Hatchery Review Team

Lower
Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team
Front Row L toR: Bryan Kenworthy, Susan Gutenberger, Larry Marchant, Doug DeHart
Back Row L toR: Joe Krakker, Don Campton, Herb Pollard, Tom Flagg
Not Pictured: Doug Olson
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Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team,
Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review
Don Campton (chair), Doug
DeHart, Doug Olson, Joe Krakker, Susan
Gutenberger, Larry Marchant,
Tom Flagg, Bryan
Kenworthy, Herb Pollard
Olympic Peninsula Hatchery Review Team
Olympic Peninsula National Fish Hatchery Review
Doug DeHart (chair), Don
Campton, Doug Olson, Larry
Telles, Barry Berejikian, Chris
Pasley,
Dave Zajac, Ray Brunson , Bruce
Stewart
Barry
Berejikian (Olympic Peninsula Hatchery Review Team) is
a supervisory fish biologist with NOAA Fisheries' Northwest Fisheries
Science Center where he leads the Behavioral Ecology Team. Berejikian
has been a research scientist at the Northwest Fisheries Science
Center since 1995. He has a B.S. (1990) from California Polytechnic
Statue University, San Luis Obispo and M.S. (1992) and Ph.D. in
Fisheries from University of Washington. His research focuses on
the effects of artificial propagation programs on natural populations
of salmon, steelhead and other marine species. His research
includes quantifying the behavior and reproductive success of hatchery
and wild salmonids in laboratory settings and in their natural
habitats. Toward this goal, his team has been developing
new applications for tag technologies to measure behavior of salmon
in the natural environment. A key component of his
team’s research is a large-scale, long-term supplementation
experiment in Hood Canal, which includes strong partnerships with
state, federal, and tribal agencies and non-profit organizations.
Ray
Brunson, (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team, Olympic
Peninsula Hatchery Review Team) a USFWS Fish Health Biologist,
holds a B.S. in Microbiology and is a graduate of the National
Fisheries Academy's "Identification and Control of Fish Diseases." He
has served for 31 years in the USFWS. In 1988, Brunson became the
Director of the Olympia Fish Health Center (OFHC), which is primarily
engaged in fish health services to Federal hatcheries in western
Washington and the mid-Columbia area. Since 1991, Mr. Brunson has
been an instructor for the National Education and Training Center
for the annual "Introduction to Fish Health" course.
In addition to his duties as Director at OFHC, Brunson is a US
Title 50 inspector, a "Fish Health Official" recognized
by Department of Fisheries and Oceans for Canada and a Certified
Fish Pathologist by the American Fisheries Society - Fish Health
Section. He is also a member of the European Association of Fish
Pathologists. He has served on the Fish Health Section "Blue
Book" committee (1983-85), Technical Procedures Committee
(1984-85), Chairman of the Board of Certification (1993-94) and
Chair of the Professional Standards Committee (1996-1999). He served
as Chairman of the Pacific Northwest Fish Health Protection Committee
in 1992-1993 and has served as the committee's Executive Secretary
since 1993.
Don
Campton (all three teams; chairs the Columbia River Basin
Hatchery Review Team and Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery
Review Team) is a US Fish and Wildlife Service senior scientist
and geneticist at the Abernathy Fish Technology Center in Longview,
Washington. Don received a B.S. in Genetics from the University
of California (UC) Berkeley, an M.S. in Fisheries from the University
of Washington and a Ph.D. in Genetics from UC Davis. He has nearly
30 years of professional experience in genetics and fisheries biology.
Previous positions have included Fishery Research Biologist for
the Washington State Department of Wildlife, Assistant and Associate
Professor in the Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences at
the University of Florida and Regional Fish Geneticist for the
USFWS. He is also a past president of the Genetics section of the
American Fisheries Society and is currently a member of the Hatchery
Scientific Review Group for the Western Washington Hatchery Reform
Project. His expertise is the general areas of population genetics,
fisheries biology and their applications to conservation biology
and animal breeding.
