Trout Reduction Efforts
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Findings from the Natal Origins Project (NO) Project
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Removals at the Little Colorado RiverDuring 2003–2006, over 23,000 nonnative fish, including rainbow trout (19,020; 82 percent) and brown trout (479; 2 percent), were removed from a 9.4-mile reach of the Colorado River near the LCR confluence (Coggins and others, 2011). Concurrent with mechanical removal, mark-recapture studies within a control reach of river 20 miles upstream of the removal reach demonstrated a system-wide decline in both rainbow trout and brown trout that was unrelated to the fish removal effort. During this same period, a rapid shift in fish community composition was observed in the LCR reach (the mainstem Colorado River upstream and downstream of the LCR; see reach 2 in fig. 1), from one dominated by cold-water salmonids (>90 percent), to one dominated by native fishes and the nonnative fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) (>90 percent). Thus, our understanding of the efficacy of mechanical removal was confounded by an external systemic decline, particularly in 2005–2006 (Coggins and others, 2011). Another removal effort took place in 2009, with around 2,500 nonnative fishes removed from the LCR reach (Makinster and Avery, 2010). Subsequent electrofishing in the LCR reach showed that the number of rainbow trout and brown trout was higher after 2008 (fig. 4; Makinster and others, 2010), but the catch rate declined for rainbow trout and brown trout after 2014. The average catch per trip (based only on the first two passes of electrofishing to standardize across years) for rainbow trout was 209, 294, 460, 67, 18, and 56 between 2012 and 2017, and 2, 10, 5, 2, 0.3, and 2 for brown trout over the same period (C.J. Yackulic, GCMRC, written commun., April 3, 2018). [2]
Bright Angel Creek RemovalsA second effort to control nonnative fish, specifically brown trout, was implemented in 2002 in Bright Angel Creek. As recently as the 1970s, rainbow trout dominated the fish community in Bright Angel Creek and brown trout were rare (Minckley, 1978), despite this tributary having been stocked with brown trout, twice in 1930 and once in 1934. After the 1990s, however, brown trout became a predominant component of the fish community in the creek, and a corresponding decline in native fish such as speckled dace (Rhinichthys osculus) was observed (Otis, 1994). Bright Angel Creek is now a principal spawning site for brown trout, and an aggregation is found in the Colorado River near the confluence with Bright Angel Creek (fig. 3; Valdez and Ryel, 1995; Makinster and others, 2010). In an attempt to restore the native fish community of Bright Angel Creek and to reduce the threat of predation to humpback chub in the Colorado River, a program of mechanical removal of nonnative trout from Bright Angel Creek was implemented. From November 2002 to January 2003, a weir was operated near the creek mouth, which resulted in the capture of over 400 brown trout as part of an initial feasibility study (Leibfried and others, 2005; fig. 5). In 2006, the Bright Angel Creek Trout Reduction Project Environmental Assessment (EA) and Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI; National Park Service, 2006) identified goals and a strategy for reducing numbers of brown trout. This project was initiated in cooperation with the USFWS in 2006–2007 (National Park Service, 2006; Sponholtz and others, 2010) following the feasibility study. This effort was resumed in 2010 (Omana-Smith and others, 2012) following the 2008 and 2011 Biological Opinions on Operation of Glen Canyon Dam (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2008 and 2011) that identified conservation measures to conduct trout reduction in Bright Angel Creek and to establish multiple self-sustaining populations of humpback chub in Grand Canyon tributaries (Valdez and others, 2000). [3] Current operations under the Bright Angel Creek trout control project were established through the NPS Comprehensive Fisheries Management Plan (CFMP; National Park Service, 2013a). From 2010–2012 trout reduction efforts included installation and operation of a weir and backpack electrofishing in the lower 2900 meters (m) of the creek (confluence to Phantom Creek; Omana-Smith and others, 2012). Beginning in fall of 2012, removal efforts were expanded to encompass the entire length of Bright Angel Creek (~16 kilometers [km]) and Roaring Springs (~1.5 km). The operation of the weir was extended from October through February to capture greater temporal variability in the trout spawn (Omana-Smith and others, 2012; National Park Service, 2013b). Electrofishing removal efforts, led by NPS and GCMRC, also occurred in the mainstem Colorado River in the Bright Angel Creek inflow in 2013 to 2016 (C. Nelson, USGS, oral commun., January 27, 2016). The brown trout removal effort in Bright Angel Creek proper has continued annually from 2010 to 2017 (Schelly and others, 2017). Across the most recent five seasons of removal, encompassing the entire Bright Angel Creek drainage, brown trout captures have declined steadily and considerably from 12,467 fish per year in 2012–13 to 4,902 in 2016–17, despite a similar level of effort each year. This decline has been most pronounced in age-2 and larger fish, with cohorts of age-1 fish produced in the previous season remaining fairly stable from year to year (fig. 6). A large cohort of age-0 fish was apparent in the winter of 2013–2014, perhaps a result of compensatory survival following removal of larger brown trout. Similar relative declines were seen in rainbow trout, which were also removed, while native fish abundance and upstream extent increased, particularly in speckled dace (B. Healy, NPS, written commun., March 5, 2018). [4] |
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