FY 2002 Mountain Snake proposal 198909801

Section 1. Administrative

Proposal titleEvaluate Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers (ISS)
Proposal ID198909801
OrganizationU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - Idaho Fishery Resource Office (USFWS/IFRO)
Proposal contact person or principal investigator
NameJustin Bretz
Mailing addressP.O. Box 18 Ahsahka, Idaho 83520
Phone / email2084767242 / justin_bretz@r1.fws.gov
Manager authorizing this projectHoward Burge
Review cycleMountain Snake
Province / SubbasinMountain Snake / Salmon
Short descriptionEvaluate various supplementation strategies for maintaining and rebuilding spring/summer chinook salmon populations in Idaho. Develop recommendations for the use of supplementation to rebuild naturally spawning populations.
Target speciesSpring/ Summer Chinook Salmon
Project location
LatitudeLongitudeDescription
46.1348 -115.9515 Confluence of Clear Creek and Middle Fork Clearwater River east of Kooskia, Idaho
46.0433 -115.8145 Mouth of South Fork Clear Creek, upper end of study area
46.1651 -115.5872 Confluence of Pete King Creek and Lochsa River east of Lowell, Idaho
46.1651 -115.5872 Pete King Creek, upper end of study area
Reasonable and Prudent Alternatives (RPAs)

Sponsor-reported:

RPA
Hatchery RPA Action 174
RM&E RPA Action 182
RM&E RPA Action 184

Relevant RPAs based on NMFS/BPA review:

Reviewing agencyAction #BiOp AgencyDescription
NMFS Action 182 NMFS The Action Agencies and NMFS shall work within regional priorities and congressional appropriations processes to establish and provide the appropriate level of FCRPS funding for studies to determine the reproductive success of hatchery fish relative to wild fish. At a minimum, two to four studies shall be conducted in each ESU. The Action Agencies shall work with the Technical Recovery Teams to identify the most appropriate populations or stocks for these studies no later than 2002. Studies will begin no later than 2003.
NMFS Action 184 NMFS The Action Agencies and NMFS shall work within regional prioritization and congressional appropriation processes to establish and provide the appropriate level of FCRPS funding for a hatchery research, monitoring, and evaluation program consisting of studies to determine whether hatchery reforms reduce the risk of extinction for Columbia River basin salmonids and whether conservation hatcheries contribute to recovery.
NMFS/BPA Action 182 NMFS The Action Agencies and NMFS shall work within regional priorities and congressional appropriations processes to establish and provide the appropriate level of FCRPS funding for studies to determine the reproductive success of hatchery fish relative to wild fish. At a minimum, two to four studies shall be conducted in each ESU. The Action Agencies shall work with the Technical Recovery Teams to identify the most appropriate populations or stocks for these studies no later than 2002. Studies will begin no later than 2003.
NMFS/BPA Action 184 NMFS The Action Agencies and NMFS shall work within regional prioritization and congressional appropriation processes to establish and provide the appropriate level of FCRPS funding for a hatchery research, monitoring, and evaluation program consisting of studies to determine whether hatchery reforms reduce the risk of extinction for Columbia River basin salmonids and whether conservation hatcheries contribute to recovery.

Section 2. Past accomplishments

YearAccomplishment
1991 Identified study areas, brood stocks, and facilities to be used.
1992 Begin brood stock development.
1992 Begin supplementation and monitoring of treatment streams.
1993 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
1994 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
1995 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
1996 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
1996 Small scale investigations into chinook salmon supplementation strategies and techniques:1992-1994. Technical Reports. Perry, C.A. and T.C. Bjornn.
1997 First generation returns, local brood stock is established.
1997 Monitor adult returns from supplementation releases in prior years, incorporate adults into second generation brood stock.
1997 Brood stock selection begins.
1997 Initiated radio telemetry study on Clear Creek to identify spawning locations, and monitor spawning success.
1997 Complete progress report for activities on Clear Creek and Pete King Creek 1991-1993.
1998 Released progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
1998 Monitor adult returns from supplementation releases in prior years, incorporate adults into second generation brood stock.
1999 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
2000 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
2000 Monitor adult returns from supplementation releases in prior years, incorporate adults into second generation brood stock.
2000 Second generation begins to return (I-Ocean).
2001 Monitor adult returns from supplementation releases in prior years, incorporate adults into second generation brood stock.
2001 Release progeny from supplementation brood stocks to treatment streams.
2001 Complete progress report for activities on Clear Creek and Pete King Creek including data from 1991-1997.
2001 Idaho Supplementation Studies Five-Year Progress Report (1992-1997).
2001 Completed progress report for activities on Clear Creek and Pete King Creek including data from 1991-2000.

