http://www.cbbulletin.com/428017.aspx
Klamath Salmon:
big fall chinook return combined with drought
sparks concerns about fish die-offs
August 23, 2013
Columbia Basin Bulletin FOLLOWED BY
entire bulletin
|
The California Department
of Fish and Wildlife is
seeking help from the public in monitoring the health of
chinook salmon in the Klamath River and its tributaries.
Drought conditions mixed
with a larger than normal return of salmon elevate
concerns of fish die offs. Small numbers of dead fish
are expected this year as an estimated 272,000 fall-run
chinook salmon return.
CDFW, in conjunction with
The Klamath Fish Health Assessment Team is asking the
public to report any unusual numbers of dead fish they
see by contacting CDFW Biologist Sara Borok at (707)
822-0330.
CDFW pathologists have
taken samples from the large run of downstream migrating
juvenile salmon. The juveniles hold in cold pools at the
mouths of creeks as they migrate to the ocean. The
purpose of monitoring of these juveniles is to ensure
they do not harbor disease that could infect returning
adult salmon that occupy the same cold water habitats.
At this time no signs of disease outbreaks in the
juveniles holding in the cold water pools have been
discovered.
Members of the KFHAT have
contacted the California-Nevada Fish Health Center for
help with monitoring and assessing disease issues and
the Yurok Tribal Fisheries Department is conducting
weekly adult fish disease sampling to keep all members
apprised of the current conditions.
KFHAT is also keeping
abreast of current fishery and water quality conditions
in the Klamath River and its tributaries and will
respond with a large-scale monitoring response in the
event that there is a fish kill.
Meanwhile, a federal court
this week ruled that water releases planned by the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation to protect the migration of
chinook salmon into the Klamath/Trinity rivers in
Northern California should move forward.
After a two-day hearing in
Fresno, the U.S. District Court for Eastern California
rejected demands by agricultural interests in
California’s Central Valley led by the Westlands Water
District, to block the releases, which were supposed to
have started Aug. 13.
After hearing from half a
dozen fisheries experts who all agreed that the water
release program was supported by the science, the court
ruled for the water release program to move forward.
The court concluded, “...on
balance, considering the significantly lower volume of
water now projected to be involved and the potential and
enormous risk to the fishery of doing nothing, the court
finds it in the public interest to permit the
augmentation to proceed.”
The U.S. District Court
also noted, “...the flow augmentation releases are
designed to prevent a potentially serious fish die off
from impacting salmon populations entering the Klamath
River estuary. There is no dispute and the record
clearly reflects that the 2002 fish kill had severe
impacts on commercial fishing interests, tribal fishing
rights, and the ecology, and that another fish kill
would likely have similar impacts.”
This year is unusual in
that extremely low flow conditions in the lower Klamath
are occurring at the same time fisheries managers expect
the second-largest run of chinook on record to begin
arriving. Federal, state and tribal salmon biologists
have been concerned that this confluence of high runs
and low flows will lead to another mass fish kill like
the one that occurred in 2002.
Experts explained to the
judge how water conditions in the basin this year are
almost identical to those in 2002, except with a far
larger adult run of chinook. The evidence before the
court was that the risk of another fish kill was grave.
The 2002 fish kill led to
coast-wide closures of commercial, recreational and
tribal fishing. Congress ultimately appropriated $60
million in disaster assistance to help coastal
communities.
The court’s full decision
can be found at:http://earthjustice.org/sites/default/files/files/CourtDecision.WaterReleasestoProtectSalmoninCaliforniaMoveForward.pdf |
=================================================================
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line. Or go to
http://www.cbbulletin.com/NewsletterSignup/default.aspx --
Bill Crampton, Editor,
bcrampton@cbbulletin.com, 541-312-8860
--------------------------------
THE COLUMBIA BASIN BULLETIN:
Weekly Fish and Wildlife News
www.cbbulletin.com
August 23, 2013
Issue No. 675
--------------------------------
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available is a free RSS news feed.
----------------------
Table of Contents
* Federal Agencies Release Draft Plan Detailing 2014-2018
Actions To Meet BiOP Salmon Survival Targets
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428028.aspx
* WDFW Taking Comments On Salmon Net-Pen Proposal To Create New
Lower Columbia Gill-Netting Area
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428026.aspx
* Early Fishing Success For Fall Chinook Has Harvest Managers
Dialing Back The Take To Extend Season
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428025.aspx
* Summer Steelhead Return To-Date Running Well Below 10-Year
Average; Group A (Smaller Fish) Downgraded
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428024.aspx
* Tribal Commercial Fishing Gets Started Bonneville To McNary;
Hope To Harvest Up To 200,000 Salmon
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428023.aspx
* Corps Delays Completion Of EIS For Lower Snake Sediment
Management Plan; No Dredging This Winter
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428022.aspx
* Dedication Set For New Hatchery Intended To Move Snake River
Sockeye Recovery To Next Level
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428021.aspx
* Science Panel Issues Project Funding Recommendations For ¡®Anadromous
Areas¡¯ Under Council F&W Program
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428020.aspx
* Corps Seeks Comment On EA Regarding Habitat Improvements Along
Lower Snake River
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428019.aspx
* Idaho Using BPA Funds To Protect, Restore Habitat In Lake Pend
Oreille/Clark Fork River Delta
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428018.aspx
* Klamath Salmon: Big Fall Chinook Return Combined With Drought
Sparks Concerns About Fish Die-Offs
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428017.aspx
* NOAA Fisheries Announces Grants To Oregon, Washington For
Increasing Salmon Habitat
http://www.cbbulletin.com/428016.aspx
--------------------------------
* Federal Agencies Release Draft Plan Detailing 2014-2018
Actions To Meet BiOP Salmon Survival Targets
Federal ¡°action¡± agencies Friday afternoon (Aug. 23) made
public a 300-page document that outlines hundreds of actions,
most focused on habitat restoration, that they say will be
implemented over the next five years to avoid jeopardizing the
survival of 13 salmon and steelhead stocks native to the
Columbia-Snake river basin that are now listed for protections
under the Endangered Species Act.
The ¡°Draft 2014-2018 Implementation Plan¡± describes the
actions that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of
Reclamation and Bonneville Power Administration, collectively
known as the ¡°action agencies,¡± will complete from 2014
through 2018 to improve survival of listed fish. The plan comes
in answer to a 2011 federal court mandate that said that the
federal agencies must provide more specifics about their hydro
system salmon protection plan to assure listed species¡¯
survival.
Those listed fish include stocks that originate in the Snake and
Willamette rivers, which are both tributaries to the Columbia.
