CCLME.ORG - DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE DIVISION 7 FISH MANAGEMENT AND HATCHERY OPERATON
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Oregon Regulations
CHAP 635 DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE DIVISION 7 FISH MANAGEMENT AND HATCHERY OPERATON




The Oregon Administrative Rules contain OARs filed through July 14, 2006

DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE

DIVISION 7

FISH MANAGEMENT AND HATCHERY OPERATON

635-007-0501

Definitions

As used in this Division and Division 40:

(1) "Anadromous" means fish which migrate from saltwater to freshwater for spawning.

(2) "Aquaria species" means those fish commonly sold in the pet store trade for use in home aquaria. "Aquaria" are any tanks, pools, ponds, bowls or other containers intended for and capable of holding or maintaining live fish and from which there is no outfall to any waters of this state.

(3) "Aquatic habitat" means the waters which support fish or other organisms which live in water and which includes the adjacent land area and vegetation (riparian habitat) that provides shade, food, and/or protection for those organisms.

(4) "Area" means a stream, a lake, a group of streams or lakes, or a portion of the ocean managed for or with a common stock of fish, or for protection of a stock or stocks of fish.

(5) "Biological requirements" refers to those environmental conditions such as water quality, water quantity, and available food that are necessary for fish to grow and/or reproduce.

(6) "Brood stock" means a group of fish, generally from the same population, that are held and eventually artificially spawned to provide a source of fertilized eggs for hatchery programs.

(7) "Brood year" means the year in which more than fifty percent of the adults in a population of fish spawn.

(8) "Commission" means the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission.

(9) "Compensation" means activities that replace fish, or their habitat lost through development or other activities.

(10) "Conservation" means managing for sustainability of native fish so that present and future generations may enjoy their ecological, economic, recreational, and aesthetic benefits.

(11) "Cooperative Salmon Hatchery Project" means a fish propagation enhancement project authorized under OAR 635-009-0400 through 635-009-0455.

(12) "Department" means the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

(13) "Depressed" means below established goal such as a fish production or escapement goal shown in a management plan or below the level of production or escapement that the Commission determines to be an optimal level.

(14) "Disease" means problems caused by infectious agents, such as parasites or pests, and by other conditions that impair the performance of the body or one of its parts.

(15) "Disease agent" means an organism that is detrimental to fish.

(16) "Endemic disease" means a disease commonly detected in a population of naturally produced native fish.

(17) "Enhancement" means management activities including rehabilitation and supplementation that increase fish production beyond the existing levels.

(18) "Export" means to transport any fish or eggs out of state.

(19) "Facility Manager" means hatchery manager, owner or person responsbile for compliance with these rules.

(20) "Fish" means all game fish as defined by ORS 496.009 and food fish as defined by ORS 506.036, which live or could live in the waters of this state.

(21) "Fish Hatchery" means a facility at which adult broodstock are held, or where eggs are collected and incubated, or where eggs are hatched, or where fish are reared.

(22) "Fry" means fish which have recently hatched and have not fed.

(23) "Foreign" means fish which originate through human intervention from a different population.

(24) "Genetic engineering" means the introduction of genetic material into an organism's genotype through molecular genetics techniques.

(25) "Genetic Resources" means the kind and frequency of genes found within a population or collection of populations.

(26) "Genotype" means the kinds of and the combination of genes possessed by an individual.

(27) "Goal" means a statement of intent which leads to policy, rules, and operation plans for implementation of a Department Program.

(28) "Hatchery produced fish" means a fish incubated or reared under artificial conditions for at least a portion of its life.

(29) "Hatchery production system" means the fish, facilities and operations associated with collecting, spawning, incubating, rearing, distributing and releasing hatchery produced fish.

(30) "Hatchery Program" means a program in which a specified hatchery population is planted in a specified geographical location.

(31) "Hold fish" means to capture and/or remove live fish in or from the waters of this state and/or maintain live fish in captivity but does not include fish held live for less than one day for examination and release without transfer from the waters where caught or collected.

(32) "Import" means to transport fish or eggs into the state.

(33) "Indigenous" means descended from a population that is believed to have been present in the same geographical area prior to the year 1800 or that resulted from a natural colonization from another indigenous population.

(34) "Marine species" means those fish found in the ocean or the saline or brackish water of estuaries or bays along the coast, but not generally found in freshwater streams.

(35) "Mitigation" means to lessen the impact of activities or events that cause fish or habitat loss.

(36) "Native fish" means indigenous to Oregon, not introduced. This includes both naturally produced and hatchery produced fish.

(37) "Naturally produced" means fish that reproduce and complete their full life cycle in natural habitats.

(38) "Naturally Spawned" means fish produced in the natural environment as the result of natural reproduction.

