Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 83639 REL 30: 2007-402-00 EXP NOAA SOCKEYE SALMON CAPTIVE BROOD
Project Number:
Title:
Snake River Sockeye Captive Propagation
Stage:
Implementation
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Mountain Snake Salmon 100.00%
Contract Number:
83639 REL 30
Contract Title:
2007-402-00 EXP NOAA SOCKEYE SALMON CAPTIVE BROOD
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
83639 REL 14: 2007-402-00 EXP NOAA SOCKEYE SALMON CAPTIVE BROOD
  • 83639 REL 42: 2007-402-00 EXP NOAA SOCKEYE SALMON CAPTIVE BROOD
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
PROJECT GOAL:

The primary project goal is to provide a captive broodstock to preserve the unique genetics of Snake River Sockeye Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka).  These traits include the ability to swim further inland (900 miles) and climb to a higher altitude (6,548 feet) than any other Sockeye Salmon in the world.  The population was listed as Endangered, under the United States Endangered Species Act, as it is the only remaining remnant of anadromous Sockeye Salmon in the Snake River Basin (92,960 square miles) and it was in danger of extinction (16 ocean-returning fish from 1991-1996).  Having stabilized the population in captivity, the project now focuses on its secondary goal of producing fish for recovering the population in its natural habitat.

The Salmon Subbasin Plan includes these future goals for Redfish Lake Sockeye:
• Natural spawning component of 2,000 adults, based on the NOAA Fisheries interim abundance de-listing criteria.
• Long-term return of 8,000–44,500 adults, based on management plans.
• For FY 2022 produce up to 1,000 maturing adults that can be released to spawn naturally or used to produce up to 600,000 eyed eggs for transfer to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game smolt production facility at Springfield, Idaho.

BACKGROUND:

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries), Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC), in partnership with Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) has been maintaining U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) listed Snake River Sockeye Salmon from Redfish Lake, Idaho in a captive broodstock program since 1991.  Captive broodstocks are a form of artificial propagation where fish are cultured in captivity for most or all of their life cycle.  These programs provide a safety net to prevent populations from going extinct.  Captive broodstock programs generate much higher egg-to-spawner survival (usually > 50%) than occurs in nature (usually < 0.2 %).  This higher in-culture survival of captive broodstock salmon enables them to produce a large number of eggs, fry, and smolts per generation for use in restoration programs.  This large number of progeny per generation is being used by the program to assist in the recovery of ESA listed Snake River Sockeye Salmon.

In the Salmon Subbasin Summary, federal, state, and tribal agencies repeatedly call for artificial production programs, like the Redfish Lake Sockeye Salmon captive-broodstock program, to meet goals and objectives (Section 5.2, Fisheries Needs 14 and 15).  The continuation of current programs, such as the Redfish Lake sockeye salmon captive broodstock program, is also a required reasonable and prudent action (Item 177) in the NOAA Fisheries 2000 FCRPS Biological Opinion, an Updated Proposed Action (Hatchery UPA 13) in the 2004 Biological Opinion on Remand (Sections 6.14.2.3 and 9.3), RPA 41 of the 2008 FCRPS Biological Opinion.  The 2019 FSCRPS Biological Opinion (section 1.3.2.1) calls for continued funding of the Snake River Sockeye Salmon hatchery operations as a required conservation and safety net hatchery action.  In addition, the implementation and refinement of captive broodstocks for the recovery of Snake River sockeye salmon have been identified as priorities in the 1994 Northwest Power Planning Council's (NWPPC) Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program (7.4A.1-3), are part of the overarching and regional objectives of the 2000 NWPPC Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program, and are priorities described in the 2015 NOAA Fisheries Recovery Plan for Snake River salmon.

Between 1991 and 2021, NOAA Fisheries has captively-reared the progeny of Sockeye Salmon that returned to Redfish Lake.  Captive propagation of these fish from fall 1994 through 2021 has resulted in thousands of prespawning adults; hundreds of thousands of eyed eggs; and thousands of juveniles being provided to IDFG for release to Stanley Basin lakes.  In addition, NOAA has provided millions of eyed eggs for grow out in smolt production actions designed to speed population recovery.  In upcoming years, the cooperative NOAA Fisheries/IDFG Redfish Lake captive- broodstock program should continue to provide large numbers of animals for use in recovery efforts.  NOAA Fisheries feels that continuation of the cooperative captive broodstock program is imperative to the recovery of Snake River Sockeye Salmon (NMFS 2015).

EXPECTED OUTCOME:

Because of the critically low naturally produced population size of Redfish Lake sockeye salmon, captive-broodstocks appear to offer the only hope to maintain the species while the recovery plan is being implemented.  The maintenance of geographically separate captive brood populations at Eagle, Idaho and Manchester-Burley, Washington will remain a key factor in reducing the risk of catastrophic loss of the Redfish Lake sockeye salmon gene pool from mechanical failure, human error, or disease.   The NOAA-Fisheries captive-broodstock project expects to produce up to 1,000 maturing fish during the current contract cycle.  It is anticipated the project will supply up to 600,000 eyed eggs for use in the smolt production programs during this contract cycle.  During this contract cycle the project will continue to maintain at least 1,000 fish from each of three broodyears in the safety net for this ESA listed stock.  In aggregate, these actions will continue to prevent the extinction of Snake River Sockeye salmon and produce fish for release in the rebuilding of this ESA listed species.
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
01/01/2022
Contract End Date:
12/31/2022
Current Contract Value:
$1,114,196
Expenditures:
$1,114,196

