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Assessment Summary

ISRP Assessment 2008-117-00-ISRP-20120215
Assessment Number: 2008-117-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 2008-117-00 - Rufus Woods Redband Net Pens
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-2008-117-00
Completed Date: 4/17/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Does Not Meet Scientific Review Criteria
Final Round ISRP Comment:

The recommendation is for Colville Hatchery Operation and Maintenance (198503800) and Rufus Woods Redband Net Pens (200811700). The comments apply to both proposals, although specific comments on the progression of the Net Pens project are provided below.

The ISRP appreciates the effort the Colville Tribal Fisheries staff put into the response to the ISRP’s preliminary review of the Colville Tribal Hatchery and the Rufus Woods net pen proposals. The sponsors provided an informal description of the resident trout and net pen programs while attempting to address the ISRP questions. A number of questions from the ISRP’s preliminary review were addressed, and the panel is better able to understand the scope and details of the project. While the information was interesting, the presentation does not allow one to evaluate the recent performance of the program in terms of harvests by tribal members in relation to numbers of eggs brought into culture and fish stocked in reservation waters. 

The sponsor needs to develop a trout stocking master plan which guides the annual stocking, provides a basis for Fish and Wildlife Program proposal review, and provides for evaluation of the success of the program. The plan should generally include information requested in Three Step Master Plans for anadromous hatcheries. The plan should critique the resident fish hatchery program for its ability to provide catchable trout on the reservation while demonstrating efficient and productive practices. The plan should develop hatchery and harvest goals and collect information to evaluate whether these goals are being met. Some documentation of fishing effort is needed on each lake that is stocked; otherwise it is impossible to determine whether the effort is worthwhile. This plan should incorporate the Rufus Woods net pen project and fish purchased and released under the Rufus Woods Habitat/Passage Improvement, Creel, and Triploid Supplementation (200740500).

The ISRP finds that the project does not meet specific review criteria established by the 1996 amendment to the Power Act for NW Power and Conservation Council Fish and Wildlife Program. Those criteria state that projects: 1) are based on sound science principles; 2) benefit fish and wildlife; 3) have clearly defined objectives and outcomes; and 4) have provisions for monitoring and evaluation of results. In particular, documentation addressing ISRP review criteria 1, 3, and 4 are not evident in the proposal, annual reports, or response.

Projects are based on sound science principals. The ISRP is unable to conclude the stocking regime for each body of water has a defensible scientific rationale. Table 7 of the response to the ISRP lists each body of water and identifies the number of fish stocked of each species in 2011, and identifies potential problems in the lakes and streams. A plan is needed that identifies the different species, their size, and their numbers, that could potentially be stocked in each lake or stream and a justification for those species, numbers, and sizes based on empirical stock recruitment information from the lake or stream. The narrative provided in the proposal suggests that some biological information is used to establish a stocking program, but the decision framework is never presented. Stocking brook trout in North and South Twin Lake is an example of the stocking that is inadequately justified. The proposal states that self-sustaining populations of brook trout occupy these lakes. No stock recruitment or harvest data are provided to indicate that hatchery fish are necessary to provide a fishery. What factors led to the stocking of about one million trout into the relatively small Twin Lakes in 2009? What is the justification for the proposed increased of stocked large triploid trout in Rufus Woods Reservoir from 20,000 to 60,000 fish, and what information is available that these additional fish have minimal effects on native fishes. Stocking catchable rainbow trout in streams based on pre-stocking electrofishing surveys of abundance is another example. The justification for why a specific abundance level triggers additional stocking is not provided. Documentation of the stocking decision framework is important for informing future managers in addition to informing this review by the ISRP. Additionally, fish rearing protocols at the net pens should be documented.

The basis for raising specific number of fish and stocking them into the reservation water bodies needs justification beyond the obvious need to provide resident fish harvests for tribal members. The program should demonstrate that its operations are effective and efficient in achieving the ultimate goal of providing harvests. 

Projects have clearly defined objectives and outcomes. The ISRP expects there will be established standards for hatchery and net pen production (egg take, eyed egg success, hatching success, and numbers released) for each species, and that the program will explicitly self-evaluate to those established benchmarks. The ISRP expects there will be standards established for fishery yields (CPUE, total harvest in relation to fish stocked, economic and other social benefits) for each body of water and the project as a whole. These standards should be consistent with types of data that can be collected. For example, if CPUE is measured in terms of fish per angler per day, then the standard should also be set using fish per angler per day. Although some fishery goals and evaluation were provided for the net pen project, others were incomplete. 

Projects have provisions for monitoring and evaluation. The ISRP concludes a sufficient monitoring program is not in place. A defined and statistically justified M&E plan is required for the resident fish stocking program that addresses both the biological/chemical/food-web and harvest factors. The ISRP understands and appreciates the difficulty in conducting direct creel surveys in small, remote lakes and streams. Nonetheless, the ISRP believes that effort needs to be made to better document the use of these lakes and the harvest of fish for the intended purpose of recreational angling or subsistence fishing. The documentation may need to use interview and survey techniques from the social science realm rather than the fisheries field.

The ISRP expresses concern about the fish culture performance at the hatchery. Hatchery performance data were provided by the sponsor that raised questions, yet there was no evaluation of these production numbers by the sponsors. Table 4 in the response to the ISRP summarizes egg take, eyed eggs, fish ponded, and fish released for brook trout, Lahontan cutthroat trout, rainbow trout, and redband rainbow trout. For brook trout and Lahontan cutthroat trout, the average percent eye-up for the past seven years has been 67% and 54% respectively, and survival to release has been only 36% and 30% respectively.For rainbow trout from Washington Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, the survival from green egg to release averaged only 25% for brood years 2006 and 2007. This level of success in the fish-rearing phase of the program is in need of investigation and improvement. Also, why does the number of green eggs vary so much within a species from year to year? The ISRP acknowledges the information provided on water supply challenges. The hatchery production program should be designed around water supply constraints.

The ISRP previously concluded in 2009 that the Rufus Woods Redband Net Pen Project met scientific review criteria with the qualifications that the project be designed as a proof-of-concept test for native redband brood fish management, and that future proposals identify goals and monitoring results that are integrated with the overall Colville resident fish hatchery program. The current proposal indicated that net pen culture of redband trout did not meet the Tribe’s needs (see statement below).Although the net pen proposal identified some goals, for example harvest 30% of stocked fish, and provided some observations this information was incomplete, as noted above. 

The current proposal reflects major changes in the Rufus Woods Redband Net Pens (200811700) project direction. The original proposal was for rearing redband trout broodstock, and actual stocking of production fish was a minor element with numbers and locations of fish to be stocked unidentified. The sponsor has suggested that redband trout are not suitable for stocking in reservation lakes and perform poorly in the tribal hatchery, although conflicting statements were also provided in the proposal: “The project successfully reared and released over 16,960 kg of redband rainbow trout into Rufus Woods and reservation lakes. This amount constitutes 76% of the Colville Tribal Resident Fish Hatchery’s annual production goal (Shallenberger, E., 2010). Associated project costs calculated out to be less than a quarter of what it would cost to raise these fish at the hatchery. The project has provided a cost effective way to grow much larger fish, alleviate some pressure on the hatchery’s current resources and provided a wonderful spring fishery on North and South Twin Lakes and Lake Rufus Woods.” Nevertheless, the sponsor has transitioned this project from rearing redband broodstock to rearing triploid rainbow trout for direct stocking into Lake Rufus Woods, North and South Twin Lakes, and unspecified reservation streams. Justification for this production is needed in a Master Plan. The ISRP is unable to determine why triploid rainbow trout from the net pens are needed for Lake Rufus Woods since project 200740500 is purchasing triploid fish from net pen operators for stocking.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

The original goal of the Rufus Woods Net Pens project (200811700) was to raise native redband trout broodstock and reduce capacity issues at the Colville Tribal Hatchery. After implementing the project, the sponsor stated that “the project successfully reared and released over 16,960 kg of redband rainbow trout into Rufus Woods and reservation lakes. This amount constitutes 76% of the Colville Tribal Resident Fish Hatchery’s annual production goal (Shallenberger, E., 2010). Associated project costs calculated out to be less than a quarter of what it would cost to raise these fish at the hatchery. The project has provided a cost effective way to grow much larger fish, alleviate some pressure on the hatchery’s current resources and provided a wonderful spring fishery on North and South Twin Lakes and Lake Rufus Woods.” Nevertheless, in the most recent proposal, the sponsor concluded that the performance of redband trout in the hatchery and Rufus Woods net pens was insufficient to meet program needs. Stocking native redband trout was deleted as a key objective in the 2011 proposal.

