Contacts:
Alice Low, DFG Senior Fishery Biologist, (916) 323-9583
Harry Morse, DFG Office of Communications, (916) 838-4410
DFG Using State-of-the-Art Technology to Tag and Track Salmon
SACRAMENTO - The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) is employing new
computerized technology to track 8 million baby fall-run Chinook salmon
raised in Central Valley hatcheries. Information from coded wire tags
implanted in the young fish will help fisheries managers make decisions
regarding California's multi-million dollar commercial and sport
salmon fishery. This marking and tagging process is currently underway
at the Nimbus Salmon Hatchery in Rancho Cordova.
"We are pleased to see this important project is under way to produce
strategic information on Central Valley salmon," said DFG State
Fisheries Manager Neil Manji. "This collaborative project will yield
critical data for improving the long-term management of fall-run Chinook
salmon in the Central Valley."
Information on salmon survival and return is critical to salmon
managers as they seek to stop the depletion of Central Valley fall-run
Chinook salmon stocks. This year's salmon fishing closures on Central
Valley salmon stocks will cost California an estimated $279 million in
lost revenue and 2,690 jobs.
This year, DFG is using four state-of-the-art AutoFish System
processing trailers that can mark and tag up to 350,000 young salmon in
a day. The cooperative program is spearheaded by DFG and includes the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Pacific States Marine Fisheries
Commission. The CALFED Ecosystem Restoration Program provided more than
$6.7 million for initial equipment purchases and the first two years of
project operations in 2007 and 2008. Beginning this year, operational
costs of the program are funded by the hatchery mitigation agencies: The
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the California Department of Water Resources
and the East Bay Municipal Utilities District.
The new tagging program provides a consistent rate of marking and
tagging for Central Valley hatcheries, thus helping biologists track
harvest rates in the ocean and inland fisheries. The data collected are
used to calculate the proportion of spawning hatchery and natural fish
returning to the Central Valley, which affects season setting and
harvest quotas in California's multimillion dollar commercial and
sport salmon fishery.
At the DFG Nimbus Fish Hatchery in Rancho Cordova, more than 4 million
young salmon, called "smolts," are currently being tagged and
marked. Work is expected to be finished this week.
Salmon have already been marked and tagged at the Feather River,
Mokelumne River, Nimbus and Coleman National Fish hatcheries. Nimbus
Hatchery is the last of the Central Valley hatcheries to complete the
process. At its conclusion, the state will have met its goal of tagging
and releasing 8 million tagged fish. Central Valley hatcheries release
more than 32 million fall-run Chinook salmon annually.