4.5 Article

Overlapping scales: Bias and variability in Alaska Chinook salmon age estimates

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FISHERIES RESEARCH
卷 265, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fishres.2023.106743

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Age estimation; Reader training; Data quality; Scales; Chinook

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Over the past 30 years, Alaska's Chinook salmon populations have experienced declines in size, age at maturity, productivity, and adult abundance. This study examined variability and bias in age estimates from 10,200 scales of five Chinook salmon stocks, and provides recommendations for improving future age estimation quality.
Alaska's Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) populations have declined in size at age and age at maturity over the past 30 years, and productivity and adult abundance have decreased during the past decade. Chinook salmon scale age data are used to understand population demography, but methods for scale age estimation may have changed over time and may differ across the state. To begin addressing this, we examined variability and bias associated with age estimates from 10,200 scales, one scale per fish, from five Chinook salmon stocks (Stikine, Copper, Karluk, Nushagak, and Kuskokwim rivers), 1980-2015. This set of scales had an original assigned age, and, from this study, ages estimated by 10 participants (readers) with a range of experience. Variability was assessed using standard deviation (SD) of reader age estimations. We compared SD among stocks, marine ages, time periods (1980-1992, 1993-2005, and 2006-2015), and reader experience. Standard deviation increased by 0.014 for each 10.0 mm difference in fish length from expected length at age. Standard deviation differed among marine ages, with marine age-1 and age-5 scales having 155% and 188% of the variability of marine age-3 scales. Standard deviation did not differ among stocks or time periods. Reader bias was the per-centage of scales over or underestimated relative to the median age assignment of 10 readers (the best approximation to known age). Reader bias differed among marine ages with the oldest ages tending to be overestimated and the youngest ages tending to be underestimated. Reader bias decreased with reader experi-ence and was not different among stocks, time periods, or between familiar (those previously examined by a reader) and unfamiliar (new to the reader) stocks. Original ages were underestimated by 3% and overestimated by 9%. Bias in original ages did not differ among stocks, time periods, or marine ages. We provide recom-mendations, based on our results, for improving the quality of Chinook salmon scale age estimates in the future.

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