Science activity

Science activity #49907, updated 29 April 2022

Effect of Outflow Alteration upon Delta Smelt Habitat, Condition and Survival

Description / purpose

Description The Directed Outflow Project (DOP) is a continuing collaborative effort among a dozen state, federal and non-governmental groups. The DOP will employ a focused spatial and temporal approach to evaluate mechanistic hypotheses directly related to the rationales provided for the summer Delta outflow action and Yolo Bypass Toe Drain action to benefit Delta Smelt, with direct relevance to the fall outflow action. Paired data collections (same location and time) of abiotic and biotic habitat constituents to test specific hypotheses will assist in avoiding prior shortcomings of using data collected for different studies/hypotheses and/or across variable spatial/temporal scales (as discussed in MAST [2015] and elsewhere). Sampling will occur during the Delta Smelt juvenile rearing-stage, a period known to be associated with the location of the low salinity zone (LSZ). Results should strengthen our understanding of the mechanisms and drivers impacting Delta Smelt vital rates and associated habitat features with a focus on outflow conditions. Results should assist in evaluating the benefit and feasibility of future flow augmentation actions for managers and decision makers. Results from this and other related studies will inform evaluations on which particular outflow-related action or group of actions provides the most benefit for Delta Smelt. Need Requests and plans for water management actions related to augmentation of Delta outflow have proceeded and are expected to proceed in the future. However, there is uncertainty and disagreement regarding the mechanistic relationship of Delta outflow during the rearing period to Delta Smelt vital rates and habitat, and the hypothesized benefit of outflow alteration for Delta Smelt. Delta outflow has experienced reductions in recent years, coinciding with the collapse of the Delta Smelt. Reduced outflow has been linked to reductions in habitat suitability in Suisun Bay and Marsh and movement of the LSZ to the Confluence of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River where little connection to shallow open water habitats exists. Objectives The DOP’s main objective will be to evaluate the hypothesized benefit of outflow alteration for Delta Smelt and its habitat in coordination with all stakeholder groups. The following process and product related sub-objectives will facilitate progression toward this evaluation objective. • Test mechanistic hypotheses addressing the rationale behind outflow-based actions to benefit Delta Smelt. • Concurrently sample fish and measure abiotic/biotic habitat conditions at each randomly selected location along the salinity and habitat gradient of the north to western Delta along the Sacramento River during the summer and fall.

Linked science activities

None specified

Collaborators

Activity status

  • 1 Awarded / Initiating (2020)
  • 2 In progress / Ongoing (2020 - 2021)
  • 3 Complete

Funding summary

Total allocated funding: $0

Label Value
Contract # or labor code PEN#326
Implementing organization U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
Funding organization U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
Funding Source Not provided
Date of award 2020
Date of fiscal year-end Not provided
Total award amount $0
State type of obligation Not provided
Federal type of obligation Not provided
Reimbursability Not provided
Procurement mechanism Not provided
Annual expenditures

2020 - $2500000.00

2021 - $2500000.00

Location

Subbasins
Delta regions

Geographic tags

None specified

Products and outputs

None provided

Type and context

Science action area

Management themes

Science themes

Types

Science functions

Management actions

None specified

Science Topics

Lead implementing organization

Partner implementing organizations

None specified

Funding organizations

Funding programs

Funding sources

None specified