The project has transitioned to rearing and releasing triploid rainbow trout. The goal in 2011 was to release 20,000 large triploid trout into the Twin Lakes and 20,000 trout into Rufus Woods for tribal and sport harvests. A reported 10,000 trout were stocked into South Twin Lake, but no values were presented for North Twin Lake or Rufus Woods. In 2011, approximately 1,769 rainbow trout were harvested in Rufus Woods and 15,477 trout were captured in the Twin Lakes. This project needs to be incorporated into a resident fish hatchery Master Plan, improve upon its stocking plan, and carefully evaluate whether the project is achieving specific goals such as catch per hour or percentage of stocked fish harvested.

 

First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Response Requested
First Round ISRP Comment:

The proposal needs major revision including:

  1. an expanded explanation of significance to regional programs/plans
  2. a revised technical background giving a more complete history of lost fisheries and the need for resident fish substitution
  3. objectives that are specific and measurable
  4. deliverables and work elements that specifically describe the tasks needed to meet objectives
  5. detailed methods for raising the net pen fish or a sub-contractors specifications and methods
  6. a description of the evaluation and decision framework used to establish stocking location and numbers, and how this stocking is integrated in the Colville Tribal Hatchery rearing and stocking plans.

See the ISRP’s programmatic comments on fish stocking.

The Council’s 1999 Artificial Production Review (NWPCC 1999-15) established that evaluating hatcheries based on numbers or pounds of fish produced and released was inadequate and that goals and objectives were required for post-release performance. The ISRP looks for clear metrics for performance in the hatchery or net pen including in-pen survival and growth, disease monitoring or other health inspections, percentage of triploid trout, net pen water quality compliance inspections, and food conversion as well as post-release performance including survival for stated intervals, harvest, and fish condition. These should be identified and reported for the time period since the last ISRP review. The Rufus Woods net pen project provided data for in-pen survival and growth, but there was no information on survival and harvests of these fish in Twin Lakes and Rufus Woods. The proposal should also identify impacts of the stocked fish on resident fishes in each of the receiving waters, including elevated harvest rates on native trout in response to higher fishing effort for example in Rufus Woods. The ISRP understands that post release data may come from other projects, but the information should be summarized in the net pen proposal.

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

Significance to Regional Programs: Insufficient information was provided. The proposal identifies that the CCT Fish Management Plan includes elements that the project fulfills, but those elements should be described. The linkages to elements in subbasin plans beyond the San Poil are likely since fish are intended for release in Lake Rufus Woods. The proposal should identify how it is linked to other relevant regional planning efforts such as the Lake Roosevelt Guiding Document, the Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Evaluation Project, and the Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program. Additionally, the numbers of fish to be purchased and released into Lake Rufus Woods by this project should be described. Interactions with the Lake Rufus Woods Creel and Supplementation (2007-405-00) project and the Resident Fish above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams (1997-004-00) need to be stated. 

Technical Background: Insufficient information is provided. The sponsor states the program provides subsistence and recreational trout fishing opportunities to substitute for lost anadromous fishing. This overarching purpose is fine. The technical background does not provide sufficient information on the specific lakes on the Colville Reservation that might be stocked using fish from this project. A decision framework, for example a regional resident fish stocking plan, that identifies the policy and scientific guidance from tribal management plans to direct the annual stocking is needed. This framework should be described in a comprehensive residence fish stocking plan that encompasses all hatchery activities in the upper Columbia region. A brief description with references of lost anadromous fisheries is needed to demonstrate the need for the resident fish substitution.

Objectives: Incomplete information is provided. There are three objectives identified: supplement fishery to provide harvest; increase efficiency and decrease the cost; relieve pressure on Colville Tribal Hatchery. These objectives need quantitative standards identified as goals that can be evaluated by metrics. There are no quantitative objectives for fish rearing success or for subsequent harvest. There should be quantitative objectives for fish harvesting metrics such as catch per effort, total harvest, angler days, and angler satisfaction as well as quantitative objectives for fish growth and survival. None are provided in the proposal. Monitoring is needed to evaluate whether the objectives are achieved.