Douglas
DeHart (all three teams; chairs the Olympic Peninsula
Hatchery Review Team) is a senior fishery biologist in the Pacific
Regional Office of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. He has a B.A.
in Biology from Harvard University, an M.S. in Fisheries from Oregon
State University and a Ph.D. in Fisheries from the University of
Washington. He has more than 30 years of state and federal fishery
agency experience, much of that in the Columbia Basin. He has planned
and directed fishery research activities, overseen hatchery and
habitat restoration programs and been involved in the conduct of
a broad range of fishery management and planning activities. Previous
positions have included fishery research coordinator for the US
Army Corps of Engineers Portland District, Bioengineering Chief
for National Marine Fisheries Service Northwest Region and Chief
of Fisheries for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. He
has special expertise in the area of fish passage including design,
operation and evaluation of passage and screening facilities.
Tom
Flagg Tom Flagg (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review
Team, Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team)
is a supervisory fish biologist with NOAA Fisheries' Northwest
Fisheries Science Center. He is station manager of the Manchester
Research Station and the station's program manager for salmon enhancement
research. Flagg has been a research scientist at the Northwest
Fisheries Science Center since 1978. He has a B.S. (1976) and M.S.
(1981) from the University of Washington's College of Fisheries.
His research interests focus on issues of hatchery reform including
development of captive broodstock programs to conserve depleted
gene pools of salmonids, development of supplementation techniques
for restoration of depleted stocks of salmonids to their native
habitats and development of fish husbandry technology to produce
wild-type juvenile salmon for release from hatcheries. Tom is also
a member of the Congressionally-established Hatchery Scientific
Review Group (HSRG) that is reviewing salmon hatcheries in the
Pacific Northwest in the context of providing management approaches
to meet conservation and sustainable fisheries goals.
Susan
Gutenberger (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team,
Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team) is the
supervisory microbiologist at the USFWS Lower Columbia River Fish
Health Center. She has a B.S. in microbiology and zoology and an
M.S. in veterinary science from the University of Idaho. Shortly
after graduation, Gutenberger accepted a job with the Service studying
juvenile salmon migration, which coincidentally introduced her
to the world of fish diseases. Gutenberger then pursued a Ph.D.
in fish disease and in 1993, graduated with a specialty in microbiology
from Oregon State University. As the director of the fish health
center since 1996, Gutenberger supervises the operations and studies
of the diagnostic laboratory that services the Columbia River federal
hatcheries and the Abernathy Fish Technology Center. Gutenberger
also collaborates with state, tribal and other agency partners
to conduct disease surveys and ecological interaction studies of
wild fish in the Pacific Northwest. Most recently, she has been
involved with Service teams examining the need and direction for
fishery habitat projects and hatchery funding. As an active member
of Oregon American Fisheries Society, she has chaired the Fish
Culture Committee since 2003. Gutenberger has more than 18 years
of experience in pathology, physiology, immunology, pharmacology
and disease policy, as well as involvement in Columbia Basin hatchery
operations and fisheries.
Bryan
Kenworthy (Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery
Review Team) is a supervisory fish biologist with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service and has over 30 years experience in the Service’s
Fisheries program in fish hatchery operations. He has been
the Project Leader at Hagerman National Fish Hatchery, Hagerman,
ID since 1993. He holds a B.S. degree in Agriculture and
an M.S. degree in Animal Science from the University of Rhode Island. His
graduate studies focused on water treatment and recycle systems
for fish culture. Bryan began his career in 1976 in the Northeast
Region at Berlin National Fish Hatchery rearing several species
of trout and Atlantic salmon. In 1980 he attended the Service’s
9-month Fish Hatchery Management Course in Leetown, West Virginia
and has been an instructor for the Service’s Cold Water Fish
Culture Course. Assignments in the Pacific Region have
included the assistant project leader positions at Eagle Creek,
Quilcene, Carson, and Lahontan national fish hatcheries and several
years as a staff biologist at the Olympia Fisheries Resources Office
responsible for hatchery evaluation studies. Bryan
Kenworthy’s career in the Fisheries program has provided
him with extensive experience in the culture of anadromous salmonids,
in the coordination of Federal fishery activities with States and
Tribes, and he is well versed in the operation and maintenance
of varied fish hatchery configurations.
