Or. Admin. Code § 635-500-6600 - Implementing the Upper Willamette River Conservation and Recovery Plan for Chinook Salmon and Steelhead
(1) Policy.
The Upper Willamette River Conservation and Recovery Plan for Chinook Salmon
and Steelhead (UWR Plan; State of Oregon 2011, available at Department offices)
implements the State's strategy for protecting and enhancing Chinook salmon and
steelhead trout in Willamette River subbasins, in cooperation with other
federal and local partners, including Oregon Plan natural resource agencies and
NOAA Fisheries. The UWR Plan is based on the premise that the Oregon Plan for
Salmon and Watersheds provides the best vehicle for securing partnerships, both
private and governmental, to successfully implement the actions called for in
this plan. This rule describes the Commission's contribution toward this
collective effort and directs the Department's implementation of the UWR
Recovery Plan. This rule describes the Department's role in implementing the
UWR Recovery Plan consistent with the Department's statutory authorities and
the Native Fish Conservation Policy (OAR
635-007-0502 thru
635-007-0505). The rule is not
intended to be a rigid recipe but rather to identify the range of opportunities
the Department should pursue and how the effectiveness of those opportunities
should be evaluated, following the template first established in the Native
Fish Conservation Policy.
(2)
Description of Species Management Unit and Populations. The Species Management
Units (SMUs) for Upper Willamette River Chinook and steelhead are the portions
of the Upper Willamette River Evolutionarily Significant Units (ESUs) for
Chinook salmon, and the Distinct Population Segment (DPSs) for steelhead that
are comprised of independent populations, as defined in Chapter 2 of the UWR
Plan. To avoid confusion and because the SMUs are the same as the federal ESUs,
or DPSs, designations, the term ESU will be used to designate the SMUs for
Willamette River Chinook salmon and steelhead.
(3) Desired Status. The desired status goal
for populations of Upper Willamette Chinook salmon and steelhead is two-tiered
such that:
(a) Delisting Goal. The ESU and
DPS covered by the UWR Plan can be removed from the federal Endangered Species
Act threatened and endangered list. This shall be achieved through the
following:
(A) All independent populations
achieve the status called for under the Desired Status for Delisting identified
in Chapter 6 of the plan; and
(B)
Significant improvements are achieved in salmon and steelhead survival from
actions implemented to reduce habitat, hydrosystem, harvest, hatcheries, and/or
predation threats, as identified in Chapter 6 for each population;
and
(b) Broad Sense
Goal. Eventual improvements in salmon and steelhead survival from management
actions provide for all independent populations to be sufficiently abundant,
productive, and diverse (in terms of life histories and geographic
distribution) so that they provide significant ecological, social, cultural,
and economic benefits. These broad sense recovery goals for the ESUs shall be
achieved by the following: All independent Upper Willamette River Chinook
salmon and steelhead populations pass all of the measurable criteria for highly
viable status.
(c) The three
measurable criteria for desired status of Upper Willamette Chinook salmon and
steelhead independent populations are defined in Chapter 8 of the UWR Plan and
include:
(A) Abundance and
productivity;
(B) Spatial
structure; and
(C)
Diversity.
(d) While
criteria for survival rate to each critical life history stage can not yet be
developed with the available information and monitoring, staff shall establish
such criteria for these biological attributes when adequate information and
monitoring is available.
(4) Current Status. The current status of
each Upper Willamette River Chinook salmon and steelhead ESU at the time of the
adoption of this rule is described in Chapter 4 of the UWR Plan. This
assessment describes the biological attributes, criteria and metrics used to
assess the status of each ESU. Those biological attributes, criteria, and
metrics are adopted by reference into this rule. The Department shall update
current status periodically consistent with timelines described under Adaptive
Management in Chapter 9 of the UWR Plan. These updates do not require rule
modification of current status, but rather will serve as a measurement of
progress toward desired status.
(5)
Primary Limiting Factors.
(a) Numerous
factors contribute to the gap between current and desired status of populations
comprising the Upper Willamette River Chinook salmon and steelhead ESUs. Marine
survival of salmon and steelhead associated with ocean conditions is the
largest single factor regulating salmon and steelhead productivity and
abundance. Marine survival is not considered a primary limiting factor for
salmon and steelhead because management has little influence on marine
survival.
(b) The factors generally
causing the gap between current and desired status for the Upper Willamette
River Salmon and Steelhead ESUs that can be managed are:
(A) Impaired fish passage;
(B) Stream habitat complexity including
riparian condition;
(C) Water
quality;
(D) Water
quantity;
(E) Altered
hydrology;
(F) Excessive
sediment;
(G) Harvest;
(H) Hatchery fish interactions; and
(I) Predation.
(c) Primary and secondary limiting factors
are identified for each population in Chapter 5 of the UWR Plan. Staff will
continue to help revise and identify new management actions addressing these
factors to aid in reaching desired status. Staff may analyze the limiting
factors at a finer, more localized scale when selecting or prioritizing
management actions for specific areas. These analyses may find primary and
secondary factors different at a local scale than what was found at the ESU or
population scale.
