Abstract
Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. experience multiple small-scale disturbances throughout their freshwater habitat, but the cumulative effect of these disturbances is often not known or not easily quantifiable. One such disturbance is water diversions, which can entrain fish and alter streamflow regimes. Threatened Lemhi River (Idaho) Chinook salmon O. tshawytscha smolts encounter 41–71 water diversions during their out-migration. We used passive integrated transponder tag data to model the entrainment rate of Chinook salmon smolts as a function of the proportion of water removed by an irrigation diversion. Under median-streamflow conditions with unscreened diversions, the estimated cumulative effect of the diversions was a loss of 71.1% of out-migrating smolts due to entrainment. This is a large potential source of mortality, but screening is an effective mitigation strategy, as estimated mortality was reduced to 1.9% when all diversions were screened. If resources are limited, targeting the diversions that remove a large amount of water and diversions in locations with high fish encounter rates is most effective. Our modeling approach could be used to quantify the entrainment effects of water diversions and set screening priorities for other watersheds.
Received October 28, 2011; accepted March 19, 2012
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Michael Ciscell and Morgan Case (IDWR) for providing the water rights GIS layers and guidance on how to analyze them; we also thank Bryan Nordlund, Paul McElhany, Al Zale, Tim Grabowski, and two anonymous reviewers for providing helpful comments on the manuscript. A.W.W. was supported by a National Research Council research associateship. The use of trade or product names does not constitute endorsement by the U.S. Government.