Restoring Life History Diversity to Bonneville Cutthroat Trout and Bluehead Sucker in the Weber...

Post on 14-Dec-2015

218 views 1 download

Tags:

Transcript of Restoring Life History Diversity to Bonneville Cutthroat Trout and Bluehead Sucker in the Weber...

Restoring Life History Diversity to Bonneville Cutthroat Trout and

Bluehead Sucker in the Weber River

Paul Burnett – Trout UnlimitedBen Nadolski – Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Paul Thompson – Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Sam McKay – Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

2

Introduction

• Background on the Weber River and its native fish

• Cooperative research between the USU Fish Ecology Lab and the UDWR

• Conservation Actions

• Strategies for the Future?

3

Weber River Watershed

4

Weber River

5

High Productivity

6

Past Habitat Impacts

Over 2 Miles of habitat lost from Henefer Valley in the 1960’s

7

Water Management and Fragmentation

8

Imperiled Native Fish in the Weber River

Bluehead Sucker

Bonneville Cutthroat Trout

Focus: Middle Weber RiverIn Morgan Valley

9

Bonneville Cutthroat Trout in the Weber River

Great Salt Lake

10

Bluehead Sucker Distribution in the Weber RiverMajor sampling efforts from 2006-2012 inventories

We know:• Occur mainly in mainstem• Long lived

We don’t know:• Habitat and movement requirements• Importance of tributary habitats

Strongest

remaining

population

11

•Population estimate obtained in 2012 was half of 2009 estimate

Weber River Section 02 Bluehead Sucker Monitoring

12

Weber River Home Rivers Initiative

• Collaborative multi-year effort• Applied research• On-the-ground restoration• Community outreach/Grassroots

Engagement• Long-term conservation and

management strategies and tools

13

Research Objectives

1. Characterize the contemporary lower Weber River BCT metapopulation

2. Determine if fluvial life-history expression is still present

3. Investigate potential limitations to movement and migration

BCT Research on Weber River

14

• Focus on comparing population size, structure, and movement between mainstem and tributary habitats

• Methods – Electrofishing– Mark-Recapture (PIT-tags)– Passive In-stream Antenna network– Otolith microchemistry

15

Summary: Understanding the Metapopulation

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= 2011 Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow

Important Populations and Barriers

Cotton

wood

Cree

k

Gor

don

Cree

k

Jaco

bs C

reek

Peterson Creek

Strawberry Creek

16

2013 Passive Instream Antenna Network

17

2013 PIA Monitoring

Origin

Antenna LocationCottonwood Creek

Gordon Creek

Jacobs Creek

Peterson Creek

Strawberry Creek

Weber 03

Weber 04 ???

Grand Total

Lower Cottonwood 2 1 5 8Upper Cottonwood 3 1 4 8Lower Gordon 3 2 5Upper Gordon 3 5 8Lower Jacobs 13 4 2 45 1 65Upper Jacobs 2 4 1 34 1 42Lower Peterson 1 2 58 4 65Upper Peterson 1 1 6 4 52 4 68Strawberry 1 6 1 7 15Grand Total 5 6 17 2 20 12 212 10 284

18

Now what?

• We know fish are moving between habitats

• Some habitats are threatened

• Many habitats are fragmented

19

Moving the Conservation Needle• Protect habitats in

strongholds

• Reconnect habitats to increase population resiliency

• Restore populations and habitat

• Sustain projects and programs

20

Prioritize Actions in Strongholds

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= 2011 Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow

Important Population and Barriers

21

Gordon Creek

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow• Bridge constructed in 1970’s• Concrete poured in 1980’s• 4 ½ ft vertical drop• Large fluvial BCT disappeared• Strong local support for

reconnection

22

Preliminary Design for Gordon Creek

23

Strawberry Creek

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow

• 370 ft Box Culvert under I-84• 5.36% Slope• Blocks access to entire

watershed• UDOT has provided assistance

with design.

24

Strawberry Creek Concept

25

“Lower Weber Diversion”

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow

Fisheries crew checking the fish trap in the passage channel

Fish screens in north side irrigation diversion

Fish screens in the south side irrigation diversion

27

Lower Weber Diversion

• Still need high flow upstream passage– Dependent on Funds– General Design Criteria

• Screen Cleaning Mechanism

Peterson Creek

Upper Gordon Creek Mainstem Weber River

Jacobs Creek

29

Continued Threats

= Tributary Barrier

= Mainstem Barrier

= Fluvial Individual

= BCT Abundance Flow

30

Moving Forward Strategically

• Collaborative effort for develop a strategic action plan

• Improved knowledge allows us to continue refining our conservation strategies in the watershed.

• Limited resources continue to exist.

• We need to use those resources the most effectively.

• We will need to rely upon the plan and revise it to continue moving the conservation needle.

31

Thank You

South Weber Irrigation Company

Uintah Central Irrigation Company