British Columbia hosts 22 species of native and introduced salmonids. This list reflects the conservation status of British Columbia salmonids with status from the B.C. Species and Ecosystems Explorer, current as of August 2023.[1] Status definitions were taken from NatureServe.[2]
Definitions
editProvincial status (S)
edit- X = presumed extirpated
- H = historical (species)/possibly extirpated (communities)
- 1 = critically imperiled
- 2 = imperiled
- 3 = special concern, vulnerable to extirpation or extinction
- 4 = apparently secure
- 5 = demonstrably widespread, abundant, and secure.
- NA = not applicable
- NR = unranked
- U = unrankable
B. C. List
edit- Red: Includes any indigenous species or subspecies that have, or are candidates for, extirpated, endangered, or threatened status in British Columbia. Extirpated taxa no longer exist in the wild in British Columbia, but do occur elsewhere. Endangered taxa are facing imminent extirpation or extinction. Threatened taxa are likely to become endangered if limiting factors are not reversed. Not all Red-listed taxa will necessarily become formally designated. Placing taxa on these lists flags them as being at risk and requiring investigation.
- Blue: Includes any indigenous species or subspecies considered to be of special concern (formerly vulnerable) in British Columbia. Taxa of special concern have characteristics that make them particularly sensitive or vulnerable to human activities or natural events. Blue-listed taxa are at risk, but are not extirpated, endangered or threatened.
- Yellow: Includes species that are apparently secure and not at risk of extinction. Yellow-listed species may have red- or blue-listed subspecies.
- Exotic: Species that have been moved beyond their natural range as a result of human activity. Exotic species are also known as alien species, foreign species, introduced species, non-indigenous species and non-native species. Exotic species are excluded from the Red, Blue and Yellow Lists as a Provincial Conservation Status Rank is not applicable (i.e. SNA).
Status by species
editSpecies | Provincial Status[3] | B.C. List[4] |
---|---|---|
Arctic cisco Coregonus autumnalis | S1, S2 (2019) | Red |
Arctic grayling Thymallus arcticus | S4 (2004) | Yellow |
Atlantic salmon Salmo salar | SNA (2019) | Exotic |
Broad whitefish Coregonus nasus | S2 (2019) | Red |
Brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis | SNA (2019) | Exotic |
Brown trout Salmo trutta | SNA (2019) | Exotic |
Bull trout Salvelinus confluentus | S3, S4 (2018) | Blue |
Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha | SNR (2019) | Not Reviewed |
Chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta | SNR (2019) | Not Reviewed |
Cisco Coregonus artedi | S2 (2019) | Red |
Coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch | SNR (2019) | Not Reviewed |
Cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii & clarkii subspecies | S3, S4 (2004) | Blue |
Dolly Varden trout Salvelinus malma | S4 (2012) | Yellow |
Inconnu Stenodus nelma | S3 (2019) | Blue |
Lake trout Salvelinus namaycush | S4 (2019) | Yellow |
Lake whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis | S5 (2019) | Yellow |
Mountain whitefish Prosopium williamsoni | S5 (2019) | Yellow |
Pink salmon Oncorhynchus gorbuscha | SNR (2019) | Not Reviewed |
Pygmy whitefish Prosopium coulterii | S4 (2019) | Yellow |
Rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss - large lake piscivore ecotype | S4 (2012) | Yellow |
Rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss | S5 (2011) | Yellow |
Round whitefish Prosopium cylindraceum | S4 (2019) | Yellow |
Sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka | SNR (2019) | Not Reviewed |
Westslope cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii lewisi | S2, S3 (2018) | Blue |
References
edit- ^ "BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer". British Columbia Ministry of Environment. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
- ^ "National and Subnational Conservation Status Definitions". natureserve.org/. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
- ^ Provincial Status applies to a species' or ecological community's conservation status in British Columbia. The number in parentheses is the year the status rank was last reviewed. "Help-Provincial Conservation Status".
- ^ B.C. List Status: Species are assigned to provincial lists depending on their Provincial Conservation Status "Help-B.C. List Status".