Science Advisory Report 2024/041
Geospatial Indicators and Metrics for Threats to Fish Habitat in the Fraser River Basin with Thompson-Nicola as a Case Study
Summary
- The work presents an approach for compiling and quantifying a large amount of spatial information to estimate threats to fish and fish habitat in the Fraser River Basin (FRB), including nine anthropogenic threats, four climate-change related threats, and cumulative threat scores, using readily available data.
- For this document, threats are defined as the exposure of fish and fish habitat to anthropogenic activities and climate change. Additional information on the sensitivity of focal fish and fish habitats to the identified threats (such as stressor-response relationships) was beyond the scope of this analysis but would be needed to develop cumulative effects mapping.
- The approaches to estimating each of the indicators provide an initial broad-scale standardized framework that can be applied to characterize threats throughout the Pacific Region. Further, the approach presented incorporates many of the desirable features of geospatial mapping tools for fish and fish habitat identified in DFO (2022).
- Generally, Species At Risk (SAR) habitat with limited ranges (i.e., Coastrange Sculpin, Green Sturgeon, Nooksack Dace, and Salish Sucker) had higher median human activity cumulative threat scores relative to all streams in the FRB. Conversely, median human activity threat scores tended to be similar among Salmon Conservation Units (CUs) and relative to all streams, which is driven in part by the large extent of CUs that inherently capture a greater range of threat scores across streams.
- Re-assessing threats temporally was considered largely feasible based on updates to the included data, and by using the current threat assessment as a baseline.
- Example applications of the threat scores and associated inputs for informing management and prioritization decisions for Salmon habitat in the Thompson-Nicola Ecological Drainage Unit (EDU), particularly in the context of climate change were conducted:
- The Deadman and Adams River watershed groups were identified as having high cumulative composite scores under current and future climate conditions across Salmon species in the EDU.
- The riparian input composite score identified high scores including along the North Thompson River, Eagle River, and Shuswap River based on nonpoint source inputs, riparian disturbance, and modeled environmental favourability (probability of occurrence) for Salmon spawning.
- The water resource composite score found the South Thompson River watershed had high scores across Salmon species based on co-occurrence of high water withdrawal allowances and low stream flows.
- The anadromous fragmentation score identified high variation in this metric across the EDU, based on modeled environmental favourability above dams that are full barriers.
- Considerations for application:
- The analytical approach would be strengthened by sensitivity analyses and validation with independent data. Currently, confidence in the relative characterization of threat scores (including cumulative threat scores) is uncertain. Recommendations for future analyses include developing and applying metrics for levels of confidence in threat scores, which could be based on expert review or formal criteria.
- A variety of improvements and alternatives to individual and cumulative threat scores are provided for consideration. It is recommended that uncertainty in outputs be considered prior to applying the approach to inform fish and fish habitat management decisions.
- This broad-scale tool can provide insight into within-watershed planning and prioritization. Local-scale application may be further informed by local expertise, Indigenous knowledge, salmon population data, and finer-scale tools.
This Science Advisory Report is from the February 27–29, 2024 regional peer review on Geospatial Indicators and Metrics for Threats to Fish Habitat in the Fraser River Basin with Thompson-Nicola as a Case Study. Additional publications from this meeting will be posted on the Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) Science Advisory Schedule as they become available.
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