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A. Vision for the Columbia River Basin
1. The Overall Vision for the Fish and
Wildlife Program
2. Specific Planning Assumptions
B. Scientific Foundation and Principles
1. Purpose of the Scientific Foundation
2. Scientific Principles
C. Biological Objectives
1. Overarching Objectives
2. Basin Level Biological Objectives
Objectives for
Biological Performance
Objectives for
Environmental Characteristics
3. Further Development of Biological
Objectives at the Basin Level
4. Significance of Objectives and
Strategies
D. Strategies (separate page)
A. Vision for the Columbia River Basin
The vision is the outcome intended for this program.
Actions taken at the basin, province, and subbasin levels should be
consistent with, and designed to fulfill, this vision. Thus, this vision
guides the choice of biological objectives and, in turn, the selection of
strategies.
1. The Overall Vision for the Fish and Wildlife
Program
The vision for this program is a Columbia River ecosystem that sustains
an abundant, productive, and diverse community of fish and wildlife,
mitigating across the basin for the adverse effects to fish and wildlife
caused by the development and operation of the hydrosystem and providing
the benefits from fish and wildlife valued by the people of the region.
This ecosystem provides abundant opportunities for tribal trust and treaty
right harvest and for non-tribal harvest and the conditions that allow for
the recovery of the fish and wildlife affected by the operation of the
hydrosystem and listed under the Endangered Species Act.
Wherever feasible, this program will be accomplished by protecting and
restoring the natural ecological functions, habitats, and biological
diversity of the Columbia River Basin. In those places where this is not
feasible, other methods that are compatible with naturally reproducing
fish and wildlife populations will be used. Where impacts have irrevocably
changed the ecosystem, the program will protect and enhance the habitat
and species assemblages compatible with the altered ecosystem. Actions
taken under this program must be cost-effective and consistent with an
adequate, efficient, economical and reliable electrical power supply.
2. Specific Planning Assumptions
As part of this vision, the Council also adopts the following policy
judgments and planning assumptions for the fish and wildlife program.
- No single activity is sufficient to recover and rebuild fish and
wildlife species in the Columbia River Basin. Successful protection,
mitigation, and recovery efforts must involve a broad range of
strategies for habitat protection and improvement, hydrosystem reform,
artificial production, and harvest management.
- The Bonneville Power Administration should make available sufficient
funds to implement measures in the program in a timely fashion.
- This is a habitat-based program, rebuilding healthy, naturally
producing fish and wildlife populations by protecting, mitigating, and
restoring habitats and the biological systems within them, including
anadromous fish migration corridors. Artificial production and other
non-natural interventions should be consistent with the central effort
to protect and restore habitat and avoid adverse impacts to native
fish and wildlife species.
- Management actions must be taken in an adaptive, experimental manner
because ecosystems are inherently variable and highly complex. This
includes using experimental designs and techniques as part of
management actions, and integrating monitoring and research with those
management actions to evaluate their effects on the ecosystem.
- Actions to improve juvenile and adult fish passage through mainstem
dams, including fish transportation actions and capital improvement
measures, should protect biological diversity by benefiting the range
of species, stocks and life-history types in the river, and should
favor solutions that best fit natural behavior patterns and river
processes, while maximizing fish survival through the projects.
Survival in the natural river should be the baseline against which to
measure the effectiveness of other passage methods.
- For the purpose of planning for this fish and wildlife program, and
particularly the hydrosystem portion of the program, the Council
assumes that, in the near term, the breaching of the four federal dams
on the lower Snake River will not occur. However, the Council is
obliged under law to revise its fish and wildlife program every five
years, at a minimum. If, within that five-year period, the status of
the lower Snake River dams or any other major component of the Federal
Columbia River Power System has changed, the Council can take that
into account as part of the review process.
- Mainstem hydrosystem operations and fish passage efforts should be
directed at re-establishing natural river processes where feasible and
consistent with the Council’s responsibility for maintaining an
adequate, efficient, economical, and reliable power supply.
- The effect of ocean habitat on salmonid species should be considered
in evaluating freshwater habitat management to understand all stages
of the salmon and steelhead life cycle.
