COMPASS Comprehensive Passage Model


|Tools & Models|

COMPASS Comprehensive Passage Model - COMPASS is being developed by scientists from throughout the Pacific Northwest, led by NOAA. The purpose of the model is to predict the effects of alternative operations of Snake and Columbia River dams on salmon survival rates, expressed both within the hydrosystem and latent effects which may occur outside the hydrosystem. Accordingly, the model has the following capabilities: 1) realistically simulate survival and travel time through the hydrosystem under variable river conditions; 2) produce results in agreement with available data, particularly PIT-tag data; 3) allow users to simulate the effects of alternative management actions; 4) operate on sub-seasonal time steps; 5) produce an estimate of uncertainty associated with model results; 6) estimate hydrosystem-related effects that may occur outside of the hydrosystem.

COMPASS Literature

Comprehensive Passage (COMPASS) Model - version 1.1 Review DRAFT manual (pdf)

Zabel, R. W., J. Faulkner, S. G. Smith, J. J. Anderson, C. Van Holmes, N. Beer, S. Iltis, J. Krinke, G. Fredicks, B. Bellerud, J. Sweet and A. Giorgi. 2008. Comprehensive Passage (COMPASS) Model: a model of downstream migration and survival of juvenile salmonids through a hydropower system. Hydrobiologia 609(1):289-300.

COMPASS Point of Contact

Jim Faulkner, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries, Seattle

Current Applications of COMPASS by Columbia Basin Research


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Please direct questions or comments to:
web@cbr.washington.edu
Columbia Basin Research,
School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences,
University of Washington
Friday, 24-Oct-2008 09:44:15 PDT