BPA Fish and Wildlife FY 1997 Proposal
Section 1. Administrative
Section 2. Narrative
Section 3. Budget
see CBFWA and BPA funding recommendations
Section 1. Administrative
Title of project
Rogersburg (Above Mouth of Grande Ronde River) Portable Acclimation/Release Facility
BPA project number 5521500
Business name of agency, institution or organization requesting funding
Nez Perce Tribe
Sponsor type ID-Tribe
Proposal contact person or principal investigator
Name | R. Ed Larson | |
Mailing address | Nez Perce Tribe
P.0. Box 365 Lapwai, ID 83540 | |
Phone | 208/843-7320 |
BPA technical contact ,
Biological opinion ID
NWPPC Program number 7.5B.1, 7.5B.2
Short description
Install, operate, maintain and disassemble a portable acclimation facility to assist in recovery and restoration of fall chinook salmon in the Snake River. This facility will be used to acclimate approximately 150,000 yearling fall chinook salmon from Lyons Ferry Hatchery from early March to late April, beginning in 1997. The fish will be reared and acclimated in the temporary facility for four to six weeks to a size if approximately 10 fish per pound before release into the Snake River. Releases will occur during rising stream flow conditions and at night to minimize predation by birds or other fish. Fish will be released at the same time or slightly preceding fall chinook salmon releases at Lyons Ferry Hatchery.
Project start year 1997 End year
Start of operation and/or maintenance 1997
Project development phase Implementation
Section 2. Narrative
Related projects
Temporary Fall Chinook Acclimation Facility - Pittsburg Landing site - Snake River, (Implementation in 1995/96)Temporary Fall Chinook Acclimation Facility - Big Canyon Creek, Clearwater River (Planned implementation in 1997)
Project history
This project is part of a funding package ($5.0 million add-on) provided by the Corps of Engineers headquarters to the Walla Walla District to comply with the language in a Senate conference report (Senate Report, 103-672,P7) describing desired work to be accomplished under the Lower Snake River Fish and Wildlife Compensation Plan. Funding for planning, engineering, conceptual design, NEPA, and construction has been secured from the COE in 1996. All O&M and monitoring and evaluation (M&E) funds for 1997 and beyond are expected to come from Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) as part of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) identified Draft Recovery Plan actions.
Biological results achieved
Acclimation and release of yearling smolts from other LSRCP projects for the past 10 years has yielded higher adult return rates than direct (unacclimated) stream or subyearling releases. Natural production of fall chinook salmon has been severely limited. We expect increased outmigrant survival due to reduced pre-release stress, increased homing ability, increased adult survival and return and an increase in natural spawning at return location.
Annual reports and technical papers
Management implications
This project is designed to test the success of acclimation facilities and their contribution to increased adult returns and increases natural spawning. Through this and similar projects we hope to recover fall chinook salmon in the Snake River basin.
Specific measureable objectives
Increased smolt survival during outmigration, increased adult returns back to the release site and increased natural spawning measured through redd counts.
Testable hypothesis
Acclimation facilities located near optimal spawning habitat will increase smolt outmigrant survival, increase adult return rates and lead to increased natural spawning.
Underlying assumptions or critical constraints
It is assumed that the portable acclimation facility constructed by the COE at Rogersburg, above the mouth of the Grande Ronde River, on the Snake River will allow fall chinook salmon presmolts from Lyons Ferry to recover from transportation stress, acclimate to the specific water chemistry at the release site, outmigrate at a higher rate than transported direct released fish, and return to the release site at a higher rate, have an improved homing instinct, and to spawn and distribute at a higher rate than actions taken to date.
Methods
The acclimation facility will be set up in February of each year, operated between March 1 and April 15, and disassembled and removed by May 1. The facility will consist of 16 circular fiberglass tanks, 4 diesel pumps, 4 grit separators, 2 distribution boxes with nitrogen stripping stacks, PVC piping, 2 diesel generators with light towers for emergency lighting, two 650-gallon diesel fuel tanks with spill containment devices, 2 metal storage containers, and 2 camping trailers. Between 100,000 and 150,000 yearling fall chinook from Lyons Ferry Hatchery will be acclimated and released from the facility each year after construction. Operation of the facility will include; 1) moving fish from Lyons Ferry Hatchery to the facility, 2) daily inventory and feeding, 3) monitoring fish health, 4)coordinating with Tribal, state and ferderal agencies in conducting monitoring and evaluation studies, and 5) reporting activities to cooperating and funding agencies as required. Fish will be held at a density of 11 lbs./cubic foot and released at approximately 10/lb. into the Snake River. The release will coincide with an ascending hydrograph to assist in smolt outmigration.
