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<br />001600 <br /> <br />though only a small portion of river was likely sampled, these collections show that Colorado <br />pikeminnow existed in the river from its mouth up to the present-day Navajo Reservoir Basin. <br />Razorback sucker was not found in any of these collections. <br /> <br />During the mid-1900s, C. L. Hubbs and R. R. Miller, two noted ichthyologists from the University <br />of Michigan, sampled throughout the West, usually stopping at bridge crossings and sampling with <br />seines for I or 2 days at each site. Some of these collections were noted in various reports, but <br />others were not documented and required reviewing collections at the University of Michigan's <br />Museum of Zoology to find them. Miller collected young Colorado pikeminnow near Mexican <br />Hat, Utah (Figure 2.1), in August 1960 (Sigler and Miller 1963). More recently, museum <br />specimens from the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology provided information on more <br />collections between 1934 and 1961 (S. Platania, University of New Mexico, personal <br />communication). C.L. Hubbs collected 44 roundtail chub from the San Juan River near Shiprock, <br />New Mexico, during two days in October 1944, and three roundtail chub were collected at Mexican <br />Hat, Utah, in 1951. The collections by Hubbs and Miller are important for understanding the native <br />fish abundance in the San Juan River. They were some of the first seine collections, and they were <br />made by ichthyologists interested in the distribution and abundance of native fishes of the West. <br />These collections verified that Colorado pikeminnow reproduced in the San Juan River, and they <br />also verified that roundtail chub was common in the San Juan River, perhaps as far downstream <br />as Shiprock, New Mexico. These collections, along with Jordan's earlier accounts and the scattered <br />collection of adult Colorado pikeminnow, show that Colorado pikeminnow was common in the San <br />Juan River and that roundtail chub was common at least in the river upstream from Shiprock, New <br />Mexico, in the mid-1900s. The absence of razorback sucker in these scattered collections may <br />mean that this species was relatively uncommon in the San Juan River, but it also may mean that <br />this species used areas that were not readily accessible. Typically, razorback sucker adults are only <br />collected during spring, when they often use flooded mouths of tributaries and other low-velocity <br />habitats (Holden and Stalnaker 1975). During other times of the year, razorback sucker appears <br />to use main channels (Tyus 1987), which were likely poorly sampled in the early to mid 1900s. <br />Koster (1960) provides anecdotal accounts of razorback sucker in the San Juan River from the mid- <br />1900s, suggesting the species was still found in the river. <br /> <br />Sampling of the San Juan River increased in the early 1960s as planning studies for Navajo Dam <br />progressed. In addition, a poisoning operation was conducted just prior to the closure of Navajo <br />Dam to rid the new reservoir basin of native and nonnative nongame fish. Olson (1962) of the <br />NMGF conducted a pre-poisoning survey ofthe reservoir area in 1961 and collected both roundtail <br />chub and Colorado pikeminnow. Olson (1962) also conducted spot surveys offish killed by the <br />poisoning operation. fish were apparently killed below Farmington, further downstream than had <br />been planned by the poisoning operation, and a few dead Colorado pikeminnow were found. <br />Throughout the 1960s, the NMGF continued fishery sampling in the newly formed Navajo <br />Reservoir, where roundtail chub were very abundant for several years after impoundment. <br /> <br />It was not until the late 1970s that relatively extensive surveys of the San Juan River were initiated. <br />Sublette (1977) sampled the river and some of its tributaries from near Pagosa Springs, Colorado, <br /> <br />September 2000 <br /> <br />2-3 <br /> <br />Program Evaluation Report <br />