THE STATUS
OF STEELHEAD POPULATIONS IN CALIFORNIA IN REGARDS TO THE ENDANGERED
SPECIES ACT
SPECIAL
REPORT
February 1995
Submitted to
National Marine Fisheries Service
on behalf of
Association of California Water Agencies
S.P. Cramer & Associates,
Inc.
300 S.E. Arrow Creek Lane
Gresham, OR 97080
AUTHORSHIP
This report was prepared as a collaborative effort between biologists
that were funded by a variety of different sources. Responsibility
for assembling information reported here was divided into geographic
areas, and questions regarding specific streams should be directed
to the appropriate Regional Coordinator. The biologists, their employers,
and their regional responsibility are listed below. The first person
listed under each region served as the Regional Coordinator.
Technical Lead and Writer
Steven P. Cramer, S.P. Cramer & Associates, Gresham, OR
North Coast
Aldaron Laird, Trinity Restoration Associates, Arcata, CA
Keith Barnard, Trinity Restoration Associates, Arcata, CA
North Central Coast
Douglas B. Demko, S.P. CRAMER & Associates, Chico, CA
Erick Van Dyke, S.P. CRAMER & Associates, Gresham, OR
Keith Barnard, Trinity Restoration Associates, Arcata, CA
Central Valley
William T. Mitchell, Jones & Stokes Associates, Sacramento,
CA
Jeff Hagar, Consultant to East Bay Municipal Utility District, Alameda,
CA
Robert C. Nuzum, East Bay Municipal Utility District, Alameda, CA
Philip A. Unger, Jones & Stokes Associates, Sacramento, CA
South Central Coast
Thomas L. Taylor, Trihey and Associates, Concord, CA
David H. Dettman, Monterey Peninsula Water Management District,
Monterey, CA
Donald W. Alley, D.W. Alley & Associates, Brookdale, CA
Jerry J. Smith, Habitat Restoration Group, Felton, CA
South Coast
Jean E. Baldrige, Trihey and Associates, Concord, CA
Randall Orton, Las Virgenes Municipal Water District, Calabasas,
CA
Thomas P. Keegan, Entrix, CA
Donald W. Alley, D.W. Alley & Associates, Brookdale, CA
Hatchery and Environmental Data
Douglas B. Demko, S.P. CRAMER & Associates, Chico, CA
Erick Van Dyke, S.P. CRAMER & Associates, Gresham, OR
Brian Farrell, S.P. Cramer & Associates, Woodland, CA
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Assembly and review of the information contained in this report
required the efforts of many people not listed as authors. We thank
Jennifer Persike-Becker of ACWA who invested substantial energy
as administrative coordinator of this project. We thank Chip Wullbrandt
and Dr. Jim Hughes, who represented ACWA members, for their input
and support at coordination and technical meetings, and for their
editorial review of this report. We thank Tim Leathers whose efforts
at drawing the attention of ACWA members to the steelhead issue
played a key role in initiating this project. Glenn Yoshioka of
Jones & Stokes Associates assembled substantial data on steelhead
in the Sacramento River basin.
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
This report was prepared
to assemble and synthesize the best available information on status
of steelhead runs in California. Information presented in this report
was prepared by a team of fisheries consultants with extensive experience
throughout California. The report is intended to provide information
to NMFS that will be useful in their determination as to whether
to list steelhead as threatened or endangered under the federal
Endangered Species Act (ESA). We often refer to steelhead in this
report as "steelhead/rainbow" to reflect the fact that
resident and anadromous forms can be produced by the same parents.
Little attention is given in this report to streams north of the
Eel River, because NMFS has already completed an internal review
of those populations (although their findings have yet to be published).
Information presented in this report is organized under three objectives:
1. Determine which steelhead population groupings in California
qualify as Evolutionary Significant Units (ESU's)
2. Determine the extent and causes of run depression
3. Assess the risks that threaten persistence of each ESU
In general terms, NMFS has defined an ESU to be a population that
meets two criteria: (1) It must be substantially reproductively
isolated from other conspecific population units, and (2) it must
represent an important component in the evolutionary legacy of the
biological species.