(6)
Management Strategies. Management strategies to address limiting factors for
each population are identified in Chapter 7 of the UWR Plan. Staff shall
consider and attempt to implement these management strategies designed for the
ESUs as a whole, and for constituent populations as applicable, as mechanisms
to reach the desired status.
(a) Short-term
Strategies (1 to 5 years):
(A) Provide
technical support to local watershed groups to inform them of the primary and
secondary limiting factors at local scales within populations.
(B) Educate and inform watershed groups and
co-managers of the highest priority tributary management actions. Facilitate
implementation of the highest priority tributary habitat actions.
(C) Provide support to oversee the tracking
and reporting of plan action implementation and development of implementation
schedules as called for in Chapter 9 of the UWR Plan.
(D) Implement actions to reduce the abundance
of naturally spawning hatchery fish in those populations where reductions are
called for in Chapter 6 of the Oregon UWR Plan to achieve desired
status.
(E) Conduct analyses to
determine the effect of climate change on individual populations to help
prioritize action implementation.
(b) Additional Long-term Strategies (1 to 25
years):
(A) Work cooperatively with
co-managers to assist Action Agencies in implementing the federal Biological
Opinions that address effects of flood control/hydropower facilties and
operations.
(B) Implement the
research, monitoring and evaluation identified in Chapter 8 of the UWR Plan
within funding and staffing constraints.
(C) Facilitate the implementation of the
adaptive management strategy and framework identified in Chapter 9 of the UWR
Plan.
(D) Collect monitoring data,
conduct analyses, and complete or support reports and assessments documenting
progress toward the desired status goals for the Upper Willamette River
ESUs.
(E) Provide technical support
to, and coordinate with, federal, state and local agencies and groups to
protect existing high quality salmon and steelhead habitat.
(F) Provide technical support to, and
coordinate with, federal, state and local agencies and groups to create
additional high quality salmon and steelhead habitat.
(G) Provide technical and outreach support to
willing landowners that will enhance the maintenance and/or creation of high
quality salmon and steelhead habitat.
(7) Adaptive Management. The Department shall
employ adaptive management principles within its statutory authority in support
of achieving the desired status goal for the ESUs by participating in the
adaptive management and implementation processes defined in Chapter 9 of the
UWR Plan. The Department's contribution to adaptive management of the ESUs by
the state of Oregon will include five elements: research; monitoring;
evaluation; a feedback loop; and reporting.
(a) Research. The Department shall support
high priority research identified in the Plan that addresses uncertainties
related to management strategies and actions needed to achieve desired status.
Research needs at the time of adoption (but which are not intended to be the
exclusive research projects to be pursued) are identified in the UWR Plan in
Chapter 8. Future research needs shall be identified during periodic
assessments of the effectiveness of the UWR Plan.
(b) Monitoring. The Department shall continue
to identify, implement, and support monitoring needed to assess the status of
each ESU and the Chinook salmon and steelhead populations relative to desired
status criteria and evaluate habitat status trends in the Upper Willamette
River ESUs, as funding and staffing allow. Monitoring needs at the time of
adoption are identified in the UWR Plan in Chapter 8. Future monitoring needs
shall be identified during periodic assessments of the effectiveness of the UWR
Plan.
(c) Evaluation. The
Department shall identify and support evaluation needed to determine status
assessment and the effectiveness of management strategies and actions in
achieving their intended outcomes. Evaluation needs at the time of adoption are
identified in the UWR Plan in Chapter 8. Future evaluation needs shall be
identified during periodic assessments of the effectiveness of the UWR
Plan.
(d) Feedback Loop. The
Department shall review the results of reports and assessments identified in
635-500-6575(7)(e)
and modify management strategies and actions as appropriate and within its
statutory authority based on the review results. The Department shall implement
the Adaptive Management processes identified in the Oregon UWR Plan and
recommend to the UWR Recovery and Oregon Plan Core Teams and other agencies or
entities, as necessary, appropriate modifications to management strategies and
actions needed to support attainment of the desired status goals for each ESU.
This feedback shall include refinement of management actions, research,
monitoring and evaluation programs and desired status criteria based on the
best available scientific information.
(e) Reporting. Annual and periodic
evaluations of Plan implementation and ESU status shall be made available to
the public. The Department shall participate in the preparation of annual and 5
year (2016) status reports, the 12 year (2023) ESU assessment of the
effectiveness of the UWR Plan, and additional assessments as necessitated by
new information or significant population declines.
(f) Modifications to the UWR Plan are
required if the fish become listed as endangered under the federal ESA or by
the direction of the UWR Recovery Team in periodic UWR Plan status reports.
These reports by the Recovery Team will serve as an early warning system that
will direct additional monitoring, evaluation, or management actions, if
needed, based on annual review of monitoring data.
(8) Impact on Other Native Fish Species.
Management strategies identified in the UWR Plan are likely to be beneficial to
other native fish species present in the ESUs because they focus on restoring
natural processes. New or modified actions shall consider impacts to other
native species, as appropriate, to minimize harm and optimize
benefits.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.138, 496.146 & 506.119
Stats. Implemented: ORS 506.109 & 506.129
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