- Systemwide water management, including flow augmentation from
storage reservoirs, should balance the needs of anadromous species
with those of resident fish species in upstream storage reservoirs so
that actions taken to advance one species do not unnecessarily come at
the expense of other species.
- There is an obligation to provide fish and wildlife mitigation where
habitat has been permanently lost due to hydroelectric development.
Artificial production of fish may be used to replace capacity, bolster
productivity, and alleviate harvest pressure on weak, naturally
spawning resident and anadromous fish populations. Restoration of
anadromous fish into areas blocked by dams should be actively pursued
where feasible.
- Artificial production actions must have an experimental, adaptive
management design. This design will allow the region to evaluate
benefits, address scientific uncertainties, and improve hatchery
survival while minimizing the impact on, and if possible benefiting,
fish that spawn naturally.
- Harvest can provide significant cultural and economic benefits to
the region, and the program should seek to increase harvest
opportunities consistent with sound biological management practices.
Harvest rates should be based on population-specific adult escapement
objectives designed to protect and recover naturally spawning
populations.
- Achieving the vision requires that habitat, artificial production,
harvest, and hydrosystem actions are thoughtfully coordinated with one
another. There also must be coordination among actions taken at the
subbasin, province, and basin levels, including actions not funded
under this program. Accordingly, creating an appropriate structure for
planning and coordination is a vital part of this program.
B. Scientific Foundation and Principles
The scientific foundation reflects the best available
scientific knowledge. The scientific principles summarize this knowledge
at a broad level. The actions taken at the basin, province, and subbasin
levels to fulfill the vision should be consistent with, and based upon,
these principles.
1. Purpose of the Scientific Foundation
In developing a program to fulfill the vision statement above, the
Council is relying on the best available scientific knowledge. While the
vision is a policy choice about what the program should accomplish, the
scientific foundation describes our best understanding of the biological
realities that will govern how this is accomplished. The program can
succeed only as it recognizes these realities and builds upon them.
Thus, the scientific foundation is the basis for the working hypotheses
that underlie this program. It also provides specific guidance for program
measures. For example, the strategies for the use of artificial production
are an application of the scientific foundation to the use of hatcheries
for raising fish within the Columbia River Basin.
The scientific foundation consists of the scientific principles, a
detailed discussion of those principles, the geographic structure of the
program, and a set of more specific scientific rules and hypotheses. Only
the scientific principles and the geographic structure appear in this
volume of the program; the remainder of the foundation is in the Technical
Appendix for this program.
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"...this
program will be accomplished by protecting and restoring the natural
ecological functions, habitats, and biological diversity of the
Columbia River Basin." |
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The rules and hypotheses in the Technical Appendix will change over
time in response to new scientific information. These rules and hypotheses
will continue to be evaluated as the program is implemented and will be
revised as needed.
In contrast, the scientific principles below are intended to be
relatively fixed points of reference. Although scientific knowledge will
improve over time, modification of the principles should occur only after
due scientific deliberation. The Council charges the Independent
Scientific Advisory Board with the primary role in reviewing and
recommending modifications to the scientific principles in the future
prior to any major revision of this program.
2. Scientific Principles
As part of the scientific foundation, the program recognizes eight
principles of general application. It is intended that all actions taken
to implement this program be consistent with these principles.
The scientific principles are grounded in established scientific
literature to provide a stable foundation for the Council’s program. A
more detailed discussion of the implications of these principles, together
with citations to the supporting references, is included in the Technical
Appendix.
Principle 1. The abundance, productivity and diversity of organisms
are integrally linked to the characteristics of their ecosystems.
The physical and biological components of ecosystems together produce
the diversity, abundance and productivity of plant and animal species,
including humans. The combination of suitable habitats and necessary
ecological functions forms the ecosystem structure and conditions needed
to provide the desired abundance and productivity of specific species.
Principle 2. Ecosystems are dynamic, resilient and develop over time.
Although ecosystems have definable structures and characteristics,
their behavior is highly dynamic, changing in response to internal and
external factors. The system we see today is the product of its
biological, human and geological legacy. Natural disturbance and change
are normal ecological processes and are essential to the structure and
maintenance of habitats.