IDENTIFICATION OF ESU'S
We found provisional evidence of genetic structuring of California
steelhead into at least six groupings (ESU's) over broad geographic
areas: (1) summer steelhead in the Rogue and Klamath rivers, (2)
winter steelhead in coastal rivers from the northern border to the
Gualala River, (3) spring/summer steelhead in the Eel and Mad rivers,
(4) winter steelhead in coastal rivers from the Russian River to
Aptos Creek near Santa Cruz, (5) winter steelhead and resident rainbow
in coastal streams from the Pajaro River and south, and (6) the
fall-run steelhead in the Sacramento River basin (Figure S-1). The
location of boundaries dividing these groups are not definitive,
and the uncertainty of boundaries is greatest on the southern portion
of the coast. It appears probable that south coast populations should
be further split into two groups by a dividing line somewhere in
the vicinity of Point Conception, perhaps as far north as Point
Buchon (near San Luis Obispo). The best evidence we could find regarding
the San Joaquin Basin indicates that rainbow populations there were
not and are not anadromous.
Steelhead from the inland portions of the Rogue and Klamath basins
are distinguished by their unique "half-pounder" life
history. Although immature half-pounder steelhead are regularly
observed in neighboring coastal streams, particularly the Eel River,
these fish are apparently nonspawning wanderers, because we found
no evidence of adult spawning populations with previous half-pounder
migrations in any basin other than the Rogue and Klamath. There
are several unique aspects of the half-pounder steelhead populations
of the Klamath and Rogue Basins that distinguish them as an Evolutionary
Significant Unit (ESU). Their location at the northern edge of Region
2 of the California Current (Cape Blanco is the dividing point)
places them in an ocean area with high productivity near shore in
the spring and summer, due to upwelling, but low productivity near
shore during winter, due to downwelling. The Rogue and Klamath Basins
provide dependable flows during summer and fall, because they drain
mountain ranges with snowpack through most of the year. Thus, near-shore
rearing in the ocean during spring and early summer, and freshwater
refuge during fall and winter, is uniquely available to steelhead
in these streams, when considered on an evolutionary time scale.
Most other coastal streams in the area frequently have sandbars
that block the stream mouth for extended periods during the summer
and fall. In larger streams, such as the Russian and Eel, water
temperatures in the lower portions of the River reach highly stressful
levels in years of drought. Juvenile life history and spawning time
of Rogue and Klamath steelhead is similar to other populations up
and down the coast. Gene flow into the Rogue and Klamath basins
is restricted by the presence of the disease Ceratomyxa.
Winter-run steelhead in coastal rivers north of and excluding the
Pajaro River (near Santa Cruz) are characterized by their ocean-migrant
life history, their winter return timing, and by freshwater habitat
with more consistent access to the ocean. Winter-run steelhead are
predominantly 2-salt ocean migrants (2 years at sea) in north-coast
streams, and the proportion of 1-salt migrants (1 year at sea) increases
southward. Nearly all north and central coast streams are blocked
from the ocean by sand bars during summer and fall, and juvenile
rearing in the estuarine lagoon can be an important life-history
strategy. Time of river entry and spawning extends over a similar
time period for all of these populations, with the exception of
spring/summer-run steelhead in the Middle Fork Eel River and Mad
River (we consider spring/summer-run steelhead to be a separate
ESU). Mixing of winter-run stocks through hatchery transfers and
outplants has been extensive on the north and central coast, so
there has likely been some homogenization of genetic diversity.