Section 3. Relationships to other projects

Project IDTitleDescription
8909800 ISS/ Idaho Department of Fish and Game Cooperator on ISS Study
8909802 ISS/ Nez Perce Tribe Cooperator on ISS Study
8909803 ISS/ Shoshone-Bannock Tribes Cooperator on ISS Study
9107300 Idaho Natural Production Monitoring and Evaluation Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9005500 Steelhead Supplementation Studies Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
8335003 Nez Perce Tribal Hatchery - O&M Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9102800 Monitoring Smolt Migration of wild Snake River Spring/Summer Chinook Salmon Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9405000 Salmon River Habitat Enhancement O&M/M&E Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9604300 Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement - O&M, M&E Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9703000 Monitoring Listed Stock Adult Chinook Salmon Escapement Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination
9705700 Salmon River Production Program Reciprocal transfer of data / coordination

Section 4. Budget for Planning and Design phase

Task-based budget
ObjectiveTaskDuration in FYsEstimated 2002 costSubcontractor
Outyear objectives-based budget
ObjectiveStarting FYEnding FYEstimated cost
Outyear budgets for Planning and Design phase

Section 5. Budget for Construction and Implementation phase

Task-based budget
ObjectiveTaskDuration in FYsEstimated 2002 costSubcontractor
1. Monitor and evaluate effects of supplementation on parr, presmolt and smolt numbers and spawning escapements of naturally produced salmon. a. Use "standardized" spawning, rearing marking, release protocols. 3 $0
b. Mark hatchery supplementation and general production fish. 3 $1,400
c. PIT tag 750 general hatchery production and 750 supplementation fish. 3 $5,100
d. Release juvenile chinook salmon. 3 $0
e. Estimate late summer parr densities. 5 $6,185
f. PIT tag a minimum of 500 naturally produced juveniles from two treatment streams. 5 $7,120
g. Collect, and enumerate emigrating fish. 5 $14,670
h. Count returning adults using weirs, redd walks, and carcass surveys. 5 $12,270
2. Monitor and evaluate changes in natural productivity and genetic composition of target and adjacent populations following supplementation. a. Collect, and enumerate juvenile chinook. 5 $14,670
b. Collect tissue samples for DNA analysis. 5 $4,570
c. Monitor straying of supplementation adults with weirs, carcass surveys, and radio telemetry. 5 $13,830
d. Predict population viability based on spawner to recruitment relationship to determine if the population will maintain itself through time in the absence of additional supplementation. 5 $9,225
3. Determine which supplementation strategies (both brood stock and release stage) provide the quickest and highest response in natural production without adverse effects on productivity. a. Monitor production (count number of pre-smolt, smolt and adults), and productivity (survival, life stage characteristics, straying, genetic composition) of supplemented population. 5 $19,950
b. Spawn local brood stocks with known natural component. 2 $8,100
c. Compare natural production and productivity between first and second generations. 5 $9,230
4. Develop supplementation recommendations. (Long term) a. Address risks and benefits in general, and specific brood stock and release strategies. 5 $0
Outyear objectives-based budget
ObjectiveStarting FYEnding FYEstimated cost
1. Monitor and evaluate effects of supplementation on parr, presmolt and smolt numbers and spawning escapements of naturally produced salmon. 2003 2006 $50,000
2. Monitor and evaluate changes in natural productivity and genetic composition of target and adjacent populations following supplementation. 2003 2006 $50,000
3. Determine which supplementation strategies (both brood stock and release stage) provide the quickest and highest response in natural production without adverse effects on productivity. 2003 2006 $40,000
4. Develop supplementation recommendations. (Long term) 2003 2006 $0
Outyear budgets for Construction and Implementation phase
FY 2003FY 2004FY 2005FY 2006
$140,000$140,000$130,000$130,000

