Show new navigation
On
Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 65089: 2011-006-00 EXP CHAMP - ECO LOGICAL RESEARCH - JOHN DAY
Project Number:
Title:
Columbia Habitat and Monitoring Program - (CHAMP)
BPA PM:
Stage:
Closed
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Basinwide - 100.00%
Contract Number:
65089
Contract Title:
2011-006-00 EXP CHAMP - ECO LOGICAL RESEARCH - JOHN DAY
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
60417: 2011-006-00 EXP CHAMP - ECO LOGICAL RESEARCH - JOHN DAY
  • 68527: 2011-006-00 EXP CHAMP - ECO LOGICAL RESEARCH - JOHN DAY
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
Amendment CCR 32471 is to authorize replacement of the planned purchase of 13 TopCon OS 105 (in the initial contract)  with 13 TopCon DS 205 instruments.    The project team has made a compelling argument for the change in model of equipment and BPA agrees with the recommendation.  See memo in attachment (Justification for TopCon DS 205).  The only  change is WE F.   A new line item budget is attached to reflect the increase in total contract value.

______________________
This contract is in support of a BiOp Fast track II project.

In support of habitat restoration, rehabilitation and conservation action performance assessments and adaptive management requirements of the 2008 Federal Columbia River Power System Biological Opinion (FCRPS BiOp), the Bonneville Power Administration is working with NOAA and other regional fish management agencies to monitor status an... d trends of fish habitat for each major population group (MPG) in the Pacific Northwest identified through the Endangered Species Act (ESA).   Status monitoring provides information on the quantity and quality of current habitat and thus maximizes spatial coverage with a given number of sample sites.  Trend monitoring is used to detect changes in habitat through time and thus requires repeat samples at given sites.  Minimizing sampling and measurement error is crucial in order to differentiate this variability from natural variability though time and space.  

In order to compare information across multiple MPGs, BPA is adopting a standardized fish habitat monitoring protocol, the Columbia Habitat Monitoring Program (CHaMP) for the Columbia River Basin monitoring programs.  CHaMP is a Columbia River basin-wide habitat status and trends monitoring program built around a single habitat monitoring protocol with a program-wide approach to data collection and management which meets FCRPS Action Agency (2010) programmatic prescriptions for habitat monitoring.    CHaMP will help BPA meet the requirements of the 2008 FCRPS BiOp and RPA 56.3.  This program will provide information on the status/trends in habitat conditions, and will support habitat restoration, rehabilitation and conservation actions, performance assessments, and the adaptive management requirements of the 2008 FCRPS BiOp.  In addition, the CHaMP meets RPA 56.3, RPA 57, and RPA 3 by characterizing stream and fish responses to watershed restoration and/or management actions in at least one population within each steelhead and Chinook MPG which have, or will have, fish in-fish out monitoring (identified in RPA 50.6).  The watersheds originally identified for CHaMP include: Hood River, Wind River, Toppenish, Klickitat, Fifteen Mile, Lower Mainstem JD, North Fork JD, Upper Mainstem JD, Middle Fork JD, South Fork JD, Umatilla, Upper Grande Ronde, Catherine Ck, Imnaha, Lolo Ck, Tucannon, Asotin, SF Salmon, Big Ck, Lemhi, Pahsimeroi, Wenatchee, Entiat, Methow, and Okanogan.  These watersheds were chosen to maximize the contrast in current habitat conditions and also represent a temporal gradient of expected change in condition through planned habitat actions.  CHaMP was implemented  in the first year of implementation FY11, in a subset of these subbasins, which are referred to as the pilot watersheds and include: Lower Mainstem JD, North Fork JD, Upper Mainstem JD, Middle Fork JD, South Fork JD, Upper Grande Ronde, Catherine Ck, Tucannon, SF Salmon, Lemhi, Wenatchee, Entiat, and Methow, In FY14, CHaMP will be implemented in these same Pilot watersheds but with a reduction in sampling intensity by ELR in the John Day watershed.  Coordination and support of CHaMP deliverables associated with additional watersheds beyond those included in the list of Pilot watersheds are outside the scope and budget of this contract.