Data on variation in mitochondrial DNA types indicate these north
and central coast populations should be further into a northern
group beginning with the Gualala River at the southern edge, and
central group beginning on the north with the Russian River. We
found no obvious life-history differences between steelhead north
and south of this line, but there is a unique oceanographic feature
at this point that may limit straying of steelhead north and south
of the line. A unique and pronounced "coastal jet" current
carries water offshore for up to 200-300 km near Point). Because
the California Current flows southward, an eddy develops just south
of Point Arena, and this eddy may draw steelhead smolts north from
the Gualala River (but not from the Russian River further south)
into the offshore jet. The coastal eddy would account for the genetic
similarity of steelhead from the Gualala River with those of north
coast streams. Additionally, the Russian River Basin is lower elevation
and drier than large coastal streams to the north.
The spring/summer-run steelhead of the Middle Fork Eel and upper
Mad River represent a completely different strategy, with extended
ocean migration and return in the spring one year prior to spawning.
The return timing and state of immaturity appears to be an adaptation
to ensure access to the spawning and rearing areas above falls which
are only passible at high flows by fish with great leaping ability.
Most coastal streams do not have the combination of passage barriers
that only allow passage within a narrow range of flows, and excellent
pool habitat for holding adults over summer. Because of this unique
habitat and life history adaptation, we suspect that spring/summer-run
steelhead from the Middle Fork Eel and upper Mad River may be appropriate
for designation as a distinct ESU, in combination with other spring/summer-runs
that exist in the Klamath Mountain geologic province. The passage
barriers above which these fish spawn isolate them from winter-run
steelhead.
Genetics and climatic data indicate a change in steelhead/rainbow
populations in streams south of Santa Cruz, starting with the Pajaro
River, where the climate is arid and annual rainfall is highly variable.
The Pajaro River also marks the first stream beyond the southern
range of coho salmon. Based on genetics data, a provisional ESU
boundary appears to occur at the Pajaro River, with its population
and those south having more similarity in mitochondrial DNA types
among themselves than similarity with populations from the San Lorenzo
River, and north. Streamflow data also indicate a change beginning
at the Pajaro and Salinas rivers, where ocean access during drought
periods is difficult or impossible. The Pajaro and Salinas rivers
drain primarily more arid interior regions. These drainages have
less surface flow at present than before turbine pumps and reservoirs,
and may have had serious access problems during extended drought
of drier centuries. However, the streams draining the wetter Santa
Lucia Range to the south (i.e., Carmel River, Little Sur River,
Big Sur River, Willow Creek, Arroyo de la Cruz, and Santa Rosa Creek)
probably remained accessible for steelhead during most critically
dry years. The Carmel River at the north end and Chorro Creek at
the south end of the Santa Lucia presently have access problems
in dry years as a result of groundwater pumping. A coastal climatic
change occurs with streams south of the Santa Lucia from Point Buchon
to Point Conception and beyond, where steelhead access becomes a
severe problem during drought, and where more arid climate causes
highly variable annual rainfall. Streamflow becomes more flashy
with longer dry periods in.
The major streams south of Point Buchon consistently flow across
wide, flat valleys before entering the ocean, making steelhead access
to the ocean more problematic than streams flowing out of the Santa
Lucia to the north. Such streams include San Luis Obispo Creek,
Santa Maria River, Santa Ynez River, Ventura River, Santa Clara
River, Los Angeles River, all of which have remnant anadromous steelhead
populations at best. Water development has accentuated the passage
difficulty in this century. Combined with these climatic, topographic,
hydrologic differences that occur near Point Conception and south,
the ocean current also changes. This has likely isolated ocean populations
of steelhead north and south in the past. However, analysis of genetic
data available to us has been insufficient to substantiate this
southern most boundary.
Because of the climatic, topographic, hydrologic and oceanographic
current changes that occur in southern San Luis Obispo County, another
provisional ESU boundary appears appropriate in the vicinity of
Point Conception, perhaps as far north as Point Buchon. Further
genetics data should be gathered to substantiate this ESU boundary.
