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Proposal Summary

Proposal RESCAT-1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery

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Archive Date Time Type From To By
11/17/2011 12:02 PM Status Draft <System>
Download 12/15/2011 2:22 PM Status Draft ISRP - Pending First Review <System>
2/16/2012 11:57 AM Status ISRP - Pending First Review ISRP - Pending Response <System>
Download 3/7/2012 8:50 PM Status ISRP - Pending Response ISRP - Pending Final Review <System>
4/13/2012 4:39 PM Status ISRP - Pending Final Review Pending Council Recommendation <System>
3/5/2014 2:16 PM Status Pending Council Recommendation Pending BPA Response <System>

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Proposal Number:
  RESCAT-1995-027-00
Proposal Status:
Pending BPA Response
Proposal Version:
Proposal Version 1
Review:
Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Portfolio:
Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Categorical Review
Type:
Existing Project: 1995-027-00
Primary Contact:
Deanne Pavlik-Kunkel (Inactive)
Created:
11/17/2011 by (Not yet saved)
Proponent Organizations:
Spokane Tribe

Project Title:
Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
 
Proposal Short Description:
White sturgeon populations in the upper Columbia River have experienced profound recruitment failure that seriously jeopardizes the future of white sturgeon persistence in the Transboundary Reach. The goal of the Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project is to work with US and Canadian government, industry and Tribal entities to conserve and restore white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach (Lake Roosevelt above Grand Coulee Dam to Hugh Keenleyside Dam, British Columbia).
 
Proposal Executive Summary:
White sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus, like many sturgeon species worldwide, have suffered declines in abundance and distribution. The subpopulation of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam is classified as Critically Endangered (CE) by the IUCN and listed as endangered under the Canadian Species At Risk Act (SARA) due to persistent recruitment failure. Recruitment failure in the upper Columbia River between Grand Coulee and Hugh Keenleyside dams (the Transboundary Reach) white sturgeon population was first documented during studies conducted in the early 1990’s in the Canadian portion of the Reach (the Keenleyside Reach). Similar results were obtained in 1998 in the Washington portion of the Reach (the Roosevelt Reach).

In response to increasing concerns over the threat of extinction, the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative (UCWSRI) was formed in 2000. The UCWSRI is an international organization with members from state, provincial, and federal fisheries agencies, Canadian First Nations, U.S. Tribes, and industry stakeholders in British Columbia and Washington State. The Initiative produced an Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Plan (UCWSRP) that is compatible with the ESA and SARA legislation. The goal of the UCWSRI, as defined in the UCWSRP, “is to ensure the persistence and viability of naturally reproducing populations of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River and restore opportunities for beneficial use if feasible.”

The Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP) is an ongoing project implemented to monitor population status and conduct recruitment failure research on white sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach of the upper Columbia River. The primary goal of the project is to conserve and restore white sturgeon in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River. Status of the wild population, including demographics, abundance, growth and condition, reproductive potential, distribution and movement, genetics, spawning behaviors, and early life history strategies have been examined through past project studies. Research into hypotheses implicated as possible mechanisms driving recruitment failure of the upper Columbia River sturgeon population have also been examined, and include hydro-operations, food resource limitation, contaminants, and habitat impacts. Interim conservation aquaculture actions have also been implemented in an effort to prevent extirpation of the population in light of 30 years of persistent recruitment failure. The ultimate goal of managers, to restore populations to a level that allows population growth through natural recruitment, is a long-term goal that requires immediate action to protect the remaining demographic and genetic diversity of the Transboundary population.

The LRSRP objectives are intended to complement work proposed by the Colville Confederated Tribes White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (WSEP; BPA 2008-116-00), and similarly to the WSEP, are consistent with objectives in the UCWSRP. Proposed objectives of the LRSRP are to monitor the status and trend of the Transboundary Reach white sturgeon population, and to identify factors limiting natural recruitment of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach.

Monitoring efforts proposed as part of the Upper Columbia core program objectives, include setline stock assessments, fall gill net surveys, water quality monitoring, acoustic telemetry, conservation aquaculture, public outreach, and data management. Conservation aquaculture activities are also proposed and are considered a core program component. Additionally, recruitment failure research has been proposed to examine proximate mechanisms (predation, food availability, and contaminant effects), and habitat-recruitment and habitat-mismatch hypotheses. This proposal will focus on objectives where LRSRP proponents are the lead, including core monitoring efforts, conservation aquaculture, and recruitment failure research into predation and food limitations. The LRSRP will provide support to WSEP objectives of data management, habitat-recruitment, habitat-mismatch, and contaminant hypotheses research.

Genetic evaluations have indicated that the Transboundary Reach is comprised of a single white sturgeon population. Stock assessments providing mark-recapture estimates of abundance and survival will need to be conducted in both the Roosevelt and Keenleyside reaches to provide a comprehensive stock assessment of the upper Columbia River population. Improved sampling methodology and support provided by WSEP will allow an extensive and statistically rigorous population assessment of the Roosevelt Reach. Further, coordination through the UCWSRI Technical Working Group will allow standardized and simultaneous surveys with Keenleyside Reach assessments (to be conducted by BC Hydro).

The LRSRP will also lead annual fall gill net surveys to monitor for natural recruitment of wild white sturgeon to the sub-yearling and yearling juvenile life stages, and to provide supplemental information for evaluation of the conservation aquaculture program through capture of hatchery origin juveniles. Fall gill netting will also be the primary tool used for evaluating the relative survival of experimental larval release groups to sub-yearling and yearling ages during empirical testing of the larval habitat mis-match hypothesis proposed under the CCT WSEP.

Water quality changes resulting from hydro-operations have been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. The LRSRP proposes to conduct long-term monitoring of parameters that directly, or indirectly have the potential to impact the survival and distribution of post-hatch sturgeon by installing water quality monitoring stations to collect abiotic data (ie. turbidity, temperature) at various sites in the riverine, transition, and upper reservoir zones of the upper Columbia River. The data will support WSEP habitat-recruitment relationship modeling efforts.

Over 100 adult sturgeon have been outfitted with long-life (10 yr) acoustic tags since 2007. The LRSRP proposes to use this pool of individuals to collect a long term data set on sturgeon spawning and movement that is meaningful in the context of the long life-span of this species using an existing Vemco telemetry array. Additionally, the LRSRP proposes to conduct a multi-year study of sturgeon spawning behavior in the Northport area through VPS technology.

A recent UCWSRI recruitment failure hypotheses assessment (Gregory and Long 2008) identified food resource availability as a potential limiting factor for early life stage white sturgeon in the Transboundary recovery area. The LRSRP proposes invertebrate sample analysis and additional sampling, with appropriate stratification, to assess community composition and abundance associated with habitat (habitat surveys proposed under WSEP). The LRSRP also proposes comparing histology of post-feeding white sturgeon collected during larval collection efforts for the conservation aquaculture program with reference specimens in order to identify potential starvation effects in wild fish.

Recent documented predation on larval sturgeon by sculpin and on a sub-yearling juvenile by a walleye indicates predation occurs in the river-reservoir transition zone in the Roosevelt Reach. The LRSRP proposes to evaluate predation impacts on early life stages of white sturgeon by periodically collecting potential predators from the transition zone from July through October. Predators will be collected using a combination of short duration gill net sets and trawling with sampling being stratified by depth and by time of day (during daylight and at night). Characterization of predation on white sturgeon will assist managers in developing actions to limit predator impacts in efforts to conserve and restore white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River.

The LRSRP proposes continuing conservation aquaculture activities to protect the population while recovery actions can be implemented to address limiting factors and allow natural recruitment to re-establish population growth. We propose to continue suspension of direct gamete take from broodstock in favor of collecting naturally produced larvae for rearing. Maintaining the genetic integrity of the Transboundary population is a critical component of conservation aquaculture actions. Genetic studies suggested that, while broodstock used in aquaculture program did not exhibit differing heterozygosity compared with wild fish, the technique may not protect rare alleles. Also, larval collections provide long-term early life history information.

The LRSRP also proposes to conduct public outreach activities in conjunction with co-managers and other researchers in the Transboundary Reach. The LRSRP will also provide support to proposed Transboundary sturgeon objectives where other organizations and projects are the lead entities, including recruitment failure hypotheses testing and core data management activities proposed by the CCT WSEP.

Purpose:
Habitat
Emphasis:
RM and E
Species Benefit:
Anadromous: 0.0%   Resident: 100.0%   Wildlife: 0.0%
Supports 2009 NPCC Program:
Yes
Subbasin Plan:
Fish Accords:
None
Biological Opinions:
None

Describe how you think your work relates to or implements regional documents including: the current Council’s 2014 Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program including subbasin plans, Council's 2017 Research Plan,  NOAA’s Recovery Plans, or regional plans. In your summary, it will be helpful for you to include page numbers from those documents; optional citation format).
Project Significance to Regional Programs: View instructions
Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document and Management Plans The Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP) goals and objectives are consistent with Lake Roosevelt co-manager (STOI, CCT, and WDFW) goals as defined by the technical draft of the Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document (LRMT 2009). The primary goal of the co-managers is to conserve, enhance and restore native species in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River (LRMT 2009). The LRSRP proposal supports manager goals through critical monitoring and research activities, protection and restoration of critical habitats, and conservation aquaculture. Particular emphasis will be placed on white sturgeon status assessment, and determination of factors limiting white sturgeon recruitment in the study area. The LRSRP also proposes continuing conservation hatchery program activities designed to protect the population while recovery actions can be implemented to address limiting factors and allow natural recruitment to re-establish population growth. Additionally, the white sturgeon appendix to the Guiding Document recommends using the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative (UCWSRI) Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002) as a guide to direct sturgeon recovery efforts in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River. NPCC Fish and Wildlife Program: The LRSRP is consistent with the Northwest Power Act and Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPCC) 2009 Fish and Wildlife Program (FWP) goals to “protect, mitigate, and enhance fish and wildlife, including related spawning grounds and habitat on the Columbia River and its tributaries . . . affected by the development, operation , and management of [hydroelectric projects]” (NPCC 2009). The LRSRP goal to conserve and restore white sturgeon populations in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River is consistent with provisions to address resident fish losses in the Columbia Basin under the FWP. FWP basin-level objectives that specifically pertain to the LRSRP goals are to “maintain and restore healthy ecosystems and watersheds that preserve functional links among ecosystem elements to ensure the continued persistence, health and diversity of all species including game fish species, non-game fish species, and other organisms”, to “protect and expand habitat and ecosystem functions in order to increase the abundance, productivity, and life history diversity of resident fish at least to the extent that resident fish have been affected by the development and operation of the Hydrosystem” and to “achieve within 100 years population characteristics of resident fish species that represent on average full mitigation for losses of resident fish” (NPCC 2009). Actions persistently recommended at all levels of the FWP, including the Intermountain Province, call for protection, restoration, and enhancement of fish habitat for native resident fish. LRSRP goals and objectives focus on evaluation of current stock status and identification of factors limiting white sturgeon recruitment to the population, with the intent to provide critical information for management of the species, and implementation of actions that will address limiting factors. As such, these goals and objectives are consistent with Intermountain Province Objectives 1B) protect and restore in-stream and riparian habitat to maintain functional ecosystems for resident fish, including addressing the chemical, biological, and physical factors influencing aquatic productivity; 2B) focus restoration efforts on habitats and ecosystem conditions and functions that will allow for expanding and maintaining diversity within, and among, species in order to sustain a system of robust populations in the face of environmental variation; and 1C6) restore resident fish species (subspecies, stocks and populations) to near historic abundance throughout their historic ranges where suitable habitat conditions exist and/or where habitats can be restored. Further, the LRSRP goal and objectives are consistent with Spokane Subbasin objective 2A1) conduct baseline investigations to determine native resident fish stock composition, distribution, and relative abundance in the Subbasin, including actions to populate existing databases and develop new databases as appropriate. The LRSRP objectives are also consistent with upper Columbia Subbasin objective 2A1) protect the genetic integrity of all focal and native fish species throughout the subbasin, strategy a) determine genetic distribution of native focal species of white sturgeon, identify limiting factors, and develop strategies for addressing limiting factors. The information collected by LRSRP is essential to assisting researchers with understanding parameters that have led to the decline of white sturgeon in the Upper Columbia Subbasin, and crucial to development of strategies designed to conserve and protect the population. The Spokane and Upper Columbia Subbasin Plans also recommend using the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002) as a guide to developing objectives for the U.S. portion of the Transboundary Reach, and support implement of the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002). The Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002) identified the immediate implementation of a conservation aquaculture program as critical to preserving the remaining demographic and genetic diversity of the population and to rebuild the natural age-class structure lost during the recruitment failures of the last 30 years (UCWSRI 2002, Recovery Plan Measure 5.5.3). The breeding plan identified the necessity of maintaining genetic diversity through annual production of sturgeon from both the Roosevelt Reach and the Keenleyside Reach (UCWSRI 2002, Technical Appendix 7.0). Managers are attempting to work through the 3-step process implemented by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council to build a dedicated conservation hatchery for the Roosevelt Reach population (BPA Project 2007-372-00). As an interim measure, the LRSRP has developed a conservation aquaculture program that will preserve the U.S. portion of the breeding population, and provide a failsafe for Canadian production efforts. The current program is intended to continue only on an interim basis until managers can complete the 3-step process. This process has been delayed due to various obstacles, resulting in limited forward progress through the 3-step process, but great improvement in knowledge of direction we should be taking under the 3-step process to ensure the dedicated aquaculture facility meets management objectives. Conservation aquaculture efforts are also addressed by the Spokane Subbasin objective 2C2) assess need for conservation aquaculture facilities to assist with enhancing or re-establishing healthy, self-sustaining native fish populations for reproduction, recreation, and subsistence; and the associated strategy to enhance populations of sensitive native resident fish, such as white sturgeon, through habitat improvements and artificial production, in concert with recovery plans. Further, the Upper Columbia strategy to enhance white sturgeon populations through habitat improvements and artificial production, in concert with the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Plan, also indicates the importance of conservation aquaculture, in addition to detecting limiting factors, to sturgeon recovery efforts in the upper Columbia River ecoregion. The Upper Columbia Subbasin Plan also identifies the need to implement a marking program to identify hatchery-produced fish from wild fish as a strategy under objective 2A2) to maintain, restore and enhance wild populations of native fish, and subsistence species to provide for harvestable surplus. The UCWSRI Recovery Plan also recognizes the need to individually mark all hatchery fish released into the recovery area so managers are able to assess and manage aquaculture programs. The LRSRP utilizes PIT tags and scute marking to identify hatchery origin sturgeon released into Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River. Upper Columbia United Tribes Measures Under the NPCC Subbasin Plans: In addition to basin-wide, province and subbasin goals, objectives, and strategies, specific measures were developed by the Upper Columbia United Tribes to address needs in the Intermountain Province. The Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project addresses the Spokane Tribe of Indians Aquatic Measure 2) as partial mitigation for resident fish losses, fund baseline assessments of white sturgeon populations and associated habitats in Lake Roosevelt from Grand Coulee Dam to the international border, including the Spokane Arm of Lake Roosevelt. Current project objectives and deliverables align with tasks identified under the measure, including assessment of population size, age class abundance, age/length frequency, recruitment rate, mortality, distribution and migration patterns, life history characteristics, habitat use, factors affecting abundance, and feasibility of developing a dedicated conservation aquaculture facility. The measure also advocates implementing research, monitoring, evaluation, and recovery measures cooperatively with Canadian sturgeon researchers and managers, using the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative Recovery Plan as a guide. Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative: The Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative (UCWSRI) is an international organization comprised of U.S and Canadian representatives from government, First Nations/Tribes, and industry. The UCWSRI produced the UCWSRI Recovery Plan in 2002, which outlined various short-, mid-, and long-term measures deemed necessary to prevent the extinction of white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam (UCWSRI 2002). The LRSRP will operate within the framework of the UCWSRI Plan (UCWSRI 2002) as part of a cooperative recovery effort for the Transboundary Reach (i.e. the Columbia River between Grand Coulee and Hugh Keenleyside Dams) white sturgeon population. The UCWSRI Recovery Plan is currently under review to assess status of recovery efforts to date, and a revised Recovery Plan is in progress. Project proponents from Lake Roosevelt sturgeon recovery projects are members of the UCWSRI Technical Work Group subcommittee tasked with reviewing and guiding Recovery Plan revisions to ensure it meets both US and Canadian sturgeon recovery goals. The goal of the UCWSRI as defined in the UCWSRP “… is to ensure the persistence and viability of naturally-reproducing populations of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River and restore opportunities for beneficial use if feasible” (UCWSRI 2002), with the ultimate long-term objective [within 50 years] of “re-establishing natural population age structure, target abundance levels, and beneficial uses through self-sustaining recruitment in two or more recovery areas” (UCWSRI 2002). Short-term objectives of the plan include completing a population status assessment, and to take action “to prevent further reductions in white sturgeon distribution, numbers, and genetic diversity within the current geographic range” (UCWSRI 2002). Medium-term objectives include determination of “survival limitations (bottlenecks) for remaining supportable populations and to establish feasible response measures to reduce or eliminate limitations” (UCWSRI 2002). The UCWSRI and LRSRP will also support recovery objectives outlined in the Canadian National Recovery Strategy (NRTWS 2007) including; 1) prevent extirpation of white sturgeon in each of the four identified populations [includes the upper Columbia River population whose distribution extends on both the WA and BC sides of the international border also known as the Transboundary population] by preventing net loss of reproductive potential; 2) for dam affected populations [includes Transboundary population] initiate recruitment restoration tests within 5 years and achieve sufficient natural recruitment for population maintenance within 10 years. Natural recruitment is defined as recruitment of 1 year old progeny from natural spawning and rearing in the wild (i.e., excludes hatchery supplementation); 3) reach or exceed all of the following population and distribution targets for conservation within 50 years: a) 1000 mature individuals in an approximately 1:1 sex ratio at maturity, b) distribution over the natural range, with the exception of Duncan Reservoir and Slocan Lake, c) ongoing natural recruitment sufficient to meet all other targets; 4) reach or exceed population and distribution targets for beneficial use within specified timeframes. As success is achieved in meeting the biological recovery targets, the beneficial use targets and timelines will be established and adjusted. Such targets may vary among populations. MERR & Implementation Strategies The Monitoring, Evaluation, Research, and Reporting (MERR) Plan strives to complement existing and future activities of Federal, State, and Tribe’s fish and wildlife agencies by building onto existing processes and structures, with the ultimate goal of answering programmatic questions developed by the NPCC to inform Congress of FWP progress. Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project proponents were involved in the development of the MERR Plan’s implementation strategies, to ensure that management goals and objectives to conserve and restore upper Columbia white sturgeon populations are met. Project objectives to examine the current status of white sturgeon through abundance surveys, telemetry, and year-class survival in the upper Columbia River will assist in determining whether “Columbia River Basin fish and wildlife are abundant, diverse, productive, spatially distributed, and sustainable” through the associated high level and FWP indicators aimed at assessing the abundance of focal resident fish species in the Columbia River Basin. Additionally, objectives to assess sub-yearling sturgeon population status will address whether the “actions implemented by the NPCC FWP are having the expected biological effect on fish and wildlife and their habitats” through associated high level and FWP indicators to assess abundance of sturgeon in relation to predation. Further, the LRSRP proposes to address crucial data gaps aimed at characterizing and quantifying aquatic habitat availability and use by all life-stages of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. The projects also intend to examine contaminant distribution and toxicity as it relates to habitat in the study area. The LRSRP also addresses the NPCC programmatic question examining whether NPCC actions are coordinated within the FWP and with other programs through close coordination with other researchers and managers in the upper Columbia River ecosystem, as well as those found in throughout the Columbia River Basin. The MERR implementation strategies, Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document, and the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002, revised version in progress) were developed in conjunction with lower Columbia River managers, and upper Columbia River and Canadian partners. Columbia River Basin Research Plan The LRSRP addresses crucial data gaps constraining insight into factors limiting white sturgeon recruitment in the upper Columbia River. Resolving data gaps aligns with the NPCC Research Plan (2006) goal to “inform decision-making and management actions to conserve and recover fish and wildlife addressed in the NPCC FWP by identifying and helping to resolve critical uncertainties”. The proposed objectives and strategies of the LRSRP were developed through interactions with other research plan architects in the Pacific Northwest, and as such are aligned with the MERR Implementation strategies and the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002). White sturgeon researchers and managers in the upper Columbia River worked cooperatively to develop cohesive monitoring protocols that allow holistic approaches to population assessments, distribution patterns, spawn monitoring, and other fisheries parameters throughout the study area regardless of political boundaries. These protocols have been input into the Pacific Northwest Aquatic Monitoring Partnership (PNAMP) website MonitoringMethods.org, to be reviewed by the Independent Scientific Review Panel and other scientists in the Columbia River Basin, which supports NPCC Research Plan (2006) objectives to eliminate redundancies, facilitate collaborative projects, and improve communication among scientists and coordination of long-term monitoring activities. Further, the cooperative nature of the Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia River white sturgeon recovery efforts identifies data sharing and management as an integral component to successful project progress. The LRSRP addresses specific questions identified by the NPCC Research Plan (2006), including [paraphrased for non-anadromous species] hydrosystem critical uncertainties examining the effect of flow stabilization, flow characteristics, and channel features on resident fish stocks, and the ecological effects of hydrosystem operations on fish populations. Tributary and mainstem habitat critical uncertainties addressed by the Lake Roosevelt sturgeon recovery projects includes examining to what extent tributary habitat restoration actions affect the survival, productivity, distribution, and abundance of native fish populations, and determining the impacts of hydrosystem operations on mainstem habitats (NPCC 2006). The LRSRP addresses population structure and diversity critical uncertainties through support of efforts to determine what approaches to population recovery and habitat restoration are most effective in regaining meta-population structure and diversity that will increase viability of fish in the Columbia River Basin, and how artificial production and supplementation impact the maintenance or restoration of an ecologically functional meta-population structure (NPCC 2006). Comprehensive Sturgeon Management Plan A comprehensive sturgeon management plan has been recommended for development by the NPCC. The NPCC staff memo dated 6/30/2011; subject line; “Briefing on Lamprey and White Sturgeon; follow-up RME/AP activities”, concluded that the plan should include; “a description of what we know and do not know about sturgeon life history, status, limiting factors, and current and past programs and activities. The plan should also describe results and conclusions from past work and to the extent to which both previous and future work has or will benefit sturgeon and other fish and wildlife. Within the planning area from the mouth of the Columbia Upstream to Priest Rapids on the mainstem and up to Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River, this comprehensive management plan should describe for sturgeon a comprehensive and integrated vision, goals, critical uncertainties, and risks related to uncertainties, research needs, strategies, and related provisions. The plan should also include summary information for sturgeon areas above Priest Rapids and Lower Granite.” The Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia River white sturgeon recovery projects will be able to provide information in development of the summary of sturgeon activities in the blocked region. Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative (UCWSRI) will work cooperatively to revise the current UCWSRI Recovery Plan (2002) to comprehensively address white sturgeon recovery in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River from Grand Coulee Dam, US to Hugh Keenleyside Dam, BC, Canada.
In this section describe the specific problem or need your proposal addresses. Describe the background, history, and location of the problem. If this proposal is addressing new problems or needs, identify the work components addressing these and distinguish these from ongoing/past work. For projects conducting research or monitoring, identify the management questions the work intends to address and include a short scientific literature review covering the most significant previous work related to these questions. The purpose of the literature review is to place the proposed research or restoration activity in the larger context by describing work that has been done, what is known, and what remains to be known. Cite references here but fully describe them on the key project personnel page.
Problem Statement: View instructions

White sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus, like many sturgeon species worldwide, have declined in abundance and distribution (Birstein 1993; Rosenthal 2008; IUCN 2011; Beamesderfer et al. 1995; Musick et al. 2000; UCWSRI 2002; McAdam et al. 2005). The Kootenai(y) River population was listed as endangered under the both the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) (USFWS 1999; Ireland et al. 2002; Paragamian et al. 2005) and the Canadian Species at Risk Act (SARA) (Wood et al. 2007). The upper Fraser River, Nechako River, and Columbia River populations were also listed as endangered under SARA. Declines in white sturgeon populations have been variously attributed to hydropower development (i.e. changes in the hydrograph, habitat loss, water quality degradation, blockages, predation), over-harvest, and contaminants (Parsley and Beckman 1994; Kruse and Scarnecchia 2002; Paragamian et al. 2001; Parsley et al. 2002; UCWSRI 2002; Gadomski and Parsley 2005a; McAdam et al. 2005; Paragamian et al. 2005).

 In addition to being listed as endangered in Canada under SARA, the subpopulation in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam is classified as Critically Endangered (CE) by the IUCN (2011) due to persistent recruitment failure. Recruitment failure in the upper Columbia River between Grand Coulee and Hugh Keenleyside dams (hereafter termed the Transboundary Reach) white sturgeon population was first documented during studies conducted in the early 1990’s in the Canadian portion of the Reach (hereafter termed the Keenleyside Reach) (Hildebrand and English 1991; R.L.&L.1994; Hildebrand et al. 1999). Similar results were obtained in 1998 in the Washington portion of the Reach (hereafter termed the Roosevelt Reach; Figure 1) during a cooperative setline and gill net survey conducted by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW), and the Spokane Tribe of Indians (STOI) that sampled an aged white sturgeon population (Devore et al. 2000) (Figure 2). In that same year, a trawl survey completed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) (Kappenman et al. 2000) in the upper stretches of the Roosevelt Reach failed to capture white sturgeon sub-yearlings or juveniles.

Fig1

Figure 1.  The Roosvelt Reach of the Columbia River.

 

Fig2

 Figure 2. Length-frequency distributions of white sturgeon captured during pre-LRSRP Transboundary Reach stock assessment surveys (setline and gill net) that demonstrated the lack of natural recruitment. Figure taken from UCWSRI (2002).

 

In response to increasing concerns over the threat of extinction, the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative (UCWSRI) was formed in 2000. The UCWSRI is an international organization with members from state, provincial, and federal fisheries agencies, Canadian First Nations, U.S. Tribes, and industry stakeholders in British Columbia and Washington State. The Initiative produced an Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Plan (UCWSRP) that is compatible with the ESA and SARA legislation (UCWSRI 2002). The goal of the UCWSRI, as defined in the UCWSRP (UCWSRI 2002), “is to ensure the persistence and viability of naturally-reproducing populations of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River and restore opportunities for beneficial use if feasible.”

The UCWSRP includes short-, medium-, and long-term objectives for achieving recovery. The short-term (within 5 years) objective is “to assess population status and act to prevent further reductions in white sturgeon distribution, numbers, and genetic diversity within the current geographic range.” The medium-term (within 10 years) objective is “to determine survival limitations (bottlenecks) for remaining supportable populations and establish feasible response measures to reduce or eliminate limitations.” The long-term (within 50 years) objective is “to re-establish natural population age structure, target abundance levels, and beneficial uses through self sustaining recruitment in two or more recovery areas.” The UCWSRP also outlined measures required to meet the recovery objectives (UCWSRI 2002) that included controlling direct sources of mortality, immediate implementation of a conservation aquaculture program, assessment of the existing population including genetic stock structure, and a research program directed at diagnosing and correcting recruitment failure.  Since the implementation of the UCWSRP, substantial progress, summarized below, has been made toward achieving short-term objectives.

CONTROLLING MORTALITY

Direct sources of mortality were controlled through regulations prohibiting angling and regulation enforcement, and as well as improved operations at hydropower facilities in British Columbia. Recreational angling for white sturgeon in the Keenleyside Reach was prohibited beginning in 1996. The WDFW prohibited the harvest of white sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach in 1995, but catch and release fishing was allowable until it was finally prohibited in 2001. While protection of white sturgeon spawning stock through harvest regulations has been successfully employed to increase production in some populations following stock collapse (i.e. the populations below Bonneville Dam [Columbia River], Hells Canyon Reach of the Snake River, and, to a lesser degree of success, in the mid-Columbia River impoundments downstream from McNary Dam), other stocks continue to decline despite catch and release regulations or complete closures (e.g. the Transboundary Reach of the Columbia River and the Kootenai(y) River populations [Parsley et al. 2002]).

POPULATION STATUS

Age-0 juvenile to adult (wild fish)

Initial assessments of population status in the Roosevelt Reach following the completion of the UCWSRP have been accomplished through a combination of setline, gillnet, and acoustic telemetry.

LRSRP stock assessment surveys using standardized baited setlines were conducted in in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, and 2009.  The initial 2004 and 2005 surveys (Howell and McLellan 2007a; Howell and McLellan 2007b) were performed during the early spring (April and May) and were confined to the upper third of the Roosevelt Reach.  Efforts were limited to this area based on: 1) insufficient funding to sample the entire reservoir; 2) the observation that the majority of fish (92%) were capture in this area during the 1998 summer/fall reservoir setline survey (DeVore et al. 2000); and 3) previous telemetry studies that indicated sturgeon overwinter in this area (Brannon and Setter 1992) and thus spring sampling would therefore likely provide a representative geographic sample of the general population. 

Surveys in 2007, 2008, and 2009 setline surveys were undertaken to address the potential sources of bias in the 2005 and 2006 surveys and evaluate previous assumptions about sturgeon distribution within the Roosevelt Reach. Whereas the 2004 and 2005 surveys utilized a haphazard sampling strategy in order to maximize catch rates, surveys 2007-2009 incorporated a spatially balanced, general random tessellation stratified design (GRTS; Stevens and Olsen 2003).  The 2007 survey covered the lower third of the Roosevelt Reach (Grand Coulee Dam to the Spokane River confluence, including the Sanpoil River Arm), the 2008 survey covered the middle third of the Roosevelt Reach (Spokane River confluence to Gifford, including the Spokane River Arm), and the 2009 survey covered the upper third of the Roosevelt Reach (Gifford to the International Border).

Fall (October) gill net surveys have been conducted annually in the Roosevelt Reach since 2001 to monitor levels of natural recruitment and, secondarily, collect data on hatchery origin juveniles released as part of ongoing conservation aquaculture supplementation efforts.  Gear type and survey area have varied through time.  In years 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011 gear was identical to that used for sub-yearling recruitment indexing in the mid Columbia and lower Snake impoundments (Burner et al 2000) consisting of 300ft long by 12 ft deep nets with 2” stretch nylon webbing.  From 2001-2003 gear used was similar in mesh size (2 inch stretch) but net dimensions were smaller (150 ft long by 6 ft deep).  Sampling in 2007 utilized nets of same dimension as described by Burner et al (2000) but incorporated panels of 2”, 4” and 6”.  Survey areas have generally been limited to the upstream third of the Roosevelt Reach for similar reasons given above for the 2004 and 2005 setline surveys.  However, the 2008 survey sampled the entire Roosevelt Reach.  Prior to 2007, sample site selection was haphazard in nature but beginning in 2008, surveys employed spatially balanced, GRTS designs (Stevens and Olsen 2003).