CHaMP collaborators will be supported by cross-project data management, stewardship and analysis staff, annual pre- and post-season meetings, annual field protocol and data management tool implementation training sessions.  The project collaborators are also working with the US Forest Service PIBO staff monitoring program to coordinate on "efficiencies" with implementation of both the CHaMP and PIBO monitoring programs.  This work will continue through 2014.

(1)             Roles
CHaMP staff - refers to individuals under contract with BPA through the following list of contractors (e.g. TQ, QCI, SFR, Sitka) and includes Chris Jordan (NOAA) who is principle investigator of Project #2011-006.  Collaborators/Collaborating Agencies:  Refers to those contractors implementing CHaMP status/trend monitoring under Project #2011-006. First-Time Collaborators - Refers to collaborators whose first year of sampling is 2014.  Returning Collaborators - Refers to collaborators whose first year of sampling was 2011, 2012 or 2013.

Program Elements

(2) Sampling Design
A Generalized Random-Tessellation Sampling (GRTS) survey design was recommended by Crawford and Rumsey (2009) for monitoring habitat status and trend in the Columbia River Basin.  The GRTS design was initially developed under the EPA’s Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program and is a probabilistic sampling design that has been shown to be advantageous for generating habitat condition parameters with known statistical characteristics.  The CHaMP monitoring design follows a  GRTS design with a 3 year rotating 1-to-1 split panel structure to distribute sampling effort in space and time, and has management tools for sampling design.  Implementing a GRTS survey design correctly is critical to producing a final dataset with known statistical characteristics requiring the implementation of strict procedures during the site evaluation and selection process.  A GRTS Site Selection Protocol and Tool will be provided to each collaborator to support field crews with efficiently completing the process while strictly enforcing design requirements.  

(3) Field Sampling
Habitat field sampling will follow the Bouwes et al. (2011) protocol that will be modified in 2014 in response to the third Pilot-year "lessons-learned" and that was developed after a review of fish habitat requirements, interactions of processes that influence fish habitat, the spatial scales for the context of these interactions, and current monitoring programs.  The protocol has the greatest probability of being comparable to other protocols and most relevant to salmonids and has been designed to be applied across varying spatial contexts depending on the logistical constrains of the sites.  In areas where GPS signals can be obtained, along with aerial photos, habitat units within reaches can be superimposed onto aerial photos with a map grade GPS.  In situations, where a GPS signal is not obtainable, units can be referenced to aerial photos and supplemented with on the ground measurements.  All approaches use a GPS map-grade data logger and thus do not require new gear for differing spatial contexts across related approaches.  

(i) Standardized Crew Training: Sampling and Data Capture Tool
Standardized field crew training in the recommended methods will be provided/required of all CHaMP field crews.  This standardized approach will promote crew efficiency and improved standardization across the region.  In addition to agency-specific safety and other training, CHaMP staff will provide training to support cooperating agencies that implement the recommended habitat protocol.

(ii) QA/QC crews to do repeat sampling across all participating watersheds
Repeated sampling of habitat monitoring sites within the same sampling season has proven to be an important component of GRTS-based, watershed-scale habitat monitoring.  Repeat sampling assists with 1) quality assurance/quality control, 2) the assessment of crew variability as a component of variation, and 3) providing improvements to temporal variability recognition (i.e., trend detection).  Furthermore, repeat sampling will be important to CHaMP's research goals of testing the performance of the recommended protocols across the Columbia Basin.  To achieve these objectives, CHaMP will conduct repeat sampling visits for all watersheds in this program at 10 percent of all sampling sites during the low-flow index period.  No repeat sampling will be conducted in FY14.

(4) Data Management
For a monitoring program at the scale of the Columbia River Basin to be successful a robust data management system must be in place before initiating data collection.  Monitoring habitat in the CHaMP watersheds will generate a massive volume of data.  A system of data processing, storage, analysis, reporting, and distribution is available to meet the needs of a large-scale monitoring program, such as (a) documenting monitoring objectives, study design and intended analysis; (b) summarizing how, when, and where the monitoring data were collected, (c) supporting a range of analytical methods, such as hypothesis testing, time series analysis, structural equation modeling, and GIS support; and (d) adapting to changing requirements in the future.  The data system (see www.CHaMPMonitoring.org) includes a centralized data warehouse and web-based data discovery tool; data exchange and loading procedures; a database schema that defines data storage format; metadata tools; data capture, validation, and summary tools; quality control and assurance procedures; and data stewards who support the system.