The Corps and Bureau operate dams within the Federal Columbia
River Power System; Bonneville markets power generated at the
dams.
The draft IP sets out a plan and specific 2014-2018 habitat
actions to meet Federal Columbia River Power System ¡°biological
opinion¡± survival improvement targets. Local experts identified
these projects, addressing specific subbasins, limiting factors
and priority populations of salmon and steelhead that the BiOp
identifies, according to the action agencies.
The draft 2014-2018 FCRPS BiOp Implementation Plan will be
available for public comment from Aug. 23 Sept. 23. To submit a
comment, go to:
http://www.bpa.gov/applications/publiccomments/OpenCommentListing.aspx
For more information go to:
http://www.salmonrecovery.gov/BiologicalOpinions/FCRPSBiOp/ProgressReports/Draft2014ImplementationPlan.aspx
The draft IP builds on the accomplishments and lessons learned
from the first five years of BiOp implementation, as described
in the draft July 2013 ¡°Comprehensive Evaluation¡± of progress
made through the first four years of the BiOP. The
implementation plan incorporates new information and adjusts
implementation to address emerging issues, the action agencies
say.
The draft 2014-2018 plan says that actions identified and
described will meet BiOp survival improvement targets by 2018.
The five-year implementation plan is intended to fulfill goals
set out in NOAA Fisheries¡¯ 2008 FCRPS BiOp, a 10-year strategy
developed under the ESA to judge whether federal actions ¨C in
this case dam existence and operations ¨C jeopardize listed
fish. That BiOp, which was supplemented in 2010, was struck down
in Oregon¡¯s U.S. District Court.
In August 2011, the court held that the FCRPS BiOp contains
positive mitigation measures that provide adequate protection to
the listed species through 2013, and it held that the BiOp shall
remain in place and be implemented through Dec. 31, 2013.
Judge James A. Redden, who presided in that case at the time,
also ordered that spring and summer spill operations to
facilitate fish passage be continued at the hydro projects in a
manner consistent with prior court orders that adopted the
Corps¡¯ annual Fish Operations Plan.
The federal court, however, called the BiOp arbitrary and
capricious and remanded it to NOAA Fisheries to reconsider the
sufficiency of habitat mitigation actions beyond 2013.
Redden ordered NOAA to produce a new or supplemental BiOp by
Jan. 1, 2014. Federal officials say that a draft version of that
new/supplemental BiOp will be offered for public review within
the next few weeks.
(See CBB, Aug. 5, 2011, ¡°Redden Orders New Salmon BiOp By 2014;
Says Post-2013 Mitigation, Benefits Unidentified¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/411336.aspx)
¡°This will form the basis for our ¡®action¡¯ that NOAA
Fisheries will assess¡± in developing its new BiOp, said the
Corps¡¯ Rock Peters. ¡°This is our plan for the next five
years.¡±
The new implementation plan says that the actions outlined are
subject to congressional authority and funding. The federal
Administration has consistently sought and received, and
continues to seek appropriations, and additional authorities,
the action agencies say.
Much of the habitat work is funded by BPA, which markets power
generated in the power system and is charged under the Northwest
Power Act with mitigating for dam impacts.
The implementation plan describes planned work in several
categories:
-- Hydro: Configuration and operational actions to promote safe
passage of juvenile and adult fish through the FCRPS represent
the core of the plan.
-- Predators: Management of birds, fish and marine mammals that
prey on salmon and steelhead.
-- Habitat: Improvements in tributary streams and the estuary to
promote salmon survival.
-- Hatcheries: Use of ¡°safety net¡± hatcheries and reform of
hatchery practices to minimize effects on wild fish.
-- Accountability: Performance standards, research and
monitoring, progress reports, adaptive management, and regional
collaboration.
¡°This Implementation Plan reflects expanded requirements
established by NOAA under what began as the 2008 BiOp for the
FCRPS. A 2010 Supplemental BiOp incorporated an Adaptive
Management Implementation Plan (AMIP), which included
accelerated actions, additional research, and contingency plans
in the event of unexpected fish declines,¡± the plan¡¯s
introduction says.
¡°The federal agencies have continued to fund and implement the
BiOp as directed, which has included a substantial increase in
expenditures since 2008.The agencies have also continued their
work with states, tribes, and other regional organizations that
are essential partners in fulfilling several elements of the
BiOp, including habitat improvements and monitoring,¡± the
implementation plan says. ¡°Research and monitoring has found
positive results, including safer dam passage for juvenile fish
as well as improved fish abundance and survival following
habitat improvements.
¡°This Implementation Plan (IP) represents a collaborative
effort by the Action Agencies with states, tribes, community
watershed groups, and others to better describe implementation
actions from 2014 through 2018, while continuing to execute,
track, and learn from measures already under way,¡± the plan
says.
¡°This Implementation Plan was originally expected to include
actions for implementation over the next three years. In
response to the court order, however, the action agencies, with
NOAA¡¯s concurrence, have expanded the Implementation Plan to
describe specific actions through 2018 to support NOAA¡¯s
development of a supplemental BiOp. The purposes of this
Implementation Plan include:
¡°-- Determine and document strategies, priorities, actions and
timetables.
-- Facilitate and measure agency progress toward performance
standards and targets.
-- Facilitate agency management of the program and progress
reporting.
-- Provide a flexible framework for adapting actions and
achieving results.
-- Provide an opportunity for the Regional Implementation
Oversight Group (RIOG) and other stakeholders to review the
Action Agencies¡¯ plans and actions.
¡®Substantial research and extensive planning stand behind the
actions described in this Implementation Plan. The BiOp includes
measurable performance standards, targets, and timelines that
the Action Agencies will use to track their progress and adjust
direction if necessary; all these elements ensure transparency
and that BiOp commitments will be met.
¡°NOAA may therefore reasonably rely on the benefits of the
actions described in this Implementation Plan to conclude the
suite of actions avoids the likelihood of jeopardizing listed
salmon and steelhead or adversely modifying their designated
critical habitat. The following Action Agency commitments
further underscore the reliability of the mitigation program:
-- The Action Agencies adopted records of decision to implement
the BiOp, and BPA has included funding commitments in its rate
case proceedings.
-- Each agency has dedicated extensive staff and other resources
to carrying out the BiOp.
-- The Action Agencies have joined states and tribes in signing
the Columbia Basin Fish Accords, which ensure funding for the
duration of the BiOp and reinforce the common goal of delivering
-----------------------------------
* WDFW Taking Comments On Salmon Net-Pen Proposal To Create New
Lower Columbia Gill-Netting Area
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife this week
released a ¡°determination of non-significance¡± under the State
Environmental Policy Act that says development of a new
commercial fishing area along the lower Columbia River¡¯s north
shore at Cathlamet will likely not have a significant adverse
impact on the environment.
