image description
Sample Design: Adult enumeration: Tucannon Hatchery - Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW)
  • Sites in Design: 1
  • Has Location Privacy: No
  • Data Repository: PTAGIS Website (See Sample Design Overview for full list)

The details of this Sample Design, including all the parameters used to generate it, are included below. Sample designs must belong to a Study Plan.

Description

This project will provide additional staff that will assist Tucannon FH staff on a daily basis during the steelhead return (March to May) to the Tucannon FH. Tucannon FH staff operate the weir/trap on a daily basis.  In the past, all captured fish were counted, collected for broodstock or passed upstream, without non-endemic fish being removed from the group allowed to pass upstream.  Occasionally, samples (scales for aging) were being collected per biological staff requests.  However, other hatchery duties and tasks which are necessary during the same time frame have made continued collection of the biological samples a large burden on existing Tucannon FH staff.  Monitoring and evaluation metrics (as proposed under this work element) will create an even larger burden on hatchery staff.  Additional staff time is needed for the increased collection of biological samples and tagging.
 
During daily trap checks, project staff will record number of fish captured (by origin), those passed upstream or collected for broodstock. In addition, project staff will collect scales from all unmarked ("natural origin") summer steelhead throughout the run. Scale samples are collected for age determination and brood year run reconstruction purposes, which is critical piece of information that is needed to determine a recruits:spawner relationship. Scales can also be used for origin determination when there is a question. Since our supplementation hatchery fish are not externally marked, and sometimes lose the CWT, scale samples should provide definitive proof of origin, thereby, the accounting of hatchery and natural origin fish at the trap will be more accurate.  WDFW will also collect a small piece of tissue (fin clip) from a portion of the run for DNA analysis. [Note: this sample size needs to be quantified. A numerical value for DNA sampling size was not available at the time of SOW development]
 
In addition to scales and tissue sampling, project staff will also be scanning all fish for PIT tags, inserting floy tags in all fish passed upstream of the trap for mark/site recapture observations while doing spawning ground surveys (see additional work element) in the upper basin. Other data such as sex, fork length, external or internal mark/tags, injuries, etc... will also be recorded for each fish.  
 
Note:  Since the Tucannon River summer steelhead have been intermixed with an out-of-basin hatchery steelhead stock since the mid-1980's, genetic profiling may be important as this program expands the new hatchery broodstock and hatchery production in the river.  However, this project is not proposing any DNA analysis. Other entities have expressed interest in the genetic profile of Tucannon River summer steelhead, and how they relate to other steelhead populations within the Snake River Basin.

 

Start Year

2010

End Year

2030

Study Plan

South East Washington Weir operation (WDFW) v2.0

Data Repositories

Photos

<none>

Documents

<none>

Area of Inference

<none>

AOI Notes

<none>


Sample Sites
These are the unique sites that are participating in this sample design over the time period covered by the design.

Map of Sites

Loading...

Sampling Schedule
This section describes which sites are scheduled to be sampled in any given year, and (if applicable) the panel and stratum that the sample site belongs to.

Plan Description

<none>


End User License Agreement

All visitors to MonitoringResources.org may read content without creating a user account. To add content and participate in collaboration features, users must create an account. Account holders must provide their name and email address, which will be viewable by anyone visiting the site.

Privacy Act Statement

Authority

Relevant acts include the Organic Act, 43 U.S.C. 31 et seq., 1879; Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 1934; Fish and Wildlife Act, 1956; Migratory Bird Treaty Act, 1918; Migratory Bird Conservation Act, 1900; Federal Land Policy and Management Act, 1976; Fish and Wildlife Improvement Act, 1978; Endangered Species Act, 1973; Marine Mammal Protection Act, 1972; Great Lakes Fishery Act, 1956; Nonindigenous Aquatic Nuisance Prevention and Control Act, 1990; Water Resources Development Act, 1990; and other authorizations conveyed to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Principal Purpose

MonitoringResources.org provides a structured system to document, store, manage and share methods, protocols, sample designs, study plans and sample locations related to natural resource monitoring and research.

Routine Uses

Used to document and share the who, what, where, when and how of natural resources monitoring and research. Users who wish to provide content, edit content and use the collaboration features of the site must create an account. Account holders must provide their name and email address, which will be viewable by anyone visiting the site. MonitoringResources.org staff may use email addresses to periodically communicate development updates, bug fixes and content to participants and to assist with completion of content, if needed. The Community feature of MonitoringResources.org supports User Profiles, which allows all site visitors to view name, email and each users’ content. Name and email of participants entering information is published via application programing interfaces (API) and shared with Sitka Technology Group (vendor contracted for site development).

For all site visitors, the following information is collected:

  • The name of the domain from which you entered our website (for example, "google.com")
  • IP Address (an IP address is a number that is automatically assigned to your computer whenever you are connected to the web)
  • The type of browser and operating system used to access our website
  • The date and time you access our website
  • The pages within our website that you visit
  • If you linked to our website from another website, the address of the website
  • This website uses session cookies. They provide enhanced navigation through the website.

We use this information to measure the number of visitors to the different sections of our website and to help make our website more useful to visitors. We do not track or record information about individuals and their visits. This information is not shared with anyone beyond the support staff for this website, except when required by Law Enforcement investigation. This information is not sold for commercial marketing purposes.

Disclosure is Voluntary

If the individual does not furnish the information requested, there will be no adverse consequences. However, if you do not provide your first and last name and email address you will not be able to enter content into MonitoringResouces.org.

Paperwork Reduction Act Statement

The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C 3501 et.seq.) requires us to inform you that the information is being collected to supplement natural resource monitoring metadata, to promote publicly accessible documentation of monitoring projects, and support coordination and integration of monitoring efforts. Use of the MonitoringResources.org tools is voluntary. Use of this website is estimated to be about 1 hour per response. A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. Comments regarding this collection of information should be directed to: Bureau Clearance officer, U.S. Geological Survey, . OMB Control Number 1090-0011 Expires 10/31/2021.