Harvesting immature Chinook is shrinking salmon and reducing future returns, new research finds

Harvesting immature Chinook is shrinking salmon and reducing future returns, new research finds

Study shows that millennia-old practice of fishing in rivers could restore salmon size

For Immediate Release
June 10, 2026

Press Contacts & Assets
Dr. Nick Gayeski, Aquatic Ecologist, Wild Fish Conservancy, nick@wildfishconservancy.org, 1-206-310-4005
Misty MacDuffee, Wild Salmon Program Director, Raincoast Conservation Foundation, misty@raincoast.org, 1-250-818-2136

JUNE10, 2026— A new study by researchers at the Wild Fish Conservancy and Raincoast Conservation Foundation has found that marine salmon fisheries along the Pacific coast typically harvest Chinook too early in their life cycle, before they reach their full size as adults. The implications from this are far reaching for fisheries, future Chinook runs, and the ecosystem.

The study, published this week in the journal Scientific Reports, examined the effects of “mixed- maturation fisheries,” where both immature and mature Chinook salmon are harvested together in coastal marine waters. This modern fishing practice may be contributing to widespread declines in the age and size of Chinook salmon across the northeast Pacific.

“These fisheries are generally catching salmon before they have the chance to fully grow,” said co-author Misty MacDuffee of Raincoast Conservation Foundation. “Over time, this can lead to younger, smaller Chinook salmon with ripple effects for fisheries, wildlife and future salmon runs.”

Using an innovative model of Chinook salmon that rear in coastal waters, the study found that immature fish can make up to 60% of the Chinook catch in ocean fisheries. In contrast, fisheries that occur in or near spawning rivers–known as terminal fisheries–allow more large, older Chinook to reach their spawning grounds. 

The study also found that terminal fisheries can produce a greater harvest weight from landing fewer fish. By targeting only mature adults and allowing immature Chinook to continue growing in the ocean, these fisheries yield larger salmon that not only contribute more weight to the catch, but typically command higher prices per-pound.

“Large Chinook salmon also play an outsized role in both reproduction and the ecosystem,” said lead author Dr. Nick Gayeski. “Older females produce more eggs and larger eggs, and larger Chinook are better able to use high quality spawning habitats not accessible to smaller fish.”  

The research provides solutions amid growing concern over declining Chinook abundance and shrinking body size across the Pacific coast, trends that have implications for Indigenous food systems, commercial and recreational fisheries, ecosystem resilience, and recovery of Southern Resident killer whales.

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Citation

Gayeski N, Swanson D, MacDuffee M, Rosenberger A. 2026 Apr 16. Mixed-maturation fisheries compromise productivity and resilience of Chinook salmon. Scientific Reports. doi:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-49054-5.

Additional information

Press assets folder
Read a Backgrounder
Terminal Fishery ~ Fish Trap/ Pound Net Video
A New Way to Fish ~ Ripple Effect video
Columbia River Terminal Chinook Fisheries

Wild Fish Conservancy is a nonprofit conservation organization headquartered in Washington State and working from California to Alaska to preserve, protect and restore the northwest’s wild fish and the ecosystems they depend on, through science, education, and advocacy. wildfishconservancy.org 

Raincoast is a team of scientists and conservationists empowered by our research to safeguard the land, waters, and wildlife of coastal British Columbia. We investigate to understand coastal species and processes. We inform by bringing science to decision-makers and communities. We inspire action to protect wildlife and wildlife habitats. raincoast.org

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