PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea

Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea
2024-04-16
(Press-News.org) A massive new analysis of high seas salmon surveys is enhancing the understanding of salmon ecology, adding details about where various species congregate in the North Pacific Ocean and their different temperature tolerances.

The project, led by researchers at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, integrates numerous international salmon studies from the North Pacific dating back to the 1950s. Although many individual reports were published by nations and agencies that funded those efforts, they were never fully compiled into an overarching database or analyzed comprehensively at this scale. This new research effort builds upon the extensive and valuable past body of work on the marine component of the salmon life cycle.

Together the data represent a trove of more than 44,000 high seas survey gear hauls across the North Pacific, netting over 14 million salmon. That ocean-based data also provides a contrast from the bulk of salmon research, which tends to focus on river habitat.

“This is a portion of the salmon life cycle that arguably gets overlooked, at least in terms of the grand investment in salmon research,” said Curry Cunningham, an assistant professor at UAF’s College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. “As someone who always wondered where all these fish went when they left Bristol Bay, seeing that pattern come to life was so satisfying.”

Although methods and data varied among the studies, they consistently noted the water temperature and location where salmon were caught. That data allowed the research team to create maps with unprecedented detail showing the areas that various salmon species occupy while at sea.

For example, the maps highlight a hotspot for Chinooks gathering in the Bering Sea. They chart a path that maturing sockeye tend to take from the North Pacific and Gulf of Alaska toward the Alaska Peninsula, traveling through passes into the Bering Sea outside Bristol Bay throughout the spring and summer. 

“It’s not as if all these salmon are going to some party in the middle of the Pacific,” said lead author Joe Langan, who worked on the project as a postdoctoral fellow at UAF. “This gives us a broad look at where they go.”

The study also produced more evidence that cold-water tolerance varies significantly among salmon species. Sockeye and chum salmon were commonly found in temperatures down to just a few degrees above freezing, while coho and steelhead were absent from the coldest areas. Chinook and pink salmon lived in the middle of those ranges.

Those tendencies are likely to influence which species will be most capable of shifting to colder waters as their traditional ranges are warmed by climate change, Cunningham said.

The heart of the dataset is from the 1950s to the 1990s, and the research required digging up forgotten reports from varying sources. Skip McKinnell, a retired Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada researcher and expert in high seas salmon research, participated in some of the earlier surveys. He helped dredge up, compile and standardize many of those older reports.

“It was more of a search and rescue mission rather than convincing anyone to provide their data,” Langan said.

The project was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of Law Enforcement, which hopes to use information about where salmon are concentrated at sea to help curb illegal fishing. The centralized database will be housed by the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission and made publicly available.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fires pose growing worldwide threat to wildland-urban interface

2024-04-16
Fires that blaze through the wildland-urban interface (WUI) are becoming more common around the globe, a trend that is likely to continue for at least the next two decades, new research finds. The research team, led by scientists at the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR), used satellite observations and machine learning techniques to produce a unique database of WUI areas and fires worldwide, dating back about two decades. The overall number of all fires worldwide has declined, as has the total area burned.  However, the scientists ...

Water main breaks are rarely due to a single factor, new Concordia research finds

Water main breaks are rarely due to a single factor, new Concordia research finds
2024-04-16
Canadians are no strangers to water main breaks. Aging equipment, increased demand and seasonal weather changes, along with many other factors, have added stress to the infrastructure of utilities across Canada. These challenges are not new, but the usual approach to studying them has often focused on pipe attributes and general protection strategies. In a new paper published in the journal Environmental Systems Research, a pair of Concordia researchers looks at the problem from a global, systemic perspective by identifying the driving factors behind water main breaks across Canada. They hope their work will help utilities develop better ...

MSU research suggests darker side of being politically confident

2024-04-16
MSU has a satellite uplink/LTN TV studio and Comrex line for radio interviews upon request. EAST LANSING, Mich. – Could being well-informed about politics mean you are less tolerant of differing political opinions? The answer might surprise you and be cause for pause before your next political conversation. New research from Michigan State University suggests that those who feel self-confident about their political abilities are more likely to discriminate against those who hold opposing political views. And those who are more skeptical of their political abilities ...

New findings in JNCCN illustrate pathway for screening high-risk individuals for pancreatic cancer in PRECEDE study

New findings in JNCCN illustrate pathway for screening high-risk individuals for pancreatic cancer in PRECEDE study
2024-04-16
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [April 16, 2024] — New research in the April 2024 issue of JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network showcases the feasibility of improving early detection and prevention for pancreatic cancer. Global incidences of pancreatic cancer have risen dramatically in recent years, but the overall survival rate is currently only 12%. When pancreatic neoplasms are detected early enough for treatment with surgical resection, the survival rate climbs to better than 80%, but unfortunately the vast majority of patients are diagnosed with advanced-stage disease. The Pancreatic ...

What’s behind canned wine’s rotten egg smell? Cornell team IDs the culprit

2024-04-16
ITHACA, N.Y. – Cornell University researchers are working to eliminate the rotten egg aroma that sometimes accompanies canned wine by ever-so-slightly altering the product’s formulation and packaging, which is also prone to corrosion. In recent research, the team – led by Gavin Sacks and Julie Goddard, both professors of food science – found that the choice of the ultrathin plastic coating inside aluminum cans can go a long way towards improving the aroma of the beverage and the lifespan of its container. The collaboration began ...

