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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260416T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260416T233000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20260128T194341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260415T213547Z
UID:10000180-1776333600-1776382200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (April 2026)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (PDT) on Thursday\, April 16th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talks:  \nAlaKaZam – Bringing Pacific Lamprey back to the Tucannon River with Artificially-Propagated Larvae  \nDeveloping Methods to Outplant Larval Pacific Lamprey in the Tucannon River \nPresenters: Zach Seilo (Lab Manager/Biologist\, Pacific Lamprey Research and Restoration Project\, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation) and Mary Moser\, PhD (Fisheries Biologist\, Moserworks LLC\, (retired – National Marine Fisheries Service)) and \nAbstracts: \nAlaKaZam – Bringing Pacific Lamprey back to the Tucannon River with Artificially-Propagated Larvae \nAuthors: Zach Seilo\, Aaron Jackson\, Alexa Maine\, Mary Moser\, Jerrid Weaskus\, Kanim Moses-Conner\, Paul Sheoships\, Greg Silver\, Jon Hess \nThe Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation have implemented a reintroduction program for Pacific Lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) in the Columbia River Basin due to population declines throughout their historic range. Artificial propagation\, a new frontier in restoration research for Pacific Lamprey\, is one method that is supporting CTUIR reintroduction efforts. Parentage Based Tagging is being used to track artificially propagated larval lamprey in the wild after they are released. \nFrom 2021-2025\, 82 female and 82 male lampreys were cross-fertilized in the lab. The resulting larval lampreys were reared to a minimum of 25 days post-fertilization. Approximately 4.3 million artificially propagated larval lampreys were released into the Tucannon River during the 2021-2025 timeframe. The artificially propagated larvae were released at two sites in 2021 and 2022\, and by 2025 the number of release sites had increased to five sites. Crosses were separated into two release treatments (staggered release and direct release). Electro-fishing surveys were conducted at multiple index sites along the river to assess presence and distribution of larval lampreys. Genetic analysis was conducted on all sampled larvae to determine whether they were from artificial propagation efforts. \nMark–recapture efforts were conducted using electrofishing surveys at 12 index sites systematically distributed throughout the Tucannon River. Larval lampreys collected during these surveys were submitted for genetic analysis. No artificially propagated larval lampreys were identified at the lower river index sites. Three index sites in the upper Tucannon River were located near larval lamprey release locations (river kilometers 50.1 and 60.1). Although no larval lamprey were detected at these sites prior to releases\, artificially propagated larvae were recaptured there after release. In 2025\, 28 larval lamprey and one transformed juvenile from the 2021 release were collected at a screw trap near the mouth of the Tucannon River during emigration from the watershed. Data from the ongoing artificial propagation and mark–recapture efforts in the Tucannon River are expected to significantly improve understanding of Pacific lamprey life history in the coming years. \nDeveloping Methods to Outplant Larval Pacific Lamprey in the Tucannon River \nAuthors: Mary L. Moser1\, Aaron D. Jackson2\, Alexa Maine2\, Jerrid Weaskus2\, Kanim Moses-Connor2\, Greg Silver3\, and Jon Hess3 \nStarting in 2012\, The Fisheries Program of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) developed methods for artificial propagation of Pacific Lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) for research and restoration. One of the key objectives of this work was to successfully release artificially-propagated larvae into the Tucannon River following a regionally-established supplementation framework. Over the past five years this research has focused on identification of methods that result in the greatest larval survival after outplanting. Two methods were used to assess survival: 1) direct assessment during the first five days after outplanting in artificial redds\, and 2) parentage analysis to assess relative survival rates of specific treatments. All larvae outplanted were near first feeding (23 – 40 d post fertilization). Survival during the first five days after outplanting artificial redds was uniformly high (>90%)\, except in 2023 when high siltation and larval density resulted in complete mortality when water circulation ceased (day 3)\, resulting in hypoxia. Pre-acclimation in Tucannon River water did not appear to convey any immediate survival advantage. Parentage analysis confirmed that larvae released from artificial redds and via less labor-intensive bucket dumps were both detected in subsequent years. These results will direct future release methods and guide management of Pacific Lamprey in the Tucannon River and other receiving waters. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nClick link below to join on April 16th \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams Need help?\n\nJoin: https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/24404505535734?p=NP8RNEP7hvgTUJVl6Z\nMeeting ID: 244 045 055 357 34\nPasscode: Hr6rR2TS\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 207-387-0436\,\,124698601# United States\, Portland\nFind a local number\nPhone conference ID: 124 698 601#\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@psmfc.org
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/pnamp-fish-monitoring-work-group-april-2026/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260115T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260115T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250902T204423Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260113T220934Z
UID:10000125-1768471200-1768476600@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (January 2026)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (Pacific) on January 15th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talk: From Data to Decisions: RMIS in R at Your Fingertips – Explore how RMIS and R work together to transform raw data into meaningful fisheries management decisions. \nPresenters: Greg Wilke (Database and Application Manager\, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission) and Kris Warner (Fish and Wildlife Biologist\, Region 5 North- Hatchery Monitoring and Evaluation\, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife) \nSummary: \nFeedback from the 2025 FMWG survey suggested a presentation on how to use the RMIS R package. In this presentation\, RMIS R package users will showcase how they apply the code in their workflows\, followed by a discussion on desired improvements and ways to enhance usability. Developers will be available to provide support and gather feedback\, ensuring the package evolves to better meet user needs. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nClick link below to join on January 15th \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams Need help?\n\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 233 720 630 552 0\nPasscode: RR9Qf7Tr\n\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 207-387-0436\,\,64429963# United States\, Portland\nFind a local number\n\nPhone conference ID: 644 299 63#\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@psmfc.org
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/pnamp-fish-monitoring-work-group-january-2026/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251016T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251016T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250725T220041Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251023T200545Z
