Great information and response Rodney.
We selectively catch fish that more aggressively go after our lures. I have seen some underwater footage, A gopro attached to a downrigger cable and there will be like 3 to 4 chinook following it around and one fish will come out of frame and push its way though and smash the lure. IT's not always the big fish doing this.
So one does wonder what effect this is having on the population. Removing this type of fish?
I have thought about this a few times over the years, and I think it is a legitimate question for sure. A few thoughts:
--I've never thought of aggression being linked to big fish, if anything, I believe it is the opposite. I'm sure many fisherman can attest to just how aggressive jacks are for example. Although anecdotal, I bet if you standardized the number of jack and adult Chinook, returning to Vedder for example, jacks would be found to bite at a higher rate than adults.
--Young, sub-adult salmon at sea (i.e., those one or more years away from spawning) are ultimately trying to put on as much weight/size as fast as possible so as reduce their chances of size-selective predation (e.g., by larger fish, birds). In other words, when fish are young, survival is key, and so since survival is linked to eating and growing (quickly), this would likely lead to younger (smaller) fish being very aggressive, and as such, perhaps being more likely to bite. Fitness, as Rodney mentioned, is determined by one's ability to survive AND reproduce. So feeding aggressively to grow to be a big adult is also a good thing (e.g., larger fish are generally more fecund (large females make more eggs) and large adult males often have a competitive advantage over smaller adult males when it comes to winning over a female). However, it may be possible that when fish make it to that crucial size that eliminates them from being eaten by the majority of predators that they are able to be more “choosy” as to whether they want to grow very fast by being aggressive (which we presume to be riskier) or slower (which we presume to be safer, for example by not exposing themselves to predators as much) – these “choices” or behaviors of course likely being under genetic control.
--Using juvenile coho as an example (which rear in freshwater for 1 or more years), we see a variety of "behavior" types/strategies, displayed among individuals. Some individuals display extreme aggression against conspecifics/other fish for the most productive rearing locations, some choose feeding lanes that provide a lot of food but have less cover for protection against predators, and some are more timid (getting kicked to the back of the school or choosing slower moving areas with less food but high cover), etc. Ultimately, all of these strategies/behaviors have trade offs, and it is this variety of behavior types that make a stock/population of fish resilient against all that we and nature can throw at them.
----So, while I don't have an answer to your question, I think that if we think about some of the considerations I've listed above, and the myriad of other natural selective forces going on prior to the point in time at which a salmon is typically caught, that there will always continue to be some component of very "bitey" fish in a population, even if we are inadvertently counteracting those natural selective forces by catching and killing the more aggressive/bitey individuals.