Steelhead/rainbow in many of these streams, particularly in the
Pajaro south of Point Buchon, have probably had to adapt to alternating
periods of resident and anadromous life histories. Long-term hydrographs
and rainfall records indicate runoff is exceptionally low during
sequences of multi-year drought. Analyses of tree ring spacings
indicates that rainfall during 1850 to 1950 was higher than previous
centuries, and that there have been many droughts of greater severity
and longer duration during the last 2,000 years than the recent
drought (Haston and Michaelsen 1994; Hughes and Brown 1992). During
severe drought sequences, the migratory link between freshwater
and the ocean may have been broken for extended periods, and populations
reproduced in freshwater. This scenario applies with greater certainty
to streams south of the Santa Lucia Mountains, and may not have
applied to the Pajaro and Salinas basins prior to groundwater pumping
by man. Resident rainbow are probably the foundation of rainbow/steelhead
populations in streams south of the Santa Lucia Range, because these
streams drain areas of low rainfall and flow across broad coastal
plains. Steelhead/rainbow with anadromous tendencies are successful
and quickly multiply in sequences of wet years. The last streams
to have access problems for steelhead, and therefore most likely
to receive strays from nearby blocked streams, would be those draining
the Santa Lucia Range (e.g. Big Sur River and Santa Rosa Creek).
We found little evidence of steelhead straying during years of adequate
stream flow, and genetics data show substantial differences between
proximal populations within the south coast group. Because most
of the alleles analyzed are believed to be selectively neutral,
genetic differences reflect isolation of breeding and random genetic
drift. Thus, long-term rainfall records and genetics data indicate
that drought serves to isolate many small populations.
We found numerous examples demonstrating that California steelhead
have the ability to readily convert from anadromy to complete freshwater
residency and vice-versa. Titus et al. (1994) found that resident
rainbow occur with increasing frequency from north to south in California
steelhead streams, with a coastwide average of 36% of steelhead
streams supporting resident rainbow. We found several examples of
resident populations that developed from steelhead after dams blocked
access to the ocean. Following the recent drought, we found that
anadromous smolts were produced in the Carmel River from fish that
had reproduced after a complete life cycle in freshwater.
Steelhead in the Sacramento River basin have developed a unique
run timing in the fall that is probably an adaptation to migratory
conditions through the mainstem Sacramento River. Winter-run steelhead
have been introduced, but are not native to the basin. Unlike other
coastal streams in that latitude, access to the Sacramento River
is maintained throughout the year. However, water temperatures in
the lower river during mid summer were likely to be lethal to salmonids
in many years. Major flooding was a frequent occurrence during winter.
Thus, it appears that fall (October-November) offered the best window
for successful upstream migration. The additional 2 months of ocean
rearing, compared to Klamath half-pounders returning in mid August,
results in 1-salt returning fish being 2-3 inches longer than half-pounders,
but 2-3 inches shorter than winter-run 1-salt migrants. One-salt
fish are mature and compose about half of the returns. Returning
steelhead in the Sacramento River are deeper bodied, at a given
length, than winter steelhead. A notable portion of the offspring
mature in freshwater without going to sea. Gene flow into the Sacramento
Basin is restricted by the presence of the disease Ceratomyxa.
ABUNDANCE AND SURVIVAL
TRENDS
We examined several indices of ocean survival of steelhead, including
dam counts, hatchery returns, angler catch, diver counts, and juvenile
densities. With a few exceptions, there has been no consistent effort
to monitor steelhead populations in the state. We found three populations
with long term abundance records continuing to present; the upper
Sacramento River above Red Bluff Diversion Dam, the upper Eel River
above Cape Horn Dam (Van Arsdale Reservoir), and the Middle Fork
Eel River. There were additional time series of adult counts at
dams, but where fish have not been counted in recent years. There
were no systematic data on harvest by anglers. Age of returning
adults was not monitored, so steelhead counts were only sufficient
to calculate rough indices of combined ocean and freshwater survival.
The abundance of steelhead in the upper Sacramento River has been
declining since the early 1970's, and in the upper Eel River since
the late 1950's. In contrast, diver counts of spring/summer-run
steelhead in the Middle Fork Eel River did not decline until after
1987. Much of the Middle Fork Eel River is in wilderness area, consumptive
harvest is illegal, and there has been no stocking of hatchery fish.
Warm Springs Hatchery on the Russian River was the only hatchery
at which releases of juveniles and returns of adults were managed
in a way that smolt-to-adult survival could be indexed. Data there
did not begin until the 1981 brood year, and return rate was substantially
higher for that brood than any subsequent broods. The pattern of
decreased return rate since the 1981 brood is similar to that for
most hatchery steelhead in Oregon and Washington.
Data on juvenile steelhead densities were available in recent years
for a number of streams and were useful for comparing present rearing
densities to those in streams seeded to capacity. We limited our
analysis to data that were collected by multiple pass electrofishing
and by systematic sampling of the stream area. The length of time
series for which we found data varied between regions, but we found
no indication of trends in average rearing densities in any region
over the last 15-20 years.
We averaged data from 1990 through 1994 for each stream from which
we had data to examine regional trends under recent conditions.
This comparison showed that juvenile rearing densities were generally
less in streams further south. Most of the central coast streams
sampled were in the Monterey Bay area (36-37N), where juvenile steelhead/rainbow
densities ranged widely. The farthest south stream was one of the
highest quality tributaries of the Santa Ynez River, so other streams
in that basin probably had lesser densities. Data from Burns (1971)
in streams between Crescent City and Fort Bragg suggest that carrying
capacity for small coastal streams is between 0.5 and 1.0 fish/m2
for all ages combined, so rearing densities in the north coast streams
sampled appear healthy.
Titus et al. (1994) assembled anecdotal and quantitative data from
a more comprehensive set of steelhead streams south of San Francisco
Bay. Titus et al. (1994) found that 14% of steelhead populations
had not changed noticeably from historical levels, 31% were reduced
compared to historical levels, and 24% were extinct. Titus et al.
found further that the proportion of extirpated populations increased
southward, while the proportion of populations that were unchanged
from historical levels increased northward. There were almost no
remaining anadromous populations at the southern end of the range
(Orange and San Diego counties), but all anadromous populations
remain north of Monterey Bay. The north-south trend found by Titus
et al. (1994) for increasing health of steelhead populations northward
towards San Francisco Bay is consistent with the trend we found
with juvenile steelhead/rainbow densities.
FACTORS DRIVING POPULATION
TRENDS
We found that survival trends of California steelhead were correlated
to physical and biological changes in the ocean. Oceanographic factors
that contributed significantly to the multiple regression model
for smolt-to-adult survival of North Umpqua summer steelhead were
spring upwelling and spring sea level in the year of return, and
winter upwelling, spring sea level, winter surface temperature,
and wind speed in the year prior to return. Biologically plausible
explanations for each correlation were found. Abundance of upper
Sacramento steelhead was correlated to catches of each of the pelagic
fishes examined (Pacific sardine, northern anchovy, Pacific mackerel,
jack mackerel, Pacific herring, and market squid), with correlations
ranging from 0.41 to 0.74. Similarly, diver counts of steelhead
on the Middle Fork Eel River correlated negatively to catches of
sardine and squid (-0.33 to -0.51). Trends in the upper Eel were
not correlated to pelagic fish catches, but this run has been supplemented
with up to 200,000 hatchery smolts in some years and none in others.
We do not imply that these are cause and effect correlations, but
they reflect similar trends in fishes exposed to the same ocean
environment. We did not include physical oceanographic factors in
the regression analysis for California steelhead, because we were
unable to obtain data from the appropriate latitudes in time for
the analysis. The decline in the returns per smolt released from
Warm Springs Hatchery (Russian River), similar to declines in steelhead
return rates to Oregon and Washington hatcheries, indicates that
ocean survival of steelhead has been low during the last decade.
We found one example of direct evidence that El Nio events
affect growth of steelhead in south-central California. Shapovalov
and Taft (1954) show unusually small size at return in 1941-42 for
both coho and steelhead. This corresponds with an El Nio event,
for which the southern oscillation index indicates was about equal
to the strength of El Nio in 1986, but less than 1983 (Fisher
1994). We found no means of estimating brood survival for those
years.
