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Recommendation 39
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Mr. Frank L. Cassidy, Jr, Chairman May 12, 2000
Northwest Power Planning Council
851 S.W. Sixth Avenue, Suite 1 100
Portland, Oregon 97204-1348
RE NPPC Fish and Wildlife Amendment Process
Dear Mr. Cassidy:
On behalf of the members of the Columbia River Alliance,
we submit the following amendment requests for inclusion in
your Fish and Wildlife Program.
1) To re-evaluate the extent to which the hydrosystem,
as presently configured and operated, has an adverse impact on salmon and
steelhead stocks in the Columbia River Basin.
2) To assess the success and accomplishments of past mitigation
efforts against the effects of present dam operations to determine whether
and to what extent additional efforts to protect, mitigate and enhance
fish and wildlife are appropriate.
3) To consider calls for a "normative" river and dam breaching
as inconsistent with past mitigation efforts, and may represent an unlawful
attempt to impose new and substantial remedial obligations on federal dam
operators.
4) To assess the fish and wildlife protection efforts
of other entities in the Columbia River Basin, in order to avoid supplanting
those efforts in violation of the Northwest Power Act.
5) Adopt proven and cost-effective measures with verifiable
and quantifiable benefits to salmonids; conduct experiments on proposed
measures to quantify benefits; and abandon measures whose benefits cannot
be quantified. That includes strategies to:
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Quantify the benefits and costs of existing and proposed
measures to protect Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead populations, taking
account of adverse impacts and
costs to other species of interest, if any.
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Select fish and wildlife measures for implementation based
on cost-effectiveness analysis to maximize the public benefit from expenditures
of finite salmon recovery funds.
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Improve measurements of survival through all salmonid life
stages to identify high mortality areas and reduce mortality.
-
Use and improve computer models to assemble existing data
and relationships to predict effects on salmon and steelhead from management
actions.
Use computer metapopulation models to predict extinction
probabilities
for listed stocks, and annually reassess extinction probabilities to reconsider
listing decisions.
Mainstem Management Actions/Rationale
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Focus research efforts on identification of survival through
alternate passage methods at dams to reduce "hot spots" for mortality (e.g.,
excessive spill at The Dalles).
-
Abandon all spring flow augmentation and real-time management
of flow, because it serves no purpose, wastes fishery management resources,
and creates conflicts with the needs of resident fish.
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Experiment with late summer/fall flow augmentation in low
water years, because there is a good chance of benefits to returning fall
adults, and possible benefits to juvenile salmon at very low flow levels.
-
Use BPA Fish Contingency Fund monies for operational experiments
with flow augmentation in low flow years. Increase program beyond experimental
level only after data demonstrate survival improvements caused by flow
augmentation.
-
Maximize smolt transportation by eliminating spill at all
collection facilities, because all available scientific evidence demonstrates
substantial benefits. Improve transportation by experimenting with release
strategies (i.e., further downstream) to avoid substantial estuarine
mortality
-
Adjust spill on a project-by-project basis to optimize passage
survival at non-collector projects (e.g., reduce spill at The Dalles
and Ice Harbor), taking care to balance potential positive effects on juveniles
against negative effects on adults.
-
Reactivate sluiceway passage at available projects, as available
studies demonstrate substantial passage benefits, and expand surface collector
efforts
-
Ensure that "fish-friendly" turbines are available in time
for renovation of mainstem facilities.
-
Assess natural mortality levels to gain understanding of
when human-induced hydrosystem and other effects are fully mitigated.
Hatchery/Supplementation Management Actions/Rationales
-
Unify and standardize hatchery reporting obligations to single
funding entity and require reporting concerning success in generate returning
adults to applicable watersheds.
-
Mark all hatchery fish, so as to facilitate selective harvest.
Highest net economic benefits will come from non-tribal recreational harvest,
which can select for hatchery stocks.
-
Use central entity to serve as clearinghouse for successful
approaches to artificial production, such as spawning channels and egg
boxes.
-
Fund applied genetics research unit to restore lost size
of salmonids, improve disease resistance, and improve tolerance for warmer
habitat, as well as other genetic improvements that will increase salmonid
abundance.
-
Install irrigated spawning channels below dam tailraces and
elsewhere to increase mainstem spawning habitat; survey reservoir habitat
for extant spawning locations and focus on expanding areas with existing
populations.
