
Council Boosts Funding For Controversial Fish
Survival Study, Questions Others
Northwest Fishletter
October 31, 2006
The Northwest Power and Conservation Council has
offered more financial support to an ambitious Canadian project that
tracks young salmon sporting $300 acoustic tags down rivers and up the
coast to Alaska in an attempt to find out where they die.
At the same time, it questioned the continuation of
another group's 10-year study that compares upriver/downriver survival
of hatchery chinook, and has been trying to prove that Snake River fish
die off at higher rates than downriver fish because they pass more dams.
To bolster his case, Canadian researcher David Welch (Kintama
Research) even presented preliminary results of his 2006 research in comments
sent to the Council earlier this month to answer questions from the
science panel that reviewed this year's spate of fish and wildlife
proposals. His results aren't going to be officially released until
November, at a Corps of Engineers' research review in Portland.
Welch had asked for $1.5 million annually over the
next three years. However, a group of fish and wildlife managers tasked
with reviewing mainstem proposals rejected the project, saying it didn't
address primary management questions related to Columbia Basin hydro
operations, and that knowing more about fish movement in the ocean
wouldn't contribute much to life cycle studies necessary for hydro
operations. Other critics don't buy Welch's assumption that all the
migrating smolts travel along the continental shelf, where his receiver
arrays are strung east to west. They say there's no guarantee that all
tagged fish will be detected, but that some could easily swim around the
arrays.
The Power Council originally recommended funding at
half the requested level, but Welch said the money wouldn't be enough to
answer two basic questions--whether barging improves the survival of
Snake River spring chinook, and whether the Snake fish show evidence of
delayed mortality once they are out of the hydro system.
In comments posted on the council's website on Oct. 6,
Welch said, "the answer to both questions appears to be 'no'."
But he added the caveat that his data seem to show that while barged
fish from the Snake initially do as well as inriver migrants, an
additional month in the ocean kills them off faster than if they had
migrated inriver.
Welch also said his research has found no difference
in mortality between fish migrating from the Snake and the Yakima
rivers, when tracked all the way to the northern tip of Vancouver
Island. Fish from the Yakima deal with four fewer dams than the Snake
migrants.
For many years, most state and tribal fish managers
supported the notion that the Snake fish died off at a higher rate than
downstream stocks because they suffered more stress from passing more
dams--especially from systems built to bypass fish around turbines. But
there was no way to prove it since the fish didn't die until they left
the hydro system.
It's been impossible to tackle such an assumption
until recently, but with the advent of new technologies such as pit-tags
and acoustic-tag research, some folks are getting closer to an answer.
But pit-tag researchers, who can't detect the fish in the open ocean
without a net, must wait until salmon return as adults to estimate
overall survival of each group, and have no way of pinpointing mortality
in the deep. Acoustic tags, on the other hand, have the ability to show
survival in nearly real time because receiver arrays are stretched
across the width of the continental shelf at several sites up the coast.
Another important element of Welch's research goes to
the heart of an assumption held by many state and tribal fish managers,
that the dams themselves have an adverse effect on all fish that must
deal with them. Welch's group also tracks inriver survivals of different
chinook, coho sockeye and steelhead stocks in other rivers like B.C.'s
Fraser, where no dams hinder fish passage.
The Canadian researchers have now begun to estimate
juvenile survivals of a spring chinook stock to the mouth of the Fraser.
In 2005, they estimated chinook survival through the 250 km stretch at
about 40 percent, similar to survival of Snake River migrants that
transit a much longer stretch and pass eight mainstem dams as well
before they reach the estuary.
But not everyone is keen on Welch's work. The state of
Oregon weighed in recently with its own recommendations on mainstem
proposals, and supported funding his proposal at only half the original
request, per an earlier recommendation by the council's own staff. But
Washington's two council members, Tom Karier and Larry Cassidy, along
with Idaho council member Judi Danielson, expressed strong support for
boosting Welch's budget at their October 17 meeting in Helena. Montana.