Sturgeon movements, habitat usage, and spawning migrations have been further assessed using biotelemetry.  Since 2003, approximately 450 sturgeon of various sizes/ages have been acoustic tagged and subsequently monitored with a longitudinal array of hydrophone receivers operated throughout the Transboundary Reach by various entities (Figure 3; Howell and McLellan 2011).  Finer scale telemetry studies using the VEMCO positioning system (VPS; VEMCO, Halifax, Nova Scotia) application has also been employed to evaluate habitat use by sturgeon in the Marcus area (McLellan et al. 2011).  Based on the success of VPS work in the Marcus area, in 2011 the LRSRP conducted a pilot study to investigate the feasibility of installing a VPS system at the Northport spawn area to document habitat use and spawning behavior at a fine scale (WDFW, unpublished data).

Fig3

 

Figure 3.  Overview of automated acoustic telemetry stations in the Transboundary area in 2008-2009 operated by various agencies in Washington and British Columbia (from Howell and McLellan 2011).

  

Demographics

As previously described, the catch of white sturgeon during Transboundary Reach stock assessment surveys conducted prior to implementation of the UCWSRP was dominated by large, old fish (R.L.&L. 1996, 1998a, Devore et al. 2000; Howell and McLellan 2005, 2007a, 2007b, 2008; Irvine et al. 2007).  The length distribution of white sturgeon captured during the LRSRP setline stock assessments in 2004 and 2005 was similar to earlier studies although a small cohort (<10%) of wild juveniles ~100 cm FL was also represented indicating a recent recruitment event (Figure 4).  Preliminary examinations of fin ray spines collected from this cohort indicated they were 1997 year class, a year when spring and summer river discharge was abnormally high in the Columbia River basin.  Supporting evidence that these fish were born in 1997 was the incidental capture of wild juveniles (<40 cm FL) during routine fish monitoring surveys in Lake Roosevelt in 1998 (STOI, unpublished data; WDFW, unpublished data).  The length of these fish was similar to those of age 1 white sturgeon in other areas of the Columbia and Snake Rivers, as well as the age 1 upper Columbia River hatchery sturgeon (Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2011).  Data collected during the 2009 LRSRP setline survey showed the wild component of the population was still represented by large (range 100-279 cm FL; median=202 cm FL; mean=194 cm FL), presumably older fish and that the median length of the adult cohort (≥150 cm FL) was greater than documented in previous surveys thereby demonstrating ongoing limited recruitment (Figure 4). 

Fig4

 

Figure 4.  Fork length frequencies of wild sturgeon captured during setline surveys of the Roosevelt Reach in 1998, 2004, and 2009 (from Howell and McLellan in prep).

 

Fall gill net sampling conducted in the Transboundary Reach annually since 2001 has failed to capture any wild sub-yearling or older juvenile white sturgeon, with the exception of the 1997 cohort (Golder 2003a, 2005a, 2006a, 2006b, 2007; Lee and Underwood 2002; Lee and Pavlik 2003; Howell and McLellan 2005, 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2011).  Collectively, the setline and gill net survey data confirms that natural recruitment of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach is a rare event, consistent with recruitment collapse.

Abundance

The abundance of wild white sturgeon (all sizes) in the Keenleyside Reach was estimated to be 1,157 (414-1,900 95% CI) using mark-recapture data collected between 1990 and 2004 (Irvine et al. 2007) (Table 1). Irvine et al. (2007) estimated survival of wild white sturgeon in the Keenleyside Reach was 0.973 (0.918-0.991 95% CI) for the 1993-2004 time period (Table 1). No comprehensive stock assessment surveys have been conducted in the Keenleyside Reach since the early 2000’s.  Abundance of wild white sturgeon (>70 cm FL) in the Roosevelt Reach was estimated to be 2,037 (1,093-3,223 95% CI) using mark-recapture data collected during the 2004 and 2005 surveys (Howell and McLellan 2007b) (Table 1).  No estimates of abundance or survival have been undertaken in the Roosevelt Reach since 2005.

 

Table 1.  The estimates abundance (N) and survival (S) of wild and hatchery origin white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach (WA/BC) of the upper Columbia River.

Table1only

 

Growth and condition

Based on von Bertalanffy growth (VBG) modeling of length at age data derived from analysis of pectoral fin sections collected during the reservoir wide setline survey in 1998, Devore et al. (2000) found that the asymptotic fork length (L) of sturgeon (255 cm) in the Roosevelt Reach was substantially less than observed in mid-Columbia impoundments (John Day = 382 cm; The Dalles = 340 cm; Bonneville = 311 cm; Beamesderfer et al. 1995; Kern et al. 2002) and in the lower Columbia River (311 cm FL; Devore et al. 1995), but similar to sturgeon in the Keenleyside Reach (RL&L 1994, 1996).   Whereas the theoretical maximum size of sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach was less than that of downstream populations, the estimate of growth co-efficient, K, predicted growth trajectories for fish <30 years of age in the Roosevelt Reach sturgeon were comparable to lower Columbia and mid Columbia impoundments (Figure 5). 

Fig5

Figure 5. (Upper panel) Estimates of mean annual growth in length for 610 sturgeon captured or released (hatchery) and subsequently recaptured in the Roosevelt Reach 1998-2009 (Howell and McLellan in prep).  Time at large ranged 1.0-11.0 years (mean=2.8). (Lower panel) comparison of von Bertalanffy growth curves for Columbia River sturgeon populations based on aging from fin spines (Beamesderfer et al 1995; DeVore et al. 1995; DeVore et al. 2000; RL&L 1996) and mark-recapture data (LRSRP; Howell and McLellan in prep).

 

VBG estimates of theoretical maximum size based on mark-recapture data (Fabens 1965) collected from wild and hatchery sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach by the LRSRP through 2009 was similar to length-at-age based estimates by DeVore et al. (2000) (Howell and McLellan in prep).  However, the estimate of growth co-efficient, K, was substantially greater in magnitude, and resulting growth trajectories predicted that sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach attain larger sizes at younger ages than observed in other areas of the Columbia River (Howell and McLellan in prep; Figure 5).  The discrepancies in growth parameter estimates of Roosevelt Reach sturgeon from age-at-length and mark-recapture analyses is likely due to the inclusion of juvenile growth information from hatchery releases in the latter.  Parameter estimation by DeVore et al. (2000) was based on a data set that included relatively few juvenile sturgeon due to their paucity in the catch of the 1998 survey.  Growth models can be severely distorted if growth data from all size classes are not included in the analyses (Spencer 2002). 

Comparisons of direct estimates of growth in large (adult) sturgeon between areas based on mark-recapture studies is difficult due to lack of available data since relatively few large fish are marked and recaptured during setline stock assessments in other areas of the Columbia basin.  However, the mean annual growth calculated from mark-recapture data of sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach (2.8 cm yr-1; >150 cm FL; Howell and McLellan, in prep), was less than the 5.0 cm yr-1 (FL > 137 cm) reported for the John Day reservoir by Kern et al. (2002), similar to 2.7 cm yr-1 reported for sturgeon in the Keenleyside Reach (Golder 2002), and greater than 1.5 cm yr-1 (FL 116-160 cm) and 0.6 cm yr-1 (FL>160 cm) reported for the Kootenay River population (Paragamian and Beamesderfer 2003).

Devore et al. (2000) found that the condition (mean relative weight [Wr] = 91%; Beamesderfer 1993) of Roosevelt Reach sturgeon was the lowest recorded for any Columbia River population. They attributed slow growth (from their VBG analyses) and poor condition to the northerly location of the population (reduced growing season, colder average water temperature) and lack of food resources such as an anadromous forage base, as well as the large seasonal drawdowns and low water retention times characteristic of the Roosevelt Reach that tend to decrease densities of benthic invertebrates (Griffith and Scholz 1991).

More recent LRSRP setline surveys found wild sturgeon condition to be improved over 1998. Mean population Wr’s in 2003 (November survey; Howell and McLellan 2005), 2004 (April/May survey; Howell and McLellan 2007a), and 2005 (May survey; Howell and McLellan 2007b) were estimated at 117%, 101%, and 98%, respectively. Howell and McLellan (2007b) speculated that the low mean Wr observed in 1998 may have been the result of sampling during the summer months (most fish were captured in August) when numbers of recently spawned out fish were likely present in the catch.  This hypothesis was supported by the 2009 setline survey results (also conducted during August) when mean Wr of the adult component (>150 cm FL) was again found to be low at 93% (Howell and McLellan, in prep).

Reproductive potential

During the LRSRP spring (prior to spawning timeframe) stock assessments in 2004 and 2005, 147 sturgeon (148-232 cm FL) were surgically examined for gender and stage of maturity.  For fish positively identified as females (n=70; range 148-232 cm FL, mean=198), 20% were pre-vitellogenic (range 148-219 cm FL; mean=186), 59% were vitellogenic (range 173-227 cm FL; mean=200) and 21% were post vitellogenic (pre-spawn; range 169-232 cm FL; mean=206).

Theoretically, the reciprocal of the ratio of vitellogenic to post-vitellogenic (pre-spawn) females should approximate the duration of gonadal development.  Thus, Roosevelt Reach collections indicate a gonadal development time between 2-3 years. Welch and Beamesderfer (1993) concluded that white sturgeon mid Columbia River impoundments were physiologically capable of spawning about every three years, with the spawning cycle consisting of a two-year period of oocyte development and a one-year resting period prior to re-initiation of gonadal development. 

Howell and McLellan (2007b) did not attempt to quantify median length at maturity for the Roosevelt Reach population (sensu Welch and Beamesderfer 1993; Beamesderfer et al. 1995 DeVore et al. 1995); however general comparisons indicated that sturgeon achieve maturity at similar sizes and rates reported for other areas of the Columbia.   For example, Howell and McLellan (2007b) found that 59.6% of females >166 cm FL were either mature or maturing when fish where sex could not be determined during surgical assessment were assumed to be female (Figure 6).  Excluding fish where sex could not be positively identified, 82.3% of females in this size interval were either maturing or mature.  By comparison, Welch and Beamesderfer (1993) found only 47% of fish identified as females >166 cm FL were mature/maturing when using similar methods of fish collection and surgical gonad inspections.

Fig6

Figure 6.  The proportion of females by size interval that were vitellogenic or post-vitellogenic (maturing or mature) when surgically examined during LRSRP setline surveys in 2004 and 2005.  Data includes individuals whose sex could not be determined during surgical assessment and assumes them to be female.  Thus some males may be represented in the plot, particularly at shorter fork lengths.  Numerals above the bars indicate sample size.

 

The combined number of adult sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach is likely greater than in any of the three mid-Columbia River impoundments (i.e. Bonneville, The Dalles, John Day) where abundance estimates for fish >166 cm have not been reported to exceed 1,000 individuals (North et al. 1999). Despite this, sturgeon in these areas are able to support limited levels of exploitation through periodic recruitment whereas the Transboundary Reach population has experienced almost total recruitment failure since the mid 1970’s.  

Based on the preliminary assessments of reproductive potential outlined above, we do not currently believe that recruitment failure in the Transboundary Reach population is due to limited numbers of spawners in any given year.  The relative ease with which the transboundary conservation aquaculture programs are able to collect broodstock indicates that fish in spawning condition are relatively abundant.  Further, removal of pre-spawners from the system for aquaculture purposes does not appear to have an appreciable impact as evidenced by spawn monitoring efforts (Golder 2007, 2008a, 2008b) and collections of large numbers of post-hatch life stages in plankton nets (Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2011, in review).

Distribution and movements

Data collected during various setline, gillnet, and telemetry surveys in the Transboundary Reach indicate that sturgeon primarily reside in the upper third of the Roosevelt Reach and in the Keenleyside Reach.  Summer time setline surveys (when sturgeon would be expected to be most widely distributed) in 1998 (DeVore et al. 2000) and 2007-2009 (Howell and McLellan in prep) found few sturgeon downstream of Gifford (Figure 7).  Acoustic telemetry studies independently confirmed limited use of lower reservoir habitat by sturgeon (Figure 8; Howell and McLellan 2011).

 

Fig7

Figure 7.  The spatial catch distribution of sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach during reservoir wide summer time setline surveys 1998 (DeVore et al 2000) and 2007-2009 (Howell and McLellan in prep.).  Each red symbol indicates a location where sturgeon catch was >0.

 

Fig8

Figure 8.  Annual number of unique acoustic tag codes (applied to sturgeon 104-227 cm FL) detected by automated receiver stations 2004-2007; black circles denote Columbia River locations; white circles denote Kootenay River locations.  Data from some closely located stations was combined. Plots demonstrate limited use of lower reservoir habitat by sturgeon (From Howell and McLellan 2011).

 

During the 2007-2009 Roosevelt Reach summer setline surveys, sub-adults (100-150 cm FL) and adults (>150 cm FL) were distributed throughout the area upstream from Gifford, whereas juveniles (<100 cm FL; primarily hatchery origin) were concentrated in the river-reservoir transition zone from Marcus upstream (Figure 9; Howell and McLellan in prep).  Juveniles were similarly distributed during the fall timeframe based on LRSRP gill net surveys 2004-2009 where few nets set downstream from the mouth of the Colville River captured fish (Figure 10; Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2011, in review, in prep).  Whereas juveniles showed little distributional differences between seasons, older fish (>100 cm FL) were more widely distributed in the summer months than during the early spring (i.e. at the tail-end of overwintering) when fish were most heavily concentrated in the area between the Colville River mouth upstream through the Marcus area (Figure 11).

Fig9

Figure 9.  Distributions and catch rates of three size classes of sturgeon during spatially balanced summer time setline surveys of the Roosevelt Reach 2007-2009.  The <100 cm FL size class is primarily represented by hatchery origin juveniles.

 

Fig10

Figure 10.  The distribution of hatchery origin juvenile sturgeon (<100 cm FL) captured during LRSRP fall gill net surveys 2004-2009.  Downstream bounds of survey areas are shown except 2008 when the entire Roosevelt Reach was surveyed (Howell and McLellan in prep.)

 

Fig11

Figure 11.  Seasonal differences in sturgeon (>100 cm FL) catch distribution during reservoir wide setline surveys of the Roosevelt Reach in 1998 and 2004.

 

Finer scale (<10 m) movement data from a VPS study in the Marcus area 2009-2010 indicated that there were seasonal differences in coarse-scale habitat use by white sturgeon (McLellan et al. 2011).  In this study, sturgeon occupied the original Columbia River channel for significantly longer periods than out of channel areas (i.e. flooded river terrace areas) in the winter and spring whereas habitat use was more dispersed in summer and fall (McLellan et al. 2011).  Acoustic telemetry data collected from the longitudinal array showed that sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach ranged most widely during the period May-October with few long distance movements observed from Nov-April (Howell and McLellan 2011; Figure 12).

Fig12

Figure 12.  Monthly summaries of detected range (furthest upstream detection minus furthest downstream detection) for wild white sturgeon outfitted with Vemco V16 acoustic tags in the Transboundary Reach.  Boxes indicate the 25th and 75th percentiles, whiskers indicate 10th and 90th percentiles, light solid lines are the median, heavy solid lines are the mean, and closed circles are outliers.  Diamond symbols indicate the sample size.  Fluctuations in sample size reflect additions through tagging efforts and reductions from expiring tags. From Howell and McLellan 2011.

 

Genetics

One of the UCWSRI recovery measures is to maintain genetic diversity (including rare allele frequencies) at current levels (UCWSRI 2002).  A nuclear DNA genetic study was conducted to examine both current (post-dam) and historic (pre-dam) stock structure of white sturgeon within the Transboundary Reach and Arrow Lakes Reservoir to 1) inform current and future management and recovery activities and 2) assist with recruitment failure diagnosis research. The study indicated that the genetic diversity (215 alleles; n=350) of Transboundary Reach sturgeon was similar to other Columbia River populations (below Bonneville Dam, 234 alleles, n=99; McNary Dam to Chief Joseph Dam 202 alleles, n=90) (Drauch Schreier et al. 2010). The Kootenai River population, which is small and experiencing recruitment failure, has low genetic diversity (95 alleles, n=268) (Drauch Schreier et al. 2009).  Drauch Schreier et al. (2010) found that there was little evidence of stock structure in the Transboundary Reach white sturgeon population and that it can be considered one genetic population.

Spawning

In the Keenleyside Reach, white sturgeon spawning has been detected in the tailrace of Waneta Dam at the confluence of the Pend Oreille and Columbia rivers in each of the 16 years that sampling was conducted between 1993 and 2011 (no monitoring in 1997 or 1999) (R.L.&L. 1996, 1997, 1998b, 2001; Golder 2002, 2003b, 2004, 2005b, 2006c, 2008a; Golder, unpublished data). A second white sturgeon spawning area was recently identified in the upper Keenleyside Reach, as evidenced by the collection of white sturgeon larvae near Castlegar, British Columbia annually since 2007 (Golder 2008b, 2009; Golder, unpublished data; BC Hydro, unpublished data).

In the Roosevelt Reach the LRSRP used radio and acoustic telemetry of mature sturgeon to identify a potential additional spawning area in the U.S. located near to the town of Northport, WA and this was subsequently confirmed by the collection of eggs and free embryos using artificial substrates and D-ring plankton nets in 2005 (Howell and McLellan 2007b).  Spawning at this location was confirmed in 2006-2008 with egg mats (Howell and McLellan 2008, 2011, in review) and implied from 2009-2011 through capture of spawned out adults during broodstock collection efforts at Northport and through collections of free embryos in D-ring plankton nets (Howell and McLellan in prep; WDFW, unpublished data).  A second, likely more minor, spawning area was identified in the vicinity of China Bend through collections of eggs and free embryos in D-ring plankton nets in 2007 and 2008 (Howell and McLellan 2008, 2011, in review).  In contrast to most other white sturgeon spawning documented to date in the Columbia basin (Chapman and Jones 2011; Hildebrand 1999; Parsley et al. 1993, 1994, 2000), spawning in the Roosevelt Reach is noteworthy in that it is not closely associated with a hydropower facility tailrace. The only other instance of this is found in the Kootenay River (Paragamian et al. 2001).

The spawning timeframe in the Transboundary Reach is somewhat later (late June through July; Golder 2007, 2008a, 2008b; Howell and McLellan 2007b, 2008, 2011) than observed in downstream areas of the Columbia (May-June; Parsley et al 1993; Parsley and Beckman 1994) due to more slowly warming water temperatures in the upper Columbia.  Similar to other areas of the Columbia, sturgeon spawning in the Transboundary Reach generally occurs when water temperatures reach about 14oC (Parsley et al 1993; Parsley and Beckman 1994; Golder 2007, 2008a, 2008b; Howell and McLellan 2007b, 2008, 2011).

Post hatch

Post-hatch sturgeon up to the first-feeding life stage have been captured during LRSRP D-ring plankton net surveys of the riverine and upper river-reservoir transition zone areas of the Roosevelt Reach annually since 2004 (no sampling was conducted in 2009) (Howell and McLellan 2008, 2011; WDFW, unpublished data; Figure 13).  Total catch varied from 26 in 2004 to 10,391 in 2011.  Variability in annual catch was due to various factors that included 1) increasing experience of the research team, 2) improvements in sampling equipment, and 3) differences in levels of effort and sample site location.  Thus, no conclusions can be drawn about annual larval production.  However, plankton net catch data indicates that conditions in the Transboundary Reach are suitable for successful incubation of embryos and that substantial numbers of larvae survive to the point of exogenous feeding in most years.  Golder (2006c, 2007, 2008a, 2008b) demonstrated high survival to hatch of embryos collected at the Waneta spawn area on egg mats and incubated in situ in incubation capsules.

Fig13

Figure 13.  Locations of LRSRP plankton net stations in the upper Roosevelt Reach 2005-2010.

 

Despite documented annual spawning and hatch success, no sub-yearling sturgeons have been captured during Transboundary Reach fall gill net surveys suggesting that the primary survival bottleneck resulting in recruitment failure occurs sometime during the period between the onset of exogenous feeding and recruitment to sub-yearling juvenile (i.e. within the first four months of life).  Further information gained from LRSRP early life history studies is discussed below in the context of recruitment failure research.

RECRUITMENT FAILURE RESEARCH

The medium-term objective of the UCWSRP is to identify and correct the sources of recruitment failure (UCWSRI 2002). There are numerous factors suspected to limit natural recruitment of upper Columbia River white sturgeon; however, they can be narrowed into five general categories (Gregory and Long 2008): 1) changes in flow patterns and turbidity, 2) diminished habitat (primarily substrate) downstream of spawning areas, 3) changes in the fish community resulting in increased predation, 4) contaminants, and 5) food availability.  Under each of these potential limiting factors, a suite of mechanisms impacting survival have been identified which are either associated with direct mortality of embryos, larvae, and early juveniles or reduced growth, condition, and reproductive potential of older juveniles, sub-adults, and adults and many of the factors are likely related and interact.

Hydro-ops

In the Transboundary Reach, river discharge appears to influence white sturgeon recruitment. The timing of sturgeon recruitment failure corresponded with the construction of mainstem dams in British Columbia that substantially reduced the magnitude and duration of discharge during the typical sturgeon spawning, incubation, and larval dispersal period (June–August; UCWSRI 2002).  As discussed above, the only detectable recruitment event in the Transboundary Reach within the last two decades occurred in 1997 when the magnitude and duration of the discharge in the June-July period were similar to levels observed prior to mainstem dam construction in Canada.

White sturgeon research in the lower Columbia River and mid-Columbia impoundments demonstrated that annual recruitment is related to river discharge during the spawning period and that the operation of the hydropower system can have large effects on the extent of white sturgeon spawning habitat (Parsley and Beckman 1994; Parsley et al. 1993). Parsley and Beckman (1994) found that recruitment to subyearling juveniles in the mid-Columbia impoundments was poor during 1987-1989, when river discharges were low, and improved with the increased discharges during 1990 and 1991. They also found that the effects of river discharge, and thus hydropower system operation, on white sturgeon spawning habitat varies among areas. For example, Bonneville Dam tailrace provides high-quality habitat for spawning white sturgeons at discharges lower than those needed to provide even low- to medium-quality habitat in the tailraces of the mid-Columbia dams. The researchers attributed this to lower gradients in the tailraces of the mid-Columbia dams compared to below Bonneville Dam due to backwater effects from the downstream projects.

While production in the mid-Columbia appears directly related to river discharge, hydropower operations, and the resulting availability and quality of spawning habitat, it remains unclear exactly what mechanisms are acting to limit recruitment.  In the case of the Kootenai(y) River population, flow augmentation through manipulation of operations at Libby Dam to more closely mimic the natural spring freshet resulted in increases in spawning activity and the collection of viable eggs (Paragamian et al. 2001). However, apparent improvements in spawning intensity have not resulted in subsequent increases in natural recruitment (Paragamian et al. 2001; Paragamian and Wakkinen 2002).  The majority of spawning in the Kootenai(y) River occurs over sand substrate (Paragamian et al. 2001; Paragamian and Kruse 2001 which is hypothesized to reduce egg survival and thus limit recruitment. In laboratory experiments, Kock et al. (2006) found that white sturgeon embryo survival was significantly lower when covered in sediment of 5 mm depth or greater when compared to controls at “low” and “high” velocities. They also reported embryo survival was negatively correlated with increased duration of sediment coverage. In addition, survival of white sturgeon eggs was diminished when incubated in contact with sediments collected from the Kootenai(y) sturgeon spawning area.  Reduced survival was attributed to contaminants within the substrate (copper and the PCB Aroclor 1260) (Kruse and Scarnecchia 2002). Thus, recruitment failure in the Kootenai(y) population appears more likely related to substrate composition in the spawning area(s) than to magnitude of river discharge.

We do not believe recruitment failure in the Transboundary Reach population is due either to limited spawning habitat in years with low (relative to historic) discharge as is observed in mid-Columbia impoundments, or to substrate conditions in spawning areas as is observed in the Kootenai.   As previously discussed, regardless of river discharge conditions, each year relatively high numbers of adults are in spawning condition,  spawning is documented at multiple locations over a protracted period of time, and substantial numbers of dispersing larvae are captured downstream of the spawning areas.  Instead we contend that river discharge and hydro-operations primarily impact survival of the larval stage by limiting their ability to effectively disperse. We suspect that hydro-operations in most years inhibit the dispersal of early larvae to suitable rearing habitats and this leads to high mortality and, ultimately, recruitment failure.

The ontogenetic behavior of many species of sturgeons, including white sturgeon, includes a drift or dispersal phase, although there is substantial variation in the manifestation of the drift behavior (Kynard and Horgan 2002; Kynard et al. 2002; Zhuang et al. 2002, 2003; Kynard and Parker 2004, 2005; Kynard et al. 2010; Braaten et al. 2008). There are even differences in the ontogenetic behavior of different populations of white sturgeon. Laboratory studies of early life history of white sturgeon from the Sacramento, lower Columbia, and Kootenai(y) rivers collectively indicate that upon hatching, some free embryos enter the water column and undergo a short (1-3 d), weak dispersal (Brannon et al. 1985; Kynard and Parker 2005; Kynard et al. 2010). This initial dispersal phase is followed by a hiding phase (approximately 7 d in duration) when free-embryos seek the substrate for places that provide cover while the yolk-sac is absorbed. At or around yolk-sac absorption, fish re-emerge from hiding. Lower Columbia River and Kootenai River white sturgeon initiate a strong downstream dispersal following re-emergence, presumably to be distributed to suitable rearing habitats (Brannon et al. 1985; Kynard et al. 2010) whereas larvae of Sacramento River white sturgeon do not migrate but forage on the substrate until the early juvenile stage at which point they initiate downstream dispersal (Kynard and Parker 2005).   

Plankton nets are a passive type of sampling gear, and catch composition should therefore reflect early life stage behaviors.  The catch compositions of annual LRSRP plankton net sampling to date were bimodal with small peaks occurring at the early free-embryo stage and larger peaks at the first-feeding larval stage (Figures 14 and15; Howell and McLellan 2011) indicating that the early ontogenetic behaviors of Transboundary Reach white sturgeon are similar to those of lower Columbia River and Kootenai River populations i.e. they exhibit a weak post-hatch dispersal followed by a strong downstream dispersal during the early larval phase.

  

Fig14

Figure 14. Catch composition of white sturgeon collected with D-ring style plankton nets in the Roosevelt Reach 2006-2008.  Fish that could not be definitively staged according to Dettlaff et al. (1993) were assigned to a general group: EFE (early stage free-embryo; stages 36-41), LFE (late stage free embryo/larva; stages 42-45), or UNK (unknown – distinguishable as a sturgeon but too damaged or decomposed to assign a stage). For reference, developmental stages are illustrated in Figure 15.

 

Fig15

Figure 15.  White sturgeon development from hatch (stage 36) through first feeding (stage 45) at a constant water temperature of 17 oC.  Fish were progeny of adults captured during broodstock collection efforts in the Northport area in June 2010.  Fertilization and rearing occurred at WDFW Region 1 fish laboratory in Spokane Valley, WA.  All fish are to same scale.  hpf denotes hours post-fertilization. Taken from Howell and McLellan in review.

 

Dispersal of sturgeon larvae to appropriate rearing habitats is critical for successful recruitment. Kynard and Parker (2005) speculated that recruitment failure in white sturgeon populations might be due to habitat mis-match resulting from dispersal behaviors and altered habitat due to hydropower development. Disruption of the dispersal of pallid sturgeon Scaphirhyncus albus larvae has been implicated in that species’ recruitment failure in the Missouri River system (Braaten et al. 2008).

Based on LRSRP spawn monitoring and plankton net data, sturgeon larvae begin to emerge from the substrate in the upper river-reservoir transition zone of the Roosevelt Reach in mid-late July coincident with rapidly declining river discharge, and following completion of reservoir refill in early July (Figure 16). These factors may collectively limit the extent of larval dispersal and confine them to upper transition zone habitat by diminishing water velocities in this area of the river.  Further, hydropower facilities begin load shaping by mid-July that can substantially reduce discharge - and therefore water velocities - at night when white sturgeon larval dispersal intensity is greatest (Kynard et al. 2010; WDFW,unpublished data; Figure 17).  Kynard et al. (2010) reported that in a laboratory study, dispersal of larval Kootenai(y)River white sturgeon was initiated earlier and was of greater duration and intensity at higher experimental water velocities (0.169 versus 0.234 m s-1).  Thus, low velocities in the river-reservoir transition zone of the Roosevelt Reach in normal flow years may result in less intense, shorter duration, and delayed dispersal by early larvae.  LRSRP plankton netting data support this assertion by showing that the relative abundance of post-hatch sturgeon progressively declines downstream in the transition zone (Figure 18; Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2011, in review).  As well, various trawling efforts have failed to capture any larval sturgeon in downstream habitats where plankton nets are ineffective due to low velocities (Kappenman et al 2000; Howell and McLellan 2011, in prep).  Collectively then, these observations suggest that dispersal extent is limited and that larval stages may be confined to upper transition zone habitat in most years.  If this is the case, then the lack of subyearling captures during fall gill net surveys indicate that conditions in this area are not conducive to larval survival.  Further, the occurrence of limited recruitment in years when very high river discharge coincides with emergence of first feeding larvae (e.g. 1997) provides further support for dispersal as a primary mechanism influencing survival (Figure 19). 

Fig16

Figure 16.  Daily total catch of post-hatch white sturgeon during LRSRP plankton net surveys of the Roosevelt Reach 2006-2008.  Sampling was concluded at the end of July in 2006 and 2007, and 24 July in 2008; post-hatch sturgeon were likely present after these times.  The duration of spawning, as documented by egg mat sampling at the Waneta and Northport spawn areas (gray horizontal bars), is protracted; however spawning intensity was greatest during the last week of June and first week of July in each year.  Note the onset of power-peaking in July coincident with presence of post-hatch sturgeon.

 

 

Fig17

Figure 17.  Box plot comparisons of post hatch sturgeon (predominantly larvae at or around first-feeding) catch rates in plankton nets by time interval during LRSRP conservation aquaculture larval collection efforts in the upper Roosevelt Reach 25 July through 2 August, 2011.  Sunrise and sunrise times during the collection effort were, approximately, 0530 and 2030 PDT.  Numerals indicate sample size (WDFW unpublished data).

 

 

Fig18

 

Figure 18.  Mean (SD = error bars) relative abundance of post-hatch sturgeon and mean (SD = error bars) water speeds calculated from flowmeter readings during D-ring plankton net sampling at four locations in the upper Roosevelt Reach in June-July 2008 (see figure 13 for overview map of 2008 plankton net locations).  Note that sampling stations were located in areas of channel constriction and thus estimated water velocities likely represent the upper range for this area of the river.  Numerals indicate sample size.

