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  • Title

    Enhanced Delta Smelt Monitoring [EDSM]

    Lead U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
    Description

    Description:
    The Enhanced Delta Smelt Monitoring (EDSM) program is a comprehensive, year-round monitoring initiative that employs multiple research crews conducting concurrent trawling operations across designated strata within the San Francisco Estuary. The program specifically targets post-larval Delta Smelt from April through June using 20mm trawling gear, while Kodiak trawling gear is utilized for the remainder of the year.
    Need:
    The ongoing decline of the Delta Smelt population has underscored the critical need for continuous improvement in the data supporting our understanding of the ecological and anthropogenic factors influencing Delta Smelt population dynamics. The EDSM program plays a vital role in providing essential biological data that informs management strategies aimed at mitigating the adverse effects of water operations on this endangered species. By capturing data across nearly all life stages of Delta Smelt, including near-real-time information on juvenile and adult stages, the EDSM program offers significant conservation benefits. This data is promptly disseminated to the Smelt Working Group and other resource managers to facilitate informed decision-making during the critical entrainment season.
    Objectives:
    -Estimate the total abundance of Delta Smelt, including standard errors or confidence intervals, on a weekly to bi-weekly basis across various life stages (post-larvae, juveniles, sub-adults, adults) throughout the year.
    -Assess the spatial distribution of Delta Smelt at a management-relevant temporal and spatial resolution.
    -Provide data that supports management decisions and addresses scientific inquiries related to sampling efficiency, drivers of Delta Smelt population patterns, and other conservation and management-related topics.

    Science topics Conductivity, Crustaceans, Delta Smelt, Dissolved oxygen, Endangered species, Fish, Invertebrates, Jellyfish, Main channels, Monitoring methods and techniques, Mysis, Other species, Pelagic fish, Salinity, Temperature, Turbidity, Water conveyance and infrastructure, Water management, Water operations and exports, Water temperature
    Updated May 23, 2025
  • Title

    Delta Juvenile Fish Monitoring Program [DJFMP]

    Lead U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
    Description

    The Delta Juvenile Fish Monitoring Program (DJFMP) has monitored natural-origin and hatchery-origin juvenile Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and other fish species within the San Francisco Estuary (SFE) since 1976 using a combination of midwater trawls and beach seines. Since 2000, three trawl sites and at least 58 beach seine sites have been sampled weekly or biweekly within the SFE and lower Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers. The main objectives of the DJFMP are:
    1. Document the long-term abundance and distribution of juvenile Chinook Salmon in the Delta.
    2. Comprehensively monitor throughout the year to document the presence of all races of juvenile Chinook Salmon.
    3. Intensively monitor juvenile Chinook salmon during the fall and winter months for use in managing water project operations (Delta Cross Channel gates and water export levels) on a real-time basis.
    4. Document the abundance and distribution of Steelhead.
    5. Document the abundance and distribution of non-salmonid species.

     

    Science topics Aquatic vegetation, Chinook Salmon, Conductivity, Crustaceans, Dissolved oxygen, Endangered species, Environmental drivers, Estuaries, Fish, Habitat, Historical ecology, Intertidal and transition zones, Invasive and non native species, Invertebrates, Jellyfish, Main channels, Monitoring methods and techniques, Mysis, Open water, Other species, Pelagic fish, Salinity, Salmon migration, Salmon rearing, SAV and FAV, Steelhead Trout, Turbidity, Water conveyance and infrastructure, Water management, Water operations and exports, Water temperature
    Updated May 21, 2025
  • Title

    Leveraging Citizen Science to Study Sturgeon Mortality in the San Francisco Estuary

    Lead University of California - Santa Cruz [UCSC]
    Description

    Little is known about sturgeon mortality sources outside management of the White Sturgeon recreational fishery. Mortality has been observed throughout the SFBDE with increased reporting over the past several years. Much of which is concentrated (but not exclusively) in the Carquinez Strait; a narrow strait linking known sturgeon feeding grounds and vital corridor which all SFBDE sturgeon must pass to access spawning grounds. Adult sturgeon populations in the SFBDE are difficult to estimate in part due to unknown rates of mortality, outside the recreational fishery. Specific, non-angling mortality data and sources are needed to develop management strategies that that lead to robust abundance estimates ensuring persistence of these public resources. 
    This project aims to dentify and enumerate non-fisheries sturgeon mortality in the San Francisco Bay Delta Estuary (SFBDE), specifically the Carquinez Strait. We plan to determine population characteristics of observed mortality, age structure and migration patterns/habitat use of collected sturgeon. We will also engage the local community through outreach efforts to investigate the public perception of sturgeon mortality in SFBDE and increase participation in our study.

