Evaluating Salmon Rearing Limitations in River Deltas: Difference between revisions
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*#Bioenergetics modeling of habitat-specific growth potential including prey inputs, diet, temperature, and local rearing densities | *#Bioenergetics modeling of habitat-specific growth potential including prey inputs, diet, temperature, and local rearing densities | ||
*#Empirical testing of bioenergetics model using otolith-based growth increments in each system | *#Empirical testing of bioenergetics model using otolith-based growth increments in each system | ||
==Reports and Publications== | ==Reports and Publications== | ||
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*The project expanded from the originally envisioned Skagit and Snohomish deltas to include the Nooksack and Nisqually deltas | *The project expanded from the originally envisioned Skagit and Snohomish deltas to include the Nooksack and Nisqually deltas | ||
*Supported by [[NOAA]] | *Supported by [[NOAA]] | ||
*[https://secure.rco.wa.gov/prism/search/ProjectSnapshot.aspx?ProjectNumber=13-1508 Project Contract in PRISM] | |||
==Principal Investigators and Collaborators== | ==Principal Investigators and Collaborators== | ||
*'''Eric Beamer (PI) - [[SRSC]]''' - Lead for [[Skagit Delta]] | *'''Eric Beamer (PI) - [[SRSC]]''' - Lead for [[Skagit Delta]] |
Revision as of 22:28, 3 March 2021
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Skagit River System Cooperative in collaboration with NW Fisheries Science Center and regional partners will evaluate how different parts of river deltas provide opportunities for juvenile salmon, allowing planners to determine what sites are likely to provide the most benefits.
Project Objectives
- Uses 10- 20 years of outmigrant data collected by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (Skagit) and Tulalip Tribes (Snohomish River)and proposed to relate these to measurements of density and size of juvenile Chinook salmon in tidal deltas to derive independent estimates of capacity for each system.
- Additional system level variation is explained by distributary network connectivity using Skagit models.
- Examines the influence of habitat types (forested riverine tidal, scrub-shrub, and estuarine emergent marsh) on growth potential through their effects on invertebrate abundance and (because prey vary in energetic value) their composition.
- We will quantify differences in the juvenile salmon rearing value of different habitat types with bioenergetics models, which estimate the energy an organism can allocate toward growth by incorporating prey consumption, prey energetic value, and metabolic activity as influenced by temperature.
- Predictions from models can be directly tested using individual habitat-specific growth estimates derived from otolith microstructure.
- These data have been collected for fish from the Skagit tidal delta, but not synthesized into a bioenergetics model. We propose to complete this task, and collect and analyze existing samples from the Snohomish, Nooksack and Nisqually to run and test the bioenergetics model for each system.
- The resultant analysis will reveal how local temperature and prey variation in different habitat types can influence growth, and the habitat-specific capacity of these types.
- The primary outcomes of this analysis will be:
- Assessment of density dependence in two estuaries factoring total habitat availability, habitat conditions, and connectivity
- Bioenergetics modeling of habitat-specific growth potential including prey inputs, diet, temperature, and local rearing densities
- Empirical testing of bioenergetics model using otolith-based growth increments in each system
Reports and Publications
Funding and Scope
- Funded by ESRP program in state FY 2013-15
- The project expanded from the originally envisioned Skagit and Snohomish deltas to include the Nooksack and Nisqually deltas
- Supported by NOAA
- Project Contract in PRISM
Principal Investigators and Collaborators
- Eric Beamer (PI) - SRSC - Lead for Skagit Delta
- Correigh Greene (PI) - NOAA - NOAA lead in Skagit.
- Josh Chamberlin (PI) - NOAA - Lead for Snohomish Delta