The WDFW¡¯s main purpose, the document says, is to find an area
to raise and release juvenile hatchery spring chinook salmon so
that, upon their return from the ocean, commercial fishing
seasons can be set to collect those adult hatchery fish without
negatively impacting wild salmon runs.
The proposed addition to an existing set of ¡°select¡± areas is
part of plans adopted by the states of Oregon and Washington to
ultimately eliminate most gill-net commercial fishing on the
lower Columbia River (downstream of Bonneville Dam).
The idea is to concentrate gill-netting efforts in off-channel
areas that are seldom used by wild salmon and steelhead, which
include some 13 wild stocks that are listed under the Endangered
Species Act. The incidental catch of such wild stocks limits
recovery efforts.
The Washington proposal envisions installing in-river rearing
pens at Cathlamet, located at about 40 miles upstream from the
river mouth, to acclimate 250,000 spring chinook salmon during
the late winter and spring before their release.
Those fish would then swim to the Pacific Ocean, with a certain
share growing to maturity and homing in on that release site
upon their return as adults to spawn.
The determination says the WDFW will not act on the proposal for
14 days, giving other agencies, affected tribes, and members of
the public time to comment on the proposal. The comment deadline
is Sept. 4.
New policy directives adopted that past fall by the Oregon Fish
and Wildlife Commission and in January by the Washington Fish
and Wildlife Commission aim to enhance opportunities for
commercial gill netters in areas off the mainstem.
The new Oregon fishing guidelines for the Columbia River
mainstem are being challenged in the state¡¯s Appeals Court by
commercial fishing interests.
(See CBB, July 12, 2013, ¡°Oregon Legislation Passes Bill Paving
Way For Gill-Net Ban; Issue Still Before Oregon Appeals Court¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/427426.aspx)
The new policy calls for increases in artificial production
acclimation at off-channel sites to offset the loss of
commercial fishing opportunities in the mainstem Columbia River
for Washington and Oregon commercial fishers and through that
process reduce impacts on wild, listed fish.
Select area commercial fisheries occur in off-channel areas and
target coho and chinook returning from net-pen and hatchery
releases at these sites.
These fisheries were initiated in 1962 with the adoption of coho
salmon seasons in Youngs Bay at Astoria, Ore. Fall select area
fisheries have occurred at Deep River in Washington and at
Tongue Point/South Channel, Blind Slough/Knappa Slough and
Youngs Bay since 1996. All are areas located in the lower
Columbia River estuary.
Select area chinook landings were excellent in 2012; the total
catch of 23,720 fish was the highest since 1993 and can be
attributed to an excellent select area bright return that again
exceeded the preseason expectations and the first year of age-3
adult tule fall chinook from releases from Oregon¡¯s Klaskanine
Hatchery.
Total coho harvest of 15,354 was about one half of the preseason
expectation and 26 percent of the recent ten-year average.
The ¡°environmental checklist¡± for the ¡°DNS¡± prepared by the
WDFW said that test fishing was conducted in the Cathlamet
Channel area in spring and early summer of both 1994 and 1995 to
evaluate the presence of ESA-listed fish. The first year showed
one in 18 fish passing through the channel was listed; no fish
were detected in the second year.
¡°Test fishing was also conducted from March 28-May 20, 2013 and
indicated a much lower catch rate in the bottom portion of the
Cathlamet Channel where the net pens will be located as opposed
to the top part of the channel where it meets the Columbia
River,¡± the checklist says. ¡°This is a positive indication
that harvesting can be conducted in the immediate area of the
net pens with reduced interactions with ESA-listed fish.
¡°These test fisheries will be pursued even if permitting is not
obtained for the net pen placement by December 2013,¡± the
checklist says. ¡°Test fisheries to take indicate that Cathlamet
Channel is not a main migratory pathway for the ESA-listed
spring chinook and that it is a promising location for locating
net pens.¡±
The environmental checklist also gives a relatively clean bill
of health for what would be, to some degree, a fish farm, though
of small scale.
¡°The fish capacity and waste production of net pens are
designed and placed in areas that would create minimal impacts
on the surrounding environment,¡± the checklist says. ¡°Sites
are selected on a variety of conditions including, water depth,
flow, velocity, exposure to weather, access and probability of
attracting returning adults.
¡°Continual movement of water through the net pen area allows
waste and other detrital material produced by the fish in the
net pens to be flushed and dispersed into the main body of
water.¡±
The WDFW has prepared the DNS in accordance with the State
Environmental Policy Act regulation. This DNS is being
circulated for review by all agencies with jurisdiction.
WDFW has determined that this proposal will likely not have a
significant adverse impact on the environment. Therefore, state
law does not require the development of an environmental impact
statement.
For more information see:
-- CBB, Feb. 22, 2013, ¡°Oregon Appeals Court Halts
Implementation Of Lower Columbia Gill-Net Ban, Will Hear Legal
Arguments¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/425154.aspx
-- CBB, Jan. 18, 2013, ¡°Washington Approves Lower Columbia
Gill-Net Ban; Opponents Form Columbia River Legal Fund¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/424594.aspx
--------------------------------------
* Early Fishing Success For Fall Chinook Has Harvest Managers
Dialing Back The Take To Extend Season
Great fishing for both anglers and gill-netters in the early
fall season has prompted Oregon and Washington fisheries
managers to take a conservative approach as the Columbia
River¡¯s fall chinook return moves toward what is normally its
peak period.
State officials on Tuesday decided to ratchet back the take in
the Buoy 10 recreational fishery at the river mouth, with most
of the season-long harvest sport allocation for the area already
in hand.
And on Thursday it was decided to take one step, instead of two
or more, forward by allowing a Sunday night commercial fishery.
The catch in hand is, already, nearly double what had been
expected through this point in time.
¡°This run does appear to be much bigger than you think it is,¡±
commercial fisherman Gary Soderstrom told the Columbia River
Compact Tuesday.
The Compact, which sets commercial fishing seasons on the
Columbia where the river is the states¡¯ shared border, is made
up of representatives of the directors of the Oregon and
Washington departments of fish and wildlife. State
representatives also convene to consider sport fishing
guidelines for the mainstem Columbia.
At meetings this week sport interests, with professional guides
especially vocal, stressed the need to prolong the season so
they can meet clients¡¯ appointments. And commercial interests
asked that they be allowed to maximize the catch to answer
market demand, and collect relatively high prices.
¡°The sport catch has been insane,¡± Soderstrom said of the
harvest thus far this season in the management area between Buoy
10 at the Columbia mouth upriver to Tongue Point, about 18 miles
upstream.