Joe
Krakker (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team, Lower
Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team) is a fishery
biologist with the USFWS Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Office
in Boise, Idaho. He has a B.S. in Conservation from Northern Michigan
University and a M.S. in Fisheries from Humboldt State University.
Krakker has more than 25 years of state and federal fishery agency
experience in the Great Lakes, Mountain-Prairie and Pacific regions
of USFWS. During the last 20 years he has been involved in salmon
and steelhead research, restoration, mitigation, ESA and program
management activities in northern California and the Columbia River
Basin. During the last 14 years he has worked in the Lower Snake
River Compensation Plan Office in Boise, Idaho, which administers
and coordinates management of a large-scale compensation program
with multiple state, tribal and federal agencies to meet mitigation,
ESA, and tribal trust responsibilities.
Larry
Marchant (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team,
Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team) is currently
the Project Leader at Spring Creek NFH with more than 28 years
of experience working within the National Fish Hatchery Program.
After receiving his B.S. degree from the University of Idaho in
Wildlife-Fisheries Management in 1977, he started his career with
the USFWS at Dworshak NFH. He has worked in Region s 1, 3 and 6
of the Service, at seven different facilities each with unique
programs dealing with threatened and endangered species, captive
broodstock, mitigation, restoration, recovery and tribal programs.
Marchant has experience in propagation of spring and fall Chinook,
rainbow trout, lake trout, steelhead and threatened Lahontan cutthroat
trout. He also has experience in fish passage operations, specifically
for endangered Cui-ui suckers. As a hatchery manager for the last
twelve years he has been involved in all phases of hatchery operations
including operation of biological reuse systems, UV treatment systems
and waste water management and isolation facilities.
Doug
Olson (all three teams) is the Hatchery Assessment Team
Leader at the USFWS Columbia River Fishery Resource Office in Vancouver,
Washington. His focus is to guide Service efforts in assessing
National Fish Hatcheries in the Columbia River Basin in order to
meetour federal mitigation, tribal trust, conservation and Endangered
Species Act responsibilities. His current research and management
skills center on hatchery reform and understanding the ecological
interactions between hatchery and wild fish. In 1979 he earned
an Associate of Science degree from Grays Harbor College, with
an interest in aquaculture. In 1982, Olson received a B.S. in Fisheries
Biology from the University of Washington with a specialty in water
quality. He worked as a Research Technician for private industry
(1982-83) and state government (1984-87) and as a Fisheries Biologist
for tribal (1988-90) and federal government organizations from
1991 to the present. Olson's work includes developing sampling
techniques, production planning, stream restoration, hatchery evaluation
and population conservation. He regularly presents papers at the
Pacific Northwest Fish Culture Conference and American Fisheries
Society annual meetings and workshops. Olson is currently serving
as President for the Oregon Chapter of the American Fisheries Society.
Chris
Pasley (Olympic Peninsula Hatchery Review Team) is currently
the Project Leader at Winthrop NFH in North Central Washington.
He received a B.S. in Fisheries Science from Humboldt State University
in 1985. Pasley started his career in Valdez, Alaska working in
Private Non-Profit salmon hatchery programs for Valdez Fisheries
Development Association. In 1991, he became a research biologist
for NOAA Fisheries conducting research on the feasibility of restoring
sockeye salmon to the Cle Elum River basin. While with the NOAA
field station in Pasco, Washington, he was also involved in juvenile
salmonid survival studies at hydroelectric facilities on the Snake
River. Pasley has been with the USFWS at Winthrop NFH for the past
14 years and has been largely responsible for building the program
there for ESA listed spring chinook salmon and steelhead. He has
been instrumental in implementing a successful coho salmon restoration
project on the Methow River in a cooperative effort with the Yakama
Nation. Pasley has a wealth of experience in culturing pink, chum,
coho, sockeye, chinook salmon and steelhead.
