Title: Juvenile Abundance Monitoring: Santa Rosa Creek, Russian River, California, 1994-2001
- Line data
- 2002
- Not owned by MIT (Owned by Stanford)
Dates
- Issued: 2002
- Coverage: 1994
- Coverage: 2001
Publishers
- Circuit Rider Productions
Summary
This line shapefile represents the juvenile salmonid abundance monitoring that was conducted in Santa Rosa Creek (a tributary of the Russian River) to evaluate spawning success, fry or fingerling production, and juvenile survivorship as part of a larger study examining the potential effects of reclaimed water discharged to Santa Rosa Creek by the Santa Rosa Subregional Reclamation System. Provides temporal data on fish and other aquatic species abundance in multiple Russian River tributaries. Circuit Rider Productions and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (2002). Juvenile Abundance Monitoring: Santa Rosa Creek, Russian River, California, 1994-2001. Circuit Rider Productions. Available at: http://purl.stanford.edu/zd583bw5976 Juvenile abundance monitoring was conducted within "index zones". Each stream was divided into upper, middle and lower reaches, based on elevation, average gradient, and distance from the Russian River, and an index zone was select from surveys within each reach. Index zones were established during the first study year and surveyed for habitat condition. Each index zone was broken down into habitat unit types (pool, riffle, glide), in which a unit is defined as a continuous portion of the stream of variable length, within which only one habitat type is present or is dominant. Juvenile abundance monitoring was conducted in selected units rather than the entire index zone. However, mapping is at the scale of index zone, with data for individual units included. Fish were sampled in selected units within each index zone by repeated passes through the unit with a beach seine. All fish and other species (invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, mammals) captured were identified to species, and the salmonids (steelhead or coho) were measured (fork length). Monitoring was conducted at the beginning (July) and end (October-November) of the summer dry period to enable estimation of percent retention within the sampling area over this critical time period, as well as inferences regarding spawning success and juvenile growth rate. Mapping was conducted at the scale of index zone rather than habitat unit. Data for habitat zone is presented here without spatial data as supplemental information. This layer is presented in the WGS84 coordinate system for web display purposes. Downloadable data are provided in native coordinate system or projection.
Subjects
- Environment
- Inland Waters
- Sonoma County (Calif.)
- Mendocino County (Calif.)
- Russian River Watershed (Calif.)
- Coho salmon
- Steelhead (Fish)
- Chinook salmon
- Salmonid
- Datasets
Geospatial coordinates
- Bounding Box: BBOX (-122.824348, -122.591946, 38.479146, 38.445168)
- Geometry: BBOX (-122.824348, -122.591946, 38.479146, 38.445168)
Provider
Stanford
Rights
- Access rights: Restricted
Citation
Circuit Rider Productions. Juvenile Abundance Monitoring: Santa Rosa Creek, Russian River, California, 1994-2001. Circuit Rider Productions. Line data. https://purl.stanford.edu/zd583bw5976
Format
Shapefile
Languages
- English