(39) "Natural production system" means the fish and environment associated with completing the life-cycles of naturally produced fish populations.

(40) "Nongame Fish" means any fish other than those specifically defined as game fish in ORS 496.009.

(41) "Operation plan" means an action plan developed by the Department that generally addresses how the objectives in a management plan for harvest or production of a species shall be attained.

(42) "Optimum" means the desired fish production level as stated in management plans or set by specific Commission action.

(43) "Phenotype" means any characteristic of an organism that is determined by the organism's genes, genotype and the environment.

(44) "Policy" means mandatory direction or constraints that provide the framework for Department programs.

(45) "Population" means a group of fish originating and reproducing in a particular area at a particular time which do not interbreed to any substantial degree with any other group reproducing in a different area or in the same area at a different time.

(46) "Presmolt" means a juvenile anadromous fish which has fed and reared but is not yet a smolt.

(47) "Production" means the number or pounds of fish raised in a hatchery or resulting from natural spawning and rearing in freshwater, estuarine, or ocean habitats; also used in reference to harvest.

(48) "Propagation of fish" means the spawning, incubating, and/or rearing of fish by a human for sale, release or other uses.

(49) "Random mortality" means fish mortality that generally does not affect the genotypic or phenotypic traits of fish populations.

(50) "Rehabilitation" means short-term management actions which may include fish stocking, habitat improvement, harvest management, or other work, that restore fish populations depressed by natural or man-made events.

(51) "Release" means liberating fish or allowing fish to move into waters of the state.

(52) "Risk" means the extent to which, a management practice may reduce population productivity or cause an undesirable change in genetic characteristics of a population.

(53) "Sensitive" means those fishes that have been designated for special consideration pursuant to OAR 635-100-0040.

(54) "Selective mortality" means fish mortality that generally affects the genotypic and phenotypic traits of fish populations.

(55) "Serious depletion" means a significant likelihood that the species management unit will become threatened or endangered under either the state or federal Endangered Species Act.

(56) "Significant or substantial" means a condition of sufficient magnitude such that it is likely to influence continued natural production at optimum levels.

(57) "Smolt" means a juvenile salmon or trout that is capable of initiating a seaward migration and is capable of living in the sea.

(58) "Species" means any group or population that interbreeds and is substantially reproductively isolated.

(59) "Species hybridization" means the crossing of two different taxonomic species.

(60) "Species management unit" means a collection of populations from a common geographic region that share similar genetic and ecological characteristics.

(61) "STEP" means Salmon Trout Enhancement Program.

(62) "Stock" means an aggregation for management purposes of fish populations which typically share common characteristics such as life histories, migration patterns, or habitats.

(63) "Stray" means a hatchery fish that spawns naturally in a location different from the location intended when the fish was stocked.

(64) "Supplementation" means continued planting of fish to maintain or increase fish abundance in areas where natural production is insufficient to meet management objectives.

(65) "Sustainable" means persistence over time, that is to say the ability of a population or a species management unit to maintain temporal, spatial, genetic, and ecological coherence while withstanding demographic, environmental, and genetic variation and catastrophic events from natural and human induced causes.

(66) "Taxonomic species" means a group of fish that have been assigned a scientific name in the form of genus and species by the American Fisheries Society Committee on Common and Scientific Names of Fishes.

(67) "Transfer" means moving fish from one facility to another or to waters of the state.

(68) "Transgenic fish" means fish that have genes or groups of genes that have been transferred from another organism through the process of genetic engineering.

(69) "Wild fish" means any naturally spawned fish in the taxonomic classes, Agnatha, Chondrichthyes, and Osteichthyes, belonging to an indigenous population.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: FWC 25-1984, f. 6-21-84, ef. 7-1-84; FWC 6-1990, f. & cert. ef. 1-29-90; FWC 2-1992, f. 1-28-92, cert. ef. 2-1-92; FWC 37-1992, f. 5-29-92, cert. ef. 6-1-92; FWC 15-1997, f. & cert. ef. 3-10-97; DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02; DFW 65-2003, f. & cert. ef. 7-17-03; DFW 96-2003, f. & cert. ef. 9-19-03

Native Fish Conservation Policy
635-007-0502

Purpose of the Native Fish Conservation Policy

(1) The purpose of this policy is to ensure the conservation and recovery of native fish in Oregon. The policy focuses on naturally produced native fish. This focus is because naturally produced native fish are the primary basis for Endangered Species Act (ESA) delisting decisions and the foundation for long-term sustainability of native species and hatchery programs. Conservation of hatchery produced native fish is also important to maintain opportunities for fisheries and aid conservation of naturally produced fish. The Hatchery Management Policy describes conservation of hatchery produced native fish.

(2) The intent of the Native Fish Conservation Policy is to provide a basis for managing hatcheries, fisheries, habitat, predators, competitors, and pathogens in balance with sustainable production of naturally produced native fish. The policy has three areas of emphasis. The first is defensive to ensure the avoidance of serious depletion of native fish. The second is more proactive to restore and maintain native fish at levels providing ecological and societal benefits. The third ensures that, consistent with native fish conservation, opportunities for fisheries and other societal resource uses are not unnecessarily constrained. This approach will allow Oregon to play a vital role in the recovery of ESA listed species and the prevention of future listings.

(3) The policy embraces the case-by-case application of a wide range of conservation and utilization strategies tailored to individual watersheds and situations. Policy implementation will likely illustrate a variety of management approaches across the landscape, such as areas focused on hatchery programs complemented with areas where hatchery influences are avoided.

(4) The policy shall be implemented through conservation plans. Plans shall be developed in collaboration with management partners and the public, and will identify the desired and existing status of native fish, key limiting factors, management options to address these factors, and monitoring required to evaluate success. The Oregon Plan for Salmon and Watersheds, as well as other local and regional forums, shall provide the context for development, implementation and coordination of these plans. Existing rules shall guide management until conservation plans are completed.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 & ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02

635-007-0503

Native Fish Conservation Policy Goals

(1) Prevent the serious depletion of any native fish species by protecting natural ecological communities, conserving genetic resources, managing consumptive and nonconsumptive fisheries, and using hatcheries responsibly so that naturally produced native fish are sustainable.

(2) Maintain and restore naturally produced native fish species, taking full advantage of the productive capacity of natural habitats, in order to provide substantial ecological, economic, and cultural benefits to the citizens of Oregon.

(3) Foster and sustain opportunities for sport, commercial, and tribal fishers consistent with the conservation of naturally produced native fish and responsible use of hatcheries.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 & ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02

635-007-0504

Key Elements of Native Fish Conservation Policy

(1) Naturally produced fish are foundational to the long-term sustainability of native fish species, hatchery programs, and fisheries in Oregon. Therefore, conservation of naturally produced native fish species in the geographic areas to which they are indigenous is the Department's principal obligation for fish management.

(2) The Native Fish Conservation Policy applies to all geographic areas within the State's jurisdiction.

(3) The Department shall manage native fish to meet the following objectives:

(a) To maintain and restore sustainable naturally produced native fish species living and reproducing successfully in their natural environments;

(b) To provide recreational, commercial, cultural, and aesthetic benefits of optimum native fish populations to present and future citizens; and

(c) To contribute benefits to their ecosystem such as carcass nutrients and food for other species.

(4) Hatcheries shall be used responsibly to help achieve the goals of this policy. The Hatchery Management Policy describes the hatchery tool and its range of applications, as well as additional guidance concerning the conservation and management of native hatchery produced fish. Other tools include but are not limited to the management of habitat, harvest, competitors, predators, and fish health.

(5) In restoring naturally produced native fish, and when weighing options for conservation action, the Department shall generally:

(a) Give priority to management actions that address and help remedy the primary factors of decline (i.e. limiting factors);

(b) Consider economic effects required by ORS 183.335(2)(b)(E); and

(c) Consider the potential for success.

(6) The Department shall manage for sustainability of naturally produced native fish at the level of the species management unit. In developing sustainability standards, the Department shall:

(a) Incorporate the importance of population structure within each species management unit, and

(b) Base the sustainability standards on biological attributes directly related to species performance, as described in OAR 635-007-0505(6).

(7) When faced with scientific uncertainty concerning fish management, including status assessments and the effectiveness of recovery strategies, the Department shall proceed with precautionary strategies scaled to the conservation risk. Less precautionary strategies may be allowed if:

(a) The Department determines that monitoring, evaluation and responsive management will keep biological risks within acceptable limits, or

(b) The Department implements specific research to address management uncertainties.

(8) The Department shall manage nonnative fish and hatchery based fisheries to optimize user benefits consistent with conservation of naturally produced native fish species.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 & ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02

635-007-0505

Implementing the Native Fish Conservation Policy

(1) Conservation Plans: The Native Fish Conservation Policy shall be implemented primarily through conservation plans developed for individual species management units and adopted by the Commission. Conservation plans shall illustrate a range of options for recovery strategies, fisheries and the responsible use of hatchery produced fish and may include subbasin plans, NOAA Fisheries recovery plans, and other plans that address the elements contained in subsections (5), (6), (7), and (8) of this rule.

(2) Conservation plans shall be based on the concept that locally adapted populations provide the best foundation for maintaining and restoring sustainable naturally produced native fish.

