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Annual Report: 1998 Sammamish River Sockeye Salmon Fry Production Evaluation PDF Format - [137KB]
Acknowledgements The success of this project relies on the hard work of a number of dedicated permanent and
temporary WDFW personnel. WDFW Fish Biologist Steve Wolthausen, and Scientific
Technician Chuck Ridley worked long hours at night operating and maintaining the trap, marking
and releasing fry, and enumerating catches. WDFW Wild Salmon Production & Survival
Evaluation Unit biologists Mike Ackley and Pete Topping provided valuable logistical support. |
Executive Summary
As part of the Lake Washington Studies, a multi-agency effort to investigate the recent decline in
sockeye salmon abundance within this system, we began assessing fry production in the Cedar
River in 1992. Because in some years as much as one third of adult sockeye spawning has
occurred in Sammamish Basin tributaries, we also initiated fry monitoring in the Sammamish
River in 1997. In this first year of the Sammamish study, we estimated that 953,000 sockeye fry
were produced from the 60,000 adults that spawned in the fall of 1996. We attributed the very
low egg-to-fry survival rate of just 1% to the record high flows (2,830 cfs) produced by a severe
rain-on-snow event in early January 1997, which immediately followed a large ice storm. This
report documents results from 1998, the second year that we evaluated production of sockeye
salmon fry from the Sammamish Basin.
As in the previous year, we placed a barge that contained two inclined plane screen traps in the
Sammamish River near Bothell (R.M. 4.0). From January 31 to April 25 1998, we operated the
traps on 61 nights. Early and late in the season, when the migration was low, we trapped every
other night. On 33 nights, we estimated capture rate via releasing groups of dye-marked fry
upstream of the trap. Over the season, trap efficiency averaged 10.6 % and, as in 1997, was
negatively correlated with flow. Expanding catches with the season average capture rate, and
interpolating for the nights not fished, produced a season total estimate of 1,243,000 sockeye fry.
Relating this migration to the estimated deposition of 12 million eggs during fall 1997 yields an
egg-to-fry survival rate of 10%. We attribute this rate, which is 10 times higher than we
estimated for the previous brood, to the more moderate flows during incubation. While other
previous years have had much lower peak flows, the peak flow of 1,060 cfs on January 24, 1998
was less than half of the record high flow registered on January 2, 1997 of 2,830 cfs in the
Sammamish River at Bothell. Therefore, although we have measured production from just two
broods in this system, given the extreme range in flows and the tenfold difference in survival
rate, it appears that egg-to-migrant fry survival of sockeye in the Sammamish system follows a
similar negative relationship with flow as we have developed in the Cedar River.
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