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Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document
ARLIS Uniform Cover Page
Title:
Aquatic furbearer abundance and habitat use
SuWa 132
Author(s) – Personal:
Author(s) – Corporate:
Alaska Energy Authority
AEA-identified category, if specified:
Aquatic and fish resources study requests
AEA-identified series, if specified:
Series (ARLIS-assigned report number):
Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project document number 132
Existing numbers on document:
Published by:
[Anchorage] : Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project, [2012]
Date published:
5/16/2012
Published for:
Date or date range of report:
Volume and/or Part numbers:
Final or Draft status, as indicated:
Document type:
Pagination:
5 p.
Related work(s):
Pages added/changed by ARLIS:
Notes:
All reports in the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document series include an ARLIS-
produced cover page and an ARLIS-assigned number for uniformity and citability. All reports
are posted online at http://www.arlis.org/resources/susitna-watana/
Susitna–Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC # 14241 Alaska Energy Authority
Aquatic Furbearer Study Request 5/16/2012 Page 1
1.1. Aquatic Furbearer Abundance and Habitat Use
1.2. Requester of Proposed Study
AEA anticipates a resource agency will request this study.
1.3. Responses to Study Request Criteria (18 CFR 5.9(b))
1.3.1. Describe the goals and objectives of each study proposal and the information
to be obtained.
The goal of the aquatic furbearer study is to collect preconstruction baseline data on aquatic
furbearers in the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project (Project) area to enable assessment of
Project-related impacts and develop appropriate mitigation measures (AEA 2011). The beaver
is the most prominent aquatic furbearer statewide in terms of ecological and economic
importance. Other aquatic furbearers in the Project area include river otter, mink, and muskrat.
Four specific objectives have been identified for the aquatic furbearer study:
1) Delineate the distribution and estimate the current population size of beavers;
2) Describe the distribution and relative abundance of river otter, mink, and muskrat;
3) Document habitat use by aquatic furbearers;
4) Review available information to characterize food habits and diets of piscivorous
furbearers (river otter and mink) as background for the separate mercury risk
assessment study.
1.3.2. If applicable, explain the relevant resource management goals of the agencies
and/or Alaska Native entities with jurisdiction over the resource to be studied.
[Please include any regulatory citations and references that will assist in
understanding the management goals.]
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) is responsible for the management,
protection, maintenance, and improvement of Alaska’s fish and game resources in the interest
of the economy and general well-being of the state (AS 16.05.020). ADF&G manages
subsistence and sport hunting and trapping for fur animals on State lands (5 AAC 85.060),
through regulations set by the Board of Game (AS 16.05.255). The Federal Subsistence Board,
which comprises representatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service,
Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and U.S. Forest Service, oversees the
Federal Subsistence Management Program (57 FR 22940; 36 CFR Parts 242.1–28; 50 CFR
Parts 100.1–28), with responsibility for managing subsistence resources on Federal public lands
for rural residents of Alaska.
ADF&G’s management goals for furbearers are to provide for an optimal harvest of furbearers
and the greatest opportunity for citizens to participate in hunting and trapping of furbearers.
ADF&G management objectives are to maintain accurate annual harvest records based on
sealing documents, for those species that require sealing of hides, and to develop specific
population and harvest objectives. ADF&G requires that the pelts of river otters taken anywhere
inside or outside the state be sealed by an authorized ADF&G representative. Beaver pelts
taken in Game Management Units (GMUs) 13 and 14 also must be sealed, but not those taken
in the other GMUs (16 and 20) bordering the Project area.
Susitna–Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC # 14241 Alaska Energy Authority
Aquatic Furbearer Study Request 5/16/2012 Page 2
1.3.3. If the requester is not a resource agency, explain any relevant public interest
considerations in regard to the proposed study.
Wildlife resources are owned by the State of Alaska, and the Project could potentially affect
these public interest resources.
1.3.4. Describe existing information concerning the subject of the study proposal,
and the need for additional information.
