Western Salmon Counts Down 90 Percent In 7 Years

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JASON DEAREN | 02/18/09 06:32 PM | AP

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SAN FRANCISCO — A record-low number of chinook salmon returned to rivers in California's Central Valley last year, indicating that severe restrictions on salmon fishing are likely again this year, federal regulators said.

The Pacific Fishery Management Council reported this week that 66,264 natural and hatchery chinook or "king" salmon adults were estimated to have returned to the Sacramento River basin in 2008 to spawn, the lowest estimate on record.

The council uses the estimates to determine if it should recommend limits on commercial and recreational fishing.

"Our team is putting together the forecast this week, will come out some time next week," Chuck Tracy, the salmon staff officer for the council, said Wednesday. Its final recommendation on fishing limits will be made in April.

The numbers are down from about 90,000 in 2007, which led to bans in 2008 on commercial and recreational salmon fishing off the coasts of California and most of Oregon. In contrast, more than 750,000 adult salmon were counted in the Sacramento River basin in 2002.

The sharp drop in the king salmon that swam from the Pacific Ocean through San Francisco Bay to spawn in the Sacramento River and its tributaries last fall is part of broader decline in wild salmon runs in rivers across the West in recent years.

The Sacramento River chinook run serves as a bellwether for the Pacific's salmon fishermen _ the run often provides the bulk of salmon caught off the coasts of California and Oregon.

In the Sacramento Delta, fishermen and regulators believe large pumps used to move water around for farming and other uses is to blame for the falling numbers. Others say changes in the ocean due to greenhouse gas pollution also are killing the fish.

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Environmental advocates blame the state's system of canals, dams and pumps, and have sued the National Marine Fisheries Service to impose restrictions to help save fish.

"These most recent salmon numbers ... are further proof that (pumping) operations ... are harming salmon," said Mike Sherwood, an attorney for environmental advocacy group Earthjustice that filed the suit.

Tracy said returns in the Klamath River, the next big salmon spawning river north of the Sacramento River, were higher overall but still fewer than regulators had expected.

Regulators and fishermen had expected this year would be tough. The decline in the salmon population has been economically devastating for the fishing industry, and the council reported that salmon fishing revenue in 2008 for the entire West Coast was $6.9 million, down from $39.9 million in 2007.

"Realistically, we were looking at the fact that we wouldn't have a season this year. We're looking at 2010 before we can fish again," said Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations, an industry group.

Grader said the fishermen's association has saved millions of dollars in federal assistance received after the collapse of the Pacific Coast salmon industry.

"That money sitting in the account will be distributed to keep people alive for this year," Grader said.

The National Marine Fisheries Service will make its final decision on the fate of this year's fishing season after the Pacific Fishery Management Council makes its recommendation.

SAN FRANCISCO — A record-low number of chinook salmon returned to rivers in California's Central Valley last year, indicating that severe restrictions on salmon fishing are likely again this yea...
SAN FRANCISCO — A record-low number of chinook salmon returned to rivers in California's Central Valley last year, indicating that severe restrictions on salmon fishing are likely again this yea...
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Fish is a huge part of man's diet. Always has been and always will be. Today we have fish farms. I have read that they are serious polluters because of the concentrated waste. I think a greener idea that could perhaps be put into play is, rather than have fish farms putting fish on the table, have them breed fish to be reintroduced to the rivers and oceans. Almost like nurseries do with plants. Alaska could be good, all communities with a coastline could have small industries, spread out and out of the way of commercial beach interests. Ecological protections like 6-9 months activity with a 3-6 month rest may reduce concerning ecological strains.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 03/01/2009
- NWBrunette I'm a Fan of NWBrunette 58 fans permalink

Dams and habitat destruction and the biggest killers of salmon. Take care of that and the rest is easy. Fishing is not the problem, and it is already massively regulated. But the negative effects of dams and habitat destruction go on and on, unabated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 AM on 02/23/2009
- cucumber I'm a Fan of cucumber 26 fans permalink

Unless I missed it, the article neglected to mention that the west coast is in a sea-lion kil.ling frenzy now - the sea lions are being blamed for kil.ling the salmon. And they're being killed in brutal ways. Never mind the dams, overfishing...it's all the sea lions' fault that overfed people can't shove a piece of salmon in their mouth. The sea lions HAVE to eat the salmon. Humans here just do it for taste.

We humans are well on our way to destroying the planet and all the living beings on it, with no end in sight. Stroll on over to the "Living" section where people sing the praises of large families (including octomom). It would be nice if we could overcome our selfishness and infatuation with reproducing and elevating our species above all others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 AM on 02/22/2009
- SOLERSO68 I'm a Fan of SOLERSO68 36 fans permalink
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i sympathize with the sea lions, but not with your rant. first of all, being "overfed" isnt problem that most people in the world share with the west. even here its not exactly well distributed and those americans who are "overfed", arent because they are "shoving" salmon into their mouths.overfishing is a problem. pollution is also part of the problem. sick fish breed less. misanthropic rants arent going to inspire large movements, and berating and insulting the people whos cooperation we need is probably harmful to the environment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 03/13/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 157 fans permalink
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90%...!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 02/21/2009

All fishing should be banned.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 02/21/2009
- sculptor I'm a Fan of sculptor 7 fans permalink

Fishing is not a big problem compared to how screwed up the watersheds are. Some factors not mentioned above were stream flow and Pacific water conditions. If the streams don't have sufficient water flow the salmon won't even attempt to spawn (which is what is happening this year.) In addition if the Pacific water conditions are wrong there will not be enough plankton to guarantee a good survival rate for the fry (which is what was happening recently.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 PM on 02/21/2009
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 274 fans permalink
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Cheny allowed farmers to takr extra water from Salmon stream for 3 years before they caught him over ruling the EPA and the Forrestry service.

2 years of water levels so low the salmon fry could not even reach the ocean. Eggs dried up where water levels dropped.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:51 AM on 02/21/2009
- ashabot I'm a Fan of ashabot 9 fans permalink

Humans are a plague.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 02/20/2009

Sooner or later, these commercial fishing operations are going to have to simply stop fishing for several years in a row. What fishery are we NOT over-fishing anywhere in the world? The Northeast still hasn't recovered from the collapse of its fisheries and who knows if/when it will, even with severely restricted fishing.

Our appetite for fish along with an astronomical population growth around the world means one thing: decimated fish populations. Unless and until we put the hammer down on large-scale commercial fishing, the inevitable is only a few short years away.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 02/20/2009
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Guide to which fish you can ethically eat:

http://www.tarasgrescoe.com/eating_ethically.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 02/20/2009
- ashabot I'm a Fan of ashabot 9 fans permalink

That monkfish. What a grim sad death.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 02/20/2009
- cucumber I'm a Fan of cucumber 26 fans permalink

Wrong premise. You can't "ethically" kil.l and eat anyone, when you can survive without doing so. You're just kil.ling for fun and taste, and that's not ethical. Far from it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 AM on 02/22/2009
- sculptor I'm a Fan of sculptor 7 fans permalink

The answer is strick worldwide regulation of all fisheries. Moritoriums may be necessary in some regions and you are right that a collapsed fishery won't just come back. When a fishery collapses the genetic deversity of the remaining fish is extreemly limited and it is unknow if recoveries can actually occur.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 02/21/2009

Many factors impact Pacific wild salmon, but dams pack the biggest punch. On the Columbia-Snake rivers dams kill 90% of juvenile salmon migrating to the ocean. While some dams provide much-needed benefits like hydropower, flood control and irrigation, many are aging and outdated and now cost taxpayers and salmon more than they are worth. Salmon have had their problems throughout this century, but the Bush administration succeeded in pushing wild salmon to the brink of extinction. Federal agencies under the Bush administration violated the Endangered Species Act on all major Western Rivers — the Columbia-Snake, the Klamath and the Sacramento.

By losing our wild salmon, we are losing jobs, communities, our culture and our way of life. With a new administration and a new Congress, we have a the opportunity to turn the tide and create real change on these rivers. President Obama, we desperately need your help.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 02/20/2009
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ok are the dams generating power? Is there a way to put a hatchery downstream of the dam? I visit lake Sonoma frequently (yes I am on the pacific coast too, and must disagree that salmon is the base of the pacific coasts economy....) where they have a very successful hatchery.

Would this not be a possibility?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 02/20/2009

Huh? The hatcheries are NATURAL. They're not like motels for fish to spawn in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 02/20/2009
- skippyB I'm a Fan of skippyB 7 fans permalink

Please go to some of these links about salmon runs. They don't make the eggs at the hatchery.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 02/20/2009
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Ok where's whats his name? They guy shouting how we need to all become vegans. I am starting to believe him now....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 02/20/2009

Sure, we could all become vegans. A plant-based diet is definitely easier on the planet, but fishing communities up and down the West Coast are hurting and are endangered themselves. Salmon is much more than a fish. It is the base of the Pacific Coast's economy, it provides thousands of jobs, is the key to protecting the rivers and streams and environment, it is a healthy food source for many species, and is a cultural icon of the West. Every person can do their part. Become a vegan if you'd like, but please speak up to our elected leaders.

Ask President Obama to join the fight and create real solutions for our wild salmon and the communities they support: http://ga0.org/campaign/salmon2009

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 02/20/2009

Death by a thousand cuts.

Damns
Chemical pollution from industry in rivers.
Farm pollution, animal waste in rivers.
Farm pollution, fertilizers and pesticides in the rivers.
Over fishing.
Drift nets in the oceans....­..Japanese are the worst offenders.
Fish farms infested with sea lice, infecting real salmon in record numbers.
Human pharmaceutical products flushed into our water system in sufficient amounts.
Logging near salmon streams causes more dirt/silt in the water impacting temperature, vision, food supply, egg development, and survival of small (frye) salmon. A devastating impact probably larger than the others combined.

Each one of these issues is well known to anyone who fights to preserve salmon. And each one of these "offenders" invariably blames "other" causes for salmon stocks collapsing.
Great information here.
http://www.wildsalmoncenter.org/about/faq.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 02/20/2009
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salmon obtain lice at sea, they are natural parasites.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 02/27/2009
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