Almost everywhere in California, salmon are on the decline. But in Putah Creek 鈥 a restored stream running through the 不良研究所, campus 鈥 wild salmon are not only increasing, they also are completing their life cycle.
A 不良研究所 study,, is the first to document Putah Creek-origin salmon. Chinook salmon have been observed at the creek since 2014, but prior studies had shown them to be strays from hatcheries. This study now confirms that some salmon returning to Putah Creek in the fall to spawn are actually born there.

This should not be news. Salmon are famous for their simple life cycle: Hatch in a stream, migrate to the ocean, and return to the stream to spawn at their life鈥檚 end. Yet salmon in 21st century California are sometimes trucked or flown to the ocean from hatcheries due to dams, habitat loss, warming streams, drought and other threats restricting their natural migration.
This study shows that at Putah Creek 鈥 and potentially other altered and dam-controlled streams worldwide 鈥 restored waterways can help restore and even create salmon runs.

鈥淭he fact that you have Putah Creek-origin fish is a big deal,鈥 said senior author Andrew Rypel, director of the 不良研究所 at the time of the study. 鈥淭o have a growing, stable population that鈥檚 natal means it鈥檚 a well-managed ecosystem. It means we鈥檙e taking care of the water and the land the right way, and that there鈥檚 a future for fish in that place. It also shows there鈥檚 hope for other streams that are degraded.鈥
Water brought back birds, bugs and salmon
Putah Creek is a tributary of the Sacramento River, flowing through the cities of Winters and Davis. It barely flowed at all after Monticello Dam was installed in the 1950s, which created Lake Berryessa and drastically reduced water to Putah Creek.
Then, in 2000, a lawsuit brought about the Putah Creek Accord, which mandated year-round flows to protect fish and habitat. , local community members, nonprofits, state agencies and 不良研究所 researchers have worked to restore and study the creek. They鈥檝e found that once water returned to the stream, so did insects, songbirds, and eventually, salmon.

Hatchery fish and new wild salmon
Until this study, the hundreds of salmon in Putah Creek were all thought to be hatchery strays.
鈥淧eople began speculating whether any of these Putah Creek-spawning fish were returning to Putah Creek,鈥 said Rypel, a professor in the 不良研究所 Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology department. 鈥淚t was a challenging scientific riddle to figure out.鈥
Lead author Lauren Hitt, a graduate student in Rypel鈥檚 lab during the study, used otoliths 鈥 or ear bones 鈥 from adult Chinook salmon carcasses recovered from Putah Creek between 2016 and 2021 to determine their origin.
No bigger than a thumbnail, otoliths carry within them the water chemistry of the streams they have traveled, allowing scientists to map their movements and migrations against the chemical tracers of individual streams. This powerful technique allowed Hitt to reconstruct each salmon鈥檚 life history. She showed that while hatchery-origin fish were most abundant, a handful 鈥 11 of 407 鈥 of returning salmon analyzed were born in Putah Creek, completing their full life cycle as wild salmon.

This new run of wild salmon at Putah Creek descended from hatchery fish颅&苍产蝉辫;鈥 a finding that could upend some long-held perspectives about the role of fish hatcheries in conservation. Hatcheries provide food and a fishing boost for anglers, yet they have often been criticized for impacts to wild fish genetics, health and habitat.
鈥淭he idea that hatcheries can be part of the solution might take people off guard,鈥 Rypel said. 鈥淏ut there may be positive effects so long as the salmon have a good place to go. There鈥檚 a lot of potential to have more Putah Creeks out there.鈥

Local love
Salmon born in Putah Creek face many challenges in completing their life cycle. They must leave Lower Putah Creek, enter the Yolo Bypass floodplain, travel to Liberty Island, down the Sacramento River and into the San Francisco Bay before emptying into the Pacific Ocean. At the end of their life, they get to do this in reverse. Along the way, restricted fish passage, reduced flows, too-warm, too little or too much water at the wrong time can be fatal.
In a sobering illustration of these risks, Putah Creek-origin salmon from 2021 died before being able to spawn because an atmospheric river sent debris and ammonia-saturated waters into Putah Creek just as spawning salmon were beginning to arrive. The authors say such setbacks are significant but not insurmountable provided collaborative management of Putah Creek in the future.
鈥淭here鈥檚 so much local love for these fish,鈥 said Hitt, currently a Ph.D. student at University of Canterbury in New Zealand. 鈥淚 hope people recognize that their caring about the system and advocating for the system are what made the changes possible. If not for local community engaged and supporting local streams, I don鈥檛 think we鈥檇 have salmon in Putah Creek today of hatchery or Putah Creek origin. This is just so special.鈥
A salmon run at 不良研究所
As for the salmon run at 不良研究所? Scientists will continue to sample and monitor the fish as they come home. Visitors and community members may see salmon spawning each fall at the Putah Creek Riparian Reserve and throughout the creek.
The study鈥檚 additional co-authors include Malte Willmes of Norwegian Institute for Nature Research; Rachel Johnson of National Marine Fisheries Service and 不良研究所; and George Whitman, Mackenzie Miner, Carson Jeffres, Dennis Cocherell and Nann Fangue of 不良研究所.
The research was supported by the and , which is tasked with managing and monitoring creek flows and restoration efforts within the framework of the Putah Creek Accord.
"For the last 25 years, the Solano County Water Agency has been successful in obtaining over $20 million in restoration grants from state, federal, and private institutions,鈥 said Chris Lee, SCWA鈥檚 general manager. 鈥淭he water agency and the Lower Putah Creek Coordinating Committee have matched that amount with engineering, planning, permitting, native plants from its own nursery, and boots on the ground in the name of Putah Creek restoration. Cold water has continued to go farther and farther downstream because of these efforts, and 25 years of fish monitoring data show that native species are outcompeting and completely replacing non-native fish species miles downstream. That Putah Creek-origin salmon have successfully returned and spawned is a testament to the impact of these restoration efforts. Go salmon!"
The research also received funding support from the Yolo Basin Foundation, 不良研究所 Agricultural Experiment Station, Peter B. Moyle and California Trout Endowment for Coldwater Fish Conservation, and 不良研究所 Erica Kelly Memorial Award and Jastro-Shields Research Award.

Related: The Salmon Diaries 鈥 Life Before and After Klamath Dam Removals
Salmon "tell" scientists their life story as decades-old dams come down.
Media Resources
- Andrew Rypel, 不良研究所 Center for Watershed Sciences, rypel@ucdavis.edu
- Lauren Hitt, 不良研究所/University of Canterbury, renhitt@gmail.com
- Kat Kerlin, 不良研究所 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu
Downloads permitted with credit.
This article was updated March 24, 2025 with a quote and clarification from the Solano County Water Agency.