Introduction:
We will examine the survival and movement patterns
of late-fall Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) smolts
and steelhead (O. mykiss) smolts migrating from the upper Sacramento
River to the San Francisco Estuary through the use of ultrasonic telemetry.
This study can be viewed as a classic mark-recapture experiment with
multiple recapture locations and complete capture histories. From the
data collected we will be able to reconstruct each fish’s migratory
pathway, and examine how natural and anthropogenic covariates affect
reach specific rates/residence time and survival
Objective:
A detailed lifecycle model for Central Valley
salmonids is seriously lacking in the realms of smolt survival and spatial-temporal
migratory patterns. The data gathered from this project will be used
to:
1) Describe reach-specific rates of survival
and movement of juvenile steelhead and Chinook salmon from the upper
Sacramento River to the coastal ocean.
2) Explain the variation in reach-specific
rates by examining natural and anthropogenic covariates, such as water
velocity, water temperature, habitat structure, etc.
Methods:
For three years we will surgically implant Vemco
V7 tags into the peritoneal cavity of 200 late-fall Chinook salmon smolts
and 200 steelhead smolts raised at the Coleman National Fish Hatchery
(CNFH). These new ultrasonic tags are small enough that they do not
affect swimming performance, predation rates, or growth rates of the
juvenile salmonids. Tags will be implanted into the peritoneal cavity
of ten Chinook salmon smolts and ten steelhead smolts each day, five
days a week, for four weeks in January. After the ten fish from both
species have been held for a post-implantation period they will be released,
and ten of both species will be released each day until 200 of each
species has been released. By spreading out when the smolts are released
we can compare environmental variables affects on movements, and it
will help to decrease the potential for “tag collisions”
(fish not being detected because of multiple pinging at a monitor).
We will be expanding the already existing array of 32 monitors in the
Sacramento River used to record the movements of green sturgeon. The
additional monitors will allow us to gain a better understanding of
where juvenile salmonids may be diverted from their migratory routes,
when they enter the Grizzly, Suisan, and San Pablo Bays, and when they
finally depart from the San Francisco Estuary at the Golden Gate Bridge.
Progress:
N/A
Personnel:
Phil Sandstrom (lead)
Pete Klimley, Ph.D.
Department of Wildlife, Fish, & Conservation
Biology, University of California, Davis
Steven Lindley, Ph.D.
Bruce MacFarlane, Ph.D.
Arnold Amman
NOAA Fisheries, Southwest Fisheries Science
Center, Santa Cruz Laboratory
Funding Sources:
CALFED Science Program
Acknowledgements: