Science activity #52576,
updated 3 October 2023
Science for adaptive management of juvenile spring-run Chinook salmon in the San Joaquin River
Description / purpose
Spring-run Chinook salmon rehabilitation efforts are intensifying on the San Joaquin River. Over the last three years, UC Davis has successfully tracked movement, behavior, reach-specific survival, and route selection for reintroduced juvenile spring-run Chinook salmon in this ecosystem. In 2019, information on salmon tracking was combined with state-of-art habitat (fast limnological automated measurements or “FLAMe”) and physiological (e.g. fish condition, survival and transcriptomic) approaches. Results from this work are ongoing but have yielded actionable information on key habitats and management strategies for promoting salmon life-cycles in the San Joaquin River and central Delta. Now UC Davis will further explore promising recent findings. First, the analysis of an additional year of juvenile salmon tracking will occur to glean more survival information across different water year conditions. This information would be married with expanded FLAMe surveys in space and time along with a second year of physiological assays using caged fish. UC Davis will also evaluate the ‘transport effect’ on salmon, in an attempt to explain consistently high losses of JSATS-tagged salmon through the restoration area. Numerous other synergies exist with new and ongoing telemetry work that will be benefitted by a continuation of this work. The goal is to provide actionable science, and open access data, with a high potential to facilitate adaptive management in the San Joaquin River and central Delta.
Linked science activities
None specifiedCollaborators
Andrew Rypel, Principal investigator -
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
Nann Fangue, Co-investigator -
University of California - Davis [UC Davis]
Activity status
- 1 Awarded / Initiating (2020)
- 2 In progress / Ongoing
- 3 Complete
Funding summary
Total allocated funding: $694,036
Label | Value |
---|---|
Contract # or labor code | 20028 |
Implementing organization | University of California - Davis [UC Davis] |
Funding organization | Delta Stewardship Council |
Funding Source | Delta Stewardship Council - General Fund |
Date of award | 2020-10-09 |
Date of fiscal year-end | 2023-10-31 |
Total award amount | $694,036 |
State type of obligation | Contract |
Federal type of obligation | Not provided |
Reimbursability | Not provided |
Procurement mechanism | Contracted competitive or direct award |
Location
Subbasins
Delta regions
Geographic tags
None specified
Products and outputs
Type | Title | Description | Views |
---|---|---|---|
Agosta, A., C.L. Hause, G.P. Singer, N.A. Fangue, N.A, and A.L. Rypel. 2021. San Joaquin River Spring-run Chinook Salmon Survival. UC Davis’s Wildlife, Fish & Conservation Biology seminar. | UC Davis’s Wildlife, Fish & Conservation Biology | 0 | |
Gross, E.S., R.C. Holleman, M.J. Thomas, N.A. Fangue, and A.L. Rypel. 2021. Development and evaluation of a Chinook salmon smolt swimming behavior model. Water 13(20) 2904 | Hydrologic currents and swimming behavior influenc | 0 | |
Hause, C.L., G.P. Singer, R.A. Buchanan, D.E. Cocherell, N.A. Fangue, and A.L. Rypel. 2022. Survival of a threatened salmon is linked to spatial variability in river conditions. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. | Extirpation of the Central Valley spring-run Chino | 5 | |
Peterson, A., C.L. Hause, G.P. Singer, R.A. Buchanan, N.A. Fangue, and A.L. Rypel. 2022. Investigation of a Mortality hotspot for Emigrating Chinook Salmon Smolts in the California Delta. Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society, Spokane WA USA. | Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society, | 0 | |
Rypel, A.L., G. Singer, and N.A. Fangue. 2021. Science of an underdog: the improbable comeback of spring-run Chinook salmon in the San Joaquin River. California Waterblog | California Waterblog | 1 |
Type and context
Science action area
SAA Need 5 (2022-2026): Acquire new knowledge and synthesize existing knowledge of interacting stressors to support species recovery
,
SAA Action Area 3 (2017-2021): Develop tools and methods to support and evaluate habitat restoration
,
SAA Action Area 4 (2017-2021): Improve understanding of interactions between stressors and managed species and their communities
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
None specified