Prespawn Mortality of Spring Chinook Salmon in Three Willamette River Populations

Author:

Naughton George P.12,Keefer Matthew L.1,Clabough Tami S.1,Knoff Matthew J.13,Blubaugh Timothy J.14,Morasch Mark R.15,Sharpe Cameron S.6,Caudill Christopher C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fish and Wildlife Sciences, College of Natural Resources University of Idaho 875 Perimeter Drive, Mail Stop 1136 Moscow Idaho 83844 USA

2. Department of Forest, Rangeland and Fire Sciences, College of Natural Resources University of Idaho 875 Perimeter Drive, Mail Stop 1133 Moscow Idaho 83844 USA

3. Lotek Wireless, Inc. 2510 West Manor Place Seattle Washington 98199 USA

4. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Columbia River Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office Vancouver Washington 98683 USA

5. Environmental Assessment Services 350 Hills Street, Suite 112 Richland Washington 99354 USA

6. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Resources Program Newport Oregon 97365 USA

Abstract

AbstractImpassable dams on major tributaries to the Willamette River, Oregon, have restricted access to historical spawning habitat for returning adult Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha. To restore these populations, some fish are collected and transported in trucks upstream of dams (i.e., adult trap‐and‐haul operations). However, persistently high prespawn mortality (PSM) rates in these programs have hindered conservation efforts. The objective of this study was to evaluate environmental factors and individual fish traits associated with PSM in Chinook Salmon populations that were transported and released upstream of dams in three Willamette River tributaries. Annual PSM of tagged and untagged female salmon ranged from 6% to 88% across 7 years. Mortality was higher in warmer years and in warmer tributaries, consistent with rangewide studies of PSM in Chinook Salmon. Effects of individual traits were mixed across sites: longer salmon and those released relatively early or late in the migrations had higher mortality. We conclude that strategies designed to minimize adult Chinook Salmon exposure to warm water temperatures, as well as additional research into both proximate and ultimate causes of PSM, may lead to better management and conservation outcomes for outplanted populations, including those in Willamette River tributaries.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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