Section 6. Budget for Operations and Maintenance phase

Task-based budget
ObjectiveTaskDuration in FYsEstimated 2002 costSubcontractor
Outyear objectives-based budget
ObjectiveStarting FYEnding FYEstimated cost
Outyear budgets for Operations and Maintenance phase

Section 7. Budget for Monitoring and Evaluation phase

Task-based budget
ObjectiveTaskDuration in FYsEstimated 2002 costSubcontractor
Outyear objectives-based budget
ObjectiveStarting FYEnding FYEstimated cost
Outyear budgets for Monitoring and Evaluation phase

Section 8. Estimated budget summary

Itemized budget
ItemNoteFY 2002 cost
Personnel FTE: 1.7 $54,625
Fringe $12,635
Supplies $11,650
Travel $6,460
Indirect USFWS Overhead @22% $22,780
Capital $0
NEPA $0
PIT tags # of tags: 3,000 $6,750
Subcontractor Backhoe operator (8hrs@$65/hr) $520
Subcontractor Trap operator (900 hrs@$9/hr) $8,100
Subcontractor Fin clip ISS fish ($28/1K @50); PIT tag 1,500 $2,800
$126,320
Total estimated budget
Total FY 2002 cost$126,320
Amount anticipated from previously committed BPA funds$0
Total FY 2002 budget request$126,320
FY 2002 forecast from 2001$140,000
% change from forecast-9.8%
Reason for change in estimated budget

Change in FWS overhead

Cost sharing
OrganizationItem or service providedAmountCash or in-kind
USFWS- Kooskia Natl. Fish Hatchery Hatchery rearing and release of supplementation fish (100K) $35,500 in-kind
USFWS- Vancouver FRO Fin clip general production fish (50K) $1,400 in-kind

Reviews and recommendations

This information was not provided on the original proposals, but was generated during the review process.

Recommendation:
Fundable only if response is adequate
Date:
Sep 28, 2001

Comment:

Idaho Supplementation Studies

A response is needed for the set of Idaho Supplementation Study Projects.

Background

Supplementation of natural stocks is not a mandated mitigation objective, but has become an important part of the hatchery programs. Idaho has outplanted (i.e. off-site releases) over 5.5 million chinook fry, approximately 8 million smolts, and 8,000 adults into the Salmon River drainage since 1977 (IDFG et. Al. 1990). During the same period, over 17 million fry, 3 million smolts, and 2,000 adults were outplanted into the Clearwater River drainage (Nez Perce Tribe et. Al. 1990). In spite of widespread outplanting activities there has been little scientific evaluation of supplementation on rebuilding or influencing natural salmon populations both in Idaho and basin wide. Furthermore, despite these hatchery mitigation efforts, anadromous fish stocks in Idaho continued to decline.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) spearheaded development of the Idaho Supplementation Studies (ISS) to address questions identified in the Supplementation Technical Work Group (STWG) Five Year Workplan (STWG 1988), as well as help define the potential role of supplementation in managing Idaho's anadromous fisheries and as a recovery tool for the basin. The goal of the Idaho Supplementation Studies is to evaluate various supplementation strategies for maintaining and rebuilding spring/summer chinook salmon populations in Idaho and to develop recommendations for using supplementation to rebuild naturally spawning populations.

Projects directly involved in the ISS are:

  1. Project ID: 198909800. Idaho Supplementation Studies. Sponsor: Idaho Department of Fish and Game and Idaho Office of Species Conservation. Subbasin: Salmon.
  2. Project ID: 198909801. Evaluate Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers (ISS). Sponsor: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - Idaho Fishery Resource Office. Subbasin: Clearwater.
  3. Project ID: 198909802. Evaluate Salmon Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers- Nez Perce Tribe. Sponsor: Nez Perce Tribe. Subbasin: Salmon.
  4. Project ID: 198909803. Salmon Supplementation Studies in Idaho- Shoshone-Bannock Tribes. Sponsor: Shoshone-Bannock Tribes. Subbasin: Salmon
  5. Project ID: 199005500. Steelhead Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers. Sponsor: Idaho Department of Fish and Game and Idaho Office of Species Conservation. Subbasin: Clearwater
  6. Project ID: 199604300. Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement Project. Sponsor: Nez Perce Tribe. Subbasin: Salmon.

