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Ramona Rapp

Ramona is a biological science technician with the Western Fisheries Research Center, Columbia River Research Laboratory where she specializes in logistical planning and implementation of large-scale telemetry projects.

Ramona Rapp earned her bachelor’s degree in Ecology from the University of North Texas in 2016, where she conducted observational field research on Alligator Gar habitat use and experimental studies on freshwater mussel species under the guidance of Dr. David Hoeinghaus. After graduation, she joined the USGS Texas Water Science Center in Fort Worth, TX, where she surveyed lakes for invasive zebra mussels, collected sediment cores, and assessed the nutrient balances affecting harmful algal blooms. In 2021, she moved to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Red Bluff Fish and Wildlife Office in Red Bluff, CA, to work for the Tributary Monitoring Program. For most of 2022, she monitored Sacramento River tributaries for juvenile salmonid passage via rotary screw traps. She also monitored adult salmonid spawning habitats via snorkel and kayak surveys. In late 2022 she joined RBFWO’s Hatchery Evaluation Program, conducting postmortem mark-recapture surveys on TNE salmonids and helping federal conservation hatcheries to meet their production targets.

In late 2024, Ramona transitioned to the USGS Columbia River Research Laboratory as part of the movement ecology team, focusing on acoustic telemetry projects. She uses acoustic telemetry to investigate challenges faced by salmonids, suckers, and lamprey as they pass through dams, and habitat use by threatened and endangered fishes. Ramona specializes in logistical planning required for the surgical implantation of acoustic and radio transmitters in fish and the maintenance of large-scale acoustic telemetry arrays. Her research is primarily located in the Klamath Basin where projects include 1) estimating the relationship between flow and survival rates of out-migrating juvenile Chinook salmon in the lower Klamath River, 2) conducting 2-dimensional fish tracking to explore the relationship between flow and habitat use of juvenile salmonids, and 3) tracking movement and survival of endangered juvenile and adult Lost River Suckers in Upper Klamath Lake.

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