Cassidy said at the meeting that Welch's work is
"very important." Karier later told NW Fishletter that
it was the council's duty to support this type of work, which compared
Columbia/Snake fish survivals with the survival of salmon that migrated
down rivers without any dams, such as the Fraser.
Welch did not beat around the bush. He told the
council that his preliminary results show no evidence that the hydro
system causes any less survival of the Snake fish than the Yakima fish,
which according to some reports, have shown five times better
smolt-to-adult return rates. NMFS, for example, has questioned the high
SARs for the Yakima fish. In a 2005 technical memo on dam effects, the
agency suggested that recent pit tag research showed similar SARs to
wild Snake River fish.
"While we caution that our first-year results
should be viewed as tentative," said Welch, "they strongly
suggest that the ocean plays the critical role in the management and
conservation of Columbia River salmon stocks, and that ignoring these
issues leads to more blame being ascribed to the hydro system than is,
in fact, appropriate. This has consequences for both the science and
management--in terms of time and money lost on, in some cases, answering
the wrong questions."
Welch's 2006 data show that each group of Snake fish,
whether inriver or barged, exhibited "substantially less"
survival in the 560-km stretch between Willapa Bay (southern Washington
coast) and Vancouver Island than in the entire 960-km distance out to
the Willapa receiver array from the Snake. It also showed significantly
higher survivals for Snake River barged fish than for inriver migrating
Snake smolts.
Survival of the two Yakima groups (199 fish each) to
the north end of Vancouver Island was miniscule--two fish were detected
from one group and none from the other.
That result was similar to the detections for Snake
inriver migrants. Of two 198-fish groups released in early May, only one
smolt was detected from the first group and three from the second.
Barged fish from the Snake fared better, with eight
detections in one group that was barged downriver June 7, adding up to
an 8-percent survival rate to Vancouver Island, with a 3-percent
survival rate from the second group, barged June 15.
In another controversial move, the council tabled a
proposal to continue funding the years-long tagging and survival study
of hatchery fish (Comparative Survival Study) overseen all this time by
the Fish Passage Center.
Idaho's Danielson led the charge for more
accountability from that project, and said only enough funding would be
given to the sponsors to complete a report that covers the last 10 years
of the study, as was requested earlier this year by the council's own
scientific review board. The council will then give the report to the
scientific board for review and recommendations.
Danielson said later that the hatchery fish would be
tagged one way or another, because other entities like NOAA Fisheries
rely on some of the pit-tagged hatchery fish in their own survival
studies, but just who analyzes the data from these efforts may change to
satisfy a need for an unbiased perspective.
Oregon members had objected to the holdup, and called
for full funding ($1.757 million in 2007) of the controversial study,
with added monies for tagging more lower river hatchery fish, as
recommended by the science review panel. But the rest of the council
felt otherwise, and wants the report within 90 days before any more
money is doled out to sponsors.
Members also OK'd spending for another project that
involved Canadians--nearly $600,000 over the next three years to
investigate marine survival issues by collecting coded wire tags from
Columbia River juvenile salmon off the B.C. coast. The council's science
panel gave the project high marks, but neither the mainstem review team
nor Oregon had supported it.
The council also gave the thumbs-up to a proposal by
the Colville Tribes to evaluate different types of net traps and a
floating fish wheel that would be used to develop live-capture methods
for selective fisheries. The proposed study would also evaluate how well
such gear can cull out hatchery fish from wild ones on spawning grounds.
The council supported a $130,000 expenditure for next year, with more to
come in future years if certain conditions are satisfied. That proposal
was also not supported by the mainstem review team, which said its own
tribal members had concerns about selective fisheries.
It's no secret that lower Columbia tribes do not
support mass-marking hatchery fish so commercial and recreational
harvesters can release wild, ESA-listed fish back to rivers. However,
supporters say a fish wheel could help reduce the number of hatchery
steelhead that return to spawning grounds above Wells Dam and dilute the
fitness of wild ESA-listed fish.
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