NW Fishletter #256, January 8, 2009
[2] Salmon Go Acoustic At Research
Confab
"...the benefits from modifying
dam passage for fish was small potatoes compared to the huge
vagaries they encounter in the ocean."
At last month's annual rendezvous of salmon recovery
researchers in Portland sponsored by the Corps of Engineers,
the take-home message was clear--the benefits from modifying
dam passage for fish was small potatoes compared to the huge
vagaries they encounter in the ocean.
But the message was delivered by someone who had invited
himself, Canadian scientist David Welch, whose acoustic tag
research has attracted a considerable amount of both flack
and kudos, for its attempts at tracking juvenile salmon
survival in the ocean.
Using a tag that's considerably larger than the one the
Corps uses in its research, Welch is able to track fish down
the Snake, into the Columbia and out in the ocean all the
way to Southeast Alaska.
The Corps' tags are small enough to be implanted in young
fall chinook, but don't work well in salt water and their
battery life is much shorter. But the Corps hasn't been
interested in monitoring fish survival past the estuary.
However, BPA funding has kept Welch's work going, despite
recommendations from fish and wildlife managers to reduce
it. They have long held that because he tags only a few
hundred fish, his work doesn't represent the run at large.
But he has collected enough data to debate that point.
When he reported his 2008 preliminary findings last
month, they corroborated his 2006 results that showed
survival of his acoustic-tagged smolts from both the Snake
and Yakima rivers tracked with survivals of PIT-tagged fish
from 2006 and 2008.
And perhaps more importantly, his data shows that those
in-river survival rates appear to be "roughly" the same
above and below the hydrosystem. Welch said ocean survival
may actually be worse than in the hydro system.
The results did not show any differential mortality
between fish from the Snake compared to Yakima smolts, which
traverse four fewer dams. The Snake fish actually had higher
survival per distance traveled.
About 11 percent of the inriver migrating Snake smolts
were detected off NW Vancouver Island, 9.3 percent of the
barged Snake fish, and 10.7 percent of the inriver migrating
Yakima fish, about 1,500 kilometers from their starting
point.
That means about 20 fish from each inriver release of 200
fish were detected off Vancouver Island.
He concluded that the lack of any benefit from
transporting juveniles through the hydro system "likely
occurs because transport moves smolts between two
environments with roughly similar rates of survival."
Welch didn't include his 2007 results because of tagging
problems that year.
Welch came under fire recently for publishing
results in a peer-reviewed journal PLOS-Biology that
showed evidence that survival of migrating juvenile chinook
in the undammed Fraser River was similar to that seen in the
Snake and Columbia--where test fish passed eight dams.
The Fish Passage Center recently posted a critical review
of Welch's paper on its Web site. Some state and tribal
agencies have also criticized Welch's earlier findings that
have raised doubts about "latent mortality" of fish that
pass more dams or are barged.
NMFS PIT-tag researchers have shown no clear benefit to
wild Snake spring chinook stocks from being barged through
the hydro system, but even FPC results have shown some
benefits to hatchery spring chinook from transportation.
NMFS research has also shown great swings in survival to
adulthood from fish that migrate only a week or two
apart--with migrating inriver fish usually showing better
SARs [Smolt-to-Adult Return Rates] early in the spring and
barged fish showing better SARs later in the season.
These findings have led NMFS to conclude that later ocean
entry usually coincides with better overall survival.
Welch's group used only two release groups from the Snake
and Yakima rivers, so his findings do not cover the
time-spread that could capture a whole season's worth of ups
and downs related to SARs.
Federal scientists have speculated that these
fluctuations are due to fast changes in ocean conditions
like upwelling, or the appearance of heavy salmon predators
like hake or mackerel when waters are warm.
Welch said survival through the estuary was much better
than previous years. This was backed up by the Corps' own
acoustic research, reported by Geoff McMichael, of the
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland.
McMichael said his group's preliminary 2008 survival
estimates for spring chinook ranged from 65 percent to 94
percent, with fall chinook about the same. He said most
spring chinook losses occurred in the lower 35 kilometers of
the river. -B. R.
The following links were mentioned in this story:
NW Fishletter 254, Nov. 10, 2008