Or. Admin. Code § 635-500-6650 - Implementing the Conservation Plan for Fall Chinook Salmon in the Rogue Species Management Unit
(1) Policy. The
Conservation Plan for Fall Chinook Salmon in the Rogue Species Management Unit
of 2012 (Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan, available at Department offices)
implements the Commission's strategy for the management of these populations of
naturally produced native fish by the Department, in cooperation with other
state, federal and local partners. The Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan is
based on the general premise that habitat management and fishery management are
critical to ensure the conservation and enhancement of these populations of
native fish. The Commission believes that habitat management is most likely to
be successful by working cooperatively with other federal, state, and local
management agencies, and by encouraging the maintenance, restoration, and
enhancement of aquatic and riparian habitat as outlined by the Oregon Plan for
Salmon and Watersheds. This rule describes a strategy for the use of Department
statutory authorities to implement the requirements of the Native Fish
Conservation Policy (OAR
635-007-0502 thru
635-007-0505). The Rogue Fall
Chinook Conservation Plan is not intended to be a rigid recipe, but does
prescribe generalized management strategies the Department will pursue; and how
the efficacy of those strategies and allied management actions will be
evaluated.
(2) Species Management
Unit and Population Description. The Species Management Unit (SMU) for Rogue
fall Chinook salmon includes that area of coastal Oregon south of Elk River
(near Port Orford). Based on differences in genetic attributes and
genetic-based life history attributes, fall Chinook salmon (CHF) populations
were assigned to one of two strata: the Rogue Stratum or the Coastal Stratum.
There are five independent CHF populations in the Rogue Stratum (Upper Rogue,
Middle Rogue, Lower Rogue, Applegate, and Illinois) and four independent CHF
populations in the Coastal Stratum (Chetco, Winchuck, Pistol, and
Hunter).
(3) Desired Status. The
desired status goal is to manage Rogue fall Chinook salmon and their habitat so
that:
(a) The population is sustained for a
minimum of 100 years;
(b) The
productive capacity of the habitat is maintained in order to provide
ecological, economic, and cultural benefits; and
(c) The opportunities for sport and
commercial fishers are consistent with population status.
(d) The five measurable criteria that
describe the desired status goal for fall Chinook salmon populations in the
Rogue Stratum are:
(A) Adult
abundance;
(B) Adult migration
timing;
(C) Adult age
composition;
(D) Adult composition
(% hatchery); and
(E) Population
persistence.
(e) The
above measurable criteria are defined in Table 36 of the Desired Biological
Status section of the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan, and are adopted by
reference into this rule. The desired status goal for the Rogue Stratum shall
be judged to be achieved when all of the populations achieve all of the
measurable criteria. Other criteria related to productivity (standardized rate
of population growth) and survival rate to each critical life history stage may
be developed in the future if new information becomes available. Implementation
of any new criteria, or the deletion of any current criteria, will necessitate
modification of this rule.
(f) The
five measurable criteria that describe the desired status goal for fall Chinook
salmon populations in the Coastal Stratum are:
(A) Spawner abundance;
(B) Spawner age composition (Chetco
only);
(C) Spawner composition (%
hatchery);
(D) Juvenile abundance
(Winchuck only); and
(E) Population
persistence.
(g) The
above measurable criteria are defined in Table 37 of the Desired Biological
Status section of the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan, and are adopted by
reference into this rule. The desired status goal for the Coastal Stratum shall
be judged to be achieved when all of the populations achieve all of the
measurable criteria. Other criteria related to productivity (standardized rate
of population growth) and survival rate to each critical life history stage may
be developed in the future if new information becomes available. Implementation
of any new criteria, or the deletion of any current criteria, will necessitate
modification of this rule.
(h) The
desired status goal for the entire SMU shall be judged to be achieved when the
two strata both achieve desired status.
(4) Current Status. The current status of the
Rogue Fall Chinook SMU and constituent independent populations, at the time of
adoption of this rule, is described in Tables 43 and 44 of the Current Status
section of the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan. Criteria used to
characterize current status are structured so as to allow for the direct
comparison of current and desired status of the SMU. The Department shall
annually update the current status of the SMU. Annual updates will serve as a
measurement of progress toward desired status, and thus will not require rule
modification of current status.
(5)
Primary Limiting Factors.
(a) Numerous
factors could, in the future, contribute to the gap between current and desired
status for fall Chinook populations in the Rogue Stratum of the SMU.
(b) At the time of adoption of this
Conservation Plan, manageable primary limiting factors are:
(A) Water temperature of the Rogue River in
summer during adult migration;
(B)
Water temperature of the Rogue River in summer during juvenile
rearing;
(C) The intensity of peak
flows during egg and sac-fry incubation in the gravel:
(D) Brood harvest rates that sometimes exceed
maximum sustained yield: and
(E)
Periodic low spawning escapements that follow poor ocean survival
conditions.
(c) Numerous
factors contribute to gaps between current and desired status for fall Chinook
populations in the Coastal Stratum of the SMU.
(d) At the time of adoption of this
Conservation Plan, manageable primary limiting factors are:
(A) Volume of juvenile rearing habitat in
streams and estuaries;
(B) Water
temperature in streams and in the estuaries during summer;
(C) Habitat quality in the estuaries during
summer:
(D) Brood harvest rates
that sometimes exceed maximum sustained yield: and
(E) Periodic low spawning escapements that
follow poor ocean survival conditions.
(6) Management Strategies. Department staff
shall attempt to implement the following management strategies as mechanisms
designed to maintain desired status. These strategies are directed at primary
and secondary factors that currently limit attainment of desired status, or are
judged to be potential risks to attainment of desired status in future years:
(a) Rogue Stratum Short-term Strategies (1 to
5 years):
(A) Manage recreational and
commercial fisheries to sustain productivity for all populations of naturally
produced fall Chinook salmon, and to provide harvest opportunities for
recreational and commercial fishers.
(B) Manage fall Chinook salmon of hatchery
origin to minimize the risk of genetic changes among naturally produced
fish.
(b) Rogue Stratum
Long-term Strategies (1 to 25 years):
(A)
Support habitat restoration, maintenance, and enhancement programs to ensure
that aquatic and terrestrial habitat is managed to maintain productive
populations of naturally produced fall Chinook salmon.
(B) Develop and support programs designed to
decrease introductions of non-native species into areas inhabited by naturally
produced fall Chinook salmon.
(C)
Decrease rates of predation by introduced species on naturally produced fall
Chinook salmon.
(c)
Coastal Stratum Short-term Strategies (1 to 5 years):
(A) Manage recreational and commercial
fisheries to sustain productivity for all populations of naturally produced
fall Chinook salmon, and to provide harvest opportunities for recreational and
commercial fishers.
(B) Manage fall
Chinook salmon of hatchery origin to minimize the risk of genetic changes among
naturally produced fish.
(d) Coastal Stratum Long-term Strategies (1
to 25 years):
(A) Support habitat restoration,
maintenance, and enhancement programs to ensure that aquatic and terrestrial
habitat is managed to maintain productive populations of naturally produced
fall Chinook salmon.
(B) Develop
and support programs designed to decrease introductions of non-native species
into areas inhabited by naturally produced fall Chinook salmon.
(C) Ensure complete access of fall Chinook
salmon to stream habitat capable of producing full sized smolts. The Department
is authorized to remove or modify natural migration barriers to enhance Chinook
populations at its discretion upon a finding that native fish species would not
be negatively impacted.
(7) Deterioration in Status.
(a) Additional conservation actions, or plan
modification, will be employed by the Department if monitoring, or pre-season
forecasting, indicate that fall Chinook population status has, or will, dropped
below criteria levels defined in Tables 48 and 49 of the Criteria Indicating
Deterioration in Status section of the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan;
and are adopted by reference into this rule.
