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Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document
ARLIS Uniform Cover Page
Title:
Instream flow study (IFS)
SuWa 146
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 146
Existing numbers on document:
Published by:
[Anchorage] : Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project, [2012]
Date published:
5/15/12
Published for:
Date or date range of report:
Volume and/or Part numbers:
Final or Draft status, as indicated:
Document type:
Pagination:
13 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
Instream Flow Study Request 5/1504/12 Page 1
1.1. Title of proposed study
Instream Flow Study (IFS)
1.2. Requestor of proposed study
AEA anticipates resource agencies will request this study.
1.3. Responses to study request criteria (18 CFR 5.9(b))
The following sections provide the necessary context and justification for the proposed study.
1.3.1. Describe the goals and objectives of each study proposal and the
information to be obtained.
The objectives of the Instream Flow studies are as follows:
1. Develop modeling approaches to quantify the seasonal habitat versus flow and other
parameter relationships for aquatic species, life stages and/or guilds, within the different
habitat types of the Susitna River.
2. Use the habitat versus flow/other parameter relationships to develop time series and
effective habitat analysis appropriate for quantifying existing conditions and a range of
with-Project conditions; the time scale for this analysis will be based on proposed Project
operations and may include hourly, daily, weekly, or seasonal time steps.
3. Select surface-water transects for 1-D modeling and/or segments for 2-D modeling to
measure and model mainstem Susitna River habitat types.
4. Identify the time periods, flow/other parameter conditions and life stages when habitat
may be a limiting factor for aquatic species.
5. Develop new, or modify existing, habitat suitability criteria (HSC) curves for selected
target species and life stages.
6. Develop a set of integrated habitat-specific aquatic habitat models (i.e., mainstem, side
channel, side slough, upland slough, tributary mouth, etc.) that can be linked with
riverine process models that produces a time series of data for a variety of biologically
relevant metrics under alternative operational scenarios. These metrics include (but are
not necessarily limited to):
o water surface elevations at selected river locations;
o water velocities within transect subdivisions (cells) over a range of flows;
o groundwater (upwelling/downwelling);
o varial zone areas;
o frequency and duration of exposure/inundation of the varial zone at selected
locations;
o habitat quantities by species and life stage within respective habitat types;
o water temperature characteristics; etc.
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7. Conduct a variety of post-processing comparative analyses derived from the output
metrics estimated under the habitat specific aquatic habitat models. These include (but
are not necessarily limited to):
o comparisons of habitat quantity and quality (e.g., habitat exceedance plots)
o ramping rates (e.g., changes in flow versus time);
o juvenile fish stranding/trapping;
o habitat sustainability (effective habitat analysis);
o distribution and abundance of benthic macroinvertebrates under alternative
operational scenarios.
8. Develop hydraulic routing models that estimate water surface elevations and average
water velocity along modeled transects (with and without ice conditions) on an hourly
basis under alternative operational scenarios.
9. Map the current aquatic habitats in the Susitna River both above and below the Watana
Dam.
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.]
To be completed by requesting organization.
1.3.3. If the requester is not resource agency, explain any relevant public
interest considerations in regard to the proposed study.
Fisheries resources are owned by the State of Alaska and the Project could potentially affect
these public interest resources by affecting aquatic habitat.
1.3.4. Describe existing information concerning the subject of the study
proposal, and the need for additional information.
Substantial information exists for the Susitna River that was collected and analyzed as part of
the 1980s studies. The extent and details of many of those studies were provided in the Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS 1984) for the previous project (FERC No. 7114) along
with companion appendices and attachments in the way of ADFG reports. Some of that
information was cited and summarized in the HDR (2011) gap analysis report; however, there
has not been a thorough review of the studies and underlying data. The gap analysis did
provide for an initial listing of salient reports and data that warrant more detailed evaluations.
The References section of this plan contains some of the more relevant documents that were
identified. As noted by HDR (2011), instream flow studies of the Susitna River were conducted
by the then Alaska Power Authority (APA) for the previous hydroelectric project (FERC No.