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management (ISRP Review of Results)

Accomplishments: The project has one year of fish rearing experience from net pens stocked with 22g redband trout in June 2010 and released fish in the spring of 2011, under emergency circumstances because of gas super-saturation. Accurate estimates of survival are needed and observed survival should be compared with a goal in order to evaluate effectiveness of net pen rearing. The proposal did not describe whether or not juvenile fish, presumably rainbow trout, were stocked into net pens during the spring/summer of 2011 for release in 2012. No information is provided on harvest from the fish stocked.

Adaptive management: The evaluation of redband trout culture and switch from redband trout to triploid rainbow trout was provided as a management response.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

The first year of operation (2010) determined that the performance of redband trout in the hatchery and Rufus Woods net pens was insufficient to meet program needs. The project plans to transition to rainbow trout, but no information on rainbow trout net pen operations was provided for 2011.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions for Type of Work (hatchery, RME, tagging)

Project Relationships: The proposal notes that the Rufus Woods Net Pen Project works directly with the Colville Hatchery O&M (#1985-038-00) and Rufus Woods Creel and Supplementation (#2007-405-00). However, the project also interacts with the Twin Lakes oxygenation project and Resident Fish above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams (#1997-004-00). The full scope of the interactions is not clear and needs to be better established. The relationship of this project to Tribal management outside of the BPA scope is not discussed. BPA funded trout rearing and stocking projects implemented by other sponsors are not identified. Standards for fish release, yield in fisheries, disease management, etc. established by the State of Washington, that may apply to this project are not discussed.

Emerging limiting factors: The proposal focuses primarily on limnological conditions, dissolved gas in Lake Rufus Woods and fish health concerns during net-pen rearing. Both of these limits need to be discussed in more detail in the problem statement and/or accomplishments section. The brief discussion of the health issues, in addition to dissolved gas, needs additional details.

Tailored Questions: Adequately answered and discussed.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

The general description of the primary deliverable consisting of purchasing triploid trout eggs from WDFW, hatching eggs and rearing fish to 22g, and then contracting for rearing to catchable size for a put-and-take fishery is clear. There needs to be quantifiable elements attached to the deliverables. For example, the explanation of how the deliverables meet the objectives needs additional detail. How will objectives 2 and 3 be evaluated, and what is the threshold for success?

4a. Specific comments on protocols and methods described in MonitoringMethods.org

Apparently, no protocols or methods were submitted to MonitoringMethods.org.

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/17/2012 1:13:29 PM.
Documentation Links:
  • Proponent Response (3/6/2012)
Proponent Response:

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

The Integrated Resource Management Plan ( IRMP) identified the Tribal memberships vision for the present and future management of their resources.   Colville Fish & Wildlife Resource Management Plan and Five Year Implementation Schedule contains broad visionary goals, objectives and strategies with specific metrics.  The Colville Fish and Wildlife Resource Management Plan provides specific goals for resident fish substitution under the Resident Fish Program.  The Net Pen Project assists in meeting goal RFG 4.0 in providing opportunities for consumptive and non-consumptive resident fisheries for native, introduced, wild, and hatchery reared stocks that are compatible with native resident fish management.  Sub goal RFG4.01 is to promote the Tribe’s cultural and subsistence fisheries using natural reproduction and hatchery supplementation. 

The Tribal Hatchery within this Management Plan has its own specific goal to provide significant fishery benefits while having minimal adverse impacts on long term productivity of naturally spawning fish and their ecosystems.  The CCT hatchery utilizes a sterile triploid stock in semi-terminal/terminal lakes and a few tributaries that are intended to have minimal impact on native redband stocks.  A basin wide survey assessing triploid and redband interactions is being proposed during this review cycle and should provide further guidance on triploid stocking in the future.

