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Research shows higher survival of Snake River spring Chinook through Snake and Columbia hydrosystem

July 13, 2006

Survival of juvenile Snake River spring Chinook salmon as they migrate past the eight dams of the lower Snake and Columbia rivers was higher in 2006 — 58 percent from Lower Granite Dam to Bonneville Dam — than it has been since federal research began in 1993, the researchers reported this week to the Council (see report, 820k PDF).

“This record high survival is good news for this species. High survival of juvenile salmon is an important objective of regional recovery efforts,” Council Chair Tom Karier said.

The research, conducted by NOAA Fisheries, shows that survival of juvenile Snake River steelhead in 2006 was lower than for Chinook — 37 percent — but still good in comparison to recent years.

The ongoing research focuses on fish that migrate in the rivers, as opposed to those that are transported downriver in barges. According to the report, there are multiple causes of mortality as the juvenile fish travel downriver from hatcheries, where they are incubated and released, past the dams and on to the Columbia River estuary, where they remain for up to a year before going to the ocean. These include the effects of dam passage, but also predation, natural selection, and, importantly, water temperature. Prolonged exposure to warm water is lethal to salmon and steelhead

The research shows that survival of juvenile salmon and steelhead from Idaho hatcheries to Lower Granite Dam, the first dam they encounter on their journey to the ocean, varies with the distance traveled, with fish traveling the farthest experiencing the highest mortality. Lower Granite is the first of eight dams the fish pass on their way to the ocean. The research shows that fish are surviving that journey better today than in the 1960s when there were only four dams in place. The research concerns only fish that had been implanted with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags and thus could be recorded by PIT tag detectors.

The research also showed that:

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