Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: stsfisher on January 09, 2021, 07:06:47 AM
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Is anyone able to find the 1999-2000 Chilliwack/Vedder telemetry study done on steelhead? Seems it has either been moved or taken off the web? I did just find it last week but searches bring up nothing when you click for access today?
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/appsdata/acat/documents/r7003/ChilliwackSteelhead_Nelsonetal2004_1147453320035_f5d6b7c48e5149a085e3a9784657fed0.pdf
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Who knows what happened to the government document portal? When that was setup it was supposedly info that belonged to all of us as citizens of British Columbia. Your link had the author and the rough date so I just googled it and :
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253884743_Behavior_and_Survival_of_Wild_and_Hatchery-Origin_Winter_Steelhead_Spawners_Caught_and_Released_in_a_Recreational_Fishery
your can download the pdf though I think you have to join research gate which is free. Most of the more recent papers you can get from the various fisheries journals but have to pay for a download, otherwise you can settle for the article abstract that gives a thumbnail of the article content.
Abstract:
Behavior and Survival of Wild and Hatchery-Origin Winter Steelhead Spawners Caught and Released in a Recreational Fishery. Nelson/Rosenau/Johnston
North American Journal of Fisheries Management25:931–943, 2005[Article] Copyright by the American Fisheries Society 2005
Mandatory catch and release of wild fish and supplementation with hatchery-reared fish are commonly used to sustain sport fisheries on low-abundance populations of wild steelhead.However, their effectiveness in limiting angling mortality on wild fish is uncertain. We radio-tagged 226 (125 wild, 101 hatchery) angled adult steelhead Oncorhynchus mykissn ear the mouth of the Vedder2Chilliwack River, British Columbia, in 1999 and 2000 and monitored their sub-sequent movements to determine survival to spawning and overlap in the distributions of inferred holding sites, spawning sites, and spawning times. The distributions of prespawning holding sites did not differ between wild and hatchery fish in either year, but spawning locations differed.Holding and spawning sites used by hatchery fish were restricted to the lower two-thirds of the river, downstream of the hatchery where they were reared but well upstream of their smolt release site. Wild fish spawned throughout the watershed. Spawning times did not differ between wild and hatchery fish, but varied with run timing. The maximum mortality from the initial catch and release and radio-tagging was 1.4% in 1999 and 5.8% in 2000; true mortality rates were lower because tag regurgitation was indistinguishable from death. The fishery subsequently killed 2.5%of tagged wild fish and harvested 20% (1999) and 43% (2000) of the hatchery fish. Seventy-two tagged fish were recaptured and released in the sport fishery up to three times without any mortality before spawning. Hatchery fish were recaptured at twice the rate of wild fish. At least 92% of unharvested fish spawned, and 75% of successful spawners survived to emigrate from the water-shed. The incidence of post spawning death did not vary with the frequency of capture and release.Catch-and-release angling imposed small costs in terms of survival; however, behavioral differences existed between adult wild fish and the adult F1progeny of wild fish reared to smolt stage in a hatchery.
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Try this link to the EcoCat posting. It looks like your link is missing a portion ... http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r7003/ChilliwackSteelhead_Nelsonetal2004_1147453320035_f5d6b7c48e5149a085e3a9784657fed0.pdf (http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r7003/ChilliwackSteelhead_Nelsonetal2004_1147453320035_f5d6b7c48e5149a085e3a9784657fed0.pdf)
A couple more that you may be interested in ...
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r1568/ChilliwackAdultReport2000_ARL337-4__1097005167990_1ab3ba1501854265bfe6a6d51be175e5.pdf
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r2210/chilliwack_adult_2001_1106349746675_e5c96f8eb41e4f4b8c1eb5150a80e5f7.pdf
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r58622/1_1588266216116_8265780657.pdf
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Who knows what happened to the government document portal? When that was setup it was supposedly info that belonged to all of us as citizens of British Columbia. Your link had the author and the rough date so I just googled it and :
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253884743_Behavior_and_Survival_of_Wild_and_Hatchery-Origin_Winter_Steelhead_Spawners_Caught_and_Released_in_a_Recreational_Fishery
your can download the pdf though I think you have to join research gate which is free. Most of the more recent papers you can get from the various fisheries journals but have to pay for a download, otherwise you can settle for the article abstract that gives a thumbnail of the article content.
Abstract:
Thanks Ralph, these are the only ones I was able to find as well.
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Try this link to the EcoCat posting. It looks like your link is missing a portion ... http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r7003/ChilliwackSteelhead_Nelsonetal2004_1147453320035_f5d6b7c48e5149a085e3a9784657fed0.pdf (http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r7003/ChilliwackSteelhead_Nelsonetal2004_1147453320035_f5d6b7c48e5149a085e3a9784657fed0.pdf)
A couple more that you may be interested in ...
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r1568/ChilliwackAdultReport2000_ARL337-4__1097005167990_1ab3ba1501854265bfe6a6d51be175e5.pdf
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r2210/chilliwack_adult_2001_1106349746675_e5c96f8eb41e4f4b8c1eb5150a80e5f7.pdf
http://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/documents/r58622/1_1588266216116_8265780657.pdf
Thank you Firebird
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Ecological Reports catalog: https://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/public/welcome.do
that was once accessible through the Document portal. Thanks for the assistance Firebird.
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Ecological Reports catalog: https://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/acat/public/welcome.do
that was once accessible through the Document portal. Thanks for the assistance Firebird.
👍
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Is there anyone on this board who has access to the authors of those reports to find out if: tissue/scale samples were taken? or if any DNA testing was done?
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Is there anyone on this board who has access to the authors of those reports to find out if: tissue/scale samples were taken? or if any DNA testing was done?
There were no samples taken for DNA in that study and I'm not aware of any DNA sampling done for C/V steelhead. The only sampling of adult steelhead I know of, other than scales, is a small sample of fish analysed for Parvicapsula minibicornis, a parasite affecting Cultus Lake sockeye at the time. They did not have it.
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I came across this recently and found it interesting in light of current discussions about the regulation change proposals and old studies. I'm also testing whether I can share files from my OneDrive. https://1drv.ms/b/s!AuXiKvW-aydmg5M9sN1qbL6BZEvfRg?e=cmOJeC (https://1drv.ms/b/s!AuXiKvW-aydmg5M9sN1qbL6BZEvfRg?e=cmOJeC)
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I came across this recently and found it interesting in light of current discussions about the regulation change proposals and old studies. I'm also testing whether I can share files from my OneDrive. https://1drv.ms/b/s!AuXiKvW-aydmg5M9sN1qbL6BZEvfRg?e=cmOJeC (https://1drv.ms/b/s!AuXiKvW-aydmg5M9sN1qbL6BZEvfRg?e=cmOJeC)
It worked. Thanks for the flashback.