ESA-listed Snake River Salmon: What’s the link to Snake River dams? John G. Williams NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center Seattle

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evaluate recreational and commercial mark-selective fisheries. (35018) Geraldine Vander Haegen, WDFW Charmane Ashbrook, WDFW Chris Peery, U. Idaho Annette.
Advertisements

Annual Stock Assessment – Coded Wire Tag Program (ODFW & WDFW) BPA Project Numbers: and
Survival Estimates for the Passage of Juvenile Salmonids Through Dams and Reservoirs of the Lower Snake and Columbia Rivers (Project ) CBFWA March.
The Columbia/Snake System
Examining the Effects of Juvenile Migration Timing on Adult Age of Columbia River Salmon Benjamin P. Sandford Fish Ecology Division Fish Ecology Division.
Upper Willamette River Recovery Planning WITHIN OUR REACH New Partnerships for a Healthier Willamette December
Overview of Current Production Programs Across the Columbia River Basin.
NWHA- Panel Discussion “Spawning Better Ideas for Fish Passage”
So Goes the Nation? Salmon Recovery in the Pacific Northwest Glenn Vanselow Pacific Northwest Waterways Association National Waterways Conference Portland,
Evolutionarily Significant Units and the U.S. Endangered Species Act Michael J Ford Northwest Fisheries Science Center Seattle, Washington.
C. A. Peery, M. L. Keefer, and S. R. Lee Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit U.S. Geological Survey and Northwest Fisheries Science Center.
Chinook Salmon Chinook Salmon, also called King Salmon, inhabit the White River. Construction of the flood-protection structure Mud Mountain Dam formed.
Resident Fish Above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams Project No Kalispel Tribe of Indians Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Spokane.
Cedar River Instream Flow Management Balancing Certainty and Flexibility.
SALMONIDS, (3) There is evidence of runs of Chinook and Steelhead in tributaries above Upper Klamath Lake Evidence of salmon from personal accounts, photos,
Disentangling evolution and plasticity in adult sockeye migration date: a new method provides evidence of evolutionary change Lisa Crozier Mark Scheuerell.
Uncertainty and the Management of the Cedar River Presented by Bruce Bachen, Rand Little, and George Schneider Water Management Section Seattle Public.
Overview  Modeling to date: –Distribution of mortality –Achieving improvements with specific actions  Building scenarios  Dealing with uncertainty –
Research Fishery Biologist NOAA Fisheries Maine Field Station John F. Kocik, Ph.D.
COLUMBIA RIVER SALMON AND STEELHEAD RETURNS FPAC and TMT – March 2013 Presented by: Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Columbia River salmon : Who (or what) will save them? John Williams Klarälven meeting in Karlstad 9 May 2011.
Combining PIT Tags with Scale Reading to Better Understand the Life History of Snake River Fall Chinook Salmon Douglas Marsh and William Muir - NOAA Fisheries.
Proposed Approach for Developing Columbia Basin Salmon and Steelhead Goals June 3, 2015.
Survival of Migrating Salmonid Smolts in the Snake and Lower Columbia Rivers, 2009 Technical Management TeamDecember 11, 2009 Lessons Learned 2009 Bill.
Hydrosystem Operations and Fish Recovery in the Columbia River Basin U
Documenting O. mykiss life histories in the White Salmon River prior to the reintroduction of anadromous fish above Condit Dam. Brady Allen and Patrick.
2014 Program Goal Statements for Salmon and Steelhead Overview Nancy Leonard, Laura Robinson and Patty O’Toole (NPCC)
ISAB Snake River Spill-Transport Review ISAB – Presentation to Council September 17, 2008.
Salmon and society: Lessons from the Pacific Northwest Robin Waples Northwest Fisheries Science Center National Marine Fisheries Service N.O.A.A Seattle,
ISAB Snake River 2010 Spill-Transport Review ISAB – Presentation to Council April 14, 2010.
Washington State Steelhead Status Review PACIFIC COAST STEELHEAD MEETING JON ANDERSON WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISH & WILDLIFE MARCH 9-11, 2010.
BUILDING STRONG ® PORTLAND DISTRICT 1. BUILDING STRONG ® PORTLAND DISTRICT 2 BiOp Performance Standards for Dam Passage Survival RPA RM&E Actions - Strategy.
Modeling physical environmental impacts on survival: the SHIRAZ model Ecosystem based management FISH 507.
Management Strategies for Columbia River Recreational and Commercial Fisheries and Beyond Oregon and Washington Staff Options for Initial Analysis.
The Restoration of the River What Happens After the Dams Are Out?
The Columbia River Basin Where we’ve been. Where we’re going. October 18, 2005.
Snake River By: Curtiss Franklin DuBois & Kenneth Alan Rowe.
Differential Estimates of “Survival” for PIT Tagged Fish – Evidence and Causes Jason Vogel Nez Perce Tribe Department of Fisheries Resources Management.
Migration pathway, age at ocean entry, and SARs for Snake River Basin fall Chinook prior to summer spill at LGR, LGS, and LMN dams.
Status of Columbia River salmon and links to flow: What we do and do not know Presentation to Northwest Power Planning Council December 11, 2002
Effectiveness of alternative broodstock, rearing and release practices at Winthrop NFH William Gale and Matt Cooper -USFWS, Mid-Columbia River Fishery.
Howard Schaller PSMFC Annual Meeting September 24, 2013 Comparative Survival Study Outcomes – Experimental Spill Management 1.
CSS Oversight Committee ISAB November 15, 2013 Comparative Survival Study Outcomes – Experimental Spill Management 1.
2004 Oregon Steelhead Status Update Steve Jacobs Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
The relationship of Snake River stream-type Chinook survival rates to in-river, ocean and climate conditions Howard Schaller, USFWS * Charlie Petrosky,
Downstream Survival of Juvenile Stream Type Chinook Salmon and Steelhead Through the Snake/Columbia River Hydropower System and Adult Return Rates AFEP.
SALMON BY: MARIAH B.. Salmons Population At the moment, salmon's population has decreased. Within ten years, scientists predict that some salmons will.
Washington State Steelhead Stock Status Review PACIFIC COAST STEELHEAD MEETING AMILEE WILSON WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISH & WILDLIFE MARCH 2004.
Findings of Congress The Endangered Species Act is the last resort for species at risk of extinction. Under the ESA, the National Marine Fisheries Service.
2010 work planned, new operations, and wrap up Presenter: Robin Ehlke CSS Annual Meeting Apr 2 nd 2010.
25 December Fraser Sockeye Life Cycle Diagram
Columbia River Basin Fish Restoration Activities ACCOMPLISHMENTS TO DATE AND UPCOMING ISSUES Bonneville Legal Briefing – October 2015.
Northwest Power Planning Council Fish and Energy Impacts Resulting from Reductions in Summer Bypass Spill July 16, 2003.
Implementing Hatchery Reform The Dawn of a New Beginning or more of the same old thing? Mike Delarm NOAA Fisheries.
Welcome To Central Washington University and the Yakima Basin Science and Management Conference Overview of Fishery Activities Dave Fast, Yakama Nation.
Upstream passage success rates and straying of returning adults Presenter: Jack Tuomikoski CSS Annual Meeting Apr 2 nd 2010.
Biological Opinions and ESA Consultations Ritchie Graves NMFS-NWR Hydropower Division Portland, Oregon February 19, 2013.
Northwest Fisheries Science Center Technical Management Team
Pacific Northwest Salmon Migration and the Relationship with Hydroelectric Dams Matt Jordan CE 394 GIS and Water Resources.
Fall Chinook Management Measures
Status of Steelhead in Oregon
Status of Steelhead in Oregon
Fisheries Adventure Learning—Boise Watershed Luke Kolar and Lee Brown.
Science Policy Exchange
NOAA Mainstem PIT Tag Research
Salmon : Types of Salmon
Adult PIT-tag Interrogation System Wells Hydroelectric Project (System Design, Installation and Evaluation)     Shane Bickford* Public Utility District.
Behavior and Survival for Juvenile Salmonids Passing Ice Harbor Dam during reduced and BiOp spill treatments, Gordon Axel, Eric Hockersmith, and.
Modifications to TDG Monitoring and Tracking
Eagle Fish Genetics Lab (IDFG): Craig Steele Mike Ackerman
Presentation transcript:

