It's official: unusual Atlantic salmon catch confirmed in Clyde River, Nunavut
Salmon also reported elsewhere along Baffin Island, and in Kugluktuk
Science has confirmed what fishermen inClydeRiver,Nunavut,have been saying for decades:Atlantic salmon do make their way to the Baffin Island hamlet north of the Arctic Circle.
A Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) lab in Winnipeg says an Atlantic salmon was harvested in the hamlet four years ago.
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The fish was caught back in 2012.Its head was frozen and sent to an Iqaluit fisheries office.The head was thenshipped to Winnipeg for DNA testing.
Communication and timing issues meant that the testing wasn't completed until March of this year, whena genetics lab confirmed from a tissue sample thatthe fish was indeed an Atlantic salmon.
"As soon as I got the fish in the cooler, I thought:'oh, that's an interesting one,'" said Karen Dunmall, a PhD student at the University of Manitoba studying salmon in the North as an indicator of a changing Arctic environment.
Dunmall is trying to figure out why the salmon are pushing further north. She began studying Pacific salmon in the Northwest Territoriesfive years ago, expanding on a DFO program to collect and monitor the fish.
She recently expanded the program to Nunavut, where, along with Clyde River, she saidAtlantic salmon have been reported elsewhere onBaffin Island.Chum salmon have also been reported further west in the territoryin the hamlet ofKugluktuk.
"We thinkthat the warmer water temperatures in the marine environment [are]allowing increased access for species that wouldn't normally go that far north," she said.
"It's just basically an indication of what the communities are saying, that the Arctic is changing. And it's how we can use the local knowledge of the changing species distributions in order to monitor that change and use salmon as indicator of a broader level change in the entire Arctic."
'It wassomething alien to us'
DanielJaypoody has been fishing for Arctic char for about 30 years in Clyde River and said thatonrare occasions, he's heard ofsalmon being caught.
About four years ago, one of his friends caught what he thought was a salmon, though Jaypoody is not sure if it was the same fish confirmed by the DFO.
"It was something alien to us," Jaypoodysaid, describing a three-foot-long silver-coloured fish.
"We don't get that kind of fish up here too often."