(3) Planning and implementation shall proceed incrementally, consistent with available funding, according to priorities established by the Department with collaboration and input from affected tribal governments, management partners, and the public. The Department shall place highest priority on developing conservation plans for species management units having one or more of the following characteristics:

(a) Contain fish that are listed under the federal or state Endangered Species Act or as a state sensitive species or contain naturally produced native fish populations that demonstrate continued decline or extirpation from a significant portion of their range;

(b) Contain new hatchery programs or existing hatchery programs that need substantial change;

(c) Have high public interest or economic or other impact on the local community; or

(d) Where the Departmental resources available for the planning and implementation efforts will likely lead to a significant increase in naturally produced native fish.

(4) The Department shall develop and maintain a statewide list of species management units and their constituent populations, including appropriate hatchery produced fish, for native fish belonging to the genus Oncorhynchus. Lists for other taxonomic groups will be developed as prioritized pursuant to subsection (3) of this rule.

Plan Contents

(5) Native fish conservation plans will address the following elements:

(a) Identification of the species management unit and constituent populations pursuant to subsection (4) of this rule;

(b) Description of the desired biological status relative to biological attributes contained in subsection (6) of this rule;

(c) Description of current status relative to biological attributes contained in subsection (6) of this rule;

(d) An assessment of the primary factors causing the gap between current and desired status, if there is a gap, and identify factors that can be managed;

(e) A description of the short- and long-term management strategies most likely to address the primary limiting factors;

(f) A description of monitoring, evaluation, and research necessary to gauge the success of corrective strategies and resolve uncertainties;

(g) A process for modifying corrective strategies based upon the monitoring, evaluation and research results;

(h) Measurable criteria indicating significant deterioration in status, triggering plan modification to begin or expand recovery actions;

(i) Annual and long-term reporting requirements necessary to document data, departures from the plan, and evaluations necessary for adaptive management, in a format available to the public;

(j) A description of potential impacts to other native fish species.

(6) Measurable Criteria: Each native fish conservation plan shall include specific, measurable criteria of species performance. Depending upon available information, criteria will be developed for the following primary biological attributes:

(a) Distribution of populations within unit;

(b) Adult fish abundance for constituent populations;

(c) Within and among population diversity;

(d) Population connectivity;

(e) Survival rate to each critical life history stage;

(f) Standardized rate of population growth for constituent natural populations;

(g) Forecast likelihood of species management unit persistence in the near and long terms.

(7) Conservation plans shall also contain secondary criteria such as migration timing, spawn timing, age structure, sex ratios, stray rates, habitat complexity, artificial barriers, and harvest rates. These secondary criteria shall be used to help assess and link the effectiveness of management actions to address limiting factors as they affect the primary biological attributes described in subsection (6).

(8) Process for Developing Plans: When developing fish conservation plans, delineating naturally reproducing populations, and defining species management unit borders, the Department shall:

(a) Use the most up-to-date and reliable scientific information and, as appropriate, convene an ad hoc team of scientists for collaboration and assistance;

(b) Solicit the assistance and independent peer review by scientists including but not limited to the Independent Multidisciplinary Science Team and university fishery management programs; and

(c) Seek input and involvement from appropriate tribal, state, local, and federal management partners, university programs, and the public. Affected tribal governments shall be consulted in the development and implementation of conservation plans.

(9) Interim Measures: Until an individual conservation plan is completed for a species management unit, the Department shall continue to manage native fish in that unit according to existing statutes, administrative rules, Commission directives and binding agreements. In addition, the Department shall manage such populations in a manner that will avoid addition of new species to the State "Sensitive Species" list. Development of conservation plans shall be governed by this Native Fish Conservation Policy. Implementation of those plans shall be as specified in the plan.

(10) Status Reports: The Department shall prepare and present to the Commission an Oregon native fish species status report at timely intervals adequate to track progress, or at the request of the Commission or Director. This report shall include:

(a) Identification of all existing native fish conservation plans;

(b) Status assessments addressing biological attributes related to species performance as described in subsection (6) of this rule and the methods and assumptions used to make these assessments, including those used because of missing or insufficient data; and

(c) Appropriate modifications to the list of populations and species management units, and additional research needs.

(11) Cooperative Recovery Planning: In implementing the Native Fish Conservation Policy and consistent with the Oregon Plan, the Department will encourage the development of complementary policies and plans by other state and federal regulatory agencies and tribes that supports a unified conservation effort.