The Buoy 10 sport fishery opened Aug. 1 with a daily bag limit
of two fish/one chinook and is scheduled to remain open through
Sept. 1. Chinook retention is scheduled to re-open Oct. 1
through Dec. 31.
But while preseason catch expectations were for a catch of
20,000 chinook and 8,000 hatchery coho for the entire season,
already (through Aug. 19) the estimated catch (including release
mortalities) through Aug. 19 includes 13,300 chinook and 2,000
hatchery coho from 28,300 angler trips.
Catch projections for chinook average around 1,800 fish per day,
and build as the week progresses, according to ODFW and WDFW
staff estimates. At that rate the staffs said that the chinook
guideline for the Buoy 10 fishery would be reached on Friday.
So, during a joint state meeting Tuesday led by the ODFW¡¯s
Steve Williams and the WDFW¡¯s Guy Norman decided to, beginning
today (Aug. 23) disallow the retention of unmarked fall chinook.
Managers hope today¡¯s action will allow them, by limiting fish
retention, to keep a chinook fishery open through Sept. 1 as
originally scheduled.
¡°We¡¯re taking this action today because we¡¯ve been having an
excellent chinook fishery at Buoy 10 this year and this will
allow chinook anglers to keep fishing,¡± said Williams, ODFW
fish division deputy administrator.
A large portion of the ¡°upriver¡± fall chinook run is made up
of naturally produced Hanford Reach fish, which is considered a
healthy run and not listed under the Endangered Species Act, and
Snake River stock, which is ESA listed.
As of early this week fishery officials estimate that about 42
percent of the fish caught at Buoy 10 are hatchery marked with a
fin clip, which is a lower percentage than expected.
At this time of year, with warm air and water temperatures, it
is estimated that about 19 percent of the unmarked fish caught
by anglers and released in the Buoy 10 fishing area die after
their release.
The hatchery-only rule was adopted Tuesday by fishery managers
from Washington and Oregon and is designed to minimize impacts
on wild stocks, while allowing the popular fishing season to
continue as previously planned into the Labor Day weekend.
Meanwhile, the gill-net fleet is projected to have a catch total
of nearly 23,000 after its sixth August (scheduled Aug. 22-23)
overnight outing. That would be nearly 10,000 fish ahead of the
pace predicted through that date.
Based on actual and projected catch, an estimated 15,800 chinook
and 200 sturgeon remain available for harvest during August
commercial fisheries, accord to a joint state fact sheet
prepared for the Thursday Compact meeting.
The Compact opted to approve a 9-hour commercial fishery in
Zones 4-5 that begins at 9 a.m. Sunday, and then meet again
Tuesday to review if any additional commercial harvest will be
allowed in the lower Columbia (the 146 river mile downstream of
Bonneville Dam) for the rest of August.
State staffs estimate at 8,000-10,000 chinook will be harvested
by the gill netters during the Sunday-Monday fishery.
¡°Late August is very volatile as chinook abundance is steadily
increasing. This volatility makes estimating catch difficult,¡±
the fact sheet says. ¡°Staff is recommending one fishing periods
at this time and will review catch and potentially recommend a
second period at the Aug. 27 hearing.¡±
The preseason catch expectation for early fall (through August)
fisheries was 38,800 adult chinook, with 13,500 chinook set
aside for harvest through Aug. 23, and the balance (25,300 fish)
set aside for the last week of August.
Harvests are restricted in order to limit to limit impacts on
wild Snake River bright and Lower River Hatchery tule fall
chinook salmon that are listed under the ESA. The listed fall
chinook swim upstream alongside unlisted stocks, such as those
bound for the mid-Columbia¡¯s Hanford Reach.
In the past week, anglers fishing the Buoy 10 area in the lower
16 miles of the Columbia River have been catching up to 1,600
chinook per day, Roler said.
"Our primary concern is wild chinook bound for tributaries of
the lower Columbia River to spawn," he said. "But fishery
managers from both states agreed we could provide adequate
protection for those fish without closing the chinook fishery
ahead of schedule."
Under the rule approved Tuesday, anglers may retain only those
chinook salmon marked as hatchery fish with a clipped adipose
fin or a missing left ventral fin.
Barbless hooks are currently required to fish for salmon on the
Columbia River, making it easier for anglers to release wild
fish unharmed, Roler said.
More information on current fishing regulations in Washington is
available on WDFW's website at
http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/regulations/ .
An estimated 678,000 fall chinook salmon are predicted to enter
the Columbia River, well above the 10-year average. Fishing for
hatchery and wild chinook is currently open from the mouth of
the river upstream to Priest Rapids Dam in central Washington.
Effective Monday, Sept. 2 through Monday, Sept. 30 Buoy 10 will
be closed to all chinook harvest.
Anglers may transport wild, unclipped salmon caught in adjacent
fisheries (such as the ocean or the Columbia River above Tongue
Point) through the Buoy 10 area, but cannot fish in Buoy 10 with
an unclipped chinook onboard.
In the meantime, Williams says Buoy 10 anglers should start
anticipating a strong coho return.
¡°By this time next week it ought to be bang up fishing for coho
at Buoy 10,¡± he said.
-----------------------------------
* Summer Steelhead Return To-Date Running Well Below 10-Year
Average; Group A (Smaller Fish) Downgraded
Columbia River fishery managers met Monday to review the summer
steelhead run status and members agreed to downsize the return
estimate for the ¡°A¡± -- the small steelhead component of the
run -- to 212,000 fish.
That is a decrease from the preseason forecast of 291,000 fish,
said the Technical Advisory Committee.
The 2013 preseason forecast for the summer steelhead return to
Bonneville Dam, located at river mile 146, was 339,200 upriver
fish, including 16,600 Skamania stock (5,300 wild), 291,800
Group A stock (83,500 wild), and 31,600 Group B stock (7,900
wild).
Overall, that preseason forecast represented 95 percent of the
2003-2012 average of 358,900 fish swimming up and over
Bonneville on their way to hatcheries and spawning grounds in
Idaho, Oregon and Washington.
The Skamania and Group A forecasts were both similar to the
2003-2012 average returns. The Group B component ¨C larger fish
headed largely for central Idaho -- is expected to be only 60
percent the 2003-2012 average
TAC, made up of federal, state and tribal fishery experts, this
week reviewed but did not update other components of the
steelhead run, or the fall chinook run. TAC will meet again on
Monday, Aug. 26.
The total steelhead count at Bonneville¡¯s fish ladders through
Monday was 153,779, including 74,063 unmarked fish that are, in
great part, of natural origin. Both wild Snake River steelhead
and fall chinook salmon are protected under the Endangered
Species Act. Steelhead without a hatchery marking, such as a
clipped adipose fin, must be released unharmed by anglers.