ISS also coordinates field activities and data collection efforts with the Idaho Habitat/ Natural Production Monitoring project (199107300). ISS also coordinates with and transfers data to projects in the Salmon River subbasin including the Monitoring Smolt Migration of Wild Snake River Spring/Summer Chinook Salmon (199102800), Salmon River Habitat Enhancement (9405000), and Salmon River Production Program (199705700). ISS also works closely with the Lower Snake River Compensation Plan (LSRCP) to coordinate on hatchery supplementation treatments and evaluations.

Presently, there are eleven state and federal anadromous hatcheries operating in Idaho: Clearwater, Oxbow, Rapid River, McCall, Sawtooth, Pahsimeroi, Dworshak, Kooskia, Hagerman National, Niagara Springs, and Magic Valley. There are also three satellite rearing ponds: Powell, Red River, and Crooked River operated in conjunction with the Clearwater Hatchery. These hatcheries have the combined capacity to produce 8.5 million spring chinook smolts, 2 million summer chinook smolts, 6.7 million A-run steelhead O. mykiss smolts, and 4 million B-run steelhead smolts annually.

ISS Study Design

The ISS study design called for a minimum of 15 years (three generations) of research (Bowles and Leitzinger 1991). Sampling was initiated in 1991, and implementation began in 1992. Supplementation effects are monitored and evaluated by comparing juvenile production and survival, fecundity, age structure, and genetic structure and variability in treatment and control streams of similar ecological parameters.

Due to the large geographic scope of this study, study streams were partitioned among four resource management entities for implementation. These include Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Nez Perce Tribe, Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Idaho Fishery Resource Office. Allocations were based on interest, integration with ongoing programs, cost efficiency, logistics and, to a lesser extent, relative equity. Approximately one-half of the study will be implemented by Idaho Department of Fish and Game through the ISS contract with BPA. The Nez Perce Tribe and Shoshone-Bannock Tribe have similar commitments to ISS, each comprising approximately 20% of the study. Both of these components rely heavily on integration of existing or proposed tribal programs. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Idaho Fishery Resource Office implements about ten percent of the project. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game is the lead agency regarding project development, coordination, and implementation.

The ISS Experimental Design was completed and published in 1991. Baseline data collection and development of supplementation brood stocks (Phase I) began in 1991. Over a period of about five years, supplementation brood stocks were developed for seven hatchery trap/release locations as identified in the experimental design:

Artificial Production Facilities

  1. Sawtooth Fish Hatchery - Upper Salmon River
  2. Pahsimeroi Fish Hatchery - Pahsimeroi River
  3. McCall Fish Hatchery - South Fork Salmon River
  4. Clearwater Fish Hatchery Satellites
  5. Crooked River
  6. Red River
  7. Powell (Colt-killed Creek)
  8. Clear Creek - Kooskia National Fish Hatchery

As adult fish began to return from the Phase I supplementation brood stock juvenile releases, the project progressed into Phase II. Phase II utilizes the returning adults to supplement natural origin recruits in treatment streams and maintains supplementation brood stocks for juvenile production and release. Juvenile fish releases through brood year 1996 include 1,281,755 fish in the Clearwater River basin and 1,954,048 fish in the Salmon River basin.

This project is now transitioning from Phase II to Phase III, monitoring the effects of supplementation. In Phase III juvenile releases from supplementation brood stocks are eventually terminated, returning adults from prior juvenile releases are released to supplement spawning of natural origin recruits, and monitoring of production and productivity response variables in control and treatment streams continues. In 2000, juvenile releases were maintained at levels similar to releases in 1999.

Treatment (e.g. supplementation in general, supplementation with a particular life stage, supplementation with a particular brood source) effects will be tested directly by hypotheses. In general, treatments will be applied for one to two generations (5-10 years) following approximately one generation of pretreatment data. Population responses to supplementation will be monitored a minimum of one generation (5 years) following supplementation. It is important that the original study design be maintained. Reducing sample size (number of treatment streams) can potentially impair the sensitivity of the design. Reducing to five treatment streams provides only a 60% chance of detecting a 25% change in production, whereas we would still have over 95% chance of detecting a 50% change.

