4.2 Article

Use of Washington estuaries by subadult and adult green sturgeon

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES
Volume 79, Issue 3-4, Pages 243-253

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10641-006-9028-1

Keywords

Acipenser medirostris; telemetry; Willapa Bay; movements; feeding; physiological refuge

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Green sturgeon, Acipenser medirostris, are the most marine-oriented of North American sturgeons. However, their estuarine/marine distribution and the seasonality of estuarine use are largely unknown. We used acoustic telemetry to document the timing of green sturgeon use of Washington estuaries. In the summers of 2003 and 2004, uniquely coded acoustic transmitters were surgically implanted in green sturgeon captured using commercial gillnets. All sturgeon tagged were greater than 1.2 m total length. They were caught, tagged, and released in both Willapa Bay (n = 49) and Columbia River (n = 11) estuaries. We deployed an array of four fixedsite acoustic receivers in Willapa Bay to detect the estuarine entry and exit of these and any of over 100 additional green sturgeon tagged in other systems during 2003 and 2004. Green sturestuarine water temperatures exceeded coastal water temperatures by at least 2'C. They exhibited rapid and extensive intra- and inter- estuary movements and green sturgeon from all known spawning populations were detected in Willapa Bay. We hypothesize that green sturgeon optimize their growth potential in summer by foraging in the relatively warm, saline waters of Willapa Bay and we caution that altering the quality of estuarine habitats could negatively affect this species throughout its range.

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