Science activity

Science activity #49828, updated 29 November 2022

Impacts of climate change on pesticide bioavailability and sublethal effects on juvenile Chinook salmon in the Delta: Potential benefits of floodplain rearing

Description / purpose

The Project will include field studies to estimate loadings and bioavailability of pesticides, concentrations of pesticide residues in salmonid prey, and the trophic basis of juvenile Chinook salmon growth (benthic vs. pelagic food web pathways) and how each of these differ between floodplain and river channel habitats in the Delta. Data from the field studies will inform development of laboratory studies that will assess the potential effects of exposure to environmentally-relevant pesticide types and concentrations in prey on swimming performance, olfaction and neuroendocrinology of juvenile Chinook salmon. Laboratory studies will also evaluate how water temperature (including increased water temperatures predicted with climate change) influences these sub-lethal effects of pesticides on juvenile salmon.

Linked science activities

None specified

Activity status

  • 1 Awarded / Initiating (2017)
  • 2 In progress / Ongoing
  • 3 Complete

Funding summary

Total allocated funding: $963,408

Label Value
Contract # or labor code None
Implementing organization University of California - Riverside [UC Riverside]
Funding organization California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Funding Source California Department of Fish and Wildlife CDFW - Prop 1
Date of award Not provided
Date of fiscal year-end Not provided
Total award amount $963,408
State type of obligation Not provided
Federal type of obligation Not provided
Reimbursability Not provided
Procurement mechanism Not provided

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

None specified

Management actions

None specified

Science Topics

None specified