Herb
Pollard, (Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery
Review Team) was born in Lakeview, Oregon, and spent his early
life in Lakeview and Klamath Falls, graduating from Lakeview
High School in 1962. He attended University of Oregon for
two years, then graduated from Oregon State University with a
B.S. in Fisheries Science in 1967. Herb earned an M.S.
in Fisheries Management from University of Idaho in 1969, and
immediately started work for Idaho Department of Fish and Game
(IDFG) as a Fishery Research Biologist. After a 28 year
career with IDFG, including stints as Regional and State Fishery
Manager, Anadromous Fishery Coordinator, and Regional Supervisor,
he spent 10 years with NOAA Fisheries, dealing with Endangered
Species Act consultations and regulations regarding fishery management,
fish hatcheries and harvest issues that impact listed salmon
and steelhead in the Snake and Columbia River basins. Currently
Herb is working as an independent contractor consulting on fishery
management issues. test
Bruce Stewart, (Olympic
Peninsula Hatchery Review Team), is the fish health program manager
for the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission in Olympia, WA. His
program provides fish health services to enhancement programs operated
by 20 western Washington Treaty Tribes. Bruce holds a B.S. in microbiology
from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a M.S. in fisheries
resources from the University of Idaho. He is certified as a “Title
50 Inspector” by the USFWS, a “Fish Health Inspector” by
the American Fisheries Society - Fish Health Section, and a "Fish
Health Official" recognized by Department of Fisheries and
Oceans for Canada. He has over 25 years of experience working
on fish health issues in both cool and coldwater species in the Midwest
and Pacific Northwest. Previous positions have included coordinating
fish health programs for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
and a private salmon ranching company in Oregon. He has also served
as chair of the AFS Fish Health Section’s Professional Standards
Committee and the Pacific Northwest Fish Health Protection Committee.
Larry
Telles, (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team, Olympic
Peninsula Hatchery Review Team) a USFWS Fish Biologist, is currently
a supervisory fishery biologist at Quilcene National Fish Hatchery
in Washington. He holds a B.S. in Agriculture (Fisheries) fromNew
Mexico State University and joined the US Fish and Wildlife Service
in 1977. Telles has spent most of his Service time at National
Fish Hatcheries in the Pacific Northwest (Dworshak NFH and Hagerman
NFH in Idaho, Eagle Creek NFH in Oregon and Leavenworth NFH complex
and Quilcene NFH). His hatchery experience encompasses most species
of salmon, steelhead and trout in the Northwest including some
experience with catfish and bass culture from his early years in
the desert Southwest. Telles was responsible for the artificial
propagation component of a successful effort to recover summer
chum salmon in north Hood Canal. He is an active participant in
local and regional forums involving tribal, sport and commercial
fishing groups and citizen activist organizations and frequently
interacts with local school districts and other educational institutions
to promote awareness of salmon and steelhead and their place in
our culture and ecosystem
Dave
Zajac (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review Team, Olympic
Peninsula Hatchery Review Team) is a fish and wildlife biologist
in the USFWS Western Washington Office in Lacey, with more than
33 years experience in the natural resource arena. He began his
career after graduating from college in 1971 as a fish culturist
at the Washington State Dungeness salmon hatchery, then spent the
next five years in both temporary and permanent positions with
the Washington State Department of Fisheries, Bureau of Sport Fisheries
(predecessor of the USFWS) and as a civilian with the Department
of the Army. During these years Zajac worked with big game, small
mammals, waterfowl, warmwater and coldwater fish, forestry and
forest fire suppression. He returned to the USFWS in 1976 and has
concentrated his efforts in the hatchery production evaluation
and monitoring program for the three Olympic Peninsula National
Fish Hatcheries. Zajac currently manages the marking and tagging
program at these hatcheries and also represents the Pacific Region
on the Mark Committee of the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission.
Zajac was also a major participant in the recent Puget Sound Coastal
Washington Hatchery Reform Project.