    Science topics Monitoring methods and techniques, White Sturgeon
    Updated February 6, 2026
  • Title

    Fish and Fish Habitat Monitoring - Wetland Regional Monitoring Program.

    Lead University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
    Description

    The Wetland Regional Monitoring Program (WRMP) Fish and Fish Habitat Monitoring project is a collaborative effort to track biological responses to tidal wetland restoration in the San Francisco Estuary. Monthly sampling is conducted across a network of benchmark, reference, and project restoration sites in the South Bay and North Bay, with the goal of evaluating how wetland restoration influences fish assemblages, habitat use, and ecological condition.

    The study uses primarily otter trawls to monitor fish and macroinvertebrate communities. Standardized field methods align with those used in long-term monitoring programs to ensure comparability and data integration across regions. Environmental data, including water temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen, are collected in tandem with biological sampling to assess habitat quality and seasonal dynamics.

    The program addresses WRMP Guiding Question #4: How do policies, programs, and projects to protect and restore tidal marshes affect the distribution, abundance, and health of fish and wildlife? The data support adaptive management, regulatory compliance, and science-based restoration planning by identifying key habitats, tracking restoration performance, and detecting regional patterns in species composition and abundance over time.

    Science topics Backwater, Benthic, Benthos, Biosentinels, Bivalve, Corbicula and Potamocorbula, Crustaceans, Dissolved oxygen, Dredging, Drought, Endangered species, Environmental drivers, Estuaries, Fish, Flows, Habitat, Habitat restoration, Intertidal and transition zones, Invasive and non native species, Invertebrates, Jellyfish, Longfin Smelt, Marsh wildlife, Mollusks, Monitoring methods and techniques, Mudflats, Mysis, Nature-based solutions, Other species, Pelagic fish, pH, Resilience, Restoration, Restoration planning, Sacramento Splittail, Salinity, Sloughs, Steelhead Trout, Striped bass, Sturgeon, Tidal wetlands, Tides, Turbidity, Wastewater discharge, Water, Water temperature, Wetland mapping, Wetlands, White Sturgeon
    Updated January 29, 2026
  • Title

    Earth Observations to Combat Invasive Aquatic Vegetation

    Lead University of California - Merced [UC Merced]
    Description

    Invasive aquatic vegetation (IAV) is a threat to aquatic ecosystems worldwide, leading to a major loss of biodiversity and extensive damages and costs to human uses of those ecosystems. The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta (the “Delta”) is the hub of California’s water system, supporting over 35 million water users and a $54 billion agricultural industry. The Delta reform act mandates management decisions meet both water supply needs while maintaining the ecological function of the system. The Delta is a global biodiversity hotspot, and the focal point of $750-$950 million in restoration. It has also been called one of the most invaded estuaries in the world. Over the past 15 years, submerged and floating IAV have more than doubled in extent, threatening water supply and ecosystem health of the Delta. There is mounting evidence that herbicide treatments are not effective, and that water management actions, and wetland restoration may be having huge impacts on IAV. This presents both a risk to increasing IAV, but also an opportunity to prevent and even  effectively combat IAV through considered water management actions and better restoration planning, meeting the state’s co-equal goals of water security and Delta ecosystem conservation.

    This project will meet the needs of multiple state agencies by advancing operational Earth observation-based monitoring program for community-level submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) and genus-level floating aquatic vegetation (FAV) and modeling tools to enable the Delta management community to assess the effect of previous management actions on IAV and forecast the effects of future actions to inform multi-agency decision making. Specifically, this work will 1) Operationalize IAV class mapping using Sentinel-2 satellite imagery, 2) Finalize and validate species distribution Models (SDM) for SAV community and FAV at genus-level to assess the impacts of previous water actions on IAV and predict IAV distribution in future scenarios, 3) Co-design IAV-based performance metrics to inform future actions.

    The proposed project fills a critical data gap in monitoring for state and federal agencies and stakeholders by implementing the first sustainable mapping effort for IAV. Monthly and seasonal estimates of SAV and FAV coverage will enable the Delta Stewardship Council to improve their performance metrics for evaluation of the Delta Plan and will help the Interagency Ecological Program assess whether management is meeting the co-equal goals for the Delta. Species distribution models will enable Department of Water Resources to evaluate how previous restoration flow actions have affected the spread and persistence of IAV and incorporate what they learn into future Structured Decision Making to better account for negative consequences of IAV when setting future restoration targets and implementing actions.