 

Fig19

Figure 19.  Comparisons of Columbia River discharge at the U.S.-Canada border pre- and post- mainstem dam construction in Canada, and in 1997 - a year when a detectable level of white sturgeon recruitment occurred.  Water temperatures at the international border reached 14oC (i.e. optimal spawning temperature) in mid-late June 1997 and thus first feeding larvae would likely have been abundant by mid-July coincident with the large secondary peak in discharge that may have aided dispersal to nursery habitats further downstream in the Roosevelt Reach.

 

While the transition zone may generally represent unsuitable nursery habitat for larval white sturgeon, the mechanisms resulting in poor survival are unknown but may be related to a lack of food (starvation), predation, contaminants, or likely some combination of all of those factors.  

Food availability

The onset of exogenous feeding constitutes a critical period of potentially high mortality (Parsley et al. 2002). According to the habitat “Match-Mismatch” hypothesis (Cushing 1974, 1990; Houde 2008), dispersing larvae must arrive at the right location at the right time to ensure survival (i.e. the place where food is, when the food is there). Braaten et al. (2008) suggested that it is important for sturgeon to settle in habitat patches with abundant food resources as they transition to exogenous foods.

Available data from the mid- and lower Columbia indicate that larval and subyearling juvenile white sturgeon are typically captured over sand (McCabe and Tracy 1994; Parsley et al. 1993). Most of the food items observed in the guts of early larvae collected by the LRSRP in the Roosevelt Reach to date consist of Diptera (Chironimidae), which are generally found in fine substrates (Howell and McLellan 2011, in review). However, current limited information indicates that in the area of the Roosevelt Reach where larval abundance is greatest, the substrate is typified by coarse sediments (gravel, cobble, boulder; Weakland et al. 2011; CH2M Hill and Ecology Environment, Inc. 2006).  Extensive areas of fine grained (sand/silt) sediments are only found from the Marcus area downstream - areas where trawl efforts to date have failed to capture larval stages (Kappenman et al. 2000; Howell and McLellan 2011; Howell and McLellan in prep).

Based on samples collected during LRSRP plankton netting efforts in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008, approximately 0%, 16%, 26%, and 23%, respectively, of larvae that had exhausted their yolk contained prey items (Howell and McLellan 2007b, 2008, 2011, in review).  By comparison, Muir et al. (2000) found that of 64 larvae averaging 21 mm in length (i.e. a similar size and stage of development as the late free embryos/early larvae collected in Roosevelt Reach studies) only one was found to have an empty stomach.  These observations could suggest that prey availability, feeding success, or both, in the upper transition zone of the Roosevelt Reach is comparatively low.

However, it should be noted that the larvae collected by Muir et al. (2000) were captured with actively towed trawl gear while those collected in the Roosevelt Reach were captured in passively fished plankton nets. Since larvae with empty stomachs may be more actively dispersing in search of suitable foraging habitat, these individuals may be disproportionately represented in the catch of stationary gear. Furthermore, since most larvae collected in the Roosevelt Reach and examined for diet were captured in long duration (overnight) sets, there is potential for complete prey digestion and expulsion between time of entry to the collection bucket and specimen preservation.  Alternatively, feeding may have occurred within the collection bucket following capture.

It is also questionable if researchers have captured white sturgeon larvae in the Roosevelt Reach old enough to exhibit the effects of starvation.  The oldest sturgeon larvae captured in the Roosevelt Reach to date were approximately 15 dph and relatively few fish had exhausted their yolk supply (Figure 20).  Mortality of food-deprived green sturgeon A. medirostris, larvae was not appreciable until 28-31 dph (Gisbert and Doroshov 2003) and food deprived white sturgeon larvae reared in a laboratory under a thermal regime that mimicked that of the Transboundary Reach exhibited 50% mortality within 13-21 dph and 100% mortality within 22-29 dph (Parsley 2010; Parsley et al. 2011). Current information is not sufficient to suggest starvation is a primary cause of larval mortality, but this requires more investigation.

Fig20 

 

Figure 20.  Length frequency (upper panel) and length-weight relationship (lower panel) of post-hatch sturgeon captured with D-ring plankton nets in the Roosevelt Reach in 2008. From Howell and McLellan in review)

 

Predation

Early larvae involved in extended searches for food could potentially experience an increased vulnerability to predation. Early life stages of white sturgeon are subject to predation by other fishes (Miller and Beckman 1993; Gadomski and Parsley 2005a, 2005b). White and green sturgeon deprived of food had slower growth and lower condition which may make them more vulnerable to predation (Gisbert and Williot 1997; Gisbert and Doroshov 2003). However, predator diet studies to date have failed to identify large numbers of white sturgeon larvae or juveniles consumed. Stomach samples (n=520) from 13 species of potential predators collected in the upper Roosevelt Reach during the sturgeon spawning and larval dispersal period did not contain any white sturgeon young (Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b). Similarly, predator diet studies in lower Columbia River reservoirs have only identified one instance of predation on juvenile sturgeon (Gadomski and Parsley 2005a). However, these results do not definitively rule out predation as a limiting factor since electrofishing was the method used to capture potential predators. Electrofishing collects only fish distributed in near shore shallow habitats, while current data indicates most sturgeon larvae are located in deep, mid-channel habitats. Further, lab studies indicate larval sturgeon are digested more rapidly by predators than similar sized salmonids thereby limiting the likelihood of identifying them in diet sampling (Garner 2006).

The abundance of potential predators is relatively high in the upper Roosevelt Reach during the times when early life stages of sturgeon are present (Beckman et al. 1985; Hall et al. 1985; Peone et al. 1990; Griffith and Scholz 1991; McLellan et al. 2002). Among those predators suspected to pose the greatest risk are walleye and sculpins. Walleye are one of the most abundant species of fish in the Roosevelt Reach (Peone et al. 1990; Griffith and Scholz 1991; Underwood and Shields 1996; Lee et al. 2006) and their proliferation corresponds with the decline in sturgeon recruitment failure (Nielsen 1975). In addition, the decline of numerous other native species populations in the Roosevelt Reach corresponds with the expansion of the walleye population (Earnest et al. 1966; Scholz et al. 1986). Introductions of walleye have led to sharp declines in native fish populations in other reservoirs as well (McMahon and Bennett 1996). Consumption of age-0 sturgeon by walleye has been demonstrated in the laboratory, and sturgeon of this age appeared to be preferred over both rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss and kokanee O. nerka while age-1 sturgeon were not consumed  (Garner 2006).

In 2008 an acoustic telemetry study of walleye behavior was conducted to explore the spatio-temporal overlap between walleye and early post-hatch life stages of white sturgeon in the upper Roosevelt Reach (Howell and McLellan, in review). Walleye exhibited diel depth migrations occupying deeper water habitat during the day and shallower water at night.  Night time depths were typically shallower than 15 m whereas in the same area, white sturgeon larvae were most often captured in the main channel (>20 m) near the bottom and were more active at night (Howell and McLellan, in review). Since walleye are bentho-pelagic by nature, this implies that while they seek depth during the day, they may remain in areas peripheral to the main channel, thereby potentially limiting interactions with sturgeon larvae.

Sculpins, another fish observed to consume white sturgeon larvae and subyearling juveniles in lab studies (Gadomski and Parsley 2005a, 2005b), are also abundant in the upper Roosevelt Reach as indicated by the catch in trawl surveys (Howell and McLellan 2007b). Large sculpin, those presumably more likely to consume sturgeon larvae, are distributed in the area where D-ring sampling is conducted, whereas small sculpin are distributed further downstream (Howell and McLellan 2007b).  A mottled sculpin (75 mm TL) captured in a plankton net set during the 2010 LRSRP conservation aquaculture larval collection effort had consumed 13 sturgeon larvae (WDFW, unpublished data). Further, in November 2011, a subyearling sturgeon (~10 cm FL) was collected from the gut of a walleye Sander vitreus (31.5 cm TL) captured during a gill net based walleye population monitoring study in the upper Roosevelt Reach (Figure 21; WDFW, unpublished data).  Thus, predation on sturgeon early life stages does occur in the Roosevelt Reach.

Fig21

Figure 21.  A wild subyearling white sturgeon (~10 cm FL) found in the gut of a walleye (31.5 cm TL) captured in a gill net set at the mouth of Flat Creek (located just downstream from China Bend) on 4 November 2011.

 

Reduced discharge may influence predation rates on sturgeon larvae in the Transboundary Reach by reducing velocities and turbidity, and thus improving predator efficiency. Gadomski and Parsley 2005c demonstrated an inverse relationship between predation rate on white sturgeon larvae and turbidity levels.  Upstream impoundments have likely reduced turbidity in the Transboundary Reach (UCWSRI 2002) and velocities are lower than they were historically as previously discussed.   LRSRP sampling in 2011 (a relatively high flow year) demonstrated that turbidity levels were very low during the sturgeon spawning and larval dispersal period (Figure 22).

Fig22

Figure 22.  Turbidity readings collected from various sites in the upper Roosevelt Reach in 2011.  Each point represents the mean of three subsamples.

 

Contaminant exposure

Exposure to contaminants may also limit survival of early life stage white sturgeon. According to the UCWSRI (2002):

There are several sources of contaminants to the Upper Columbia River watershed in British Columbia and the United States, including Cominco Ltd. at Trail, B.C., Celgar Pulp Company at Castlegar, B.C., municipal sewage treatment plants, abandoned mines, and tailing dumps. Many of these sources have made substantial effort to establish cleaner operating procedures within the last 25 years; however, a great deal of contaminant input occurred prior to these upgrades and potential effects to sturgeon are unknown. Cominco has been operating since 1906 (MacDonald Environmental Sciences Ltd. 1997). However, over the past 25 years, the industry has initiated a long-term program to modernize and expand its operations at the Trail plant. Some of the major improvements include an effluent treatment plant, zinc electrolyte stripper, mercury removal plant, drainage controlsystem, heat exchanger, elimination of phosphate-based fertilizer plant, and a slag containment facility. These modernization projects have significantly reduced loading of metals to theColumbia River. Accidental discharges currently comprise the majority of contaminant inputs. Between January 1987 and January 1993, there were a total of 56 spills from ComincoLtd., into the Upper Columbia River. These spills released multiple tons of compounds containing sulphuric and phosphoric acid, zinc (various forms), gypsum, mercury, copper sulphate, ammonia, coal dust, furnace and compressor oils, sodium bisulphite, phosphate, ammonium sulphate, arsenic, cadmium oxide, chlorine, lead, slag, oxide dust, and various undetermined solutions.

Exposure to contaminants has been suggested to cause direct mortality of sturgeon larvae. Kruse and Scarnecchia (2002) suspected contaminant exposure (copper and the PCB Aroclor 1260) led to decreased survival of white sturgeon eggs. Sand-sized water-granulated fumed slag released from the Cominco Ltd. (now Teck Metals Corporation) lead and zinc smelter in Trail, British Columbia is distributed throughout the Roosevelt Reach, but primarily in the upper portion with a major depositional area at Marcus (CH2M Hill and Ecology Environment, Inc. 2006). Slag contains elevated levels of several trace elements, such as arsenic, cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc (Majewski et al. 2003). Preliminary acute toxicity studies with larval (30 dph) white sturgeon indicated LD50’s occurred at much lower concentrations of copper (3.1-4.9 μg/L) than similar aged rainbow trout (USFWS 2008). However, Vardy et al. (2011) reported that chronic concentrations (LC20) for white sturgeon larvae (up to 66 dph) exposed to copper (5.5 μg/L), zinc (112 μg/L), and cadmium (1.5 μg/L) were similar to other sensitive salmonids. Smelter effluent which contained lead (mean=21.6 ug/L at 100%), zinc (mean=166 ug/L at 100%), copper (mean=2.5 ug/L at 100%), and cadmium (mean=2.55ug/L at 100%) was lethal to white sturgeon larvae (11-14 and 32-35 dph) at high effluent concentrations of 100% and 50%, but at low concentrations (1%) mortality did not differ significantly from controls (Bruno 2004).

While there may be some direct mortality from exposure to metals, the annual catch of relatively large numbers of post hatch sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach suggest that acute toxicity may not be a root cause of recruitment failure. However, contaminant exposure may result in sublethal effects that influence survival of sturgeon during early life stages. Exposure to elevated levels of copper from slag deposited throughout the upper Roosevelt Reach may impair sensory function and behavior of larval sturgeon. Exposure to copper has been shown to impair the olfactory system of coho salmon O. kisutch and steelhead (Baldwin et al. 2003; Sandahl et al. 2007) and larval zebrafish Danio rerio experienced damage to peripheral mechanosensory (lateral line) cells when exposed to copper (Linbo et al. 2006).  Sensory impairment may reduce the ability of larvae to locate food, ultimately resulting in starvation, or could result in an increase in searching behavior or reduced growth and condition, both factors that could potentially increase predation risk. Contaminant exposure may also alter a sturgeon’s ability to detect or respond to predation risk: coho salmon exposed to copper (>2.0 μg/L) did not initiate “predator avoidance behaviors” (Sandahl et al. 2007).  Heavy metal contamination in the upper Roosevelt Reach may also reduce the variety and abundance of food available to first feeding white sturgeon larvae. Copper and Zinc can negatively impact benthic macro-invertebrate diversity and abundance (Roch et al. 1985; Clements 2004).  Habitat depauperate in suitable forage could, in concert with sensory/behavioral impairment, severely limit larval white sturgeon survival.  Recruitment of sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach may thus be dependent upon successful dispersal of larvae to nursery habitats downstream of the primary slag depositional areas although more research is required to map the spatial distribution of slag as well as evaluate exposure effects of this substance on the early life stages of sturgeon.

Concern has also been raised about the physical effects of slag on sturgeon free embryos and larvae since slag particles are glass-like and very angular (CH2M Hill and Ecology Environment, Inc. 2006) and contact with slag could result in physical trauma. Evidence of early larvae incidentally ingesting slag particles (attached to prey) has been confirmed through the examination of the gut contents of the plankton net catch (Howell and McLellan 2011) (Figure 23).  Parsley et al. (2010) examined the gut contents of 37 hatchery origin juvenile white sturgeon captured by the LRSRP in upper Lake Roosevelt (rkm 1,120 to 1,170) that had been at large for 1–4 growing seasons and found that 78% contained slag particles. Histological examination of the digestive tracts indicated significantly greater chronic inflammation relative to controls (fish reared without exposure to ingestible substrate). It is unknown if the inflammatory response would occur in sturgeon ingesting inert sand-sized substrate or if it results in reduced survival, growth, or condition. The relatively high survival, growth, and condition of hatchery sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach (discussed above) suggest that it does not.

Fig23

Figure 23. Granulated industrial slag particle found in the gut of a larval sturgeon. A) Stage 45 individual (19.9 mm TL) captured in a benthic plankton net. B) Left-lateral view of excised digestive tract; prey items and slag/sand grains can be clearly seen. C) Prey items and slag/sand grains removed from stomach. D) Detail of the slag (left) and sand (right) grains. Taken from Howell and McLellan, in review.

 

The effects of contaminants on older life stages are unknown at this time. White sturgeon are long lived, and thus they have greater risk of negative effects due to contaminants as a result of bioaccumulation (Beamesderfer et al. 1995). Exposure to some contaminants has been suggested to reduce reproductive potential of white sturgeon (Feist et al. 2005). Kruse and Webb (2006) indicated that copper can bioaccumulate in the eggs of upper Columbia River white sturgeon. As discussed above, copper can have both acute and potentially sublethal effects on white sturgeon early life stages that may result in low survival. Hatchery sturgeons from the Roosevelt Reach were provided to the USFWS in 2008 and 2009 for an analysis of contaminant burden; however, ongoing litigation has prevented public release of the results. Additional work is needed to determine the patterns and rates of contaminant bioaccumulation by sturgeons in the Transboundary Reach.

Critical habitat

The availability of suitable substrate for the hiding phase of development has been implicated as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach. Fine substrates, including slag, filling interstitial spaces may reduce available habitat for sturgeon free embryos during their hiding phase.  Brannon et al. (1985) noted that substrate composition may influence the settling response of free embryos such that coarser substrates provide more suitable cover for the hiding phase than fines. McAdam (2011) found in a laboratory study that free embryos hid immediately when provided coarse substrate, whereas over sand they entered the drift suggesting free embryo drift was indicative of poor hiding habitat. Gravel was identified by Bennett et al. (2007) as the preferred hiding habitat of white sturgeon free embryos.   In the context of the Roosevelt Reach, the relatively low catch rate of early free-embryos relative to first-feeding larvae in plankton net catches indicates that substrate suitable for the free-embryo hiding phase is available. However, there is a need to undertake comprehensive sediment facies mapping of the upper Roosevelt Reach, in order to quantify the availability of this and other critical habitats.

CONSERVATION AQUACULTURE

The Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Conservation Aquaculture Program is a critical component of the UCWSRP with the intention of preserving the remaining demographic and genetic diversity of the transboundary population and rebuild the natural age-class structure (UCWSRI 2002, Recovery Plan Measure 5.5.3).  The program is particularly critical to Canadian UCWSRI members, as white sturgeon are listed as endangered under the Species At Risk Act (SARA) in Canada.  The Canadian National Recovery Strategy (NRTWS 2007) has identified aquaculture as a priority activity to protect the upper Columbia River white sturgeon population in the recovery strategy; “prevent extirpation of white sturgeon in each of the four identified populations [including the upper Columbia River Transboundary Reach population] by preventing net loss of reproductive potential”. 

Conservation aquaculture programs were established in British Columbia and Washington in 2001 and 2003, respectively. Collectively, the programs have released a combined total of 118,412 juvenile white sturgeon into the Transboundary Reach between 2002 and 2011 (Figure 24; Table 2). 

Fig24

Figure 24.  Number of hatchery juvenile sturgeon released in to the Transboundary Reach by brood year.  Fish were sourced for rearing by direct gamete take (DGT) from broodstock collected in British Columbia (BC) and Washington (WA) and by wild larval collection (WLC).

 

Table 2. Release summary for hatchery reared sturgeon into the Roosevelt Reach of the Columbia River by the LRSRP conservation aquaculture program.

Table2only

 

The Washington program began in 2003 when surplus juveniles from the British Columbia program were transferred to WDFW’s Columbia Basin Hatchery (CBH) for rearing and to act as a failsafe group.  In 2004 and 2005, fertilized eggs and larvae were transferred from Canada to CBH where they were successfully reared and subsequently released (Howell and McLellan 2005, 2006).  In 2006 the LRSRP implemented a full-scale white sturgeon conservation aquaculture program that included all aspects of husbandry from broodstock collection and spawning to rearing and subsequent release (Howell and McLellan 2008).  That year, an interim broodstock holding facility was developed at WDFW’s Sherman Creek Hatchery (SCH) and pre-spawn adults were collected from near the documented spawning area at Northport, WA (Figure 25).  Adults were transferred to SCH where they were successfully spawned and later released.  The resulting embryos were transferred to CBH where they were again successfully reared for release in 2007. 

Fig25

Figure 25.  Overview map of key sites related to LRSRP conservation aquaculture.

 

The LRSRP aquaculture program subsequently operated in this manner until 2011 when the program suspended direct gamete take in favor of collecting naturally produced larvae for rearing and stocking purposes.  This shift was motivated by the following: 1) recent research demonstrating that lake sturgeon offspring produced from direct gamete take were more related and exhibited lower genetic diversity than offspring produced from larvae collected while dispersing from spawning areas (Crossman et al. 2011); 2) collection of naturally produced eggs and post-hatch live stages for conservation aquaculture purposes was identified as a potential option in the UCWSRP; 3) plankton net sampling as part of LRSRP early life history studies from 2004 to 2008 indicated that substantial numbers of post-hatch sturgeon could be collected alive and therefore potentially be reared in a hatchery environment; 4) broodstock collection would become more logistically challenging over time due to growth (i.e. length and weight) of the existing adult cohort; 5) concerns over the potentially deleterious effects of sampling procedures on broodstock fish (i.e. capture, transport, spawning).

The LRSRP initiated a pilot study in 2010 to collect post-hatch sturgeon and transfer them to SCH for rearing on river water.  A total 2,744 larvae were collected from the river between 11-25 July and transferred to Sherman Creek Hatchery for rearing.  Rearing was successful and 522 sub-yearling juveniles were released in to the Roosevelt Reach on 1 December 2010.  Based on the success of the 2010 study, broodstock collection was suspended in 2011 in favor of a full scale larval collection effort.  From 26 July – 2 August 2011 a total of 10,295 larval sturgeon were collected from the river and transported to SCH.  Rearing success in 2011 (34.9% survival to release) was substantially improved over 2010 (19.0% survival to release) and 3,598 sub-yearling juveniles were released into the Roosevelt Reach on 30 November 2011.

uring the 2004 LRSRP setline survey, only three hatchery sturgeon were captured in 162 overnight setline sets, whereas 225 hatchery sturgeon were captured in 219 overnight setline sets during the 2009 survey, dominating the catch ((Figure 26; Howell and McLellan 2007a; Howell and McLellan, in prep;).  Thus supplementation efforts are successfully restoring a more natural size structure.  Various survey efforts indicate that hatchery fish condition and growth is generally very good (Golder 2005a, 2006a, 2007, 2009; Howell and McLellan 2007a, 2007b, 2008, 2001, in review, in prep).  Indeed, as discussed above, VBG modeling based on mark-recapture data collected in the Roosevelt Reach indicate that growth during the juvenile phase is markedly greater than observed in other areas of the Columbia River downstream.  However, some spatial trends in fish condition and growth have been observed that may represent variation in habitat quality or density dependent effects.  In the Roosevelt Reach hatchery juvenile condition declines moving upstream towards the international border from the Marcus area (Figure 27) and this trend continues in the lower Keenleyside Reach but reverses such that fish condition is very good in the area immediately downstream from HLK Dam (Golder 2006a). 

Fig26

Figure 26.  Length frequency distribution, length-weigh relationship, and relative weight of hatchery and wild white sturgeon captured between Gifford and the international border during the 2009 LRSRP setline survey.

 

Fig27

Figure 27.  Relative weights of hatchery origin juveniles (23-127 cm FL) by capture location during various LRSRP surveys 2003-2009 (WDFW unpublished data).  The plot shows declining fish condition moving upstream from the Marcus area.

 

In response to these trends, the LRSRP has adapted its juvenile release strategy.  From 2004-2006, the LRSRP distributed hatchery releases among three locations (Northport, North Gorge, Nancy Creek; Figure 25).  Following initial observations that juvenile growth and condition were decreased in upstream areas of the river-reservoir transition zone, releases at Northport and North Gorge were suspended in 2007 and fish were instead released further downstream at the Kettle Falls Marina and Nancy Creek sites (Figure 25).  Since 2008, LRSRP release sites have been further limited to the Kettle Falls Marina location only (Figure 25).  Concerns over potential over-stocking have also led to reductions in the annual number of fish released into the transboundary area.  Beginning with BY 2008, annual target release numbers were reduced in the Keenleyside Reach and equalized with the Roosevelt Reach at 4,000 fish per area (Figure 24).

Formal analyses seeking to evaluate hatchery juvenile survival post-release have been limited.  Using catch data from both the Keenleyside and Roosevelt Reaches, Golder (2007) estimated survival of hatchery sturgeon to be 0.28 (0.11-0.54 95% CI) for the first 6 months post release and 0.88 (0.35-0.99 95% CI) between 2 and 5 years post release (Table 1). When viewed the context of the long juvenile phase of sturgeon, the very low precision of the Golder (2007) estimates limits their usefulness as inputs for modeling exercises attempting to project future rates of recruitment to the adult life stage.  Thus there is a need for more intensive and coordinated sampling efforts to capture sufficient numbers of fish to generate more precise estimates of survival.

 

PROPOSED LRSRP WORK PLAN 2013-2017

Recently, the UCWSRI TWG identified the need to update the Transboundary Reach White Sturgeon Operational Plan with the aim of providing additional detail and options to guide recovery efforts over the next 5-10 years in view of knowledge gained since completion of the original UCWSRP in 2002. The Operations Plan identifies 1) a “Core Program” that recognizes the longer term need for stock assessment monitoring and conservation aquaculture intended to prevent further reductions in Upper Columbia sturgeon distribution, numbers, and genetic diversity, and 2) a “Recruitment Failure Research Program” that describes a series of recruitment failure hypotheses, and outlines potential research approaches to address them.

In light of current knowledge gained from sturgeon work by the LRSRP to date (described above) the Lake Roosevelt Co-Managers (i.e. the STI, CCT, and WDFW) collaborated to develop an outline of recommended sturgeon recovery activities to be undertaken during the period 2012-2017.  This document was provided to the TWG to act as the WA participants component of the Transboundary Reach Operations Plan and serves as the backbone for the collaborative development of proposals for the Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP; BPA project 1995-027-00) and the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (WSEP; BPA project 2008-116-00) as part of the FY2013 Resident Fish, Data Management and Program Coordination Review.

The document outline is presented below and the project lead (i.e. LRSRP or WSEP) for individual components are indicated.  The justifications for those components where the WSEP is identified as lead are detailed in the WSEP proposal submitted by the CCT for the Resident Fish, Data Management and Program Coordination Review.  These components will not be further discussed in this document except to note that the LRSRP is expected to provide a support role.

CORE PROGRAM

  1. Setline Stock Assessment (LRSRP)
  2. Fall Gill Net Surveys (LRSRP)
  3. Water Quality Monitoring(LRSRP)
  4. Acoustic Telemetry(LRSRP)
  5. Data Management(WSEP)
  6. Conservation aquaculture(LRSRP)
  7. Public outreach (LRSRP)

 

RECRUITMENT FAILURE RESEARCH PROGRAM

  1. Evaluate Habitat-Recruitment Relationships (WSEP)
  2. Empirically Evaluate Habitat Mismatch Hypothesis (WSEP)
  3. Investigate Proximate Mechanisms Limiting Post-Hatch Survival
    1. Predation (LRSRP)
    2. Food availability (LRSRP)
    3. Contaminants (WSEP)

 

Setline Stock Assessment

Periodic stock assessments that incorporate mark-recapture estimates of abundance and survival continue to be required in the Transboundary Reach.  While informative, previous stock assessment efforts in the Roosevelt Reach were limited by insufficient equipment and staff (i.e. only one boat and crew) and a lack of statistical rigor.  For example, the Roosevelt Reach specific sturgeon abundance estimate obtained from the 2004 and 2005 LRSRP setline surveys assumed the population was closed between sampling occasions, but based on telemetry and other catch data that indicated movement of sturgeon between areas it is possible that closed system assumptions were seriously violated.  While improvements have been made over time with regard to survey design, namely the institution of GRTS sampling methodology beginning in 2007, limited equipment and staff continued to limit the project’s ability to conduct surveys at a great enough level of effort to defensibly assess sturgeon abundance, survival and other pertinent population parameters (e.g. reproductive potential).  However, in 2010 the LRSRP obtained a second research boat suitable for stock assessment purposes, and the WSEP expects to obtain a white sturgeon research boat in 2012.  Collectively then, the two projects will have sufficient field equipment to carry out extensive and statistically rigorous population assessments proposed to begin in 2013.

Optimally, setline stock assessment surveys should be standardized, coordinated, and conducted simultaneously in both the Keenleyside and Roosevelt reaches. Coordination is needed based on recent genetic evaluations that indicate white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach comprise a single population, and not reach specific subpopulations as they have sometimes been treated (UCWSRI 2002).  Upper Columbia River stock assessment activities will be coordinated through the UCWSRI Technical Working Group and are proposed to occur on an annual basis beginning in 2013 to coincide with Keenleyside Reach stock assessments conducted under the BC Hydro Water Use Plan, and with lower Columbia River stock assessments (project 1986-050-00).  The assessments will employ a spatially balanced, stratified random sampling strategy (general random tessellation stratified [GRTS] design) and standardized setline gear.

In particular, there is a need to more thoroughly evaluate aquaculture supplementation efforts. Based on the 2009 LRSRP setline survey, older hatchery fish are now recruiting well to setline gear and offer the opportunity to estimate long term trends in juvenile abundance and survival.  Surveys will also monitor for trends in growth, condition, and range expansion that may indicate density dependent effects.  Data collected from these coordinated efforts will help inform and guide future stocking levels.  Further, by the time of survey implementation, numbers of hatchery fish will be likely be transitioning to sexual maturity, and will provide the opportunity to assess reproductive characteristics of the population across multiple cohorts of known age. Hatchery sturgeon of known age and origin also provide the opportunity to monitor contaminant bioaccumulation and the effects on growth, condition, and reproduction (i.e. fecundity, egg size).

Stock assessment study design, analysis, and implementation will be led by the Spokane Tribe Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (1995-027-00) in Washington and by BC Hydro in British Columbia.  The CCT, under the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA project 2008-116-00), will provide a support role in population monitoring by providing a field crew, equipment, and technical advice.  CCT participation will help increase sampling effort, and sample sizes, to improve precision of capture-recapture abundance and survival estimates, as well as indices of growth and condition to facilitate inferential statistical analysis. To complement the traditional stock assessment surveys, the CCT proposes to experiment with the use of a multibeam echosounder (MBES) to identify individual white sturgeon for estimating abundance.

Fall gill netting

There is a continued need for annual fall gill net surveys in the Roosevelt Reach.  Surveys are needed to monitor for natural recruitment of wild white sturgeon to the sub-yearling and yearling juvenile life stages, as well as provide supplemental information for evaluation of the conservation aquaculture program through capture of hatchery origin juveniles.  Further, fall gill netting will be the primary tool used for evaluating the relative survival of experimental larval release groups to sub-yearling and yearling ages during empirical testing of the larval habitat mis-match hypothesis proposed under the CCT WSEP.  Gill net study design, analysis, and implementation will be led by the Spokane Tribe Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (1995-027-00) in Washington and by BC Hydro in British Columbia.  The CCT, under the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA project 2008-116-00), will provide a support role in population monitoring by providing a field crew, equipment, and technical advice.  CCT participation will help increase sampling effort and sample sizes to improve precision of parameter estimates, as well as indices of growth and condition to facilitate inferential statistical analysis.

Water Quality Monitoring

Water quality changes resulting from hydro-operations have been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River.  There is a need to monitor parameters that directly, or indirectly have the potential to impact the survival and distribution of post-hatch sturgeon.  The LRSRP proposes to install water quality monitoring stations to collect abiotic data (ie. turbidity, temperature) at various sites in the riverine, transition, and upper reservoir zones of the upper Columbia River to collect a long term data set that will be used in modeling habitat-recruitment relationships.