(b) Additional conservation actions to be
taken will be dependent on Department assessments that predict:
(A) Which criteria will be reached:
and
(B) The degree of criteria
deterioration.
(c)
Implementation of any new criteria, or the deletion of any current criteria,
will necessitate modification of this rule.
(8) Adaptive Management. The Department shall
employ adaptive management principles within its statutory authority in support
of achieving the desired status goal for the Rogue Fall Chinook SMU and
constituent fall Chinook populations. The adaptive management approach employed
by the Department will include five elements: research; monitoring; evaluation;
reporting; and modification of corrective strategies.
(a)
Research. The Department
shall identify and support research that, as funding and staffing allows,
addresses uncertainties related to management strategies and actions needed to
achieve desired status. Research needs, at the time of plan adoption, are
identified in the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan (but which are not
intended to be the exclusive research projects to be pursued). Future research
needs may be identified, or research needs described at the time of plan
adoption may be modified, as a result of periodic assessments of the Rogue Fall
Chinook Conservation Plan.
(b)
Monitoring. The Department shall identify, implement, and
support monitoring, as funding and staffing allow, needed to assess fall
Chinook population and SMU status relevant to desired status criteria, current
status criteria, and criteria indicating significant deterioration in status.
Future monitoring needs may be identified during periodic assessments of the
Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan.
(c) Evaluation. The Department shall identify
and support evaluation that is needed, as funding and staffing allows, to
determine the effectiveness of management strategies and actions in achieving
intended outcomes. Future evaluation needs may be identified, or evaluation
needs described at the time of plan adoption may be modified, as a result of
periodic assessments of the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan.
(d)
Reporting. The
Department will develop, and will make available to the public:
(A) Annual reports of fall Chinook population
and SMU status. Annual reports will present:
(i) Current fall Chinook population and SMU
status as assessed by monitoring;
(ii) A summary of results from research or
evaluation activities; and
(iii)
Department rationale associated with any adaptive changes made to management
actions.
(B) Summary
reports of fall Chinook population and SMU status every five years. Summary
reports will outline progress made towards attainment of desired status; and
(C) Comprehensive assessments of
the Conservation Plan efficacy. Comprehensive assessments of plan efficacy will
be completed for intervals that do not exceed 15 years, beginning with the year
2027.
(9)
Process to Modify Strategies.
(a) In the
event Department assessments indicate that criteria indicative of status
deterioration will likely be realized, the Department will craft management
options to address the need to temporarily modify the Rogue Fall Chinook
Conservation Plan. These options will be presented in the annual report, and
the Department will solicit public input prior to selection of a course of
action.
(b) In the event that a
status review indicates that management strategies should be modified to ensure
attainment of desired status, or in the event of critical changes in local,
state, or federal laws, the Department will develop revised options for
management strategies to address the need to modify the Rogue Fall Chinook
Conservation Plan. These options will be presented in a special report, and the
Department will solicit public input prior to selection of a course of
action.
(c) Specific management
actions for management strategies adopted into rule may be modified by the
Department under the principle of adaptive management.
(d) Actions may be revised to improve
performance, or actions may be terminated and be replaced by other actions that
are determined to be more effective.
(e) Rationale associated with any changes in
management actions will be detailed in annual status reports developed by the
Department, and where applicable, will be linked to findings from monitoring,
evaluation, and research efforts.
(10) Impact on Other Native Fish Species.
Management strategies identified in the Rogue Fall Chinook Conservation Plan
are likely to be collectively neutral or somewhat beneficial to other native
fish species present in the SMU. New or modified management actions shall
consider projected impacts to other native species of fish and if needed, will
be modified to ensure compliance with:
(a)
Department policy; and
(b) State,
federal, and local laws.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.138, 496.146 & 506.119
Stats. Implemented: ORS 506.109 & 506.129
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