(i) Field Data Capture Tools: Hand Held Loggers
Field crews will need applications to support data capture, review, summarization, and reporting and a suite of handheld and desktop tools to support both habitat and fish monitoring is available.  These tools have XML-based mechanisms to synchronize data.  This workflow includes documenting metadata about project and statistical design, entering survey event information and observations, performing quality assurance procedures, deriving metrics, and submitting data for archiving.

(ii) GIS Data Management and Geoprocessing
The large spatial scales that the CHaMP will cover means that assimilating and managing spatial datasets in GIS, accounting for the geomorphic context of sampling, and performing watershed or subbasin-scale analyses are important data features within these programs.  GIS data management support, coordination, and basic processing for monitoring programs that require data management guidance or processing assistance is available and development of geospatial models, the use of remote sensing technologies to collect continuous GIS datasets, such as LIDAR and aerial photos, and integrating field-based tabular data within a geospatial context is ongoing.  

(iii) Data Storage and Retrieval
The CHaMP will have multiple groups collecting data and it will be critical to have data accessible and available for use by all groups within the program.  The CHaMP data management system serves as a long-term storage facility for monitoring datasets including metadata and features online interfaces for searching, viewing, and downloading datasets and documents associated with the coordinated monitoring program.

(5) Reporting
In such a large and geographically dispersed program such as CHaMP it is important to have an annual review of the data collection events so that any issues experienced or lessons learned over the field season can be addressed in a timely manner and with each collaborators' input.  To that end,  collaborators will submit a summary of their field season to the CHaMP Lead Coordinator who will collate and summarize the data collected, logistics of implementation and lessons learned from each field season into the RM&E BiOp report. Due to the need to fully summarize data from the period 2011-2013, 2013 field season data, and incorporate management feedback from early 2014, the 2013 Lessons Learned report will be prepared under the FY14 contract period. The report will be used to inform full implementation in 2014, including any adjustments that may be appropriate on the design or scope of the project.  Subsequent Lessons Learned reporting will occur in at the start of the following contract year, i.e. the 2014 Lessons Learned Synthesis report deliverable will be produced in early FY15.

(6) Post-season Workshop
A post-season workshop will be held to address the questions and comments posed by the ISRP and the Council pertaining to CHaMP and to review the FY14 season, look at the data, discuss the protocol, review the draft logistics/lessons learned CHaMP Annual Synthesis report, and plan the next season. Topics covered could include a programmatic overview of CHaMP, an overview of the study design and objectives, review of the protocol and data management tools, and analytical approaches.
  
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
02/15/2014
Contract End Date:
02/14/2015
Current Contract Value:
$808,536
Expenditures:
$808,536

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 28-Feb-2025.

Env. Compliance Lead:
Contract Contractor:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Contract
Pricing Method:
Time and Materials
MarkerMarker
50 km
50 mi
Click the map to see this Contract's location details.

No photos have been uploaded yet for this Contract.

Full Name Organization Write Permission Contact Role Email Work Phone
Christopher Beasley Quantitative Consultants Inc Yes Technical Contact chris@qcinc.org (360) 620-2883
Nick Bouwes Eco Logical Research Yes Contract Manager nbouwes@gmail.com (435) 760-0771
David Byrnes Bonneville Power Administration Yes COR dmbyrnes@bpa.gov (503) 230-3171
Chris Jordan National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Supervisor chris.jordan@noaa.gov (541) 754-4629
Paul Krueger Bonneville Power Administration Yes F&W Approver pqkrueger@bpa.gov (503) 230-5723
Pamela Nelle Terraqua, Inc. Yes Technical Contact pamela@terraqua.biz (509) 885-8143
Jenna Peterson Bonneville Power Administration No Env. Compliance Lead jepeterson@bpa.gov (503) 230-3018
Meagan Polino Eco Logical Research Yes Technical Contact mtpolino@gmail.com (435) 757-7201
Kristi Van Leuven Bonneville Power Administration Yes Contracting Officer kjvleuven@bpa.gov (503) 230-3605
Sarah (Terraqua) Walker Terraqua, Inc. Yes Technical Contact sarah.walker@terraqua.biz (509) 662-4142
Michael Ward Terraqua, Inc. Yes Administrative Contact mike@terraqua.biz (509) 486-2426


Viewing 13 of 13 Work Statement Elements
Sort Order
WSEV ID
WE ID
Work Element Name
Title
Description
WSE Effective Budget
% of Total WSE Effective Budget
WSE Start
WSE End
A131772185Produce CBFish Status ReportPeriodic Status Reports for BPAThe Contractor shall report on the status of milestones and deliverables in Pisces. Reports shall be completed either monthly or quarterly as determined by the BPA COTR. Additionally, when indicating a deliverable milestone as COMPLETE, the contractor shall provide metrics and the final location (latitude and longitude) prior to submitting the report to the BPA COTR.$4000.05%07/01/201402/14/2015
B131773165Produce Environmental Compliance DocumentationEnvironmental Compliance documentationReview and evaluate existing NEPA compliance/permits to ensure coverage is adequate for any work to be performed during the next field season (if applicable). Ensure necessary documents are provided to BPA's Environmental Compliance group in sufficient time to allow for a compliance letter to be written prior to any work. Coordinate with appropriate agencies regarding any permits that may be required.$7,0000.87%02/19/201402/14/2015
C131774189Coordination-Columbia BasinwideCHaMP2d: Program Coordination (calls, reports, workshops, etc.)Successful implementation of CHaMP will require coordination with all CHaMP collaborators, as well as the as the Project Management Team (PMT), other fish and wildlife managers and policy makers. This generally requires frequent conference calls, meetings, and reporting. ELR is part of the PMT, implements CHaMP in two watersheds, and was instrumental in the design of CHaMP. Under this work element, ELR, will continue in the coordination activities to implement, review, and improve CHaMP.$42,1855.22%02/15/201402/14/2015
D131775189Coordination-Columbia Basinwide12.7 Participation in coordination of development efforts of CHaMPCoordination of the CHaMP project is being undertaken by several contractors who are experienced in working together and who must continue to work together for the entire project to be successful. These contractors include Terraqua, Inc. (TQ), Quantitative Consultants, Inc. (QCI), Eco Logical Research (ELR), South Fork Research, Inc. (SFR), and Sitka Technologies (Sitka). These contractors are overseen by Chris Jordan (NOAA) in his role as Principle Investigator and are known as the Project Management Team (PMT). This work element describes the minimum milestones for this group to work together coordinating the CHaMP project in 2013. One technical team that is required is a Data Management Advisory Team who will advise Sitka in the development and management of the CHaMP data management system. BPA is contracting with the Sitka Technology Group in FY13 (Project 2011-006-00, contract 55738) to manage and develop the CHaMP data management system and tools, a task which requires oversight/insight from the CHaMP Data Management Advisory team. This work element includes milestones that describe the timing of the input from the advisory team.$6,1000.75%02/15/201402/14/2015
E131776119Manage and Administer ProjectsManage and Administer CHaMP in the TucannonThis work element covers the management of on the ground efforts in the Tucannon watershed, including all staff associated with implementing the Columbia Habitat Monitoring Program (CHaMP) and any administrative work in support of on the ground efforts and in support of BPA's programmatic requirements such as metric reporting, financial reporting (e.g., accruals), and development of an SOW package (includes draft SOW, budget, spending plan, and property inventory) for annual contract renewal.$19,0352.35%02/19/201411/30/2014
F131777119Manage and Administer ProjectsCHaMP1.2: Bulk Equipment Purchase and MaintenanceThis work element allows Ecological Research Inc., to conduct a bulk purchase of necessary equipment for dissemination to collaborators working in watersheds identified for habitat monitoring under CHaMP. A bulk purchase of this equipment will ensure standardization of equipment type, cost savings, and that equipment is purchased and ready to go in time for the 2014 field season.$266,82333.00%02/15/201401/31/2015
G131778156Develop RM&E Methods and DesignsCHaMP 1.3: Protocol developmentProtocol development is an ongoing task as new information and lessons learned from implementation results in a refining of methodologies. The goal of this work element is to support ongoing development of the CHaMP protocol to clarify, revise and update methodologies through testing in the field in the winter/spring of 2014 prior to implementation in select watersheds across the PNW in the summer of 2014. Additional development will occur throughout the year to increase field collection efficiency,$57,1227.06%02/15/201411/30/2014
H131779156Develop RM&E Methods and DesignsCHaMP 1.4: River Bathymetry ToolkitThis work element allows for the continued development of the River Bathymetry Toolkit. The RBT is designed to sample the DEM generated from the CHaMP protocol and produce metrics that are commonly used or newly developed to described stream reaches,$7,4250.92%02/15/201401/31/2015