Migration barriers and availability of water have been obvious freshwater
factors affecting fish runs. Migration to a large portion of the
spawning and rearing habitat, particularly in the central and southern
portions of the state, have been blocked by dams. Availability of
water for migration and rearing was a limiting factor in many steelhead
producing streams even under pristine conditions, and water diversions
for human uses has substantially aggravated the shortage of water
in many streams. Habitat damage from logging and floods has also
been well documented, particularly in north coast streams.
Drought has played a major role in the present reduced abundance
of steelhead/rainbow throughout California, particularly in southern
California. The primary mechanisms by which drought impacts steelhead/rainbow
are reduced rearing area, reduced productivity of remaining freshwater
habitats, reduced productivity of estuarine lagoons, and blocked
migration. Examples of each of these impacts are presented.
We found that angler harvest in trout fisheries and in steelhead
fisheries may have contributed to steelhead declines in some streams.
Because of reduced ocean survival, the harvest rate that steelhead
populations can sustain is much reduced. In streams where trout
fishing is permitted, numerous studies have demonstrated that anglers
capture a high proportion of the juvenile steelhead that are age
1 and older. The impacts of trout angling have likely been greatest
in the southern part of the state, where Titus et al. (1994) found
that 80% of streams in Ventura and Los Angeles counties were stocked
with catchable trout. Evidence indicates that harvest rates on adult
steelhead are highly variable and depend on environmental circumstances.
Most of the estimated harvest rates we found are sufficiently high
to damage steelhead populations during years when ocean and freshwater
survival are low.
Hatchery practices have probably contributed to loss of genetic
fitness in many streams, particularly on the north coast and in
the Sacramento Basin. Steelhead from a select portion of the run
have been extensively outplanted in the Sacramento basin and survival
rates appear to be quite low. Timing of migration and spawning at
Mad River Hatchery have also emphasized a restricted portion of
the run, and large surpluses of fry have been dumped in the Mad
and Russian rivers.
We found many streams where efforts have begun to restore steelhead
and their habitat. The most notable efforts were in the Sacramento
River and the Carmel River. Planning and study efforts to preserve
steelhead populations are underway on many other streams, particularly
on the south and central coast.
EVALUATION OF RISKS
THREATENING PERSISTENCE
The flexible life history of steelhead/rainbow has allowed this
species to persist in coastal streams further south than other anadromous
salmonids. The cyclic oscillations evident in long term records
of flow, rainfall, and abundance of ocean pelagic fishes indicate
it is likely the southern range of this species has periodically
expanded and contracted. The present contraction has been substantially
aggravated by human activities, but the record of recurrent droughts
indicates this is probably not the first time that anadromous rainbow
have disappeared from several streams in southern California. The
substantial genetic diversity found between nearby populations of
rainbow suggests that they have been periodically isolated in small
groups, as would occur during extended years of drought when anadromy
would be impossible.
Given that anadromy of steelhead/rainbow in many streams from the
Santa Cruz to the Mexican border has been periodically interrupted
by drought over at least the last 2,000 years, we conclude that
anadromy is not a necessary trait to enable persistence of steelhead/rainbow
in these streams. We deduce that anadromy may only have been an
uninterrupted trait in the larger streams with the most reliable
perennial flow. These would be streams flowing out of the Santa
Lucia Mountains (Carmel River, Little Sur River, Big Sur River,
Arroyo de la Cruz, and Santa Rosa Creek) and Corralitos Creek flowing
out of the Santa Cruz Mountains into the lower Pajaro River. Anadromous
steelhead may also have been reestablished following drought periods
from rainbow populations resident in perennial sections of temporarily
intermittent streams, such as are found in the upper Santa Ynez
River, Ventura River, Santa Clara River, and Malibu Creek. However,
because anadromy in these streams was likely to be interrupted by
drought, even before human impacts, temporary loss of access to
the ocean in such streams should not trigger listing of steelhead
as threatened or endangered under the ESA. Loss of access to the
ocean should only be regarded as an unusual threat in the south
coast ESU when it occurs in the perennial streams listed above.