Facilitator -
Michael
Schmidt is the Fish Program Coordinator for Long Live
the Kings (LLTK). He has worked for LLTK for six years, starting
as an assistant to the facilitator of the congressionally created
and funded Puget Sound and Coastal Washington Hatchery Reform Project
(2001-2004). In 2004, after receiving his Master of Marine Affairs
from the University of Washington, Michael became the Fish Program
Coordinator. In addition to facilitating the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service Columbia Basin Hatchery Review Team, Michael oversees LLTK’s
two hatcheries that include 7 projects and 3 staff. LLTK is a private,
non-profit organization committed to restoring wild salmon and
steelhead to the waters of the Pacific Northwest. LLTK’s
expertise is in enabling the most comprehensive scientific study
of salmon and steelhead restoration strategies, and in facilitating
and communicating imaginative management techniques based on that
science.
Outreach and Public Affairs --
Cheri
Anderson is the Information and Education Manager for
the Spring Creek and Carson National Fish Hatcheries (NFH) and
the Lower Columbia River Fish Health Center. She coordinates
all aspects of hatchery tours and orientation, education involvement
in the mid-Columbia Region, maintaining four websites, various
day camps, teacher workshops, and special events. Cheri provides
outreach services asneeded for the Eagle Creek and Warm Springs
NFH. She is involved with the Washington State E3 (education, environment
and economy) regional committee, is on the regional workgroup for
the national Children in Nature initiative for the USFWS and is
a board member for the Columbia River Gorge Visitors Association.
Cheri came to the USFWS in October 1998 after spending nearly five
years in Mississippi working as an Interpretive Park Ranger on
the Natchez Trace Parkway for the National Park Service. Prior
to that, she worked as a seasonal Park Ranger at Grand Teton National
Park. Cheri has a B.A. in Education for Biology and Reading and
a B.S. in Wildlife Biology both from the University of Montana.
Past Participants -
David
Carie is a Fisheries Management Biologist at the USFWS
Mid-Columbia River Fishery Resource Office in Leavenworth, Washington
. He has a B.S. in Ecology from Northern Michigan University and
has more than 14 years of federal fisheries experience working
in the Great Lakes and upper-Columbia River regions. Carie is the
lead hatchery evaluation biologist for the Leavenworth NFH Complex,
which includes Leavenworth, Entiat and Winthrop hatcheries, where
he oversees all aspects of the evaluation program. He is involved
in Federal Energy Regulator Commission re-licensing, ESA compliance,
and subbasin planning and recovery efforts. He serves as the FWS
representative on the Priest Rapids Coordinating Committee's hatchery
sub-committee. Dave served as an alternate member of the Team 2005-2007
and was designated Team member for the reveiws of the Warm Springs,
Eagle Creek, Carson, Spring Creek, Lettle White Salmon and Willard
NFHs.
Ron Hardy (Columbia River Basin Hatchery Review
Team, Lower Snake River Compensation Plan Hatchery Review Team) is
Director of the Aquaculture Research Institute and the Hagerman Fish
Culture Experiment Station, University of Idaho, and a Professor
in the Department of Animal and Veterinary Sciences. He received
his BS in Zoology (1969) and PhD in Fisheries from the University
of Washington (1979), and his MS in Animal Sciences/Nutrition from
Washington State University (1973). Prior to coming to the
University of Idaho in 1996, he was a research scientist for the
Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, in Seattle, Washington,
and concurrently a member of the research faculty (assistant to full
professor) in the School of Fisheries, University of Washington from
1979 until 1996. He has authored over 200 scientific publications,
book chapters and popular articles on aquaculture, fish nutrition
and feed technology. He was Secretary of the World Aquaculture
Society from 1997 to 2001, and Vice-President from 2001-2002. He
served on the Committee on Animal Nutrition, National Research Council,
National Academy of Sciences, and more recently on the National Agricultural
Research, Extension, Education and Economics Advisory Board of the
US Department of Agriculture. He is co-editor of Fish Nutrition,
3rd Edition, and editor of Aquaculture Research, plus
serves on the editorial boards of Aquaculture, Aquaculture
Nutrition, and Reviews in Fisheries Sciences. His
research interests include developing sustainable feed sources for
the global aquaculture industry and expanding the use of genomics
in fish. He works extensively on salmon and steelhead hatchery and
recovery issues in the Pacific Northwest with state and federal agencies,
and Native American Tribes, with whom he is exploring appropriate
means to broaden participation in educational programs. Ron participated
in Lower Snake NFHs reviews.
