July 25, 2008
A vastly
changed landscape has allowed non-native species to
flourish to the point they now "represent major
impediments to the restoration of native salmonids in
the Columbia River Basin," according to a recently
completed Independent Scientific Advisory Board report.
"The
negative impacts of non-native species invasions, along
with habitat loss and degradation, are recognized as the
two leading causes of native species imperilment in
North American freshwater ecosystems," according to the
report, "Non-native Species Impacts on Native Salmonids
in the Columbia River Basin: Including Recommendations
for Evaluating the Use of Non-Native Fish Species in
Resident Fish Substitution Projects."
The panel
recommends that the Northwest Power and Conservation
Council and fish and wildlife agencies "elevate the
issue of non-native species effects to a priority
equivalent to that of habitat loss and degradation,
climate change, and human population growth and
development." Those species include fish, plants and
invertebrates.
Climate
change and human population growth and development
themselves are "likely to effect the establishment and
spread of non-native species with subsequent significant
impacts on native species," according to the report.
Most of the introduced fish species have a higher
tolerance for warm water than do salmon. And population
growth could bring calls for more non-native fisheries,
according to the ISRP.
The 11
member panel advises the Northwest Power and
Conservation Council, NOAA Fisheries and basin tribes.
The
report issued July 18 says that "while intentional and
unintentional introductions of non-native species have
accounted for initial establishment of non-native
species, habitat change is currently the major factor
causing the expanding distribution and increasing
abundance of non-native species in the Columbia River
Basin."
"Most of
the free-flowing river habitats in the Snake and
Columbia rivers have been converted into reservoir
habitats through dam building, intended for
hydroelectric power generation and for flow regulation
for irrigation diversion and flood control," the report
says. "The reservoirs have created hotspots of
non-native species, which become source populations of
non-natives, facilitating secondary spread of these
species throughout the basin."
The
report says that there are 119 threatened or endangered
species in the basin, most of which are plants. But the
list does include 13 salmon and steelhead stocks.
It cites
a 2007 survey that indicates non-natives now make up 46
percent, 54 percent and 60 percent of the resident fish
species in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, respectively.
Such
non-native species as American shad, common carp, brook
trout, bluegill, walleye, and smallmouth and largemouth
bass, are widespread and have come to dominate many fish
communities throughout the Basin. Some prey on young
salmon; others compete for habitat and sustenance.
The
number of non-native aquatic invertebrates, such as
clams, in the lower Columbia River is rising fast. On
average over the past 10 years a new invertebrate
species was discovered about every five months.
"The
increasing rate of new discovery is due both to the
increasing frequency of introductions and to the number
and type of surveys conducted," the report says.
"Non-native aquatic plants (i.e., macrophytes), such as
Eurasian milfoil, have also become quite abundant and
have altered littoral fish habitat in many mainstem
reservoirs in the Columbia and Snake rivers."
The
introduction of non-native fish, plants and
invertebrates have come as a result of increases in
inter-continental trade, travel, and tourism, as well as
import and export of exotic pets, ornamental plants,
foreign foods, and crop plants.
Walleye,
smallmouth bass and channel catfish consume significant
amounts of juvenile salmon. Largemouth bass, yellow
perch, and crappie eat salmon as well.
The ISAB
report is posted on the Council's website at this
location:
http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/isab/isab2008-4.htm
A
description of the ISAB, whose members are nominated by
the National Academy of Sciences and appointed jointly
by the Council, NOAA Fisheries, and the Columbia River
Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, also is on the Council's
website:
http://www.nwcouncil.org/fw/isab/Default.htm
The
report on non-native species is timely for the Council
because it is now in the process of amending its
Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program, which
will be released in draft form for public comment in
late August or early September.
The
program establishes strategies and goals aimed at
protecting and enhancing fish and wildlife affected by
the construction and operation of the federal
Columbia/Snake river power system. The Bonneville Power
Administration funds program implementation from
revenues it collects from selling power generated in the
system.
The
report is intended to help the Council (1) develop
guidelines for implementing the Fish and Wildlife
Program to minimize future impacts from non-native
species and (2) frame scientific guidance and propose
criteria for deciding the limitations and appropriate
use of non-native fishes to mitigate hydrosystem losses
through resident fish substitution.
According
to the report's executive summary:
--
Non-native species also compete with natives species for
food and habitat. As an example, larval/juvenile
American shad have reduced zooplankton species food base
favored by subyearling chinook.
--
Nonnative fish can cause food web alterations (e.g.,
native resident fish communities in littoral habitats of
Columbia River reservoirs are being replaced by
non-native species).
---
Non-natives' interbreeding with native stocks and
disease transmission and parasites (American shad is a
carrier of a protozoan parasite of salmon) are also
harmful.
-- Native
species are also significantly impacted by non-native
invertebrates and plants. Examples include the
freshwater Asian clam, which has replaced native
mollusks in the Columbia River Basin, and non-native
plants like Eurasian milfoil, which is widespread in
Columbia River reservoirs and is altering littoral
habitats.
The
ISAB's recommends that:
-- the
Council urge the state agencies to relax (or eliminate)
fishing regulations aimed at non-native predators.
"It would
seem contradictory that the Council has continued to
support the project aimed at reduction in abundance of
the native northern pikeminnow, while state agencies in
Washington, Oregon, and Idaho have simultaneously
adopted management policies that in some cases seem
aimed at perpetuating or even enhancing populations of
these introduced predators," the report says.
"For
example, all three states have regulations in place that
limit the daily catch of bass by recreational anglers.
In particular, Washington's Columbia River regulations
seem to be designed to optimize the spawning capability
and thus recruitment of bass, using the same type of
regulations as in the sturgeon fishery. Similarly,
Washington's regulations for the walleye fishery seem
aimed at optimizing recruitment by protecting spawners.
--
habitats, including riparian habitats, be maintained and
restored.
"Habitat
restoration may be the best hope for protecting or
restoring native species. When native species are
provided with habitat for which they are best adapted,
they have an improved chance of out-competing or
persisting with non-native species.
"Restoring physical features (including natural flow and
thermal regimes) may make native species more likely to
persist in environments now occupied by non-natives."
--
efforts be made to increase public awareness of the
threats that non-native invasive species pose to aquatic
ecosystems and the native species therein. That
awareness is critical for curtailing the introduction
and spread of new non-native species.
-- a
thorough Environmental Risk Assessment of potential
negative impacts on native fish species should be
completed and submitted, concurrently with project
proposals, for all resident fish substitution projects
in which a non-native species is to be selected for
substitution.
"Research
needs are many, including (1) mapping the vulnerability
of the landscape to non-native species introduction,
establishment, and spread; (2) examining the impacts of
non-native predators on native salmonids and other
native species at regional scales and where many species
co-occur; (3) determining the potential for transmission
of diseases and parasites to native species, (4)
improving understanding of the effects of competition
between non-native and native species, and (5) exploring
the potential synergistic interactions of climate
change, land use, and non-native species spread," the
report says.
"Exploratory surveillance and monitoring of fish, plant,
and invertebrate populations needs to be increased for
early detection of invasive non-native species and
tracking of their distribution and abundance in the
future.
"Early
detection of rare non-native species is challenging and
may sometimes require use of sophisticated sampling
designs and estimation techniques. However, the cost of
control after spread of undesirable species thoroughly
justifies the effort," according to the report.
And
enforcement is a must.
"Federal,
Regional, and State Policies and regulations regarding
non-native species exist, but enforcement seems to be
weak or non-existent. Improved enforcement of current
regulations should be a high priority."