The many streams in which steelhead/rainbow reproduce and rear is
in itself a strong protection against extinction. Therefore, one
measure of risk of extinction is the number of streams in which
steelhead/rainbow rear and still have suitable habitat. As long
as a diversity of such streams is maintained, the species as a whole
has little risk of extinction. The more confined the distribution
of fish, the greater likelihood that a given environmental sequence
or natural disaster might cause extinction. Risk of extinction would
be evaluated best by incorporating spatial dispersion into a cause-and-effect
model of population trends, but data for such a model are not available.
Given that time-series data sets on steelhead abundance are few,
and that a variety of different factors may limit steelhead production
in different streams, we believe that risk of extinction should
be rated against the probability that good habitats will be maintained
in a diversity of areas, and that harvest and hatcheries will be
used properly. Habitat modification, harvest, and hatcheries are
factors under human control; the ability of the populations to persistent
under extreme environmental variation in the natural habitat has
already been demonstrated. Therefore, we compiled a partial list
of California steelhead streams in which most habitat is still good
to excellent, and in which juvenile steelhead populations are healthy.
Some of these streams are in nearly pristine condition. Most have
been altered only slightly by man. We also listed streams which
continue to produce important steelhead populations in spite of
reductions in habitat. In addition to streams listed in Table S-1,
there are many headwater streams in good condition which support
abundant rainbow populations of steelhead ancestry, but which no
longer have consistent access to the ocean. It is likely that a
NMFS policy decision will be required to determine whether or not
steelhead/rainbow populations should be included in a steelhead
ESU after their migratory link to the ocean has been permanently
severed by man's actions.
- Table S-1.
- Partial listing of
steelhead streams in California which still have good to excellent
habitat and support persistent populations of naturally reproducing
steelhead. Some streams are also listed which continue to produce
important steelhead populations in spite of reductions in habitat.
On the north coast, only the streams with at least 10 miles of
good to excellent habitat in use are listed. The adult return
supportable was assigned, based on professional judgement, to
the following categories: <50, 50-200, 200-500, 500-1000, and
1000+, unless specific estimates were available.
| ESU |
Stream |
Adult Return Supportable |
Dominant Land Ownership |
| North Coast |
Rowdy Creek |
500 |
Private |
| North Coast |
North Fork Smith River |
1000+ |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Middle Fork Smith River |
1000+ |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
South Fork Smith River |
1000+ |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Goose Creek |
500 |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Hurdygurdy Creek |
500 |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Jones Creek |
500 |
Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Redwood Creek |
500-1000 |
Redwood National Park, Private |
| North Coast |
Maple Creek |
250 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Mad River |
500 |
Private, Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Freshwater Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Elk River |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Van Duzen River |
500 |
Private, Six Rivers National Forest |
| North Coast |
Yager Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Larabee Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
South Fork Eel River |
1000+ |
Private |
| North Coast |
Bull Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Indian Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Hollow Tree Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Black Butte River |
50-200 |
Yolla Bolly Middle Eel Wilderness |
| North Coast |
Tenmile Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Noyo Creek |
1000+ |
Private, Jackson State Forest |
| North Coast |
Jughandle Creek |
200-500 |
Jughandle State Reserve, Jackson St. Park |
| North Coast |
Casper Creek |
200-500 |
Jackson State Forest, Private |
| North Coast |
Russian Gulch (Mend.) |
50-200 |
Russian Gulch State Park |
| North Coast |
Big River |
1000+ |
Private, Jackson State Forest |
| North Coast |
Little River |
50-200 |
Van Damme State Park |
| North Coast |
Albion River |
500-1000 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Navarro River |
