|
|
Chapter 3 Alaska’s Salmon Habitats
Key Concepts
|
|
Healthy watersheds are crucial to sustaining
Alaska’s wild salmon. Alaska is unique in that it has large quantities
of healthy watersheds. We have the ability to sustain salmon populations
by understanding and maintaining these watersheds.
|
|
Chapter Objectives
|
|
Students will be able to describe:
·
geographical areas and terms of the essential environmental
elements found in healthy watersheds;
·
how each element contributes to good salmon habitat;
and
·
how the elements of salmon habitats are interconnected.
They will also be able to describe:
·
human behavior that can threaten elements of good salmon
habitat;
·
steps they and their communities can take to assure healthy
salmon spawning, rearing, and growing areas; and
·
the major salmon-producing areas in Alaska.
|
|
Terms Students Should Understand
|
|
watershed – an area of land in which
all the water that falls as snow or rain collects and eventually flows
into a larger body of water
habitat partitioning – the natural
allocation among different species of salmon of areas in a stream that
are suitable for spawning and rearing
|
|
Background for Teachers
|
|
What’s so important about watersheds?
|
We all live in a watershed. It is often
difficult for students to perceive that their activities have an impact
on the places where they live. From rural surface water systems to city
water and sewers, students should explore their use of water as part of
watershed studies.
While most of Alaska’s watersheds remain
healthy, for many students living in metropolitan areas, local impacts
on watersheds can be as glaring as in any city. Because we tend to settle
along water bodies, human impacts can be greater than we might think.
While industry must have clean waters to
function, and regulations exist to assure that point source pollution
is in check, often our individual impacts go unnoticed. These cumulative
impacts of humans on waters and watersheds are usually from what is called
non-point sources. These are general, everyday sources of pollution
that can affect the health of watersheds.
An improperly installed sewage system
can back up and affect the quality of drinking water in a village.
Pet owners walking their dogs along lake shores can lead to closure
to swimming. Cat litter discarded along beaches or into streams
can spread disease in wildlife. Changing oil in the driveway or
spreading waste oil to contain dust on roads can pollute drinking
water in an aquifer. The over application of fertilizers on lawns
near lakes can lead to explosive growth of water plants and eutrophication
(the process by which a body of water becomes enriched in dissolved
nutrients that stimulate the growth of aquatic plant life usually
resulting in the depletion of dissolved oxygen).
See also Appendix B, Fish Habitat
in Alaska, in this guide.
|
Questions For Discussion
|
|
1. How does habitat loss relate to the decline
of salmon?
|
Most biologists agree that loss of habitat
is a primary reason for the decline of salmon populations in the Pacific
Northwest. The other four “Hs” of salmon loss (listed on the back cover
of Alaska’s Wild Salmon) are all significant in these declines
in the Lower 48 and Canada.
In Alaska, the fact that our salmon habitat
remains healthy is a primary reason that virtually all of our salmon runs
are healthy, year after year. For this to be true, ALL parts of the habitat
used in the wild salmon’s life cycle must remain healthy.
|
2. How will climate change affect salmon
habitat?
|
Scientists do not know. It is safe to say
that there will be changes in salmon populations and production due to
climate change, but it is likely that some populations will decline and
others increase in number. Remember that salmon are adaptable to some
change, but they cannot change their basic habitat needs.