UID:10000109-1760608800-1760614200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (October 2025)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (Pacific) on October 16th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nSalmon Research and Monitoring Interest Group – Introduction to RDA and Working Group Development \nPresenters: Lara Erikson​ (Program Manager\, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission) and Tom Bird (Research Scientist\, Fisheries and Oceans Canada) \nSummary: \nThe Salmon Research and Monitoring Interest Group (IG) within the Research Data Alliance (RDA) was formed to address the need for better data sharing and standardization in salmon research\, building on the synthesis paper Salmon Data Mobilization from the International Year of the Salmon (IYS) closing symposium in 2023. The collaborative efforts from an informal group looking to address the challenges of salmon data mobilization gradually evolved and cohered into a more formal Interest Group within the RDA. Salmon data are broad\, multi-disciplinary\, and complex\, encompassing data on salmon at various life stages (freshwater\, sea\, spawning)\, as well as related biological processes (prey\, predators) and physical environments (oceans\, rivers). A key recommendation from the IYS paper was establishing a peer support network to facilitate collaboration\, knowledge sharing\, and skill development in the salmon research community. With several collaborators already being members\, the RDA was chosen for its global community and existing infrastructure. Aims of the IG include expanding the current three chairs to eight across Atlantic and Pacific regions\, serve as a social network to link ideas across time zones\, learn from the existing RDA community’s tools and strategies\, and develop and share their own tools and processes within open spaces such as Zenodo and GitHub. The IG is a larger overarching group of members and collaborators under which smaller more focused Working Groups (WG) are formed which focus on outputs with clear\, short-term and specific goals. Thus far\, proposed WG topics include; salmon ontology\, salmon data paper synthesis\, biochronology of otolith and scale samples\, monitoring methods ontology\, migration timing data\, and long-term monitoring data. The salmon ontology WG in particular has made progress building upon a workshop held at the BC-WA Chapter AFS meeting in March 2025. The IG and the various WGs aim to foster a collaborative environment to tackle the complexities of salmon data for conservation and recovery efforts. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\n  \nClick link below to join on October 16th \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams Need help?\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 269 941 573 156 3\nPasscode: bu3GL9Qr\n\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 207-387-0436\,\,797278667# United States\, Portland\nFind a local number\n\nPhone conference ID: 797 278 667#\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@psmfc.org
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/pnamp-fish-monitoring-work-group-october-2025/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250522T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250522T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250313T174549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250530T161513Z
UID:10000091-1747908000-1747913400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Beyond PTAGIS: More on applying R and Other Regional PIT Tag Systems - FMWG PIT Tag Data & Analysis 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Watch the Recording \nLinks to resources shared during the presentations \n\ntidyr cheatsheet: https://rstudio.github.io/cheatsheets/tidyr.pdf\ndplyr cheatsheet: https://nyu-cdsc.github.io/learningr/assets/data-transformation.pdf\nggplot2 cheatsheet: https://github.com/rstudio/cheatsheets/blob/main/data-visualization.pdf\nR Graph Gallery: https://r-graph-gallery.com/\nAccessible Color Palette Generator: https://venngage.com/tools/accessible-color-palette-generator\ngoogle “hex colors” to find your own colors and make custom color palettes\nMapping basics: SFS GIS R | Basic Mapping\nEPSG codes: Spatial Reference List — Spatial Reference\nsf library github: Simple Features for R • sf\nsf library cheatsheet: cheatsheets/sf.pdf at main · rstudio/cheatsheets · GitHub\npch shape codes: https://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/r-plot-pch-symbols-the-different-point-shapes-available-in-r?title=r-plot-pch-symbols-the-different-point-shapes-available-in-r\nLeaflet:  Interactive maps with leaflet in R [Complete Guide] | R CHARTS\nR for data science: R for Data Science (2e)\nKlamath Basin Fisheries Collaborative\nPacific Salmon Foundation Dashboards\n\n\nReady to turbocharge your research? Dive into the world of R\, the open-source programming language that’s revolutionizing how scientists work. Whether you’re a budding biologist or a seasoned pro\, our dynamic webinar is your ticket to mastering R. To wrap up the series\, we’ve invited a few folks from other regional systems to give us a brief overview of some of their tools. Join us for the fifth and final session in the FMWG PIT Tag & Data Analysis 2025 Webinar Series. \n\nBeyond PTAGIS: Using R for biological data management\, visualization\, and reporting – Jennifer Fredrickson\, Jennifer Rowe; U.S. Geological Survey Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center\nLIGHTNING TALKS:\n\nKlamath Basin Fisheries Collaborative Database – Monica Diaz\, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission\nBottlenecks to Survival Data System & Orphan Tag Database – Brahm White-Gluz\, Pacific Salmon Foundation\nUsing PIT tags to guide salmon recovery in the Green River – Chris Gregersen\, King County\n\n\n\nEach session is 90 minutes long; we will also host an optional 30-minute “office hours” after each session where participants can get additional help from the presenters. Note\, if there are no further questions during the “office hours”\, we will conclude the session. \nSee the FMWG 2025 Webinar Series Program V2 for presentation abstracts. \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams\nJoin the meeting\nMeeting ID: 294 444 747 761 9\nPasscode: MH23ct9S\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,790235998# United States\, Washington\nFind a local number\nPhone conference ID: 790 235 998#
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/beyond-ptagis-more-on-applying-r-and-other-regional-pit-tag-systems-fmwg-pit-tag-data-analysis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250515T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250515T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250313T173956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250519T223254Z
UID:10000090-1747303200-1747308600@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Columbia Basin Research: Data Access in Real Time and Tools - FMWG PIT Tag Data & Analysis 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Watch the Recording \nLinks to resources shared during the presentations \n\nColumbia Basin Research (CBR)\nColumbia River DART (Data Access in Real Time)\nTools | Columbia Basin Research\nDART PIT Tag Life Stage Filter\nDART PIT Tag ESU (Evolutionarily Significant Unit) and DPS (Distinct Population Segment) Filter and Glossary\nDART PIT Tag Transportation Filter\nDART Metadata\, Glossaries\, and Methods\nDART PIT Tag Columbia Basin ESU & DPS Graphics & Text\nDART PIT Tag Adult Returns by Observation Year Detail\nDART PIT Tag DART-specific file_id (.DART[N])\nDART PIT Tag Adult Returns by Observation Site Historical Run Timing\nDART PIT Tag Adult Returns Conversion Rate\nDART PIT Tag Columbia Basin ESU & DPS Smolt-to-Adult Return (SAR) Survival\nDART Lower Granite Bypass and Spillway Analyses\nDART PIT Tag Release and Observation Summary for Generating Survival and Travel Time Estimates with Tag File Selection\nDART PIT Tag Juvenile Survival and Travel Time Estimates Methods\nDART PIT Tag Upload TagID List Analysis and Reporting\nPitPro webpage\n\n\nColumbia Basin Research experts