The Lake Rufus Woods Sub-Basin Plan, a section of the Intermountain Province (IMP) Sub-basin Plan , identified the loss of anadromous resources and converting the river system into reservoirs from the construction of Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams as one of the most important limiting factor for Lake Rufus Woods fisheries. The Net Pen project assists Province Level objective 1A goal to mitigate for fish losses from construction & operation of hydropower projects by providing resident fish substitution.  The project is transitioning from a mixed redband rainbow trout stock to a domestic triploid rainbow trout stock in efforts to minimize negative impacts (introgression) on native species.  This action addresses objective 1C3 & 2A3 in the sub-basin plan.   (“Lake Rufus Woods Subbasin Plan.”  In Intermountain Province Sub-basin Plan. Spokane, Wa., 2004.) 

Colville Tribes Resident Fish Program also follows the Artificial Production Review Guidelines developed by the Northwest Power Planning Council to annually evaluate the purpose of hatchery and net pen production within the sub-basin and identify any hatchery reforms that need to be instituted and budgeted.  This is also a goal within the CCT Fish and Wildlife Resource Management Plan (RFHG1.O2).

Linkages to the Lake Roosevelt Guiding Document and the Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Evaluation Project are not consistent with this net pen project.  The Net Pen Project is a substitution program for Lake Rufus Woods and inland waters of the Colville Reservation.  No fish from this project are released directly into Lake Roosevelt or any lake within the Sanpoil river or its tributaries in order to prevent any genetic dilution of the redband stocks that other Tribal projects are attempting to rehabilitate. 

This project is an extension of the Colville Hatchery Project (#1985-038-00).  In providing resident fish substitution as mitigation for fish losses, the project currently distributes fish at approximately a 50/50 ratio, half toward Lake Rufus Woods and half toward appropriate Reservation lakes.    Rainbow trout originate from the Colville Tribal Fish Hatchery where they are incubated, reared and marked before entry into the net pen.  Fish are NOT purchased and released into Lake Rufus Woods or Reservation waters from this project; instead fish are transferred from the tribal hatchery to the net pen.  Once they arrive at the net pen, project essentially begins. Fish are reared according to established rearing guidelines and project goals, then distributed to Reservation lakes and Lake Rufus Woods in the Spring. 

Technical Background:

The project provides rainbow trout to Lake Rufus Woods and Reservation waters as large one pound spring entry fish.   Since the inception of the project, the project has stocked Rufus Woods with 20,000 redband rainbow trout, North Twin Lake with 10,000 redband rainbow trout and South Twin with 10,000 redband rainbow trout (Table 1).  The tribes objective in the future is to increase net pen production as stated in the proposal to 100,000 triploid rainbow trout with the bulk of these fish stocked in Rufus Woods.  However,  other Reservation waters maybe be stocked with net pen fish that include:  Buffalo, Bourgeau, Little Goose, Round, La Fleur, Summit, Nicholas and Elbow. 

Annually, the Colville Tribes Fish & Wildlife's Resident Fish Stocking Plan is evaluated and adjusted to meet Reservation water needs.  Stocking decisions are based on results from creel surveys, gill net surveys and whole lake surveys that are performed by M&E staff from three separate projects, Lake Rufus Woods Creel and Supplementation (2007-405-00), Colville Hatchery O & M Project (#1985-038-00) and Twin Lakes Enhancement (#2008-111-00) 

The annual Resident Fish Stocking Plan, implemented by the Colville Tribal Fish Hatchery and the Rufus Woods Net Pen project,  is determined by a number of factors. 

  1. Management Objectives
  2. Desires of the Tribal membership
  3. Water quality
  4. Biological risks (hybridization potential, disease, competition, survival, water quality limitations).
  5. Monitoring and evaluation information (Angler pressure and success, relative weights, etc).

In waters where information is lacking,  indicators of fish health and historical information are used.  Historical information such as previously observed growth rates, relative weights, limited angling pressure data and historical stocking numbers are used to develop stocking numbers ateach specific location.

 

Table 1.  Resident fish hatchery stocking plan for inland waters of the Colville Reservation and Rufus Woods documenting net pen numbers, size and release location.

 Annual Stocking Plan 2011

 

Brief description with references of lost anadromous fisheries.