That overall (A, B and Skamania) steelhead count through Aug. 19
compares to a total of 150,670 through that date in 2012 and a
10-year average of 215,556.
The total return to Bonneville Dam (April-October passage) of
upriver summer steelhead was 230,800 fish, and included 11,000
Skamania stock, 192,100 Group A stock, and 27,700 Group B stock.
The Group B return in 2012 was the lowest since 1999 and 44
percent of the 2002-2011 average.
Upriver summer steelhead include hatchery and wild fish that
pass Bonneville Dam during April through October of each year,
according to the July11 Joint Staff Report prepared by the
Oregon and Washington departments of fish and wildlife. Fish
passing from April through June are categorized as either
Skamania stock steelhead destined mainly for tributaries within
Bonneville Pool. Production programs for Skamania stock fish in
hatcheries upstream of Bonneville Dam have decreased from
historical levels.
Steelhead that pass Bonneville Dam during July through October
are categorized as Group A index or Group B index fish, based on
fork length (Group A < 78 cm, Group B ¡Ý78 cm). Group B
steelhead primarily return to tributaries in the Salmon and
Clearwater rivers in Idaho and usually spend two years in the
ocean, while Group A steelhead return to tributaries throughout
the Columbia and Snake basins and usually spend only one year in
the ocean.
On the lower Columbia mainstem below Bonneville Dam, an
estimated 4,219 steelhead were kept by anglers and 5,707
released in July, according to the WDFW.
The overall counts of upriver fall chinook salmon at Bonneville
remain above average in what is the early part of their return
season. The count through Monday was 31,055 fall chinook, which
is more than double the count through Aug. 19, 2012 and the
10-year average, which are 13,185 and 12,682 respectively.
Fall chinook generally enter the Columbia River from late July
through October with abundance peaking in the lower river from
mid-August to mid-September and passage at Bonneville Dam
peaking in early to mid-September.
------------------------------------
* Tribal Commercial Fishing Gets Started Bonneville To McNary;
Hope To Harvest Up To 200,000 Salmon
Fishermen from the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Warm Springs and Yakama
tribes took to the Columbia River this week for the first
gill-net fishery of the 2013 fall commercial season, targeting a
budding run of fall chinook salmon run, steelhead and the early
parts of the coho salmon run.
Over the course of the fall season the Indian fishers expect to
harvest up to 200,000 fish or an estimated 2.5 million pounds of
salmon.
Fishing by the four treaty tribes takes place, for the most
part, in mainstem reservoirs between Bonneville and McNary dams.
Salmon, steelhead, shad, yellow perch, bass, walleye, catfish
and carp may be sold, or retained for subsistence, during
fisheries scheduled this week and Aug. 26-30 and Sept. 3-7.
Additional fishing periods will likely be scheduled at a later
date.
The tribes have opened the commercial sales of these fish,
allowing the public to purchase salmon, steelhead and coho
directly from Indian fishers. Sales to the public should last
into October with peak abundance from just before Labor Day
through mid-September. Much of the harvest is sold to wholesale
fish dealers and can be found in stores and restaurants around
the Northwest and beyond.
Fisheries biologists estimate that the 2013 fall chinook return
will be well above average with 677,900 fall chinook entering
the Columbia, with more than 575,000 adult fish destined for
areas upstream of Bonneville Dam, which is the first hydro
project the fish encounter. Bonneville is located at about river
mile 146.
Fishery managers predict a record return of wild Snake River
fall chinook, listed under the Endangered Species Act, as well
as more than 130,000 coho salmon.
¡°Many of the salmon returning to the Columbia River are the
direct result of tribal restoration efforts, joint state and
tribal programs and several tribal and federal partnerships that
are increasing the abundance of salmon in upriver areas,¡± said
Paul Lumley, executive director for the Columbia River
Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.
During the harvest, managers actively monitor the returns so
they can adjust the harvest levels as needed to keep the
fisheries within strict harvest limits established under the US
v. Oregon fisheries management agreement.
The tribal fishery offers an ample supply of fish for the public
through over-the-bank sales. Common sales locations include:
Marine Park in Cascade Locks, Lone Pine in The Dalles, North
Bonneville - one mile east of Bonneville Dam, and Columbia Point
in Washington¡¯s Tri-Cities area.
Individuals interested in purchasing tribally caught fish should
keep the following tips in mind:
-- Sales from tribal fishers generally run from 10 a.m. to dusk.
-- Price is determined at the point of sale.
-- Most sales are cash only.
-- Buyers should request a receipt.
-- Tribal fishers can advise on topics including fish freshness
and preparation.
The public is urged to call the salmon marketing program at
(888) 289-1855 before heading up the river to find out where the
day¡¯s catch is being sold. More information is available on the
salmon marketing website
http://www.critfc.org/harvest. Follow @ColumbiaSalmon on
Twitter for updates.
CRITFC is the technical support and coordinating agency for
fishery management policies of the Umatilla, Warm Springs,
Yakama and the Nez Perce tribes.
------------------------------------
* Corps Delays Completion Of EIS For Lower Snake Sediment
Management Plan; No Dredging This Winter
The Walla Walla District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
announced Aug. 16 that it is delaying completion of the lower
Snake River Programmatic Sediment Management Plan Environmental
Impact Statement and proposed dredging of the lower Snake River
in Lewiston-Clarkston and near Ice Harbor Lock and Dam in
Burbank, Wash.
The delay is due to remaining complex EIS technical and
environmental review requirements, plus associated contract
planning efforts, the Corps says.
The Corps does not expect that remaining work to be done in time
to complete the EIS ¨C a requirement of the National
Environmental Policy Act -- and consider the signing a ¡°record
of decision¡± in time for possible action during this winter¡¯s
¡°in-water work window,¡± the Corps says.
That work window is Dec. 15 through Feb. 28 each year. Winter
work schedules are planned to minimize impacts on migrating
salmon and steelhead, which move up and down the Columbia/Snake
river system primarily in spring and summer.
As a part of its congressional authorization, the Corps operates
and maintains the navigation system on the lower Snake River,
which is part of an inland navigation system from Lewiston,
Idaho to the Pacific Ocean and includes the Columbia River.
Within this navigation system are four dams which were
constructed by the Corps between 1961 and 1975 on the Snake
River in Washington State (Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little
Goose, and Lower Granite).
The Corps continues to conduct reviews required to reach a final
EIS. The environmental review process must be completed prior to
Corps¡¯ efforts to manage problem sediment, and before a
solicitation for a contract can be issued for proposed dredging.