Principle 3. Biological systems operate on various spatial and time
scales that can be organized hierarchically.
Ecosystems, landscapes, communities and populations are usefully
described as hierarchies of nested components distinguished by their
appropriate spatial and time scales. Higher-level ecological patterns and
processes constrain, and in turn reflect, localized patterns and
processes. There is no single, intrinsically correct description of an
ecosystem, only one that is useful to management or scientific research.
The hierarchy should clarify the higher-level constraints as well as the
localized mechanisms behind the problem.
Principle 4. Habitats develop, and are maintained, by physical and
biological processes.
Habitats are created, altered and maintained by processes that operate
over a range of scales. Locally observed conditions often reflect more
expansive or non-local processes and influences, including human actions.
The presence of essential habitat features created by these processes
determines the abundance, productivity and diversity of species and
communities. Habitat restoration actions are most effective when
undertaken with an understanding and appreciation of the underlying
habitat-forming processes.
Principle 5. Species play key roles in developing and maintaining
ecological conditions.
Each species has one or more ecological functions that may be key to
the development and maintenance of ecological conditions. Species, in
effect, have a distinct job or occupation that is essential to the
structure, sustainability and productivity of the ecosystem over time. The
existence, productivity and abundance of specific species depend on these
functions. In turn, loss of species and their functions lessens the
ability of the ecosystem to withstand disturbance and change.
Principle 6. Biological diversity allows ecosystems to persist in
the face of environmental variation.
The diversity of species, traits and life histories within biological
communities contributes to ecological stability in the face of disturbance
and environmental change. Loss of species and their ecological functions
can decrease ecological stability and resilience. It is not simply that
more diversity is always good; introduction of non-native species, for
example, can increase diversity but disrupt ecological structure.
Diversity within a species presents a greater range of possible solutions
to environmental variation and change. Maintaining the ability of the
ecosystem to express its own species composition and diversity allows the
system to remain productive in the face of environmental variation.
Principle 7. Ecological management is adaptive and experimental.
The dynamic nature, diversity, and complexity of ecological systems
routinely disable attempts to command and control the environment.
Adaptive management — the use of management experiments to investigate
biological problems and to test the efficacy of management programs —
provides a model for experimental management of ecosystems. Experimental
management does not mean passive "learning by doing," but rather
a directed program aimed at understanding key ecosystem dynamics and the
impacts of human actions using scientific experimentation and inquiry.
Principle 8. Ecosystem function, habitat structure and biological
performance are affected by human actions.
As humans, we often view ourselves as separate and distinct from the
natural world. However, we are integral parts of ecosystems. Our actions
have a pervasive impact on the structure and function of ecosystems, while
at the same time, our health and well being are tied to these conditions.
These actions must be managed in ways that protect and restore ecosystem
structures and conditions necessary for the survival and recovery of fish
and wildlife in the basin. Success depends on the extent to which we
choose to control our impacts so as to balance the various services
potentially provided by the Columbia River Basin.
C. Biological Objectives
The biological objectives describe the conditions that are needed to
reach the vision, consistent with the scientific principles. The program
fulfills the vision by achieving these objectives.
1. Overarching Objectives
The Northwest Power Act directs the Council to develop a program to
"protect, mitigate, and enhance" fish and wildlife of the
Columbia River and its tributaries, including related spawning grounds and
habitat affected by the development and operation of the federal
hydrosystem. In the vision, the Council has stated four overarching
biological objectives for this program. They are:
- A Columbia River ecosystem that sustains an abundant, productive,
and diverse community of fish and wildlife.
- Mitigation across the basin for the adverse effects to fish and
wildlife caused by the development and operation of the hydrosystem.
- Sufficient populations of fish and wildlife for abundant
opportunities for tribal trust and treaty right harvest and for
non-tribal harvest.
- Recovery of the fish and wildlife affected by the development and
operation of the hydrosystem that are listed under the Endangered
Species Act.
The Council recognizes that achieving these broad objectives is not the
sole responsibility of this fish and wildlife program nor the Bonneville
Power Administration. Complementary actions by other governmental agencies
and funding sources, including Canadian entities where appropriate, as
well as the support and participation of the citizens of the Northwest,
will be needed for these objectives to be fully achieved. Consequently,
the focus of the program is limited to fish and wildlife affected by the
development, operation, and management of the hydrosystem.