Acoustic telemetry

We propose to continue operation and maintenance of the portion of the transboundary longitudinal array of acoustic telemetry receivers established by the LRSRP in the upper portions of the Roosevelt Reach in 2004. While a great deal of acoustic data has been collected to date the continued operation of the transboundary acoustic array is desirable for two primary reasons. Firstly, over 100 adult sturgeon have been outfitted with long-life (10 yr) acoustic tags since 2007 and this pool of individuals provides the opportunity to collect a long term data set that is meaningful in the context of the long life-span of this species. Secondly, maintenance of the array over the long term also provides the opportunity for its utilization by other researchers interested in conducting studies of other species of interest in Lake Roosevelt. A current example of this is acoustic telemetry studies of kokanee being conducted by Eastern Washington University (BPA Project Number 1994-043-00.)  Specific objectives would include:

  1. Identify migrations by adult white sturgeon outfitted with long-life (10 yr) acoustic tags to known spawning areas in the Transboundary Reach to estimate spawning periodicities.
  2. Potentially identify previously undocumented spawning areas by monitoring the movements of adult sturgeon during the spawning timeframe.
  3. Use observations of adult sturgeon presence in known spawning areas to estimate duration of the spawning period each year.
  4. From observations of multiple spawn migrations, determine individual proclivity for spawning site fidelity.
  5. Estimate annual survival of adult sturgeon outfitted with long-life (10 yr) acoustic tags.
  6. Monitor general movements and habitat use of telemetered sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach.

The LRSRP also proposes to conduct a multi-year study of sturgeon spawning behavior in the Northport area through deployment of VPS technology.  Since 2007, researchers in the U.S. and Canada have outfitted over 100 adult sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach (Grand Coulee Dam in WA to HLK Dam in BC) with long-life (10 yr) VEMCO acoustic tags and this pool of fish affords the opportunity to collect multi-year data on fine-scale spawning behavior and habitat use in known spawning locations.  As previously described, the Northport location is of particular interest since it represents one of the few known spawning areas in the Columbia Basin that is not closely associated with a hydropower facility tailrace. In 2011, the LRSRP assessed the feasibility of deploying a VPS system in the Northport spawning area.  Despite well above average flows during the study (July through mid August), the system was successfully deployed and retrieved, and multiple detections of nine tagged adult sturgeon were recorded over the course of the study.  When allied with habitat mapping data and flow modeling in the upper Roosevelt Reach as currently being proposed by the CCT WSEP, fine-scale positioning data will provide new and detailed insights into white sturgeon spawning behavior and preferred spawning habitat and may potentially result in the identification of previously undocumented spawning areas.

Conservation Aquaculture

The LRSRP proposes continuing conservation hatchery program activities to protect the population while recovery actions can be implemented to address limiting factors and allow natural recruitment to re-establish population growth.  We propose to continue suspension of direct gamete take from broodstock in favor of collecting naturally produced larvae for rearing based on the perceived benefits outlined above.  However, comparative genetic analyses are needed in order to confirm larval collection efforts are at least as efficacious in representing the native genetic diversity as direct gamete take from broodstock fish.  Tissue samples (n=500 each year) were collected from juveniles reared from larval collections in 2010 and 2011 and these will be subject to a comparative genetic analysis by UC Davis researchers in 2012.  Larval collection efforts have the secondary benefit of providing long term early life history information (e.g. dispersal timing, relative abundance etc.) with the proviso that it may not be possible to fully standardize collection efforts due to, for example, inter-annual variability in river discharge that will likely affect locations of collection stations.

Food availability

A recent UCWSRI recruitment failure hypotheses assessment (Gregory and Long 2008) identified food resource availability as a potential limiting factor for early life stage white sturgeon in the Transboundary recovery area.  From 2007-2010, the LRSRP conducted sampling to assess the abundance and types of macro-invertebrates found in the river-reservoir transition zone of the Roosevelt Reach at the time of year when first feeding sturgeon larvae are known to be present.  Analysis of samples collected during these efforts is not yet complete and no conclusions regarding food availability for sturgeon can be drawn at this point.  However, a recognized major limitation of the 2007-2010 sampling efforts was a lack of stratification by habitat type because this information was lacking at the time.  This is an important consideration since invertebrate community composition and abundance is often associated with habitat, substrate type in particular.  Habitat surveys of the river-reservoir transition zone are currently being proposed by the CCT as part of the WSEP (BPA project 2008-116-00) and will include substrate characterization and mapping.  This provides the opportunity to develop macro-invertebrate studies that more properly and efficiently assess forage availability for larval white sturgeon in the river-reservoir transition zone through appropriate stratification of sampling effort.  The LRSRP also proposes comparing histology of post-feeding white sturgeon collected during larval collection efforts for the conservation aquaculture program with reference specimens in order to identify potential starvation effects in wild fish.

Predation

As detailed above, previous predator sampling efforts by the LRSRP failed document predation on young white sturgeon although this may have been due to limitations of the collection methodology and the sampling strategy employed at the time (i.e. collection of predators by shallow-water/littoral electro-fishing at night).  The recent documented predation on larval sturgeon by sculpin and on a sub-yearling juvenile by a walleye indicates predation actually does occur in the river-reservoir transition zone.  The LRSRP therefore proposes to revisit evaluations of predation impacts on early life stages of white sturgeon by periodically collecting potential predators from the transition zone from July through October.  Predators will be collected using a combination of short duration gill net sets and by trawling with sampling being stratified by depth and by time of day (during daylight and at night).  The LRSRP also proposes to sample the guts of predator fish collected during annual fall walleye indexing efforts in the Roosevelt Reach that are conducted in early November.  Characterization of predation on white sturgeon will assist managers in developing actions to limit predator impacts in efforts to conserve and restore white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River.

Key Project Personnel

Matt Howell is the current project manager and principal investigator for the WDFW portion of the Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery (BPA Project No. 1995-027-00).  As principal investigator for the project since its inception, Mr. Howell had a primary role in the development, design, and implementation of all aspects of monitoring and research undertaken to date.  Consequently he has extensive experience conducting studies related to sturgeon stock assessment, subyearling recruitment, early life history, conservation aquaculture, acoustic telemetry, and habitat evaluation.  Mr. Howell is the current WDFW technical lead for white sturgeon in Lake Roosevelt, has been a member of the UCWSRI Technical Working Group since 2003, and recently became the WDFW’s representative on the UCWSRI TWG.

 


What are the ultimate ecological objectives of your project?

Examples include:

Monitoring the status and trend of the spawner abundance of a salmonid population; Increasing harvest; Restoring or protecting a certain population; or Maintaining species diversity. A Project Objective should provide a biological and/or physical habitat benchmark by which results can be evaluated. Objectives should be stated in terms of desired outcomes, rather than as statements of methods and work elements (tasks). In addition, define the success criteria by which you will determine if you have met your objectives. Later, you will be asked to link these Objectives to Deliverables and Work Elements.
Objectives: View instructions
Prevent further reduction in upper Columbia River sturgeon distribution, density and genetic diversity by implementing LRSRP/UCWSRI long-term measures (OBJ-1)
Monitoring efforts, comprised of comprehensive adult and sub-yearling stock assessments, evaluation of sturgeon spatial distribution and movements, and water quality assessments, will provide information vital to the development of management actions designed to protect wild white sturgeon populations in the upper Columbia River. Continuation of the Lake Roosevelt interim white sturgeon conservation aquaculture program is a critical strategy in protecting genetic diversity of the Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia white sturgeon populations. Data management is also critical for data collected under the Transboundary Reach projects, and will provide data sharing and collaborative opportunities with other sturgeon researchers in the region.

Implement research examining hypotheses to determine the cause of upper Columbia River white sturgeon recruitment failure. (OBJ-2)
Examine fish community structure, food resource limitations, contaminants, and habitat limitations potentially causing recruitment failure of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach. Determination of factors limiting recruitment is crucial to the development and implementation of strategies intended to promote natural recruitment of the upper Columbia River white sturgeon.


The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Summary of Budgets

To view all expenditures for all fiscal years, click "Project Exp. by FY"

To see more detailed project budget information, please visit the "Project Budget" page

Expense SOY Budget Working Budget Expenditures *
FY2019 $505,982 $505,982 $545,908

General $505,982 $545,908
FY2020 $505,982 $635,982 $442,846

General $635,982 $442,846
FY2021 $505,982 $505,982 $558,038

General $505,982 $558,038
FY2022 $505,982 $505,982 $472,101

General $505,982 $472,101
FY2023 $505,982 $900,000 $972,049

General $900,000 $972,049
FY2024 $528,245 $922,500 $525,983

Fish Accord- Spokane $922,500 $525,983
General $0 $0
FY2025 $945,563 $945,563 $472,381

Fish Accord- Spokane $945,563 $472,381

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 31-Mar-2025

Actual Project Cost Share

The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Current Fiscal Year — 2025   DRAFT
Cost Share Partner Total Proposed Contribution Total Confirmed Contribution
There are no project cost share contributions to show.
Previous Fiscal Years
Fiscal Year Total Contributions % of Budget
2024 $69,519 7%
2023 $68,396 7%
2022 $50,650 9%
2021 $50,650 9%
2020 $53,650 8%
2019 $53,650 10%
2018 $53,650 10%
2017 $43,529 8%
2016 $43,529 8%
2015 $43,529 8%
2014 $42,550 8%
2013 $42,350 8%
2012 $43,050 8%
2011 $58,250 10%
2010 $71,899 13%
2009 $104,594 18%
2008 $77,316 14%
2007 $68,396 11%

Discuss your project's recent Financial performance shown above. Please explain any significant differences between your Working Budget, Contracted Amount and Expenditures. If Confirmed Cost Share Contributions are significantly different than Proposed cost share contributions, please explain.
Explanation of Recent Financial Performance: View instructions
Working budgets, contracted budgets and expenditures were mostly aligned as described in project proposals and expensed to nearly zero in all years. The confirmed cost share contributions were considerably higher than the proposed cost share due to contributions from outside sources to cover additional work determined to be necessary to move forward by the project proponents and recovery initiative partners.
Discuss your project's historical financial performance, going back to its inception. Include a brief recap of your project's expenditures by fiscal year. If appropriate discuss this in the context of your project's various phases.
Explanation of Financial History: View instructions
The first deliverables identified for this project consisted of development of the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative Recovery Plan. All expenses in the project were directed to subcontractors to complete that work. After the Recovery Plan was completed in 2002, the project moved forward on implementation of the measures identified in the Recovery Plan. They were and continue to be primarily directed towards assessments to determine stock status and recruitment failure mechanisms. Additional funding continues to be directed towards conservation aquaculture activities. 2002 $49,228 2003 $7,297 2004 $247,821 2005 $208,035

Annual Progress Reports
Expected (since FY2004):40
Completed:19
On time:19
Status Reports
Completed:79
On time:56
Avg Days Late:0

                Count of Contract Deliverables
Earliest Contract Subsequent Contracts Title Contractor Earliest Start Latest End Latest Status Accepted Reports Complete Green Yellow Red Total % Green and Complete Canceled
5755 22571, 27332, 32258, 37734, 42440, 46996, 52293, 57415, 61026, 65088, 68702, 72008, 75980, 78941, 81914, 85144, 87423, 89840, 92128, 94282, 96658 1995-027-00 EXP LAKE ROOS STURGEON RECOVERY UPPER COL R SPOK TR Spokane Tribe 04/01/2001 03/31/2026 Issued 79 280 0 0 30 310 90.32% 0
BPA-3715 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2006 09/30/2007 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-4082 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2007 09/30/2008 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-4326 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2008 09/30/2009 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-5167 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2009 09/30/2010 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-5708 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2010 09/30/2011 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-6351 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2011 09/30/2012 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-7023 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2012 09/30/2013 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-8386 PIT Tags - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2014 09/30/2015 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-8912 PIT Tags - Lake Rosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2015 09/30/2016 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-9593 PIT Tags - Lake Rosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2016 09/30/2017 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-10021 PIT Tags - Lake Rosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2017 09/30/2018 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-10729 PIT Tags - Lake Rosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2018 09/30/2019 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-12276 FY21 Pit Tags Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2020 09/30/2021 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-12914 FY22 PIT tags Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2021 09/30/2022 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-13273 FY23 PIT Tags Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2022 09/30/2023 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-13780 FY24 PIT Tags Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2023 09/30/2024 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BPA-14386 FY25 PIT Tags Bonneville Power Administration 10/01/2024 09/30/2025 Active 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Project Totals 79 280 0 0 30 310 90.32% 0

Selected Contracted Deliverables in CBFish (2004 to present)

The contracted deliverables listed below have been selected by the proponent as demonstrative of this project's major accomplishments.

Contract WE Ref Contracted Deliverable Title Due Completed
46996 I: 99 Develop, organize and participate in public outreach activities 3/31/2011 3/31/2011
52293 B: 176 Produce and release hatchery white sturgeon (BY2010) 5/10/2011 5/10/2011
52293 Q: 132 Produce 2007 Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Progress Report. 7/15/2011 7/15/2011

View full Project Summary report (lists all Contracted Deliverables and Quantitative Metrics)

Discuss your project's contracted deliverable history (from Pisces). If it has a high number of Red deliverables, please explain. Most projects will not have 100% completion of deliverables since most have at least one active ("Issued") or Pending contract. Also discuss your project's history in terms of providing timely Annual Progress Reports (aka Scientific/Technical reports) and Pisces Status Reports. If you think your contracted deliverable performance has been stellar, you can say that too.
Explanation of Performance: View instructions
Status reports have been completed mostly on time. Annual Progress Reports are completed through 2007, and 2008 and 2009 are nearly complete/under review. The delay in the reporting has been primarily a result of a large field-work schedule that has limited data compilation and reporting times. We are working to get the report deliverables completed.

  • Please do the following to help the ISRP and Council assess project performance:
  • List important activities and then report results.
  • List each objective and summarize accomplishments and results for each one, including the projects previous objectives. If the objectives were not met, were changed, or dropped, please explain why. For research projects, list hypotheses that have been and will be tested.
  • Whenever possible, describe results in terms of the quantifiable biological and physical habitat objectives of the Fish and Wildlife Program, i.e., benefit to fish and wildlife or to the ecosystems that sustain them. Include summary tables and graphs of key metrics showing trends. Summarize and cite (with links when available) your annual reports, peer reviewed papers, and other technical documents. If another project tracks physical habitat or biological information related to your project’s actions please summarize and expand on, as necessary, the results and evaluation conducted under that project that apply to your project, and cite that project briefly here and fully in the Relationships section below. Research or M&E projects that have existed for a significant period should, besides showing accumulated data, also present statistical analyses and conclusions based on those data. Also, summarize the project’s influence on resource management and other economic or social benefits. Expand as needed in the Adaptive Management section below. The ISRP will use this information in its Retrospective Review of prior year results. If your proposal is for continuation of work, your proposal should focus on updating this section. If yours is an umbrella project, click here for additional instructions. Clearly report the impacts of your project, what you have learned, not just what you did.
All Proposals: View instructions
  • For umbrella projects, the following information should also be included in this section:
  • a. Provide a list of project actions to date. Include background information on the recipients of funding, including organization name and mission, project cost, project title, location and short project summary, and implementation timeline.
  • b. Describe how the restoration actions were selected for implementation, the process and criteria used, and their relative rank. Were these the highest priority actions? If not, please explain why?
  • c. Describe the process to document progress toward meeting the program’s objectives in the implementation of the suite of projects to date. Describe this in terms of landscape-level improvements in limiting factors and response of the focal species.
  • d. Where are project results reported (e.g. Pisces, report repository, database)? Is progress toward program objectives tracked in a database, report, indicator, or other format? Can project data be incorporated into regional databases that may be of interest to other projects?
  • e. Who is responsible for the final reporting and data management?
  • f. Describe problems encountered, lessons learned, and any data collected, that will inform adaptive management or influence program priorities.
Umbrella Proposals: View instructions
  1. The LRSRP has worked cooperatively with co-managers and project partners (Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife and Colville Confederated Tribes) to assess adult and sub-yearling stock status, movement, and early life history status in the Roosevelt Reach.  The data collected has been combined with data collected by others in the UCWSRI-TWG to complete full white sturgeon stock status, movement and sub-yearling assessments in the Transboundary Reach (upper Columbia River from Grand Coulee Dam to Hugh Keenleyside Dam, BC).  The information provided by the research and monitoring efforts is critical to development of management actions to recovery white sturgeon in the study area.  See Problem Statement and Adaptive Management proposal sections for a full review of this accomplishment.
  2. Annual Reports from 2004 through 2007 have been completed and submitted to Bonneville Power Administration.  The 2008 draft report is complete and under review, while the 2009 and 2010 reports are in progress and will be reviewed by project participants and will be submitted to Bonneville Power Administration.  Additionally, articles are in draft examining the use of wild larvae collections for aquaculture, and upon completion will be submitted to peer-reviewed journals for publication.
  3. The Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project – Interim Hatchery Component has released approximately 31,995 white sturgeon juveniles into the Roosevelt Reach between 2004 and 2011.  Hatchery fish released in 2004 and 2005 were reared from eggs provided by UCWSRI Canadian partners from the Keenleyside Reach and reared at WDFW Columbia Basin Hatchery.  Project proponents identified spawning areas in the U.S. in 2005, and subsequently began collecting broodstock from U.S. spawning areas for rearing at Columbia Basin Hatchery in 2006.  A recommendation to use a 3 by 3 factorial mating scheme for broodstock was implemented in 2008 in an effort to maintain wild population genetic integrity within the conservation aquaculture program .  Although collection efforts did not support the intent in 2008, project proponents recommend 3 by 3 mating matrices for all subsequent broodstock crosses utilized by Lake Roosevelt managers.  Additionally, genetics studies were implemented to examine the Transboundary Reach population structure, and to determine the level to which the production program represented the wild-type genetic diversity in its broodstock program.  Studies found that the white sturgeon population in the upper Columbia River was comprised of a single population, and that broodstock collected represented the genetic diversity of the wild population, but that rare alleles may not be well represented or preserved using the current methodology.  To address potential limitations of the broodstock production program, managers examined the potential of using wild-caught larvae collected from the Roosevelt Reach in 2010.  Larvae were collected using modified D-ring nets and transferred to the WDFW Sherman Creek Hatchery for rearing.  Based on the success of the pilot study, managers began full implementation of the aquaculture program using wild-caught larvae in 2011.
  4. In 2009 the LRSRP funded WDFW to examine the potential for chemically marking early life stage (at fertilization, hatch, and six weeks post-hatch) sturgeon with strontium chloride (Schroder and Sanborn 2009).  Inductively Coupled Plasma/Optical Emission Spectroscopy analyses showed that there were no discernible differences in ppm strontium between fish treated at fertilization or at hatch and controls.  However, concentrations of strontium in fish marked at six weeks post hatch were approximately nine times greater than controls one month after marking.  Analysis of samples collected from this treatment group at longer time intervals from marking will be completed in 2012.  However, preliminary results suggest strontium marking has potential for use in larval release experiments intended to empirically test habitat mis-match hypotheses.  Larval marking with calcein is planned under LRSRP bridge year funding in 2012.
  5. The LRSRP project partners were involved in the development of the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002).  The Recovery Plan (UCWSRI 2002) defines short-, medium-, and long-term measures developed to achieve the UCWSRI goal “to ensure the persistence and viability of naturally-reproducing populations of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River and restore opportunities for beneficial use if feasible.”
  6. The LRSRP project partners were involved in the broader UCWSRI Recruitment Failure Hypothesis Review (RFHR) process, implemented to complete an exhaustive examination of all of the hypotheses suggested to be potential causes of recruitment failure of the upper Columbia River white sturgeon population.  The intent of the RFHR was to determine which factors were most likely to be causing recruitment failure.  Outcomes from the process have been/will be used to develop the revised UCWSRI Recovery Plan, Action Plans under Canada’s National Recovery Strategy, and to develop proposals under the NPCC FWP and other processes in the US.
  7. The LRSRP completed development of a website dedicated to the Transboundary Reach white sturgeon located at http://www.uppercolumbiasturgeon.org.  The primary function of the webpage is to inform the public about white sturgeon issues in the Transboundary Reach, as well as facilitating information exchanges among researchers and managers.  The webpage is currently experiencing an architectural revision, and will be updated with new information and links courtesy of our Canadian partners.  The LRSRP is involved in providing U.S. updates during the website revision and will be involved in maintaining the website in the future.
  8. The LRSRP have finalized a technical draft of the Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document - White Sturgeon Appendix (LRMT 2009) that details management strategies for white sturgeon over the next five years.  This is a living document that will be updated and changed as new data and information becomes available.  
  9. The LRSRP has compiled in-house databases that are maintained for project use and eventual inclusion into regional databases, including PTAGIS, HYDRA, and the upper Columbia River white sturgeon database (proposed under the Colville Confederated Tribe’s White Sturgeon Enhancement Project 2008-116-00).


The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Review: 2020 Resident Fish and Sturgeon Project Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-NPCC-20210317
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: 2020 Resident Fish and Sturgeon Project Review
Approved Date: 10/27/2020
Recommendation: Implement
Comments: Supported as reviewed. Additional funding supported - retrofit the existing 2003 sturgeon landing craft ($100K) to conduct field activities and provide safe environment for crew and sturgeon. Linked to #2008-116-00.
Part 3, Project-Specific Recommendation: Bonneville to fund the retrofit of the sturgeon landing craft at a cost not to exceed $100,000 in FY2021 to ensure continued use of the vessel in support of this collaborative sturgeon effort.

[Background: See https:/www.nwcouncil.org/fw/reviews/2019RFS]

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-ISRP-20210319
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: 2020 Resident Fish and Sturgeon Project Review
Completed Date: None
Documentation Links:
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-NPCC-20130807
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal: RESCAT-1995-027-00
Proposal State: Pending BPA Response
Approved Date: 3/5/2014
Recommendation: Implement with Conditions
Comments: Implement with conditions through 2017. 1) Not to exceed current infrastructure and sturgeon production level (experimental phase: with 10,000 naturally produced post-hatch sturgeon (deliverable 6)) until initial step review complete in Project 2007-272-00. 2). As part of step review, sponsor to address ISRP qualification 2. 3) Prior to implementation of food web/predation activities, sponsor to submit for ISRP review design and approach methods for predation (deliverable 4) and food web (deliverable 5) components as requested by ISRP in qualification #1. Refer to Data Management Review and Recs (Part 3) for database development aspects of the project. Also refer to the Resident Fish Review and Recommendations for White Sturgeon in Part 2.

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-1995-027-00
Completed Date: 4/13/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:

Most of the responses to ISRP questions were adequate. Positive responses from the sponsors included summary updates for project results (2009-2011) and a description of expertise and roles of existing project personnel.

The sponsors provided detailed information, including a good diagram, of how this project relates to and coordinates with project #200811600. It has now been made clearer to the ISRP which entities are leading the work in various areas.

The ISRP had requested additional information on criteria for identifying stock rebuilding. However, no additional information was provided. The objective is simply to stock plenty of fish, and if it turns out to be too many, fish can be thinned through harvest. This is one approach, but a more plausible scientifically-based rebuilding schedule needs to be formulated.

The ISRP requested more detailed methods and approaches for several tasks outlined in the proposal, including methods for determining (1) if predation on juvenile sturgeon was cause for recruitment failure and (2) if lack of proper food was the cause of starvation and recruitment failure. These were not included in the response. Instead, the sponsor’s response was "The LRSRP appreciates that the ISRP recognizes the complexity of the recruitment failure issue in the transboundary reach and the difficulties associated with identifying the limiting factors. The LRSRP recognizes the importance of designing detailed study approaches in order to objectively answer recruitment failure questions. The LRSRP plans to retain a subcontractor with appropriate expertise to assist with study design including detailed methods and implementation of the predation and food habits components of this project. The completion of this work is contingent upon funding."

The sponsor stated that it plans to hire a subcontractor when funded to assist with study design and methodology involving predation and food web components of the project. A specific subcontractor was not identified in the proposal. It is highly desirable for a scientific proposal to identify key individuals or groups that would be responsible for such a major contribution to the study, to indicate that that they had been contacted, and for them to perhaps provide some indication of hypotheses and appropriate methodologies used to test the hypotheses.

Qualification #1 - Qualification #1 - identify and hire the subcontractor
For the predation and food web components of the project, the sponsor needs to identify and hire the subcontractor, identify qualified staffing additions to conduct the work, and develop detailed methodologies, including the starvation approach. The ISRP should review the specific objectives and methodologies prior to implementation.
Qualification #2 - Qualification #2 - develop a plausible rebuilding schedule for the stock
The sponsor needs to develop a plausible rebuilding schedule for the stock with production and cohort/age structure goals during contracting. Similar work by other entities, including the Kootenai Tribe, should be reviewed for applicability.
Qualification #3 - Qualification #3 - High quality annual reports need to be completed and updated.
High quality annual reports need to be completed and updated.
First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Response Requested
First Round ISRP Comment:
  1. Results are lacking for 2009-2011. Annual reports are behind schedule. Two or three years of data may change the direction and rationale of the study. The sponsors should provide a summary of recent results to the ISRP for review.

  2. More rigorous and detailed methods and approaches are needed for several of the tasks outlined, specifically describing how the field work will translate into answered questions. Refer to the next paragraph for issues to address in the response.

Despite a reasonably sound and useful overview of sturgeon problems in this portion of the basin, several items in the proposal are in need of clarification. First, although the need for more understanding of the recruitment failure is well articulated and on target, designing studies to address this issue is an extremely difficult process and requires a more detailed, critical approach than is outlined here. The goals of the recruitment failure work are laudable. However, because of a lack of detail provided in the proposal, the ability of the proposed work to answer the key questions and meet those goals is very questionable. For example, it is not enough to answer if some sturgeon are eaten; it must be shown that this is a cause of the recruitment failure. Similarly, it is not enough to look at some fish food habits and invertebrates; it needs to be shown objectively that these factors are a cause for the recruitment failure. These are difficult questions to answer. Detailed study approaches are needed.

  1. Information that details how work elements proposed under 200811600 and this project are to be divided up should be provided in the response.
  2. A description of the expertise and specific roles of personnel should be provided so responsibility for every project activity is clear.

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

The Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP) is an ongoing project implemented to monitor population status and conduct recruitment failure research on white sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach of the upper Columbia River. The primary goal of the project is to conserve and restore white sturgeon in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River. Their hypothesis is that sturgeon cannot get from the hiding to rearing life stage due to contaminants and predation. This project is closely linked to project 200811600.

The significance of this project is described as responding to many regional plans and programs including: the Lake Roosevelt Guiding Document and Management Plan, the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Initiative and Recovery Plan (2002), the NPPC Fish and Wildlife Program (2009), the Spokane Subbasin Plan, the MERR Plan, and others.

The technical background is described in the Problem Statement and is extensive, contains many good references, and provides sufficient detail regarding the current status and problems of white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River Basin. Past work is well described.

The objectives are listed as:

OBJ-1: Prevent further reduction in upper Columbia River sturgeon distribution, density and genetic diversity by implementing LRSRP/UCWSRI long-term measures.

OBJ-2: Implement research examining hypotheses to determine the cause of upper Columbia River white sturgeon recruitment failure.

These objectives are too general. The deliverables which follow, however, are the work elements and are at a reasonable level of detail.

Even though the importance of rebuilding white sturgeon in the Upper River is well documented and well-justified in this proposal, some details remain vague. The intent to "rebuild the natural age-class structure lost during the recruitment failures of the last 30 years (UCWSRI 2002, Recovery Plan Measure 5.5.3)" raises the question of whether this historical age structure is well-known, or is it just assumed that recruitment occurred every year or nearly every year? The data in Figure 2 demonstrate the lack of recruitment very clearly but do not necessarily indicate steady recruitment of the past. It is also not separated by sex, so with sexual size dimorphism of sturgeon, it gives little indication of actual yearly recruitment. Care must therefore be used in designing the stock composition target that is part of the rebuilding effort. There seems to be no evidence that recruitment in this section of the river was necessarily a yearly event or even very consistent.

Regarding the goal of 1000 mature individuals in an approximately 1:1 sex ratio at maturity, there will of course not be such a sex ratio at maturity because the males will mature several years before the females so there will be more mature males from a cohort starting at a 50-50 sex ratio.

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

Overall, the sponsors did a nice job providing the status of sturgeon populations for this part of the system. Accomplishments are adequately summarized in the proposal. However, there has been a serious lack of reporting since the last ISRP review of this project. Completed reports are lacking for three recent years. Although the ISRP lauded the reporting in the previous review, the major lapse in reporting since then is cause for concern about project direction.

Regarding growth, the authors reported that "the estimate of growth co-efficient, K, was substantially greater in magnitude, and resulting growth trajectories predicted that sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach attain larger sizes at younger ages than observed in other areas of the Columbia River (Howell and McLellan in prep; Figure 5)." It is confusing as to why the growth of the Lake Roosevelt fish would be faster than others but from Keenleyside slower than the others. This does not appear to make sense. Clarification would be helpful.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

The sponsors present a thorough review of sturgeon activities to date and do a reasonable job of focusing in on the knowledge limitations remaining. There does not seem to be a 2009, 2010, or 2011 Annual report, and there does not seem to be much, if any, history of refereed publications resulting from this long project. The ISRP will expand on its retrospective analysis following the response.

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

The sponsors provided a good description of how this project relates to and coordinates with many other BPA projects plus state and Canadian programs.

Potential limiting factors are identified in the review section. There is a general description of how the sponsors are aware of emerging limiting factors such as non-natives and predators.

Adequate answers were provided to the tailored questions. Tagging descriptions were provided in good detail. Database development and sharing is described in reasonable detail.

It is not clear exactly who is doing the work. There is no recent annual report to clarify this issue. The sponsors state, "Stock assessment study design, analysis, and implementation will be led by the Spokane Tribe Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (1995-027-00) in Washington and by BC Hydro in British Columbia. The CCT, under the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA project 2008-116-00), will provide a support role in population monitoring by providing a field crew, equipment, and technical advice. CCT participation will help increase sampling effort, and sample sizes, to improve precision of capture-recapture abundance and survival estimates, as well as indices of growth and condition to facilitate inferential statistical analysis." The one person mentioned as involved in this study is from neither entity but from WDFW, even though this is a Spokane Tribe proposal. The roles of the participants in achieving each objective are unclear and need to be clarified. Who exactly is doing various portions of this work?

Some duplication appears to occur in 200811600 with regard to database management. Both agencies have sizeable budgetary resources dedicated to this effort, although it is the lead of 2008-116-00. The roles here need to be more clearly defined. We would request a diagram showing how work elements proposed under 200811600 and this project are to be divided up. There seems to be some duplication, and a diagram may show otherwise.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Details of several work elements are not clearly articulated. For example, regarding predation: "Under the recruitment failure hypotheses assessment completed by the UCWSRI, several potential proximate mechanisms have been identified as potentially limiting survival of white sturgeon in the recovery area. The LRSRP proposes to examine predation on white sturgeon early life-history stages (ELS) by conducting diet analyses on predators collected from the transition zone from July through October using a combination of short duration gill net sets and by trawling with sampling being stratified by depth and by time of day." This approach intends to sample fish and look at stomachs, but it is not clear how the presence or absence of sturgeon will be translated into a quantitative assessment of the effect of predation and therefore on recruitment failure. The collection of the data is much more direct than the translation of the results into a predation effect on recruitment failure, and the approach should be described in more detail.