(12) The Commission shall revise existing fish management basin plans as necessary to support the implementation of Native Fish Conservation Policy conservation plans. The Commission shall make appropriate revisions to affected fish management basin plans when the Commission approves the corresponding conservation plan. Pending approval of a specific conservation plan, the conservation of native fish populations shall be guided by fish management basin plans. However, if adherence to such basin plans will likely prevent the affected populations from meeting the Native Fish Conservation Policy interim criteria described in 635-007-0507, then the interim criteria will be used by the Department to guide the conservation of native fish populations. For those populations without basin plans, the Department shall use the Native Fish Conservation Policy interim criteria described in 635-007-0507 to guide the conservation of such populations.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 & ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, .172, .176, .182, 430, .435, .445, .450 & .455
Hist.: DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02; DFW 96-2003, f. & cert. ef. 9-19-03

635-007-0506

Education and Training

(1) The Department shall develop a training curriculum for staff, Commissioners, management partners, and the public that focuses on the Native Fish Conservation Policy and its implementation.

(2) Training shall be provided as deemed appropriate by the Director.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 & ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 131-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-22-02

635-007-0507

Interim Criteria

As temporary guidance to ensure the conservation of native fish prior to the completion of conservation plans, the Department shall use the interim criteria described in this rule. Once a conservation plan is approved, these interim criteria will no longer apply to the species management unit. In addition, for state endangered species covered by an associated endangered species management plan, as described in OAR 635-100-0140, these interim criteria do not apply.

(1) Existing Populations - No more than 20% of the historical populations within the species management unit have become extinct and no natural population within the species management unit in existence as of 2003 shall be lost in the future. Further, if the historical species management unit contained more than one race (e.g., summer and winter steelhead), then each race must be represented by at least 2 populations. For at least 80% of the existing populations within each species management unit or for selected index populations identified in the stock status report as described in 635-007-0505(10), interim criteria (2) through (6) must be exceeded in at least 3 years during the most recent 5-year time interval.

(2) Habitat Use Distribution - Naturally produced members of a population must occupy at least 50% of a population's historic habitat.

(3) Abundance - The number of naturally produced spawners must be greater than 25% of the average abundance of naturally produced spawners over the most recent 30 year time period.

(4) Productivity - In years when the total spawner abundance is less than the average abundance of naturally produced spawners over the past 30 years, then the rate of population increase shall be at least 1.2 adult offspring per parent. Where offspring are defined as naturally produced adults that survive to spawn and parents are defined as those adults of both natural plus hatchery origin that spawned and collectively produced the observed offspring.

(5) Reproductive Independence - At least 90% of the spawners within a population must be naturally produced and not hatchery produced fish, unless the department determines the hatchery produced fish are being used in a short-term experimental program to help restore a population in its natural habitat or otherwise directed by a court order.

(6) Hybridization - The occurrence of individuals that are the product of deleterious hybridization with species that are non-native to the basin in which they are found must be rare or nonexistent.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012 and 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, 496.172, 496.176, 496.182, 496.430, 496.435, 496.445, 496.450, and 496.455
Hist.: DFW 96-2003, f. & cert. ef. 9-19-03

635-007-0509

Implementation of Interim Criteria

(1) Species management units that do not meet, or that the department determines are unlikely to meet in the near future, at least four of the interim criteria specified in 635-007-0507 shall be classified as "at risk". Species management units that meet four but no more than five of the interim criteria specified in 635-007-0507 shall be classified as "potentially at risk". Species management units that meet all interim criteria specified in 635-007-0507 shall be classified as "not at risk".

(2) For those species management units classified as potentially at risk, the Department shall document this finding in the native fish species status report as described in 635-007-0505(10) and give an elevated priority to the species management unit with respect to development of statewide monitoring strategies and conservation plan development.

(3) For those species management units classified as at risk, the Department, in addition to actions described in 635-007-0509(2), shall implement, within the Department's statutory authority, fish management changes likely to improve the conservation status of the conservation management unit, based upon a documented evaluation of the primary factors impacting fish within the species management unit. The Department shall respond as soon as possible to an improvement in the conservation status of the species management unit with a reclassification of the unit consistent with the guidance provided in 635-007-0509(1).

(4) In applying interim criteria, the Department recognizes that data may not be available to assess all populations belonging to a species management unit. The Department also recognizes that even when data for a population are available they may not be of sufficient detail or collected over a sufficient time period. In these circumstances, to determine if a population meets the interim criteria, it will be necessary to make inferences from those populations within the species management unit for which sufficient information is available or by using alternative qualitative and quantitative information and analyses to approximate interim criteria metrics. In evaluation of such species management units for conformity to the interim criteria, the Department shall document the assumptions and inferences associated in making this evaluation.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS 496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 96-2003, f. & cert. ef. 9-19-03

635-007-0542

Purpose of the Hatchery Management Policy

(1) The purpose of the Hatchery Management Policy is to describe the hatchery tool and its range of applications. The Hatchery Management Policy also provides general fish culture and facility guidelines and measures to maintain genetic resources of native fish populations spawned or reared in captivity. This policy applies to all Department hatchery operations and programs including Salmon and Trout Enhancement Program (STEP) fish propagation projects (OAR 635-009-0090 through 635-009-0240) and Cooperative Salmon Hatchery Programs (OAR 635-009-0400 through 635-009-0455).