The Colville Tribes Resident Fish Program plays an important role in providing subsistence fisheries for the Tribal Membership.  Historically anadromous fish (salmon and steelhead) were the principal subsistence fishery, with resident fish playing a minor role.  However, the construction of  Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph Dams resulted in the extirpation of anadromous fish and consequently the loss of an anadromous subsistence fishery. As a result, resident fish became a significant and necessary alternative as a subsistence resource because of the extirpation of anadromous fish above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams.  ("Lake Rufus Woods Subbasin Plan.”  In Intermountain Province Sub-basin Plan. Spokane, Wa., 2004., Colville Fish and Wildlife Management Resource Plan and 5-year Implementation Schedule, Hrusha, C., CCT Fish and Wildlife Staff, Nespelem, Wa., 2005.). The Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPCC) recognizes the need for resident fish substitution programs to mitigate for losses of salmon and steelhead production above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams. 

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management 

 One of the goals of  The Colville Fish & Wildlife Resource Management Plan and Five Year Implementation Plan is to provide opportunities for consumptive and non-consumptive resident fisheries with use of hatchery supplementation and maximize return to the creel of hatchery origin fish where appropriate and consistent with native species conservation.   Specific metric associated with the plan include targeted sizes and angler CPUE where creel surveys are conducted; rainbow trout will average 342.9-mm (13.5 inches) fork length and a CPUE (catch per unit effort) 0.5 - 1 fish/hr., as catchable sizes. 

 South Twin Lake was stocked with 10,000 fish in 2011 from the net pen project and met specific metrics outlined in the CCT F&W Management Plan.   For example, the angler CPUE for South Twin Lakes in 2010 was 0.21/hr (below target goals) and increased to  0.88/hr (within target) in 2011 (Table 2), the highest rate in recent years. 

 Table 2. South Twin Lake Catch Rate and Average Size (g) 

S. Twin Annual Catch

  

Net Pen survival goal from entry to distribution  is  ≥ 75% to be considered successful.  High, sustained water temperatures in Rufus Woods caused the majority of mortality in the net pen fish.  In 2011, survival rate from the 2010 entry fish to distribution was 78.2%.  The current survival rate for the 2011 entry fish is 84.2%.

 The 2011 elevated gas levels in Rufus Woods caused a delay in the delivery of the net pen component from the hatchery to the contracted site.   Upon submitting Request for Proposals to both local aquaculture operations on Lake Rufus Woods, Pacific Aquaculture (PA) & Chief Joseph Fish Farms (CJFF), PA informed sponsor they were not interested in performing the sub-contract for fish rearing.  PA explained they had sustained heavy mortalities from the elevated gas levels and needed to focus on production and evaluating losses.   CJFF agreed they would rear fish for project.    Contractor was directed to follow the Columbia River Fish Farm (CRFF) feeding chart.  Chart is 20% less aggressive, feeding body weight percentages, than the Wild West Feed Chart that is used at commercial net pen operations.   Following the CRFF guidelines is particularly important during colder water temperatures.  Fish require less feed to maintain biological demands, feeding 20% more toward achieving growth during temperatures below 6° C may result in wasted feed and lower the FCR.  Sub-contract for fish rearing was administered and rearing plan and goals were discussed with CJFF Manager and agreed upon.

After contractors and sponsors responsibilities were outlined,  net pens were floated downstream from PA to CJFF site and 50,090 (4,749lbs.) redband rainbow trout @ 43 grams were delivered on August 8, 2011.    Sponsor completes monthly monitoring of project; sub sampling population, observing fish behavior, monthly meetings with contractor to discuss fish growth or to identify emerging issues, track mortalities and calculate FCR.  Monthly monitoring of the project is essential to ensure contractor's records are correct and project goals are achieved.  All project results are summarized annually in the project's progress report and attached in Pisces.  Quarterly status reports are also completed to update projects progress and detail any completed deliverables within Pisces.  Transitioning from redband stock to a triploided rainbow trout stock will occur in 2012, entry fish (juveniles) used for project will be Spokane stock purchased from WDFW.

Harvest estimates are unknown at this time because the first year of utilizing and assessing net pen fish was completed in December.  In the months preceding December project personnel were developing the current proposal for submission and did not have the time to analyze the data. 

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions for Type of Work (hatchery, RME, tagging

Although project does not specifically perform M&E to determine its overall success of supplementing targeted fisheries, Lake Rufus Woods Creel and Supplementation (2007-405-00), Colville Hatchery O & M Project (#1985-038-00) and Twin Lakes Enhancement (#2008-111-00) projects all assist in M & E.  