Studies of aquatic furbearers for the original Alaska Power Authority Susitna Hydroelectric
Project (SHP) in the 1980s focused primarily on beaver and secondarily on muskrats. Beavers,
which were selected to predict downstream impacts of the SHP on furbearers, were studied
primarily downstream of the proposed dam site (Gipson et al 1982, 1984; Woolington et al.
1984, 1985; Woolington 1986). Aerial surveys were used to identify locations of lodges and
caches and to estimate population levels and overwinter survival, and boat surveys in summer
were used to detect beaver sign. Surveys were conducted using boats and airplanes between
Devils Canyon and Cook Inlet during summer 1980 and 1982; in general, beaver sign increased
substantially with distance downriver from Devils Canyon (Gipson et al. 1982, 1984). Side
channels and sloughs were the habitat types used most often. Caches, lodges, and dens were
found most often in habitats that had silty banks, willows, and poplars. Little or no sign of beaver
activity was found in the mainstem Susitna River during summer surveys (Gipson et al. 1984).
Away from the Susitna River, beaver sign was found along slow-flowing sections of most
tributaries, including Portage Creek, Indian River (especially along a tributary flowing out of
Chulitna Pass), streams along the access-road route alternative between Gold Creek and Devils
Canyon, and Prairie Creek (Gipson et al. 1984).
Spring and fall counts of beaver lodges and food caches were conducted between Devils
Canyon and Talkeetna (Gipson et al. 1984; Woolington et al. 1984, 1985; Woolington 1986).
Fall counts were conducted annually during 1982–1985 and spring counts were conducted in
1984 and 1985. Between 1982 and 1985, the population in that area was estimated at 70–220
beavers. Aerial surveys for beavers (and muskrats) were conducted in the upstream study area
during spring and summer 1980 (Gipson et al. 1982). Beaver colonies in the SHP impoundment
zones occurred mostly in lakes between 610 and 730 m (2,000 and 2,400 ft) elevation. Colonies
also were present in slow-moving sections of most of the larger tributaries, particularly
Deadman Creek. No active beaver lodges or bank dens were found on the Susitna River
upstream of Devils Canyon (Gipson et al. 1982), however.
Aerial surveys for muskrat pushups were flown upstream from Gold Creek during spring 1980
(Gipson et al. 1982). Muskrat sign was observed most often in lakes on plateaus above the river
valley, at 610–730 m (2,001–2,395 feet) elevation. Muskrats in the upstream area appeared to
depend on fairly small, isolated areas of wetland habitats. Muskrats also were seen along slow-
moving sections of creeks and at locations where creeks drained into larger streams,
particularly near the Stephan Lake–Prairie Creek and Deadman Lake–Deadman Creek
drainages.
A large body of research demonstrates that the beaver is a keystone species that exerts
profound ecological effects on hydrology, geomorphology, vegetation, nutrient cycling, the
productivity of aquatic and riparian habitats, and the distribution and abundance of fishes and
other aquatic organisms (Butler 1995, Collen and Gibson 2001, Müller–Schwarze and Sun
2003, Rosell et al. 2005). Little current research has been conducted in GMU 13 on aquatic
furbearers, however. Updated information is needed because of the ecological importance of
Susitna–Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC # 14241 Alaska Energy Authority
Aquatic Furbearer Study Request 5/16/2012 Page 3
beavers in freshwater aquatic systems. Data on distribution, population densities, and
movements of aquatic furbearers is limited to that collected for the SHP, and that information is
now 25–30 years old. Furbearer reports produced by ADF&G contain general abundance
information obtained from trapper questionnaires (Schumacher 2010), but reports do not include
drainage-specific population data.
1.3.5. Explain any nexus between project operations and effects (direct, indirect,
and/or cumulative) on the resource to be studied, and how the study results
would inform the development of license requirements.