Related projects

Several additional projects are related to the ISS. The monitoring and evaluation portion of the Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement project (199604300) conducts the juvenile emigration and survival, adult escapement (weir and spawning ground surveys), and genetic monitoring associated with the ISS project in Johnson Creek. The Nez Perce Tribal Hatchery Monitoring and Evaluation project (198335003) collects the data associated with the ISS project in Lolo Creek, Eldorado Creek, and Newsome Creeks in the Clearwater River subbasin. The Nez Perce Tribe Monitoring of Listed Stock Chinook Salmon Escapement project (BPA Number 199703000) operates a video camera and weir to passively monitor and enumerate adults returning to Lake Creek and upper Secesh River. This project collects data on adult abundance and migration timing of chinook salmon.

ISRP Preliminary Recommendations:

As initially planned, the Idaho Supplementation Study (ISS) was probably the best supplementation study among the Provinces. It should be continued, but the ISRP has a number of concerns that should be addressed while there is still time. This study addresses the critical issue of the efficacy of supplementation to restore populations and many resources have been committed to it. With the experimental design of the Yakima Hatchery in question (no wild/wild and no hatchery/hatchery controls), retaining the integrity of this experiment is crucial. It is important that the Idaho Supplementation Studies be completed following the original approved experimental design.

The most critical ISRP concerns are:

  1. the effect of the loss of Johnson Creek (previously a control stream) from the experimental design, and
  2. the effect of straying of hatchery fish into Lake Creek, the Secesh River, and other designated "controls".

As currently planned in project #199604300"Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement Project", Johnson Creek is neither a treatment nor a control stream in the ISS because the criteria for stopping supplementation has been changed and does not appear to match the timetable in the ISS. Supplementation activities in Johnson Creek should cease immediately for the duration of the ISS study design, allowing Johnson Creek to continue to be used as a 'control' stream, even given the recent limited supplementation of it. (Note: a portion of the 2001 returning jacks are the first returning fish from the limited Johnson Creek supplementation effort.)

To do minimal damage to the ISS study design, the ISRP recommends that Johnson Creek now be considered a control stream (at least by year class!) and that supplementation be stopped in Johnson Creek in accordance with the original timetable in the ISS. The number of wild returning adults we observed earlier this month spawning in Johnson Creek, and the number we are likely to observe next year, argue that supplementation of Johnson Creek is not needed as an emergency action for a declining stock at least through the duration of the ISS experiment.

As we understand the situation, the decision to remove Johnson Creek from the study was beyond the control of some proponents of the ISS project. Nevertheless, we find it unacceptable that the experimental design for study of such a critical issue as supplementation would be compromised by a decision to remove a control stream from the study. The only conclusion we can come to is that the proponents of the decision to remove Johnson Creek from the supplementation study believe that they already know the result, i.e., they believe supplementation works. A broad base of the scientific community is in extreme disagreement with this conclusion, and it is unacceptable that the best-designed study of supplementation would be compromised.

Other ISRP concerns: The proponents should list the initial control and treatment streams and the current treatments and controls. How has the overall design changed? What is the current timetable to stop supplementation in the treatment streams and to evaluate the effect on natural production? In the control streams, what effect do the straying rates have on the analysis? What would be the effect of changing Johnson Creek from a "control" to a "treatment" stream on the statistical power of the study?

The results of this project should help determine whether supplementation is a viable restoration strategy and as such should inform the RPA four-step safety net process.

There may be a need for ongoing input from an over-site committee with members outside those participating in the study to monitor the progress. Has this been planned for or considered?