will lead us through the Data Access in Real Time (DART) site and some of their analysis tools for use with mark-recapture data and an in-depth look at the PIT-tag processing tool\, PitPro. Join us for the fourth session in the FMWG PIT Tag & Data Analysis 2025 Webinar Series. \nThe session features a two-part presentation with opportunities for Q&A interspersed:\n\nPart 1. Columbia Basin Research Data Access in Real Time (DART) – Susannah Iltis\, Matt Carter\, and Jennifer Gosselin\, Columbia Basin Research\, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences\, University of Washington\nPart 2. Columbia Basin Research Mark and Recapture Tools – Rich Townsend and Rebecca Buchanan\, Columbia Basin Research\, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences\, University of Washington\n\n\n\nEach session is 90 minutes long; we will also host an optional 30-minute “office hours” after each session where participants can get additional help from the presenters. Note\, if there are no further questions during the “office hours”\, we will conclude the session. \nSee the FMWG 2025 Webinar Series Program V2 for presentation abstracts. \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams\nJoin the meeting\nMeeting ID: 258 873 165 738 8\nPasscode: Sp6G228K\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,449412563# United States\, Washington\nFind a local number\nPhone conference ID: 449 412 563#
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/columbia-basin-research-data-access-in-real-time-and-tools-fmwg-pit-tag-data-analysis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250508T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250508T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250313T173801Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T213318Z
UID:10000089-1746698400-1746703800@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Applications: Clean & Organize Your PIT Tag Data - FMWG PIT Tag Data & Analysis 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Watch the Recording \nLinks to resources shared during the presentations:\n\nPITcleanr\nPIThy\nPIThy 2023 Presentation\nPIThy GitHub\nMarika Dobos PIThy example\nNicole Tancreto PIThy example\nBONAFF PIThy example\nAn introduction to Git and how to use it with RStudio\nNMFS Openscapes\nColumbia Cold Water Refuge PIT-Tab Analysis (GitHub)\nMapshaper (GitHub)\n\n\n\n\nYou’ve got your data and need to clean it up\, now what? Tune in as we cover some tools to help you format your data using helpful tools such as PitcleanR and PIThy\, as well as information on helpful GitHub pages. Join us for the third session in the FMWG PIT Tag & Data Analysis 2025 Webinar Series. \n\nWrangling and Preparing PIT Tag Data using PITcleanr – Kevin See; Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife\nStrategies for Bringing PTAGIS to the Masses – Brian Maschhoff; Salmonetics\n\nEach session is 90 minutes long; we will also host an optional 30-minute “office hours” after each session where participants can get additional help from the presenters. Note\, if there are no further questions during the “office hours”\, we will conclude the session. \nSee the FMWG 2025 Webinar Series Program V2 for presentation abstracts. \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams\nJoin the meeting\nMeeting ID: 281 353 821 649 8\nPasscode: Em7Eq2pJ\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,813562932# United States\, Washington\nFind a local number\nPhone conference ID: 813 562 932#
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/applications-clean-organize-your-pit-tag-data-fmwg-pit-tag-data-analysis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250501T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250501T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250313T173535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250505T215940Z
UID:10000088-1746093600-1746099000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:GitHub for Data Analysis Projects - FMWG PIT Tag Data & Analysis 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Watch the Recording \nLink to resources shared during the presentation: GitHub Crash Course \n\nFollow along as Dr. Ben Staton gives a live tutorial on GitHub. If you are new to GitHub\, it is highly recommended that you watch Ben’s GitHub introduction from the 2025 Emerging Technologies Information Sessions (ETIS) 2025 Webinar Series\, link to the session here. This presentation will build on his introduction by diving deeper into GitHub. Join us for the second session of the FMWG PIT Tag & Data Analysis 2025 Webinar Series. \n\nLive Tutorial for Using and Navigating GitHub for Data Analysis Projects – Ben Staton; Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission\n\nEach session is 90 minutes long; we will also host an optional 30-minute “office hours” after each session where participants can get additional help from the presenters. Note\, if there are no further questions during the “office hours”\, we will conclude the session. \nSee the FMWG 2025 Webinar Series Program V2 for presentation abstracts. \n\n\nMicrosoft Teams\nJoin the meeting\nMeeting ID: 222 840 364 028 8\nPasscode: gs6H9eg6\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,729731836# United States\, Washington\nFind a local number\nPhone conference ID: 729 731 836#
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/github-for-data-analysis-projects-fmwg-pit-tag-data-analysis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250424T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250424T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250313T173252Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250425T183045Z
UID:10000087-1745488800-1745494200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Starting Your Journey with PIT Tag Data - FMWG PIT Tag Data & Analysis 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Watch the Recording \nLinks to resources shared during the presentations\n\nPTAGIS Tutorial Videos: https://www.ptagis.org/Resources/VideoLibrary?videoTutorials=Reporting%20Tutorial\nData Overview section in PTAGIS Data Specification: https://www.ptagis.org/content/DataSpecification/topics/data-overview.htm\nQuery section in PTAGIS Data Specification: https://www.ptagis.org/content/DataSpecification/topics/query.htm\nPTAGIS Frequently Asked Questions: https://www.ptagis.org/Faq\nExcel Handout: https://pnamp.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/FMWG_PIT_Workshop_Dobos_EXCEL_Handout_2025_04_24.docx\nExcel Exercise: https://pnamp.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/FMWG_PIT_Workshop_Dobos_EXCEL_Exercise_FINAL_2025_04_24.xlsx\n\n\nNew to the PIT tag data and analysis world or maybe you need a refresher? The PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG) has got you covered! Join us for the first session in the FMWG PIT Tag & Data Analysis 2025 Webinar Series. \n\nUsing the PTAGIS advanced reporting system to query and download PIT tag data – Nicole Tancreto; Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission/PTAGIS\nManaging PIT Tag Detection Data with Microsoft Excel – Marika Dobos; Idaho Department of Fish and Game\n\nEach session is approximately 90 minutes long; we will also host an optional 30-minute “office hours” after each session where participants can get more hands-on from the presenters. Note\, if there are no further questions during the “office hours”\, we will conclude the session. \nSee the FMWG 2025 Webinar Series Program V2 for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/starting-your-journey-with-pit-tag-data-fmwg-pit-tag-data-analysis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250417T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250417T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250122T155435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T200815Z
