Counting salmon in the river
How do Salmon get Counted?
By James Costello
One of the most basic, yet challenging, tasks for those involved with salmon enhancement efforts is to get an accurate count of the fish they are trying to help. In the fast moving (and often murky) waters of a river – it can be very hard to figure out just how many salmon there are at any given time. Depending on the stage of life you are trying to observe, counting salmon can be a tough job in the wild – here we will look at a few ways it can be done.
(In another article I will look at how a typical hatchery might be set up to count and collect fish, but today let’s go through what it takes to do it outside in the natural world.)


One of the big advantages of swimming the river is that we can clearly see the condition of the fish – meaning, we can observe whether a salmon has just entered the river from the sea and is still silver, whether it is a female and has been using its tail to build a redd, whether it is a wild or hatchery fish (missing its adipose fin), or whether it has already spawned. Using different calculations based on the observations seen by those in the field, biologists can make educated guesses to fill in the blanks. By collecting all of this data, salmon enhancement workers, or biologists, can then paint a picture of what is happening in nature. By comparing these pictures, they are able to see which salmon runs are doing well, and which might need more help.

Female salmon can have 2000 to 5000 eggs depending on the species and size of fish. With this number you can then start subtracting factors like fertilization rate (how many eggs actually start to grow), and survival rate (how many eggs hatch and grow into juvenile salmon). Typically, if there are 3000 eggs laid you will have only 300 alevins hatch out, and then only 50 smolt heading out to sea. Once the salmon are in the ocean there may only be 4 adults left, and 2 of those might return to spawn in the river – hence the large number of eggs to begin with!
Once the math is done – like always – you will want to check your work, right? This is where salmon biologists can use technology to help them get better data for their science efforts. By placing traps in the river, they can collect juvenile salmon as they migrate out to the ocean. They carefully measure the fish and then release them back onto the river to carry on in their journey. Using this data, they can compare what they see to what they may have expected from estimates, as well as checking on how big the fish are when they are caught.

As you can see it’s not easy to get good data when it comes to salmon populations in their freshwater environment, and we didn’t even look at the ocean!
Next time we will look at how adult salmon are collected by salmon enhancement staff and volunteers to be used in the hatchery – stay tuned.
Salmon enhancement is a one of his strong passions and he is hoping you get more of an understanding into what happens away from public view to keep salmon numbers strong.