Movement and Apparent Survival of Acoustically Tagged Juveline Late-Fall Run Chinook Salmon Released Upstream of Shasta Reservoir, California

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
J. M. Plumb, Amy C. Hansen, N. Adams, S. Evans, J. Hannon
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Author(s): Plumb, John; Hansen, Amy; Adams, Noah; Evans, Scott; Hannon, John | Abstract: Stakeholder interests have spurred the reintroduction of the critically endangered populations of Chinook Salmon to tributaries upstream of Shasta Dam, in northern California. We released two groups of acoustically tagged, juvenile hatchery, late-fall Chinook Salmon to determine how juvenile salmon would distribute and survive. We measured travel times to Shasta Dam, and the number of fish that moved between locations within Shasta Reservoir. We used mark-recapture methods to determine detection and apparent survival probabilities of the tagged fish as they traveled through five reaches of the Sacramento River from the McCloud River to San Francisco Bay (~590 km) over the two 3-month observation periods. After our first (February) release of 262 tagged fish, 182 fish (70%) were detected at least once at the dam, 41 (16%) were detected at least once downstream of Shasta Dam, and 3 (1%) traveled as far as San Francisco Bay. After the second (November) release of 355 tagged fish, only 4 (1%) were detected at Shasta Dam. No fish were detected below Shasta Dam, so we could not estimate survival for this second release group. The first release of fish was fortuitously exposed to exceptionally high river flows and dam discharges, which may have contributed to the more distant downstream migration and detection of these fish — though other factors such as season, diploid versus triploid, and fish maturation and size may have also contributed to release differences. The reported fish travel times as well as detection and survival rates are the first estimates of juvenile salmon emigration from locations above Shasta Dam in more than 70 years. This information should help inform resource managers about how best to assess juvenile winter-run Chinook Salmon and assist in their reintroduction to watersheds upstream of Shasta Dam.
加州沙斯塔水库上游放生的声学标记晚秋幼体奇努克鲑鱼的运动和明显存活率
作者:Plumb, John;汉森,艾米;亚当斯,挪亚;埃文斯,斯科特;摘要:利益相关者的利益促使了极度濒危的奇努克鲑鱼种群重新被引入加州北部沙斯塔大坝上游的支流。我们放了两组经过声学标记的孵卵晚秋奇努克鲑鱼,以确定鲑鱼的分布和生存方式。我们测量了到沙斯塔大坝的旅行时间,以及在沙斯塔水库内不同地点之间移动的鱼的数量。在两个3个月的观察期中,我们使用标记-再捕获方法来确定标记鱼在萨克拉门托河从麦克克劳德河到旧金山湾的五个河段(约590公里)中被发现和明显存活的概率。在我们第一次(2月)释放262条带标签的鱼后,182条鱼(70%)在大坝至少被发现一次,41条(16%)在沙斯塔大坝下游至少被发现一次,3条(1%)游到旧金山湾。在第二次(11月)释放355条带标签的鱼后,沙斯塔大坝只发现了4条(1%)。在沙斯塔大坝下面没有发现鱼,所以我们无法估计第二组放生的存活率。第一次放生的鱼偶然地暴露在异常高的河流流量和水坝流量中,这可能导致了更远的下游迁徙和这些鱼的发现——尽管其他因素,如季节、二倍体与三倍体、鱼的成熟和大小也可能导致放生差异。报告的鱼类洄游时间以及发现和存活率是70多年来对幼鲑鱼从沙斯塔大坝以上地区洄游的首次估计。这些信息应该有助于资源管理者了解如何最好地评估冬季洄游的奇努克鲑鱼幼鱼,并协助将它们重新引入沙斯塔大坝上游的流域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Environmental Science-Water Science and Technology
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
24 weeks
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