    Science topics Aquatic vegetation, Emergent macrophytes, Floating aquatic vegetation, Habitat restoration, Invasive and non native species, Monitoring methods and techniques, Other species, Remote sensing, Saltwater and freshwater marshes, SAV and FAV, Submerged aquatic vegetation, Tidal wetlands, Water hyacinth, Wetland mapping, Wetlands
    Updated February 7, 2026
  • Title

    Continuous Flow and Water Quality Monitoring Network in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Bay

    Lead U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
    Description

    High-frequency monitoring for hydrodynamic (stage, velocity, flow), water quality (including chlorophyll, nutrients), sediment, and phytoplankton at key locations in the Delta (Figure 1). The physical properties monitored by the fixed-station network are the primary drivers of the habitat conditions and biological responses that management actions are designed for. Combined, these data establish the spatially and temporally rich data set needed for real-time operation of water export facilities, understanding Delta ecosystem responses to hydrological conditions, and evaluating restoration actions.

    For more information, including data links, please see the USBR program webpage.

    Science topics Chlorophyll A B, Conductivity, Dissolved oxygen, Flows, Food webs, Habitat restoration, Intertidal and transition zones, Monitoring methods and techniques, Nutrients, Outflow, pH, Phytoplankton, Salinity, Stage, Turbidity, Velocity, Water conveyance and infrastructure, Water management, Water operations and exports, Water temperature
    Updated March 13, 2026
  • Title

    Methodological development for tracking delta smelt implanted with acoustic telemetry tags: learning how to develop a JSATS array to detect delta smelt

    Lead U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
    Description

    Observations of individual and population dispersal of delta smelt are essential for improving models that can inform management strategies potentially improving movement into favorable areas or reducing movement into areas of poor habitat quality and risk of pumping loss. However, delta smelt movement patterns are largely unknown. Pacific Northwest National Labs has developed a much smaller Juvenile Salmon Acoustic Telemetry System (JSATS) tag, called the "Shad tag." Recent experiments suggest these tags can be successfully implanted in delta smelt without having significant, negative effects on individual condition and swimming behavior. The next step to determine if the newest technology may provide a tool for acoustic observation of fish dispersal over small spatial scales. Filling this data gap is important because changes in delta smelt spatial distribution (i.e., movement or dispersal) play a significant role in the management and recovery of the species.

    This project includes two years of field-based experiments necessary to move this technology into the field. The existing San Francisco Estuary's JSATS array was designed to detect larger, more powerful tags and may not be as effective at detecting the smaller, less powerful tags. Therefore, first, we will test the detectability of the Shad tag by the existing JSATS array and explore detectability at potential locations for new receivers at delta smelt-relevant locations. Secondly, we will design and deploy a 3D
    positioning array to test performance of such an array in upper San Francisco Estuary habitats. Finally, we will conduct several small releases of delta smelt implanted with the new Shad tag to assess the capacity of the JSATS receiver arrays to detect and position live fish. This feasibility study will lay the groundwork for the development of a receiver array and post detection
    signal processing algorithm to detect delta smelt tagged with Shad tags in later phases of the project.

    Science topics Delta Smelt, Monitoring methods and techniques
    Updated February 24, 2026
  • Title

    Estimating Juvenile Production and Run Timing of Spring Chinook Salmon Leaving the Delta

    Lead U.S. Geological Survey [USGS]
    Description

    Spring-run Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) are a high-priority species under the Endangered Species Act due to their risk of extinction. However, understanding the factors affecting their populations is difficult when monitoring focuses only on returning adult spawners. This limited view overlooks critical life stages. To address this gap, the project aimed to estimate the number of juvenile salmon leaving the Delta at Chipps Island. Monitoring salmon throughout their entire life cycle is essential for identifying the key factors influencing their survival and reproduction.

    There is a need from both scientists and managers for accurate data to make informed decisions about salmon protection and conservation. The Department of Water Resources (DWR) mandates that juvenile production estimates for spring-run salmon be included in their incidental take permit, which is necessary for the continued operation of the State Water Project. A method to estimate juvenile abundance of spring-run salmon leaving the Delta (at Chipps Island) did not yet exist.

    To develop these annual estimates, researchers built on previous studies and incorporated new genetic data into updated models. This approach maximized the use of available information and the latest genetic research to improve the protection and understanding of these threatened fish.

