Survival of Juvenile Chinook Salmon Passing the Bonneville Dam Spillway in 2007
2008
Citations Over Time
Gene R. Ploskey, Mark A. Weiland, James S. Hughes, Shon A. Zimmerman, Robin E. Durham, Eric S. Fischer, Jin-A Kim, R. L. Townsend, John R. Skalski, Rebecca A. Buchanan, R. Lynn McComas
Abstract
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Portland District (CENWP) funds numerous evaluations of fish passage and survival on the Columbia River. In 2007, the CENWP asked Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to conduct an acoustic telemetry study to estimate the survival of juvenile Chinook salmon passing the spillway at Bonneville Dam. This report documents the study results which are intended to be used to improve the conditions juvenile anadromous fish experience when passing through the dams that the Corps operates on the river.
Related Papers
- → Survival of Puget Sound chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in response to climate-induced competition with pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha)(2004)70 cited
- → Development of underwater recorders to quantify predation of juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in a river environment(2016)19 cited
- Genetic variation in chinook, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha , and coho, O. Kisutch</i?, salmon from the north coast of Washington(1987)
- → A tool to identify pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha)×Chinook salmon (O. tshawytscha) hybrids in the St. Marys River, Michigan–Ontario(2010)1 cited
- → Death Of A Salmon: An Investigation Of The Processes Affecting Survival And Migration Of Juvenile Yearling Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus Tshawytscha) In The Lower Columbia River And Ocean Plume(2014)1 cited