Abstract

AbstractAllocating reservoir flows to meet societal and ecosystem needs under increasing water demands and climatic variability presents challenges to resource managers. Often, rivers have been regulated to meet flow and temperature compliance points or mimic historical patterns. Because it is difficult to assess if this approach is efficient, process‐based models are being used to design river operations. This paper describes a model for fish incubation survival based on the premise that mortality from thermal stress occurs over a critical window (CW) of embryo development. A model for the embryo CW based on metabolic studies of development is combined with density‐dependent and background mortalities to describe salmonid survival from egg fertilization to fry detection downstream. The model is calibrated with a two‐decade dataset of Sacramento River winter‐run Chinook salmon egg‐to‐fry survival. The effects of temperature exposure over a range of CWs were explored. Based on statistical and biological support, two alternative CWs were identified for temperature control: the entire incubation period and a short duration window prior to hatching. Survival under different CW assumptions and temperature control operations were simulated with an internet‐accessible form of the model. The analysis indicated that under years of limited cold‐water resources, targeting water releases to the CW prior to hatching would yield the highest incubation survival.

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