Similarly, with regard to food limitation, the sponsors state, "We also intend to compare histology of post-feeding stages of white sturgeon collected during field surveys with reference specimens to identify starvation effects in wild fish, thus determine the role food availability plays as a limiting factor in sturgeon survival." Has this approach been used successfully elsewhere? Please provide background and references.

Although year class strength has at least tentatively been associated with higher flows, it does not seem that any recommendations have been forwarded to test flow augmentation during late spring early summer to improve natural reproduction and recruitment. Has this topic been adequately investigated? Have recommendations been made?

There may be some value in using otoliths to find hatching dates for larval fish.

More details are needed of the contaminant work to be performed and the protocols and methods. 

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

The protocols and methods have been entered in MonitoringMethods.org. The basic protocols and methods were fairly complete and the level of detail for the methods is almost sufficient to be able to replicate the study data collection. Methods outlined in these sections often do not greatly exceed in detail that presented in the proposal. More details of the proposed experimental designs for predation should be provided. What might be the role of sculpins and how might it be evaluated?

Under food resource availability, no details of methods are provided. How can sampling some stomachs clearly lead to conclusions regarding possible "starvation"? Have the sponsors clearly visualized and laid out how the starvation hypothesis can be evaluated?

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/13/2012 4:39:12 PM.
Documentation Links:
  • Proponent Response (3/7/2012)
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-NPCC-20090924
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Approved Date: 10/23/2006
Recommendation: Fund
Comments: ISRP fundable (qualified): sponsors should consider the ISRP comments for the next project review. Work element associated with artificial production triggers step reviews. See project 200737200.

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-ISRP-20060831
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Completed Date: 8/31/2006
Final Round ISRP Date: None
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:
This is a proposal for white sturgeon rehabilitation in Lake Roosevelt that is reasonable in broad view, but the initial proposal lacked perspective from other white sturgeon research, did not adequately document the status of the population, and did not adequately justify a conservation aquaculture program. The first two of these three deficiencies were amply remedied by an excellent response. The response addressed the ISRP's identified concerns explicitly with an abundance of data, analysis, and intentions for the proposed research. The response provides convincing evidence that sponsors are gaining an understanding of the dynamics of the sturgeon population upstream from Lake Roosevelt and perhaps beginning to determine the mechanisms limiting recruitment to the older age classes. An expanded reference list was provided. The ISRP appreciates the thoughtfulness, thoroughness, and objectivity with which the sponsors provided their response. The reporting of results of the project has been good with Annual Reports to BPA produced for each year of the study.

The relationships of the Lake Roosevelt stock to other components of the Columbia River Basin white sturgeon were described both genetically and geographically. The research and analysis to date on stock status was described quantitatively and appropriate results were presented. As requested, the response demonstrated an understanding of the sturgeon population in the context of other populations and ongoing research and management in the basin and throughout the species' range. The initially unclear relationships among existing projects were appropriately clarified. The response provided evidence that the population assessments conducted to date and those planned for the future are intended to be quantitative and have statistical rigor.

Despite the fine response, the ISRP has some suggestions for sponsors' consideration in the areas of population status and stock assessment. Sponsors conclude with a statement that the historic stock structure is not germane to the current problem of poor recruitment, and that the population will remain isolated for the foreseeable future because of impoundment of this section of the river. This may be true, although the ISRP provides another view for consideration. The ISRP receives proposals from various reaches throughout the Columbia River basin that implicitly treat each impoundment as an isolated unit. It could be, however, that before the hydrosystem was constructed white sturgeon migrated among segments of the Columbia and Snake Rivers (exclusive of the Kootenai, which has been isolated for thousands of years). Coupled with episodic and localized successful recruitment interspersed with many years of failed reproduction, the abundance and geographic distribution of sturgeon may have depended on movement of individuals, young and old, among river reaches. The fragmentation of the system may itself be a causal mechanism in the decline in recruitment in some segments. If this is the case, then efforts to mitigate the mechanisms for recruitment failure may be a necessary but insufficient solution to recover these populations. Any artificial production to support white sturgeon needs to consider this possibility.

Sponsors provided a very helpful summary of their stock assessment efforts, and their conclusions to date. If this proposal is funded and the current round of tasks are accomplished, it would be helpful for reviewers in the next proposal cycle if the sponsors provided a more thorough justification of additional stock assessments. There need to be explicit assessments outlined that will provide convincing abundance and survival estimates. The conclusion that a standardized survey needs to be conducted every three years could to be better justified, also. Future proposals should more thoroughly develop the need for continued population status monitoring and at what time intervals.

The sponsors' justification for the conservation hatchery was still based too much on the UCWSRI (2002) and recovery plan recommendations, plus the citing of supplementation ongoing in the lower Columbia River (The Dalles reservoir) and in the Kootenai River. The ISRP examined the upper Columbia plan and found no compelling evidence that a conservation aquaculture program was well justified other than that the Canadians were successfully rearing and releasing juvenile white sturgeon into the Keenleyside Reach since 2002. All of the supplementation efforts are at such an early stage that it is unknown if supplementation will help or hurt these populations. This is too much like a bandwagon approach. The rationale for trying conservation aquaculture was presented as a temporary response to the longer time frame of likely research and management advances for restoring habitat deficiencies likely responsible for low recruitment. An informative set of projected population trajectories with and without hatchery supplementation was provided. Nonetheless, the ISRP suggests the supplementation approach be more thoroughly developed and justified, which remains a qualification for the fundable recommendation.
Documentation Links:
Explain how your project has responded to the above ISRP and Council qualifications, conditions, or recommendations. This is especially important if your project received a "Qualified" rating from the ISRP in your most recent assessment. Even if your project received favorable ratings from both the ISRP and Council, please respond to any issues they may have raised.
Response to past ISRP and Council comments and recommendations: View instructions
LRSRP goals to conserve and enhance white sturgeon populations in the Transboundary Reach are not critically linked to the genetic stock structure of Columbia River white sturgeon. Regardless of whether the Roosevelt/Transboundary Reach white sturgeon population is a “genetically distinct” stock, the Transboundary population is isolated from mixing with other populations due the construction of hydropower facilities that have artificially created an isolated population segment. The ISRP suggestion that pre-hydrosystem sturgeon populations were comprised of migrating individuals rather than distinct breeding populations, and that fragmentation of the Columbia River may actually be a causal mechanism of recruitment failure, doesn’t fully align with genetic stock structure assessment data indicating lower Columbia River white sturgeon exhibit population differentiation compared with mid and upper Columbia white sturgeon (Drauch Schreier et al. 2010). Additionally, stock assessment work conducted in the Transboundary Reach suggests that recruitment failure in the Transboundary Reach population is likely not due to limited numbers of annual spawners. Sturgeon populations of the mid-Columbia River impoundments have not been reported to exceed 1,000 individuals, but reportedly are still capable of supporting limited exploitation, suggesting periodic recruitment events, while the Transboundary Reach, comprised of a population of more than 3,000 individuals, has experienced almost total recruitment failure (Howell and McLellan in prep; North et al. 1999). Genetically distinct or not, the Transboundary Reach population is experiencing persistent recruitment failure, which will in all likelihood result in eventual extirpation without intervention. <br/> <br/> The Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Conservation Aquaculture Program has been identified as a critical component to core activities by both US and Canadian UCWSRI Technical Working Group members (see regional significance section) to prevent extirpation of the Transboundary population. Due to the persistent recruitment failure of upper Columbia River white sturgeon over the past 30 years, and the likelihood that large-scale in-river restoration activities directed at recruitment failure in the Roosevelt Reach will likely take a substantial amount of time, concern regarding population demographics and genetic health supports the continuation of conservation aquaculture activities. The program is intended to serve as a temporary measure to artificially increase recruitment and to maintain the demographic and genetic diversity of the Transboundary population (UCWSRI 2002), but is not intended as a long-term solution to the recruitment failure problem in the project area. The progress of the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Conservation Aquaculture Program is covered more thoroughly in the proposals Problem Statement section and the Adaptive Management section.<br/> <br/> Additional stock assessment information was also requested in the last review, including convincing abundance and survival estimates, and stronger justification of monitoring needs and timelines. Stock assessment surveys using standardized baited setlines were completed in the Roosevelt Reach in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, and 2009. Abundance of wild white sturgeon (&gt;70 cm FL) in the Roosevelt Reach was estimated to be 2,037 (1,093-3,223 95% CI) using mark-recapture data collected during the 2004 and 2005 surveys (Howell and McLellan 2007b), and about 1,151 (sturgeon &gt;34 cm FL; 414-1,900 95% CI) in the Keenleyside Reach using mark-recapture data collected from 1993-2004 surveys (Irvine et al. 2007). A more complete summary of stock assessment work conducted in the Transboundary Reach is included in the Problem Statement section of this proposal. Periodic stock assessments that incorporate mark-recapture estimates of abundance and survival continue to be necessary in the Transboundary Reach, although methods have been adapted to address current needs and potential limitations (see Adaptive Management section).


Project Level: Please discuss how you’ve changed your project (objectives, actions, etc) based on biological responses or information gained from project actions; because of management decisions at the subbasin state, regional, or agency level; or by external or larger environment factors. Specifically, regarding project modifications summarize how previous hypotheses and methods are changed or improved in this updated proposal. This would include project modifications based on information from recent research and literature. How is your new work different than previous work, and why?
Management Level: Please describe any management changes planned or made because of biological responses or information gained from project actions. This would include management decisions at the subbasin, state, or regional level influenced by project results.
Management Changes: View instructions
CONSERVATION AQUACULTURE: The Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Conservation Aquaculture Program is a critical component to core activities to restore white sturgeon populations in the Transboundary Reach for both US and Canadian UCWSRI Technical Working Group members (see Regional Significance section). This is especially critical to Canadian UCWSRI members, as white sturgeon are listed as endangered under the Species At Risk Act (SARA) in Canada. The Canadian National Recovery Strategy (NRTWS 2007) has identified aquaculture as a priority activity to protect the upper Columbia River white sturgeon population in the recovery strategy; “prevent extirpation of white sturgeon in each of the four identified populations [including the upper Columbia River Transboundary Reach population] by preventing net loss of reproductive potential”. The combined US and Canadian programs have released a total of 120,384 hatchery origin juvenile white sturgeon into the Transboundary Reach between 2002 and 2011. Survival of hatchery sturgeon was estimated to be 0.28 (0.11-0.54 95% CI) for the first 6 months post release and 0.88 (0.35-0.99 95% CI) between 2 and 5 years post release (Golder 2007). However, growing concern regarding the potential long-term effects on the genetic integrity of the population led managers in the Transboundary Reach to examine the genetic composition of the Transboundary population and aquaculture broodstock. The objectives of the studies were to characterize genetic diversity within the Transboundary population, infer historic population structure, compare contemporary population structure patterns to pre-impoundment patterns, and determine how well the Transboundary Reach white sturgeon conservation aquaculture program has represented wild-type genetic diversity in its broodstock within and across years (Drauch Schreier et al. 2010; Drauch Schreier and May 2011). Study results examining the population structure of the Transboundary Reach suggested that Transboundary Reach sturgeon comprise a single population, and that the population exhibits population differentiation compared with lower Columbia River sturgeon (Drauch Schreier et al. 2010). Aquaculture broodstock were also examined to determine whether the genetic integrity of the population was maintained. Results from the study suggest that the broodstock utilized in the Transboundary Reach conservation aquaculture program do not differ from the wild population with regards to observed heterozygosity, but there exists a high number of rare alleles (alleles detected a =5% frequency) in the Transboundary population (Drauch Schreier and May 2011). Drauch Schreier and May (2011) found 71 of 208 alleles detected in the Transboundary Reach are rare, suggesting that 34% of alleles were found in 10 individuals or fewer in the combined dataset of 375 adults. The fact that three rare alleles were detected in broodstock samples and not the randomly sampled wild adults suggests there is additional wild genetic diversity that has not yet been sampled in the Transboundary Reach (Drauch Schreier and May 2011). While this may seem surprising in a small population experiencing recruitment failure, research has found that high levels of genetic diversity may be retained in long-lived iteroparous organisms, even in the face of severe declines (Quattro et al. 2002; Lippé et al. 2006; Lawrence et al. 2008; Moyer et al. 2009; Drauch Schreier and May 2011). The white sturgeon polyploidy genome further slows genetic diversity loss by ensuring up to eight copies of each locus are maintained in a single individual (Drauch Schreier and May 2011). Slow loss of genetic diversity in white sturgeon make the species particularly amenable to the preservation of native genetic diversity in a conservation aquaculture program utilizing a sufficient number of broodstock (Drauch Schreier and May 2011). Concern regarding the potential paucity of rare alleles inherited by progeny under broodstock hatchery practices led to changes in how the conservation aquaculture program operates in the US. Wild-produced larvae are collected using modified D-ring nets from known spawning locations over the spawning period. The wild-produced larvae are transferred to WDFW Sherman Creek Hatchery for rearing and eventual release into the Roosevelt Reach. This conservation aquaculture program is designed to preserve the remaining demographic and genetic diversity of the population and rebuild the natural age-class structure, and is a key component of the overall recovery effort. STOCK ASSESSMENTS: Periodic stock assessments that incorporate mark-recapture estimates of abundance and survival continue to be required in the Transboundary Reach, although methods have been adapted to address current needs and potential limitations. The surveys need to be standardized, coordinated, and conducted simultaneously in both the Keenleyside and Roosevelt reaches. This coordination is imperative because the white sturgeons in the Transboundary Reach comprise a single population, as indicated by genetic and movement data, not reach specific subpopulations as they have sometimes been treated (UCWSRI 2002). There may have also been violations of the assumptions of the estimators used to calculate the reach specific capture-recapture estimates of abundance and survival, based on sturgeon movements in the Transboundary Reach. A coordinated effort will eliminate this potential bias by sampling the entire population at one time. Upper Columbia River stock assessment activities will be coordinated through the UCWSRI Technical Working Group and are proposed to occur annually beginning in 2013 to coincide with Keenleyside Reach stock assessments conducted under the BC Hydro Water Use Plan, and with lower Columbia River stock assessments (BPA project 1986-050-00). The assessments will employ a spatially balanced, stratified random sampling strategy (general random tessellation stratified [GRTS] design) and standardized setline gear. There will be two capture-recapture occasions: one in the spring and one in the fall.

The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Public Attachments in CBFish

ID Title Type Period Contract Uploaded
00022571-1 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Progress (Annual) Report 01/2004 - 03/2005 22571 5/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
P108776 WDFW Lake Roos Sturg 2005 Annual Report_Final 9_19_07 Final Progress (Annual) Report 04/2005 - 03/2006 32258 10/24/2008 10:14:13 AM
P110097 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Progress Report Progress (Annual) Report 04/2006 - 03/2007 37734 2/2/2009 10:01:55 AM
P112493 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Report January 2003-March 2004 Progress (Annual) Report 01/2003 - 03/2004 42440 7/15/2009 8:14:09 AM
P122055 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project, 4/07 - 3/08 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2007 - 03/2008 52293 7/15/2011 8:51:19 AM
P124145 Genetic Monitoring of the Upper Columbia River White Sturgeon Conservation Aquaculture Program Other - 52293 12/11/2011 6:34:05 PM
P125837 LR Sturg Proj (199502700) Lake Roosevelt Interim Conservation Aquaculture Program 2012 Other - 52293 3/30/2012 10:42:38 AM
P131598 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/08 - 3/09 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2008 - 03/2009 61026 4/3/2013 4:52:20 PM
P131599 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/09 - 3/10 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2009 - 03/2010 61026 4/3/2013 4:56:52 PM
P136199 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Report: April 2010 - March 2011 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2010 - 03/2011 61026 4/15/2014 2:20:38 PM
P137778 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/11 - 3/12 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2011 - 03/2012 65088 7/24/2014 2:34:09 PM
P140037 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/12 - 3/13 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2012 - 03/2013 65088 12/17/2014 11:06:26 AM
P143593 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Progress Report April 2013 - March 2014 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2013 - 03/2014 68702 6/3/2015 9:35:41 AM
P148765 2014 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Report Final Progress (Annual) Report 04/2014 - 03/2015 5/9/2016 11:25:31 AM
P158687 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/15 - 3/16 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2015 - 03/2016 75980 1/9/2018 9:03:06 AM
P160163 2016 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Report Progress (Annual) Report 04/2016 - 03/2017 75980 4/16/2018 1:36:43 PM
P171881 Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Recovery Project; 4/18-3/19 Progress (Annual) Report 04/2018 - 03/2019 81914 3/25/2020 10:29:26 AM
P182375 FINAL - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project Annual Report Progress (Annual) Report 04/2019 - 03/2020 85144 2/25/2021 7:55:53 AM

Other Project Documents on the Web



The Project Relationships tracked automatically in CBFish provide a history of how work and budgets move between projects. The terms "Merged" and "Split" describe the transfer of some or all of the Work and budgets from one or more source projects to one or more target projects. For example, some of one project's budget may be split from it and merged into a different project. Project relationships change for a variety of reasons including the creation of efficiency gains.
Project Relationships: None

Additional Relationships Explanation:

The LRSRP will be closely coordinated with the CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (WSEP; BPA 2008-116-00), which is a new project intended to complement current recovery efforts conducted under the LRSRP in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam (Roosevelt Reach).  The two projects will work closely to ensure cost effective and efficient completion of shared objectives.  The LRSRP will remain the lead on completing long-term monitoring efforts, such as stock assessment, recruitment monitoring, and telemetry, as well as conservation aquaculture activities. The WSEP will assist with the stock assessment and recruitment monitoring by providing staff and equipment for field sampling to increase sample sizes necessary to improve precision of estimates and reduce potential bias. The sturgeon recovery effort in the Transboundary Reach has generated a substantial amount of data that exists in a series of disparate databases and spreadsheets. The WSEP will lead the development and maintenance of an UCWSRI relational data management system that will support all of the upper Columbia sturgeon recovery efforts. The LRSRP will provide support for the data management system, because they too contribute substantial amounts of data to be included in the database. The WSEP and LRSRP recruitment failure research activities will complement each other. For example, habitat assessments conducted by the WSEP will be used by the LRSRP in conjunction with their macroinvertebrate data to make inference about food availability for first feeding larvae and telemetry data to make inference about juvenile, sub-adult, and adult habitat use. The conservation aquaculture activities conducted by LRSRP will supply first feeding larvae for future WEP experiments that empirically test the larval transport/habitat mis-match hypothesis. In addition, the substrate mapping (habitat assessment) conducted by the WEP will assist both projects with study design for future monitoring and research in the Roosevelt Reach.

The LRSRP is also linked with the Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Conservation Hatchery 3-Step Project (BPA 2007-372-00), which has been developed to assess the need and feasibility of developing a white sturgeon hatchery to assist managers with meeting recovery goals, and to provide a fail-safe facility to complement Canadian conservation aquaculture activities as recommended under the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (2002).  The LRSRP is currently operating conservation aquaculture activities as an interim activity at an established facility to meet Recovery Plan goals to preserve the remaining demographic and genetic diversity of the population and to rebuild the natural age-class structure lost during the recruitment failures of the last 30 years (UCWSRI 2002).  The UCWSRI provided funding to examine the population structure of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River, that was aligned with lower and mid-Columbia River white sturgeon genetic assessments (Drauch Schreier et al. 2010), and the LRSRP completed a genetic assessment of broodstock used in conservation aquaculture activities in the upper Columbia River (both US and Canada).  These, combined with the genetic assessment of the wild-caught larvae aquaculture program currently in progress, provide information critical to the feasibility studies and facility design components of the proposed dedicated white sturgeon conservation aquaculture facility for the upper Columbia River.

The LRSRP is also linked to the Sherman Creek Hatchery Operations and Maintenance Project (BPA 1991-047-00).  The interim hatchery activities occur at Sherman Creek Hatchery and the operations and maintenance project is a critical support piece in the collection and rearing of white sturgeon.

The goal of the Evaluate Sturgeon Populations in the Lower Columbia River Project (BPA Project No. 1986-050-00) is “to ensure persistence of white sturgeon populations and to restore and maintain population productivity in impounded river reaches” downstream of Grand Coulee Dam.  While in different geographical areas, information gained and shared between these projects will improve our understanding of sturgeon population dynamics and factors affecting recruitment.

The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission (CRITFC) project, Develop a Master Plan for a Rearing Facility to Enhance Selected Populations of White Sturgeon in the Columbia River Basin (BPA Project No. 2007-155-00) and the Yakama Nation project, Sturgeon Management (BPA Project No. 2008-455-00) are related to the establishment of aquaculture programs for supplementation of white sturgeon in the lower Columbia River impoundments (downstream of Priest Rapids Dam) and lower Snake River impoundments (downstream of Lower Granite Dam). Following the RME/AP Categorical Review these two projects were tasked with the “development of a comprehensive management plan for white sturgeon through a collaborative effort involving currently funded projects.” The 1986-050-00 and CRITFC Sturgeon Genetics project (BPA Project No. 2008-504-00) are to contribute to the development of the plan. The comprehensive management plan will include a description of what we know and do not know about sturgeon life history, status, limiting factors, as well as current and past program activities.  The plan should also describe results and conclusions from past work and the extent to which both previous and future work has or will benefit sturgeon and other fish and wildlife. In addition, the NPCC decision indicated that “the plan should also include summary information for sturgeon areas above Priest Rapids and Lower Granite.” The LRSRP project proponents will contribute to the development of the comprehensive management plan (also referred to as the White Sturgeon Framework for the Columbia and Snake River Basin) by providing summary information related to the population segment in the upper Columbia River, as well as results of life history and limiting factors research.

The Kootenai River Resident Fish Mitigation (BPA Project No. 1988-065-00) and Kootenai River White Sturgeon Aquaculture Conservation Facility (BPA Project No. 1988-064-00) are working to restore white sturgeon recruitment, similar to the LRSRP. The efforts to understand factors limiting sturgeon recruitment in the Kootenai River formed the foundation for initial efforts in the upper Columbia River. Specifically, the examination of hydro-operation and habitat impacts on recruitment. The continued gains in information by both of the Kootenai River Projects and the upper Columbia Projects, including the LRSRP, will improve our understanding of recruitment failure and assist with identifying feasible responses.

This project also relates to work conducted by other, non-BPA funded projects in the Columbia River. The LRSRP is an integral part of the UCWSRI. The LRSRP works collaboratively with researchers in both BC and WA to implement the UCWSRI Recovery Plan (2002) and achieve the Initiative’s goal to restore natural recruitment of sturgeon to a level where the population can support beneficial uses. The LRSRP will assist WSEP in the development of the UCWSRI relational data management system, which will facilitate data sharing between all UCWSRI partners. The relationship of the LRSRP activities to the UCWSRI, as well as other regional initiatives is described in detail in the Regional Significance section of this proposal.

The Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Evaluation Project (formerly Data Collection Project; BPA Project No. 1994-043-00) monitors fish populations, productivity, and water quality in Lake Roosevelt. This data will inform the upper Columbia River white sturgeon recovery effort by providing information about predator distribution and abundance, reservoir productivity in years with and without recruitment, and water quality conditions in years with and without recruitment.  In turn, the LRSRP will provide white sturgeon population information that can be used to guide management decisions and develop future restoration activities and research that will be incorporated into the Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document.

Additionally, the project works with the public through student opportunities, where kids are invited to aquaculture releases to learn about white sturgeon and get an opportunity to release sturgeon into the reservoir, and the Lake Roosevelt Forum (BPA 2001-031-00) conference, which allows project proponents to present project findings in a public forum.  These types of opportunities allow public interaction with technical people and develop public awareness of upper Columbia River white sturgeon issues.  These types of activities foster public support which is critical to recovery of long-lived and highly demanded species like white sturgeon.


Primary Focal Species
Sturgeon, White (Acipenser transmontanus) - All Populations except Kootenai R. DPS

Secondary Focal Species
None

Describe how you are taking into account potential biological and physical effects of factors such as non-native species, predation increases, climate change and toxics that may impact the project’s focal species and their habitat, potentially reducing the success of the project. For example: Does modeling exist that predicts regional climate change impacts to your particular geographic area? If so, please summarize the results of any predictive modeling for your area and describe how you take that into consideration.
Threats to program investments and project success: View instructions
The Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project proposes continuation of monitoring activities for Lake Roosevelt/the upper Columbia River white sturgeon populations, including stock status assessments, sturgeon distribution and movement, and early-life history parameters.   The LRSRP will work cooperatively with the LRFEP, which proposes long-term monitoring activities including walleye and northern pike assessments (FWIN and SPIN), as well as trend monitoring of fisheries community, hydrology, and limnology parameters to assess predator and non-native species shifts that have the potential to impact Lake Roosevelt fish community.  The LRSRP will work with the LRFEP to incorporate diet assessment of predator species captured under FWIN and SPIN for, at a minimum, the upper section of the reservoir.  This will provide information on predation of white sturgeon. Monitoring activities will also provide insight into how climate change, potential new directives under the Columbia River Treaty, newly implemented Columbia River water management mandates and other hydro-operation changes impact Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River sturgeon populations and fish community structure.  The LRSRP also works cooperatively with the Upper Columbia River Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study Project, the Spokane Tribal Water and Fish Program, WSEP, and other groups/projects researching toxic loading impacts from up-river and tributary sources on the fishery and ecology of Lake Roosevelt.

Work Classes
Program Name:  
White Sturgeon
Type:  
Integrated
Fish Species:  
Sturgeon, White (Acipenser transmontanus) - All Populations except Kootenai R. DPS
Populations Origin # of PIT Tags per year Type of PIT Tag Years to be tagged Comments
Sturgeon, White (Acipenser transmontanus) - All Populations except Kootenai R. DPS Hatchery 16000 HDX - Half Duplex 2013 - 2017 Scute removal to identify broodyear and hatchery reared sturgeon.
Sturgeon, White (Acipenser transmontanus) - All Populations except Kootenai R. DPS Wild 3000 HDX - Half Duplex 2013 - 2017 Scute removal to identify that the fish is a PIT tagged wild sturgeon.
Please explain why the tagging technology used in this project was selected. Include a discussion of how the cost and applicability of the selected tagging technology influenced your selection. Enter "NA" if not applicable to your project.
PIT tags will be utilized for assessing population parameters based on mark-recapture methodologies. PIT tags are well suited to mark-recapture studies as they provide a unique identifier for individual fish and have, essentially, an unlimited functional life that facilitates the development of long term capture history data sets that are essential for monitoring long lived species such as sturgeons. Ease of application, low cost, high retention rates, and negligible impacts on fish behavior are also factors that lend themselves well to sturgeon population assessment work. Additionally, coordination with the PTAGIS system may allow for identification of emigration to areas downstream from Grand Coulee Dam. All hatchery white sturgeon >30 grams will be tagged with a 12 mm FDX-B (full duplex) 134.2 kHz PIT tag (Digital Angel Corp.) prior to release into Lake Roosevelt. All wild-caught white sturgeon captured during annual sampling events, and not previously tagged or with inoperable tags, will also be tagged using with 12 mm FDX-B (full duplex) 134.2 kHz PIT tags.
Describe any of the innovative approaches that your projects proposes that are in direct support of the ISAB/ISRP's recommendations to improve techniques for surgical insertion of internal tags, or external attachment of acoustic, radio, or data storage tags that reduce handling time, fish injury and stress. Enter "NA" if not applicable to your project.
NA
For specific tagging technologies, please address the tagging report's recommendations for genetic markers, otolith thermal marking, PIT tags, acoustic tags and radio tags for improving technologies in any way applicable. Enter "NA" if not applicable to your project.
NA
If your project involves ocean port sampling and lower river sampling for coded wire tag (CWT) recovery, address the tagging and tag recovery issues (statistical validity of tagging rates, tag recovery rates, and fishery sampling rates) presented in the Pacific Salmon Commission's Action Plan to Address the CWT Expert Panel (PSC Tech. Rep. No. 25, March 2008).
NA
Explain how your tagging and tag recovery rates ensure a statistically valid result for your project. Enter "NA" if not applicable to your project.

PIT tags will be utilized for assessing population parameters based on mark-recapture methodologies.  PIT tags are well suited to mark-recapture studies as they provide a unique identifier for individual fish and have a theoretically unlimited useful life that facilitates the development of long term capture history data sets that are essential for monitoring long lived species such as sturgeons.  Ease of application, high retention rates, and negligible impacts on fish behavior are also factors that lend themselves well to sturgeon population assessments.

Primary objectives of the proposed stock assessment monitoring are estimation of abundance and survival of both the wild and hatchery components of the sturgeon population inhabiting the Transboundary area of the Columbia River.  Optimally, stock assessment efforts will be planned and coordinated with researchers in British Columbia. Currently we anticipate using the (closed) robust capture-recapture design to estimate abundance and survival (Kendall et al. 1997, 1995; Kendall and Nichols 1995; Kendall and Bjorkland 2001; Pollock 1982; Pollock et al. 1990). Generally, the robust design incorporates two methods of parameter estimation: an open method (e.g. Cormack-Jolly-Seber models) that estimates survival between primary sample periods; and a closed method (e.g. Lincoln-Petersen, CAPTURE) that estimates abundance from secondary sample periods that occur within each primary period.  The strength of the Robust Design is that open model survival rate estimation is insensitive to variability in catchability and closed models can take unequal catchability into account.

The degree of sampling intensity during a mark-recapture effort is dictated by the desired level of accuracy and precision in the estimates balanced against logistical constraints (i.e. available time and money).  BPA funded sturgeon projects (LRSRP and WSEP) on Lake Roosevelt will have three boats available for setline stock assessment work and our counterpart in Canada will have an additional two boats.  Each research boat can deploy, on average, around 10 setline sets per day, or 40 sets per week, or 160 sets per month.  Thus five boats could fish approximately 800 sets per month. 

The Roosevelt Reach survey area will encompass the area between Hunters and the US-Canada border where the majority of sturgeon found in the Roosevelt Reach are normally resident.  In the 2009 LRSRP spatially balanced GRTS setline survey of this area, the catch of wild sturgeon averaged 0.41 per overnight setline set.  The mean catch rate in the same area during the 1998 haphazard setline survey was 0.57.  Assuming then an average catch rate of 0.5 for the Transboundary area as a whole (probably a conservative estimate as catch rates in the Keenleyside Reach are likely substantially greater), we could expect to capture about 400 wild sturgeon in a month’s worth of sampling with five boats. 