2. Basin Level Biological Objectives
Biological objectives describe physical and biological changes needed
to achieve the vision, based on the information we now have and thereby
fulfill the vision. Biological objectives have two components: (1)
biological performance, describing responses of populations to habitat
conditions, described in terms of capacity, abundance, productivity and
life history diversity, and (2) environmental characteristics, which
describe the environmental conditions or changes sought to achieve the
desired population characteristics. Where possible, biological objectives
are intended to be empirically measurable and based on an explicit
scientific rationale. Objectives at the basin level are more qualitative,
but objectives should become increasingly quantitative and measurable at
the province and subbasin levels. These basinwide objectives will help
determine the amount of change needed across the basin to fulfill the
vision. They will also help determine the cost effectiveness of program
strategies, and provide a basis for monitoring, evaluation and
accountability.
The Council will establish specific biological objectives at the
province level and in subbasin plans identifying the changes needed in
characteristics of the environment and target populations. The program
provides the following biological objectives at the basin level.
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Objectives for Biological Performance
The Council recognizes that significant losses of anadromous
fish, resident fish, and wildlife and their habitats have occurred
as a result of the development and operation of the hydrosystem. To
be consistent with the Power Act, these losses establish the
underlying basis for population objectives for the program as a
whole. Collectively, specific biological objectives should represent
what is considered to be mitigation for losses under the program.
Anadromous Fish Losses
The Council recognizes that the scientific basis for biological
objectives is not certain and will shift over time as our knowledge
improves. Further, we expect to learn a great deal through the
process of developing subbasin plans. The Council intends to review,
and if necessary, revise these objectives in the course of adopting
subbasin plans in a subsequent amendment process. On an interim
basis, until subbasin plans identify actual targets, the Council
adopts the following regional objectives for anadromous fish:
- Halt declining trends in salmon and steelhead populations
above Bonneville Dam by 2005. Obtain the information necessary
to begin restoring the characteristics of healthy lamprey
populations.
- Restore the widest possible set of healthy naturally
reproducing populations of salmon and steelhead in each relevant
province by 2012. Healthy populations are defined as having an
80 percent probability of maintaining themselves for
200 years at a level that can support harvest rates
of at least 30 percent.
Increase total adult salmon and steelhead runs above Bonneville
Dam by 2025 to an average of 5 million annually in a manner that
supports tribal and non-tribal harvest. Within 100 years achieve
population characteristics that, while fluctuating due to natural
variability, represent on average full mitigation for losses of
anadromous fish.
Substitution for Anadromous Fish Losses
Part of the anadromous fish losses has occurred in the blocked
areas. A corresponding part of the mitigation for these losses must
occur in those areas. The program has a "Resident Fish
Substitution Policy" for areas in which anadromous fish have
been extirpated. Given the large anadromous fish losses in the
blocked areas, these actions have not mitigated these losses. The
following objectives address anadromous fish losses and mitigation
requirements in all blocked areas:
- Restore native resident fish species (subspecies, stocks and
populations) to near historic abundance throughout their
historic ranges where original habitat conditions exist and
where habitats can be feasibly restored.
- Take action to reintroduce anadromous fish into blocked areas,
where feasible.
- Administer and increase opportunities for consumptive and
non-consumptive resident fisheries for native, introduced, wild,
and hatchery-reared stocks that are compatible with the
continued persistence of native resident fish species and their
restoration to near historic abundance (includes intensive
fisheries within closed or isolated systems).
Resident Fish Losses
The development and operation of the hydrosystem has also
resulted in losses of numbers and diversity of native resident fish,
such as bull trout, cutthroat trout, kokanee, white sturgeon and
other species. The following objectives address resident fish
losses:
- Complete assessments of resident fish losses throughout the
basin resulting from the hydrosystem, expressed in terms of the
various critical population characteristics of key resident fish
species.
- Maintain and restore healthy ecosystems and watersheds, which
preserve functional links among ecosystem elements to ensure the
continued persistence, health and diversity of all species
including game fish species, non-game fish species, and other
organisms.
