March 3, 2017 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com • 3A BIOLOGIST SPEAKS AT SEASIDE LIBRARY Life in the river Understanding the migration patterns of salmon By Katherine Lacaze For Seaside Signal C ommunity members delved beneath the surface and got a glimpse of salmonid life cycles and behavior in northern coast- al river basins during a presentation by Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife research biologist Derek Wi- ley. Wiley, the assistant project leader for the department’s North Coast Sal- monid Life Cycle Monitoring Project, gave a presentation on “Life in the River” at the Seaside Public Library on Feb. 15. It was the second presen- tation for the Listening on the Land winter lecture series, put on by the Necanicum Watershed Council and North Coast Land Conservancy. Since 1998, the project has been monitoring the survival and down- stream migration of salmon in coastal river basins, such as the North Fork Nehalem River, whose basin contains about 48 miles of Coho rearing and spawning habitat. Using a GoPro camera on the job and while fl y fi sh- ing, Wiley has captured footage that documents project activities from the fall 2015 fi eld season. “I thought it would be really inter- esting to try and capture what we do in a documentary-style format,” he said. “Documentaries can give you a really powerful look at a topic or a project in a way a conventional pre- sentation just can’t do.” A wet, rough season The life cycle monitoring project was initiated with two goals in mind. First, to estimate the abundance of returning adult salmonids and down- stream migrating juvenile salmonids. Second, to estimate freshwater and marine survival rates of Coho salmon. The documentary follows the 2015 fall adult trapping season, which started Oct. 1, with weather forecasts predicting a mild and dry fall and winter. With strong El Niño conditions present and warm sea surface tem- peratures in the Pacifi c Ocean, the season on the North Fork Nehalem began with low water levels. As adult salmon started making their way up the river, staff drove “through stormy conditions to greet them,” the docu- mentary states. The department of fi sh and wild- life operates two adult traps on the Nehalem, at Waterhouse Falls and at Fall Creek Falls, further upstream. All wild salmon that travel through the Waterhouse Falls trap are processed, which includes tagging them and collecting biological data. The ratio of tagged to untagged fi sh recovered as carcasses in spawning surveys and captured alive at the adult traps is used to make population estimates for all species. Hatchery fi sh who go through the trap are processed and euthanized there, and then donated to the Oregon Food Bank or used for stream enrich- ment. “Eliminating as many hatchery fi sh as possible from reaching the spawning grounds is extremely im- portant in the conservation and pro- tection of wild fi sh,” the documentary states. Another part of the data collection process is completing spawning sur- veys by walking or canoeing along river tributaries. After spawning, sal- monids die, so their carcasses can be found on or near spawning grounds. The staff fi nds the carcasses and checks for tagged fi sh to help calcu- late population estimates. Contrary to predictions, the fall and winter of 2015 were not dry and mild. In mid-November, the fi rst of a number of strong storms spattered the coast, bringing gale force winds, de- bris and fl ooding that created unsafe conditions for processing fi sh at the traps and conducting surveys. “Over the course of a month and a half, fl ooding and continually high fl ows forced us to close the adult traps for an unprecedented 20 days,” the documentary states. The fall trapping season ended Jan. 16, with staff entering data and running population estimates. The documentary shared some of the data collected. Notably, the num- ber of Coho salmon who were caught and who spawned were less than the project average. The marine survival rate for Coho was estimated at 3.3. percent, lower than the project high of 21 percent in 2014 and the project average of 15 percent. The fi sh also were smaller than normal. The number of wild Chinook caught for the season, 196, was be- low the project high of 349 in 1999, but higher than the project average of 175. However, capture effi ciency was low because of high river fl ows and trap closures, and a majority of Chinook still jump Waterhouse Falls rather than traveling through the trap. Because of the low capture effi ciency, the staff had reduced confi dence in its data regarding Chinook spawning es- timates. Only 147 hatchery fi sh were do- nated to the food bank, below the project average of 295 per year. The documentary raised several questions that were unable to be an- swered at the time, but which Wiley addressed having information from the 2016 season, as well. Silver salmon Program in jeopardy KATHERINE LACAZE/FOR SEASIDE SIGNAL Derek Wiley (center), assistant project leader of the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Salmonid Life Cycle Monitoring Project, talks with attendees after presenting for “Life in the River,” at the Seaside Public Library. ‘An impact