 

Table 3. Project Relationships

 

 

 

 

 NP Project Relationships 

 

 

Emerging limiting factors:

The elevated gas levels caused from spring runoff and management of the hydropower facilities at Grand Coulee Dam during 2011 caused high fish mortalities for local aquaculture facilities.  The Manager for Pacific Aquaculture estimates the event initially caused a 20% loss of production from mortality and escapement.  The issue of TDG was forecasted and identified early in the year by CCT biologists who made the decision to remove/distribute production from project before levels rose.  In the future, the Net Pen Project can project increases in TDG,  make immediate decisions and take actions to eliminate mortality.  The tribal hatchery must also be flexible to the TDG issues since they rear juveniles for project. 

High water temperatures in Lake Rufus Woods during summer months are also identified as a limiting factor.  High water temperatures, above 65°F, cause rainbow trout in a net pen environment stress.  Rainbow trout in Lake Rufus Woods subjected to high water temperatures or high dissolved gas levels have the option to descend to more favorable or optimum levels at increased water depths.  Unfortunately the net pen environment does not allow fish to take advantage of this option.  Instead, net pen fish can become stressed and are more susceptible to disease which can cause high mortality. Prior to high water temperatures, net pen biomass of 10,000kg of fish are split into two-separate pens to lower rearing densities.  During elevated water temperatures in Rufus Woods the % body weight fed is consistent with chart requirements, however feed days are reduced in efforts to help fish cope with increased temperatures.  As water temperatures rise, available dissolved oxygen lowers adding to fish stress level.  Increased stress exposes them to and makes them susceptible to bacteria and parasites resulting in increased mortalitiy.  Fish growth during elevated water temperatures is not a consideration; instead focus is on avoiding any stressors that would cause disease or mortality.  

CCT contracts with WDFW Fish Health Specialist Bob Rogers.  In 2010 and 2011 he identified the Columnaris bacteria on moribund samples from the net pen site and suggested treatment with medicated feed for 10 days.  Mortalities from disease began dropping dramatically after completion of treatment, but lingered around 75 fish a day for approximately two more weeks until water temperatures began dropping.

  • Original response did not mention these other somewhat obvious limiting factors; pen rearing capacity and budget.  Each of the project nets are designed to culture up to 13,000 kg of production.  Before entering the high summer water temperatures the project does not push this production limit instead fish are split into another net pen or a partial release is conducted to stay under the biomass threshold of 10,000 kg.  Budget limitations effect project expansion capabilities, capital costs, and staffing.

 

There are no WDFW formal guidelines we are aware of, particularly with resident fish programs.  Fish size and releases are based on WDFW’s Regional Biologist’s recommendations and are directed toward each individual water body.  WDFW Fish Health guidelines have been established to ensure the health and productivity of cultured fish.  The Colville Tribal Fish Hatchery follows these established fish health guidelines in maintaining healthy fish and preventing fish diseases. Bob Rogers (Fish Health Specialist) from WDFW is annually contracted through the Colville Hatchery O&M (#1985-038-00) project to assist in preventative, early diagnosis and suggested treatment of fish disease at the tribal hatchery.  Prior to transporting entry fish from tribal hatchery to net pen site, a sample of fish are sacrificed for dissection and analysis to ensure fish are healthy for transfer.  Fish Health Guidelines assist to avoid transferring diseased fish into waters where contamination may occur and begin an outbreak.  If the Fish Health Specialist determines fish are sick or diseased, they will not be transferred until they receive a clean bill of health.

 

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

 Work Elements and deliverables are stated in Pisces.  Objectives with metrics are identified in more detail below.  Harvest, catch rates, angler satisfaction and associated methods are detailed in the related M & E component of each project, (see project relationships) results summarized in below tables. 

Objectives:

  1.   Increase efficiency results in decreased cost per pound of fish released:

 This project is more cost effective at raising larger fish for Reservation waters than the hatchery.  The hatchery is limited by water and rearing space where as this is not a limitation for the net pens.   The plan to increase project's efficiencies is twofold.  1.)The transition from using the redband rainbow mixed stock to a domestic rainbow (triploided) stock will decrease the feed conversion ratio (FCR) by a minimum of 20%, which lowers feed costs.  2.) Expanding program numbers and/or pounds will decrease the overall costs per pound of fish raised.  Ultimately, cost per pound should be lower than cost to purchase from the local commercial aquaculture operations ($2.25/lb., 2011).  In order to be as cost effective as the commercial facilities, project needs to expand and rear a minimum of 175,000lbs. (not including initial capital costs).

