RECOMMENDATIONS
FOR RESTORATION OF STEELHEAD POPULATIONS IN CALIFORNIA
August
1995
Submitted to
National Marine Fisheries Service
on behalf of
Association of California Water Agencies
prepared by
Steven P. Cramer
Donald W. Alley
Aldaron Laird
Jean E. Baldridge
William T. Mitchell
Keith Barnard
Robert C. Nuzum
Douglas B. Demko
Randall Orton
David H. Dettman
Jerry J. Smith
Jeff Hagar
Thomas L. Taylor
Thomas P. Keegan
Philip A. Unger
S.P. Cramer & Associates,
Inc.
300 S.E. Arrow Creek Lane
Gresham, OR 97080
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
This is the second of two reports we have prepared for submittal
to the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for their use in
determining if steelhead in California should be listed as threatened
or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. This report focuses
on recommendations for restoring healthy steelhead populations.
We summarize restoration work that is already underway, and discuss
further work that is needed.
ONGOING RESTORATION
ACTIVITIES
Efforts to restore steelhead populations and their habitat have
been substantial in several Califoria streams, and provide reason
to expect improved steelhead production in the future on specific
streams. These streams include, but are not limited to, the Sacramento
River and its major tributaries, Lagunitas Creek, Pescadero Creek,
San Lorenzo River, Zayante Creek, Soquel Creek, Browns Creek, Gamecock
Creek, Corralitas Creek, Carmel River, Big Sur River, Santa Rosa
Creek, San Simeon Creek, Choro Creek, Sespe Creek, Clear Creek,
and Lompico Creek. Restoration activities include increased flows
released from upstream reservoirs, capture and transport of fingerlings
to permanent habitat and smolts to the ocean, rearing of fingerlings,
closures of trout angling, gravel placement, installation of fish
passage structures, riparian plantings, lagoon water level maintenance,
and public education programs. In the Sacramento Basin, changes
are being implemented in the mainstem such as increasing Delta outflow
from February through June, improved fish passage facilities at
Red Bluff Diversion Dam (RBDD), keeping RBDD gates open during late
fall through early spring, closing the Delta Cross Channel gates
from February through April, operating Shasta and Keswick dams and
the Spring Creek Power Plant to provide cooler summer flows in the
upper Sacramento River, installing temperature control devices at
Shasta and Whiskeytown dams, and increasing minimum flow releases
at Keswick Dam and RBDD.
NEW REGULATORY AND FINANCIAL
AID MECHANISMS
New regulatory and financial mechanisms for expanding restoration
efforts have recently been established. The Central Valley Project
Improvement Act (CVPIA) requires development and implementation
of a program designed to double natural production of anadromous
fish in Central Valley streams by the year 2002. State and federal
agencies signed an agreement in late 1994 to achieve improved water
quality standards for the San Francisco Bay-Delta. The California
Department of Fish and Game is allocating funds from a variety of
sources (up to $2.7 million is available in 1994/95) to the public,
nonprofit groups, and companies to complete habitat enhancement
projects for salmon and steelhead. The California Wildlife, Coastal
and Park Land Conservation Fund of 1988 (Proposition 70) provides
funds for restoration and enhancement of salmon and steelhead streams,
and up to $1.5 million will be available during 1995/96.
Our recommendations for recovery include both the gathering of information
needed to make wise management decisions and the implementation
of restoration activities.
RISK ASSESSMENT
We have recommended that the number of streams in which steelhead
/ rainbow rear and still have suitable habitat be used as the best
measure for risk of extinction. Habitats in streams originating
south of the Santa Lucia Mountains, at the southern fringe of the
steelhead range, are only likely to be suitable for steelhead in
cool, wet years. In these streams, the risk of extinction should
be rated against the availability of cool-water refuges. Population
trend alone should not be regarded as a reliable measure of the
threat of extinction, because the populations fluctuate naturally
in accordacne with long-term environment cycles. We conclude that
anadromy has been historically interrupted in drought cycles in
southern California streams, and is not a necessary trait to enable
persistence of steelhead / rainbow there.
MONITORING AND RESEARCH
Monitoring of steelhead populations has been neglected, and priority
should be assigned to establishing annual fish inventory sampling
on several indicator streams within each ESU. Uniquely marked groups
of smolts should be released on-station at each hatchery annually
so that smolt-to-adult survival trends can be monitored and causes
of variation analyzed, particularly the effects of the ocean environment.
Additional genetics sampling should be completed to enable accurate
assessment of ESU boundaries. The habitat carrying capacity for
subyearlings, smolts and spawners should be estimated in streams
designated to receive supplementation.
HARVEST
We recommend that harvest of wild fish, which occurs almost entirely
in freshwater, be substantially restricted until ocean survival
improves. Most of the estimates we found for harvest rates of adult
steelhead were sufficiently high that steelhead populations could
be damaged during years when ocean and freshwater survival are low.
Trout angling in streams where steelhead / rainbow are designated
for restoration should be curtailed. Particularly in the southern
portion of the state, it will be necessary to resolve conflicting
resource values between intensive fisheries for resident fish and
intermittent opportunities to view or harvest anadromous fish.
SUPPLEMENTATION
Hatcheries will be an important tool for rebuilding steelhead populations,
but hatchery practices must be substantially changed. Hatchery practices
have probably contributed to a loss of genetic fitness in many streams,
particularly on the north coast and in the Sacramento Basin. Outplanting
of domesticated steelhead stocks should be discontinued, and the
use of local wild broodstock should be developed. Naturally produced
steelhead should be incorporated into the broodstock at any hatchery
where hatchery fish are likely to interbreed with wild fish. Stocking
of catchable trout from winter-spawning stocks should be prohibited
in streams that may contain indigenous steelhead / rainbow. Juvenile
salmon and steelhead rescues should be adopted as a form of supplementation
in steelhead streams that become intermittent during years of low
flow. Stocking of exotic species that may prey on juvenile steelhead,
such as striped bass, should be stopped in waters that may support
indigenous steelhead / rainbow.
HABITAT IMPROVEMENTS
We recommend a variety of measures. Water levels should be managed
to maintain rearing habitat in lagoons that are breached artificially.
Trapping and hauling of juvenile and adult steelhead around migration
barriers should be considered in streams where suitable rearing
habitat still remains upstream of the barrier. A refuge system should
be adopted to include streams with good to excellent habitat, broadly
distributed in each ESU, and that support steelhead populations
large enough to avoid inbreeding depression. Implementation and
evaluation of such habitat enhancements as addition of woody debris
in pools, and replanting and protection of riparian zones should
continue. Unscreened water diversions on steelhead / rainbow streams
should either be screened or evaluated for the need to install a
fish guidance device. Opportunities should be sought with water
storage projects to provide pulses in flow that enable migration
up or downstream of steelhead at critical times.
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