Using generative AI, Insilico Medicine discovers new class of Polθ Inhibitors for BRCA-deficient cancers

Using generative AI, Insilico Medicine discovers new class of Polθ Inhibitors for BRCA-deficient cancers
2024-04-16
Building on the anti-tumor potential of Polθ inhibition in BRCA-deficient cancers, researchers at Insilico Medicine discovered a new class of orally bioavailable Polθ inhibitors designed using generative AI. For molecular generation, they used both ligand-based drug design (LBDD) and structure-based drug design (SBDD) strategies within the Chemistry42 generative chemistry engine. The new inhibitors demonstrated strong potency and promising druglike properties, highlighting AI’s potential in medicinal chemistry for precise molecular modifications. A crucial player in genomic integrity maintenance, DNA Polymerase Theta (Polθ) provides a potential synthetic lethal ...

New A.I. project will allow industrial robots to be more freethinking

2024-04-16
Robots are increasingly being used in industry, and in future they will need to adapt to unforeseen events and changes in their environment much more than today, including when they work with humans. A new international research project is addressing this issue using artificial intelligence. The project is being funded by Horizon Europe, the EU framework programme for research and innovation, with a grant of DKK 56 million (EUR 7.5 million) and is called RoboSapiens (Robotic Safe Adaptation In Unprecedented Situations). The RoboSapiens project will reduce ...

Computer scientist William Wang receives prestigious early career technical achievement award

Computer scientist William Wang receives prestigious early career technical achievement award
2024-04-16
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — As artificial intelligence continues to boom, scaling algorithms to ever-increasing data sets also becomes a bigger hurdle. Such is the case in the domain of natural language processing (NLP), or, the effort to get machines to understand and communicate with human language (think: ChatGPT, search engines and other text-based modalities). “A key challenge in this domain is the tradeoff between scalability and accuracy,” said UC Santa Barbara computer scientist ...

UC Irvine researchers shine light on rapid changes in Arctic and boreal ecosystems

2024-04-16
Irvine, Calif., April 16, 2024 — Arctic and boreal latitudes are warming faster than any other region on Earth. In three new studies, Earth system scientists at the University of California, Irvine report how the ecosystems in these regions are changing.   In a study published in Global Change Biology, a team led by Earth system science Ph.D. candidate Jinhyuk Kim from the lab of James Randerson, professor of Earth system science, reveals how wildfires are increasing rates of photosynthesis in Canada and Alaska.    They find that increasing wildfires are wiping out black spruce forests that grow relatively slowly and contribute to the organic layer of the underlying ...

Trash to treasure – researchers turn metal waste into catalyst for hydrogen

Trash to treasure – researchers turn metal waste into catalyst for hydrogen
2024-04-16
Scientists have found a way to transform metal waste into a highly efficient catalyst to make hydrogen from water, a discovery that could make hydrogen production more sustainable. A team of researchers from the University of Nottingham's School of Chemistry and Faculty of Engineering have found that the surface of swarf, a byproduct of the metal machining industry, is textured with tiny steps and grooves on a nanoscale level. These textures can anchor atoms of platinum or cobalt, leading to an efficient electrocatalyst ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UC Irvine astronomers’ simulations support dark matter theory

Rensselaer researcher publishes groundbreaking study on labor market discrimination against transgender people

What's new in transportation data at PSU?

Ten-minute breath test to monitor antibiotic concentrations

Antimicrobial resistance prevalence varies by age and sex in bloodstream infections in European hospitals

Pathogens, including multi-drug resistant “superbugs”, found on floors, ceilings and door handles of hospital toilets, UK study finds

Sour Patch adults: 1 in 8 grown-ups love extreme tartness, study shows

Vineyard Cares Business of the Year presented to Huntsman Cancer Institute

Polyamorous youth report facing stigma, heightened levels of depression

Competition from “skinny label” generics saved Medicare billions

Xavier Ochsner College of Medicine announces founding dean and location in downtown New Orleans at Benson Tower

Three Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute faculty members honored by AAAS

STRONG STAR Consortium secures $17 million in DOD research funding for brain injuries, PTSD and more

Scientists harness the wind as a tool to move objects

Long snouts protect foxes when diving headfirst in snow

Laser imaging could offer early detection for at-risk artwork

"BioBlitz" citizen science reveals urban biodiversity, guides management

Haiti study suggests early-onset heart failure is prevalent form of heart disease in low-income countries

Maps developed with artificial intelligence confirm low levels of phosphorus in Amazonian soil

Uptick in NYC transit assault rate during COVID pandemic; has not returned to pre-pandemic levels despite subway safety plan

Hongbo Chi, PhD named 2023 AAAS Fellow

Study finds school entry requirements linked to increased HPV vaccination rates

Study reveals higher injury and assault rates among NYC food delivery gig workers dependent on the work

Kaposi sarcoma discovery could facilitate drug development

Research shows link between pollution and heart risks in residents of the city of São Paulo, Brazil

Rice’s Yousif Shamoo elected AAAS fellow

Mazin to study electronic, transport & topological properties of frustrated magnets

TCT 2024 Career Achievement Award to be presented to Robert A. Harrington, MD

Tibetan plateau had broader social dimensions than previously thought

Oncotarget sponsors 19th International p53 Workshop in Italy

[Press-News.org] Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea