The presentations listed below are from the Hatchery Reform and
Mass Marking Forum held April 1, 2009 at the California/Nevada Chapter of the American
Fisheries Society meetings in Santa Rosa, CA. The objective was to
achieve improved clarity regarding specific hatchery-related management actions that would
significantly benefit natural origin Chinook and restore imperiled salmon fisheries.
Agenda and Summary:
Presentations:
Hatchery Reform in the Pacific Northwest:
Applying Science to Hatchery Management [Lee Blankenship, Hatchery Scientific Review Group Co-Chair; 780KB; Powerpoint]
Tools for Hatchery Reform
[Andy Appleby, Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife; 1.9MB; Powerpoint]
Mass Marking and Electronic Recovery of
CWTs in the Pacific Northwest [Ron Olson, Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission; 9.3MB; Powerpoint]
Development and Implementation of a
Monitoring Program for Mark-selective Chinook Salmon Fisheries in Puget Sound, Washington
[Mark Baltzell, WDFW; 13.1MB; Powerpoint]
A Coordinated Mass Marking Program
for Salmonines Stocked Into the Laurentian Great Lakes [Charles Bronte, US Fish & Wildlife Service; 9.2MB; Powerpoint]
Tools and Data Requirements for Estimating Impacts from
Mark-selective Fisheries [Kristen Ryding, Ph.D., Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife; 752KB; Powerpoint]
Mass Marking and Mark-Selective
Fisheries: Black and White Choice, or Complex Shades of Grey?
[Dave Hankin, Ph.D., Humboldt State University; 1.6MB; Powerpoint]
Ocean Salmon Management Implications of Mass Marking / Mark-Selective
Fisheries [Michael O'Farrell, Ph.D., NMFS; 100KB; PDF]
Mass Marking of Hatchery Chinook and Mark-Selective
Fisheries in California [James Phillips, California Department of Fish and Game; 52.9MB; Powerpoint]
Central Valley Salmonid Hatcheries: Problems and
Potential Solutions [Dennis Lee, retired California Department of Fish and Game; 29.4MB; Powerpoint]
The reports/presentations provided here are copyright their respective authors and are provided
as-is without warranty by Cramer Fish Sciences.