ODFW Field Reports. Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission September 4, 2015

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ODFW Field Reports Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission September 4, 2015 EAST REGION Bruce Eddy, Region Manager Wildfire Impacts on Fish and Wildlife Long-term drought and weather conditions have created a severe wildfire situation in Eastern Oregon. In addition to the devastating loss of homes, livestock, and other property, the fires will have negative impact to some fish, wildlife and their habitat. East Region staff has initiated coordination with federal land managers and private landowners on rehabilitation efforts for sage-grouse habitat and other key habitats impacted by the fires. This coordination and planning will increase as federal resources are released from fire suppression efforts and the extent of fire impacts is known. While there have been numerous fires, there are currently seven fires burning in East Region that are greater than 10,000 acres. These fires have burned over 500,000 acres with the majority of impact in Baker, Grant and Malheur Counties. Several of our wildlife areas remain threatened by adjacent fires, but to date minimal acreages of Department owned lands have burned. The true impact of these fires will not be known until the fires are out and staff has assessed the conditions on the ground. At this time our primary concerns are loss of sage-grouse habitat, direct loss of wildlife killed in the fire, and impacts to aquatic species from sedimentation, reduced water quality and increased water temperature. McKay Reservoir Receives Spider Blocks McKay Reservoir is a popular destination for warm water anglers from around the region; the reservoir consistently produces good catches of crappie and is known for its trophy sized largemouth bass. It also provides water for irrigators of the Umatilla area. With the high demand for irrigation water due to drought, McKay Reservoir is expected to reach record low levels. These low reservoir elevations will limit overwintering habitat for crappie and bass that support this popular fishery.

bass and crappie use the spider blocks like they would submerged trees and bushes. Unlike natural cover, the spider blocks will not decay over time and will provide habitat for many years to come. WEST REGION Steve Marx, Region Manager After considering this year s drought and what the future may hold for the fisheries of McKay Reservoir, ODFW, Blue Mountain Bass Club and Columbia Basin Bass Club and High Desert Marina decided that improving habitat diversity would improve conditions for bass and crappie, especially juvenile production. With a grant from the R&E Program they constructed and deployed more than 70 spider blocks to create complex structural habitat in the deeper sections of the reservoir. The placement of the spider blocks is expected to improve habitat diversity conditions for overwintering warm water fish. Spider blocks are simple and inexpensive to construct. Variable lengths of plastic pipe are fitted to concrete filled cinder blocks. The web of plastic pipe forms a dense and complex structure, while the cinder block anchors the structure to the floor of the reservoir. Once in the reservoir, juvenile Fielder and Wimer Dam Removal Two key fish passage barriers, Fielder and Wimer dams, are in the process of being removed on Evans Creek (tributary to the Rogue River) and will open unimpeded access to 60 miles of habitat for ESA-listed coho salmon, 70 miles of habitat for steelhead trout, and about 16 miles of habitat for Chinook salmon. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) listed both dams in the top ten of the 2013 Oregon Statewide Fish Passage Priority Barrier List, as approved by the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission. The removal of Wimer Dam was completed in late July, 2015. Removal of Fielder Dam is in progress and approximately 50% complete as of August 17th. After the removal of the dams, the project sites will be graded and seeded with grass followed by riparian restoration during the upcoming winter/spring planting season. Fielder and Wimer Dams were constructed for irrigation purposes on Evans Creek in the early 1900 s and later abandoned in the 1980 s. According to the Water Resources Department, there are no valid water rights associated with either dam but both dams continued to pose migration barriers for native fish. WaterWatch was a lead player working with the landowner to obtain authorization to remove the dams. The development and implementation of plans to remove these dams were supported by a 2014 Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board (OWEB) technical assistance grant and an ODFW Restoration and Enhancement Board grant to the Geos Institute and River Design Group to develop engineering designs for the removal of Fielder and Wimer dams. In 2015, OWEB awarded the Geos Institute a restoration grant for the removal of the dams. Other partners in the removal include American Rivers, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and WaterWatch. The removal of Fielder and Wimer Dams complements past dam removals in the Rogue