Proposed dredging, if its use is supported by the final EIS,
will now be delayed at least a year.
The Corps has also determined that the Port of Lewiston in Idaho
and the Port of Clarkston in Washington are now required to
apply for individual permits from the Corps and applicable state
agencies in Idaho and Washington for proposed dredging of their
own port berthing or dock areas. This is consistent with
nationwide Corps practices.
The Corps is responsible for maintaining the federal navigation
channel in the lower Snake River to congressionally authorized
dimensions of 14 feet deep by 250 feet wide. Accumulated
sediment interferes with navigation, recreation and other
purposes.
A lawsuit was filed in 2002 by conservation and fishing groups
who feared potential impacts of maintenance dredging on fish.
They asked that a full environmental analysis be conducted. Fish
migrating through the lower Snake hydro system include four
salmon and steelhead species that are listed under the
Endangered Species Act.
As part of a legal settlement reached in 2005, dredging was
allowed during the winter of 2005-2006 based on a pledge by the
Corps to develop a "Programmatic Sediment Management Plan" for
reducing sedimentation and the need for dredging. Prior to that,
navigation and port maintenance dredging had not been conducted
since 1997-98. Such dredging had previously been deemed
necessary every 2-3 years.
In the settlement the Corps agreed that, following completion of
the 2005-2006 work, it would limit further routine dredging
activities to those deemed necessary because of emergency
conditions (hazard to human life or significant loss of property
and/or severe economic hardship), when sediment impairs access
to ports and navigation locks at four lower Snake River dams, or
when Lewiston's levee system might be threatened.
Since then only one relatively isolated dredging operation, in
Ice Harbor pool, has occurred to relieve a navigation hazard.
In order to avoid potential commercial barge grounding or
shoaling in the sediment-degraded navigation channel, the
reservoir behind Lower Granite Dam has at times in recent years
been held above ¡°minimum operating pool.¡±
That goes against NOAA Fisheries¡¯ 2008/2010 Federal Columbia
River Power System biological opinion, which prescribes measures
intended to improve the survival of listed stocks such as Snake
River steelhead, fall and spring/summer chinook salmon and
sockeye salmon.
Dredging is one of several proposed tools in a PSMP ¡°toolbox¡±
of measures to manage problem sediment in the river. Dredging is
the only effective, short-term tool available to meet the need
of reestablishing depth and width of the lower Snake River
navigation channel where sediment has accumulated, the Corps
says.
The final PSMP will describe the Corps¡¯ intent for best
managing problem sediment.
For more information, go to:
http://www.nww.usace.army.mil/Missions/Projects/ProgrammaticSedimentManagementPlan.aspx
Also see:
-- CBB, Dec. 14, 2012, ¡°Corps Releases Draft Plan To Deal With
Years Of Sediment Buildup In Lower Snake River¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/424216.aspx
-- CBB, Jan. 25, 2013, ¡°Information Meeting In Lewiston
Highlights Views On Draft Lower Snake Sediment Management Plan¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/424720.aspx
-----------------------------------
* Dedication Set For New Hatchery Intended To Move Snake River
Sockeye Recovery To Next Level
Officials will gather just outside Springfield on the morning of
Sept. 6 to mark the completion of a new hatchery that is
intended to boost recovery of Snake River sockeye.
The $13.5 million facility will be capable of producing up to
one million juvenile sockeye annually for release in the
Sawtooth basin of central Idaho, the headwaters of the Salmon
River.
This additional incubation and rearing space will move the
sockeye recovery effort from the conservation phase to a
re-colonization phase where emphasis will be on returning
increasing numbers of ocean-run adults to use in hatchery
spawning and to release to the habitat for natural spawning.
It¡¯s hoped the increase may eventually mean recreational and
tribal fishing seasons.
The hatchery will be operated by Idaho Fish and Game and was
funded by the Bonneville Power Administration as part of its
obligation to mitigate the impact of hydropower dams on salmon
and steelhead.
The Springfield Fish Hatchery was designed and constructed by
the Idaho-based engineering firm of McMillen LLC. The water
supply for the Springfield facility is more than 50 cubic feet
per second of cold, clean spring water - just right for raising
sockeye.
Snake River sockeye were listed as an endangered species in
1991. Idaho Fish and Game initiated conservation and research
efforts for sockeye earlier that same year. Just a few years
later the number of adult sockeye returning from the ocean to
the Sawtooth basin dropped to zero -- in 1995 and 1997 -- but
reached 1,336 in 2010, an amount not seen since the 1950s.
This success resulted from redundant captive broodstock programs
operated at hatcheries in Idaho and Washington. Today the
sockeye are produced at hatcheries in Idaho, Washington and
Oregon. Snake River sockeye rearing and spawning habitat in the
Sawtooth basin is considered to be in excellent condition
because it has experienced limited human impacts.
The current run of sockeye into the Snake River is one of three
remaining populations in the Columbia River basin. The other two
populations are in Okanogan and Wenatchee lakes, on tributaries
of the upper Columbia River. Efforts are under say to rekindle
historic sockeye runs to the Deschutes River basin in central
Oregon and south-central Washington¡¯s Yakima River
basin.
Partners in the sockeye recovery effort include Idaho, Oregon,
Washington, NOAA-Fisheries, the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, the
Bonneville Power Administration and the Northwest Power and
Conservation Council.
For more information, see CBB, August 16, 2013, ¡°So Far, 90
Snake River Sockeye Spawners Make It To Central Idaho, 26 Of
Natural Origin¡±
http://www.cbbulletin.com/427926.aspx
-----------------------------------------
* Science Panel Issues Project Funding Recommendations For ¡®Anadromous
Areas¡¯ Under Council F&W Program
The Independent Scientific Review Panel in its ¡°final¡±
recommendations released Aug. 15 says that 24 percent (20
projects) of the 83 fish and wildlife proposals submitted as
part of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council¡¯s
geographic review meet scientific criteria necessary to be
eligible for funding.
The final review by the ISRP suggests that 55 other proposals
meet scientific criteria with some qualifications, four
proposals did not meet criteria and four proposals were not
amenable to scientific review.
The proposals are for ongoing habitat improvement projects in
the ¡°anadromous¡± areas ¨C places where ocean going salmon and
steelhead spend the freshwater portion of their lives. The
ISRP¡¯s review of the proposals for scientific merit is part of
the NPCC¡¯s process for evaluating proposals for funding under
the panel¡¯s Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program.
The Council reviews projects and makes funding recommendations
to the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets power
generated in the Columbia-Snake hydro system and funds fish and
wildlife work as mitigation for impact from the construction and
operation of the dams. BPA makes final funding decisions and
ultimately issues contracts for project work.