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

BPA CO:
BPA COR:
Env. Compliance Lead:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Order
Pricing Method:
Cost Reimbursement (CNF)
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Full Name Organization Write Permission Contact Role Email Work Phone
Barry Berejikian National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration No Supervisor barry.berejikian@noaa.gov (360) 871-8301
Debbie Frost National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Technical Contact debbie.frost@noaa.gov (360) 895-7757
Brad Gadberry National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration No Technical Contact Brad.Gadberry@noaa.gov (253) 279-0716
Kristen Jule Bonneville Power Administration Yes F&W Approver krjule@bpa.gov (503) 230-3588
Bryon Kluver National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration No Technical Contact Bryon.Kluver@noaa.gov (360) 731-7463
Donald Larsen National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Technical Contact don.larsen@noaa.gov (206) 799-4476
Cyndy Masada National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration No Administrative Contact cyndy.masada@noaa.gov (206) 860-3391
Desmond Maynard National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Interested Party des.maynard@noaa.gov (360) 871-8313
Jonathan McCloud Bonneville Power Administration Yes COR jmmccloud@bpa.gov (503) 230-3110
Jennifer McKenna Bonneville Power Administration No CO Assistant jmmckenna@bpa.gov (503) 314-8915
Alyssa Mische National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Technical Contact alyssa.mische@noaa.gov (503) 915-3711
Khanida Mote Bonneville Power Administration Yes Contracting Officer kpmote@bpa.gov (503) 230-4599
Robert Shull Bonneville Power Administration Yes Env. Compliance Lead rwshull@bpa.gov (503) 230-3962
Chris Tatara National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Yes Contract Manager chris.p.tatara@noaa.gov (360) 871-8304
David Venditti Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) No Interested Party david.venditti@idfg.idaho.gov (208) 465-8404x231


Viewing of Work Statement Elements

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Concluded
All Environmental Compliance Activities Complete A: 165. Obtain Environmental Compliance 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
FY 2022 Manchester Research Station Seawater Rearing Location Activities Complete B: 61. Manchester Research Station Seawater Rearing Location 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
See the deliverable specification above. C: 174. 2022 Annual Maintenance Plan for NOAA Sockeye Salmon Culture Facilities 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
FY 2022 Burley Creek Freshwater Rearing Location Maintenance Activities Complete D: 61. Burley Creek Freshwater Rearing Location 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Spawn, fertilize and incubate BY 2022 eggs F: 176. Spawn BY 2017 through BY 2020 Mature Fish and Fertilize And Incubate Their Eggs To Produce BY 2022 Eyed Eggs To Supply Smolt Production Facilities 12/31/2022 12/13/2022
FY 2022 Fish Culture Coordination Activities Complete G: 189. Regional Coordination- Fish Culture Activities 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Rear BY 2019 captive broodstock H: 176. Rear BY 2019 Captive Broodstock 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Rear BY 2018 Captive Broodstock I: 176. Rear BY 2018 Captive Broodstock 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Rear BY 2017 captive broodstock J: 176. Rear BY 2017 Captive Broodstock 12/31/2022 11/09/2022
Rear BY 2020 captive broodstock K: 176. Rear BY 2020 Captive Broodstock 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Incubate and rear BY 2021 captive broodstock L: 176. Incubate And Rear BY 2021 Captive Broodstock 12/31/2022 12/29/2022
Results of laboratory analysis M: 60. Analyze Springfield hatchery smolt samples for latent mortality assessment 12/31/2022 08/31/2022
PIT-Tag and adipose fin clip BY 2020 pre-smolts N: 158. PIT-Tag and adipose fin clip BY 2020 pre-smolts 04/01/2022 01/28/2022
Completed Annual Report Q: 132. Submit Final Progress Report For The Period January 2021 To December 2021 12/31/2022 09/15/2022
Project Mgmt. and Admin Activities Complete and submittal of new FY 2023 contract package R: 119. Manage Project And Prepare New FY 2023 SOW With Budget 12/31/2022 12/29/2022

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Sockeye (O. nerka) - Snake River ESU (Endangered)
  • 6 instances of WE 176 Produce Hatchery Fish
  • 1 instance of WE 60 Maintain Fish Health
  • 2 instances of WE 61 Maintain Artificial Production Facility/Infrastructure
  • 1 instance of WE 174 Produce Plan
  • 1 instance of WE 158 Mark/Tag Animals

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 165 Obtain Environmental Compliance
B 61 Manchester Research Station Seawater Rearing Location 10/27/2021
C 174 2022 Annual Maintenance Plan for NOAA Sockeye Salmon Culture Facilities 10/27/2021
D 61 Burley Creek Freshwater Rearing Location 10/27/2021
E 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA
F 176 Spawn BY 2017 through BY 2020 Mature Fish and Fertilize And Incubate Their Eggs To Produce BY 2022 Eyed Eggs To Supply Smolt Production Facilities 10/27/2021
G 189 Regional Coordination- Fish Culture Activities
H 176 Rear BY 2019 Captive Broodstock 10/27/2021
I 176 Rear BY 2018 Captive Broodstock 10/27/2021
J 176 Rear BY 2017 Captive Broodstock 10/27/2021
K 176 Rear BY 2020 Captive Broodstock 10/27/2021
L 176 Incubate And Rear BY 2021 Captive Broodstock 10/27/2021
M 60 Analyze Springfield hatchery smolt samples for latent mortality assessment 10/27/2021
N 158 PIT-Tag and adipose fin clip BY 2020 pre-smolts 10/27/2021
O 132 Submit Progress Report for the period January 2019 to December 2019
P 132 Submit Progress Report for the period January 2020 to March 2021
Q 132 Submit Final Progress Report For The Period January 2021 To December 2021
R 119 Manage Project And Prepare New FY 2023 SOW With Budget