7114) that was proposed in the early 1980s. Those study efforts focused on establishing the
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Instream Flow Study Request 5/0415/12 Page 3
relationships between physical variables, fluvial processes and fish resources in the middle
Susitna River. Faced with the complexity of the number of environmental variables involved
and the number of species of fish which inhabit the middle Susitna River, it was deemed
necessary to focus only on the most important physical variables and carefully identified fish
resources which were most sensitive to project-related changes (Trihey & Associates and Entrix
1985b). Inspection of the 1980s report confirms that the majority of efforts were focused on the
Middle River portion of the Susitna River.
The gap analysis presented in HDR (2011) outlines the major elements required in an instream
flow study. Although substantial data and information were collected in the 1980s, those data
are approximately 30 years old and therefore additional information needs to be collected to
provide a contemporary understanding of the baseline conditions existing in the Susitna River.
In addition, the configuration and proposed operations of the Project have changed and must be
evaluated within the context of the existing environmental setting. This includes consideration
of potential load following effects on important fish and aquatic habitats both downstream and
upstream of the Watana Dam. This evaluation needs to extend for the entire length of the
Susitna River below the Watana Dam that is affected by the Project, including the reach of river
below the confluence of the Chulitna and Talkeetna rivers, as appropriate. Potential effects of
proposed Project operations on aquatic habitats and biota and potential benefits and impacts of
alternative operational scenarios have not been quantitatively analyzed. The aquatic habitat
specific models will provide an integrated assessment of the effects of Project operations on
biological resources and riverine processes. These models will provide an analytical framework
for assessing alternative operational scenarios and quantitative metrics that will aid in
comparing alternatives that may lead to refinements in proposed Project operations. Project
effects will be quantified using indices of potential habitat rather than estimates of the number of
fish produced or lost under alternative operational scenarios.
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.
Project construction and operation, as described in the Pre-application Document (PAD, AEA
2011), would have an effect on the flows downstream of the dam, the degree of which will
ultimately depend on its final design and operating characteristics. With a proposed elevation of
700 ft resulting in the creation of a 39 mi. long reservoir (20,000 acre) and a nominal generating
capacity of 600 MW (PAD AEA 2011), the project would change the timing and magnitude of
flows in the river below the powerhouse The alteration in the timing and magnitude of flows in a
river can influence downstream resources/processes, including fish and aquatic biota and their
habitats, channel form and function including sediment transport, water quality, ice dynamics
and riparian and wildlife communities. The license may include conditions pertaining to any or
all of these matters., all of which have been alluded to in the PAD (AEA 2011).
The potential operational flow induced effects of the Project will need to be carefully evaluated
as part of the licensing process. This study plan describes the Instream Flow Study (IFS) for
the Susitna-Watana Project that will be conducted to characterize and evaluate these effects.
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Instream Flow Study Request 5/0415/12 Page 4
The plan includes a statement of objectives, a description of the technical framework that is at
the foundation of the IFS, the general methods that will be applied, and the study nexus to the
Project. This plan should be viewed as preliminary and will be subject to revision and
refinements based on agency and stakeholder review and comment. In particular, at this stage
in its development, the IFS has not identified specific study sites nor the methods and analytical
procedures that will be applied to the study. These details and others will be added subsequent
to further review of existing information and via agency discussions. The results of this study
and of other proposed studies will provide information needed to support the FERC’s National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) analysis for the Project license.
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.
The IFS plan is specifically directed toward establishing a contemporary understanding of
important biological communities and associated habitats, and the hydrologic, physical, and
chemical processes that are currently operating in the Susitna River that directly influence those
resources. The focus of much of this work will be on establishing a set of analytical
tools/models based on the best available information and data that can be used for defining
both baseline conditions; i.e., how these resources are currently functioning under existing flow
conditions, and how these resources and processes will respond to various alternative Project
operations.
The foundation of the IFS analyses rests with the development of the Susitna Mainstem Flow
Routing Models (HEC-RAS, CRISSP1D and/or other routing models) (MFRM) that will provide
hourly flow and water surface elevation data at numerous locations longitudinally distributed
throughout the length of the river extending from RM 184 downstream to RM 75 (about 23 miles
downstream from the confluence with the Chulitna River). Two different flow routing models will
be developed: a summer ice-free model (HEC-RAS); and a winter model to route flows under
ice-covered conditions (CRISSP1D or equivalent).