The ¡°geographic¡± category is the last of five project groups
evaluated since the Council¡¯s project review process began in
2009. Previously completed reviews were for: wildlife;
monitoring, evaluation and research; artificial production; and
resident fish (in areas of the basin blocked off to anadromous
fish) projects.
The ISRP review can be found at:
http://www.nwcouncil.org/fw/isrp/isrp2013-11/
In addition to individual project reviews, the report contains a
brief retrospective evaluation of habitat improvements and
comments on important issues that involve most projects and
apply to the Council program in general, according to the ISRP
report.
Topics covered include regional research, monitoring and
evaluation, strategic restoration framework, productive
partnerships, workforce support, and restoration methods and
assessments.
¡°This is the last set of projects to be reviewed in the
Category Review process. To the ISRP's knowledge, every project
funded through the Fish and Wildlife Program has now been
evaluated by the ISRP through the Category Reviews,¡± the ISRP
report says. ¡°The ISRP is supportive of many features of the
Category Review approach and looks forward to helping shape the
next review process based on lessons learned.¡±
¡°The ISRP especially appreciated the efforts of project
sponsors and Council and BPA staff in organizing and providing
invaluable site visits and presentations. The ISRP also
appreciated the constructive and detailed responses by project
sponsors that addressed the ISRP concerns raised in the
preliminary review. The proposals, responses, tours, and
presentations demonstrated that the projects are led by
dedicated staff and progress is being made. Specifically,
greater understanding and appreciation of the Council¡¯s Fish
and Wildlife Program goals for native species and ecosystem
restoration are evident in the projects visited and reviewed by
the ISRP.¡±
------------------------------------------------------
* Corps Seeks Comment On EA Regarding Habitat Improvements Along
Lower Snake River
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Walla Walla District is
inviting public comments on an environmental assessment for
habitat improvements at locations along the lower Snake River.
Comments are due by Sept 6.
The Corps is proposing to plant native vegetation on three
Habitat Management Units (HMUs) along the lower Snake River to
create or enhance approximately 125 acres of wildlife habitat to
help meet the terrestrial wildlife mitigation requirements of
the Lower Snake River Fish and Wildlife Compensation Plan.
Proposed planting sites are located in Garfield, Whitman and
Walla Walla counties, along the banks of the lower Snake River.
The three sites proposed for habitat enhancement are: Ayer,
Swift Bar, and Willow Bar HMUs.
The Compensation Plan directed that lands on the lower Snake
River, plus other lands purchased and leased in adjacent areas
of southeast Washington, be developed for terrestrial wildlife
habitat.
As a result, approximately 25,000 acres of Corps lands along the
lower Snake River were set aside for this purpose. Another
24,000 acres of lands were purchased or leased for terrestrial
wildlife habitat development and angler access.
The Corps prepared an EA to address potential effects associated
with implementation of the planting plan. As part of National
Environmental Policy Act compliance, the Corps is inviting
public comment on the EA and draft Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI). The Corps is required to consider all comments
received. The EA and draft FONSI are available on the Corps
website at
www.nww.usace.army.mil/Missions/Projects/LSRWildlifeHabitatPlanting.aspx
------------------------------------------------
* Idaho Using BPA Funds To Protect, Restore Habitat In Lake Pend
Oreille/Clark Fork River Delta
Out of concerns over the loss of fish and wildlife habitat in
the Lake Pend Oreille area, resulting from the operation of the
Albeni Falls Dam, the state of Idaho is using funding from the
Bonneville Power Administration to protect, improve and restore
habitat in the Clark Fork River delta that is being lost to
erosion.
The restored and enhanced habitat is intended to benefit a wide
variety of wildlife, including songbirds, water birds, raptors,
waterfowl, elk, deer, moose, bear and furbearers by providing
improved areas for breeding, feeding and cover.
The project is proposed to occur in two phases: The first phase
involves the drift yard and boat launch areas, as well as two
island areas directly to the south of the drift yard. The second
phase will involve bank stabilization along White and Derr
islands.
Visitors to the area should expect some interruption of public
access to the Clark Fork River delta from the drift yard access
site during the first construction phase, which will begin in
July 2014 and run through March 2015.
The proposed restoration activities include protecting delta
shorelines with engineered structures and vegetated riprap. This
will help prevent saturated wetland soils from slumping into the
water and wave action from eroding shorelines.
The restoration effort will also elevate portions of the delta
areas that are currently submerged during the summer to increase
the amount of habitat available to breeding waterfowl and
wildlife.
Efforts will be made to reduce the presence of invasive weeds
and encourage the growth of native grasses, forbs and woody
plants.
Work to implement the first phase will start in July 2014, with
rock and large wood being barged to the project site.
Construction of the projective structures and earthmoving will
occur after the lake is lowered to its winter elevation in
November 2014, and will continue until March 2015, when the
spring flows begin.
The start date for the second phase has not been determined but
will occur after the completion of the first phase.
Efforts will be made to minimize disruption of public access to
the delta area. During the first phase, the public will be able
to get to the delta from the Johnson Creek boat launch area, and
construction work is focused near the delta face leaving other
areas available for public recreation.
The long-term benefits of completing the restoration project
will include improved and increased habitat for wildlife,
increased areas for hunting, wildlife watching and other
wildlife related activities. These benefits are expected to
out-weigh the short-term interruptions in public access.
-----------------------------------------------
* Klamath Salmon: Big Fall Chinook Return Combined With Drought
Sparks Concerns About Fish Die-Offs
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is seeking help
from the public in monitoring the health of chinook salmon in
the Klamath River and its tributaries.
Drought conditions mixed with a larger than normal return of
salmon elevate concerns of fish die offs. Small numbers of dead
fish are expected this year as an estimated 272,000 fall-run
chinook salmon return.
CDFW, in conjunction with The Klamath Fish Health Assessment
Team is asking the public to report any unusual numbers of dead
fish they see by contacting CDFW Biologist Sara Borok at (707)
822-0330.
CDFW pathologists have taken samples from the large run of
downstream migrating juvenile salmon. The juveniles hold in cold
pools at the mouths of creeks as they migrate to the ocean. The
purpose of monitoring of these juveniles is to ensure they do
not harbor disease that could infect returning adult salmon that
occupy the same cold water habitats. At this time no signs of
disease outbreaks in the juveniles holding in the cold water
pools have been discovered.
Members of the KFHAT have contacted the California-Nevada Fish
Health Center for help with monitoring and assessing disease
issues and the Yurok Tribal Fisheries Department is conducting
weekly adult fish disease sampling to keep all members apprised
of the current conditions.
