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1998 Cedar River Sockeye Salmon Fry Production Evaluation PDF Format - [369KB]
Acknowledgements The success of this project relies on the hard work of a number of dedicated permanent and
temporary WDFW personnel. The Hatcheries Program successfully collected adult broodstock
and incubated eggs, releasing over 9.8 million sockeye fry. Eric Volk and Gene Sanborn
designed and implemented the otolith-marking program at Landsburg Hatchery. Eric and his
staff at the Otolith Lab extracted and analyzed otoliths from the fry sampled at the trap.
Scientific Technicians Paul Lorenz, Chuck Ridley and Tim Eichler worked long hours at night
operating and maintaining the trap, marking and releasing fry, and enumerating catches. WDFW
Wild Salmon Production & Survival Evaluation Unit biologists Mike Ackley and Pete Topping
provided valuable logistical support. |
Introduction
Adult sockeye salmon returns to the Lake Washington system have declined from peak runs in
excess of 600,000 fish as recently as 1988, to under 100,000 fish in subsequent years. In 1991, a
broad-based group comprised of representatives of local governments, the Muckleshoot Indian
Tribe, state and federal fisheries agencies, academic institutions, and concerned citizens was
formed to address this decline. Resource managers developed a program to investigate the
cause(s) of the sockeye decline through research and population monitoring in combination with
an artificial production program. Information generated by these efforts will be used to devise a
restoration plan for Lake Washington sockeye salmon.
Existing management information indicated that marine survival has averaged 13.1%, varying
eight-fold (2.6% to 21.4%) with no apparent decline over the data set, which begins with the
1967 brood. In contrast, however, survival during the freshwater phase has declined in recent
years. For the 1985 through 1992 broods, freshwater survival (as indicated by the estimated
numbers of presmolts produced/spawner) has averaged only 4.8. This rate is only one third of
the average production rate of 14.1 presmolts per spawner for the previous 18 broods (1967-
1984).
The majority of sockeye production involves two freshwater habitats: the stream, where
spawning, egg incubation, fry emergence, and migration to the lake occurs; and the lake, where
the juveniles rear for one year before emigrating to the ocean as smolts. Measuring survival rates
in both of these habitats requires quantifying the numbers of hatchery and naturally-produced
sockeye fry entering Lake Washington as well as estimating the population as spawners and as
smolts.
Production at the Landsburg Hatchery began with the 1991 brood. This brood,
released in 1992, and all subsequent sockeye incubated at this hatchery,
have been identified with thermallyinduced otolith-marks (Volk et al.
1990). We developed the trapping gear and methodology to estimate
sockeye fry production from the Cedar River in 1992.
During the first three years of this evaluation, we determined that survival of hatchery fry from
Landsburg to the trap was very low, often less than 10%. In these three seasons, however, flows
during most upriver releases were at or near minimum levels. To avoid this high in-river
mortality, beginning in the second year (1993), the majority of the hatchery production was
transported and released in the lower river just upstream of Highway I-405. In 1995, we
evaluated the effect of flow on survival using ten groups released over a range of flows. Results
corroborated the earlier estimates, demonstrating that in-river fry survival is largely a function of
flow.
Over the first five brood years of this evaluation, we have also determined that the survival from
egg deposition to fry emigration is a function of the severity of peak flows in the Cedar River
during the time that the eggs are incubating in the gravel. Therefore, over the range of spawning
population levels we have thus far evaluated, the numbers of naturally produced fry entering
Lake Washington are the product of the number of eggs deposited and the flow-effected survival
rate. In 1996, an estimated 230,000 sockeye spawned in the Cedar River, over twice as many as
in any of the previous five years. In 1997, WDFW biologists estimated that 104,000 adult
sockeye spawned in the Cedar River.
This report documents the 1998 Cedar River Sockeye Salmon Fry Production
Evaluation. This trapping project estimated the numbers of 1997
brood Cedar River wild and hatchery-produced fry that entered Lake Washington
during 1998.
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