I131780156Develop RM&E Methods and DesignsCHaMP3c: Training StaffThis work element also allows for the development, coordination and implementation of a training program for CHaMP collaborators.$36,9444.57%02/15/201411/30/2014
J131781157Collect/Generate/Validate Field and Lab DataConduct CHaMP fish habitat surveys in the Tucannon watershedIn support of habitat restoration, rehabilitation and conservation action performance assessments and adaptive management requirements of the 2008 FCRPS Biological Opinion (BiOp), the Bonneville Power Administration is working with NOAA and other regional fish management agencies to monitor status and trends of fish habitat for each major population group (MPG) in the Pacific Northwest identified through the Endangered Species Act (ESA). BPA is adopting a standardized fish habitat monitoring protocol, the Columbia Habitat Monitoring Program (CHaMP) for the Columbia River Basin monitoring programs. CHaMP is a Columbia River basin-wide habitat status and trends monitoring program built around a single habitat monitoring protocol with a program-wide approach to data collection and management. CHaMP will capture habitat features that drive fish population biology and will result in systematic habitat status and trends information that will be used to assess basin-wide habitat condition and correlated with biological response indicators to evaluate habitat management strategies. BPA is implementing CHaMP in at least one population within each steelhead and Chinook MPG which has, or will have, fish in-fish out monitoring. The goal of this work element is to implement CHaMP in the Tucannon watershed. The data from this project will be used to evaluate the quantity and quality of tributary fish habitat available to salmonids across the Columbia River basin. When combined with parallel fish monitoring metrics from related projects, these data will also be used assess the impact of habitat management actions on fish population processes.$63,3897.84%02/15/201411/30/2014
K131782162Analyze/Interpret DataCHaMP7b: Data reduction statistical supportCHaMP collects an enormous amount of data from which several summary statistics can be created. This information can be used in a whole host of analyses ranging from partitioning of variance, developing fish habitat relationships, and assessing impacts of stream restoration and landuse. ELR has conducted these types of analyses with CHaMP and non-CHaMP data and thus will help develop appropriate summary information to address multiple questions that can be addressed with this type of data.$148,42418.36%02/15/201402/14/2015
L131783162Analyze/Interpret DataCHaMP7c: Statistical tool refinement and developmentCHaMP collects an enormous amount of data from which several summary statistics can be created. This information can be used in a whole host of analyses ranging from simulation modeling, partitioning of variance, developing fish habitat relationships, and assessing impacts of stream restoration and landuse. ELR has conducted these types of analyses with CHaMP and non-CHaMP data and thus will help develop appropriate summary information to address multiple questions that can be addressed with this type of data.$149,19118.45%02/15/201402/14/2015
M131784132Produce Progress (Annual) ReportContribute to and review CHaMP FCRPS BiOp RM&E/Project Lessons Learned reportTwo recent evaluations of research, monitoring and evaluation (RM&E) aspects of Bonneville Power Administration’s (BPA) fish and wildlife program found key areas for improving the usefulness of annual reports on RM&E projects. The Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s (Council) 2011 RM&E categorical review called for standardized annual reporting formats. Similarly, a second assessment funded by BPA reviewed existing monitoring results and noted the program would benefit from a standardized approach to annual reports, including uniform measurements and reporting. As a result BPA is adopting a new annual reporting system for Research, Monitoring & Evaluation results and a second report for sponsors with projects that support Reasonable and Prudent Alternatives in the Biological Opinion for the Federal Columbia River Power System, which will help BPA track and report progress toward BiOp goals. The CHaMP Lead Coordinator will work with collaborators to produce FCRPS BiOp RM&E reports for the CHaMP 2013 field season. This “lessons learned” annual report will be used to inform implementation in 2014 and 2015, including any adjustments that may be appropriate on the design or scope of the project. The CHaMP RME and BiOp reports will: a) provide regular synthesis and reporting of habitat status results b) compare these results to available fish status and trend information c) inform adaptive management improvements for CHaMP, including comparison with other similar efforts such as PIBO and Washington State monitoring protocols with the goal of achieving use of fewer key parameters, greater efficiencies and lower costs; d) support Action Agencies requirements for the 2013/2016 Comprehensive Evaluations; and e) be written to inform agency and tribal decision-makers and specifically address key management questions and decisions.$4,5000.56%03/01/201402/14/2015
      
