Science Inventory

Assessing contributions of coldwater refuges to reproductive migration corridor conditions for adult salmon and steelhead trout in the Columbia River, USA

Citation:

Snyder, M., N. Schumaker, J. Dunham, M. Keefer, P. Leinenbach, A. Brookes, J. Palmer, J. Wu, D. Keenan, AND Joe Ebersole. Assessing contributions of coldwater refuges to reproductive migration corridor conditions for adult salmon and steelhead trout in the Columbia River, USA. Journal of Ecohydraulics. Taylor & Francis Group, London, Uk, , 1855086, (2020). https://doi.org/10.1080/24705357.2020.1855086

Impact/Purpose:

Many rivers and streams in the USA used by migratory fishes are impaired under the Clean Water Act as a result of high summer water temperatures. Adverse effects of warm waters include impacts to fish populations that may already be stressed by habitat alteration, disease, predation, and fishing pressures. Much effort is being expended to improve conditions for fish, and methods are needed to project anticipated benefits of water temperature improvements, or costs of impairments. This paper describes an approach being applied by the EPA to link changes in water temperatures, including the spatial arrangement and connectivity of cold-water refuges, to fish population responses.

Description:

Diadromous fish populations face multiple challenges along their migratory routes. These challenges include suboptimal water quality, harvest, and barriers to longitudinal and lateral connectivity. Interactions among factors influencing migration success make it challenging to assess management options for improving conditions for migratory fishes along riverine migration corridors. We describe a migration corridor simulation model which integrates complex individual behavior, responds to variable habitat conditions over large areas, and is able to link migration corridor conditions to fish condition outcomes. Our model, developed within HexSim, is built around a mechanistic behavioral decision tree that drives individual interactions of fish with their spatially-explicit simulated environment. Outcomes of the migration corridor simulation model applying alternative scenarios of refuge availability show that cold water refuges can provide substantial relief from exposure to high water temperatures, but do not substantially contribute to energy conservation by migrating adults. Cooling of the Columbia River reduced reliance on cold water refuges and allowed for slight reductions in migratory energy expenditure. This modelling approach provides a framework for assessing the sufficiency of coldwater refuges, but final determination will be dependent upon water temperature management goals and species recovery targets.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:12/17/2020
Record Last Revised:04/01/2021
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 351226