Realistically, the amount of time cooperators could devote to each primary sampling period would be about two months each year in order to leave sufficient field time to accomplish other sampling tasks (e.g. predation studies, telemetry, fall gill netting, larval collection etc.). The minimum number of secondary sampling occasions per primary sampling occasion under the robust design is two, representing a Lincoln-Petersen closed estimator.  Thus, we would expect to undertake two secondary sample periods per primary period that were each of a month duration and each resulting in the capture of about 400 fish. 

According to Robson and Reiger (1964), a sample size of this magnitude on two occasions would provide a Petersen estimate of abundance where error would not exceed 25% at a 95% level of certainty – a level they recommended for management studies.  As noted above, sampling as far downstream as Hunters should satisfy model assumptions of geographical closure (immigration-emigration).  However, these assumptions will be assessed through monitoring the movements of telemetered sturgeon. Assumptions of demographic closure may be more likely subject to violation due to growth recruitment during the interval between secondary sampling periods.  It is unlikely we will be able to perform back-to-back secondary surveys due to other project sampling needs, and instead surveys will probably occur in the early spring and late summer. Under the assumption that little or no mortality occurred between sampling events, then in this case the abundance estimate would be for the second sampling occasion.

Pollock et al. (1990) suggested that a coefficient of variation (CV) of 20% or less represents a “reasonable” level of precision for parameter estimates from mark-recapture studies and presented graphical comparisons of the precision of survival rate estimates under open models for a range of population sizes (50 to 500) and capture probabilities.  Current estimates of annual survival probabilities for sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach are 0.97 for wild fish and 0.88 for hatchery fish (>age 2) and abundance of wild sturgeon is around 3,000 fish.  Using the catch rate estimates outlined above and the estimated population size of the wild component, we might assume our capture probabilities to be somewhere around 0.25 during each primary sampling occasion.  According to the plot of Pollock et al (1990) where survival is assumed to be 0.9, population size is 500, and the number of primary sampling events is 5, a capture probability of 0.25 results in a coefficient of variation in the survival estimator of less than 20%. 

Thus, collectively, the transboundary cooperators should be easily able to attain “reasonable” levels of precision for estimates of abundance and survival for the wild component of the population.  We assume that the level of effort put forth above would also be adequate to achieve similar levels of estimator precision for the hatchery component of the population since hatchery fish are substantially more abundant based on the number of fish stocked, relatively high post-release survival, and relative catch rates in recent stock assessment surveys.  The greater abundance of hatchery fish would require a smaller fraction of the total population be sampled (i.e. capture probability need not be so high) to achieve a similar level of estimator precision (Pollock et al. 1990).

The foregoing discussion represents a preliminary formulation of how transboundary sturgeon mark-recapture studies will be conducted and how the data will be analyzed to ensure statistical rigor and validity of results. Study plans will require further development in conjunction with our counterparts in Canada as well as through consultation with appropriately credentialed professional biometricians. 

Please describe which opportunities have been explored to restore or reintroduce resident native fish and their habitats?
The central project goal of the LRSRP is to conserve and restore native white sturgeon populations in the Transboundary Reach (Lake Roosevelt from Grand Coulee Dam to Hugh Keenleyside Dam, BC), with particular focus for this project on the US portion. The project includes a conservation hatchery component that uses wild-caught larval sturgeon for rearing and release into the study area. Use of native stocks of white sturgeon for hatchery operations is ongoing, and preservation of genetic diversity, including rare alleles, is an essential component of the aquaculture protocol. Additionally, the project is tasked with monitoring current population status and research examining some of the potential mechanisms causing the recruitment failure in the upper Columbia River white sturgeon populations.
Has a loss assessment been completed for your particular subbasin/or province?
No
Describe how the project addresses the loss assessment. If a loss assessment is in progress or being proposed, describe the status and scope of that work.
The anadromous fish loss assessment was completed and is available in the “Compilation of Salmon and Steelhead Losses in the Columbia River Basin” and the “Numerical Estimates of Hydropower-related Losses” contained in the Council Program (NPCC 1987, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2005) Technical Appendix E. A resident fish loss assessment has not been completed. A project to complete a loss assessment has been proposed by the Colville Confederated Tribes. The LRSRP project will assist as necessary, but is not proposing completion of a loss assessment as part of the LRSRP project deliverables for 2013-2017.
If you are using non-native fish species to achieve mitigation, have you completed an environmental risk assessment of potential negative impacts to native resident fish?
No
Please describe: for the production of non-native fish, what are the potential impacts on native fish populations, including predation, competition, genetic impacts, and food web implications?
NA. We are using native fish species (white sturgeon) to address white sturgeon recovery conservation aquaculture needs.
Does your proposed work support or implement a production goal identified in a USFWS Bull Trout Recovery Plan?
No
What tools (e.g., guidance material, technologies, decision support models) are you creating and using that support data management and sharing?
CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (2008-116-00) is the lead on development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners, including stock assessment surveys, early life history data, aquaculture activities, broodstock spawning matrices, telemetry detections, and other data as deemed appropriate and necessary to forward progression of white sturgeon recovery work. The STOI LRSRP will provide support on database development. Please see CCT Project 2008-116-00 for a complete explanation of the development of database technology for upper Columbia River sturgeon.
Describe the process used to facilitate receiving and sharing of data, such as standardizing data entry format through a template or data steward, including data exchange templates that describe the data collection methods, and the provision of an interface that makes data electronically accessible.
CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA WSEP; 2008-116-00) is the lead on development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. The STOI LRSRP will provide support on database development. The CCT WSEP and STOI LRSRP will also upload white sturgeon capture/release data associated with PIT tags into PTAGIS and telemetry detections and metadata into HYDRA to enable data sharing ease with project partners. In the interim, data collection and data entry templates have been developed internally. Data management is a coordinated effort among project data users and is achieved through cooperative data sharing. Data receiving and sharing is accomplished electronically.
Please describe the sources from which you are compiling data, as well as what proportion of data is from the primary source versus secondary or other sources?
Primary data is collected by the LRSRP and compiled internally within the program. Secondary data sources include: hydrologic data obtained from fixed monitoring stations (US/Canada Border and Grand Coulee Dam forebay) on Lake Roosevelt operated by the US Bureau of Reclamation “Data Access in Real Time” (DART); precipitation data obtained from the United States Department of Commerce National Climatic Data Center (NCDC); and project partner data collected under Transboundary Project protocols to ensure methodologies are cohesive across the study area.
Please explain how you manage the data and corresponding metadata you collect.
Data collected on white sturgeon includes length, fork length, weight, diet, age, sex, maturity, origin, telemetry detections, and tags or markings. Data collected on aquatic habitat and associated environmental conditions includes, but is not limited to, temperature, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, and flow. Invertebrate data collected includes species, numbers and total length. Data is currently maintained in Microsoft Excel and Access databases and Vemco VUE PC software. Metadata is maintained electronically with each data set and follow standards developed internally within the program. CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (2008-116-00) is the lead on development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. The STOI LRSRP will provide support on database development. Please see CCT Project 2008-116-00 for a complete explanation of the development of database technology for upper Columbia River sturgeon.
Describe how you distribute your project's data to data users and what requirements or restrictions there may be for data access.
Development of databases that facilitate data sharing and distribution on a regional scale has been identified as a critical component of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council and Bonneville Power Administration’s Fish and Wildlife Program. Additionally, the Transboundary aspect of the full Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative, comprised of US and Canadian government, Tribal and industry partners, makes simplifying data sharing critically important to effective project management and progress. Methods and protocols used for LRSRP data collection are consistent with guidelines defined in the 2009 NPCC FWP, in that they represent standard white sturgeon, telemetry, and water quality methodologies. Methods are to be processed through the PNAMP MonitoringMethods.org website, and all review processes therein. Raw data generated under the LRSRP are available to interested parties upon written request to the LRSRP Program Manager. Annual reports and comprehensive, multi-year final reports on specific project components are available on the BPA website and other locations as they become available. Upon completion of the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative Database, data will also be electronically accessible to a variety of data-users, although a hierarchy of users will be established to protect data collected under projects and funding resources other than BPA. Data dissemination will be in electronic format. CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (2008-116-00) is the lead on development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. The STOI LRSRP will provide support on database development. Please see CCT Project 2008-116-00 for a complete explanation of the development of database technology for upper Columbia River sturgeon.
What type(s) of RM&E will you be doing?
Project Implementation Monitoring
Status and Trend Monitoring
Action Effectiveness Research
Uncertainties Research (Validation Monitoring and Innovation Research)
Project Compliance Monitoring
Where will you post or publish the data your project generates?

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Layers
Legend
Name (Identifier) Area Type Source for Limiting Factor Information
Type of Location Count
Lower Spokane (17010307) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 22
Franklin D (17020001) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 49
Grand Coulee Dam to Keenleyside Dam Mainstem None

Project Deliverable definition: A significant output of a project that often spans multiple years and therefore may be accomplished by multiple contracts and multiple work elements. Contract Deliverables on the other hand are smaller in scope and correspond with an individual work element. Title and describe each Project Deliverable including an estimated budget, start year and end year. Title: A synopsis of the deliverable. For example: Crooked River Barrier and Channel Modification. Deliverable Description: Describe the work required to produce this deliverable in 5000 characters or less. A habitat restoration deliverable will contain a suite of actions to address particular Limiting Factors over time for a specified Geographic area typically not to exceed a species population’s range. Briefly include the methods for implementation, in particular any novel methods you propose to use, including an assessment of factors that may limit success. Do not go into great detail on RM&E Metrics, Indicators, and Methods if you are collecting or analyzing data – later in this proposal you’ll be asked for these details.
Project Deliverables: View instructions
Assess the status of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-1)
Complete comprehensive stock assessments of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River in conjunction with researchers in British Columbia (on matching annual cycle with UCWSRI/BC Hydro Water Use Planning and lower Columbia River white sturgeon project 1986-050-00). Design and implement spatially balanced, random surveys using standardized setline gear where individual studies will be comprised of two capture-recapture occasions (spring and late summer). Monitor abundance, survival, growth, condition and habitat use of wild and hatchery origin white sturgeon. Stock assessment surveys will act as the primary tool for evaluation of conservation aquaculture supplementation efforts. Additionally, assessments will refine knowledge of reproductive potential (i.e. size/age at maturity, spawning periodicity, sex ratio, and fecundity) via examinations of a subset of hatchery captures. Use of hatchery fish allows for examination of fish of known age for reproductive characteristics across multiple cohorts.
Types of Work:

Monitor the status of sub-yearling (juvenile) white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-2)
Design and implement spatially balanced, random surveys to assess sub-yearling (juvenile) white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach. Surveys will be used to detect natural recruitment events of wild white sturgeon to the sub-yearling and yearling juvenile life stages, provide supplemental data to evaluate the conservation aquaculture program, evaluate relative survival of experimental larval release groups at sub-yearling and yearling ages, and provide information necessary to direct restoration/conservation efforts. Survival estimates and assessments of distribution, condition, growth, age, and behavior of wild and hatchery origin juvenile sturgeon will provide critical information in the development of management actions that will conserve wild white sturgeon populations in the upper Columbia River. This work will be completed in conjunction with researchers in British Columbia and will use standardized small-mesh gill net gear.
Types of Work:

Assess white sturgeon movements in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River using acoustic telemetry. (DELV-3)
Continue to investigate long-term white sturgeon movements and habitat use in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River via acoustic telemetry technologies. The U.S. portion of the Transboundary Reach assessment will be completed under this project as part of the overall Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative Transboundary Telemetry and Data Management Project (U.S. and Canada joint project). Data collected will identify potential spawning areas in the U.S. as well as important seasonal habitats and patterns of sturgeon movement in the full Transboundary Reach using the existing receiver array. Additional acoustic work includes utilizing the pool of adult sturgeon currently equipped with long-duration (10-year) acoustic tags to collect fine-scale spatial data documenting spawning behavior in known spawning areas using VPS arrays. When synthesized with habitat data derived from hydrographic surveys, it may be possible to identify other potential spawning sites.
Types of Work:

Investigate predation impacts on survival of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam. (DELV-4)
Under the recruitment failure hypotheses assessment completed by the UCWSRI, several potential proximate mechanisms have been identified as potentially limiting survival of white sturgeon in the recovery area. The LRSRP proposes to examine predation on white sturgeon early life-history stages (ELS) by conducting diet analyses on predators collected from the transition zone from July through October using a combination of short duration gill net sets and by trawling with sampling being stratified by depth and by time of day. Proposed work will help managers by identifying potential impacts predation may have on the Transboundary Reach sturgeon population, and allow managers to develop actions to limit predator impacts in efforts to conserve and restore white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River.
Types of Work:

Investigate food resources availability as a limiting factor to larval white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-5)
The UCWSRI recruitment failure hypotheses assessment identified food resource availability as potentially limiting survival of white sturgeon in the recovery area. The LRSRP proposes to estimate invertebrate size and abundance for the river-reservoir transition zone to determine availability of food to sturgeon early life-history stages. Results will be interpreted with respect to larval/juvenile food habits and preferences and synthesized with habitat data from hydrographic surveys completed under the CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project. We also intend to compare histology of post-feeding stages of white sturgeon collected during field surveys with reference specimens to identify starvation effects in wild fish, thus determine the role food availability plays as a limiting factor in sturgeon survival. Knowledge of food resource availability and potential impacts in the Transboundary Reach is critical to meeting management goals to conserve upper Columbia River sturgeon.
Types of Work:

Continue conservation aquaculture operations to produce white sturgeon for release in Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia River. (DELV-6)
Continue annual conservation hatchery operations following protocols designed to best protect the genetic integrity of upper Columbia sturgeon stocks (wild caught larvae or broodstock–determined by genetics research (LRSRP) and research into mass releases of larval sturgeons under the CCT WSEP). Collect 10,000 naturally produced post-hatch sturgeon and rear larvae at Sherman Creek Hatchery; or collect adult sturgeon from U.S. spawning locations, transfer and spawn adults at WDFW Sherman Creek Hatchery, and rear eggs and larvae at Sherman Creek Hatchery. Rear larvae on river water to a size of 30 g to meet early December release target. Annual release target is 4,000 fish. All hatchery sturgeon will be scute marked, PIT tagged, measured, weighed and soft fin tissue samples collected for genetic analyses prior to release. Conservation aquaculture actions are a core component of the UCWSRI Recovery Plan, identified as critical to maintaining current genetic diversity in the absence of natural recruitment.
Types of Work:

Examine early life-history information on white sturgeon collected as part of the wild caught larvae conservation aquaculture tasks. (DELV-7)
Aquaculture collection of wild post-hatch life-stage white sturgeon will provide early life history information on the ecology and fate/survival of white sturgeon post-hatch life stages (e.g. timing, relative abundance, etc.) with the proviso that it may not be possible to fully standardize collection efforts due to inter-annual variability in discharge affecting location of collection stations, and assumptions that wild-caught larvae aquaculture will be implemented yearly.
Types of Work:

Complete genetic assessment of conservation aquaculture methodologies to compare wild caught larvae with broodstock collection methods. (DELV-8)
Complete studies monitoring genetic marker data to assess the efficacy of the hatchery protocols in maintaining the widest genetic component of the wild population. The study will compare broodstock collection with larval collection methods. This information, combined with stock assessment data, will assist managers in development of joint US-Canada conservation aquaculture and stocking rate plans designed to protect white sturgeon population genetics.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation + Data Management
157. Collect/Generate/Validate Field and Lab Data
161. Disseminate Raw/Summary Data and Results
162. Analyze/Interpret Data

Monitor water quality parameters to assist with determination of how water quality affects habitat and sturgeon recruitment in the upper Columbia R. (DELV-9)
Install water quality monitoring stations to collect abiotic data (ie. turbidity, temperature) at various sites in the riverine, transition, and upper reservoir zones of the upper Columbia River. Data will be used to model habitat-recruitment relationships.
Types of Work:

Continue public outreach activities to educate kids and community members about white sturgeon issues in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-10)
The LRSRP works with local schools to expand interest and knowledge of white sturgeon. School kids are invited to release sturgeon into the reservoir as part of annual release events, and learn about Lake Roosevelt and Columbia River natural resource issues as part of Water Festival, Student Discovery Week and other outreach events. Additionally, the UCWSRI has developed, and will continue to update and maintain a website about white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River (Transboundary project).
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation + Data Management
161. Disseminate Raw/Summary Data and Results
Planning and Coordination
99. Outreach and Education

Evaluate chemical mass marking techniques for white sturgeon. (DELV-11)
Complete an updated literature review of chemical mass marking techniques and applications. Analyze fin spine samples to complete evaluation of strontium chloride marking experiments conducted by WDFW in 2009. Complete laboratory experiments investigating calcein as a mass marking agent for white sturgeon early larval stages.
Types of Work:

Assist in development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. (DELV-12)
CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (2008-116-00) is the lead on development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners, including stock assessment surveys, early life history data, aquaculture activities, broodstock spawning matrices, telemetry detections, and other data as deemed appropriate and necessary to forward progression of white sturgeon recovery work. The STOI LRSRP will provide support on database development. The STOI and CCT Sturgeon Recovery/Enhancement Projects will also upload white sturgeon capture/release data associated with PIT tags into PTAGIS and telemetry detections and metadata into HYDRA to enable data sharing ease with project partners.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation + Data Management
159. Transfer/Consolidate Regionally Standardized Data

Assist with habitat characterization and paired release studies in the Roosevelt Reach to assess habitat-recruitment relationships. (DELV-13)
CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (2008-116-00) is the lead on this deliverable. The LRSRP will provide support. Insufficient magnitude and/or duration flow velocities may contribute to recruitment failure by limiting effective downstream dispersal of larvae to suitable rearing habitats. Hydrographic surveys of the Roosevelt Reach in the area between Kettle Falls and the International Border to characterize geomorphology, substrate typology, and hydrology will be conducted to develop a digital elevation model (DEM) of bathymetry, sediment facies map, and develop a hydro-dynamic model of velocity from ADCP transects. Additionally, paired larval release experiments to compare relative survival to fall sub-yearling size between release locations will be conducted. Study results combined with modeling and other analyses will provide valuable insights to habitat-recruitment relationships.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation + Data Management
157. Collect/Generate/Validate Field and Lab Data


Objective: Prevent further reduction in upper Columbia River sturgeon distribution, density and genetic diversity by implementing LRSRP/UCWSRI long-term measures (OBJ-1)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Assess the status of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-1) Stock assessments provide essential information on status of the population.

Monitor the status of sub-yearling (juvenile) white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-2) Stock assessments provide essential information on status of the population.

Assess white sturgeon movements in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River using acoustic telemetry. (DELV-3) Telemetry monitoring provides essential information on distribution of the population.

Continue conservation aquaculture operations to produce white sturgeon for release in Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia River. (DELV-6) Conservation aquaculture activities have been identified by the LRSRP and UCWSRI as a critical component to preservation of sturgeon populations in the upper Columbia River. Recruitment failure of the past 30 years has made preservation of the remaining genetic diversity in the population an imperative part of restoring the population in the short-, mid- and potentially the long- term.

Examine early life-history information on white sturgeon collected as part of the wild caught larvae conservation aquaculture tasks. (DELV-7) Understanding the fate and survival of post-hatch white sturgeon will assist managers in preventing further degradations in the population.

Complete genetic assessment of conservation aquaculture methodologies to compare wild caught larvae with broodstock collection methods. (DELV-8) Conservation aquaculture activities have been identified by the LRSRP and UCWSRI as a critical component to preservation of sturgeon populations in the upper Columbia River. Recruitment failure of the past 30 years has made preservation of the remaining genetic diversity in the population an imperative part of restoring the population in the short-, mid- and potentially the long- term. Monitoring of hatchery practice impacts on genetic contribution of sturgeon released into the study area is critical to preserving the genetic integrity of the population in the long-term.

Continue public outreach activities to educate kids and community members about white sturgeon issues in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-10) Education of stakeholders in the upper Columbia River ecoregion, particularly of children whom have the greatest capacity to effect change in the long-term, is critical to objectives to restore populations of imperiled species. Increasing understanding of how human impacts can restrict conservation efforts can lead to greater success of actions designed to restore imperiled species. This is especially important when dealing with long-lived species like white sturgeon, where the children of today will carry on with restoration efforts in the future.

Assist in development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. (DELV-12) Development of databases that facilitate data sharing and distribution on a regional scale has been identified as a critical component of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council and Bonneville Power Administration’s Fish and Wildlife Program. Additionally, the Transboundary aspect of the full Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative, comprised of US and Canadian government, Tribal and industry partners, makes simplifying data sharing critically important to effective project management and progress.


Objective: Implement research examining hypotheses to determine the cause of upper Columbia River white sturgeon recruitment failure. (OBJ-2)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Investigate predation impacts on survival of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam. (DELV-4) Predation has been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. This deliverable is aimed at determining the validity of the hypothesis.

Investigate food resources availability as a limiting factor to larval white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-5) Limited food resources have been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. This deliverable is aimed at determining the validity of the hypothesis.

Monitor water quality parameters to assist with determination of how water quality affects habitat and sturgeon recruitment in the upper Columbia R. (DELV-9) Water quality changes resulting from hydro-operations have been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. This deliverable is aimed at monitoring parameters that have the potential to impact sturgeon survival and distribution, particularly at young-life-stages, directly (immediate death due to low water quality), and indirectly (through changes to habitat, fish community structure, and food availability).

Evaluate chemical mass marking techniques for white sturgeon. (DELV-11) Loss of habitat has been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. To fully assess habitat, paired-release assessments to determine survival of sturgeon in different release locations is critical to evaluation of habitat availability and limitations in the study area. 100% marking of all hatchery fish released into the project area is required. To complete paired-release studies, the ability to mass mark sturgeon is necessary. Without this deliverable, project proponents will not be able to move forward with all components of the habitat assessments.

Assist in development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. (DELV-12) Development of databases that facilitate data sharing and distribution on a regional scale has been identified as a critical component of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council and Bonneville Power Administration’s Fish and Wildlife Program. Additionally, the Transboundary aspect of the full Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative, comprised of US and Canadian government, Tribal and industry partners, makes simplifying data sharing critically important to effective project management and progress.

Assist with habitat characterization and paired release studies in the Roosevelt Reach to assess habitat-recruitment relationships. (DELV-13) Loss of habitat has been identified as a potential factor limiting recruitment of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. This deliverable is aimed at determining the validity of the hypothesis.


*This section was not available on proposals submitted prior to 9/1/2011

RM&E Protocol Deliverable Method Name and Citation
White Sturgeon Enhancement - Fall Subyearling Gill Net Surveys v1.0
White Sturgeon Enhancement - Setline Stock Assessment v1.0
Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon - Acoustic Telemetry ( Longitudinal Array ) (1995-027-00) v1.0
Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon - Subyearling Predation Assessment (1995-027-00) v1.0
Benthic Macroinvertebrate Sampling in the Upper Columbia River (1995-027-00) v1.0

Project Deliverable Start End Budget
Assess the status of white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-1) 2013 2017 $375,057
Monitor the status of sub-yearling (juvenile) white sturgeon in the Transboundary Reach of the upper Columbia River. (DELV-2) 2013 2017 $408,827
Assess white sturgeon movements in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River using acoustic telemetry. (DELV-3) 2013 2017 $221,927
Investigate predation impacts on survival of white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River above Grand Coulee Dam. (DELV-4) 2013 2017 $390,089
Investigate food resources availability as a limiting factor to larval white sturgeon in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-5) 2013 2017 $273,407
Continue conservation aquaculture operations to produce white sturgeon for release in Lake Roosevelt/upper Columbia River. (DELV-6) 2013 2017 $283,329
Examine early life-history information on white sturgeon collected as part of the wild caught larvae conservation aquaculture tasks. (DELV-7) 2013 2017 $203,967
Complete genetic assessment of conservation aquaculture methodologies to compare wild caught larvae with broodstock collection methods. (DELV-8) 2013 2017 $400,712
Monitor water quality parameters to assist with determination of how water quality affects habitat and sturgeon recruitment in the upper Columbia R. (DELV-9) 2013 2017 $151,152
Continue public outreach activities to educate kids and community members about white sturgeon issues in the upper Columbia River. (DELV-10) 2013 2017 $65,424
Evaluate chemical mass marking techniques for white sturgeon. (DELV-11) 2013 2017 $157,404
Assist in development of a relational database management system that encompasses data collected by all of the UCWSRI partners. (DELV-12) 2013 2017 $145,000
Assist with habitat characterization and paired release studies in the Roosevelt Reach to assess habitat-recruitment relationships. (DELV-13) 2013 2017 $145,000
Total $3,221,295
Requested Budget by Fiscal Year

Fiscal Year Proposal Budget Limit Actual Request Explanation of amount above FY2012
2013 $628,522 This project includes some minor increases in work load. The most significant is the assistance with development of a unified database for white sturgeon work completed in the upper Columbia River (completed cooperatively with the CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project).
2014 $635,304 See fiscal year 2013 explanation. Includes an (average) 1.1% COLA and inflation increase.
2015 $655,219 See fiscal year 2013 explanation. Includes an (average) 1.1% COLA and inflation increase.
2016 $651,591 See fiscal year 2013 explanation. Includes an (average) 1.1% COLA and inflation increase.
2017 $650,659 See fiscal year 2013 explanation. Includes an (average) 1.1% COLA and inflation increase.
Total $0 $3,221,295
Item Notes FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017
Personnel FTE (2), 0.5FTE (1), 0.15FTE (2) $181,686 $184,382 $199,903 $202,873 $205,886
Travel Sampling fuel, travel expenses $16,875 $13,215 $13,479 $17,443 $10,958
Prof. Meetings & Training Perdiem, hotel, etc. costs for attendance of ~1 staff annually $5,300 $5,380 $5,460 $5,542 $5,625
Vehicles Rental costs $17,500 $17,763 $18,029 $18,299 $18,574
Facilities/Equipment (See explanation below) $25,500 $25,900 $21,308 $26,724 $22,149
Rent/Utilities Utilities for shops and offic $5,250 $5,329 $5,409 $5,490 $5,572
Capital Equipment None $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Overhead/Indirect Estimated at 10.25% $25,841 $25,827 $27,018 $28,328 $27,548
Other Subcontractors (WDFW, Hatchery, Genetics, Public Outreach, Facilitator, CCT) $317,700 $324,638 $331,743 $314,022 $321,477
PIT Tags Hatchery and wild white sturgeon marking. $32,870 $32,870 $32,870 $32,870 $32,870
Total $628,522 $635,304 $655,219 $651,591 $650,659
Major Facilities and Equipment explanation:
STI: Office and laboratory space is provided by the STI DNR in Wellpinit, WA. Storage space is available at the STI DNR and near West End, WA. Computer, office, and laboratory equipment are available for sample analyses, data management/analyses, and report writing. Vehicles available include two Ford F250 crew-cab pickups, and a Ford F350 super-cab pickup. LRSRP boats are two 27’ aluminum construction landing craft style research boats. Each is equipped with 350 HP Mercruiser engine and Bravo III outdrive, 12” hydraulic pot hauler/davit arm system, hydraulic gill net drum, chartplotter/sonar electronics, self bailing sturgeon live-well, port side dive door, three helm stations, and T-top console. WDFW: Sherman Creek Hatchery (SCH) has tanks, filters, pumps, water heating, etc. necessary to rear sturgeon to PIT tag size (about 30g) on Columbia River water. SCH has a lab with equipment for maturity determination, adult holding tanks (up to 12 adults), two pumps, backup oxygen, emergency alarms, 24 on-call staff, spawning tank, shop/tools for equipment maintenance, repair, etc., and boats. WDFW has a GSA leased Ford F350 with a Powerstroke diesel engine and heavy duty tow package. WDFW Region 1 facilities include office space, storage warehouse for boats/equipment, and a wet lab with adjoining negative pressure room and chemical storage area, and large walk-in cold room and freezer. The wet lab is suitable for rearing young sturgeon and conducting small scale research experiments with sturgeon. Negative pressure room equipment: two fume hoods; two Ziess Stemi 2000 dissecting stereo-microscopes equipped with digital cameras; various electronic scales; hotplates; autoclaves; centrifuges. The WDFW warehouse facility has a covered area for storage of project boats and the heated main building has space to house all project sampling gears and equipment. WDFW has one leased GSA Ford F-350 diesel pickup truck for towing project boats.

