The Eel River Salmon Restoration Project has monitored portions of the South Fork Eel River since 1983. Our survey work focused mainly on salmon and steelhead populations. Walking the creeks during spawning season (November through March) and counting fish and redds (fish nests) is one way to track adult population trends. As well, we used various "downstream migrant" (DSM) fish-trap designs, allowing us to monitor natural production of salmon and steelhead in their native habitats. In addition, the DSM trap allows us to study "nongame" species (fish, amphibians, reptiles and crayfish) as well. From 1983 to 2005 we operated a fyke-entrance adult fish trap and weir system on Redwood Creek. This adult trap site allowed us to gather measurements from steelhead, coho salmon, Chinook salmon, and chum salmon returning to spawn. This fish trap allowed us to take fertilized eggs for our small-scale natal conservation hatchery and enabled us to supply fertilized salmon eggs to local school children for educational purposes. Sadly, due to recent government policy decisions, we are no longer operating the adult fish trap to collect data and provide salmon eggs to local area school children.
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As habitat quality in Sproul Creek improves further, we might expect a future where the ratio of juvenile coho salmon in the system will increase relative to a decreasing ratio of juvenile steelhead, trending increasingly towards a coho-dominated system. Also increasingly cleaner spawning gravels, having a higher production capacity for salmonid fry and macro-invertebrates, will continue to provided more food directly for juvenile salmonids. This should result in increasing growth rates and larger overall size of fish prior to downstream migration (with the accompanying higher survival rates that larger fish enjoy) on their way to the salty estuary and finally into the ocean world that awaits. As such, we are measuring responses of organisms to biological and physical interactions that comprise an ever changing environment of various multi-cyclic feedback loops. It is our hope that restoration activities and better land-use practices will continue to push feedback loops in a positive direction, compatible with the ever-changing natural cycles.
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For more information: www.hits.org/salmon98
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TOC for Forest & River News, Winter 2007





