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Location: Coldwater River Project Summary
In the spring of 2006 the FSWP funded the Nicola Tribal Association to conduct a smolt migration project on Interior Fraser coho on the Coldwater River. This project is also a valuable component to PSF’s Coldwater River Recovery Plan. Through strategic placement and monitoring via a rotary screw trap, the stock assessment project aims to find out how many juvenile coho and steelhead smolts head to the ocean in order to better inform future habitat restoration projects. 1. Continue on previous years assessment work of juvenile coho emigrating from the Coldwater River Final Results A five-foot rotary screw trap (RST) was operated in the Coldwater River at Merritt, BC during the period 24 April to 19 June 2006. Similar to 2005, the single RST was utilized to capture and mark juvenile fish as well as to re-capture the marked (caudal and/or dorsal fin-clipped) juvenile fish. A mark-recapture estimator was used to obtain total population estimates for coho and rainbow/steelhead using the Spius Creek Hatchery adipose-clipped fish (coho) released in the Coldwater River, and caudal/dorsal-clipped fish marked, released upstream, and re-captured at the RST.
Location: Fraser River Basin, Project Summary
To develop a watershed matrix to be used as a coarse filter in the selection of high priority funding areas under the Living Rivers Strategy (LRS). Two key LRS Program Delivery areas were the focus: Final Results This Salmon Watershed Prioritization Matrix (SWPM) was developed in fairly short order (<2 weeks) to quickly inform the PSF for a proposal submission to the British Columbia Government. Therefore, it was not possible to thoroughly populate the matrix with all desired data. Nevertheless, due to the availability of recent literature and analyses containing watershed-specific or stock-specific data, a good portion of the SWPM was completed to a draft stage that is believed to be sufficient for initial (2006) planning.
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