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Oregon’s Coastal Plan: A Walk on the Wild (and Hatchery) Side AFS Hatchery/Wild Symposium Ed Bowles ODFW Lessons in: Conservation science Fish management Social/political engagement
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Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Mar 24, 2022

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Page 1: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Oregon’s Coastal Plan:A Walk on the Wild (and Hatchery) Side

AFS Hatchery/Wild

Symposium

Ed Bowles

ODFW

Lessons in:

• Conservation science

• Fish management

• Social/political engagement

Page 2: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Native Fish Conservation Policy

Goals

• Prevent serious depletion of native species

… so that natural production of native fish

is sustainable.

• Maintain and restore naturally produced

native fish species … to provide substantial

ecological, economic and cultural benefits…

• Foster and sustain opportunities for sport,

commercial and tribal fishers consistent

with conservation...

Page 3: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Conservation and Recovery Plans Completed or in progress

Plans for 22 of 28

anadromous

salmonid species

completed by 2015

Shifting from

planning to

implementation

Page 4: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

What’s different about this plan?

Jay Nicholas

• Multispecies

• None ESA listed

• Conservation & use

• Portfolio approach

Page 5: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Planning Area and Species

• Chinook

• Spring Chinook

• Winter Steelhead

• Summer Steelhead

• Chum

• Coastal Cutthroat

• Coho

Page 6: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Public Involvement

• Nearly 2-yr process

• Professional facilitation

• Stakeholder Teams

• Town Hall meetings

• Legislative hearings

• Commission meetings

Page 7: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Common Ground and Tensions (necessary for progress)

• Legislative fix

• Hatchery in every garage

vs

• Hatchery/harvest litigation

• ESA listings

• Love fish

• Support fishing

• Want good habitat

• Want vibrant economies

Page 8: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Let’s get planning!

Start with

best

available

science

Page 9: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

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Bayes’ theorem of conditional probability

can improve PVA

data parameters

likelihood

prior

evidence

Page 10: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Intrinsic Productivity ()

Ric

ke

r

2 4 6 8 10

0.00005

0.0001

0.00015

Page 11: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Productivity

Ca

pa

city (N

eq )

4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 201000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

Productivity

Ca

pa

city (N

eq )

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 111000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

11000

Extinction P

robabili

ty

95% Highest Probability Density Interval

Equili

brium

Abundance (

Neq

)

Productivity

Page 12: Oregon’s Coastal Plan
Page 13: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Species and Status

Chinook Spring

Chinook

Chum

Winter

Steelhead

Summer

Steelhead

Coastal

Cutthroat

Page 14: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Status and Limiting Factors

• Current Status – remarkably good (except for chum and a

few populations), though caution is

warranted

• Desired Status – improve to ensure conservation and

support fishing

• Limiting Factors

- Hatchery: Yes (a few locations)

- Harvest: Chinook, Spring Chinook

- Other Species: Predation (pinnipeds, birds, non-native fish)

- Habitat: Yes!

Page 15: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Hatchery Actions

Improved Conservation

• Consolidate some programs (5)

• Reduce some hatchery releases (3)

• Reduce hatchery fish on spawning

grounds

• Designate wild fish emphasis areas

Improved Opportunity

• Increase some hatchery releases

(11)

• Add some new hatchery programs

(3 ChS)

• Recognize hatchery emphasis

areas

Page 16: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Wild Fish Emphasis

1 Hatchery Program

2 Hatchery Programs

3-4 Hatchery Programs

N M U M-S Total

40

30

20

10

6M

5M

4M

3M

2M

1M

Releases

Programs

c

u

r

r

e

n

t

C

M

P

Hatchery Portfolio

Page 17: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Harvest Actions

Improved Conservation

• Sliding-scale harvest (wild)

• Protective periods (early run

Chinook)

• Critical thresholds

Improved Opportunity

• Sliding-scale harvest

• Stable wild coho fisheries

• New wild StW harvest (3)

• New ChS fisheries (3)

Page 18: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Predators Habitat

RM&E

Page 19: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Example Focus Area: Elk River Chinook

• Status: red to green

• Reduce H:W spawners

• Reduce H prod

• Improve homing

• Increase H harvest;

reduce W harvest

• Improve estuary habitat

• Improve upland habitat

• Increased RM&E

• Stakeholder partnerships

Page 20: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Passionate Participants

ODFW anti-hatchery bias• Close fisheries

• Shut down communities

• Economic collapse

ODFW anti-wild bias• Hatcheries everywhere

• Genetic/ecological collapse

• Wild fish armageddon

ODFW conservation/use mandate• Blend of wild & hatchery emphasis areas

• Hatchery/harvest reform

• Better conservation, better fishing

Page 21: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

Outcomes…

• Portfolio of hatchery and wild fish emphasis areas

• Largest codified “wild fish only” area in lower 48

• Sliding scale harvest

• Habitat emphasis

• $3.5M Monitoring

• Hatchery BMPs

• OHRC

• Public/political support

Page 22: Oregon’s Coastal Plan

http://www.dfw.state.or.us/fish/CRP/coastal_multispecies.asp

Questions?