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Research Update: January 13, 2003 Pacific
herring (Clupea harengus pallasi) are a critical part of the food chain
within the inland waters of Washington and British Columbia. These small
fish feed primarily on planktonic crustaceans. Larger fishes, marine birds,
and marine mammals, in turn, feed on herring. Within the inland waters
of Washington State, there are 18 stocks of herring, each group defined
by its distinct spawning ground. The Cherry Point herring stock is one
of Washington’s most important. It was once Puget Sound’s
largest herring stock and, unlike most of Washington’s herring,
which are winter-spawning, the Cherry Point Stock is spring-spawning.
Unfortunately Cherry Point herring have declined 94% between 1973 and
2000 (see graph below). They are using less and less of their historic
spawning grounds, larvae hatch with reduced survival potential (reduced
fitness), and the adult survival rate has declined. Finding that the developmental abnormalities detected among larvae at Cherry Point are NOT the result of exposure to site-related conditions (toxins or other products) during development is important. Causes for declines in the abundance of marine resources like the Cherry Point herring stock are not usually easy to understand. When Washington’s once-largest herring stock declines 94% and it just happens to spawn near the home of some of the state’s largest industrial plants, most people assume the two facts are connected. Hershberger, Naish and Kocan’s work suggests that the toxins or other products that may be present in the water at Cherry Point are not the cause of larval developmental abnormalities or reduced weights in newly hatched larvae in Cherry Point herring. They are not yet finished with their MEHP-funded project, and more work still needs to be done to understand all of the factors responsible for the decline in Cherry Point herring, but these early results are a good example of how our efforts to understand and reverse species declines needs to be based on good science and not just appearances. Thank you again for taking an interest in the work of the Marine Ecosystem Health Program. For more information about the research highlighted in this update or other important research projects funded by the MEHP, please visit the MEHP website. Sincerely, Joseph K.
Gaydos, VMD, PhD |
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