(2) This policy describes best management practices that are intended to help ensure the conservation of both naturally produced native fish and hatchery produced fish in Oregon through the responsible use of hatcheries. The conservation of hatchery produced fish is important to maintain opportunities for fisheries and aid conservation of naturally produced native fish.

(3) The Hatchery Management Policy complements and supports the Native Fish Conservation Policy OAR 635-007-0502 through 635-007-0506 and will be implemented through conservation plans developed for individual species management units, hatchery program management plans, or other formal agreements with management partners. The Hatchery Management Policy provides a foundation for the management and reform of hatcheries in Oregon, whereas the Native Fish Conservation Policy establishes the process for defining the specific use of the hatchery tool in specific watersheds.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 65-2003, f. & cert. ef. 7-17-03

635-007-0543

Hatchery Management Policy Goals

(1) Foster and sustain opportunities for sport, commercial and tribal fishers consistent with the conservation of naturally produced native fish.

(2) Contribute toward the sustainability of naturally produced native fish populations through the responsible use of hatcheries and hatchery-produced fish.

(3) Maintain genetic resources of native fish populations spawned or reared in captivity.

(4) Minimize adverse ecological impacts to watersheds caused by hatchery facilities and operations.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 65-2003, f. & cert. ef. 7-17-03

635-007-0544

Operating Principles for Hatchery Management

(1) Hatchery management and reform will generally proceed from the following hatchery premise: The ideal hatchery removes as many random mortality effects as possible without having any other influence on the natural life or experience of native fish and their habitats. The hatchery premise has five main components that managers shall strive to incorporate into hatchery programs:

(a) Removing random mortality occurring in the natural environment;

(b) Simulating selective mortality operating in the natural environment;

(c) Minimizing artificial selection;

(d) Providing fish rearing and training experiences to reduce unnatural behaviors; and

(e) Minimizing ecological impacts associated with hatchery operations (e.g., competition and predation associated with release location and number, pathogen transfer and amplification, pollutants, passage barriers, overharvest of weak stocks in mixed stock fisheries).

(2) Success moving toward the premise in subsection (1) will be largely dependent on funding, research, program type, and facility or operating flexibility.

(3) Hatchery program management plans shall be developed and implemented in consultation and cooperation with management partners and the public, and in coordination with native fish conservation policy plans at local and regional scales.

(4) Hatchery programs shall be managed to provide optimum fishery and conservation benefits, based on the best available scientific information. Most programs will contribute toward fish management objectives primarily by raising fish for harvest while minimizing the impact on, or benefiting, fish that spawn naturally.

(5) Hatchery facilities shall be operated to maximize fish quality and minimize adverse impacts to watersheds, consistent with fish management objectives, applicable permits and agreements.

(6) Monitoring and evaluation shall be adequate to measure progress toward fish management and hatchery program objectives, contain risks within acceptable limits, and provide feedback for adaptive management.

Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.012, ORS496.138
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.171, ORS 496.172, ORS 496.176, ORS 496.182, ORS 496.430, ORS 496.435, ORS 496.445, ORS 496.450, ORS 496.455
Hist.: DFW 65-2003, f. & cert. ef. 7-17-03

635-007-0545

Hatchery Program Management Plans

(1) The Department shall develop hatchery program management plans for all hatchery programs. Clear management objectives that describe the role and expectations for hatchery programs relative to species conservation, watershed health and fisheries shall be the foundation for all hatchery program management plans. A hatchery program management plan may be a Hatchery and Genetic Management Plan, a Lower Snake River Compensation Plan annual operating plan, an aspect of a conservation plan developed under the Native Fish Conservation Policy (OAR 635-007-0502 through -0506) or similar document which describes the program's objectives, fish culture operations, facilities operations, and monitoring and evaluation, as more fully detailed in subsections (2) through (24) of this rule.

Planning and Coordination of Hatchery Programs

(2) When developing hatchery program management plans, the Department shall use the most up to date and reliable scientific information and seek the input and involvement of appropriate tribal, state and federal management partners, university programs and the public.

(3) The Native Fish Conservation Policy (OAR 635-007-0502 through -0506) provides the primary process for planning and coordinating hatchery programs, but these programs shall also be coordinated with obligations arising in other forums (e.g., U.S. v. Oregon, Lower Snake River Compensation Plan, Pacific Salmon Treaty) to avoid inconsistency and duplication.