Basin, including two dams that were removed in the Evans Creek watershed (Alphonso Dam in 1999 and Maple Gulch Dam in 2002). There have also been many habitat enhancement projects completed in the Evans Creek watershed, including in-stream large wood placement and road work to decrease sedimentation. Removal of the Fielder and Wimer Dams supports on-going habitat restoration efforts, putting the salmon and steelhead populations in Evans Creek on the road to recovery. Wimer Dam Removal - 2015 August Cougar Activity Cougar activity and complaints spiked in August with a number of sightings and reports from Mid- Coast, Mid-Willamette, North Willamette, and Roseburg wildlife districts. Many of the sightings were verified however others remain unverified or were misidentifications. Two landowners reported cougars on their deck in the Florence area (one confirmed by photograph); two cougars were killed by automobiles (one just outside of Toledo); one rural Waldport landowner reported her Doberman chased a deer from her lawn only to have the deer attacked by a cougar four feet from the dog and 35 feet from the home; and, a licensed cervid ranch had two fallow deer killed inside their fenced enclosure. Two cougars were taken by wildlife services for killing goats and sheep. The two road struck cougars and one of the cougars on the homeowner s deck are young of the year. Wildlife staff in the North Willamette district handled over a dozen cougar sightings and damage complaints and checked in four local cougar mortalities since early August. In one situation, the manager of a Camp Fire Girls of America camp in Sandy shot and killed cougar just hours before young campers arrived. In another, a resident legally harvested the one of two cougars he observed at his Corbett home. The second cougar fled the area however a few days later, approximately 1/2 mile away, a cougar of similar size and age to the hunter harvested cat was struck by a vehicle then dispatched by OSP. Staff also received unconfirmed cougar sightings at Jackson Bottoms Wetlands over the past several years prompted the Safety Officer for the City of Hillsboro to request assistance from district staff in providing a presentation on bear and cougar safety. Over 50 City of Hillsboro employees attended the presentation. Several reported cougar sightings in the West Salem area received considerable attention in the local media however review of video footage aired by the media shows a bobcat crossing a field. Staff continues to follow up to help verify other reports. Staff in the Roseburg area is currently working with local enforcement and Wildlife Services Agents to track a cougar that has been observed multiple times during daylight hours near the local community college over the last two days. The cat s proximity to the college and behavior patterns raises concerns for human safety in the area. The reports demonstrate the range of calls typically received by local wildlife staff. Of note is that many of the verified sightings are young dispersing animals and suggest that drought conditions may be pushing animals into urban interface areas in search of food and vacant habitat. OCEAN SALMON AND COLUMBIA RIVER PROGRAM Tom Rien, Acting Ocean Salmon and Columbia River Program Manager Northwest Power and Conservation Council In its 2014 Fish and Wildlife Program the Northwest Power and Conservation Council committed to take on a set of priority needs. These include assessing the feasibility of providing anadromous fish passage in additional areas of the Columbia River Basin, providing funds for longterm maintenance of program assets, implementing adaptive management (including prioritized research on critical uncertainties) throughout the program, implementing additional sturgeon and lamprey measures, and continued efforts to improve floodplain habitats. Oregon

Department of Fish and Wildlife employees are engaged in various discussions and processes to share our expertise and to assure that the State s interests are represented. The Council is working to identify cost savings and additional funds to provide $2 to $3 million annually (or about one percent of the Council s current Fish and Wildlife Program). These savings are intended to come from projects that are closing out, where efficiencies can be found, or where the benefits to the resource are low. The money that is identified will be targeted to fund emerging priority work. In the near term assessment of passage in blocked areas and restoration of infrastructure are most likely to receive this funding. Work on other priorities identified in the Program will be considered more thoroughly in 2016 and beyond. The 2014 Program commits the Council to evaluate the feasibility of restoring anadromous fish passage in blocked areas of the Columbia River upstream from Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams. The Council is undertaking a phased approach to address this question. Steps that the Council has identified include: investigating the availability and suitability of anadromous fish habitat upstream of these dams; assessment of passage opportunities at these facilities; and discussion with fisheries co-managers regarding the purpose, scope and challenges associated with potential reintroductions. The Council will assess and develop a plan for long-term maintenance, rehabilitation, and replacement of assets at the hatcheries and fish screens the Program funds. ODFW s Umatilla Hatchery is among about 13 hatchery facilities throughout the northwest that that were directly funded and constructed with Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) funding. Operation and maintenance funding continues to be provided through the Council s Program. While Oregon has hundreds of fish screening facilities throughout the state, these have been completed with a variety of funding, including Mitchell Act and BPA money. The BPA is engaged in discussions with the Council and with state fish screening programs in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana to determine its funding responsibilities and the need for restoration of fish screening facilities throughout the Columbia Basin. OREGON STATE POLICE Captain Jeff Samuels, Fish & Wildlife Division Throughout the summer months, the Oregon State Police Fish & Wildlife Division has remained extremely busy with the enforcement of fisheries related regulations. As in years past, the coastal fisheries, including the Buoy 10 fishery, have governed the time of coastal Troopers. Inland, enforcement focus has shifted to big game as evidenced in the following enforcement activities: Trooper Herman conducted boat patrols on the Columbia River and Pacific Ocean during the Buoy 10 and ocean salmon fishery in early August. Numerous salmon anglers were contacted; resulting in the issuance of 35 citations for offenses including Angling Prohibited Method- Barbed Hooks for Salmon, Angling Closed Area-Young Bay Control Zone, Angling Closed Area-Columbia River Control Zone, Exceed the Daily Bag Limit of Chinook Salmon, and Fail to Immediately Validate Harvest Card. Multiple salmon were seized and donated to charity. Recruit Fough and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Port Samplers were patrolling the Port of Garibaldi focusing on the coho salmon closure in the ocean south of Cape Falcon. With the collective effort of Recruit Fough and ODFW, 11 coho salmon were seized and seven subjects were cited for Take/Possession of Fish Closed Area. Sr. Trooper Niehus was working antelope season in the East Interstate Unit. He contacted a subject that another hunter indicated was with a party with an antelope down. The subject was nervous and rushed off in his pickup. Sr. Trooper Niehus

followed the subject when he came back and located two hunters with two dead Antelope on private property without permission. As the investigation progressed, it was determined that one hunter had shot both the Antelope. Sr. Trooper Niehus was able to review a video of the hunt which showed that one hunter had actually shot three antelope with two shots. The hunters admitted that they were going to go back out after Sr. Trooper Niehus left and retrieve and tag the third antelope. Both hunters were cited criminally for Hunting in Violation of Trespass and the shooter was cited criminally for Exceeding the Bag Limit of Game Mammal. The rifle the shooter used and the two excess antelope were seized. Biologist position is being placed in southwestern Oregon to focus on on-the-ground Conservation Strategy implementation with field staff and partners. A legislatively approved Sage-Grouse Mitigation Coordinator position will begin charting new paths for discussion of development in sage brush habitats. END OF FIELD REPORTS FOR September 4, 2015. Sr. Trooper Martin Maher received a telephone call from a subject who told the trooper he was responsible for shooting a deer in the Fall Creek area. The subject was interviewed and cited (criminally) for Take Buck Deer Closed Season and Waste of a Game Mammal - Deer and a rifle was seized. (Note: the subject said he saw a post on Facebook about the deer and recognized the photo from the press release we put out and decided to report himself). CONSERVATION PROGRAM REPORT Andrea Hanson, Oregon Conservation Strategy Coordinator Staffing Up and Conserving Oregon s Bats Recruitment for the Strategy Species Coordinator position, recently vacated by Lindsay Adrean who accepted a seabird fellowship position in Mexico, will begin in the next several weeks. The Strategy Species Coordinator position is instrumental in developing and implementing state strategies for the conservation of species identified in the Oregon Conservation Strategy. A key project of the position includes initiating Oregon s participation in the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat). NABat is an international effort to monitor and track bat populations across North America to help inform habitat management decisions and conservation efforts. Two new conservation positions are currently in the development and recruitment phase of the hiring process. A new Regional Conservation