UBC researchers map Pacific salmon habitat, finding much is lost or inaccessible
VANCOUVER — Pacific salmon can no longer access hundreds of kilometres of spawning streams or floodplain habitat after decades of urban, agricultural and resource development around British Columbia’s Lower Fraser River, a study has found.
The study and mapping by researchers at the University of B.C. focused on 14 populations in the lower stretch of Canada’s most productive salmon river.
It maps where an estimated 85 per cent of floodplain is dried up or inaccessible to salmon due to dikes, along with 1,700 kilometres of streams thought to be “completely lost” due to in-filling and barriers such as dams and road culverts.
The study used earlier research from the University of B.C. that examined surveyors’ notebooks detailing vegetation in the late 19th century to map floodplain areas that would have been available to salmon, said Riley Finn, the study’s lead author and a research assistant at UBC’s conservations decisions lab.