Note: Provided here is the Executive Summary from our Draft 2005 Season Summary (click link below for complete draft report). The 2005 Season Summary has been prepared for the Bonneville Power Administration and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the purpose of assessing project accomplishments. This report is not for citation in the published literature without the permission of the authors. Please contact clientservices@realtimeresearch.org for this authorization.
[Click here for the 2005 Draft Season Summary (pdf)] Executive Summary We initiated a study in 1997 to investigate the impacts of piscivorous colonial waterbirds on the survival of juvenile salmonids ( Oncorhynchus spp.) in the lower Columbia River (Roby et al. 1998; Collis et al. 2002). The study area included the Columbia River from the mouth (river km 0) to the head of the impoundment created by McNary Dam (river km 553). The species of piscivorous waterbirds investigated were California gulls (Larus californicus), ring-billed gulls (L.delawarensis), glaucous-winged/western gulls (L. glaucescens X L. occidentalis), Caspian terns (Sterna caspia), double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus), and, more recently, American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) and California brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis californicus). This study revealed differences in diet composition among the various bird species and colony locations (Collis et al. 2002). Terns, cormorants, and pelicans were strictly piscivorous, whereas the three gull species consumed a diverse array of food types. Gulls nesting at up-river colonies consumed primarily anthropogenic food items (e.g., cherries, potatoes, human refuse).
In 1997 and 1998, Caspian terns nesting on Rice Island consumed the highest percentage of juvenile salmonids of those species of piscivorous colonial waterbirds nesting in the Columbia River estuary (Collis et al. 2002). Rice Island , a dredged material disposal site, supported an expanding colony of about 8,500 breeding pairs of terns in 1998 (Collis et al. 2002). This colony was the largest known Caspian tern breeding colony in the world. Using bioenergetics modeling, we estimated that in 1998 this tern colony consumed approximately 13% (95% c.i. = 9.1%–16.9%; Roby et al. 2003) of the estimated 96.6 million out-migrating smolts that reached the estuary during the 1998 migration year. Analysis of over 36,000 smolt PIT tags recovered from the Caspian tern breeding colony on Rice Island revealed that over 13.5% of all PIT-tagged steelhead smolts (O. mykiss) detected migrating in-river through Bonneville Dam were consumed by terns in 1998 (Collis et al. 2001). Our monitoring of tern management in the Columbia River estuary has continued through the 2005 nesting season. In 2005, the size of the Caspian tern colony on East Sand Island was approximately 8,800 nesting pairs, nearly the same size as the Rice Island tern colony in 1998. Consumption of juvenile salmonids by the East Sand Island tern colony in 2005 was approximately 3.6 million smolts (95% c.i. = 2.0–4.2 million), ca. 9 million fewer smolts consumed compared to 1998, when all terns nested on Rice Island. Caspian terns nesting on East Sand Island continue to rely primarily on marine forage fishes as a food supply, even in 2005 when availability of marine forage fishes declined due to poor ocean conditions.
Despite the much smaller numbers of salmonid smolts consumed annually by the Crescent Island tern colony, predation rates on certain salmonid stocks have been unexpectedly high, particularly on some steelhead stocks during years of low river flow (Antolos et al. 2005). For example, PIT tag recoveries on the tern colony in 2004 and 2005 (low flow years) indicate that the predation rate by Crescent Island terns on in-river Snake River steelhead smolts was 34% and 17%, respectively (based on the proportion of PIT-tagged smolts interrogated at Lower Monumental Dam that were subsequently recovered on the Crescent Island tern colony). In-river steelhead smolts from the Snake River were more vulnerable to tern predation than in-river steelhead smolts from the Upper and Middle Columbia River (predation rates between ca. 6% and 4%, based on the proportion of PIT-tagged smolts interrogated at Rock Island Dam that were subsequently recovered on the Crescent Island tern colony in 2004 and 2005). Substantial stock-specific and temporal variability in predation rates were observed in both 2004 and 2005, with predation rates on certain in-river stocks of steelhead ranged from less than one percent to upwards of 30%; an indication that smolt vulnerability to Crescent Island terns changes throughout the nesting season and is not easily characterized by a single point estimate. Furthermore, the higher predation rate on in-river migrants from the Snake River ws offset by the transportation of > 95% of Snake River steelhead smolts past Crescent Island. Conversely, no juvenile salmonids that originated from the Upper Columbia River were transported past Crescent Island, resulting in the entire run being susceptible to predation by Crescent Island terns. Predation rates on salmonids by Crescent Island terns are unlikely to increase appreciably considering habitat constraints on tern colony expansion, limited capacity for increased per capita smolt consumption by terns, and current high transportation rates past Crescent Island for Snake River smolts.
