Monitoring mortality is an essential strategy for fish health management. Commercial marine finfish sites in British Columbia, Canada, are required to report mortality events (MEs) to Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO), which makes these data publicly available. This study aimed to analyze the spatial and temporal patterns of ME composition and total MEs. Between June 2011 and June 2022, 561 MEs were reported. The annual incidence ranged from 1.36 (95% CI: 0.55-2.81) MEs per 100 active site-months in 2013 to 17.98 (95% CI: 13.26-23.84) MEs per 100 active site-months in 2022, with a broadly increasing trend over the period under consideration. The primary causes of MEs were low levels of dissolved oxygen, fish health treatments, and harmful algal blooms (HABs). Both HABs and low dissolved oxygen followed similar patterns, increasing from 2014, peaking in 2019, and declining thereafter. Treatment-related MEs were first reported in 2017 and saw a sharp increase in subsequent years, becoming the leading cause of MEs by 2020. Nearly all treatment-related MEs were linked to sea lice treatments, highlighting the urgent need for adaptive strategies to mitigate these impacts. Sites on the west coast of Vancouver Island demonstrated a higher risk of reporting MEs compared to Mainland sites, likely due to their higher levels of exposure to fluctuating oceanographic conditions. Long-term climate change and persistent periods of warming events, such as marine heat waves, are warming the oceans, altering water parameters, and likely increasing the occurrence and severity of HABs and low dissolved oxygen-related MEs. Further studies are needed to quantify the effects of ocean warming on salmon aquaculture and the resulting increase in fish mortalities.
Keywords: Climate change; Environmental factors; Farmed salmon; Mortality events; Public data; Sea lice treatment.
© 2024. The Author(s).