Skip to content
NWT
Discovery Portal
A Source for Environmental Knowledge
Feedback
Help
Register
Login
Home
About
Search
Links
Details
Preview
.
2025-26 - Dietary niches of endemic and range‑expanding salmonids in the western Canadian Arctic - Publication - CIMP221
Metadata
File Identifier:
{EAA2210F-D3A8-461F-9BF2-AC4C696DE62C}
Metadata Language:
en
Responsible Party:
Organisation Name:
NWT CIMP
Role:
Point Of Contact
Contact Info:
E-Mail Address:
nwtcimp@gov.nt.ca
Metadata Date:
2025-09-04
Metadata Standard Name:
ISO 19139/19115 Metadata for Datasets
Metadata Standard Version:
2003
Data Identification
Abstract:
The cumulative effects of climate change are impacting Arctic species and facilitating increased interactions between Arctic and sub-Arctic species. Anadromous Arctic char Salvelinus alpinus and the northern Dolly Varden Salvelinus malma malma are endemic Arctic fishes vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, yet our understanding of the dietary niches they occupy is limited. The recent increased occurrence of sub-Arctic Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) in the western Canadian Arctic has raised concerns among Indigenous communities given the potential for competition with endemic fishes important for subsistence fisheries. Stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) were analyzed from Arctic char, Dolly Varden, and chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta, collected among four coastal Canadian Beaufort Sea locations. These fishes were captured during the summer of 2017 and 2019 during ongoing community-based fisheries monitoring programs in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region and Gwich’in Settlement Area. The trophic position of Arctic char and Dolly Varden indicates both species rely heavily on pelagic prey enriched in δ15N, consistent with a diet of marine forage fishes. Chum salmon occupied a trophic position > 3.0‰ below the char species, which reflects a diet comprised primarily of marine invertebrates. Isotopic niche analyses revealed chum salmon do not overlap in diet with the char species during the summer marine foraging season, and thus were unlikely to compete for prey as adults. This assessment of dietary overlap informs conservation and fisheries co-management objectives of endemic fishes as their as interactions with range-expanding species become more prevalent within a rapidly changing Arctic.
Language:
en
Citation:
Contact Info:
Title:
2025-26 - Dietary niches of endemic and range‑expanding salmonids in the western Canadian Arctic - Publication - CIMP221
Date:
Date:
2025-07-21
Date Type:
Publication Date
Topic Category:
Environment and Conservation
Keyword Collection:
Keyword:
Arctic char
Keyword:
Dolly Varden
Keyword:
Chum salmon
Keyword:
stable isotopes
Keyword:
Beaufort Sea
Spatial Extent:
West Bounding Longitude:
-140.982
East Bounding Longitude:
-117.826
North Bounding Latitude:
72.440
South Bounding Latitude:
68.124
Distribution
Transfer Options:
URL:
https://nwtdiscoveryportal.enr.gov.nt.ca/geoportaldocuments/McNicholl_et_al-2025-Environmental_Biology_of_Fishes.pdf
Distributor:
Distributor Contact:
Organisation Name:
Cumulative Impact Monitoring Program (CIMP)
Role:
Point Of Contact
/geoportal/rest/document?f=html&id=%7B1D538F18-4620-4AD8-999A-BAA8335DB722%7D
NWT Discovery Portal was built using Geoportal Server. Please read the
Disclaimer
or
Contact Us
.