For aquatic furbearers, the Project will result in habitat loss and alteration, habitat fragmentation,
disturbance, and direct and indirect mortality due to development activities (AEA 2011). The
aquatic furbearers study will provide data to assess the following direct and indirect impacts and
cumulative effects:
• Direct and indirect loss and alteration of wildlife habitats from Project construction and
operation;
• Potential physical and/or behavioral blockage and alteration of movements due to
reservoir water and ice conditions, access and transmission corridors, and new patterns
of human activities and related indirect effects;
• Potential direct mortality due to Project-related fluctuating water and ice conditions in the
reservoir and downstream river reaches;
• Potential direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts on predator and prey abundance and
distribution related to increased human activities and habitat changes resulting from
Project development;
• Potential direct behavioral impacts to wildlife, such as attraction or avoidance, resulting
from vehicular use, noise, and increased human presence associated with Project
construction or operation;
• Potential indirect behavioral impacts to wildlife, such as attraction or avoidance, resulting
from changes in hunting, vehicular use, noise, and increased human presence
associated with increased subsistence or recreational access that may be facilitated by
Project development;
• Potential direct mortality due to vehicle strikes, exposure to contaminants, attraction to
garbage and human activity, and protection of life and property; and
• Potential changes in wildlife mortality rates due to increased subsistence and sport
harvest facilitated by Project development.
This aquatic furbearer study would provide baseline data for the Project area, including habitat
use data for development of habitat evaluation criteria, and would provide a basis for impact
assessment; developing any necessary protection, mitigation, and enhancement (PME)
measures; and developing resource management and monitoring plans.
1.3.6. Explain how any proposed study methodology (including any preferred data
collection and analysis techniques, or objectively quantified information, and a
schedule including appropriate field season(s) and the duration) is consistent
with generally accepted practice in the scientific community or, as appropriate,
considers relevant tribal values and knowledge.
Aerial surveys of beaver lodges and food caches would be conducted in a small piston
helicopter (Robinson R44®, Robinson Helicopter Company, Torrance, California) to assess the
Susitna–Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC # 14241 Alaska Energy Authority
Aquatic Furbearer Study Request 5/16/2012 Page 4
abundance and distribution of beaver in the middle reach of the Susitna River below the
proposed dam site (downstream extent to be informed by instream flow modeling), the reservoir
impoundment zone in the upper basin, the proposed facilities and laydown/storage areas, and
access road and transmission-line corridors. Surveys would be flown in fall shortly before
freeze-up to document the distribution and abundance of active colonies, as indicated by lodges
and food caches (Hay 1958, Payne 1981).
Aerial surveys in winter would focus on snow-tracking of river otters (e.g., Reid et al. 1987,
Sulkava and Liukko 2007) and, if feasible, mink, in the same areas surveyed for beavers. Aerial
surveys of ponds and lakes in winter would be used to enumerate muskrat pushups in the
portions of the Project area in the upper basin that would be affected directly by Project
infrastructure and activities. All sightings of aquatic furbearers would be recorded with Global
Positioning System (GPS) receivers for entry into a geospatial database for use in the wildlife
habitat evaluation for the Project.
Additional data on aquatic furbearers (primarily river otter and mink) would be collected during
winter track surveys of terrestrial furbearers being conducted for that separate study. In addition,
historical and current data on harvest of aquatic furbearers in GMU subunits 13A, 13B, 13E,
14B, 16A and 20A would by synthesized for the separate wildlife harvest study, beginning in
2012 (AEA 2012). Details of incidental sightings of aquatic furbearers would be requested from
other Project researchers working on fish and aquatic resources studies.
1.3.7. Describe considerations of level of effort and cost, as applicable, and why any
proposed alternative studies would not be sufficient to meet the stated
information needs.
Aerial surveys using a small piston helicopter would be conducted in fall and winter of both 2013
and 2014 to assess the relative abundance and habitat use of aquatic furbearers in the Project
area. Beaver surveys would require up to a week of survey effort in October. Winter track
surveys, requiring approximately 3–5 days each, would be conducted monthly in mid- to late
winter (February to April). Muskrat pushup surveys would be conducted in late winter (April).
1.3.8. Literature Cited
AEA (Alaska Energy Authority). 2011. Pre-Application Document: Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric
Project, FERC Project No. 14241. December 2011. Prepared for the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC.
AEA (Alaska Energy Authority). 2012. Past and current big game and furbearer harvest study
for the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC Project No. 14241. Draft final version
(March 21, 2012). Alaska Energy Authority, Anchorage.
Butler, D. R. 1995. Zoogeomorphology: Animals as Geomorphic Agents. Cambridge University
Press, New York, NY. 231 pp.
Collen, P., and R. J. Gibson. 2001. The general ecology of beavers (Castor spp.), as related to
their influence on stream ecosystems and riparian habitats, and the subsequent effects on
fish—a review. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 10: 439–461.
Gipson, P. S., S. W. Buskirk, and T. W. Hobgood. 1982. Susitna Hydroelectric Project
environmental studies, Subtask 7.11: furbearers—Phase I report. Report by Alaska
Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, for Terrestrial
Environmental Specialists, Inc. 81 pp.
Susitna–Watana Hydroelectric Project, FERC # 14241 Alaska Energy Authority
Aquatic Furbearer Study Request 5/16/2012 Page 5
Gipson, P. S., S. W. Buskirk, T. W. Hobgood, and J. D. Woolington. 1984. Susitna Hydroelectric
Project furbearer studies: Phase I report update. Final report by Alaska Cooperative Wildlife
Research Unit, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, for the Alaska Power Authority, Anchorage.
100 pp.
Hay, K. G. 1958. Beaver census methods in the Rocky Mountain region. Journal of Wildlife
Management 22: 395–402.
Müller–Schwarze, D., and L. Sun. 2003. The beaver: natural history of a wetlands engineer.
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY. 190 pp.
Payne, N. F. 1981. Accuracy of aerial censusing for beaver colonies in Newfoundland. Journal
of Wildlife Management 45: 1014–1016.
Reid, D. G., M. B. Bayer, T. E. Code, and B. McLean. 1987. A possible method for estimating
river otter, Lutra canadensis, populations using snow tracks. Canadian Field-Naturalist 101:
576–580.
Rosell, F., O. Bozser, P. Collen, and H. Parker. 2005. Ecological impact of beavers Castor fiber
and Castor canadensis and their ability to modify ecosystems. Mammal Review 35: 248–
276.
Schumacher, T. 2010. Trapper questionnaire: statewide annual report, 1 July 2008–30 June
2009. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Wildlife Conservation, Juneau.
Sulkava, R. T., and U.-M. Liukkoo. 2007. Use of snow-tracking methods to estimate the
abundance of otter (Lutra lutra) in Finland with evaluation of one-visit census for monitoring
purposes. Annales Zoologici Fennici 44: 179–188.
Woolington, J. D. 1986. Susitna Hydroelectric Project. Furbearer studies, fall 1985: Beaver.
Report by LGL Alaska Research Associates, Inc. and Harza–Ebasco Susitna Joint Venture,
Anchorage, for Alaska Power Authority, Anchorage. 23 pp.
Woolington, J. D., P. S. Gipson, and D. Volsen. 1984. Susitna Hydroelectric Project, furbearer
studies, fall 1984: beaver. Report by LGL Alaska Research Associates, Anchorage, and
Alaska Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Fairbanks, for the Alaska Power Authority,
Anchorage. 30 pp.
Woolington, J. D., R. H. Pollard, and P. S. Gipson. 1985. Susitna Hydroelectric Project,
furbearer studies, spring 1985: beaver. Report by LGL Alaska Research Associates and
Arkansas Game & Fish Commission for the Alaska Power Authority, Anchorage. 14 pp.