Recommendation:
High Priority
Date:
Nov 30, 2001

Comment:

This project addresses RPAs 174, 182 and 184.
Recommendation:
Do Not Fund
Date:
Dec 21, 2001

Comment:

Idaho Supplementation Studies

Background Supplementation of natural stocks is not a mandated mitigation objective, but has become an important part of the hatchery programs. Idaho has outplanted (i.e. off-site releases) over 5.5 million chinook fry, approximately 8 million smolts, and 8,000 adults into the Salmon River drainage since 1977 (IDFG et. al. 1990). During the same period, over 17 million fry, 3 million smolts, and 2,000 adults were outplanted into the Clearwater River drainage (Nez Perce Tribe et. al. 1990). In spite of widespread outplanting activities there has been little scientific evaluation of the efficacy of supplementation on rebuilding or influencing natural salmon populations both in Idaho and basin wide. Furthermore, despite these hatchery mitigation efforts, anadromous fish stocks in Idaho continued to decline.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) spearheaded development of the Idaho Supplementation Studies (ISS) to address questions identified in the Supplementation Technical Work Group (STWG) Five Year Workplan (STWG 1988), as well as help define the potential role of supplementation in managing Idaho's anadromous fisheries and as a recovery tool for the basin. The goal of the Idaho Supplementation Studies is to evaluate various supplementation strategies for maintaining and rebuilding spring/summer chinook salmon and steelhead populations in Idaho and to develop recommendations for using supplementation to rebuild naturally spawning populations.

Projects directly involved in the ISS are:

  1. Project ID 198909800. Idaho Supplementation Studies. Sponsor: Idaho Department of Fish and Game and Idaho Office of Species Conservation. Subbasin: Salmon.
  2. Project ID 198909801. Evaluate Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers (ISS). Sponsor: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - Idaho Fishery Resource Office. Subbasin: Clearwater.
  3. Project ID 198909802. Evaluate Salmon Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers- Nez Perce Tribe. Sponsor: Nez Perce Tribe. Subbasin: Salmon.
  4. Project ID 198909803. Salmon Supplementation Studies in Idaho- Shoshone-Bannock Tribes. Sponsor: Shoshone-Bannock Tribes. Subbasin: Salmon
  5. Project ID 199005500. Steelhead Supplementation Studies in Idaho Rivers. Sponsor: Idaho Department of Fish and Game and Idaho Office of Species Conservation. Subbasin: Clearwater
  6. Project ID 199604300. Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement Project. Sponsor: Nez Perce Tribe Subbasin: Salmon.

ISS coordinates field activities and data collection efforts with the Idaho Habitat/ Natural Production Monitoring project (199107300). ISS also coordinates with and transfers data to projects in the Salmon River subbasin including the Monitoring Smolt Migration of Wild Snake River Spring/Summer Chinook Salmon (199102800), Salmon River Habitat Enhancement (9405000), and Salmon River Production Program (199705700). ISS also works closely with the Lower Snake River Compensation Plan (LSRCP) to coordinate on hatchery supplementation treatments and evaluations. Presently, there are eleven state and federal anadromous hatcheries operating in Idaho: Clearwater, Oxbow, Rapid River, McCall, Sawtooth, Pahsimeroi, Dworshak, Kooskia, Hagerman National, Niagara Springs, and Magic Valley. There are also three satellite rearing ponds: Powell, Red River, and Crooked River operated in conjunction with the Clearwater Hatchery. These hatcheries have the combined capacity to produce 8.5 million spring chinook smolts, 2 million summer chinook smolts, 6.7 million A-run steelhead O. mykiss smolts, and 4 million B-run steelhead smolts annually.

ISS Study Design

The ISS study design called for a minimum of 15 years (three generations) of research (Bowles and Leitzinger 1991). Sampling was initiated in 1991, and implementation began in 1992. Supplementation effects are monitored and evaluated by comparing juvenile production and survival, fecundity, age structure, and genetic structure and variability in treatment and control streams of similar ecological parameters.

Due to the large geographic scope of this study, study streams were partitioned among four resource management entities for implementation. These include Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Nez Perce Tribe, Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Idaho Fishery Resource Office. Allocations were based on interest, integration with ongoing programs, cost efficiency, logistics, and, to a lesser extent, relative equity. Approximately one-half of the study will be implemented by Idaho Department of Fish and Game through the ISS contract with BPA. The Nez Perce Tribe and Shoshone-Bannock Tribe have similar commitments to ISS, each comprising approximately 20% of the study. Both of these components rely heavily on integration of existing or proposed tribal programs. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Idaho Fishery Resource Office implements about ten percent of the project. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game is the lead agency regarding project development, coordination, and implementation.

