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How heat waves pose 㽶Ƶֱcatastrophic㽶Ƶֱ threats to B.C. salmon

Impact of drought, climate change is 'glaringly obvious', says Nation's wildlife coordinator

During the spring and summer, Meghan Rooney sees firsthand how rising water temperatures affect salmon in B.C. waterways.

At 20 C, salmon slow down and seek refuge in cooler areas, said Rooney, science and communications coordinator for Watershed Watch Salmon Society, a charity that works to defend and rebuild the province㽶Ƶֱs wild salmon population. When temperatures rise above that, fish start to die from the heat, an issue that goes on to have a ripple effect on many different aspects of life in B.C.

㽶ƵֱSalmon are incredibly important, not just for our ecosystems,㽶Ƶֱ Rooney said during a Zoom interview from Port Coquitlam. 㽶ƵֱThey feed our forest. They support many different species. They are important culturally for many Indigenous First Nations in B.C.㽶Ƶֱ

Erika Eliason, a fish biologist and associate dean of Kwantlen Polytechnic University㽶Ƶֱs Faculty of Science, said that fish are ectotherms, meaning their body temperature is the same as their surrounding environment.

㽶ƵֱIf the water temperature goes from 15 C to 18 C, that means the fish's body goes from 15 C to 18 C,㽶Ƶֱ Eliason said.

㽶ƵֱThat three-degree change may not seem like much, but it can have a profound impact on the fish's performance and their ability to survive.㽶Ƶֱ

While the ideal water temperature for fish varies by location, when it gets too warm, a fish㽶Ƶֱs ability to swim, digest a meal, escape a predator and interact with its environment all worsen, Eliason said.

Much of her research shows that fish, including Pacific salmon, experience a higher metabolism in warmer waters, as well as increases in their heart rate, oxygen demand and biochemical reactions. At very high temperatures, their heart begins to fail.

Prolonged heat waves can be 㽶Ƶֱcatastrophic㽶Ƶֱ for fish population, Eliason said. For example, when the Fraser River hits 19 to 22 C, Pacific salmon can㽶Ƶֱt swim upstream, leading many to die on their way to their spawning grounds.

㽶ƵֱThat's really the biggest trend that we're seeing over and over again,㽶Ƶֱ she said. 㽶ƵֱMillions of fish can show up to the Fraser River to perform that upper migration 㽶Ƶֱ but if the water temperature is too warm, you can get huge numbers of fish that don't make it.㽶Ƶֱ

From 1950 to 2015, summer temperatures in the Fraser River Basin have risen by nearly 1 C, and for many of the basin㽶Ƶֱs sites, the number of summer days with their water temperature exceeding 20㽶ƵֱC has doubled, a University of Northern British Columbia from 2019 found.

In 2023, the Cheam First Nation in Chilliwack㽶Ƶֱs Ford Creek a mass die-off of fish due to the heat. Rooney said Watershed Watch assisted the nation by helping to move the fish to a section of the waterway that was cooler and better enriched with oxygen. Ford Creek is just one example of the fish die-offs the charity has helped handle during the summer months in B.C.

Due to the impact of heat waves, the Williams Lake First Nation in the Cariboo region has chosen to not fish its traditional sockeye salmon in the main channel of the Fraser River for the last six years, says Nicholas Coutu, fish and wildlife coordinator at the nation.

㽶ƵֱBeing at the headwaters, it's their responsibility 㽶Ƶֱ and mine now also 㽶Ƶֱ to steward those fish and allow them to get to their nursery, so that other people all the way down the Fraser, into the ocean, can have future fish,㽶Ƶֱ he said.

㽶ƵֱIf they continue doing their traditional harvesting, it will prevent those fish from spawning. So they have the weight of all that responsibility on them.㽶Ƶֱ

What's being done

Droughts make ledges for fishing inaccessible to Willams Lake First Nation

Over the last two years, as water levels have lowered, the ledges along the Fraser River on Williams Lake First Nation territory have been too high above the water for fishing.

These ledges are along steep cliff canyons, which the Secwépemc people, including the Williams Lake Nation, traditionally use wide nets to collect dozens of fish, said Nicholas Coutu, the nation㽶Ƶֱs fish and wildlife coordinator. 

㽶ƵֱIt㽶Ƶֱs a glaringly obvious impact of climate change and low water because of drought,㽶Ƶֱ he said.

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At the Chilcotin River, a massive landslide in July 2024 prevented the nation from accessing its other fishing site. (Nicholas Coutu/Submitted)

The water levels are the lowest they have been in over 6,500 years, which is how long the nation has been fishing along the cliffs, Coutu said.

The most traditionally sought after fish by the nation is sockeye salmon, which is in steep decline. During the mid-1990s, about 800,000 sockeye salmon returned to its nursery to spawn. In 2024, the Pacific Salmon Foundation  a total of just 560,000 sockeye in the Fraser for that year.

At the Chilcotin River, a massive landslide in July 2024 prevented the nation from accessing its other fishing site, so Coutu drove up north of Smithers and received one-thousand sockeye from the Gitxsan First Nation.

㽶ƵֱIt was sad in a way, but it was very fulfilling to see all the First Nations people coming together for the thing they love and cherishing that gift from another First Nation because they didn't have any,㽶Ƶֱ Coutu said.

Tŝilhqot'in National Government was contacted for comment for this story. 
 

This story was written by a student in as part of a partnership between KPU and Black Press Media.