(4) Coordination objectives include:

(a) Efficient use of resources (including sharing of facilities, staff, equipment and supplies);

(b) Improved communication among managing entities to share information and experience, jointly resolve issues, and promote common objectives pursued at local and regional scales.

(5) Hatchery program management plans shall be submitted to and approved (or modified) by the Fish Division. The Fish Division may waive the requirement to include specific elements of a hatchery program management plan upon a determination that the requirement would provide no appreciable benefit to hatchery management or native fish conservation.

(6) The Department shall continue to operate a hatchery program according to existing statutes, administrative rules, Commission directives, and binding agreements until that program's plan is approved.

Hatchery Program Objectives and Types

(7) Hatchery program objectives and types shall be based on fish management objectives established via conservation plans (OAR 635-007-0505) or other binding agreements. Until conservation plans or other agreements are in place, hatchery program objectives and types will be based on existing statutes, rules, Commission directives and current management direction.

(8) Hatchery program management plans shall include measurable criteria relating to the following general objectives:

(a) Conservation and/or fishery benefits;

(b) A net survival advantage (egg to adult) over naturally produced fish;

(c) Minimal adverse interactions (e.g., competition, predation, genetic introgression, and disease amplification) of hatchery programs with naturally produced native fish populations;

(d) Minimal adverse effects (e.g., water quality and quantity, solid and chemical wastes and fish passage) of hatchery facility operations on watershed health and native fish populations; and

(e) Sustainability of hatchery programs over time.

(9) Department hatchery programs will generally be distinguished as harvest or conservation hatchery programs. A single hatchery may have both harvest and conservation hatchery programs. If harvest and conservation programs are not distinguished, the Department shall clarify harvest and conservation objectives and their relative priorities.

(10) Harvest hatchery programs operate to enhance or maintain fisheries without impairing naturally reproducing populations. Operations shall integrate hatchery and natural production systems (e.g., locally-derived hatchery broodstocks, rearing containers simulating natural characteristics) if necessary for conservation, within funding and facility constraints and consistent with fishery management objectives. Harvest hatchery programs shall also separate (e.g., temporally, spatially, visually) hatchery produced and naturally produced native fish in fisheries and on spawning grounds as necessary for conservation. The hatchery program management plan may be designated as one of the following harvest hatchery program types:

(a) Harvest augmentation, which is used to increase fishing and harvest opportunities where there is no mitigation program in place;

(b) Mitigation, which is used pursuant to an agreement to provide fishing and harvest opportunities lost as a result of habitat deterioration, destruction or migration blockage.

(11) Conservation hatchery programs operate to maintain or increase the number of naturally produced native fish without reducing the productivity (e.g., survival) of naturally produced fish populations. Conservation hatchery programs shall integrate hatchery and natural production systems to provide a survival advantage with minimal impact on genetic, behavioral and ecological characteristics of targeted populations. Implementation shall proceed with caution and include monitoring and evaluation to gauge success in meeting goals and control risks. Long-term conservation success shall be tied to remediating causes of the decline that resulted in the need for hatchery intervention. Once goals are met then the hatchery program will be discontinued. The hatchery program management plan may be designated as one of the following conservation hatchery program types:

(a) Supplementation, which routes a portion of an imperiled wild population through a hatchery for part of its life cycle to gain a temporary survival boost, or brings in suitable hatchery produced fish or naturally produced native fish from outside the target river basin to supplement the imperiled local population;

(b) Restoration, which outplants suitable non-local hatchery produced or naturally produced native fish to establish a population in habitat currently vacant for that native species using the best available broodstock;

(c) Captive brood, which takes a portion or all of an imperiled wild population into a protective hatchery environment for the entire life cycle to maximize survival and the number of progeny produced;

(d) Captive rearing, which takes a portion of an imperiled wild population into a protective hatchery environment for only that part of its life cycle that cannot be sustained in the wild;

(e) Egg banking, which temporarily removes a naturally produced native fish population from habitats that cannot sustain it and relocates the population to another natural or artificial area that can support the population;

(f) Cryopreservation, which freezes sperm from naturally produced native fish for later use in conservation hatchery programs;

(g) Experimental, which investigates and resolves uncertainties relating to the responsible use of hatcheries as a management tool for fish conservation and use.

Fish Culture Operations

(12) Fish culture operations shall comply with fish health requirements of OAR 635-007-0549.

(13) Broodstock selection and collection. Hatchery program management plans shall identify the broodstock best able to meet the objectives of the type of program in which the broodstock will be used.

(a) For harvest hatchery programs, broodstock shall be used that best meet fishery objectives, consistent with conservation objectives to ensure risk to naturally produced native fish and their watersheds is within acceptable and clearly defined limits.