The ISS Experimental Design was completed and published in 1991. Baseline data collection and development of supplementation brood stocks (Phase I) began in 1991. Over a period of about five years, supplementation brood stocks were developed for seven hatchery trap/release locations as identified in the experimental design:

Artificial Production Facilities

  1. Sawtooth Fish Hatchery - Upper Salmon River
  2. Pahsimeroi Fish Hatchery - Pahsimeroi River
  3. McCall Fish Hatchery - South Fork Salmon River
  4. Clearwater Fish Hatchery Satellites

  5. Crooked River
  6. Red River
  7. Powell (Colt-killed Creek)
  8. Clear Creek - Kooskia National Fish Hatchery
As adult fish began to return from the Phase I supplementation brood stock juvenile releases, the project progressed into Phase II. Phase II utilizes the returning adults to supplement natural origin recruits in treatment streams and maintains supplementation broodstocks for juvenile production and release. Juvenile fish releases through brood year 1996 include 1,281,755 fish in the Clearwater River basin and 1,954,048 fish in the Salmon River basin. This project is now transitioning from Phase II to Phase III, monitoring the effects of supplementation. In Phase III juvenile releases from supplementation brood stocks are to be eventually terminated, returning adults from prior juvenile releases are released to supplement spawning of natural origin recruits, and monitoring of production and productivity response variables in control and treatment streams continues. In 2000, juvenile releases were maintained at levels similar to releases in 1999. Treatment (e.g. supplementation in general, supplementation with a particular life stage, supplementation with a particular brood source) effects will be tested directly by hypotheses. In general, treatments will be applied for one to two generations (5-10 years) following approximately one generation of pretreatment data. Population responses to supplementation will be monitored a minimum of one generation (5 years) following supplementation. It is important that the original study design be maintained. Reducing sample size (number of treatment streams) can potentially impair the sensitivity of the design. Reducing to five treatment streams provides only a 60% chance of detecting a 25% change in production, whereas we would still have over 95% chance of detecting a 50% change. Related projects Several additional projects are related to the ISS. The monitoring and evaluation portion of the Johnson Creek Artificial Propagation Enhancement project (199604300) conducts the juvenile emigration and survival, adult escapement (weir and spawning ground surveys), and genetic monitoring associated with the ISS project in Johnson Creek. The Nez Perce Tribal Hatchery Monitoring and Evaluation project (198335003) collects the data associated with the ISS project in Lolo Creek, Eldorado Creek, and Newsome Creeks in the Clearwater River subbasin. The Nez Perce Tribe Monitoring of Listed Stock Chinook Salmon Escapement project (BPA Number 199703000) operates a video camera and weir to passively monitor and enumerate adults returning to Lake Creek and upper Secesh River. This project collects data on adult abundance and migration timing of chinook salmon. ISRP Final Recommendation: Not fundable until the ISRP concerns are adequately addressed. The experimental design has not been adhered to over the years and from the response to our preliminary review, the ISRP is not confident it will be in the future. In fact, the current experimental design is not adequately defined. There does not appear to be commitment to treatment durations, particularly to the Phase III portion of the study design, where supplementation ceases, so that treatment effects can be analyzed. From communications that occurred during the ISRP site visit, it appears the project sponsors should be able to specify timelines for termination of the treatments for each treatment stream. A table needs to be developed for Phase III implementation that describes when the treatments will stop on a stream-by-stream basis. In the past, sponsors have not stuck with agreed upon control streams. How confounded are the treatment and control streams? This points to the need for submittal of a certified statistical design. Projects 198909800 through 198909803 and 199005500 are fundable after adequately addressing the following constraints.
  1. A written protocol for complete statistical analysis, certified by an independent statistician team should be presented to Council during the contracting period. The ISRP is not comfortable with the implications that "problems" with the study design can be "fixed" during the statistical analysis stage. Considerable thought and effort should be placed in planning the statistical analyses of these potentially controversial data before final decisions are made on criteria for stopping supplementation and before data are available.
  2. The protocol for statistical analysis must indicate how straying of hatchery fish into "control streams" and "partial treatments" will be analyzed. For example, the response to the ISRP preliminary review indicated that the straying rate of hatchery fish into the Secesh River from 1996-2001 varied from 0.83% to 14.71%. This is in fact, de facto supplementation. It is unclear to the ISRP how partial treatment and de facto supplementation of control streams will be addressed in the statistical analysis of the ISS.
  3. Development of a specific stream-by-stream protocol and timetable for implementation of Phase III of the ISS. Included in this is the immediate cessation of supplementation activities in Johnson Creek (see comments below on proposal 199604300) and inclusion of Johnson Creek once again as a control stream in the ISS experimental design.

