Out-migrant Monitoring of Juvenile Salmonids - Hoopa Reservation

Salmonid Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation (RM&E)

Project IDHoopa-2023-05 Outmigrant
Recovery Domains -
Start Date02/01/2024
End Date07/31/2024
Year2023
StatusNew
Last Edited04/18/2024
 
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Description    


The purpose of this project is to estimate the abundance of juvenile anadromous salmonids on reservation tributary streams (Tish Tang, Campbell, Supply, Mill, Soctish, and Hostler creeks). These streams provide thermal refugia and spawning habitat for anadromous salmonids and are a focus for salmonid habitat restoration. Since 1982, this project has provided juvenile production trend data. This dataset describes annual variation in migration timing and allows for evaluation of outmigrant success in the Mill and Supply Creek watersheds, which were both recently restored. To monitor outmigrants, fyke traps are installed in Reservation streams. Trapped fish are identified, measured (fork length) and released. Depending on the number of fish being caught, a mark-recapture component of the project will be conducted. Numbers of marked and unmarked fish caught are recorded. Resulting data are used to construct abundance estimates for juvenile salmonids. These data are referenced extensively during analysis of timber sales, water withdrawals, and other projects (including drafting of ESA documentation).

Project Benefit    


Project Objective: 1. Estimate outmigrant abundance across the Hoopa Valley Reservation and to assess restoration success in the Mill and Supply Creek watersheds and to prioritize future restoration actions.Project Benefits: 1. SONCC in the lower Trinity River are identified in the Recovery Plan as being at high risk of extinction. Restoration of tributary habitat for both natal and non-natal SONCC is therefore of great importance. This project facilitates the evaluation of spawning and rearing success of anadromous salmonids within Reservation streams, providing managers with necessary data to prioritize potential restoration sites and evaluate restoration success.



Priority Two – Restoration effectiveness monitoring at the watershed scale for Southern Oregon Northern California Coho and other fish species important to the exercise of federally-recognized tribal fishing rights (SONCC Recovery Actions Addressed: SONCC-LTR.27.1.22.1 Describe annual variation in migration timing, age structure, habitat occupied, and behavior; SONCC-LTR.27.1.45.1 Conduct presence/absence surveys for juveniles).

Accomplishments

Metric Completed Originally
Proposed

Funding Details

SourceFunds
PCSRF$77,220
Report Total:$77,220


Worksites

No Worksite data was found for this project.