UID:10000082-1744884000-1744889400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (April 2025)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (Pacific) on April 17th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nDevelopment of a Mid-Sized River Habitat Sampling Protocol\nTyler Hessler (PhD student in the Missouri Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit in Columbia\, MO) \nThe use of technology is increasing in natural resources field and there is a need to determine how these technologies can be utilized to advance our respective fields. In this study\, we propose the use of several advanced technologies (acoustic doppler current profilers\, ADCPs; unmanned aerial systems\, UASs; side scan sonar; 360 cameras) to better standardize and streamline the collection of fish-relevant habitat data in non-wadeable rivers. UASs and 360 cameras allow for efficient capture of important habitat metrics (canopy cover\, riparian land use\, etc.) with greater accuracy than traditional observational methods that often include a great deal of subjectivity. ADCPs and side scan sonar have seen use in fisheries but are not used as often as they could be to quickly assess habitat. Although the amount of data these technologies collect can be daunting\, the use of AI and other software may streamline the implementation of these data and provide another option for managers that can increase confidence associated with making informed decisions that rely on accurate habitat data. Developing a standardized protocol using these technologies could significantly increase the quality of data collected in non-wadeable rivers and also decrease the costs associated with extended time in the field. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nClick link below to join on April 17th \n\nMicrosoft Teams Meeting link\nMeeting ID: 240 100 065 603\nPasscode: Hm2wb39o\n\n\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,595384762# United States\, Washington\nFind a local number\n\nPhone conference ID: 595 384 762#\n\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-april-2025/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250128T211539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250128T230045Z
UID:10000085-1741609800-1741626000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:WA-BC AFS Workshop-Tracking Hatchery Data from Eggs to Spawners Across Regions
DESCRIPTION:Tracking Hatchery Data from Eggs to Spawners Across Regions \nWe hope you are planning to attend the Washington-British (WA-BC) AFS Chapter meeting this year because PNAMP is co-hosting two workshops with partners. While each workshop has a different goal\, both workshops are related to sharing important data needed for salmon recovery work. \nVisit the conference website for more information. \nIf you are in the need for hatchery data specifically\, join us for our half-day workshop Tracking Hatchery Data From Eggs to Spawners Across Regions (sponsored by PSMFC StreamNet and PNAMP). In this session\, you will learn about the Coordinated Assessments data exchange (CAX)\, a data-sharing network supported by the Coordinated Assessments Partnership (CAP). CAX provides a system for sharing important hatchery data\, including hatchery program details\, SARs for hatchery runs\, and hatchery releases. The CAX was initially created to share high level indicator data\, like Natural Origin Spawner Abundance (NOSA)\, Recruits per Spawner (R/S) and Smolt to Adult Returns (SAR). Recently\, the system has been expanded to include hatchery data\, building on its original foundation.   \n  \nIn this workshop\, you will gain an understanding of the development process and key elements of data standards\, using CAP’s Hatchery Coordinated Assessment (HCA) to explore technical specifications for data storage and exchange. You will also learn about hatchery data availability\, how to access data via CAX\, and how to use the metadata within records for proper data citation and attribution. This workshop will also provide the opportunity to actively inform the collaborative development of CAX to meet the needs of data providers and users throughout our region.   \n  \nYou could join us in the morning for the first half of the Fishing for Clarity: Knowledge Modeling to Support Cross-Organizational Collaboration and Data Sharing About Salmon Escapement workshop and then jump over to the Hatchery Data workshop! See link above to register for the conference and workshops. 
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/workshop-tracking-hatchery-data-from-eggs-to-spawners-across-regions/
LOCATION:Pinnacle Hotel Harbourfront\, 1133 West Hastings Street\, Vancouver\, BC\, V6E 3T3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:CAP Event,HCAX Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250310T143000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250127T232806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250307T001030Z
UID:10000084-1741597200-1741617000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:WA-BC AFS Workshop - Fishing for Clarity: Knowledge Modeling to Support Cross-Organizational Collaboration and Data Sharing About Salmon Escapement
DESCRIPTION:UPDATED March 5\, 2025 \nFishing for Clarity: Knowledge Modeling to Support Cross-Organizational Collaboration and\nData Sharing About Salmon Escapement \nAFS Washington-British Columbia Chapter Meeting Vancouver BC March 10\, 2025 9:00 am – 2:30 pm\nIn person attendees will be in the hotel Salon C (Cordova Level) \nWorkshop Description\nIn this workshop (sponsored by Fisheries and Oceans Canada\, NCEAS\, PSMFC StreamNet\, and PNAMP)\,\nparticipants will learn about using a knowledge modeling approach to integrate data across multiple\norganizations engaged in monitoring salmon spawner abundance. Focusing on the challenge of being able to\nintegrate salmon escapement observations across diverse entities\, workshop attendees learn about processes\nto develop a shared ontology\, starting with mapping of concepts that underlie salmon escapement\nobservations. The workshop will introduce participants to the skills needed to build scalable\, interoperable\ndata models\, an important component of enabling integrated data across organizations for better analysis and\ndecision-making. Workshop participants will be invited to a future workshop where we share practical tools\nand conduct further hands-on exercises to enable a roadmap for advancing data sharing and collaboration in\nsalmon management. \nWorkshop Objectives\n● Shared Understanding of Challenges: Identify and address challenges in integrating heterogeneous data\nfrom different systems and organizations.\n● Strategies for Standardizing Terms: Understand the key principles and methodologies of knowledge\nmodeling.\n● Best Practices for Salmon Data Stewardship: Invite critical review of best practices outlined in\nmanuscript\, identify missing best-practices\, coordinate authorship.\n● Next Steps for Continued Collaboration: Discuss strategies for ensuring the scalability and sustainability\nof data models in collaborative environments. \nWorkshop Flow:\nThe workshop will begin with brief roundtable introductions for in-person attendees and chat\nintroductions for virtual participants\, following a welcome from the hosts. The objectives and informal\,\ndiscussion-based format for the workshop will be outlined. \nMatt Jones (NCEAS) will set the stage by showcasing innovative data science and knowledge\nengineering solutions used to improve salmon data integration and discoverability in Alaska. Their\nwork will serve as a springboard for exploring how similar approaches could address inter-agency and\ntransboundary data-sharing challenges. \nInvited speakers will present their salmon data integration projects\, focusing on the challenges of\ndefining and standardizing terms and how they overcame them to integrate data from disparate\nsources. \nWe will also discuss an in-progress paper on salmon data stewardship principles\, inviting new\nco-authors to contribute ideas and continue collaboration beyond the workshop. \nThe hands-on session (1 hour) will be conducted in three breakout groups\, each working with a\ndifferent dataset. Two in-person groups will focus on NuSEDS and SALHub\, while the online breakout\ngroup will work with Streamnet CAX-NOSA. The session will consist of two 30 minute activities: 1)\nDecomposing dataset concepts – identifying core concepts and relationships within each dataset’s\nvocabulary; 2) Clustering identified concepts – organizing them into broader conceptual categories.\nParticipants will use Google Sheets and Mural for these activities. Each dataset will have a designated\nGoogle Sheet in the working drive here\, containing its vocabulary and definitions. Breakout group\nmembers will use these Sheets to guide their discussions\, while the Group Leader and Scribe will\ndocument key insights and results on the Mural Board. \nThe session will conclude with a discussion on next steps\, identifying potential tools\, processes\, and\nvenues for formal collaboration toward more interoperable international salmon data. \n 