Recommendation:
Date:
Feb 1, 2002

Comment:

Statement of Potential Biological Benefit to ESU
Benefits are indirect. Evaluate various supplementation strategies for maintaining and rebuilding spring/summer chinook salmon populations in Idaho. Develop recommendations for the use of supplementation to rebuild naturally spawning populations.

Comments
Supplementation of natural stocks has become an important part of the hatchery programs. However, in spite of widespread outplanting activities there has been little scientific evaluation of supplementation on rebuilding or influencing natural salmon populations. The results of these projects should help determine whether supplementation is a viable restoration strategy, a subject which NMFS is currently researching.

Already ESA Req? No

Biop? Yes


Recommendation:
A Conditional
Date:
Feb 11, 2002

Comment:

Recommend funding of ongoing scope of work only after ISRP concerns are addressed and conditioned upon timely submission of reports for implementation of RPAs 182 and 184. We note that this project has consistently struggled with timely submission of annual progress reports. This project now proposes additional objectives that may have merit and could be considered after the ISRP's concerns are addressed and a regional RM&E plan is developed.

BPA RPA RPM:
182, 184

NMFS RPA/USFWS RPM:
182, 184


Recommendation:
Fund
Date:
Apr 19, 2002

Comment:

Council recommendation: The Council recommends funding for these projects [198909800, 198909801, 198909802, 199604300, 198909803] after the ISRP concerns detailed in programmatic issue 10 are addressed. The sponsors are requested to document their responses, and provide them to the Council for ISRP review. If the ISRP concerns are addressed, only previously approved and ongoing objectives should be funded. NMFS comments provide that these projects address RPAs 182 and 184. Bonneville's "A conditional" rating and comments are consistent with the Council recommendation. All of these proposals are held to funding levels approved by the Council in Fiscal Year 2001 plus 3.4%. The Council also notes that the sponsors need to consider how Johnson Creek will continue to be used in the ISS study as part of its response (this relates to the ISRP's third question on page 45 of its final report and Salmon Issue 8 below) [see Council comments on project 199604300].
Recommendation:
Fund
Date:
Jun 13, 2002

Comment:

Fund ongoing scope of work only after ISRP concerns are addressed and conditioned upon timely submission of reports for implementation of RPA's 182 and 184.
Recommendation:
Date:
May 22, 2003

Comment:

[See full document for review of all Idaho Supplementation Studies (ISS) Projects]
Recommendation:
Fund
Date:
Sep 20, 2003

Comment:

On track. Confirm 04 &05 with sponsor. Additional review - June 04. Final design review due by June 04.
Recommendation:
Date:
Sep 20, 2003

Comment:

The 2004 budget reflects a decrease in activities associated with project 198909801, from 2003. As a result of this decrease, there is a reduction in the requested budget for 2004. This decreased request is due to: 1. completion of Pete King Creek production PIT tagging in 2003. The completion of this portion of the project will result in a reduction of the requested amount due to a reduction in labor costs associated with PIT tagging and a reduction in funds needed for purchasing of those PIT tags. 2. a vehicle lease expiring in 2003. There are no vehicle lease costs associated with project 198909801 for 2004. The estimated budget request for 2005 is increased from 2004. In 2004, PIT tagging of Clear Creek production will be completed. This results in a reduction of requested funds for labor and PIT tags associated with this portion of the project, for 2005. After that reduction, the 2005 budget was increased by 5% over 2004. This estimated budget reflects a base budget request and would not reflect any potential increases in the requested budget due to expansion of the scope of the project.
REVIEW:
NW Power and Conservation Council's FY 2006 Project Funding Review
Funding category:
expense
Date:
May 2005
FY05 NPCC start of year:FY06 NPCC staff preliminary:FY06 NPCC July draft start of year:
$125,590 $125,590 $125,590

Sponsor comments: See comment at Council's website