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Draft Resource
Management Plan:
Puget Sound Chinook Salmon Hatcheries
a component of the Comprehensive Chinook Salmon Management
Plan
developed by Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
& Puget Sound Treaty Tribes
SUMMARY
Northwest Native Americans
called the largest of the salmon the tyee, or chief. Reaching a weight
of up to 125 pounds, and occupying rivers from the Ventura River in
California to Point Hope, Alaska, the tyee, king, or chinook salmon
(Oncohynchus tshawytscha) has always been an icon of northwest
culture. Now, Puget Sound chinook salmon are about one-third as abundant
as they were in 1908 (Meyers et al., 1998), and they have been listed
since 1999 as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act (FR 64 14308).
As comanagers, our goal is
to protect, restore, and enhance the productivity, abundance, and diversity
of salmon and their ecosystems to sustain ceremonial, subsistence, commercial,
and recreational fisheries, non-consumptive fish benefits and other
cultural and ecological values. Restoring populations of Puget Sound
chinook salmon will depend on integrated management of all factors affecting
the salmon throughout their life cycle, including freshwater, estuarine
and marine habitats, ecological interactions, harvest, and hatchery
programs.
The purpose of this plan
is to describe the operating procedures for chinook salmon hatcheries
in Puget Sound, their role in achieving the comanagers’ resource management
goals, and their consistency with the protection given to Puget Sound
chinook salmon by the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The plan describes
both Tribal and WDFW hatcheries, because these hatcheries are tightly
linked – they often operate in the same watersheds, exchange eggs, and
share rearing space to maximize the effectiveness of the programs. The
benefits of the programs are also shared, including the perpetuation
of critically depressed populations and the harvest of returning adults.
Providing harvest opportunities
is an important, legally defined role for hatcheries, for in United
States v. Washington the court concluded:
“The hatchery programs
have served a mitigating function since their inception in 1895. 506
Supp. at 198. They are designed essentially to replace natural fish
lost to non-Indian degradation of the habitat and commercialization
of the fishing industry. Id. Under these circumstances, it is only just
to consider such replacement fish as subject to allocation. For the
tribes to bear the full burden of the decline caused by the non- Indian
neighbors without sharing the replacement achieved through the hatcheries,
would be an inequity and inconsistent with the Treaty.” United States
v. Washington, 759 f.2d 1353m 1360 (9th Cir)(en banc), cert. Denied,
474 U.S. 994 (1985).
The court-ordered Puget Sound
Salmon Management Plan provides the framework for coordinating these
programs, treaty fishing rights, artificial production objectives, and
artificial production levels. Based on this framework, the parties to
United States v. Washington, with the National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS), developed this plan jointly as part of the Comprehensive Chinook
Salmon Management Plan, which identifies interim goals for harvest and
hatcheries.
This plan describes the scientific
foundation and general principles for evaluating artificial production
programs and for continued hatchery reform. It builds on a biological
assessment of tribal hatchery programs submitted to NMFS by the Bureau
of Indian Affairs (BIA) in October, 1999, as required by section 7 of
the ESA, and incorporates management alternatives subsequently developed
by NMFS and the tribes. It also draws from the recommendations of the
Hatchery Scientific Review Group (HSRG), a panel of independent scientists
charged by the U.S. Congress with promoting hatchery reform.
The following general principles
guide this plan.
- Hatchery programs need
clearly stated goals, performance objectives, and performance indicators.
- Hatchery programs need
to coordinate with fishery management programs to maximize benefits
and minimize biological risks so that they do not compromise overall
plans to conserve populations.
- Priorities for brood
stock collection of listed fish depend on the status of the donor
population, relative to critical or viable population thresholds.
Highest priority for brood stock collection of listed populations
below the viable threshold is conservation. Brood stock collection
for other priorities depends on meeting the conservation goals and
not appreciably slowing recovery to viable levels.
- Hatchery programs need
protocols to manage risks associated with fish health, brood stock
collection, spawning, rearing, and release of juveniles; disposition
of adults; and catastrophes within the hatchery.
- Hatchery programs need
to assess and manage the ecological and genetic risks to natural populations.
- Hatchery programs must
have adequate facilities and maintenance to rear fish, maintain fish
health and diversity, and minimize domestication in fish of naturally
spawned brood stock.
- Hatchery programs should
be based on adaptive management, which includes having adequate monitoring
and evaluation to determine whether the program is meeting its objectives
and a process for making revisions to the program based on evaluating
the monitoring data.
- Hatchery programs must
be consistent with the plans and conditions identified by Federal
courts with jurisdiction over tribal harvest allocations.
- Hatchery programs will
monitor the “take” of listed salmon occurring in the program and will
provide that information as needed.
In addition to the benefits
provided by artificial production, the scientific literature indicates
that artificial production may pose risks to wild chinook salmon populations.
These potential risks include: 1) genetic impacts, which affect the
loss of diversity within and among populations and reproductive success
in the wild; 2) ecological impacts, such as competition, predation,
and disease; and 3) demographic impacts, which directly affect the physical
condition, abundance, distribution, and survival of wild fish.
The risks and benefits resulting
from each artificial production program for chinook salmon in Puget
Sound were evaluated in multiple ways, including the Benefit Risk Assessment
Procedure, recommendations of the Hatchery Science Review Group (HSRG),
and extensive discussions with NOAA Fisheries staff. This multifaceted
review, in conjunction with numerous actions previously initiated by
the comanagers, has resulted in significant improvements in chinook
salmon programs in Puget Sound, and extensive commitments to monitoring
and evaluation. Key elements of the plan are summarized below:
Genetic Impacts.
The development and implementation in 1991 of a new stock transfer
policy (WDFW 1991) designed to foster local brood stocks resulted
in a significant reduction in the transfer of eggs and juveniles between
watersheds. In recent years brood stocks established from Green River
fish have been also been eliminated or replaced in rivers with extant
indigenous stocks.
Further review of the programs
during the development of this plan led to additional actions, including:
- terminating net pen
programs at Fidalgo, Oak Harbor, Roche Harbor, San Juan, Mukilteo,
Langley, Ballard, Elliot Bay, Des Moines, Fox Island, Hood Canal
Marina, Pleasant Harbor, and Sund Rocks;
- terminating the McAllister
Creek Hatchery program;
- reducing the Samish
Fingerling fall chinook program from 5.2 to 4.0 million;
- reducing the Kendall
Creek spring chinook production from 1.6 to 0.70 million;
- reducing the Wallace
Yearling summer chinook production from 520,000 to 250,000; and
- reducing Hood Canal
fingerling/fry production by 830,000.
Ecological Interactions.
The Puget Sound Tribes, WDFW, and the HSRG are now conducting numerous
studies to evaluate the risks posed by ecological interactions of
chinook salmon of hatchery and natural origin. Data collected through
the studies will be used to adjust, if necessary, release numbers,
release timing, or characteristics of the programs. In the interim
period, hatchery programs will apply measures based on the best available
science to reduce the risks posed by ecological interactions. These
actions include:
- terminating the net
pen programs discussed above;
- terminating the McAllister
Creek Yearling program;
- reducing the Wallace
Yearling summer chinook production from 520,000 to 250,000;
- releasing fish at a
time, size, and physiologically condition that provides a low likelihood
of residualization and promotes rapid migration through the estuary
to marine waters. Programs typically release subyearling chinook
salmon that are in the 40 to 90 fish per pound (77 to 100mm fork
length) during the months of May and June. Fish released at this
time and size are fully smolted, are unlikely to residualize, and
are expected to move rapidly through estuarine areas;
- releasing subyearling
fish that are a larger size than natural-origin chinook salmon of
the same brood year to reduce the potential for diet overlap with
any co-occuring natural origin fish in marine waters.
- limiting the total
releases of chinook salmon in Puget Sound and reducing or minimizing
releases affecting key stocks. The chinook salmon programs proposed
in this plan constitute a 37% reduction in production relative to
1990, including a 35% reduction in yearling production;
- implementing fish health
policies and procedures (PNFHPC 1989; Comanagers 1991; WDFW 1996);
- maintaining state-of-the-art
fish health monitoring, facility disinfecting, and disease management
procedures presently applied in the operation of Puget Sound hatcheries.
Direct Demographic Impacts.
The operation of hatchery facilities was analyzed, potential concerns
identified, and actions undertaken and/or capital funding requested
for facility modification. These actions and funding requests include:
- screening all water
intakes at Dungeness Hatchery to prevent adverse impacts to listed
fish;
- exploring removal of
the Canyon Creek intake to allow passage of juvenile and adult chinook
salmon to available spawning and rearing habitat;
- building an expanded
incubation and early rearing facility at the Elwha Hatchery; and
- exploring capital improvements
to the pollution abatement system and the adult trapping/holding
ponds at the Wallace River Hatchery to facilitate sorting of natural
and hatchery-origin fish.
Research, Monitoring
and Evaluation. Significant uncertainty exists in the threats
posed by artificial production programs. To address these uncertainties,
this plan includes substantial commitments to research, monitoring,
and evaluation:
- marking all chinook
salmon artificial production from Puget Sound, including program
specific marks where multiple program(s) may affect a stock;
- monitoring chinook
salmon escapements to estimate the number of tagged, untagged, and
marked fish;
- collecting and analyzing
genetic data, including natural spawners in the North Fork Stillaguamish
River, South Fork Stillaguamish River, Puyallup River, Nisqually
River,
- conducting a study
to determine the relative reproductive success of naturally and
hatchery produced chinook salmon in the Green River;
- conducting studies
on the incidence and effects of competition and predation in fresh
and marine waters.
The comanagers are committed
to the ongoing transformation of hatcheries from one of the all-H (habitat,
hydro, harvest, and hatcheries) risk factors to an integrated, productive,
recovery tool. This plan takes a significant step forward, while recognizing
the role that hatcheries must play in mitigating for the land and water-
use decisions that have resulted in the permanent loss or degradation
of salmon producing habitat.
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