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/workshop-fishing-for-clarity-knowledge-modeling-to-support-cross-organizational-collaboration-and-data-sharing-about-salmon-escapement/
LOCATION:Pinnacle Hotel Harbourfront\, 1133 West Hastings Street\, Vancouver\, BC\, V6E 3T3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Data Management and Mobilization event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250211T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250211T143000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20250116T181402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250116T183134Z
UID:10000081-1739278800-1739284200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agenda\n5 min\, Welcome and Introductions \n30 min\, What is Data Management\, and Why is it Important? Edyth Hermosillo (Aquatic Biologist\, EPA Region 10 – Seattle) \n30 min\, Environmental Data Management at WA Ecology – 25 Years of Insight and Tips\, Chris Neumiller (WA Ecology\, EIM Data Manager)  \n20 min\, Round Robin \n\nMeeting participants are invited to share 1-2 minute updates about new monitoring on the horizon.\n\n5 min\, TMS Updates \n\nNews about TMS Core Team tasks and the 2025 TMS Workshop\n\n  \nMicrosoft Teams\n\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 215 646 005 565\nPasscode: 4278qT6E\n\nOr call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 630 909 080#\nFind a local number | Learn More
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-meeting-7/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250205T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250205T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20241101T001537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250206T185034Z
UID:10000076-1738746000-1738753200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Remote Sensing Session - ETIS 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Remote Sensing Session – Watch the Recording \n\nDeveloping Autonomous eDNA Detection – Edgar Rudberg\, Ph.D.; Nucleic Sensing Systems\nEarly Predication Method for Native Migratory Fish Presence at Small Culverts – Courtney Zambory; Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife\nWhy on Earth Would We Put Ocean Color Sensors on a Geostationary Weather Satellite? – Ryan Vandermeulen; NOAA Fisheries\n\nSee the ETIS 2025 Webinar Program for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/remote-sensing-session-etis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:ETIS Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250129T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250129T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20241031T235926Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250130T174605Z
UID:10000075-1738141200-1738148400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Genetics Session - ETIS 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Genetics Session – Watch the Recording \n\nUpdating Genus Classification and Species Diversity in the OG Fish – Kellie Carim; U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station\nHow Might Restoration Efforts Help Bring a Bumper Return of Pacific Lamprey to the Columbia River? – Jon Hess; Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission\nIntegrating Genetics into Crayfish Conservation – Zanethia Barnett; USDA Forest Service\nSharing Biological Information Across Generations: Parallels Between Indigenous Knowledge and Genetics for Fisheries Recovery in the Columbia River Basin – Jeremy FiveCrows; Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission\n\nSee the ETIS 2025 Webinar Program for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/genetics-session-etis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:ETIS Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250122T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250122T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20241031T233543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250124T234715Z
UID:10000074-1737536400-1737543600@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Data QA/QC Session – ETIS 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Data QA/QC Session – Watch the Recording \n\n(Slide Deck) Enabling Real Time Data Collection\, Quality Control\, Reporting\, and Visualization to Enhance Field Data Collection Across the West – Justin Welty; U.S. Geological Survey\n(Slide Deck) Data QA/QC for Spawning Ground Surveys Using Survey 123 and ArcGIS Enterprise – Brock Lipple; Idaho Department of Fish and Game\n(Slide Deck) UI Design for Getting Better Quality Data – Chris Harrington; Idaho Department of Fish and Game\n\nSee the ETIS 2025 Webinar Program for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/data-qa-qc-session-etis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:ETIS Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20250116T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20250116T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240815T204304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250925T155738Z
UID:10000032-1737021600-1737027000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (January 2025)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (Pacific) on January 16th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talk: RECORDING AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST\, send email to mdethloff@psmfc.org \nPutting Time Back into Space-for-Time Mark-Recapture Models\nAuthors: Russell W. Perry\, Dalton J. Hance\, and Adam C. Pope (U.S. Geological Survey) \nSummary:\nRussell Perry\, a Research Fish Biologist in the Quantitative Ecology Section at the US Geological Survey with the Western Fisheries Research Center will present Putting Time Back into Space-for-Time Mark-Recapture Models. Mark-recapture models such as the Cormack-Jolly-Seber and multi-state models are widely used to estimate survival of PIT- and acoustic-tagged fish migrating through stream and river networks. Although mark-recapture models were designed to estimate survival over time between discrete sampling occasions\, when applied to migratory animals space can be swapped for time by using the discrete sampling locations to form detection “gates” along the migratory corridor. However\, space-for-time models pose significant challenges when interest centers on understanding the effect of time-varying covariates on survival. This is because the environmental conditions that fish experienced upon passing a detection gate is unknown when individuals are not detected. In this presentation\, we describe Time-Integrated Migration and Survival (TIMS) models that overcome this limitation of space-for-time mark-recapture models. TIMS models combine a migration model with a mark-recapture model to explicitly model travel times between detection gates and to account for probable arrival times and environmental conditions experienced by undetected fish. We provide example applications of these models to both acoustic- and PIT-tagged juvenile salmon to illustrate how the TIMS modeling framework allows for estimating effects of daily covariates such as flow and temperature on migration and survival. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nClick link below to join on January 16th \n\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 221 482 886 201\nPasscode: dd6X2C\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,292731902# United States\, Washington DC\nFind a local number\n\nPhone conference ID: 292 731 902#\n\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-jan2025/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250115T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250115T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20241023T165420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250121T213833Z
