Thursday August 15, 2024
Interagency Ecological Program —
Pop quiz – what are the three longest-running monitoring programs in Sacramento Delta? The Summer Townet Survey started in 1959 to monitor young-of-year striped bass, the Fall Midwater Trawl survey started in 1967 to monitor juvenile striped bass after the Summer Townet finished for the year, and the Adult Striped Bass Survey started in 1969 to monitor adult striped bass (males reach sexual maturity at 2 to 4 years old, when they are about 11 inches long, and females at 4 to 8 years old, when they are 21-25 inches long). Data from Summer Townet and Fall Midwater Trawl have been used for tons of other projects, and are now used to monitor many species of native and non-native pelagic fish (Kimmerer 2002, Mac Nally et al. 2010, Sommer et al. 2011, Bever et al. 2016, Mahardja et al. 2021, Smith et al. 2021, Tempel et al. 2021), but not many people know about the Adult Striped Bass Dataset – and it’s just recently been published online (Stompe and Hobbs 2024)!
Why has so much of the monitoring in the Delta started for striped bass? Well, the striped bass – Morone saxatilis – was introduced into the Sacramento River in 1879 (Stevens et al. 1987) and is a popular sport fish. It originally came from the East Coast of North America, where it was a food source for the Indigenous people of the region and has been a favorite of fishermen after colonization as well. Overfishing has caused a decline in abundance on the East Coast (though the fishing rate has been reduced to better manage the stock)(Richards and Rago 1999, Fabrizio et al. 2017), but how are they doing in California?
The young-of-the-year fish picked up in the Summer Townet and Fall Midwater Trawl have declined a lot since the 1980s, with a particularly sharp downturn in the early 2000s (Sommer et al. 2007), though they have not declined as sharply as native pelagic fishes (Mac Nally et al. 2010, Nobriga and Smith 2020).