The Coded-Wire Tag Program: Regional Overview. Coded Wire Tags: Tiny Tool for Stock Identification...

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The Coded-Wire Tag Program:

Regional Overview

Coded Wire Tags: Tiny Tool for Stock Identification

– Stainless steel micro-tag– Introduced in late 1960s – Replaced fin clips for stock id – Placed in nasal cartilage– Originally binary coding scheme– Adipose clip used ~ 3 decades as

external flag for tagged fish– Present: Use of electronic detection:

Ad clip now flag for hatchery fish

Major Advantages of CWTs

– Small size (0.25 x 1.1 mm)– Ease of application– Very low tag loss– Vast number of codes– Low cost (14 cents/tag applied)– Biological compatibility– Very minimal impact on

survival

Format of New Decimal CWTs (Laser Etched)

CWT Quality Today

• Tag 16/58/09 made 11 April 2002

Types of CWT Marking Studies1) Management Objectives

– Stock contribution (fisheries viewpoint); Harvest allocation; Survival trends; Escapement

2) Hatchery and Wildstock Evaluation– Stock contribution to the various fisheries

coastwide; Straying; Age composition, etc.

3) Experimental Comparisons– Diets, release sites, time of release, density, etc

4) Habitat Evaluation

Relevance of CWT Information to the NWPPC’s Fish & Wildlife Program

• The CWT is the stock ID tool used coastwide for evaluating survival rates and status of salmonid stocks.

• It serves a wide variety of F&W Program purposes, including: – Hatchery monitoring and evaluation– Adult and juvenile migration patterns– Evaluate and monitor harvest

• Coastwide harvest management closely intertwined with the mission of the F&W Program; and is critical to protecting Columbia River stocks in trouble.

• Federal ESA depends on CWT marked hatchery fish as indicators for wild listed stocks.

CWT Tagging Programs

Tagging Trailer in Action at Hatchery

Tagging Crew at work removing adipose fin and inserting CWT into the snouts of smolts

NMT’s ‘AutoFish System’ Marking Trailers, with Fish Guidance Trays

Volitional Entry of Juvenile Fish into the Auto Clipping and Marking System

AutoFish System with View of Tagging Machines (blue units)

Scale of Coastwide CWT Tagging Program

• 50 million tagged smolts released coastwide each year at a cost of ~$7.5 million

• Over 1,200 new codes involving hundreds of studies

• Chinook tagging levels are highest at 39 million; Coho levels at 9-10 million

• 54 federal, state and tribal fisheries agencies plus private entities now tag fish

Principal Tagging Facilities

• Tagging programs are carried out at over 330 federal, state, tribal, and private hatcheries and rearing facilities on the west coast, including Canada

• Wild stocks also captured and tagged at numerous sites

Oregon Facilities Releasing CWT’ed Fish

Washington’s Coastal and Columbia River

Hatcheries (excluding southern Puget Sound)

Scale of CWT Tagging Programin the Columbia Basin

• 18-20 million of the 50 million chinook and coho tagged annually come from the Columbia Basin

• Of those, ~6-7 million tags were directly funded by BPA in 2003

• On a coastwide basis, BPA funds an estimated 13% of the 50 million tags released annually

BPA Funded CWT Tagging Programs in the Columbia Basin

• Prior to 1989, many hatcheries released chinook and coho without tagged groups

• In 1989 BPA began to fund tagging the “Missing Production” groups at ODFW, WDFW and USFWS hatcheries

• In 2000, projects renamed “Annual Stock Assessment - CWT” to avoid former confusing name

CWT Recovery Programs

CWT Recovery ProgramBPA Project 198201301

• Ongoing data collection/management program• Five component projects: ODFW, WDFW, PSMFC• Tag Recovery Sampling Programs

– Columbia Basin sport and commercial fisheries jointly sampled by ODFW and WDFW

• Buoy 10 to Priest Rapids Dam (397 miles)– Oregon ocean fisheries (commercial and sport) by

ODFW (~1/4 cost of sampling funded by BPA)• Tag Extraction: ODFW’s Clackamas Tag Recovery Lab• Data management: PSMFC’s Mark Center• Combined 2005 Funding Level: $2,028,757

Commercial Harvest Zones Below McNary Dam

M iles

0 15 30

N

Astoria

Portland

BonnevilleDam Dalles

Dam

John DayDam

McNaryDam

TREATY INDIAN SET NET FISHERY140 M iles O pen to Com m ercia l F ish ing

Zone 6Drift G ill Net Fishery

Zones 1-5

140 M iles O pen to Com m ercia l F ish ing

DeschutesRiver

John DayRiver

UmatillaRiver

61

62

63

1 2

3

4 5O REG O N

Washington

COLUM BIA RIVER

Pac

ific

Oce

an

Com mercial F ishing Zones on the Columbia R iver Below M cNary Dam.

Rock Creek

WillametteRiver

Sport Fisheries Sampling Sections Below Bonneville Dam

N

EnlargedArea

Lewis River

Cowlitz River

Kalama River

I-5 Bridge

Washougal River

W illamette River

Sandy River

Clatskanie River

Bonneville Dam(River Mile 146)

Oregon

Washington

Astoria Bridge

10

9 8

7

6

5

4

32 1

Recreational Sam pling Sections on the Colum bia R iver Below Bonneville Dam

Buoy 10

Oregon Ports and Ocean Management Areas for Salmon Fisheries

Flowchart for

Columbia River CWT

Recovery Programs

Columbia RiverCommercial Catch

CWT Sampling(ODFW, WDFW, USFWS, NMFS)

ODFWFish Tickets

WDFWFish Tickets

SnoutsTaken

SamplingData

ODFWHead Lab

ODFW Biometrics SectionData Processing & Validation

Regional MarkProcessing CenterOther Agencies

ODFW Clackamas Tag Recovery Lab

ODFW Tag Recovery LabClackamas, Oregon

• Extract and decode CWTs from fish heads recovered in the sampled fisheries, etc.

• Verify and report CWT tag data to ODFW’s data management and to PSMFC’s Regional Mark Information System (RMIS)

Number of Heads Processed by ODFW’s Tag Recovery Lab during 2003 -2005

YearHatcheryReturns

RiverSport

SpawningGround

Comm.Gillnet

Ocean Spt & Troll Totals

2003 12,527 2,383 1,006 8,793 9,710 34,419

2004 15,500 2,818 1,534 5,831 11,935 37,618

2005 20,153 1,574 785 14,809 6,801 44,122

Sampled Heads Brought into the Lab in Frozen and/or Formaldehye Soaked

Halving the Head, Cut by Cut, Until the CWT is Found

Checking Halved Samples to Isolate the CWT

Final Phase of Recovering Tag

Reading the Tag Code under a Microscope

Coding on Tag Easily Read on TV Monitor Screen

Ongoing Challenges for the Clackamas Tag Recovery Lab

• The processed heads represent samples taken from fisheries, spawning grounds, and hatchery rack returns over multiple years (e.g. 2005 work covered 2002-2005 samples)

• Level funding, staff reductions and large escapements have overwhelmed the capacity of the lab to keep abreast of the work.

• This has forced prioritizing CWT processing:– In-season management needs met first– Fishery evaluation needs met second– Hatchery returns typically met last unless specific

needs exist

CWT Data Management

The Regional Mark Information System (RMIS)

• CWT data are forwarded to the Mark Center where it is loaded and validated against an extensive set of checks

• Once validated, the data are moved into an online relational database (Oracle) that the public can access by Internet

• Data is accessible in either PSC exchange format, or various summary reports

Data Flowchart for the RMPC

REGIONAL MARK PROCESSING

CENTER

VALIDATION PROCESS

REGIONAL MARKINFORMATION

SYSTEM(R M I S)

AL

L

CO

AS

T -

WID

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TA

GG

ING

&

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NC

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R M I SCOAST - WIDEDATA USERS

C A N A D A

PSC format raw data Release Recovery Catch/sample Location codes Data description

Errors

RMPCvalidated data

RMIS Reports: Detail Summary Ad - hoc

PSC format valid data

New RMIS Web Pages

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