Carl
Schreck is a Senior Scientist with the Biological Resources
Division of the US Geological Survey and a professor at Oregon
State University in the Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research
Unit. He has been researching the biology of fish for nearly 30
years. He received a B.A. in Zoology from the University of California,
Berkeley, and an M.S. in Fisheries Science and a Ph.D. in Physiology
and Biophysics and Fisheries Science from Colorado State University.
He was an Assistant Professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University and the Assistant Leader of the Oregon Cooperative
Fish and Wildlife Research Unit (OCFWRU) through the USFWS and
an Assistant Professor at Oregon State University. Presently, he
is the Leader of the OCFWRU and a Full Professor in the Department
of Fisheries and Wildlife at OSU. Dr. Schreck has authored more
than 250 published papers and is a member of several scientific
and management teams, organizations and committees including Oregon's
Independent Multidisciplinary Science Team. He is currently serving
a second four-year term as President of the International Federation
of Fish Endocrinologists. He has served or is serving on the editorial
boards of The Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, Copeia, General
and Comparative Endocrinology, Aquaculture, and Comparative
Biochemistry and Physiology and acts as editor for "The
Environment"
for the journal Diseases of Aquatic Organisms . Carl served
as a member of the Team 2005-2006 for the reveiws of the Warm Springs,
Leavenworth, Entaiat and Wintrop NFHs.
Amy
Gaskill, APR, is an External Affairs Specialist for the
USFWS Pacific Region. She started her career in natural resources
while serving on active duty in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1991
to 1999. Her main duties included public affairs and outreach in
the areas of pollution response and fisheries management. Gaskill’s
first crisis public affairs incident was the Perfect Storm, off
the coast of New England in October of 1991. Building relationships
is one of Gaskill’s expertises after performing advanced
public affairs in 10 different countries in the Mediterranean duirng
the summer of 1995. She joined the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Pacific Region External Affairs staff in January of 2002. Gaskill
serves as the US Fish and Wildlife representative on the Federal
Caucus Communications Team. Gaskill’s focus is on enhancing
relationships and building stronger communications between the
Fish and Wildlife Service and its many stakeholders and partners.
She received her BA in Communications from Marylhurst University
and earned an international Accreditation in Public Relations from
the Public Relations Society of America. Amy retired from the Coast
Guard, in November 2006, with 21 years of service.Amy served as
the Team's Outreach and Public Affairs Specialist 2005-2007 for
the reviews of Warm Springs, Leavenworth, Entiat, Wintrop and Eagle
Creek NFHs.
Michael
Kern is formerly a Project Director at Long Live the Kings
(LLTK), a private, non-profit organization devoted to restoring
wild salmon to the waters of the Pacific Northwest. Since joining
LLTK staff in 2000, Michael has provided facilitation, coordination
and communications services for the Congressionally-funded Puget
Sound and Coastal Washington Hatchery Reform Project. Prior to
joining LLTK, Kern was Outreach Director for several projects at
the University of Washington's Department of Environmental Health,
a role which included facilitating and coordinating the Hanford
Openness Workshops and a roundtable on tribal risk assessment.
Before that, Kern was a facilitation, mediation, strategic planning,
fundraising, and communications consultant; his clients included
non-profit organizations, local governments, Indian tribes and
community groups. Kern has a Master of Public Administration (MPA)
degree from the University of Washington and over 15 years experience
in helping people have productive conversations about natural resource
management in the Pacific Northwest. Michael served as the Team's
Facilitor, 2005-2006, for the reviews of Warm Springs, Leavenworth,
Entiat, and Winthrop NFHs. Michael is currently a senior associate
at Triangle Associates after a short time with the Wilderness Society.
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