Contract Description:
Passage of ESA-listed Fall Chinook Salmon during the Winter when the Juvenile Fish Bypass System is Not Operated
BPA Project Number: 2002-032-00
BPA Project Title: Fall Chin Passage at Lower Granit
Contract Number:
Contract Title: 2002-032-00 EXP USFWS FALL CHIN PASSAGE AT LOWER GRANITE DAM
Province: Systemwide Subbasin: Systemwide Projects
Performance/Budget Period: August 1, 2005- July 31, 2006
William P. Connor
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
4147 Ahsahka Rd.
Ahsahka, ID 83520
Phone:(208) 476-2242; FAX (208) 476-7228
william_connor@fws.gov
Diane Praest
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
4147 Ahsahka Rd.
Ahsahka, ID 83520
Phone:(208) 476-2222; FAX (208) 476-7228
diane_praest@fws.gov
Contract background section:
BACKGROUND
Juvenile fall Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha listed for protection under the Endangered Species Act mostly have an ocean-type life history. Fry emerge in the spring, grow rapidly, and migrate from the Snake River during summer. However, some of the later emerging and slower growing juvenile fall Chinook salmon fail to leave the Snake River as subyearlings, overwinter in the reservoir, and then resume seaward migration the following spring as yearlings (hereafter, holdover smolts). This is especially prevalent in the lower Clearwater River, which produces the latest emerging fry of present-day production areas. In recent years as part of other studies, researchers have compiled moderate amounts of unpublished data that suggests that wild juvenile Snake River fall Chinook salmon that holdover in the lower Snake River reservoirs contribute up to 30% to adult production. Existing data cannot be used to determine the specific time holdover fall Chinook salmon smolts pass dams in the Snake and Columbia River, but there is a good chance that passage occurs during late winter when fish bypass facilities are shut down. This means holdover smolts pass through the turbines and are susceptible to blade strike. Our new project will refine existing methods for determining the age and genetic lineage of holdover fall Chinook salmon, compile and publish the existing data on holdover fall Chinook salmon, and then document passage timing of holdover fall Chinook salmon smolts at Lower Granite Dam.
COORDINATION
Coordination with the agencies and tribes is necessary to avoid duplicating work and to make efficient use of existing resources and personnel. We will coordinate our research with the Bonneville Power Administration,Environmental Protection Agency, Fish Passage Center, Idaho Fish and Game, Idaho Power Company, National Marine Fisheries Service, Nez Perce Tribe, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U. S. Geological Survey, University of Idaho, and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
GOAL
Our research goal is to provide fishery managers with a complete description of holdover by juvenile Snake River fall Chinook salmon, so that the management implications of this atypical migrational behavior can be understood.
OBJECTIVES AND RATIONALE
Objective 1: Determine if holdover wild fall Chinook salmon pass Lower Granite Dam during the winter when the fish bypass systems are shut down.
Rationale: If holdover wild fall Chinook salmon pass Lower Granite Dam in the winter, it is likely that a high percentage of the fish are killed by turbine blade strike. Starting fish bypass operations in March, rather than in April, might lead to large increases in fall Chinook salmon adult returns to the Snake River. Objective 1 of our study will provide mangers with the data to decide if earlier operation of the fish bypass system at Lower Granite Dam should be considered.