Brief schedule of activities
1. Construction funding secured - LSRCP Cong. Add - $5m2. NEPA - USACOE, Walla Walla, WA3. Construction planning - USACOE, Walla Walla, WA4. Begin construction- October 1, 19965. First operations - January 1997 to April 1997, and each year thereafter.
Biological need
This project is part of a funding package provided by the Corps of Engineers headquarters to the Walla Walla District to comply with the language in a Senate conference report (Senate Report, 103-672,P7) describing desired work to be accomplished under the Lower Snake River Fish and Wildlife Compensation Plan. Snake River fall chinook salmon have been listed as an endangered species by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) under an emergency interim rule. The number of returning adults for the last 10 years has been at record low levels. The goal of the project is to get more adult fall chinook to return to the Snake and Clearwater Rivers upstream of Lower Granite reservoir for natural spawning rather than returning to Lyons Ferry Hatchery. The conference report language directs the Corps to work with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service , the NMFS, and the affected state and Tribal hatchery managers to develop this project.The Nez Perce Tribe hopes to recover the weak population of Snake River fall chinook salmon to a self-sustaining run of fish and eventually develop population sizes capable of sustaining Tribal and non-Tribal Harvests.
Critical uncertainties
Portable acclimation facilities of this type have never been used stream side and the success of an operation of this type have not been measured to date. The operation of a similar facility at Pittsburg Landing in 1996 will be monitored and evaluated and techniques learned will be applied in later years. Pre-transport testing of facility of the facility will be done two weeks prior to the arrival of fish to flush out any mechanical gliches that could occur. This worse scenario is if the system fails the fish would be released earlier than planned.
Summary of expected outcome
Presmolts will be reared from 12/lb. to 10/lb. streamside and upon smoltification and increasing hydrograph will be released. We expect increased outmigrant survival due to reduced pre-release stress, increased homing ability, increased adult survival and return and an increase in natural spawning at return location.
Dependencies/opportunities for cooperation
US Army Corps of Engineers, Walla Walla, WAWashington Department of Fish and Wildlife - Lyons Ferry HatcheryUSFWS - LSRCP, Boise, IDUSFWS - Fish Health Lab, Dworshak Hatchery Complex, Ahsahka, IDIDFG - Boise, ID
Risks
Extinction of existing species and populations if supplementation is not undertaken within the next year.Violation of Nez Perce Tribal Treaty Rights as a result of extinction of salmon species; this has already occurred for sockeye, coho, and summer chinook(yearling migrant).
Monitoring activity
The monitoring and evaluation of Lyons Ferry Hatchery fall chinook salmon yearlings acclimated and released at Rogersburg will be a cooperative effort between the Nez Perce Tribe (NPT), Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). Post release dispersal, migration timing, and release group survival between Rogersburg releases and Lyons Ferry releases will be evaluated through the use of PIT tags and assessing physiology at release and during migration. Smolt-to-adult survival will be esimated and compared between Rogersburg releases and yearling on-station releases at Lyons Ferry Hatchery. The foremost monitoring and evaluation goal will be to assess adult escapement from the Rogersburg releases back to the spawning grounds and the contribution to natural production.
Section 3. Budget
Data shown are the total of expense and capital obligations by fiscal year. Obligations for any given year may not equal actual expenditures or accruals within the year, due to carryover, pre-funding, capitalization and difference between operating year and BPA fiscal year.Historic costs | FY 1996 budget data* | Current and future funding needs |
(none) | New project - no FY96 data available | 1997: 0 1998: 245,000 1999: 253,000 2000: 261,000 2001: 269,000 |
* For most projects, Authorized is the amount recommended by CBFWA and the Council. Planned is amount currently allocated. Contracted is the amount obligated to date of printout.
Funding recommendations
CBFWA funding review group Snake River
Recommendation Tier 1 - fund
Recommended funding level $0