(A) For some harvest hatchery programs, fishery and conservation objectives will be best met using existing hatchery broodstocks and managing for minimal spatial or temporal overlap of hatchery produced and naturally produced native fish in spawning areas.

(B) For other harvest hatchery programs, fishery and conservation objectives will be best met using broodstocks derived from, or transitioning to, naturally produced native fish from the local watershed. This approach shall not be used if available data indicates the donor wild population will be impaired, or if conservation objectives are better met with existing hatchery broodstocks, or if hatchery programs are located in areas with too few naturally produced native fish to supply the hatchery broodstock;

(b) For conservation hatchery programs, broodstock shall be derived from the wild population targeted for hatchery intervention, or from nearby wild or hatchery populations with desired characteristics if the targeted wild population is extirpated or too depressed to provide brood fish;

(c) Broodstock maintenance shall be consistent with the fishery and conservation objectives established for the hatchery program.

(A) Hatchery program management plans shall identify effective population size targets and other strategies to reduce risk of inbreeding depression, genetic drift and domestication for broodstocks developed under subsection (a)(A).

(B) Hatchery program management plans shall identify target and allowable proportions of hatchery produced and naturally produced native fish incorporated into broodstocks developed under subsections (a)(B) and (b), consistent with conservation plan objectives.

(d) Broodstock collected shall represent the genetic variability of the donor stock by taking an unbiased representative sample with respect to run timing, size, gender, age and other traits important for long-term fitness of the population. The Fish Division may approve a deviation from this subsection if necessary to shift run timing and other characteristics of long-term hatchery broodstocks to better coincide with characteristics of wild populations in the watershed or to meet fish management goals. Hatchery program management plans shall explain the reason for any deviations;

(e) Facilities and methods used to collect broodstock shall minimize stress and maximize survival of fish to spawning, consistent with management objectives.

(14) Disposition of adult hatchery produced fish returning to hatchery facilities. Adult hatchery produced fish returning to collection facilities shall be used to meet program objectives and, if available, provide other ecological, societal and program benefits, consistent with objectives for watershed health and native fish conservation.

(a) Hatchery programs will be managed to meet, but not exceed, program objectives for returning adult fish. Environmental variation and other factors outside of management control may result in significantly less or more fish than planned.

(b) Adult hatchery produced fish returning to hatchery facilities shall be allocated among the categories of uses described in order of preference in subsections (c) and (d). The Department need not satisfy all potential uses within a category before providing fish to uses in lower categories. The Fish Division may approve additional uses or deviations from the stated order of preference to satisfy agreements with management partners, respond to unique situations or respond to unforeseen circumstances.

(c) Order of preference for disposition of adult hatchery produced fish returning to or collected at harvest hatchery program facilities:

(A) Meet broodstock needs for the program;

(B) Release live, spawned fish back into the wild if specified in management plans for species able to spawn more than once;

(C) Provide fish for tribal ceremonial and subsistence use;

(D) Provide additional fishing opportunities consistent with management plans (e.g., Fishery Management and Evaluation Plans);

(E) Allow hatchery produced fish to spawn naturally at locations and in numbers identified in existing fish management plans or conservation plans developed through the process outlined in the Native Fish Conservation Policy (OAR 635-007-0505);

(F) Place carcasses in natural spawning and rearing areas to enhance nutrient recycling, consistent with Department of Environmental Quality requirements, management plans and pathology constraints identified in OAR 635-007-0549;

(G) Provide for experimental, scientific or educational uses identified in conservation plans, management plans or other Department agreements;

(H) Sell eggs and carcasses from selected facilities to provide revenues to support hatchery programs and facilities;

(I) Provide fish to charitable food share programs benefiting needy Oregonians;

(J) Provide fish for animal feed to animal rehabilitation shelters, zoos, or other such operations;

(K) Dispose of fish in a landfill or at a rendering plant.

(d) Order of preference for disposition of adult hatchery produced fish returning to or collected at conservation hatchery program facilities:

(A) Meet natural spawning objectives of the specific hatchery program as identified in conservation plans;

(B) Meet hatchery broodstock needs for the specified conservation hatchery program management plan;

(C) Pelease live, spawned fish back into the wild if specified in conservation plans for species able to spawn more than once;

(D) Place carcasses in natural spawning and rearing areas to enhance nutrient recycling, consistent with Department of Environmental Quality requirements, management plans and pathology constraints identified in OAR 635-007-0549;

(E) Provide fish for tribal ceremonial and subsistence use;

(F) Provide additional fishing opportunities consistent with fishery management plans (e.g., Fishery Management and Evaluation Plans). (continued)