UID:10000071-1736931600-1736938800@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Session - ETIS 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Session: Watch the Recording \n\n AI for capture recapture data: individual instance pattern recognition tools and the GrouperSpotter platform – Brice Semmens; Scripps Institution of Oceanography\, UC San Diego\n (Slide Deck) Exploring monitoring methods using text clustering and LLMs – Tomas Bird and Minh Doan; Department of Fisheries and Oceans\, Canada\n Improving Hydroelectric Dam Operations Through AI-Powered Fish Monitoring – Aaron Legge; Innovasea\n\nSee the ETIS 2025 Webinar Program for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/ai-and-ml/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:ETIS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250108T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250108T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20241023T161813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250121T213939Z
UID:10000070-1736326800-1736334000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Modeling and Analysis Session - ETIS 2025 Webinar Series
DESCRIPTION:Modeling and Analysis Session: Watch the Recording \n\n(Slide Deck) An Overview of GitHub for Data Analysis Projects – Ben Staton; Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission\n(Slide Deck) Utilizing R Shiny Within the Likely Suspects Framework – Graeme Diack\, Jon Emery\, Colin Bull; Missing Salmon Alliance\n(Slide Deck) Models facilitate comparison of the social-ecological tradeoffs among Puget Sound management alternatives – Caitlin Magel; University of Washington Puget Sound Institute\n\nSee the ETIS 2025 Webinar Program for presentation abstracts.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/modeling-analysis-session-etis-2025-webinar-series/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:ETIS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20241106T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20241107T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240823T152014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250129T220138Z
UID:10000035-1730883600-1730977200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:2024 Joint Session of StreamNet Executive Committee and PNAMP Steering Committee
DESCRIPTION:PNAMP Steering Committee and StreamNet Executive Committee Joint Session Meeting Notes for November 6-7\, 2024. \nJoin us on Wednesday\, November 6th and Thursday\, November 7th for the 2024 joint session between the StreamNet Executive Committee and PNAMP Steering Committee. The overlapping work of StreamNet and PNAMP makes this meeting format beneficial for both communities and creates efficiency in participants’ time and travel. \nEveryone is welcome to attend all sessions in Portland or virtually. In person will be held at the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission 700 NE Multnomah St\, Portland\, OR 97232 in the 5th floor Commission/conference room. \nTimelines for Day 1 and Day 2. \n\nDAY 1\, Wednesday\, November 6th\n8:30 am – Breakfast Social – Join us for PNAMP’s 20-year Celebration with coffee\, donuts\, and apples (in-person only)\n9:00 am – PNAMP Steering Committee\n10:30 am – Joint Session of StreamNet Executive Committee and PNAMP Steering Committee\nLunch break around 11:45 am\n1:00-4:30 – reconvene both committees\nDay 2\, Thursday\, November 7th\n 9:00 am -11:00 am – StreamNet Executive Committee\n\n\nPNAMP is an open forum\, but these meetings are specifically focused on gathering feedback from our Steering Committee and courtesy partners. All others are welcomed to come\, learn\, and listen\, but please contain your comments to the in-meeting chat or a follow up email. We will reach out one to one to discuss your thoughts and questions after the meeting. \nContact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov\, if you have any questions or suggestions.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/2024-joint-session-of-streamnet-executive-committee-and-pnamp-steering-committee/
LOCATION:Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission\, 700 NE Multnomah St\, Portland\, OR\, 97232\, United States
CATEGORIES:PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20241017T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20241017T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T173056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250117T174318Z
UID:10000013-1729159200-1729164600@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (October 2024)
DESCRIPTION:Join us at 10:00 am (Pacific) on October 17th for the next meeting of the PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG). During the meeting\, we will update participants on current tasks\, hear a presentation about innovative fish monitoring\, and provide you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nFlowing Forward: Key Insights from the Middle Fork John Day River Intensively Monitored Watershed 2024 Summary Report \nThe Middle Fork John Day River Intensively Monitored Watershed (Middle Fork IMW) Working Group (comprised of multiple agencies and entities\, with funding from PSMFC\, NOAA and OWEB) dedicated 2023 to completing a summary report that builds off the Middle Fork IMW’s 2017 10-Year Summary Report. The 2024 report represents additional years of work and voluntary reporting by numerous agencies and individuals\, conducting restoration\, research\, and monitoring activities in the upper Middle Fork John Day River. On a voluntary basis\, principal investigators and their co-authors wrote eight individual chapters\, describing their recent research and findings. The 2024 Summary Report also provides key insights into the intensity and types of restoration actions completed on the landscape\, an assessment of the application of previous recommendations provided in 2017\, a compilation of new lessons learned and recommendations\, and recommendations for future restoration to target limiting factor(s) and achieve the goals of the Middle Fork IMW.  The 2024 Middle Fork John Day IMW Summary Report can be found at this link: 2024 Middle Fork John Day River IMW Summary Report.  Kasey Bliesner (ODFW and the Middle Fork IMW co-coordinator) and other members of the Middle Fork IMW Working Group will present key insights from the 2024 Summary Report. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nClick link below to join on October 17th \nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 286 334 974 298\nPasscode: F42mqG\n\n\nDial in by phone\n+1 202-640-1187\,\,806443594# United States\, Washington DC\nFind a local number\n\nPhone conference ID: 806 443 594#\n\n\n\nNever been to a FMWG meeting? This meeting is a perfect time to learn about the project\, join in\, and help guide future work. \nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings. \n\nThe PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to discuss task progress\, share expertise through guest presentations\, and support collaboration\, communication\, and coordination among fish monitoring practitioners for effective monitoring and efficient data sharing. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-oct2024/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240731T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240731T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240703T234533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240704T000142Z
UID:10000009-1722423600-1722427200@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:MonitoringResources.org Tutorial for CORs