    Science topics Chinook Salmon, Fish, Monitoring methods and techniques, Salmon migration
    Updated April 15, 2026
  • Title

    Field data collection and mapping of aquatic vegetation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh from 2022-2027

    Lead University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
    Description

    Invasive aquatic macrophytes (aquatic weeds) cover increased dramatically in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta) during the 2013-2015 drought and the 2021-2023 drought. This trend toward increasing dominance of these invasive aquatic weeds has profound implications for delta/marsh habitat, as aquatic weeds are known to significantly alter the physical environment by slowing water velocities, increasing water clarity, providing habitat for invasive fishes, and reducing open water habitat. These habitat effects are thought to negatively impact the endangered Delta Smelt and other pelagic species that rely on turbid, open water habitat. During the drought of 2021- 2023, aquatic weeds have continued to spread into new habitats, therefore there is an urgent need to identify effective control measures, which requires increased understanding of ecosystem responses to drought and associated environmental conditions in the waterways (e.g., water temperature, flow rates, turbidity, etc.), and specific control measures.

    The work covered in this contract includes the 2021-2023 Emergency Drought Salinity Barrier Monitoring Plan mandated under DWR’s Incidental Take Permit. Research has focused on understanding invasion patterns in Franks Tract and contrasting them with patterns in channels surrounding Liberty Island and restoration sites. We also analyze Suisun marsh to assess the condition near the salinity drought barrier on Montezuma Slough, and its impacts across the length of Montezuma Slough and relate observed patterns to salinity conditions in Suisun Slough.

    Extensive field work has been conducted throughout the Delta and in Suisun Marsh to acquire data that is used to train and evaluate remotely sensed maps of aquatic weed distribution and link these to measurements of water quality. This project extends the time period of continued mapping of aquatic vegetation in the Delta through summer of 2027, for a time series that goes back to 2004, covering 19 years of high spatial resolution hyperspectral imagery data. This dataset now encompasses the full range of hydrologic conditions that extend from wet years to extremely dry years which can potentially form the basis for interpreting causal relationships and changes in trait distributions of aquatic weeds. Aquatic weed mapping combined with an extensive field campaign within the Suisun Marsh extends the Suisun time series to seven years. This growing time series of vegetation maps for both the Delta and Suisun Marsh can be leveraged to look at the evolution of tidal wetland restoration sites developed by DWR’s Fish Restoration Program (FRP) as part of the Incidental Take Permit. This analysis covers construction to current time period to see if different restoration strategies (pre-planting, no pre-action, treating invasive species outside the site, etc.) have an impact on the growth and maturity of a site, invasibility, etc. Additionally, the full time series will be evaluated for trends related to weather/climate, water conditions, and management actions.
     

    Science topics Aquatic vegetation, Brazilian waterweed, Emergent macrophytes, Estuaries, Floating aquatic vegetation, Habitat, Invasive and non native species, Landscape change, Monitoring methods and techniques, Remote sensing, SAV and FAV, Spongeplant, Submerged aquatic vegetation, Tidal wetlands, Water hyacinth, Wetland mapping
    Updated May 11, 2026
  • Title

    Field data collection and mapping of aquatic vegetation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh during drought year 2021 and gap filling 2009-2013 using archival satellite images

    Lead University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
    Description

    Invasive aquatic macrophytes (aquatic weeds) cover increased dramatically in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta during the 2013-2015 drought and the 2021-2023 drought. This trend toward increasing dominance of these invasive aquatic weeds has profound implications for delta/marsh habitat, as aquatic weeds are known to significantly alter the physical environment by slowing water velocities, increasing water clarity, providing habitat for invasive fishes, and reducing open water habitat. These habitat effects are thought to negatively impact the endangered Delta Smelt and other pelagic species that rely on turbid, open water habitat.

    Different state and federal agencies have funded the acquisition of airborne spectroscopy data over the legal Delta since 2004. However, this long dataset has a critical 5-year gap in data acquisition during one of the most severe droughts that California has seen. This project is focused on inventorying any high spatial resolution satellite imagery that may have been taken over the legal delta, processing and analyzing it and mapping it to fill this 5-year gap in the only existing large-scale monitoring and mapping effort focused on aquatic macrophytes in the Delta. 

    The main objective of the study is map the satellite "gap-fill" imagery using the same methods used for the spectroscopy airborne data and creating and publishing a time series of those maps that could then potentially be used as a 21-year continuous dataset of floating and submerged aquatic macrophytes distribution in the Delta. Further, these maps will be used to study the effect of nutrients and management activities on the distribution of these invasive species.

    Science topics Aquatic vegetation, Environmental drivers, Floating aquatic vegetation, Herbicides, Invasive and non native species, Monitoring methods and techniques, Nitrogen and ammonia, Nutrients, Remote sensing, Suspended sediment, Water
    Updated May 11, 2026