The routing models will initially be developed based on approximately 100 transects and on
gaging stations at approximately 9 locations on the Susitna River that will be established and
measured in 2012 as part the IFS program. The hourly flow records from USGS gaging stations
on the Susitna River will also be utilized to help develop the routing models. Depending on the
initial results of the flow routing models, it may be necessary to add additional transects to
improve the performance of the models between RM 75 and RM 184, and to possibly extend
the models further downstream past RM 75.
The gaging stations initially installed in 2012 will be maintained through 2013 and 2014 to help
calibrate and validate the flow routing models and provide data supporting other studies. The
gaging stations will be used to monitor stage and flow under summer ice-free conditions and to
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monitor water pressure under winter ice-covered conditions. Continuous measurement of water
pressures during the 2012/2013 and the 2013/14 winter periods under ice-covered conditions
will be produce information different from open-water conditions. During partial ice cover, the
pressure levels measured by the pressure transducers is affected by flow velocities, ice-cover
roughness characteristics and other factors such as entrained ice in the water column. The
pressure-head data is important for understanding groundwater/surface-water interactions.
Periodic winter discharge measurements will be completed at selected gaging stations in the
winter, in coordination with USGS winter measurement programs, and will provide valuable
information for understanding hydraulic conditions in the river during a season when
groundwater plays a more prominent role in aquatic habitat functions. Winter flow
measurements will also be used to help develop the CRISSP1D model (or equivalent).
Output from the flow routing models will provide the fundamental input data to a suite of habitat
specific and riverine process specific models that will be used to describe how the existing flow
regime relates to and has influenced various resource elements (e.g., salmonid spawning and
rearing habitats, invertebrate habitat, sediment transport processes, ice dynamics, large woody
debris (LWD), the health and composition of the riparian zone). These same models will
likewise be used to evaluate resource responses to different Project operational scenarios,
again via output from the routing models, including various baseload and load following
alternatives, as appropriate. As an unsteady flow model, the routing models will be capable of
providing flow and water surface elevation information at each location on an hourly basis and
therefore Project effects on flow can be evaluated on multiple time steps (hourly, daily, and
monthly) as necessary to evaluate different resource elements.
The consistency of various elements of the program to generally accepted practices is
described below:
• Habitat Mapping. Studies regarding habitat mapping are commonly conducted at many
hydroelectric projects as part of FERC licensing (e.g., Watershed GeoDynamics 2005,
R2 Resource Consultants 2003, R2 Resource Consultants 2004). Mapping surveys will
utilize protocols similar to those performed at other hydroelectric projects.
• Hydraulic Unsteady Flow Routing. One-dimensional unsteady flow hydraulic models
are commonly used to route flow and stage fluctuations through rivers and reservoirs.
Examples of public-domain computer models used to perform these types of processes
include FEQ (USGS 1997), FLDWAV (U.S. National Weather Service 1998), UNET
(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 2001), and HEC-RAS (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
2010a, 2010b, and 2010c). The HEC-RAS (Hydrologic Engineering Center – River
Analysis System) model has proven to be very robust under mixed flow conditions
(subcritical and supercritical), as will be expected in the Susitna River. The HEC-RAS
model also has the capability of automatically varying Manning’s “n” with stage through
the use of the equivalent roughness option. Another feature of HEC-RAS is the
capability of varying Manning’s “n” on a seasonal basis. The robust performance and
Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project FERC #14241 Alaska Energy Authority
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flexibility of HEC-RAS make this model an appropriate choice for routing stage
fluctuations downstream from the proposed Project dam under summer ice-free
conditions. Under winter ice-covered conditions, the CRISSP1D model (or equivalent)
can be used to route unsteady flows downstream through the Susitna River. CRISSP1D
is a one-dimensional unsteady flow model that can be used to analyze water
temperature, thermal ice transport processes, and ice cover breakup (Chen et al 2006).
The seasonal timing of the transition from the HEC-RAS model to the CRISSP1D model
(or equivalent) and vice versa will vary from year-to-year and will depend on
meteorological conditions.
• Mainstem, Side channel, and Slough Habitat Models. Physical habitat models are
often used to evaluate alternative instream flow regimes in rivers (e.g., the Physical
Habitat Simulation [PHABSIM] modeling approach developed by the U.S. Geological
Survey; Bovee 1998, Waddle 2001). Methods available for assessing instream flow
needs vary greatly in the issues addressed, their intended use, their underlying
assumptions, and the intensity (and cost) of the effort required for the application. Many
techniques, ranging from those designed for localized site or specific applications to
those with more general utility have been used. The summary review reports of Wesche
and Rechard (1980), Stalnaker and Arnette (1976), EA Engineering, Science and
Technology (1986), the proceedings of the Symposium on Instream Flow Needs
(Orsborn and Allman eds. 1976), Electric Power Research Institute (2000), and more
recently the Instream Flow Council (Annear et al. 2004) provide more detailed
information on specific methods. The methods proposed in the IFS will likely include a
combination of approaches depending on habitat types (e.g., mainstem, side channel,
slough, etc.) and the biological importance of those types. During the 1980s studies,
methods were designed to focus on both mainstem and off-channel habitats, although
mainstem analysis was generally limited to near-shore areas. Both PHABSIM based
models and juvenile salmon rearing habitat models were employed and will be
considered as part of the IFS plan. It is likely that more rigorous approaches and
intensive analysis will be applied to habitats determined as representing especially
important habitats for salmonid production. It is also likely this will include both 1-D and,
in some cases, 2-D surface-water hydraulic modeling that can be linked to habitat based
models. Incorporation of a groundwater component into the habitat models will provide
the basis for evaluating how Project operations may alter the surface-water/groundwater
interactions that could influence habitat utilization of sloughs and other groundwater
influenced habitat types. The proposed modeling approach is consistent with the use of
physical habitat models used at other hydroelectric projects to assess the effects of
alternative operational scenarios on aquatic habitat.
• HSC and HSI Development. HSI curves have been utilized by natural resources
scientists for over two decades to assess the effects of habitat changes on biota. HSI
curves were developed by the USFWS for use with fish and wildlife (see
http://www.nwrc.usgs.gov/wdb/pub/hsi), but their usage has also included periphyton
and wetland tree habitats (e.g., Tarboton et al. 2004). The proposed method for the
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development and verification of HSI curves is analogous to the methods described in
Bovee (1982; 1986) and USFWS (1981). The proposed fish sampling and observation
methods will be consistent with those described in Murphy and Willis (1996) and will
consider methods previously used in the 1980s (e.g., Suchanek et al. 1984). The
proposed use of an expert panel to develop and verify fish HSI curves is modified from
that described by Crance (1987) and has been applied in FERC licensing/relicensing
studies of other projects.
A tentative schedule that includes field season(s) and the duration of the study is provided in
Table 1.
Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project FERC #14241 Alaska Energy Authority
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Table 1. Schedule for development of all components of the Mainstem Aquatic Habitat Model.
Activity 2012 2013 2014
1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4Q
Technical Consultant Selection ▲
Refine and Finalize Study Plan ----▲ --▲--- -------
Agency Stakeholder Site Visit ---▲
Study Site Selection (mainstem, slough,
side channels, etc.) - ---▲
Review of 1980s Data and Information --------- --------- ------●
Model Selection by habitat type (1-D, 2-
D, mapping, etc.) --------- ---●
Hydraulic Routing: data collection and
reporting --------- --------- ------● -------- --------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- --------
Hydraulic Routing: develop executable
model -------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- ---------
HSC/Periodicity Fish: Review literature
and 1980s reports -------- ------● -------- -------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- ---------
HSC Fish: Field data collection
(summer, fall, winter) (both years) ▲ ▲ -------- ----▲-- --▲--- -----▲- ------- --▲--- ---▲-- ▲
Habitat Mapping (GIS, aerial
videography, aerial photography) -------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------- -------
Habitat Surveys (side channels,
sloughs, mainstem) ------- ------- ------- -------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Collect Velocities and depths at
transects selected for habitat analysis
(3 flows)
▲ ▲
Re-establish old cross-sections and
establish new cross-sections for flow
routing model
------ ------- -------- -------
Maintain gaging station for stage and
flow measurement ------ ------- -------- ------- -------- -------
Maintain gaging station for stage
measurement ------- ------- ------- -------
Winter measurement programs ------ ------ -- ------- ------- --
Develop groundwater/surface flow
models ------ ------ ------ ------ -------
Hydraulic Model Integration and
Calibration ------ ------
Varial Zone Model and Downramping
Analysis ------- ------- -------
Habitat Modeling ------- ------- -------
Alternate Scenario Post-Processing ------- ------- -------
Reporting ● ●● ●●
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Instream Flow Study Request 5/0415/12 Page 9
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.
Based on a review of study costs associated with similar efforts conducted at other hydropower
projects, and in recognition of the size of the Project and logistical challenges associated with
the remoteness of the site, study costs associated with the IFS plan are expected to range from
$5,000,000 to $6,000,000. Study costs include office-based tasks such as development of draft
and final study plans, compilation and review of the extensive instream flow data developed
during the 1980s, analysis and processing of data collected in 2013 and 2014, hydraulic and
habitat model development and testing, and draft and final study reports.
Field efforts include habitat survey and mapping, collection of physical and hydraulic data to
support instream flow modeling, validation of salmonid habitat suitability curves, and monitoring
of the groundwater/surface interface. To obtain efficiencies in the overall relicensing work effort,
portions of this study will be conducted in conjunction with Water Resource, Geomorphology,
Water Quality, Operational Modeling, and other Aquatic Resource Studies; however, costs of
those studies are reflected in those individual study requests. Estimated study costs are subject
to review and revision as additional details are developed.
1.3.8. Literature Cited
[ADF&G] Alaska Department of Fish and Game. 1981a. Aquatic studies procedures manual:
Phase I. Su-Hydro Aquatic Studies Program. Anchorage, Alaska. Susitna Hydro
document no. 3506.
—. 1981b. Subtask 7.10 Phase 1 Final Draft Report Resident Fish Investigation on the Upper
Susitna River. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1982. Upper Susitna River Impoundment Studies 1982. ADF&G. Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1983a. Susitna Hydro aquatic studies phase II final report. Adult anadromous fish studies,
1982, volume 2. Susitna Hydro Document No. 588, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1983b. Aquatic Habitats and Instream Flow Studies Parts I and II. Susitna Hydro Aquatic
Studies Phase II Basic Data Report volume 4, Susitna Hydro Document No. 585.
Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984a. Susitna Hydro aquatic studies report no. 1. ADF&G, Susitna Hydro Aquatic Studies
Report Series, Susitna Hydro Document No. 1450, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984b. Population Dynamics of Arctic Grayling in the Upper Susitna Basin, Report 4, Part II.
Schmidt, D.C., C. Estes, D. Crawford, and D. Vincent-Lang, editor. Access and
Transmission Corridor Aquatic Investigations (July–October 1983). Susitna Hydro
Document No. 2049. ADF&G, Anchorage.
—. 1984c. Susitna Hydro Aquatic Studies Report No. 2. Resident and juvenile anadromous fish
investigations (May–October 1983). D.C. Schmidt, S.S. Hale, D. L. Crawford, and P.M.
Suchanek, editors. Prepared for the Alaska Power Authority, Susitna Hydro Document
No. 1784, ADF&G, Anchorage, Alaska.
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—. 1984d. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations (May–October, 1983). Chapter 1.
Stage and Discharge Investigations – 1984. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1930.
ADF&G, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984e. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations (May–October, 1983). Chapter 2.
Channel Geometry Investigations. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1931. ADF&G,
Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984f. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations (May–October, 1983). Chapter 3.
Continuous Water Temperature Investigations. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1932.
ADF&G, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984g. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations (May–October, 1983). Chapter 5.
Eulachon Spawning Habitat – 1984. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1934. ADF&G,
Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984h. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations (May–October, 1983). Chapter 6.
An evaluation of passage conditions for adult salmon in sloughs and side channels of
the Middle Susitna River. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1935. ADF&G, Anchorage,
Alaska.
—. 1984i. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations, (May–October, 1983). Chapter 7.
An evaluation of chum and sockeye salmon spawning habitat in sloughs and side
channels of the Middle Susitna River. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1936. ADF&G,
Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984j. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations, (May–October, 1983). Chapter 8.
Evaluation of chum salmon spawning habitat. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1937.
ADF&G, Anchorage, Alaska.
—. 1984k. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations, (May–October, 1983). Chapter 9.
Habitat suitability criteria for Chinook, coho and pink salmon spawning in tributaries of
the Middle Susitna River. Susitna Hydro Document No. 1938. ADF&G, Anchorage,
Alaska.
—. 1984k. Aquatic Habitat and Instream Flow Investigations, (May–October, 1983). Modeling of
juvenile salmon and resident fish habitat. Susitna Hydro Development Part 7. ADF&G,
Anchorage, Alaska.
Addley, C. 2006. Habitat modeling of river ecosystems: Multidimensional spatially explicit and
dynamic habitat templates at scales relevant to fish. Ph.D. dissertation. Utah State
University, Logan, Utah.
Annear, T., I. Chisholm, H. Beecher, A. Locke and 12 other authors. 2004. Instream flows for
riverine resource stewardship, revised edition. Instream Flow Council, Cheyenne, WY.
268 pp
Bovee, K. D. 1982. A guide to stream habitat analysis using the Instream Flow Incremental
Methodology. Instream Flow Paper No. 12. Washington, DC: U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS/OBS-82/26).
Bovee, K. D. 1986. Development and evaluation of habitat suitability criteria for use in the
instream flow incremental methodology. Washington, DC: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(Biological Report 86[7]). 235pp.
Chen, Fanghui, Hung Tao Shen, and Nimal C. Jayasundara. 2006. A one-dimensional
comprehensive river ice model, Proceedings of the 18th IAHR International Symposium
on Ice.
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Crance, J. 1987. Guidelines for Using the Delphi Technique to Develop Habitat Suitability
Index Curves. US Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 82(10.134). Fort Collins,
CO. 22 pp.
DeVries, P., B. Kvam, S. Beck, D. Reiser, M. Ramey, C. Huang, and C. Eakin. 2001. Kerr
Hydroelectric Project, Lower Flathead River ramping rate study. Prepared by R2
Resource Consultants, for Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead
Nation, Montana.
Dugan, L.J., D. A. Sterritt, and M.E. Stratton. 1984. The distribution and relative abundance of
juvenile salmon in the Susitna River drainage above the Chulitna River confluence.
Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Completion Report. Susitna Hydroelectric
Studies. Anchorage, Alaska.
EA Engineering, Science, and Technology, Inc. 1986. Instream flow methodologies. Electric
Power Research Institute (EPRI). EPRI EA-4819, Project 2194-2, Final Report.
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). 2000. Instream flow assessment methods: guidance
for evaluating instream flow needs in hydropower licensing. Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI). Report number 1000554.
Hardy Thomas B., and Tarbet Karl, 1996. Evaluation of one-dimensional and two-dimensional
hydraulic modeling in a natural river and implications in instream flow assessment
methods. Proceedings of Second International Symposium on Habitat Hydraulics
Ecohydraulics 2000, Quebec, Canada, June 1996, Volume B, 395-406.
HDR Alaska. 2011. Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project; Railbelt Large Hydro; Aquatic
Resources Data Gap Analysis. Prepared for Alaska Energy Authority, Anchorage,
Alaska.
Klemm, D.J., P.A. Lewis, F. Fulk, and J.M. Lazorchak. 1990. Macroinvertebrate field and
laboratory methods for evaluating the biological integrity of surface waters. EPA/600/4-
90/030, Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Leclerc, M., Boudreault A., Bechara, J. A., and Corfa, G., 1995. Two-dimensional
hydrodynamic modeling-a neglected tool in the instream flow incremental methodology.
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 124(5), 645-662.
Marshall, R. P., P. M. Suchanek, and D.C. Schmidt. 1984. Juvenile salmon rearing habitat
models. Report No. 2, Part 4. Susitna Hydro Aquatic Studies, Alaska Department of
Fish and Game, Anchorage, Alaska.
Murphy, B. R. and D. W. Willis. 1996. Fisheries Techniques, Second Edition. American
Fisheries Society, Bethesda Maryland. 732 pp.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/National Marine Fisheries Service
(NOAA/NMFS). 2012. Letter from J.W. Balsiger to W. Dyok (AEA) regarding: Susitna-
Watana Hydroelectric Project (P-14241) 2012 Study Meetings. February 29, 2012.
Orsborn, J.F. and C.H. Allman (editors). 1976. Proceedings of the symposium and specialty
conference on instream flow needs. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland
20014. Volume I & II.
Perry, S.A. and W.B. Perry. 1986. Effects of experimental flow regulation on invertebrate drift
and stranding in the Flathead and Kootenai rivers, Montana, USA. Hydrobiologia. 134:
171 182.
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