DESCRIPTION:An overview and quick tutorial of the MonitoringResources.org metadata documentation tool for BPA CORs and any other contractors interested in attending. \nBPA Workflow Navigation and Guidance\n\n\nMicrosoft Teams Need help?\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 229 605 652 066\nPasscode: nHanuN\n\n 
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/monitoringresources-org-tutorial-for-cors/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Monitoring Resources Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240618T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240618T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T212923Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T212923Z
UID:10000019-1718704800-1718712000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agenda\n15 min\, Welcome\, Introduction\, and Short Updates \n20 min\, Columbia River Mainstem Fish Tissue and Water Quality Monitoring Program Development \n\nPresentation by Laura Shira and Sherrie Duncan (Yakama Nation Fisheries Program) on program development\, pilot study progress\, and next steps\, followed by Q&A.\n\n30 min\, Upper Mississippi River Monitoring Programs \n\nPresentation by Jeff Houser (USGS)\, Kathi Jo Jankowski (USGS)\, and Kirsten Wallace (UMRBA) on two complementary multi-state monitoring programs on the Upper Mississippi River – the Upper Mississippi River Restoration Program’s Long Term Resource Monitoring element (UMRR LTRM) and the Upper Mississippi River Basin Association water quality monitoring program\, followed by Q&A.\n\n30 min\, Prioritizing Contaminants of Ecological Concern in Great Lakes Tributaries \n\nPresentation by Steve Corsi (USGS) and Dan Villeneuve (EPA) on integrated chemical and biological effects monitoring in Great Lakes tributaries\, associated prioritization strategies\, and some lessons learned from a 10 year\, multi-agency research effort. Followed by Q&A.\n\n15 min\, Open Discussion \n\nDiscussion of strategies to link tributary monitoring to mainstem Columbia River and estuary monitoring\n\n10 min\, Round Robin \n\nMeeting participants are invited to share 1-2 minute updates about new monitoring on the horizon.\n\n  \nMicrosoft Teams\n\nJoin the meeting now\nMeeting ID: 267 224 343 606\nPasscode: BopPGo\n\nOr call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 941 947 120#\n\n  \nContact the TMS Core Team\, gs-crbtoxmon@usgs.gov\, if you have any questions or suggestions.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-meeting-5/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240521T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240521T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T233226Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T233226Z
UID:10000021-1716287400-1716291000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:2024 HCAX Project Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Please join the final HCAX Project workshop\, which will provide: \n\na brief recap of HCAX progress to date\nan overview of HCAX data standard development and implementation testing\ndiscussion of query system to retrieve data from HCAX\nreview of the updated Data Use Agreement\ndiscussion of any remaining tasks and when we can expect to data published\nplanning for future tasks: check-in with data consumers to inform further refinements for analysis and reporting needs\n\nA detailed agenda will be provided two weeks before the workshop. \nBackground Material Links \n\nHCAX DES  
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/2024-hcax-project-workshop/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CAP Event,HCAX Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240418T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240418T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240826T223404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T194047Z
UID:10000052-1713434400-1713439800@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (April 2024)
DESCRIPTION:The PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to update participants on current FMWG tasks\, share expertise through presentations on innovative fish monitoring\, and provides you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nA New Approach to Spatially Characterize Water Temperature in Wadable Streams \nAndy Tranmer\, a research Professor for the Center for Ecohydraulics Research\, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering\, at University of Idaho will present on a new method for gathering temperature data. Water temperature is a primary driver of biological processes and metabolic rates that exhibits high spatial variation in aquatic systems. However\, accurately measuring water temperatures and characterizing its associated variability in the field is an ongoing challenge that constrains our understanding of seasonal timing of processes\, chemical reaction rates\, and habitat availability. Here we present a new\, simple method of measuring spatially distributed water temperatures and depths in wadable streams by combing low-cost sensors and RTK GPS units. We also demonstrate its application for capturing temperature heterogeneity and identifying thermal refuge in a recently restored gravel-bed reach of the Grande Ronde River in Oregon. The field data were used to evaluate which restored morphologic features (alcoves\, side channels\, riffles\, pools\, and plane beds) aid in maintaining appropriate thermal habitat conditions. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-apr2024/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240229T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240229T110000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240730T164249Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T203640Z
UID:10000011-1709199000-1709204400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agenda\n9:30 – 9:35 AM\, Welcome and Introductions \n9:35 – 10:15 AM\, Screening Values \n\nPresentation and discussion of a proposed process to select Columbia Basin wide screening values for contaminants.\n\n10:15 – 10:55 AM\, Lightning Talks \n\nMercury Exposure and Bioaccumulation in the Salmon and Lower Snake Rivers\, Austin Baldwin (US Geological Survey) ​\nFreshwater Fish Contaminants Monitoring: Columbia River\, Jakub Bednarek (WA Ecology)​\nEngaging Communities to Monitor Mercury Risk in the Columbia River Basin: Intensive Application of a National Biosentinel Network at a Regional Scale\, Tiffany Garcia (Oregon State University)\n\n10:55 – 11:00 AM\, Online Resources \n\nA brief reminder of online resources that are available for current and future EPA grantees for help with QAPPs\, WQX\, and more.\n\n  \nMicrosoft Teams\n\nClick here to join the meeting\nMeeting ID: 241 572 279 474\nPasscode: XPreSf\n\nOr call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 611 936 650#\nFind a local number | Learn More\n\n  \nSlido Polling\n\nClick here to open Slido\nOr go to slido.com and enter code TMS
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-meeting/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20240118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20240118T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240815T213505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T193912Z
UID:10000033-1705572000-1705577400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (January 2024)
