Books > Earth & environment > The environment > Conservation of the environment
|
Buy Now
An Analysis of Differential Delayed Mortality Experienced by Stream-type Chinook Salmon of the Snake River (Paperback)
Loot Price: R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
|
|
An Analysis of Differential Delayed Mortality Experienced by Stream-type Chinook Salmon of the Snake River (Paperback)
(sign in to rate)
Loot Price R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Mass transportation of juvenile fish in the lower Snake River was
initiated in the late 1970's in an effort to reduce mortality of
salmon and steelhead during downstream migration. Fish are
transported in barges and trucks to below BON, thereby
circumventing direct mortality due to passage through the
hydroelectric projects and reservoirs. Measurement of the efficacy
of smolt transportation has taken the form of studies of "T/C"
(transport/control) ratios. These mark recapture studies measured
the smolt-to-adult return rates (SARs) of test fish, which were
transported, and control fish which were returned to the river.
These studies estimated the relative effectiveness of
transportation to improve survival rates of fish from the site
where they were collected as juveniles back to (usually) the same
site when they returned as adults. Included in this T/C ratio is
any differential mortality from the collection point to the end of
the hydrosystem (to BON tailrace), as well as any differential
mortality from below BON to the adult recapture site(s). Although
fish generally appear to survive reasonably well while in the
trucks and barges, it is harder to gauge how well transported fish
survive below BON, after they are released and continue their life
cycle in the estuary and ocean. NMFS suggests there may be partial
support for delaying a decision to breach the lower Snake River
hydroelectric dams because 'D' estimates, using "improved methods
provided by PIT-tag technology," appears to be high for the recent
past (A-Fish). Based on these estimates, NMFS further suggest that
"ongoing experiments by NMFS are likely to resolve the uncertainty
regarding differential delayed transportation mortality in 5 to 10
years." Alternatively, the Plan for Analyzing and Testing
Hypotheses (PATH) analyses include a larger set of T/C studies and
stock recruitment data that suggests 'D' is low, which lends
support to breaching of the four Snake River dams as the most
robust hydro action for recovery of Snake River salmon and
steelhead (Marmorek et al. 1998). In this paper, we evaluate the
NMFS conclusion that 'D' is now much higher than previously thought
(A-Fish), demonstrate the sensitivity of estimates of 'D' to the
numerous assumptions required to make an estimate of 'D', clarify
and discuss the evidence for and against various interpretations of
these assumptions, and discuss the possibility of improving
estimates of 'D' in the future. We note that 'D' is not a
measurement. Instead, it is an indirect estimate from data and
requires numerous assumptions, with many different possible
interpretations. In our analysis we evaluate the effect of these
different assumptions on 'D' estimates: 1) including and excluding
different control and transport groups; 2) using different
techniques to expand reach survival rate estimates from a shorter
experimental reach to the entire migration corridor; 3) using
different approaches to weight cohort reach survival rate estimates
to produce seasonal estimates; 4) using different approaches to
summarize experimental groups on a daily or on a weekly basis for
wild fish only or wild and hatchery fish combined; and finally 5)
using different approaches of pooling or averaging estimates across
years. In addition, the effects of using alternative tools (passage
models) to estimate reach survival rates on 'D' value estimates
were evaluated.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.