A system-wide assessment of avian predation using the available data indicates that the most significant impact on survival of juvenile salmonids occurs in the estuary (Ryan et al. in prep). Caspian terns and double-crested cormorants nesting on East Sand Island together consumed ca. 10 million smolts in 2004 (CBR 2005). Additionally, when compared to the impact of avian predation further up-river, avian predation that occurs in the estuary affects juvenile salmonids that have survived freshwater migration to the estuary and presumably have a higher probability of survival compared to those fish that have not yet completed their out-migration. Finally, juvenile salmonids from every ESA-listed stock in the Columbia River Basin are susceptible to predation in the estuary because all surviving fish must migrate in-river through the estuary. For these reasons, management of terns and cormorants nesting on East Sand Island has the greatest potential to benefit ESA-listed salmonids across the Columbia Basin, compared to management of other bird populations. One possible exception is the Caspian tern colony on Crescent Island, where tern management may benefit certain ESA-listed ESUs of steelhead.
References Anderson, C.D., D.D. Roby, and K. Collis. 2004. Conservation implications of the large colony of double-crested cormorants on East Sand Island, Columbia River estuary, Oregon, USA. Waterbirds 27:155-160. Anderson, C.D., D.D. Roby, and K. Collis. 2004. Conservation implications of the large colony of double-crested cormorants on East Sand Island, Columbia River estuary, Oregon, USA. Waterbirds 27:155-160. Antolos, M., D.D. Roby, and K. Collis. 2004. Breeding ecology of Caspian terns at colonies on the Columbia Plateau. Northwest Science 787:303-312. Antolos, M., D.D. Roby, D.E. Lyons, K. Collis, A.F. Evans, M. Hawbecker, and Brad A. Ryan. 2005. Caspian tern predation on juvenile salmonids in the Mid-Columbia River. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 134:466-480. CBR ( Columbia Bird Research). 2005. Caspian Tern Research on the Lower Columbia River: 2004 Draft Season Summary. Real Time Research, Bend, Oregon. Available on-line at http://columbiabirdresearch.org/. Collis, K., D.D. Roby, D.P. Craig, B.A. Ryan, and R.D. Ledgerwood. 2001. Colonial waterbird predation on juvenile salmonids tagged with passive integrated transponders in the Columbia River estuary: vulnerability of different salmonid species, stocks, and rearing types. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 130:385-396. Collis, K., D.D. Roby, D.P. Craig, S. Adamany, J. Adkins, and D.E. Lyons. 2002. Colony size and diet composition of piscivorous waterbirds on the lower Columbia River: Implications for losses of juvenile salmonids to avian predation. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 131:537–550. Roby, D. D., D. P. Craig, K. Collis, and S. L. Adamany. 1998. Avian predation on juvenile salmonids in the lower Columbia River. 1997 Annual Report of the Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Oregon State University to Bonneville Power Administration and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Portland, Oregon, USA. Roby, D.D., K. Collis, D.E. Lyons, D.P. Craig, J. Adkins, A.M. Myers, and R.M. Suryan. 2002. Effects of colony relocation on diet and productivity of Caspian terns. Journal of Wildlife Management 66: 662–673. Roby, D.D., D.E. Lyons, D.P. Craig, K. Collis, and G.H. Visser. 2003. Quantifying the effect of predators on endangered species using a bioenergetics approach: Caspian terns and juvenile salmonids in the Columbia River estuary. Canadian Journal of Zoology 81:250-265. Ryan, B.A., B.P. Sanford, K. Collis, A.F. Evans, and D.D. Roby. In prep. Predation on juvenile salmonids by colonial waterbirds in the Columbia River basin: System-wide assessment of avian predation based on PIT tag recoveries. USFWS ( U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service). 2005. Caspian tern management to reduce predation of juvenile salmonids in the Columbia River estuary: Final Environmental Impact Statement, January 2005. Migratory Birds and Habitat Program, Portland OR. |