Source / Organization Fiscal Year Proposed Amount Type Description
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2013 $1,000 In-Kind 3- D-ring net frames
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2014 $1,000 In-Kind 3 D-ring net frames
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2015 $1,000 In-Kind 3- D-ring net frames
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2016 $1,000 In-Kind 3- D-ring net frames
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2017 $1,000 In-Kind 3- D-ring net frames
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2013 $3,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2014 $3,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2015 $3,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2016 $3,850 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2017 $3,850 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Spokane Tribe 2013 $1,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Spokane Tribe 2014 $1,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Spokane Tribe 2015 $1,500 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Spokane Tribe 2016 $1,700 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Spokane Tribe 2017 $1,700 In-Kind Office/lab/storage space.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2013 $24,000 In-Kind Vemco VR2W Receivers (16)
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2014 $24,000 In-Kind Vemco VR2W Receivers (16)
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2015 $24,000 In-Kind Vemco VR2W Receivers (16)
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2016 $24,000 In-Kind Vemco VR2W Receivers (16)
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 2017 $24,000 In-Kind Vemco VR2W Receivers (16)

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Online: Available at: http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/234/0 (accessed on 8 November 2011). Kappennman, K.M., D.G. Gallion, P.E. Kofoot, and M.J. Parsley. 2000. Report C. Describe reproduction and early life history characteristics of white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River between Bonneville and Priest Rapids dams and define habitat requirements for spawning and rearing white sturgeon and quantify the extent of habitats available in the Columbia River between Bonneville and Priest Rapids dams. Pages 75 to 113 in D.L. Ward, editor. White sturgeon mitigation and restoration in the Columbia and Snake rivers upstream from Bonneville Dam. Annual Progress Report to Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. Project No.198605000. Contract No. DE-AI79-86BP63584. Kendall, W . L. and Nichols, J . D. 1995. On the use of secondary capture-recapture samples to estimate temporary emigration and breeding proportions. Journal of Applied Statistics 22,751-762. Kendall, W . L.; Pollock; K. H., and Brownie, C. 1995. A likelihood-based approach to capture-recapture estimation of demographic parameters under the robust design.Biometrics 51,293-308. Kendall, W . L., Nichols, J. D., and Hines, J. E. 1997. Estimating temporary emigration and breeding proportions using capture-recapture data with Pollock's robust design. Ecology 78,563-578. Kendall, W.L and R. Bjorkland 2001. Using Open Robust Design Models to Estimate Temporary Emigration from Capture-Recapture Data Biometrics Vol. 57, No. 4, pp. 1113-1122 Kern, J.C., T.A. Rien, and R.A. Farr. 2002. Report A. Evaluate the success of developing and implementing a management plan for enhancing production of white sturgeon in reservoirs between Bonneville and McNary dams. Pages 5 to 25 in D.L. Ward, editor. White sturgeon mitigation and restoration in the Columbia and Snake rivers upstream from Bonneville Dam. Annual Progress Report to Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. Project No. 198605000. BPA Report No. DOE/BP-00004005-1. Kock, T.J., J.L. Congleton, and P.J. Anders. 2006. Effects of sediment cover on survival and development of white sturgeon embryos. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 26:134-141. Kruse, G.O. and D.L. Scarnecchia. 2002. Contaminant uptake and survival of white sturgeon embryos. Pages 151- 160 in W. Van Winkle, P.J. Anders, D.H. Secor, and D.A. Dixon, eds. Biology, management, and protection of North American sturgeon. American Fisheries Society, Symposium 28, Bethesda, MD. Kruse, G., and M. Webb. 2006. Upper Columbia River white Sturgeon contaminant and deformity evaluation and summary. Report prepared for the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative Contaminants Sub-Committee. Kynard, B., and M. Horgan. 2002. Ontogenetic behavior and migration of Atlantic sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus oxyrinchus, and shortnose sturgeon, A. brevirostrum, with notes on social behavior. Environmental Biology of Fishes 63:137–150. Kynard, B., E. Henyeya, and M. Horgan. 2002. Ontogenetic behavior, migration, and social behavior of pallid sturgeon, Scaphirhynchus albus, and shovelnose sturgeon, S. platorynchus, with notes on the adaptive significance of body color. Environmental Biology of Fishes 63:389–403. Kynard, B., and E. Parker. 2004. Ontogenetic behavior and migration of Gulf of Mexico sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi, with notes on body color and development. Environmental Biology of Fishes 70:43–55. Kynard, B., and E. Parker. 2005. Ontogenetic behavior and dispersal of Sacramento River white sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus, with a note on body color. Environmental Biology of Fishes 74:19-30 Kynard, B., E. Parker, and B. Kynard. 2010. Ontogenetic behavior and dispersal of Kootenai River white sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus, with a note on body color. A laboratory study. Environmental Biology of Fishes 88:65-77 Lake Roosevelt Management Team. 2009. Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Guiding Document. Technical Draft. Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. BPA Report DOE/BP-117094. 92pp Lawrence, H. A., G. A. Taylor, C. D. Millar, and D. M. Lambert. 2008. High mitochondrial and nuclear genetic diversity in one of the world’s most endangered seabirds, the Chatham Island Taiko (Pterodroma magentae). Conserv Genet 9:1293-1301. Lee, C., and K. Underwood. 2002. Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Juvenile Sampling. Report prepared for the Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection, BC, Canada. Lee, C., and D. Pavlik. 2003. Lake Roosevelt White Sturgeon Juvenile Sampling. Report prepared for the Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection, BC, Canada. Lee, C., D. Pavlik-Kunkel, K. Fields, and B. Scofield. 2006. Lake Roosevelt fisheries evaluation program; limnological and fisheries Monitoring, 2004-2005 Annual Report. Project No. 199404300. BPA Report DOE/BP-00014804-1. Linbo, T.L., Stehr, C.M., Incardona, J.P. and Scholz, N.L. 2006. Dissolved copper triggers cell death in the peripheral mechanosensory system of larval fish. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 25: 597-603. Lippé, C., P. Dumont, and L. Bernatchez. 2006. High genetic diversity and no inbreeding in the endangered copper redhorse, Moxostoma hubbsi (Catostomidae, Pisces): the positive sides of a long generation time. Mol Ecol 15:1769-1780. Majewski, M.S., S.C. Kahle, J.C. Ebbert, and E. G. Josberger. 2003. Concentrations and distribution of slag related trace elements and mercury in fine-grained beach and bed sediments of Lake Roosevelt, Washington, April-May 2001. Water-Resources Investigation Report 03-4170. U.S. Geologic Survey, Tacoma, WA. McAdam, S.O., C.J. Walters, and C. Nistor. 2005. Linkages between white sturgeon recruitment failure and altered bed substrates in the Nechako River, Canada. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 134:1448-1456. McAdam, S.O. 2011. Effects of substrate condition on habitat use and survival by white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) larvae and potential implications for recruitment. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 68:812-822. McCabe, Jr., G.T., and C. A. Tracy. 1994. Spawning and early life history of white sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus, in the lower Columbia River. Fishery Bulletin 92:760-772. McLellan, J.G., M.D. Howell, S.G. Hayes, and R.K. Steinhorst. 2011. Seasonal use of channel and off-channel habitats and depth distribution of white sturgeon in the Marcus area of the upper Columbia River as determined using an acoustic telemetry array. Report submitted to the Toxics Cleanup Program, ERO, Washington Department of Ecology, Spokane, WA. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Spokane, WA. McMahon, T.E. and D.H. Bennett. 1996. Walleye and northern pike: boost or bane to Northwest fisheries. Fisheries 21:6-13. Miller, A. I., and L. G. Beckman. 1996. First record of predation on white sturgeon eggs by sympatric fishes. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 125:338340. Moyer, G. R., J. D. Rousey, and M. A. Cantrell. 2009. Genetic evaluation of a conservation hatchery program for reintroduction of the sicklefin redhorse Moxostoma sp. in the Tuckasegee River, North Carolina. N Am J Fish Manage 29:1438-1443. Muir, W.D., R.L. Emmett, and R J. McConnell. Diet of juvenile and subadult white sturgeon in the lower Columbia River and its estuary. California Fish and Game 74:49-54. Musick, J.A. and seventeen co-authors. 2000. Marine, estuarine, and diadromous fish stocks at risk of extinction in North America (exclusive of Pacific salmonids). Fisheries 25:6-30. NRTWS (National Recovery Team for White Sturgeon). 2007. Recovery strategy for white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) in Canada [Proposed]. In Species at Risk Act Recovery Strategy Series. Ottawa: Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Nielsen, J.R. 1975. A survey and evaluation of sport fisheries in the North Management Area, Region One, with special emphasis on the walleye fishery. Washington Department of Game. Project F-64-R, Job No. 2, 1974. North, J.A., L.C. Burner, and R.A. Farr. 1999. Report A. Evaluate the success of developing and implementing a management plan for enhancing production of white sturgeon in reservoirs between Bonneville and McNary dams. Pages 6-54 in D.L. Ward, ed. Determine the status and habitat requirements of white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River downstream from McNary Dam. Annual Progress Report to Bonneville Power Administration, Portland,Oregon. Project No. 198605000. BPA Report No. DOE/BP-63584-13. Northwest Power Planning Council. 1987 Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. Northwest Power Planning Council. Portland, Oregon: 246. Northwest Power Planning Council. 1994. Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. Portland, Oregon. Northwest Power Planning Council (Northwest Power and Conservation Council), 1995. Fish and Wildlife Program. Document 95-20. Portland, Oregon. Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPPC). 2000. Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. Council Document 2000-19. http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/2000/2000-19 Northwest Power and Conservation Council. 2005. Subbasin Plans. In Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. Portland, Oregon, 2005. Northwest Power and Conservation Council. 2006 Columbia River Basin Research Plan. Document Number 2006-3. Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Portland, Oregon. http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/2006/2006-3.htm Northwest Power and Conservation Council. 2009 Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program: 2009 Amendments. Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Portland, Oregon. http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/2009/2009-09.htm Northwest Power and Conservation Council. 2010. Draft Columbia River Basin Monitoring, Evaluation, Research and Reporting (MERR) Plan. Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Portland, Oregon. http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/2010/2010-17.htm Paragamian, V.L., and G. Kruse. 2001. Kootenai River white sturgeon spawning migration behavior and a predictive model. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 21: 10–21. Paragamian, V.L., G. Kruse, and V. Wakkinen. 2001. Spawning habitat of Kootenai River white sturgeon spawning habitat, post Libby Dam. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 21: 22-33. Paragamian, V.L., and V.D. Wakkinen. 2002. The effects of flow and temperature on the spawning of Kootenai River white sturgeon. Journal of Applied Ichthyology 18:608-616. Paragamian, V.L., and R.C.P. Beamesderfer. 2003. Growth estimates from tagged white sturgeon suggest that ages from fin rays underestimate true age in the Kootenai River, USA and Canada. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 132:895-903. Paragamian, V.L., R. C. P. Beamesderfer, and S. C. Ireland. 2005. Status, population dynamics, and future prospects of the endangered Kootenai River white sturgeon population with and without hatchery intervention. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 134:518-532. Parsley, M.J., L.G. Beckman, and G.T. McCabe, Jr. 1993. Spawning and rearing habitat use by white sturgeons in the Columbia River downstream from McNary Dam. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 122:217-227. Parsley, M.J., and L.G. Beckman. 1994. White sturgeon spawning and rearing habitat in the lower Columbia River. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 14:812-827. Parsley, M. J., and K. M. Kappenman. 2000. White sturgeon spawning areas in the lower Snake River. Northwest Science 74:192–201. Parsley, M.J., P.J. Anders, A.I. Miller, L.G. Beckman, and G.T. McCabe, Jr. 2002. Recovery of white sturgeon populations through natural production: understanding the influence of abiotic and biotic factors on spawning and subsequent recruitment. Pages 55-66 in W. Van Winkle, P.J. Anders, D.H. Secor, and D.A. Dixon, eds. Biology, management, and protection of North American sturgeon. American Fisheries Society, Symposium 28 Parsley, M.J., B.K. van der Leeuw, and D.G. Elliot. 2010. Characterization of the contents and histology of the gastrointestinal tracts of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) captured from upper Lake Roosevelt Washington, October 2008. US Geological Survey Open-File Report 2010-1193. Parsley, M.J. 2011. Mid Columbia sturgeon incubation and rearing study (year 1). Columbia River Water Use Plan. Lower Columbia River Fish Management Plan. CLBMON#27. Reported prepared for BC Hydro, Castlegar, BC. U.S. Geological Survey, Cook, WA. Parsley, M.J., E. Kofoot, and T.J. Blubaugh. 2011. Mid Columbia sturgeon incubation and rearing study (year 2). Columbia River Water Use Plan. Lower Columbia River Fish Management Plan. CLBMON#27. Reported prepared for BC Hydro, Castlegar, BC. U.S. Geological Survey, Cook, WA. Peone, T., A.T. Scholz, J.R. Griffith, S. Graves, and M.G. Thatcher. 1990. Lake Roosevelt Fisheries Monitoring Program. Annual Report, 1988-89. U.S. Department of Energy. Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. Report No. DOE/BP-91819-1. Pollock, K. H. (1982). A capture-recapture design robust to unequal probability of capture. Journal of Wildlife Management 46,757-760. Pollock, K. H., Nichols, J. D., Hines, J. E., and Brownie, C. (1990). Statistical inference for capturerecapture experiments. Wildlife Monographs 107. Quattro, J. M., T. W. Greig, D. K. Coykendall, B. W. Bowen, and J. D. Baldwin. 2002. Genetic issues in aquatic species management: the shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum) in the southeastern United States. Conserv Genet 3:155-166. R.L. & L. Environmental Services Ltd. 1994. Status of white sturgeon in the Columbia River, B.C. Reportprepared for BC Hydro, Environmental Affairs, Vancouver, BC. by R.L. & L. Environmental Services Ltd.,Vancouver, B.C. Report #377F 101. R.L.&L. Environmental Services Ltd. 1996. Columbia River white sturgeon investigations, 1995 study results. Report prepared for BC Hydro, Kootenay Generation, Vancouver, B.C. and B.C. Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Nelson Region. R.L.&L. Report No. 96-377F. R.L.&L. Environmental Services Ltd. 1997. Columbia River white sturgeon spawning studies, 1996 data report. Report prepared for Cominco Ltd., Trail Operations. R.L.&L Report No. 522F. R.L.&L. Environmental Services Ltd. 1998a. White sturgeon investigations in the Columbia River, 1997-1998 study results. Report prepared for BC Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Nelson Region. R.L.&L. Report No. 611F. R.L.&L. Environmental Services Ltd. 1998b. Columbia River white sturgeon spawning studies, 1998 investigations.Report prepared for Cominco Ltd., Trail Operations. R.L. & L Report No. 641F.R.L.&L. Environmental Services Ltd. 2001. Columbia River white sturgeon spawning studies, 2000 investigations.Draft data report prepared for B.C. Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Nelson, B.C. R.L. & L. Report No. 853D. ADDITIONAL REFERENCES LOCATED IN NOTES SECTION

REFERENCES (continued from References Section) R.L. & L. Environmental Service Ltd. 2001 Columbia River white sturgeon spawning studies, 2000 investigations. Draft data report prepared for B.C. Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, Nelson, B.C. R.L. & L. Report No. 853D: 25 p. + 2 app. Roch, M., R.N. Nordin, A. Austin, C.J.E. McKean, J. Deniseger, R.D. Kathman, J.A. McCarter, and M.J.R. Clark. 1985. The effects of heavy metal contamination on the aquatic biota of Buttle Lake and the Campbell River drainage (Canada). Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 14:347-362 Rosenthal, H. 2008. Sturgeon conservation issues: overcoming man-made barriers in the rivers. Pages 5-16 in Rosenthal, H., P. Bronzi, M. Spezia, and C. Poggioli, eds. Proceedings of a workshop held at Piacenza, Italy, June 10, 2006.Fish elevators: A tool for overcoming barriers for large migratory species. World Sturgeon Conservation Society, Special Publication No. 2. Available at: http://www.boku.ac.at/hfa/lehre/812370_gewaesseroekologisches_seminar/Passages_for_fish_ocr.pdf (accessed on 8 November 2011). Sandahl, J.F., D.H. Baldwin, J.J. Jenkins, and N.L. Scholz. 2007. A sensory system at the interface between urban stormwater runoff and salmon survival. Environmental Science and Technology 41:2998-3004 Scholz, A.T., J.K. Uehara, J. Hisata, and J. Marco. 1986. Feasibility report on restoration and enhancement of Lake Roosevelt Fisheries. In: Northwest Power Planning Council. Applications for Amendments. Volume 3A:1375-1489. Schroder, S., and G. Sanborn. 2011. Marking juvenile white sturgeon by immersion in strontium chloride solutions. Unpublished technical report. Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Olympia. Spencer, R.J. 2002. Growth patterns of two widely distributed freshwater turtles and a comparison of common methods used to estimate age. Australian Journal of Zoology, 50, 477-490. Stevens, D.L., Jr., and A.R. Olsen. 2004. Spatially balanced sampling of natural resources. Journal of the American Statistical Association 99:262-278. Underwood, K. and J. Shields. 1996. Lake Roosevelt fisheries monitoring, 1993 Annual Report. Project No. 88-23. For Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, OR. UCWSRI (Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative). 2002. Draft Upper Columbia River white sturgeon recovery plan, November 28, 2002. Available at: http://uppercolumbiasturgeon.org/RecoveryEfforts/Recovery.html. USFWS (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service). 1999. White Sturgeon; Kootenai River Population Recovery Plan. U.S. Department of Interior, USFWS, Region 1, Portland, Oregon. Available at: http://ecos.fws.gov/docs/recovery_plans/1999/990930b.pdf USFWS (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service). 2008. Summary of Kootenai River white sturgeon studies. Information Sheet. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Spokane, WA. Vardy, D. W., Tompsett, A. R., Sigurdson, J. L., Doering, J. A., Zhang, X., Giesy, J. P. and Hecker, M. (2011), Effects of subchronic exposure of early life stages of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) to copper, cadmium, and zinc. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 30: 2497–2505. doi: 10.1002/etc.638 Weakland, R.J., Fosness, R.L., Williams, M.L. and Barton, G.J. 2011. Bathymetric and sediment facies maps for China Bend and Marcus Flats, Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake, Washington, 2008 and 2009. Welch, D.W., R.C. Beamesderfer. 1993. Report F. Pages 89-107 Volume II, in R.C. Beamesderfer and A.A. Nigro, editors. Status and Habitat Requirements of the white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River downstream from McNary Dam. Annual Report to the Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. Wood, C.C., D. Sneep, S. McAdam, J. Korman, and T. Hatfield. 2007. Recovery potential assessment for white sturgeon populations listed under the Species at Risk Act. DFO Can. Sci. Advis. Sec. Res. Doc. 2007/003. Zhuang, P., B. Kynard, L. Zhang, T. Zhang & W. Cao. 2002. Ontogenetic behavior and migration of Chinese sturgeon, Acipenser sinensis. Environ. Biol. Fish. 65: 83–97. Zhuang, P., B. Kynard, T. Zhang, L. Zhang & W. Cao. 2003. Comparative ontogenetic behavior and migration of Kaluga, Huso dauricus, and Amur sturgeon, Acipenser schrenckii, from the Amur River. Environ. Biol. Fish. 66: 37–48.

Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1995-027-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 1995-027-00 - Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-1995-027-00
Completed Date: 4/13/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:

Most of the responses to ISRP questions were adequate. Positive responses from the sponsors included summary updates for project results (2009-2011) and a description of expertise and roles of existing project personnel.

The sponsors provided detailed information, including a good diagram, of how this project relates to and coordinates with project #200811600. It has now been made clearer to the ISRP which entities are leading the work in various areas.

The ISRP had requested additional information on criteria for identifying stock rebuilding. However, no additional information was provided. The objective is simply to stock plenty of fish, and if it turns out to be too many, fish can be thinned through harvest. This is one approach, but a more plausible scientifically-based rebuilding schedule needs to be formulated.

The ISRP requested more detailed methods and approaches for several tasks outlined in the proposal, including methods for determining (1) if predation on juvenile sturgeon was cause for recruitment failure and (2) if lack of proper food was the cause of starvation and recruitment failure. These were not included in the response. Instead, the sponsor’s response was "The LRSRP appreciates that the ISRP recognizes the complexity of the recruitment failure issue in the transboundary reach and the difficulties associated with identifying the limiting factors. The LRSRP recognizes the importance of designing detailed study approaches in order to objectively answer recruitment failure questions. The LRSRP plans to retain a subcontractor with appropriate expertise to assist with study design including detailed methods and implementation of the predation and food habits components of this project. The completion of this work is contingent upon funding."

The sponsor stated that it plans to hire a subcontractor when funded to assist with study design and methodology involving predation and food web components of the project. A specific subcontractor was not identified in the proposal. It is highly desirable for a scientific proposal to identify key individuals or groups that would be responsible for such a major contribution to the study, to indicate that that they had been contacted, and for them to perhaps provide some indication of hypotheses and appropriate methodologies used to test the hypotheses.

Qualification #1 - Qualification #1 - identify and hire the subcontractor
For the predation and food web components of the project, the sponsor needs to identify and hire the subcontractor, identify qualified staffing additions to conduct the work, and develop detailed methodologies, including the starvation approach. The ISRP should review the specific objectives and methodologies prior to implementation.
Qualification #2 - Qualification #2 - develop a plausible rebuilding schedule for the stock
The sponsor needs to develop a plausible rebuilding schedule for the stock with production and cohort/age structure goals during contracting. Similar work by other entities, including the Kootenai Tribe, should be reviewed for applicability.
Qualification #3 - Qualification #3 - High quality annual reports need to be completed and updated.
High quality annual reports need to be completed and updated.
First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Response Requested
First Round ISRP Comment:
  1. Results are lacking for 2009-2011. Annual reports are behind schedule. Two or three years of data may change the direction and rationale of the study. The sponsors should provide a summary of recent results to the ISRP for review.

  2. More rigorous and detailed methods and approaches are needed for several of the tasks outlined, specifically describing how the field work will translate into answered questions. Refer to the next paragraph for issues to address in the response.

Despite a reasonably sound and useful overview of sturgeon problems in this portion of the basin, several items in the proposal are in need of clarification. First, although the need for more understanding of the recruitment failure is well articulated and on target, designing studies to address this issue is an extremely difficult process and requires a more detailed, critical approach than is outlined here. The goals of the recruitment failure work are laudable. However, because of a lack of detail provided in the proposal, the ability of the proposed work to answer the key questions and meet those goals is very questionable. For example, it is not enough to answer if some sturgeon are eaten; it must be shown that this is a cause of the recruitment failure. Similarly, it is not enough to look at some fish food habits and invertebrates; it needs to be shown objectively that these factors are a cause for the recruitment failure. These are difficult questions to answer. Detailed study approaches are needed.

  1. Information that details how work elements proposed under 200811600 and this project are to be divided up should be provided in the response.
  2. A description of the expertise and specific roles of personnel should be provided so responsibility for every project activity is clear.

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

The Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP) is an ongoing project implemented to monitor population status and conduct recruitment failure research on white sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach of the upper Columbia River. The primary goal of the project is to conserve and restore white sturgeon in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River. Their hypothesis is that sturgeon cannot get from the hiding to rearing life stage due to contaminants and predation. This project is closely linked to project 200811600.

The significance of this project is described as responding to many regional plans and programs including: the Lake Roosevelt Guiding Document and Management Plan, the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Initiative and Recovery Plan (2002), the NPPC Fish and Wildlife Program (2009), the Spokane Subbasin Plan, the MERR Plan, and others.

The technical background is described in the Problem Statement and is extensive, contains many good references, and provides sufficient detail regarding the current status and problems of white sturgeon populations in the Columbia River Basin. Past work is well described.

The objectives are listed as:

OBJ-1: Prevent further reduction in upper Columbia River sturgeon distribution, density and genetic diversity by implementing LRSRP/UCWSRI long-term measures.

OBJ-2: Implement research examining hypotheses to determine the cause of upper Columbia River white sturgeon recruitment failure.

These objectives are too general. The deliverables which follow, however, are the work elements and are at a reasonable level of detail.

Even though the importance of rebuilding white sturgeon in the Upper River is well documented and well-justified in this proposal, some details remain vague. The intent to "rebuild the natural age-class structure lost during the recruitment failures of the last 30 years (UCWSRI 2002, Recovery Plan Measure 5.5.3)" raises the question of whether this historical age structure is well-known, or is it just assumed that recruitment occurred every year or nearly every year? The data in Figure 2 demonstrate the lack of recruitment very clearly but do not necessarily indicate steady recruitment of the past. It is also not separated by sex, so with sexual size dimorphism of sturgeon, it gives little indication of actual yearly recruitment. Care must therefore be used in designing the stock composition target that is part of the rebuilding effort. There seems to be no evidence that recruitment in this section of the river was necessarily a yearly event or even very consistent.

Regarding the goal of 1000 mature individuals in an approximately 1:1 sex ratio at maturity, there will of course not be such a sex ratio at maturity because the males will mature several years before the females so there will be more mature males from a cohort starting at a 50-50 sex ratio.

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

Overall, the sponsors did a nice job providing the status of sturgeon populations for this part of the system. Accomplishments are adequately summarized in the proposal. However, there has been a serious lack of reporting since the last ISRP review of this project. Completed reports are lacking for three recent years. Although the ISRP lauded the reporting in the previous review, the major lapse in reporting since then is cause for concern about project direction.

Regarding growth, the authors reported that "the estimate of growth co-efficient, K, was substantially greater in magnitude, and resulting growth trajectories predicted that sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach attain larger sizes at younger ages than observed in other areas of the Columbia River (Howell and McLellan in prep; Figure 5)." It is confusing as to why the growth of the Lake Roosevelt fish would be faster than others but from Keenleyside slower than the others. This does not appear to make sense. Clarification would be helpful.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

The sponsors present a thorough review of sturgeon activities to date and do a reasonable job of focusing in on the knowledge limitations remaining. There does not seem to be a 2009, 2010, or 2011 Annual report, and there does not seem to be much, if any, history of refereed publications resulting from this long project. The ISRP will expand on its retrospective analysis following the response.

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

The sponsors provided a good description of how this project relates to and coordinates with many other BPA projects plus state and Canadian programs.

Potential limiting factors are identified in the review section. There is a general description of how the sponsors are aware of emerging limiting factors such as non-natives and predators.

Adequate answers were provided to the tailored questions. Tagging descriptions were provided in good detail. Database development and sharing is described in reasonable detail.

It is not clear exactly who is doing the work. There is no recent annual report to clarify this issue. The sponsors state, "Stock assessment study design, analysis, and implementation will be led by the Spokane Tribe Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (1995-027-00) in Washington and by BC Hydro in British Columbia. The CCT, under the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA project 2008-116-00), will provide a support role in population monitoring by providing a field crew, equipment, and technical advice. CCT participation will help increase sampling effort, and sample sizes, to improve precision of capture-recapture abundance and survival estimates, as well as indices of growth and condition to facilitate inferential statistical analysis." The one person mentioned as involved in this study is from neither entity but from WDFW, even though this is a Spokane Tribe proposal. The roles of the participants in achieving each objective are unclear and need to be clarified. Who exactly is doing various portions of this work?

Some duplication appears to occur in 200811600 with regard to database management. Both agencies have sizeable budgetary resources dedicated to this effort, although it is the lead of 2008-116-00. The roles here need to be more clearly defined. We would request a diagram showing how work elements proposed under 200811600 and this project are to be divided up. There seems to be some duplication, and a diagram may show otherwise.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Details of several work elements are not clearly articulated. For example, regarding predation: "Under the recruitment failure hypotheses assessment completed by the UCWSRI, several potential proximate mechanisms have been identified as potentially limiting survival of white sturgeon in the recovery area. The LRSRP proposes to examine predation on white sturgeon early life-history stages (ELS) by conducting diet analyses on predators collected from the transition zone from July through October using a combination of short duration gill net sets and by trawling with sampling being stratified by depth and by time of day." This approach intends to sample fish and look at stomachs, but it is not clear how the presence or absence of sturgeon will be translated into a quantitative assessment of the effect of predation and therefore on recruitment failure. The collection of the data is much more direct than the translation of the results into a predation effect on recruitment failure, and the approach should be described in more detail.

Similarly, with regard to food limitation, the sponsors state, "We also intend to compare histology of post-feeding stages of white sturgeon collected during field surveys with reference specimens to identify starvation effects in wild fish, thus determine the role food availability plays as a limiting factor in sturgeon survival." Has this approach been used successfully elsewhere? Please provide background and references.

Although year class strength has at least tentatively been associated with higher flows, it does not seem that any recommendations have been forwarded to test flow augmentation during late spring early summer to improve natural reproduction and recruitment. Has this topic been adequately investigated? Have recommendations been made?

There may be some value in using otoliths to find hatching dates for larval fish.

More details are needed of the contaminant work to be performed and the protocols and methods. 

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

The protocols and methods have been entered in MonitoringMethods.org. The basic protocols and methods were fairly complete and the level of detail for the methods is almost sufficient to be able to replicate the study data collection. Methods outlined in these sections often do not greatly exceed in detail that presented in the proposal. More details of the proposed experimental designs for predation should be provided. What might be the role of sculpins and how might it be evaluated?

Under food resource availability, no details of methods are provided. How can sampling some stomachs clearly lead to conclusions regarding possible "starvation"? Have the sponsors clearly visualized and laid out how the starvation hypothesis can be evaluated?

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/13/2012 4:39:12 PM.
Documentation Links:
  • Proponent Response (3/7/2012)
Proponent Response:

SPONSOR RESONSE TO ISRP COMMENTS:  Resident Fish Categorical Review.

Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (BPA 1995-02-700) 

Sponsor: Spokane Tribe

ISRP recommendation: Response Requested

1. Comments: Results are lacking for 2009-2011. Annual reports are behind schedule. Two or three years of data may change the direction and rationale of the study. The sponsors should provide a summary of recent results to the ISRP for review.

RESPONSE:

Data reports for years 2009-2011 are currently in preparation.  Activities and project results through 2009 were largely summarized in the proposal.  The proposal also included partial results for the period 2010-2011 (e.g. the development of larval collection as the preferred basis for the conservation aquaculture program, VPS pilot study).  Information collected 2010-2011 that was not included in the proposal does not affect proposal direction and rationale.  Brief summaries of activities and results of note that were not outlined in the proposal follow below.

Review of female length at maturity:

We reviewed sturgeon sex and maturity data collected during various LRSRP surveys 2003-2009 for assessment of FL at maturity i.e., the FL at which 50% of a cohort spawn for the first time.  Generally, sex and reproductive status of sturgeon was assessed macroscopically in the field via otoscopic gonad inspection through surgical incision, and classified according to Conte et al. (1988).  The analysis was restricted to females since few fish < 150 cm FL were examined for maturity, and average length at maturity in males is likely less than 150 cm FL.  Thus, all fish unambiguously identified as males were excluded from the analysis.  For cases where sex and maturity state could not be determined, fish were classified as immature (non-reproductive) females for the analysis recognizing that a small proportion of these fish could actually be males.  All females classified as stages 13 (early vitellogenic) through 16 (post spawn) were considered mature (i.e. had spawned at least once previous to examination or, if virgin, were expected to spawn relatively soon after examination).  Because during macroscopic examination of the ovaries it is difficult to differentiate pre-vitellogenic (stage 12; moderate sized ovary with small eggs present) females that have previously spawned and are in a resting state from virgin fish that will spawn for the first time at some unknown time in the future, females classified as stage 12 were alternately treated as mature or immature in two separate analyses.

Female maturity was modeled as a logistic function of fork length using ratios of immature and mature fish: 

formula 1

Where M = proportion mature, x = fork length, x0 = fork length at 50% maturity, and a and b are model coefficients.  Model parameters were estimated using non-linear least squares in SigmaPlot (v11.1.0.102; Systat Software, Inc).

LRSRP staff conducted 277 field assessments of sex/maturity on 266 individual sturgeon captured in the Roosevelt Reach from 2003-2009.  Sturgeon ranged in size from 94.0-260.5 cm FL (mean=191.3; n=277).  Males ranged in size from 100.0-259.5 cm FL (mean=181.9; n=84), females ranged 148.0-260.5 cm FL (mean = 204.9; n=127), and fish where sex could not be determined ranged 94.0-237.4 cm FL (mean=177.0; n=66) (Figure 1).

One fish of uncertain sex was excluded from the female length at maturity regression analysis based on its size (94 cm FL – i.e. a juvenile).  Thus the total number of observations that were used in the analysis was 192 representing fish that were 141.0-260.5 cm FL (mean=195.9) at time of examination.  Estimates for length at female maturity where stage 12 (pre-vitellogenic) females were treated as either mature or immature were similar at 183.3 and 189.8 cm FL, respectively (Figure 2).  These estimates are similar to those published for female sturgeon in other impounded areas of the Columbia River (Beamesderfer et al 1995).  Also, when applied to length-at-age growth models based on Roosevelt sturgeon fin-ray aging and mark-recapture data, estimates of length-at-maturity correspond to an age of approximately 30 years.

 

 F1

Figure 1. Length frequency plots for sturgeon examined for sex/maturity in the Roosevelt Reach 2003-2009. 

 

F2

Figure 2.  Proportion mature female sturgeon by length (10 cm length bins) in the Roosevelt Reach 2003-2009 showing fitted logistic curves and parameter estimates. Blue lines denote 95% confidence bands and red lines denote 95% prediction bands.  The upper plot assumes all pre-vitellogenic fish are mature, the lower plot assumes them to be immature.

Brief review of acoustic telemetry 2003-2009

From 2002-2005, LRSRP staff and researchers in Canada collectively outfitted 78 white sturgeon (104.0-256 cm FL; mean = 189.7) in the Transboundary Reach with Vemco V16 acoustic tags (nominal four year tag life).  These tagged fish were tracked with a longitudinal array of Vemco VR2 and VR2W receivers spaced at varying intervals from HLK Dam downstream to the Columbia-Spokane confluence (the number of array nodes and node placement has developed over time).  From 2002-2009, 76 of these fish were detected by the transboundary array.  The duration of detection histories for another three of these fish were < 1 year suggesting fish death or premature tag failure.  Of the remaining 73 fish, detection history durations ranged from 1.84-6.32 years (mean = 3.58).  While at large, the detected longitudinal range of these fish within the Transboundary Reach ranged 0.0-186.4 km (mean = 71.4)(Table 1).  Excluding movements during apparent spawn migrations, most fish habituated to either the Keenleyside or Roosevelt Reach for the entire duration of their tag’s life; only four (5.5%) fish utilized habitat in both reaches for substantial (months to years) periods of time outside of spawning timeframes.  The longitudinal range of fish (including spawn migrations) that habituated to the Keenleyside Reach was substantially less than observed for fish habituating to the Roosevelt Reach (Table 1).

Table 1.  Detected longitudinal ranges of movement for 73 sturgeon outfitted with Vemco V-16 acoustic tags in the Transboundary Reach 2002-2005.  Fish ranged in size from 104 to 256 cm FL (mean=189.3).  Detection history durations ranged from 1.84 to 6.32 years (mean = 3.58). 

Table1JPG 

While at large, only two fish (2.7%) were detected as far downstream as the Columbia-Spokane confluence (rkm 1,029) and only 12 (16.4%) were detected downstream from Gifford (rkm 1,093).  Thus telemetry observations are consistent with setline catch data that indicates sturgeon use of the, approximately, lower half of the Roosevelt Reach is limited (Figure 3, Figure 4).

Interpretation of spawning movements is under review as of this writing and detailed data will not be presented here.  However, a preliminary assessment suggests forty nine fish made clear migrations to known or suspected spawning areas during spawn timeframes and twenty two were observed to make multiple spawning migrations while their tags were active.  Of these, fourteen were females (169-256 cm FL at tagging) that undertook migrations at intervals ranging from two to four years (two year interval, n=4; three year interval, n=8; four year interval, n=2).  A female that undertook spawn migrations at two year intervals is illustrated in Figure 5.  Most fish that did not apparently undertake clear spawn migrations (primarily fish habituating to the Keenleyside Reach) were reproductively mature when tagged suggesting they may spawn at locations close to their general area of residence.  Spawning intervals for these fish can therefore not be readily determined.

 

F3

Figure 3.  Summertime sturgeon relative abundance by river kilometer in the Roosevelt Reach during spatially balanced random setline surveys, 2007-2009.  CPUE is the mean (SE error bars) catch per overnight set and Ep is the proportion of sets that captured sturgeon.  Data are arranged in 10 km bins and are relative to the Highway 395 Bridge near Kettle Falls, WA (rkm 1,136).  Note differences in CPUE scaling among individual plots.  Labeled vertical dotted lines denote locations of landmarks for reference purposes.

 

F4

Figure 4.  Frequency plots (black bars) of furthest downstream detection for 73 sturgeon outfitted with V16 acoustic tags in the Transboundary Reach 2002-2005.  The grey line represents the cumulative frequency of the count data moving upstream and roughly indicates what proportion of the tag group were detected downstream from any particular location. 

 

F5

Figure 5.  Detected movements of acoustic tagged female ID 1848 in the Transboundary Reach 2005-2009.  This fish was 238.5 cm FL and in pre-spawn condition when tagged at Waneta Eddy 24 June 2005.  Subsequent migrations to the Waneta during the spawning timeframe suggest this female spawns, or is capable of spawning, on a two year cycle and shows fidelity to the Waneta spawning area.

 2010 LRSRP activities and results (report in prep.):

  1. Direct gamete take
    1. Setlining and angling at Northport (rkm 1,185) 16-18 June, 2010
    2. 27 sturgeon captured (8 hatchery 68.1-93.9 cm FL; 19 wild 131.0-268.0 cm FL)
    3. Nine fish in pre-spawn condition (four females, five males) transported to WDFW Sherman Creek Hatchery
    4. Three females and three males successfully spawned and crossed (3x3 factorial) on 29 June 2010
    5. Progeny transported to WDFW CBH for rearing.
    6. 3,869 BY 2010 juveniles (153-395 mm FL; mean=296) released at Kettle Falls Marina 10 May.
  2. Larval collection pilot study:
    1. See proposal and Tables 2 and 3

Annual fall gill net sub-yearling recruitment survey:

  • Standard small-mesh (5.1 cm stretch) gill net gear
  • Survey timeframe: 27 September – 7 October 2010
  • GRTS spatially balanced random survey design
  • 80 overnight gill net sets between Chalk Grade (rkm 1,110) and international border (rkm 1,204)
  • 47 hatchery sturgeon (237-1020 mm FL) captured
  • CPUE = 0.59 sturgeon per set; Ep = 0.28
  • No wild sub-yearling sturgeon captured

Pilot contaminants experiment:

In 2010 we wished to gain experience in incubating sturgeon embryos in preparation for calcein marking experiments slated for 2011.  Out of this grew a pilot study looking at the gross effects of exposing sturgeon embryos and free-embryos to industrial slag of the type found in the substrates of the upper portions of the Roosevelt Reach.

We collected (ponar dredge, towed plankton net) samples of industrial slag from the river thalweg at China Bend where post-hatch life stages are known to occur.  Water used in the experiment was sourced from the river at China Bend.  Experiments were conducted at the WDFW region 1 fish lab.  Sturgeon used for the experiments were sourced from broodstock collected in 2010 and were excess to the aquaculture program requirements. 

Two experiments were conducted (see Figure 6): 

  1. Effects of slag on developing sturgeon embryos
    1. Treatments:
      1. Industrial slag, inert sand, negative control
      2. All three treatments in triplicate; constant water temperature of 17oC
    2. General methods
      1. Fertilize eggs and distribute into experimental enclosures (1,000 per replicate)
      2. Coat with treatment material while jelly layer is still active
      3. Incubate at 17 oC in recirculating system (separate systems for slag treatment and sand/negative control treatments)
    3. Biological endpoints
      1. hatch success
      2. hatch timing
      3. size at hatch
    4. Preliminary results (analysis currently underway)
      1. No detectable differences in outcomes among treatments
  2. Effects of slag on post-hatch sturgeon through first feeding stage
    1. Treatments
      1. Industrial slag, inert sand, negative control
      2. All three treatments applied in triplicate, constant water temperature of 17oC
    2. General methods
      1. Hold newly hatched free-embryos in experimental enclosures (500 per replicate) and allow to develop through first-feeding
      2. Modified Heath trays used as experimental enclosures – each approximately half filled with treatment material
      3. Incubate at 17 C in re-circulating system (separate system for slag treatment, and for sand/negative control treatments)
    3. Biological endpoints
      1. Time to yolk utilization
      2. Growth rates
      3. Mortality
    4. Preliminary results (analysis currently underway)
      1. Retarded growth and development in slag treatment relative to sand and control treatments
      2. No apparent differences in mortality among treatments 

 

 F6

Figure 6.  Modified Heath trays used as experimental enclosures for LRSRP pilot contaminant experiments in 2010.  Left: to limit density dependent effects, a perforated plastic sheet was employed to evenly distribute embryos during incubation.  Right: Heath tray filled with industrial slag in preparation for introduction of recently hatched free-embryos.

2011 LRSRP activities and results (report in prep.): 

Conservation aquaculture 

  • Broodstock collection – suspended in favor of larval collection
  • Larval collection - see proposal and Table 2 and 3.

 

Table 2.  Summary of D-ring plankton net post-hatch sturgeon catch in the upper China Bend area of the Roosevelt Reach in 2010 and 2011. 

 T2  

T3

Pilot calcein marking experiment:  

  • Approximately 20,000 white sturgeon embryos were successfully incubated to hatch and reared to first feeding stage at WDFW Region 1 fish lab
  • Manufacturing delays in purpose-built rearing system resulted in experiment being abandoned.

 Northport spawning area Vemco Positioning System (VPS) pilot study: 

  • 2 July through 18 August 2011
  • Installed 17 Vemco VR2W receivers in two sub-arrays at the broodstock collection and spawning area near Northport, WA (Figure 7)
  • Arrays detected twelve acoustic tagged sturgeon
    • Nine adults (four males, four females; six fish had pressure sensing tags; Figure 8)
    • Three juveniles
  • Positioning analysis is pending but the pilot study was provisionally considered a success particularly give the difficult environmental conditions (i.e. very high river discharge) in 2011. 

    

F7 

Figure 7.  Map of VPS receiver locations as deployed in the Northport area in 2011. 

 

 

 

 

F8

Figure 8.  Depth detection plots from six adult sturgeon outfitted with pressure sensor acoustic tags that were present in the vicinity of the Northport VPS array during the spawning timeframe in 2011.

 

Fall trawling for sub-yearling juveniles

  • 9-10 November 2011
  • 7.9 m benthic shrimp trawl with plumb staff beam arrangement
  • Kettle Falls Marina to China Bend
  • 13 trawls ranging 0.8 to 1.7 km track length
  • Various benthically oriented species captured including freshwater mussels, sculpins, one burbot (425 mm TL) and one BY 2010 hatchery sturgeon (383 mm FL).  No YOY sturgeon captured.

 Annual fall gill net sub-yearling recruitment survey:

  • Standard small-mesh (5.1 cm stretch) gill net gear
  • Survey timeframe: 17-28 October 2011
  • GRTS spatially balanced random survey design
  • 80 overnight gill net sets between Gifford (rkm 1,093) and Little Dalles (rkm 1,179)
  • 19 hatchery sturgeon (282 to 94.8 mm FL) captured
  • CPUE = 0.24 hatchery sturgeon per set; Ep = 0.14
  • Furthest downstream capture of a hatchery juvenile to date: Barnaby Island (rkm 1,112), approximately 14 km downstream than previously observed during fall surveys.  Perhaps an indication of range expansion in response to increasing hatchery fish densities?
  • No wild sub-yearling sturgeon captured

 

The lack of YOY captures in the fall of 2011 during the targeted trawl and gill net efforts is particularly interesting since the spring discharge peak at the international border that year was the highest observed since 1997 – a year which produced a detectable recruitment event.  Although spring discharge was high, water temperatures at the international border lagged behind normal (including 1997) in 2011 and this apparently delayed spawning by approximately two weeks based on the results of spawn monitoring efforts in Canada.  This was confirmed by LRSRP D-ring larval collection efforts (for the aquaculture program) where first feeding larvae were not observed until 20-21 July and were not present in numbers until 25 July.  Previous LRSRP early life history D-ring surveys found first feeding larvae to be present in numbers by early-mid July (see plots in proposal).  By the time large numbers of first feeding larvae were present in 2011, discharge had declined substantially from peak and was not substantially greater than observed during the larval migration period in “normal” water years.  The secondary peak in discharge in mid-July 1997 that likely coincided with peak larval dispersal (the water temperatures profile at the border in 1997 was similar to “normal” years) exceeded 200 kcfs.  By contrast, river discharge in 2011 had declined to 145-160 kcfs by the time first-feeding larvae were becoming abundant.  Thus, the apparent lack of recruitment to sub-yearling juveniles in 2011 as indicated by the fall gill net and trawl surveys adds weight to our contention that the primary determinant of recruitment in the transboundary sturgeon population is hydrologic conditions during the larval dispersal phase, not the spawning phase as has been suggested for other areas of the Columbia. 

 

2. Comments:  More rigorous and detailed methods and approaches are needed for several of the tasks outlined, specifically describing how the field work will translate into answered questions. Refer to the next paragraph for issues to address in the response.

Despite a reasonably sound and useful overview of sturgeon problems in this portion of the basin, several items in the proposal are in need of clarification. First, although the need for more understanding of the recruitment failure is well articulated and on target, designing studies to address this issue is an extremely difficult process and requires a more detailed, critical approach than is outlined here. The goals of the recruitment failure work are laudable. However, because of a lack of detail provided in the proposal, the ability of the proposed work to answer the key questions and meet those goals is very questionable. For example, it is not enough to answer if some sturgeon are eaten; it must be shown that this is a cause of the recruitment failure. Similarly, it is not enough to look at some fish food habits and invertebrates; it needs to be shown objectively that these factors are a cause for the recruitment failure. These are difficult questions to answer. Detailed study approaches are needed.

RESPONSE:

The LRSRP appreciates that the ISRP recognizes the complexity of the recruitment failure issue in the transboundary reach and the difficulties associated with identifying the limiting factors.  The LRSRP recognizes the importance of designing detailed study approaches in order to objectively answer recruitment failure questions.  The LRSRP plans to retain a subcontractor with appropriate expertise to assist with study design including detailed methods and implementation of the predation and food habits components of this project.  The completion of this work is contingent upon funding. 

 

3. Comments:  Information that details how work elements proposed under 200811600 and this project are to be divided up should be provided in the response.

RESPONSE: 

As described in our proposal, the white sturgeon recovery effort in the upper Columbia River is an international endeavor with loose oversight by the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery Initiative. The Washington component is comprised of the collective efforts of two BPA funded projects: the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (WSEP) (BPA 200811600) sponsored by the Colville Confederated Tribes (CCT) and the Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (LRSRP) (BPA 199502700) sponsored by the Spokane Tribe of Indians (STOI) (Figure 9). There are three main categories of work that are proposed to be completed under the Washington component of the recovery effort, which are the core program, habitat assessment, and recruitment failure research. Within the core program, there is population monitoring, which consists of stock assessment with setlines, recruitment monitoring with gill nets, and telemetry, conservation aquaculture, and data management (Figure 9). The habitat assessments include the hydrographic survey to produce the bathymetric and sediment facies maps, velocity profiling, and water quality monitoring. The recruitment failure research includes studies to investigate the proximate mechanisms of recruitment failure (mortality), such as predation, starvation, and contaminant toxicity. The recruitment failure research will also examine the larval transport hypothesis by conducting habitat modeling using the habitat assessment data and by empirical testing by conducting larval release experiments. The larval release experiments are dependent on the ability to mass mark larval sturgeons, which will be studied prior to implementation of the release experiments (Figure 9).

  

 

F9

  Figure 9.  Overview of proposed work to be completed by the LRSRP (199502700) and WSEP (200811600) projects including specific tasks.

Diagrams divided by each of the major work categories (core program, habitat assessment, and recruitment failure research) that indicate the responsibilities of each sturgeon project are provided in Figures 10-12. Under the core program, the LRSRP (BPA 199502700) will lead the population monitoring and conservation aquaculture, and the WSEP (BPA 200811600) will lead development and maintenance of the data management system (Figure 10). The LRSRP proposal describes the level of effort needed to conduct mark-recapture experiments to estimate survival and abundance of wild and hatchery sturgeons. The LRSRP has adequate equipment and staff to complete two thirds of the level of effort necessary. Thus, the CCT through the WSEP will support the stock assessment by supplying a boat and crew to complete approximately one third of the setline and gill net effort (see green arrows, Figure 10). Study design, analysis, and reporting will be completed by the LRSRP. Due to the large amount of data, wide variety of data types, and involvement of multiple parties collecting and accessing data, the development of the data management system will require a development team greater financial support than can be provided by a single project. While the CCT through the WSEP will lead this effort, support in the form of funding, data transfer, and participation on the development team is to be provided by the STOI through the LRSRP (see black arrow, Figure 10).

   

F10

 Figure 10.  Core program tasks proposed to be completed by the LRSRP (199502700) and WSEP (200811600) projects.

 

The LRSRP will complete the water quality monitoring component of the habitat assessment (Figure 11). The WSEP will be responsible for the hydrographic survey and resulting bathymetric and sediment facies maps, as well as the velocity profiling. 

  

F11

 

Figure 11.  Habitat assessment tasks proposed to be completed by the LRSRP (199502700) and WSEP (200811600) projects.

As previously indicated, there are two ways that the projects propose to research recruitment failure: 1) examination of proximate causes of mortality (i.e. predation, starvation, contaminant toxicity), and 2) determining if larvae are being transported to appropriate habitats. In order to assess proximate causes of mortality, the LRSRP (BPA 199502700) will investigate predation on sub yearling sturgeon, as well as food availability for sub yearling sturgeon (Figure 12). The WSEP (BPA 200811600) will examine the effects of contaminants on sub yearling sturgeon.

We proposed two approaches to investigate the larval transport hypothesis: habitat modeling and empirical testing. The WSEP will be responsible for conducting the habitat modeling to determine if there are differences in the quantity of suitable habitat during years with and without detectable recruitment (Figure 12). The WSEP will also be responsible for empirically testing the larval transport hypothesis by conducting larval release experiments. The LRSRP will experiments to determine if sturgeon larvae can be mass marked with Calcein (Figure 12). The mass marking experiment will be completed before the release experiments, because the release groups need to be differentially marked (see green arrow, Figure 12). Following the completion of mass marking experiment, and assuming positive results, the WSEP will apply the marking procedure and conduct the release experiments.

 

F12

 

Figure 12.  Recruitment failure tasks proposed to be completed by the LRSRP (199502700) and WSEP (200811600) projects.

 

4. Comments:  A description of the expertise and specific roles of personnel should be provided so responsibility for every project activity is clear.

RESPONSE:

Historically, the LRSRP subcontracted Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) to lead the project as they had biologists with sturgeon expertise available out of the Region 1 offices.  However, staffing changes at the co-management agencies has created a need to restructure, so the project is currently experiencing a transitional phase in regards to staff.  During the 2013-2017 funding cycle, the LRSRP will provide a qualified full-time biologist, one FT technician and one part-time technician out of the Spokane Tribe of Indians Department of Natural Resources.  WDFW will continue to provide subcontracted support with one FT biologist and one PT technician.  In addition, the CCT will continue to provide support through the White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (200811600).

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

Even though the importance of rebuilding white sturgeon in the Upper River is well documented and well-justified in this proposal, some details remain vague. The intent to "rebuild the natural age-class structure lost during the recruitment failures of the last 30 years (UCWSRI 2002, Recovery Plan Measure 5.5.3)" raises the question of whether this historical age structure is well-known, or is it just assumed that recruitment occurred every year or nearly every year? The data in Figure 2 demonstrate the lack of recruitment very clearly but do not necessarily indicate steady recruitment of the past. It is also not separated by sex, so with sexual size dimorphism of sturgeon, it gives little indication of actual yearly recruitment. Care must therefore be used in designing the stock composition target that is part of the rebuilding effort. There seems to be no evidence that recruitment in this section of the river was necessarily a yearly event or even very consistent.

RESPONSE:

Attempts at identifying past levels of annual recruitment are limited by well documented ageing errors (which reduces the accuracy of age-based models) and highly variable growth rates (which reduces the accuracy of length-frequency analyses). Include other poorly described variables such as age-at first maturity, spawning intervals, number of available spawners, total annual egg production, mortality rates, etc. and the likelihood of being able to accurately predict past recruitment rates becomes even less likely. Due to these difficulties, the approach taken by the UCWSRI in the first decade of hatchery supplementation has been to ensure that stocking rates are conservative; we can always reduce the population in the future (through selective harvesting)  if we have overstocked but we can’t go back in time and stock more fish if we have understocked. As stated in the proposal, we do plan on monitoring hatchery juveniles annually to 1) track density dependent effects on growth as a means to assess our stocking levels and 2) obtain more accurate estimates of post-release survival.  Therefore, although the reviewer’s concerns are valid, we currently don’t have sufficient data to address this issue. It is possible that we could look at more natural population structures in the lower Columbia or the Fraser as a means to assess the variability in annual recruitment but those are much different systems than the upper Columbia River, so how valid any extrapolations might be is unclear.

Ageing data for Roosevelt Reach sturgeon is limited in extent.  During a setline survey of the Roosevelt Reach in 1998, fin rays from 124 sturgeon were aged (Devore et al 2000).  No sex information was collected from these fish.  A year class distribution and approximated recruitment index for this data are shown in the figure below.  The plot suggests that for the period between the completion of Grand Coulee Dam (1942) and commencement of mainstem dam construction in Canada (beginning with HLK dam in 1969) recruitment was somewhat variable (likely largely function of the sparseness of the data) but relatively consistent.

 

F13

Figure 13.  Year class histogram and recruitment index based on fin-ray ageing of 124 white sturgeon collected during a summertime setline survey of the Roosevelt Reach in 1998 (Devore et al 2000).  The recruitment index is for the period 1941-1998 where apparent relative recruitments, Rt , for years t prior to the 1998 sampling event were back-calculated by assuming that Rt-a = Pa x eaM where Pa is the proportion of the sample fish that were age a at t = 1998 (McAdam et al. 2005).  A natural mortality rate of 0.08 was assumed.  Actual mortality rates are unknown as the population was exploited up until prohibition of harvest in the mid-1990s. 

 

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

Regarding growth, the authors reported that "the estimate of growth co-efficient, K, was substantially greater in magnitude, and resulting growth trajectories predicted that sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach attain larger sizes at younger ages than observed in other areas of the Columbia River (Howell and McLellan in prep; Figure 5)." It is confusing as to why the growth of the Lake Roosevelt fish would be faster than others but from Keenleyside slower than the others. This does not appear to make sense. Clarification would be helpful.

RESPONSE:

The VBG parameters reported in the proposal were derived from a preliminary analysis of mark-recapture (M-R) data collected in the Roosevelt Reach from 1998-2009.  In retrospect, the direct comparison of the M-R derived growth curve for the Roosevelt Reach to those reported for other sturgeon populations that were based on fin ray ageing was likely not a fair one.  Juvenile fish grew rapidly in the Roosevelt Reach 1998-2009 likely reflecting the low densities of this size class (due to recruitment failure and limited hatchery introductions) relative to other populations and is therefore not representative of historical norms.

Following on from this, a single von Bertalanffy growth (VBG) model based on 1998-2009 M-R data for the Roosevelt Reach may not provide an adequate description of sturgeon growth across all size classes.  A distinct change in the growth trajectory is apparent between approximately 100-150 cm FL in plots of growth rate at length (see figure below).  While this change could represent the transition to sexual maturity or ontogenetic changes in behavior it is, again, more likely a density dependent effect.  The initial M-R VBG analysis also utilized a substantial amount of data from hatchery fish that were only captured once following release.  We now consider inclusion of these fish into the analysis as inappropriate since it likely incorporates a post-release growth phase that is potentially not representative of normal growth patterns due to factors such as high fish condition at release and an unknown period of post-release adjustment to the natural environment.

 

 F14

Figure 14.  Mean annual growth in length for 178 sturgeon marked and subsequently recaptured in the Roosevelt Reach 1998-2009.  Time at large for individual fish ranged 0.86 to 11.03 years (mean=3.62).  Lines indicate growth rate trajectories estimated from VBG parameters derived from the mark-recapture data using Fabens (1965) growth increment equation.  VBG parameters were variously estimated for: 1) a single analysis using all M-R data combined; 2) a composite analysis where parameters were estimated separately for the <100 cm FL, and >150 cm FL size classes (parameters for 100-150 cm FL size class were estimated via linear interpolation and thus represent a crude approximation); and 3) females.

 

We re-analyzed the M-R data (Fabens 1965) by considering the <100 cm FL (“juveniles”; hatchery single captures excluded) and >150 cm FL (“adults”) separately and assuming VBG for each stanza.  VBG parameters for the 100-150 cm FL size class (“sub-adults”) were then crudely approximated via linear interpolation as data for this size class was sparse.  We also subjected fin ray ageing data collected from sturgeon (n=124) in the Roosevelt Reach in 1998 to re-analysis by constraining Lto a more realistic value of 282 cm FL (previous unconstrained value = 255 cm).  This value was derived by applying the observed maximum size of sturgeon in the Roosevelt Reach to date, Lmax, (279 cm FL) to Froese and Binholan’s (2000) invariate relationship: L=Lmax/0.985.

Plots of growth rate at length derived from estimates of L and K from the M-R analysis showed growth for the <100 cm FL size class was much greater than in other areas of the Columbia; again likely a reflection of the low densities of this size class in the Roosevelt Reach during the period of interest (Figure 15).  The high rates of growth for this size class suggest that supplementation efforts are not yet overseeding available habitat.  In contrast, growth rates of Roosevelt Reach sturgeon >150 cm FL were comparable to similar sized sturgeon in Bonneville reservoir and were greater than similarly sized Keenleyside Reach fish (Figure 15).  Growth rates at length derived from 1998 fin ray ageing with L constrained to 282 were comparable to M-R estimates for the >150 cm FL size class and, hence, Bonneville reservoir also (Figure 15).

 

 F15

Figure 15.  Comparisons of approximate annual growth at length for the Roosevelt Reach and various other Columbia River populations (LCR = lower Columbia River below Bonneville Dam; BON = Bonneville reservoir; TDA = The Dalles reservoir; JDA = John Day reservoir; KR=Keenleyside Reach).  Plots were derived from published VBG parameter values that were based on fin ray ageing (LCR, BON, TDA, JDA; [Beamesderfer et al. 1995]; KR [RL&L 2007], Roosevelt Reach 1998 [Devore et al. 2000], Roosevelt Reach 1998 (Linf constrained) and 1998-2009 Roosevelt Reach mark-recapture data.  Data for the 1998-2009 Roosevelt Reach mark-recapture 100-150 cm FL stanza is omitted for the purposes of clarity but essentially connects the <100 cm FL and >150 cm FL plots. 

Disparities in sturgeon growth between the Roosevelt (Grand Coulee Dam to border) and Keenleyside (border to HLK Dam) Reaches likely reflect differences in habitat coupled with the tendency of fish to habituate to localized areas for relatively long periods of time (years).  The international border marks the approximate upper boundary of the river-reservoir transition zone of the Transboundary Reach (Grand Coulee to HLK Dam) of the Columbia River, and thus the Keenleyside Reach is riverine year-round whereas the areas of the Roosevelt Reach in which sturgeon are found principally represents transition-zone and upper reservoir habitat.  Conventional tagging (PIT) and telemetry (acoustic, radio) studies conducted in the transboundary reach to date indicate that, with the exception of apparent spawning migrations, sturgeon tend to reside in one or other of these general areas for long periods.  For example, Hildebrand et al (1999) found that during the period 1990-1995 approximately 98% of conventionally tagged fish in the Keenleyside Reach moved less than 10km between successive captures.  In the Roosevelt Reach, Brannon and Setter (1992) acoustic tagged 16 sturgeon between 1988-1990, of which none apparently moved upstream into the Keenleyside Reach.  During the period 2004-2007, only four of 75 wild fish outfitted with acoustic tags (primarily sub-adults and adults) spent extended periods (several months to years) of time in both the Keenleyside and Roosevelt Reaches (Howell and McLellan 2011).  Further, of the approximately 733 individual wild sturgeon handled by the LRSRP in the Roosevelt Reach through 2009, only 21 (~3%) were found to have been tagged in the Keenleyside Reach.

Using movement information from mark-capture data collected since 1990, van Poorten and McAdam (2010) suggested that sturgeon in the Keenleyside Reach were spatially segregated into two groups (HLK and Waneta groups) and found differences in growth and metabolism between them, observing that the Waneta group exhibited lower growth which the authors attributed to food limitation.  If there are observable differences in growth and metabolism within the Keenleyside Reach, then it is perhaps not surprising apparent differences exist between the Keenleyside and Roosevelt Reaches generally.  Sturgeon growth in the Roosevelt Reach may be greater for various reasons that could include greater productivity and wider prey base, and lower energetic costs than might be expected for fish inhabiting more riverine habitat.

 

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods 

Similarly, with regard to food limitation, the sponsors state, "We also intend to compare histology of post-feeding stages of white sturgeon collected during field surveys with reference specimens to identify starvation effects in wild fish, thus determine the role food availability plays as a limiting factor in sturgeon survival." Has this approach been used successfully elsewhere? Please provide background and references.

RESPONSE:

Gisbert and Doroshov (2003) conducted histological analysis of larval green sturgeon digestive tracts to identify effects of food deprivation.  Histological differences were identified in food-deprived larval fish as evidenced by progressive deterioration of the digestive system after 10-15 days of starvation.

The LRSRP plans to compare histology of post-feeding stages of white sturgeon to identify starvation effects on wild fish.  The LRSRP histology study will be modeled after the Gisbert and Doroshov (2003) study.  Food limitation (including quantity and quality) has been identified as a possible limiting factor in recruitment failure of white sturgeon in the transboundary reach.  This analysis may provide important insight into possible habitat food limitation and the role it plays in sturgeon survival and recruitment.

 

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods 

Although year class strength has at least tentatively been associated with higher flows, it does not seem that any recommendations have been forwarded to test flow augmentation during late spring early summer to improve natural reproduction and recruitment. Has this topic been adequately investigated? Have recommendations been made?

The topic of flow augmentation during the late spring and early summer has not been thoroughly investigated at this time. The upper Columbia white sturgeon managers feel it is perhaps premature to develop recommendations for flow augmentation prior to completion of critical components of the Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Recovery plan.  Comprehensive habitat assessments (proposed under the CCT project BPA 200811600) and other proposed work will provide a better understanding of dispersal patterns of sturgeon and habitat availability in the transboundary reach.  In addition, costs associated with testing flow augmentation due to loss of power generation are potentially prohibitive.  Given the critical data gaps associated with habitat availability, and likely high costs associated with flow augmentation, recommendations have not been made at this time.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

More details are needed of the contaminant work to be performed and the protocols and methods. 

RESPONSE:

The contaminant work is not proposed under this project, but rather under the CCT White Sturgeon Enhancement Project (BPA 200811600).  

 

Literature Cited

This page has citations that were not included in the proposal.  All other citations can be found in the literature cited section of the Lake Roosevelt Sturgeon Recovery Project (BPA 1995-027-00) proposal.

Conte, F.S. Doroshov, S.I., Lutes, P.B., and E.M. Strange. 1988.  Hatchery manual for the white sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus Richardson. Cooperative Extension University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Publ. 3322, 104 pp.

Froese, R. and C. Binohlan. 2000. Empirical relationships to estimate asymptotic length, length at first maturity and length at maximum yield per recruit in fishes, with a simple method to evaluate length frequency data. J. Fish Biol. 56:758-773.

van Poorten, B.T. and S.O. McAdam. 2010. Estimating differences in growth and metabolism in two spatially segregated groups of Columbia River white sturgeon using a field-based bioenergetics model. The Open Fish Science Journal 3:132-141.