ESA-listed Snake River Salmon: What’s the link to Snake River dams? John G. Williams NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center Seattle Conference on Large Scale Water Infrastructure: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES ON LARGE DAMS 3-5 November New Haven, Connecticut, USA

Poll

Snake River dams or salmon Can we have both?

Decision makers need to know --- Is dam removal necessary?

Decision makers need to know --- Is dam removal necessary? Is dam removal sufficient?

Salmon stocks pre- and post dam construction Direct dam impacts Modifications to dams Where are we now? Can we answer the questions? Road Map

No data

Changes to the hydropower system

Improvements or installation of juvenile bypass systems at dams

Transportation by barge

Changes in water storage

Changes in turbine operations

Spill designated for fish

Columbia River salmon ESUs (13 of 17 listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act) Snake River – Sockeye Salmon - Sockeye Salmon Chinook salmon - spring-summer run; fall-run Steelhead - Steelhead Columbia River – Sockeye Salmon - Lake Wenatchee/Okanogan River Chinook salmon - Upper spring-run, Upper summer-fall run, Middle spring-run, Deschutes River summer-fall run, Lower Steelhead - Upper, Middle, and Lower Coho salmon - Lower Chum salmon - Lower Upper Willamette River - Chinook salmon; Steelhead

Other significant changes

Context Stocks naturally fluctuate

Baumgartner et al CalCofi

Schindler et al CJFAS

Chance (1973) - information from early pioneer diaries: In 1811 and in the late 1820s the middle Columbia River (between the confluence of the Snake River and Kettle Falls) had salmon populations so low that settlers and Native Americans relied on horseflesh for survival

Scheuerell and Williams 2005 Fisheries Oceanography R 2 =0.71

Do dams effect fish?

Could we harvest adults at higher rates without dams?

Do dams effect fish? Could we harvest adults at higher rates without dams? Is recovery limited by dams?

If the evidence was clear, the debate would not rage