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WSP11797
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Last modified
1/26/2010 3:18:54 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 5:11:00 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8240.200.33.J
Description
15-Mile Reach (UCRBRIP)
State
CO
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Water Division
5
Date
1/1/2000
Author
USFWS
Title
Importance of the 15-Mile Reach to Colorado River Populations of Endangered Colorado Pikeminnow and Razorback Sucker
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Publication
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<br />EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br /> <br />The U. S, Fish and Wildlife Service <br />(USFWS) takes the position that the quality <br />and quantity of habitat in a IS-mile reach of <br />the upper Colorado Rivec must be protected <br />and enhanced if Colorado River populations <br />of two endangered species are to be main- <br />tained and recovered. The reach extends <br />upstream from the Gunnison River conflu- <br />ence in Grand Junction, Colorado to the <br />Grand Valley Diversion darn at Palisade, <br />Colorado. The flow regime of the reach has <br />been altered in two primary ways: (I) up- <br />stream diversion dams have significantly <br />, reduced summer flows since the turn of the <br />century; 'and (2) headwater dams have re- <br />duced spring runoff flows since the middle of <br />the century. Despite these and other impacts, <br />the IS-mile reach and the IS-mile reach <br />immediately downstream continue to, be <br />concentration areas for a remnant Colorado <br />Rivec population of the endangered Colorado <br />pikeminnow, and until recent years, for the <br />endangered razorback sucker, now almost <br />extirpated, This report attempts to summa- <br />rize the biological basis for why the IS-mile <br />reach, and the Grand Valley in general, are so <br />critically important to the maintenance and <br />recovery of these populations. <br />Floodplains contain habitats critical to <br />the reproductive strategy of razorback suck- <br />ers. Alluvial valleys containing such habitats <br />appear to have been centers of distribution <br />for this species in the upper Colorado River. <br />These areas include the Grand Valley as well <br />as the more upstream De Beque-to-Rifle <br />reach. Both areas should therefore be the <br />focus of recovery efforts for this species in <br />the upper Colorado River. <br />For Colorado pikeminnow, movements <br />are an integral part of the life history strategy: <br />adults migrate to spawn, larvae drift long <br />distances down river, and sub- and young <br />adults disperse from nursery areas to reaches <br />containing more suitable adult habitat. As a <br />consequence, an individual fish is likely to <br />use many sections of river during the course <br />of its life. Each part of the river is therefore <br />important; however, based on the distribution <br /> <br />of these life stages, some areas are clearly <br />more important than others. For young, the <br />reach downstream of Moab, Utah evidently <br />contains the most important rearing habitat in <br />the river. Conversely, the reach upstreainof <br />Westwater, Utah evidently contains the most <br />important adult habitat. <br />Upstream of Westwater, the 33-mile <br />. long Grand Valley consistently supports the <br />greatest concentrations of adult Colorado <br />pikeminnow. The relatively high gradient, <br />clear water, broad floodplain and a diversity <br />of habitat types make these upstream sections <br />of river more productive than more down- <br />stream sections. Higher standing stocks of <br />periphyton. and invertebrates support rela- <br />tively high numbers of forage fish, in turn <br />providing greater food availability for the <br />river's top piscivore, the Colorado pikemin- <br />now. However, main-channel temperatures <br />decline with distance upstream and upstream <br />movements therefore take these warmwater <br />fish. away from a more preferred theimal <br />regime. The Grand Valley, including the IS- <br />mile reach, may represent the best balance <br />between food supply and preferred tempera- <br />tures. It is not known 'how much farther <br />upstream of the Grand Valley these fish <br />would establish home ranges were it not for <br />the diversion darns that currently block their <br />movement. However, results of an analysis <br />of pikeminnow distribution in the Yampa <br />River (where adults have unlimited upstream <br />access), and a comparison between the ther- <br />mal regime there and that in the Colorado <br />River, suggests that suitable temperatures in <br />the Colorado River may extend approxi- <br />mately 14 miles into canyon habitat upstream <br />of the Grand Valley. <br />Alluvial valleys with floodplain habitats, <br />high productivity and relatively warm main- <br />channel temperatures are in short supply in <br />the upper Colorado River. The Grand Val- <br />ley, including the IS-mile reach, is the center <br />of distribution for adult Colorado pikemin- <br />now in the upper Colorado River and may <br />have historically been so for the razorback <br />sucker. It is therefore clear that this area will <br />be critical in recovering populations of these <br />endangered fish. <br /> <br />1 <br />
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