- Protect and expand habitat and ecosystem functions as the
means to significantly increase the abundance, productivity, and
life history diversity of resident fish at least to the extent
that they have been affected by the development and operation of
the hydrosystem.
- Achieve population characteristics of these species within 100
years that, while fluctuating due to natural variability,
represent on average full mitigation for losses of resident
fish.
Wildlife Losses
Development and operation of the hydrosystem also resulted in
wildlife losses through construction and inundation losses, direct
operational losses or through secondary losses. The program has
included measures and implemented projects to obtain and protect
habitat units in mitigation for these calculated
construction/inundation losses. Operational and secondary losses
have not been estimated or addressed. The program includes a
commitment to mitigate for these losses. More specific wildlife
objectives are:
- Quantify wildlife losses caused by the construction,
inundation, and operation of the hydropower projects.
- Develop and implement habitat acquisition and enhancement
projects to fully mitigate for identified losses.
- Coordinate mitigation activities throughout the basin and with
fish mitigation and restoration efforts, specifically by
coordinating habitat restoration and acquisition with aquatic
habitats to promote connectivity of terrestrial and aquatic
areas.
- Maintain existing and created habitat values.
- Monitor and evaluate habitat and species responses to
mitigation actions.
Objectives for Environmental
Characteristics
Basin level environmental characteristics describe the kinds of
changes that are needed across the Columbia Basin to achieve the
changes in biological performance described earlier. Again, the
intent is to achieve the vision and allow for mitigation under the
Power Act for the fish and wildlife losses resulting from the
development and operation of the hydrosystem. The Council is
including in the Appendix of this program a provisional set of
environmental characteristic objectives for the basin level.
The Council directs the Independent Scientific Advisory Board to
review the basin level environmental characteristics in the Appendix
by June 2001. The Independent Scientific Advisory Board should
report to the Council on the scientific soundness and basinwide
applicability of the environmental characteristics, as well as their
utility for further defining biological objectives at the province
and subbasin levels. As part of its review, the Independent
Scientific Advisory Board should consider and report to the Council
on the applicability of these objectives in the most altered areas
of the basin, the blocked areas.
The Council will make the Independent Scientific Advisory Board’s
report publicly available and seek views and comment from interested
parties. The Council will consider the report of the Independent
Scientific Advisory Board and the views and comments of others on
the report, and will confirm or revise these basin level objectives
for environmental characteristics for purposes of providing guidance
for subbasin level planning and further program amendments. |
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3. Further Development of Biological Objectives at the
Basin Level
Biological objectives, comprising both biological performance and
environmental characteristic standards, will be established at the
province level and subbasin level (in subbasin plans) in subsequent
program amendments. However, the efforts at assessment and planning that
will precede the formal adoption of province and subbasin level biological
objectives may further inform the basin level objectives adopted here.
This is possible in two primary ways. First, assessment and planning at
these levels should test the validity of the general basin level
biological objectives, as previously described. Second, assessment and
planning at these levels may identify more specific, quantified biological
objectives for the program as a whole. Examples might include abundance
and performance objectives for fish populations that transcend more than
one province, specific programwide objectives for improvement in certain
habitat types, and specific objectives for water management and
coordinated operation of the hydrosystem to benefit fish and wildlife.
More specific basinwide objectives could help determine the amount of
change needed across the basin to fulfill the vision. They will also help
determine the cost-effectiveness of program strategies and provide a basis
for monitoring, evaluation, and accountability. These more specific
objectives will be considered as guidance for subbasin planning, and for
adoption when the Council considers adoption of province level biological
objectives and subbasin plans.
4. Significance of Objectives and Strategies
These objectives and the strategies that follow are to be used as
guidance for developing province and subbasin plans, as the basis for
development of more specific objectives, and as a basis for Council
recommendations to the Bonneville Power Administration regarding project
funding. Proposed measures will be evaluated for consistency with these
objectives and strategies. A primary function of the monitoring and
evaluation components of this program is to measure progress toward
achieving these objectives.
All province and subbasin plans must be consistent with these
objectives.
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