everywhere you look’ Some the struggles salmonids face along the various stages of their life-cycle, from birth to spawning, include the unnaturally warm sur- face water temperatures in the Pa- cifi c Ocean along the coast; extreme weather events, like those that took place in late 2015; and poor habitat in the river systems, to name a few. “The good thing about a monitor- ing project like this is you capture all that variability,” Wiley said. Since 2010, the project has had the top three population estimates on the number of wild Coho in the North Fork Nehalem, as well as its lowest estimate and one of its lowest estimates. “If you take a snapshot of one (year) at a time, and you get the good year, your conclusion on the condi- tion of the resource, or condition of the fi sh, is very different than if you continually monitor and keep track,” Wiley said. As of Feb. 6, data from the Na- Tracking the brown pelican Skimming the waves and plummeting beak-fi rst for fi sh, the California brown pelican is one of the most iconic and easily recognizable seabirds on the Oregon Coast. On Wednes- day, March 15, at 6 p.m. join Astoria wildlife biologist Deborah Jaques at the Sea- side Public Library to explore the natural history of brown pelicans, from their breeding grounds off Mexico to their summer feeding grounds off our own coast. Use of DDT and other pes- ticides decimated breeding populations of brown pelicans off southern California by the early 1970s. Pelicans recov- ered from the pesticide era, but their num- bers continue to rise and fall, impacted by Deborah environmen- Jaques tal conditions here and in their breeding grounds and by natural and unnatural mortal- ity events. Astoria biologist Jaques has been closely ob- serving brown pelicans since the 1980s. Jaques is an in- dependent wildlife biologist based out of Astoria. Her work over the past 30 years has tak- en her from the coastal margins of Antarctica to the Olympic WHERE STYLE MEETS SUSTAINABILITY Schedule your FREE In-Home Consultation today! M Peninsula and has most often involved seabirds and other colonial water birds. Jaques did her graduate research at the University of California, Davis, on California brown pelican habitat use and dis- tribution in the non-breeding range, including evaluation of northern range expansion and communal roosting behavior. Brown pelicans are a focus of her monitoring and conserva- tion efforts on the West Coast. Listening to the Land is a monthly winter speaker series offered January through May in partnership with the Seaside Public Library. For more infor- mation, visit NCLCtrust.org. ECO-FRIENDLY WINDOW TREATMENTS ARCH FREE DLESS COR PL US 25 Off % M S Select ries Signature Se ADNES Woven wood shades with custom drapes Ask about all our eco-friendly window solutions, including wood blinds and hardwood shutters Oregon Coast 503-738-5242 Lincoln City 541-994-9954 The Best in Custom Blinds and Window Coverings SW Washington 503-738-5242 www.budgetblinds.com <*Applies to selected Signature Series ® window treatments by Budget Blinds. ® Some restrictions may apply. 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However, other contributing fac- tors — such as restrictions to refuges, eliminating hatchery fi sh before they can spawn with wild salmon and im- proving habitats — can be addressed at the local level. “That’s small scale, but every- thing we can do is going to help,” Wiley said. “But as far as one impact, it all goes together. And in certain years, one might be more important than the other. Cumulatively, there’s an impact everywhere you look.” As part of a plan to reduce the de- partment of fi sh and wildlife’s budget, the life-cycle monitoring project may be defunded starting in the 2017-18 fi scal year. The department was re- quested to offer two budget reduction strategies, one to decrease the budget by 10 percent and one by 15 percent. The program was part of the strategy at the 10-percent level, Necanicum Watershed Council Coordinator Mel- yssa Graeper said. The matter now is in the hands of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means, with numerous state legislative sessions still to take place. If the program is eliminated, the continuity developed by collecting data for nearly two decades would be lost, undermining the work that’s been accomplished. She urged the attendees to contact state representatives and express in- terest in the program’s survival. A closer look at fi sh behavior Another fi lm shared during the presentation showed the underwater behavior and spawning activities of chum salmon, fall Chinook salmon, Coho salmon and Pacifi c lamprey. All the footage was captured on the north coast in a variety of rivers. Wiley put together the video for the Oregon chapter of the American Fisheries Society’s annual meeting in Seaside last year. “It’s just a snapshot of a bunch different behaviors and a bunch of different things I’ve captured with the GoPro,” Wiley said. The next Listening to the Land presentation will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. March 15 at the Seaside Public Library. The topic will be “Tracking the Brown Pelican,” presented by As- toria biologist Deborah Jaques.