DESCRIPTION:The PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to update participants on current FMWG tasks\, share expertise through presentations on innovative fish monitoring\, and provides you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nPassage\, Predation\, Contamination and Supplementation: The Importance of Collaborative and Creative Research in Restoring Pacific Lamprey \nRalph Lampman\, the Lamprey Project Lead for Yakama Nation Fisheries\, will present “Passage\, Predation\, Contamination and Supplementation: The Importance of Collaborative and Creative Research in Restoring Pacific Lamprey”. Although awareness and support has generally increased in recent years for Pacific Lamprey restoration and research\, there are still many challenges for their recovery and numerous hurdles to fully understand the threats they face throughout their life history. In this presentation\, Ralph will share a few examples of recent collaborative research (in regard to passage / collection techniques\, molecular analysis of predation\, eDNA / eRNA / bile acid\, sourcing of contamination) that the Yakama Nation Fisheries and other Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission member tribes are currently working on to help make timely progress towards their recovery. Collaboration and innovation are essential in realizing this goal and we ask all entities and partners to seek and discover creative ways in which they can each contribute towards these efforts. \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-jan2024/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20231205T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20231205T121500
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T212028Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T212028Z
UID:10000018-1701766800-1701778500@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Agenda (Updated 12/1/2023)\n9:00-9:10 AM\, Welcome and Introductions \n9:10-9:15 AM\, Columbia River Basin Restoration Program Overview \n\nShort overview presentation of the Columbia River Basin Restoration Program by Michelle Wilcox (EPA)\n\n9:15-9:35 AM\, Toxics Monitoring Project Information Summary \n\nPresentation on Columbia River Basin (CRB) toxics monitoring project information by Patrick Moran (USGS)\n\n9:35-10:05 AM\, CRB Toxics Monitoring Dashboard \n\nReview of project tracking information dashboard prototype by Katia Rar (EPA) followed by participant feedback\n\n10:05-10:45 AM\, Methods Comparison \n\nReview of methods comparison analysis by Meghan Dunn (EPA) followed by group discussion of challenges and ideas for solutions\n\n10:45-11:00 AM\, Break \n11:00 AM-11:40 AM\, Identifying Needs and Building Synergy  \n\nGroup brainstorm and discussion of future monitoring program needs and potential areas of synergy\n\n11:40 AM-12:10 PM\, Monitoring Project Reporting  \n\nDiscussion about information and analyses TMS members would value seeing in monitoring project reports lead by Lisa Kusnierz (EPA)\n\n12:10-12:15 PM\, Help Shape ethe Future of TMS \n\nSurvey link will be shared to gather feedback on the first year of TMS meetings and how to improve going forward\n\n  \nMICROSOFT TEAMS\n\nClick here to join the meeting\nMeeting ID: 253 038 905 168\nPasscode: TLknvd\n\nOr call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 639 176 893#\n\n  \nContact the TMS Core Team\, gs-crbtoxmon@usgs.gov\, if you have any questions or suggestions.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-workshop/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20231019T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20231019T113000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240826T214945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T193703Z
UID:10000048-1697709600-1697715000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:Fish Monitoring Work Group Meeting (October 2023)
DESCRIPTION:The PNAMP Fish Monitoring Work Group (FMWG)\, meets quarterly to update participants on current FMWG tasks\, share expertise through presentations on innovative fish monitoring\, and provides you with opportunities to engage regional managers and experts. These meetings are an opportune time to discuss tasks and get input from members on where they see importance or could use facilitated support. The FMWG is also interested in your work; if you would like to present your innovative fish monitoring ideas or any recent publications at a future meeting please contact Meg Dethloff\, mdethloff@usgs.gov \nTech Talk: WATCH RECORDING \nAn Update on NOAA-F Stormwater Science in Puget Sound \nNat Scholz\, an Ecotoxicology Program Manager with NOAA Fisheries at their Northwest Fisheries Science Center\, presented his research on fish health contaminants in the region. This presentation will briefly review critical information gaps in the context of regional development\, increasing toxic runoff\, and associated conservation implications for Puget Sound salmon and marine forage fish. For recent publications on these and related topics\, see Google Scholar (link to publications). \nAgenda \n\n10:00 – Welcome and Introductions\n10:05 – Task Updates\n10:20 – Tech Talk\n11:10 – Q&A\n11:30 – Adjourn\n\nMissed a previous FMWG meeting? Check out our YouTube page for presentations or task meetings.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/fish-monitoring-work-group-meeting-oct2023/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:FMWG Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20230926T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20230926T123000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T211242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T211355Z
UID:10000017-1695724200-1695731400@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agenda\n10:30—10:40 AM\, Welcome and Introductions \n10:40—10:55 AM\, WQX 101 \n\nBrief overview\nOrientation to online resources\n\n10:55—11:20 AM\, CRB Toxics Monitoring Dashboard(s) \n\nBackground and initial ideas\nGet feedback on utility and potential features\n\n11:20—11:35 AM\, Ask the Audience \n\nTap into the collective knowledge of the group to see if we can help answer a TMS member’s question about how best to report on fish tissue toxicity data and criteria to measure it against\n\n11:35—12:20 PM\, Lightning Talks \n\nLake Chelan DDT Conceptual Site Model\, Clay Patmont (Anchor QEA)\nPFAS Monitoring at Public Water Systems in Washington State\, Stan Hoffman (WA DOH\, Office of Drinking Water)\nDevelopment of Tools to Site-specifically Monitor Exposure and Effects of Lead in the Tundra Swan\, Mark Jankowski (US EPA)\n\n  \nMicrosoft Teams\n\nClick here to join the meeting\nMeeting ID: 244 566 405 995\nPasscode: Bqn2Nx\n\n Or call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 488 046 193#\nFind a local number | Learn More\n\n  \nSlido Q&A\n\nClick here to open Slido\nOr go to slido.com and enter code ToxMon
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-meeting-4/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20230711T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20230711T140000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041019
CREATED:20240813T201425Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T204230Z
UID:10000016-1689078600-1689084000@pnamp.org
SUMMARY:CRBRP Toxics Monitoring Subgroup Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agenda\n12:30 – 12:35 PM\, Welcome and Introductions \n12:35 – 12:45 PM\, Monitoring Matrix \n\nReview purpose\, current content\nDiscuss plans to provide access and update over time\n\n12:45 – 1:00 PM\, Winter Workshop Planning \n\nGet feedback on topic(s)\, date\, and location\n\n1:00 – 2:00 PM\, Lightning Talks \n\nRiver TALC: Toxics Assessment of the Lower Columbia\, Kelli Daffron (North Coast Watershed Association)\nTLC: Tracking Toxics in the Lower Columbia (Phase I)\, Catherine Corbett (LCEP)\nLower Wenatchee River PCB Source Investigation\, Abby Hendrickson (Chelan County)\nCrayfish as indicators of 6PPD-quinone contamination\, Mary Engels (University of Idaho)\nTransboundary Impacts of Mining on US Waters\, Travis Schmidt (US Geological Survey)\n\n  \nMicrosoft Teams\n\nClick here to join the meeting\nMeeting ID: 283 884 241 408\nPasscode: MZMchX\n\nOr call in (audio only) \n\n+1 202-640-1187\nConference ID: 755 948 600#\nFind a local number | Learn More\n\n  \nSlido Polling\n\nClick here to open Slido\nOr go to slido.com and enter code TMS\nDuring the meeting we will use Slido instead of MS Teams Chat for questions and comments. If you’ve never used Slido\, here’s a short how-to.
URL:https://pnamp.org/event/crbrp-toxics-monitoring-subgroup-meeting-3/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CRBRP TMS Event,PNAMP Event
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR