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is measured 400 miles downstream at the lower Snake River's Lower Granite. It is the eighth and final hydro project the fish pass on their way up the Columbia, Snake and Salmon rivers.The top sockeye count since Lower Granite was completed in 1975 was 2,201 in 2010. This year's count is 1,502 with the last two sockeye counted Sept. 3. Most of the fish passed the dam in July. Only 55 have been recorded in August and September.Of the fish counted at Sawtooth Hatchery and Redfish Lake Creek, most were captured and transported to Eagle Hatchery near Boise for holding and genetic sampling. This week they took a three hour ride back up to Redfish Lake for release so they can spawn on their own. A portion of the returning fish were trapped and sampled at Redfish Lake Creek and then allowed to proceed to Redfish Lake.In all 1,519 returned, according to Dan Baker, Eagle Hatchery manager. Some swam there directly (those passed through the Redfish Lake Creek trap). Others included the anadromous fish that were trapped and held at Eagle and still others were captive fish that were reared at Eagle and a NOAA Fisheries facility in eastern Washington.Through Tuesday a total of 938 adult anadromous sockeye had been accounted for.Of that total 134 are "natural" fish, meaning they were born in the wild. They are the product of fish that spawned in Redfish Lake, residual sockeye or from fertilized eggs outplanted in two nearby lakes, Alturas and Pettit.The vast majority of the return are from migration ready smolts released two years ago into the Salmon River at Sawtooth Hatchery or into Redfish Lake Creek.Actual