Document Details

Sacramento Valley Salmon Resiliency Strategy June 2017

California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) | June 2nd, 2017


The Sacramento Valley Salmon Resiliency Strategy (Strategy) is a science-based document that has been prepared by the State of California (State) to address specific near- and long-term needs of Sacramento River winter-run Chinook salmon (winter-run), Central Valley spring-run Chinook salmon (spring-run), and California Central Valley steelhead (steelhead). The Strategy mirrors the approach taken with the Delta Smelt Resiliency Strategy developed by the State in 2016: science-driven, focused, and designed to provide resource agencies, the public, Congress, and the California State Legislature with information critical to collaborative approaches to species resiliency.

The Strategy relies heavily on the National Marine Fisheries Service Final Recovery Plan for winter-run, spring-run, and steelhead (NMFS 2014), and is guided by conceptual models of factors driving winter-run population dynamics at key life stages developed by the salmon and sturgeon assessment of indicators by life-stage (SAIL) teams (Johnson et al. 2016; Heublein et al. 2017). The actions are also supported, where indicated, by other salmonid recovery planning documents and efforts.
The Strategy is an aggressive approach to improving species viability and resiliency by implementing specific habitat restoration actions. The State will take leadership roles in each action, although in all cases federal and local agency leadership, coordination, and partnerships are required for success.

Recent successful restoration efforts led by local agencies and landowners demonstrate the importance and value of these collaborative partnerships. State agencies that could implement this Strategy include the California Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) and the Department of Fish and Wildlife (DFW). The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) will be a primary partner in many of the actions.

In many cases, included actions will benefit an array of aquatic and terrestrial species. Coordination and alignment across various resource management agencies will ensure achievement of maximum public benefit. All of the actions will comply with applicable laws including the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA), California Endangered Species Act, California Environmental Quality Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and the federal Clean Water Act.

Keywords

anadromous fish, ecosystem management, endangered species, fisheries