Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 76910 REL 2: 1993-056-00 EXP UW ADVANCE HATCHERY REFORM RESEARCH
Project Number:
Title:
Advance Hatchery Reform Research
BPA PM:
Stage:
Implementation
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Basinwide - 100.00%
Contract Number:
76910 REL 2
Contract Title:
1993-056-00 EXP UW ADVANCE HATCHERY REFORM RESEARCH
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
76269: 1993-056-00 EXP UW ADVANCE HATCHERY REFORM RESEARCH
  • 76910 REL 7: 1993-056-00 EXP UW ADVANCE HATCHERY REFORM RESEARCH
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
Reasonable and Prudent Alternative (RPA) 63.2 of the FCRPS Biological Opinion calls for determining the effects of implemented hatchery reforms on salmon and steelhead populations. There is currently a specified gap in coverage for Upper Columbia River steelhead (RM&E workgroup June 2009 predecisional draft document and subsequent workgroups). This project provides for implementation and evaluation of major hatchery reforms identified by the RM&E workgroup for the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s, Winthrop National Fish Hatchery (WNFH). The required transition to local broodstock requires hatchery reform actions that i) can accommodate a later return and spawn timing, ii) induce proper smoltification, iii) promote high survival, and iv) maintain natural levels of fitness in the hatchery stock. Simply, transition to local broodstock cannot be successful without effective implementation of the hatchery reforms described in this proposal, which is part and parcel to the HGMP being developed by the USFWS for WNFH.

Steelhead in Pacific Northwest hatcheries are typically reared for release as 1
-year-old smolts, rather than the 2- and 3-year-old smolt life history patterns found in nature. High growth rates associated with accelerated hatchery rearing to a 1
-year-old smolt life history may contribute to maladaptive behavioral traits and reduced post-release survival, and may constitute a primary mechanism leading to reduced fitness in hatchery fish. The current proposal offers a unique
opportunity to evaluate genetic, physiological, and life history impacts of rearing
1- vs 2-year-old steelhead smolts. The study is cost effective in that it will be conducted using groups of integrated steelhead already being reared in
Washington tributaries of the upper Columbia River as part of ESA recovery efforts. The study will aim to provide husbandry solutions that will help increase fitness, and alleviate maladaptive traits of hatchery-reared steelhead. The design fills gaps identified in the FCRPS BiOp Reasonable and Prudent Alternatives 39, 63.2, 64.2. It will develop hatchery reform actions and best management practices for artificial production programs to make a net positive contribution to recovery of listed populations.  

Nearly all steelhead intervention programs within the Basin will require non-conventional rearing methods in order to minimize the fitness loss described by Araki et al. (2008and 2009) while achieving high smoltification and survival
rates. The methods developed and tested under this proposal will be transferable in real time to other intervention programs wrestling with the same issues (e.g., Touchet, Tucannon, East Fork Salmon River). The RME workgroup
indicated under RPA 64.2 that additional analysis may be needed to determine if supplementation programs are having a negative impact on recovery. Negative effects from ecological interactions constitute one of the primary concerns with
hatchery programs. This project will include a focus on the effects of hatchery reform actions on residualism, which can exacerbate competition and predation effects on natural-origin fish survival. Hatchery-induced residualism caused by early male maturity would make it nearly impossible to implement hatchery reform alternatives because controlling the proportionate natural influence (PNI) and other important parameters included in HSRG models cannot be controlled if residuals are maturing and interbreeding with natural-origin fish.

With the completion of the reproductive behavior, reproductive success, and gamete quality studies of S1 and S2 adult steelhead returning to the Methow River in FY 17, the project has two biological objectives: 1) Improve survival and reduce fitness loss in Columbia River steelhead smolts by minimizing unnatural selection on body size and other smolt characteristics, and 2) Identify behavioral and physiological traits under selection through laboratory-scale research to develop hatchery rearing methods to reduce selection.  Objective 1 has been greatly informed by the complementary results of our hatchery and laboratory scale research done under Objective 2.  At the WNFH, we have demonstrated that the S2 rearing methodologies for steelhead produce smolts with equal or greater survival and faster rates of outmigration than a yearling smolt program.  This has enabled the use of natural origin broodstock at WNFH to reduce genetic impacts of hatchery steelhead on natural origin steelhead.  However, some problems remain, including higher rates of precocious male maturation at WNFH when using S2 rearing than when using S1 rearing.  Our laboratory scale research has provided evidence for selection on rapid early growth under a S1 rearing regime, and that the selection may contribute to fitness loss of hatchery reared fish.  Our current laboratory scale experiments are testing alternative rearing regimes designed to minimize selection for growth, and investigating other traits under selection associated with rapid early growth.  But, project 1993-056-00 has come to the point where we can offer adaptive management solutions at the hatchery scale that increase the proportion of smolts produced by reducing the number of steelhead that residualize as parr due to insufficient growth and as precociously mature males.  Consequently, In FY 18, Objective 1 will implement an experiment at WNFH that compares a new rearing regime for steelhead to the standard S2 rearing regime.  The new rearing method sorts juvenile steelhead produced from natural-origin broodstock according to their growth rate approximately 8 weeks after ponding to hatchery tanks.  The fast growing fish will be raised as yearling (S1) smolts, while the slow growing fish will be raised using the S2 protocols established at WNFH. We will assess the proportion of smolts and precocious males produced under the new culture method and estimate their survival and travel rate during outmigration. Results will be compared to the BY18 S2 production group at WNFH.  In parallel, mechanistic laboratory-based research under Objective 2 will be conducted at the Manchester Research Station using hatchery steelhead produced from the local natural broodstock at WNFH. The FY18 laboratory experiment will test for family effects on seawater survival under the new sorting regime and will estimate heritability of growth and survival traits.  The control for the FY18 experiment will be steelhead raised as S1 smolts.
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
07/01/2018
Contract End Date:
06/30/2019
Current Contract Value:
$202,744
Expenditures:
$202,744

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 31-Oct-2024.

BPA CO:
Env. Compliance Lead:
Contract Contractor:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Release
Pricing Method:
Cost Reimbursement (CNF)
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Viewing of Work Statement Elements

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Concluded
Obtain Environmental Clearance A: 165. Provide environmental compliance documentation to BPA 06/30/2019 06/04/2019
Produce accessible, error-checked datasets B: 157. Increase steelhead smoltification rate and decrease residuals at WNFH. 06/30/2019 06/04/2019
Data on behavioral and physiological traits under selection through laboratory-scale research C: 157. Identify behavioral and physiological traits under selection through laboratory-scale research 06/30/2019 06/04/2019
Manage and administer contract D: 119. Manage and Administer Contract 06/30/2019 06/04/2019
Provide Data/Information to NOAA as needed for BiOp RPA report F: 202. Provide Data/Information to NOAA as needed for BiOp RPA report 03/15/2019 03/15/2019

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Upper Columbia River DPS (Threatened)
  • 2 instances of WE 157 Collect/Generate/Validate Field and Lab Data

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 165 Provide environmental compliance documentation to BPA 07/01/2018
B 157 Increase steelhead smoltification rate and decrease residuals at WNFH. 02/01/2018
C 157 Identify behavioral and physiological traits under selection through laboratory-scale research 02/01/2018
D 119 Manage and Administer Contract 07/01/2018
E 132 Assist with Progress Report for the period January 2018 - December 2018 07/01/2018
F 202 Provide Data/Information to NOAA as needed for BiOp RPA report
G 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA 07/01/2018