Th-306A-11
Genetic-Based Estimates of Adult Chinook Salmon Spawner Adundance from Carcass Surveys and Juvenile out-Migrant Traps

Thursday, August 21, 2014: 11:50 AM
306A (Centre des congrès de Québec // Québec City Convention Centre)
Scott Blankenship , Genidaqs, A Cramer Fish Sciences business, West Sacramento, CA
Daniel Rawding , Science, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, White Salmon, WA
Cameron Sharpe , Fisheries Division, Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, Corvallis, OR
Due to the challenges associated with monitoring in riverine environments, unbiased and precise spawner abundance estimates are often lacking for populations of Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. listed under the Federal Endangered Species Act. We investigated new genetic approaches to estimate the 2009 spawner abundance for a population of Columbia River Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha via genetic mark–recapture and rarefaction curves. The marks were the genotyped carcasses collected from the spawning area during the first sampling event. The second sampling event consisted of a collection of juveniles from a downstream migrant trap located below the spawning area. The parents that assigned to the juveniles through parentage analysis were considered the recaptures, which was a subset of the genotypes captured in the second sample. Using the Petersen estimator, the genetic mark–recapture spawner abundance estimates based on the binomial and hypergeometric models were 910 and 945 Chinook Salmon, respectively. These results were in agreement with independently derived spawner abundance estimates based on redd counts, area-under-the-curve, and Jolly–Seber methods. Our genetic-based approaches provide new alternatives to estimate adult Pacific salmon abundance in challenging environmental conditions or for populations with poor or unknown estimates of precision.