500-1000 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Greenwood Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Elk River |
200-500 |
Private |
| North Coast |
Alder Creek |
200-500 |
Private, Manchester State Park |
| North Coast |
Brush Creek |
200-500 |
Private, Manchester State Park |
| North Coast |
Gualala River |
200-500 |
Private |
| Spring/Summer |
Middle Fork Eel River |
500-1000 |
Yolla Bolly Middle Eel Wilderness |
| Spring/Summer |
Upper Mad River |
200-500 |
Private, Six Rivers National Forest |
| Spring/Summer |
Upper Van Duzen River |
50-200 |
Private, Six Rivers National Forest |
| Central Coast |
Russian Gulch (Sonoma) |
50-200 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Pieta Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Big Sulphur Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Maacama Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Dry Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Willow Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Big Austin Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Lagunitas Creek |
500-1000 |
Pt. Reyes National Seashore, Taylor St. Park, Marin Municipal
WD |
| Central Coast |
Redwood Creek |
under 50 |
Golden Gate National Recreation Area |
| Central Coast |
San Gregorio Creek |
50-200 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Pescadero Creek |
200-1000 |
Private, State parks, county parks |
| Central Coast |
Waddell Creek |
200-500 |
Big Basin Redwood State Park |
| Central Coast |
Scott Creek |
100-300 |
Private |
| Central Coast |
San Lorenzo River |
1000+ |
Private |
| Central Coast |
Soquel Creek |
300-700 |
Private, State Forest |
| Central Coast |
Aptos Creek |
50-200 |
Private, state parks |
| South Coast |
Little Sur River |
50-200 |
Private |
| South Coast |
Arroyo de la Cruz |
200-500 |
Private |
| South Coast |
Santa Rosa Creek |
200-500 |
Private |
| South Coast |
Islay Creek |
under 50 |
Montana de Oro State Park |
| South Coast |
Coon Creek |
under 50 |
Montana de Oro State Park |
| South Coast |
Big Sycamore Canyon Creek |
under 50 |
Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy |
| South Coast |
Arroyo Sequit |
under 50 |
Leo Carrillo State Park, National Rec Areas |
| Sacramento Basin |
Anteleope Creek |
200-500 |
Private, Lassen National Forest |
| Sacramento Basin |
Mill Creek |
1000+ |
Private, Lassen National Forest, Ishi Wilderness |
| Sacramento Basin |
Deer Creek |
1000+ |
Private, Lassen National Forest, Ishi Wilderness |
| Sacramento Basin |
Yuba River |
1000+ |
Tahoe National Forest, Private |
The number of streams with good to excellent steelhead habitat and
with open access to the ocean is greater on the north coast than
on the south coast. On the north coast, we only attempted to list
streams with at least 10 miles of good to excellent steelhead habitat
and with healthy populations of juvenile steelhead. Many smaller
tributaries could also be listed.
Risk of extinction in a given ESU, as determined from the availability
of good habitat, should be ranked with the following factors in
mind:
The number of streams
in which the habitat and the juvenile steelhead populations are
presently healthy
The spatial dispersion
of these healthy streams is sufficient that they would not all
be affected by the same environmental disaster
The populations in
each stream are sufficiently large to avoid inbreeding depression,
in the event that nearby populations are extirpated.
Because a thorough status
review of coho has just been completed, it is useful to evaluate
risks by comparison to findings with coho. In comparison to coho,
steelhead remain in many more streams, have a more diverse life
history, spawn over a greater span of time, and can survive and
reproduce in freshwater. Coho die after spawning, but steelhead
can survive to spawn several times. Multiple freshwater ages at
smolting offers greater mechanisms for density compensation, and
this is demonstrated in the asymptotic stock recruitment curve typical
of steelhead. Shapovalov and Taft (1954) intensively studied the
two species side-by-side in Waddell Creek, and drew the following
contrast, "Unlike silver salmon, steelhead migrate to sea at
various ages and over a long period within a season, spend varying
amounts of time in the ocean and return over a fairly long period
within a season, are capable of spawning more than once, sometimes
spawn before their first journey to sea, and may even remain in
fresh water for their entire lives." Given these differences
between coho and steelhead, it is clear that the present risk of
extinction to steelhead is substantially less than that for coho
where the two species co-occur.
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