For example, as ocean temperatures warm,
all Pacific salmon require more feed to grow. Accordingly, salmon retreat
from warmer waters and become more tightly packed and dependent upon the
forage resources of the North Pacific. This could strain ocean food resources,
leading to fish that spawn later and are smaller in size.
|
3. The map caption on p. 28 of Alaska’s
Wild Salmon states that “in Alaska, small streams produce more salmon
than large rivers.” In terms of what you know about the salmon life cycle,
is this surprising or not?
|
|
Ideas for Activities
|
|
1. Ask students to look at stream habitat
near their school and decide which salmonid species this system is likely
to support.
|
They can refer to pp. 11-13 of Alaska’s
Wild Salmon for habitat requirements of different species, and to
p. 23 for information on some species habitat preferences.
|
2. Assign individuals or a group of students
to gather more information about the major salmon producing areas listed
on p. 28 of Alaska’s Wild Salmon. Where does their community fit
in?
|
See, among other references:
·
graphs of commercial salmon harvest by region, map
showing intensity of sport fishing by region, and use of subsistence
resources, in Alaska in Maps: A Thematic Atlas
·
information about salmon harvests on the Divisions of Commercial
Fisheries, Sport Fish, and Subsistence on the Alaska Dept. of Fish and
Game web site - ADF&G
·
information about Alaska communities on the Alaska Department
of Community and Economic Development “Community Database
Online” - Community Database Online
|
3. Have students compile oral histories
for possible indications of climate change in their community. Are local
glaciers melting rapidly? Have weather patterns changed in recent decades?
Are new or exotic species of fish being caught in local fisheries? Have
any stocks of salmon disappeared from local streams?
|
Students could use the world wide web to
see if projected global climate trends relate to specifics of local observations
or predictions for local changes.
|
4. Begin a long-term stream monitoring and
habitat assessment project in a local watershed. Plan for it to be maintained
annually by subsequent classes.
|
Resources are available from Jon Lyman,
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, (907) 465-6186.
|
Resources Especially for Teachers
|
|
Tom Murdoch and Martha Cheo. 1999. Streamkeeper’s
Field Guide. Available from Adopt-a-Stream Foundation, Everett
Washington, (206) 316-8592.
|
This is a complete “how-to” field guide
for studying, monitoring, and taking action to preserve and restore streams.
It contains detailed information on watersheds, physical characteristics
of streams, water quality, underwater invertebrates, and ways to collect
and present data.
|
Alaska Volunteer Biological Monitoring
and Assessment Procedures. 2001. Environmental Natural Resources
Institute (ENRI), University of Alaska Anchorage. Available from
Jon Lyman, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, (907) 465-6186.
|
These ENRI protocols are written to
establish guidelines for the sampling of benthic macroinvertebrates
by students. Their use allows teachers to create long-term water
quality projects in schools.
|
J. Michael Migel. 1974. The Stream Conservation
Handbook. General Publishing Company, Ltd.
|
A sourcebook for ideas on how to help and
heal damaged waterways.
|
Fish Habitat in Alaska – Appendix B of this
guide.
|
|
Resources for Students and Teachers
|
|
Alaska Stream Team, Water Quality Monitoring
Field Guide, educational level. 2000. ENRI. Available from Jon Lyman,
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, (907) 465-6186.
|
Student handbook to go with the ENRI protocols
on stream monitoring described in the preceding section.
|
Alden Ford. The Kenai Peninsula’s Amazing
Water Maze (groundwater game on CD). Available from Jon Lyman, Alaska
Department of Fish and Game, (907) 465-6186.
|
An award-winning computer game that runs
on both Mac and disc systems.
|
See Alaska in Maps: A Thematic Atlas,
produced for Alaska schools, for maps of watersheds, and graphs showing
salmon harvests by region.
|
Copies of this book are available in many
classrooms and in most Alaska school libraries.
|
Community Database Online
|
The Alaska Dept. of Community
and Economic Development Community Database Online describes economic
and other information for every community in Alaska.
|
“It takes a healthy watershed to raise a
fish” – brochure and poster
|
Available from Jon Lyman, Alaska Department
of Fish and Game, (907) 465-6186
|
Looking Ahead
|
|
Ask students to think about ways in which
their use of water, and the ways their families and community use water,
could affect the five habitat qualities salmon need. The five qualities
are listed in the second paragraph on p. 14 of Alaska’s Wild Salmon
and in activities for Chapter 2.
|
|
Previous Next
|