-
Allow hatchery operators to share revenue from salmon and
steelhead tags in hatchery watersheds, to establish feedback loop for hatchery
success.
-
Move hatcheries to tribal management, because tribes may
have longer-term management focus, and will reap 50% of harvestable fish
pursuant to Supreme Court Treaty interpretations, again establishing feedback
loop for hatchery success.
-
Declare specific tributaries "off-limits" to hatcheries (e.g.,
John Day River) to provide buffers against asserted genetics problems with
hatchery production.
-
Designate tributaries with extensive
hatchery
influence as "production/supplementation" tributaries and abandon efforts
to protect existing wild stocks in such tributaries.
Harvest Management Actions/Rationales
-
Place a moratorium on harvest of wild stocks in the mainstem,
with tributary-by-tributary escapement goals for protected wild stocks.
Mainstem harvest can be allowed only to the extent that the weakest wild
stock subject to protection has adequate spawning escapement for adequate
seeding.
-
Work toward elimination of ocean salmon harvest, including
treaty negotiations with Canada. If each country catches "its own" salmon,
search, production and management costs of commercial salmon harvest will
decrease, along with political friction. Fishery managers have long recognized
that ocean commercial harvest of Columbia Basin salmon makes little economic
sense when the fish will return at maturity.
-
Redirect lower river mixed-stock commercial harvest to terminal
harvest away from mainstem migration corridor. No improvement in upriver
stocks is possible with present high levels of mixed stock harvest.
-
Redirect tribal mixed-stock commercial harvest to selective
harvest at fish ladders and terminal harvest in tributaries. Tribal share
of harvestable fish can be caught without indiscriminate harvest through
hundreds of inriver gillnets.
-
Conduct one-time purchase of replacement selective harvest
gear for affected harvest interests with monies saved through operational
changes at dams. Unify policing functions under United States v. Oregonto
gain accurate harvest counts, using aerial or satellite-based estimation
techniques to corroborate self-reporting by fishermen.
Habitat Management Actions/Rationales
-
Abandon regional government supervision of habitat restoration.
Repeated costly failures demonstrate that state and local entities will
produce more effective efforts, particularly if improved harvest management
rewards localities that invest in habitat restoration by allowing salmon
and steelhead to return to the improved habitat.
-
Limit regional governmental role to clearinghouse for information
about successful habitat restoration strategies.
-
Abandon regional approach to wildlife restoration. Effects
on wildlife from dam development have been mitigated for many years through
land purchase and dedication, including creation of many wildlife refuges.
Centralized planning offers no advantages to mostly single-State wildlife
populations, and has the disadvantage of superfluous governmental layers,
creating additional coordination costs.
-
Liquidate and cap current habitat mitigation efforts funded
by BPA and substitute Bonneville Environmental Foundation or other vehicle
for habitat grants. Create one-time endowment of funding vehicle monies
saved through mainstem operational changes. Focus habitat improvement funds
on "wild reserve" rivers.
-
Evaluate comparative cost effectiveness of improved habitat/wild
reserve tributary production vs. production/supplementation tributary production.
General and Other Actions/Rationales
-
Prioritize research funding to document project-specific
effects on anadromous fish, and effects of operational changes. Make decisions
based on best available quantification of effects of operational changes.
-
Use new and existing information to expand salmon passage
models to cover entire salmon lifecycle. Without a model of effects on
adults from flow and spill changes, managers cannot make a rational assessment
of the effects of operational changes.
-
Use new and existing information to construct metapopulation
models of salmon and steelhead population dynamics. Preliminary information
suggests
that extinction risks are much lower than generally supposed, which
if confirmed could remove ESA listings and eliminate significant management
constraints.
-
Introduce mammalian predators to control bird populations
on Rice Island and elsewhere. The rise of such colonies in the 1990s, which
may consume a third of the smolts making it downriver, has depressed recent
salmon runs.
-
Allow limited hunting for marine mammals to control populations;
turn over percentage of license revenues to habitat restoration projects.
High percentages of returning adults show evidence of marine mammal attacks.
Thank you for the opportunity to provide comments. We look
forward to discussing these proposals with the Council over the next year.
Sincerely,
Bruce J. Lovelin
Executive Director
Attachment
- July 16, 1997 memorandum from James L. Buchal
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