$808,538
   

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Concluded
Environmental Compliance Documentation B: 165. Environmental Compliance documentation 05/31/2014 05/31/2014
Participate in the Coordination of CHaMP C: 189. CHaMP2d: Program Coordination (calls, reports, workshops, etc.) 02/14/2015 02/14/2015
Participation in CHaMP advisory team D: 189. 12.7 Participation in coordination of development efforts of CHaMP 02/14/2015 02/14/2014
Funding Package - Submit draft to COTR E: 119. Manage and Administer CHaMP in the Tucannon 04/15/2014 04/15/2014
All administrative tasks fulfilled with timely quality products F: 119. CHaMP1.2: Bulk Equipment Purchase and Maintenance 01/31/2015 01/31/2015
Development of CHaMP protocol G: 156. CHaMP 1.3: Protocol development 11/30/2014 11/30/2014
Development of the River Bathymetry Toolkit H: 156. CHaMP 1.4: River Bathymetry Toolkit 01/31/2015 01/31/2015
Implementation of training program I: 156. CHaMP3c: Training Staff 11/30/2014 11/30/2014
CHaMP habitat data from 25 sites in the Tucannon watershed J: 157. Conduct CHaMP fish habitat surveys in the Tucannon watershed 11/30/2014 11/30/2014
Summarize and analyze CHaMP data K: 162. CHaMP7b: Data reduction statistical support 02/14/2015 02/14/2015
Statistical and analytical interpretation of CHaMP data L: 162. CHaMP7c: Statistical tool refinement and development 02/14/2015 02/14/2015

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Loading...
Sort Order
WE ID
Work Element Name
Title
Description
Metric ID
Metric
End Fiscal Year
Planned
Actual
Contractor Comments
All Measures
Annual Progress Report Measures
Populations
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize
Loading...
WSE ID
WSE Start
WSE End
WE ID
Title
WSE Progress
Study Plan
Protocol
Category
Subcategory
Focus 1
Focus 2
Specific Metric Title

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Mid-Columbia River Spring ESU
  • 2 instances of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Snake River Spring/Summer ESU (Threatened)
  • 2 instances of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Snake River Spring/Summer (not listed)
  • 1 instance of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Upper Columbia River Spring ESU (Endangered)
  • 2 instances of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Middle Columbia River DPS (Threatened)
  • 2 instances of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Snake River DPS (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 157 Collect/Generate/Validate Field and Lab Data
  • 2 instances of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Upper Columbia River DPS (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Upper Willamette River DPS (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 162 Analyze/Interpret Data

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA 02/15/2014
B 165 Environmental Compliance documentation 02/15/2014
C 189 CHaMP2d: Program Coordination (calls, reports, workshops, etc.) 02/15/2014
D 189 12.7 Participation in coordination of development efforts of CHaMP 02/15/2014
E 119 Manage and Administer CHaMP in the Tucannon 02/15/2014
F 119 CHaMP1.2: Bulk Equipment Purchase and Maintenance 02/15/2014
G 156 CHaMP 1.3: Protocol development 02/15/2014
H 156 CHaMP 1.4: River Bathymetry Toolkit 02/15/2014
I 156 CHaMP3c: Training Staff 02/15/2014
J 157 Conduct CHaMP fish habitat surveys in the Tucannon watershed 02/19/2014
K 162 CHaMP7b: Data reduction statistical support 02/15/2014
L 162 CHaMP7c: Statistical tool refinement and development 02/15/2014
M 132 Contribute to and review CHaMP FCRPS BiOp RM&E/Project Lessons Learned report 02/15/2014