4.1 Article

Low-Elevation Dams Are Impediments to Adult Pacific Lamprey Spawning Migration in the Umatilla River, Oregon

Journal

NORTH AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES MANAGEMENT
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 548-556

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/02755947.2012.675950

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Funding

  1. Bonneville Power Administration

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Due to tribal concerns over the recent decline of Pacific lamprey Lampetra tridentata, a restoration program was initiated to establish a self-sustaining, harvestable lamprey population within the ceded lands of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in Oregon. We hypothesized that low returns of adult lampreys to spawning areas in the Umatilla River were caused by loss of habitat connectivity in this watershed. We conducted a study to determine whether the ubiquitous, low-elevation irrigation diversion dams in the main-stem Umatilla River were obstacles to adult lamprey spawning migration. Radiotelemetry was used to assess lamprey passage efficiency at seven dams located within the lowest 55-km reach of the Umatilla River. During this 4-year study, we tracked 217 adult Pacific lampreys that were implanted with radio transmitters and released downstream from the dams. Logistic regression analysis indicated that dam design, fish size, and temperature had the greatest effects on passage efficiency. Poor performance (< 30% fitted passage probability) was recorded at the two lowest dams in the system and resulted in limited escapement to upper sites. During the study, one dam was breached, after which passage efficiency there immediately improved from 32% to 81%. In addition, water augmentation actions at Three Mile Falls Dam apparently contributed to improved mean passage efficiency of migratory-phase fish (from 17% to 50%). Thus, actions to improve adult lamprey access to historical spawning areas are feasible and are key to successful restoration of this species.

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