  1. Increase feed efficiency by lowering feed conversion rate.  Target an FCR of ≤ 1.2:1 to obtain a 1-1.5 pound fish.
  2. Expand project; as expansion occurs cost per pound lowers.  Target cost per pound of trout ≤ $2.25 (commercial aquaculture/market rate in 2011) reared.

2.  Relieve pressure from the Colville Tribal Fish Hatchery

 As mentioned above the hatchery has limited water and rearing space available.  Annually, the hatchery production quota is 50,000 pounds of fish.  The hatchery was not designed to produce large numbers of catchable or jumbo trout, it is however effective at rearing fish for a put, grow and take fishery (fall plants) and stream plants.  The hatchery cannot effectively rear enough large, high quality rainbow trout for Reservation waters and Lake Rufus Woods.  The Net Pen project has been able to relieve pressure from the hatchery by taking a portion of rainbow trout production and rearing it to a large catchable size for Rufus Woods and Reservation waters.  The project also focuses more on supplementing the Rufus Woods fishery.  By stocking larger fish that have been acclimating in the reservoir, they may have better survival and enter targeted fisheries (short & long term).    

 a. Target net pen population minimum of  50,000 fish.  Of this component  ≥ 20,000lbs.of  fish are identified as spring entries to be distributed into appropriate reservation lakes.

 

 3.  Supplement fishery to provide harvest:

Total fish planted will be specifc to each water body, size and amount distributed will be outlined in the Annual Resident Fish Stocking Plan.

Monitor and Evaluation will be performed by projects previously identified (project relationships). 

  1. Harvested numbers should be ≥ 30% in Reservation lakes that are creeled.
  2. CPUE  between 0.5 - 1 fish/hr., according to objectives identified in the Colville Fish & Wildlife Resource Management Plan 
  3. Angler satisfaction

 Anglers from both North and South Twin Lakes in 2011 were  satisified with total catch and the average fish size was > 600 grams.  Tables 4 below summarizes M & E results for the Twin Lakes.

 

Table 4. North & South Twin Lakes Angling Hours versus Catch

Twin Lakes Angln vs catch

Table 5. North & South Twin Lakes 2011 Catch, Harvest, Return to Creel

 

Lake Rufus Woods data suggests net pen fish may stay in lake longer than purchased, floy tagged fish.  Fish purchased, floy tagged and released into Rufus Woods through RufusWoods Creel & Supplementation project, dissappeared in a couple of days through harvest or other means (CCT unpublished data).  However,  the 2011 net pen project fish released are continuing to show up in Rufus Woods creel.  Creel results for 2011 released fish are shown below (Table 6) (CCT unpublished data). 

Table 6. 2011 Lake Rufus Woods creel identifying Ad/CWT fish (RW Net Pen)

RW Creel NP

Between May and June of 2011, local aquaculture facilities on Lake Rufus Woods had an estimated escapement >115,000 fish that averaged 2.5 to 3 Kg each.  Fish escapes in previous years from one of the aquaculture facilities has driven the fishery and many anglers throughout the United States have claimed Lake Rufus Woods as one of the best destination trophy trout lakes.  We hypothesize anglers targeted these larger fish that escaped in 2011.  In a normal year with limited escapement from the local aquaculture facilities, the net pen fish return to creel results would increase.  It is encouraging these net pen fish released in February, April and May of 2011  are still showing up in Rufus Woods creel today.  However under current angler pressure these fish will eventually be harvested and eliminated from the system. 

Expansion of the Net Project will allow larger more frequent net pen releases into Lake Rufus Woods and distribution of spring plants into Reservation lakes.  Creel staff will monitor and results will be documented. In 2012,  an updated Lake Rufus Woods Management Plan is being developed and the Annual Stocking Plan is adjusted to meet upto date Reservation water needs. The Rufus Woods Net Pen Project, an extention of the hatchery project, goal is to provide subsistence and recreational fisheries to the tribal membership and sport fishery to non-members by supplementing resident fish through hatchery production.