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Population-specific Escapement of Columbia River Fall Chinook Salmon: Tradeoffs Among Estimation Techniques

Oct 1, 2012

Abstract

In the multi-stock Columbia River system, managers estimate fall Chinook Salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha (Walbaum), escapements using various combinations of spawning ground surveys, harvest data and fish counts at dams and hatcheries. Our objectives were to improve upon the traditional methods, and to evaluate trade-offs among methods. Using data from radio-tagged (n = 4421) and PIT-tagged (n = 1950) adult salmon over eight years, we applied a mark-recapture method to estimate population-specific escapements, both aggregating data within year and stratifying them by week. Mark-recapture estimates differed between estimation techniques and from estimates generated using traditional methods. Stratifying data by week measured escapement estimate uncertainty more reasonably than aggregating data within year. Radiotelemetry provided better spatial resolution among populations for tributary spawners whereas PIT tags provided low-cost, easily replicated estimates using an existing detection system. Mark-recapture techniques had several advantages over current practices: quantifying uncertainty, transparent methods and reduced sensitivity to survey biases.

Authors

Saang-Yoon Hyun, Matthew Keefer, Jeff Fryer, Michael Jepson, Rishi Sharma, Christopher Caudill, John Whiteaker, and George Naughton

Citation

Hyun, S-Y., M.L. Keefer, J.K. Fryer, M.A. Jepson, R. Sharma, C.C. Caudill, J.M. Whiteaker, and G.P. Naughton. 2012. Population-specific escapement of Columbia River fall Chinook Salmon: tradeoffs among estimation techniques. Fisheries Research 129–130:82-93. Online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2012.06.013.

Date

2012/10/01

Report No.

JournalPost_Hyun_etal2012C

Media Type

Journal Article