KFHAT is also keeping abreast of current fishery and water
quality conditions in the Klamath River and its tributaries and
will respond with a large-scale monitoring response in the event
that there is a fish kill.
Meanwhile, a federal court this week ruled that water releases
planned by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to protect the
migration of chinook salmon into the Klamath/Trinity rivers in
Northern California should move forward.
After a two-day hearing in Fresno, the U.S. District Court for
Eastern California rejected demands by agricultural interests in
California¡¯s Central Valley led by the Westlands Water
District, to block the releases, which were supposed to have
started Aug. 13.
After hearing from half a dozen fisheries experts who all agreed
that the water release program was supported by the science, the
court ruled for the water release program to move forward.
The court concluded, ¡°...on balance, considering the
significantly lower volume of water now projected to be involved
and the potential and enormous risk to the fishery of doing
nothing, the court finds it in the public interest to permit the
augmentation to proceed.¡±
The U.S. District Court also noted, ¡°...the flow augmentation
releases are designed to prevent a potentially serious fish die
off from impacting salmon populations entering the Klamath River
estuary. There is no dispute and the record clearly reflects
that the 2002 fish kill had severe impacts on commercial fishing
interests, tribal fishing rights, and the ecology, and that
another fish kill would likely have similar impacts.¡±
This year is unusual in that extremely low flow conditions in
the lower Klamath are occurring at the same time fisheries
managers expect the second-largest run of chinook on record to
begin arriving. Federal, state and tribal salmon biologists have
been concerned that this confluence of high runs and low flows
will lead to another mass fish kill like the one that occurred
in 2002.
Experts explained to the judge how water conditions in the basin
this year are almost identical to those in 2002, except with a
far larger adult run of chinook. The evidence before the court
was that the risk of another fish kill was grave.
The 2002 fish kill led to coast-wide closures of commercial,
recreational and tribal fishing. Congress ultimately
appropriated $60 million in disaster assistance to help coastal
communities.
The court¡¯s full decision can be found at:
http://earthjustice.org/sites/default/files/files/CourtDecision.WaterReleasestoProtectSalmoninCaliforniaMoveForward.pdf
--------------------------
* NOAA Fisheries Announces Grants To Oregon, Washington For
Increasing Salmon Habitat
NOAA¡¯s National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries) this
week announced $3.73 million in funding for habitat restoration
projects in Oregon and Washington to restore more than 1,800
acres of habitat to benefit threatened species including
steelhead, chinook and coho salmon.
¡°Without the right habitat, fish struggle to grow and
reproduce, and that means smaller fish populations,¡± said Will
Stelle, regional administrator for NOAA Fisheries¡¯ Western
Region. ¡°These projects will increase fish habitat -- providing
the important feeding and breeding grounds they need to
thrive.¡±
In the Northwest, populations of fish like salmon and steelhead
trout are limited by a lack of habitat. In the region¡¯s
Columbia River basin alone there are 13 salmon and steelhead
stocks that have been listed by NOAA Fisheries for protections
under the Endangered Species Act.
NOAA Fisheries, among its protection endeavors, works with
partners in the region to restore habitat for these fish by
reconnecting wetlands and stream channels to tidal flow. NOAA
scientists also address the impacts of marine debris on our
coastal habitat and wildlife.
Restoration efforts recently approved for funding include:
-- Coastal Alaska ($330,000): In partnership with the Alaska
Marine Stewardship Foundation and the Sitka Sound Science
Center, marine debris will be removed from the shorelines of
Alaska.
-- Puget Sound ¨C Whidbey Basin ($1.4 million): Three projects,
with The Nature Conservancy, will make progress toward Puget
Sound Action Agenda¡¯s goal to restore 15 percent of degraded
floodplain habitat by 2020. The goal is to restore nearly 500
acres of floodplain habitat in Whidbey Basin, one of the most
important areas in Puget Sound for recovery of threatened Puget
Sound chinook and steelhead.
-- Smith Island ($1 million): Working with Washington¡¯s
Snohomish County, work will begin to restore nearly 330 acres of
wetlands in the Snohomish River estuary. That will fulfill 25
percent of NOAA¡¯s 10-year target for tidal wetland restoration
in the Snohomish basin. It will also provide important habitat
for threatened Puget Sound chinook and steelhead.
-- Tillamook Bay ($242,000): In Oregon¡¯s Tillamook County, the
loss of wetlands has been a limiting factor for young coho and
chinook salmon. Working with the county, NOAA Fisheries¡¯
funding will allow completion of planning efforts to restore
500 acres of wetlands, addressing 70 percent of the tidal
wetlands restoration goal for Tillamook Bay.
-- Waite Ranch ($392,000): In partnership with Ecotrust, efforts
will begin to return more than 200 acres of land -- which was
previously used for farming -- back to productive tidal wetlands
within the Siuslaw River estuary in Oregon. These tidal wetlands
provide important nursery and refuge habitat for threatened
Oregon Coast coho salmon.
-- Washington Marine Waters ($100,000): With the Northwest
Straits Marine Foundation, derelict fishing gear will be removed
from Puget Sound, as part of an ongoing effort to mitigate
impacts.
-- Willamette River ($221,000): Working with The Nature
Conservancy, NOAA Fisheries will initiate the restoration of 300
acres of floodplain habitat and bring four miles of streams back
to a more natural condition. These efforts will address
recommendations from the Upper Willamette Chinook and Steelhead
Recovery Plan.
NOAA Fisheries¡¯ investment in habitat is part of a long-term
effort to rebuild fisheries, many of which have declined
precipitously from habitat loss, over-fishing and climate
change. Recent successes show that restoring habitat is a way
not only to stop the decline of fish populations, but also to
regrow them to historic high numbers.
This is the first year of an anticipated three years of funding.
The grants are from funds appropriated by Congress to NOAA
Fisheries' Community-based Restoration Program. The federal
agency solicits projects proposals for the program every few
years, with the next one anticipated in FY2015.
NOAA states as its mission to understand and predict changes in
the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the
surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage coastal and
marine resources.
***********************************
For more information about the CBB contact:
-- BILL CRAMPTON, Editor/Writer,
bcrampton@cbbulletin.com, phone: 541-312-8860 or
-- BARRY ESPENSON, Senior Writer,
bespenson@msn.com, phone:
360-696-4005; fax: 360-694-1530
The stories in this e-mail newsletter are posted on the Columbia
Basin Bulletin website at
www.cbbulletin.com. If you would like access to the CBB
archives, please consider becoming a Member of the CBB website
for as little as $5 a month. Your membership will help support
maintenance of the 14-year (1998-2012) news database and the
production of trustworthy, timely news and information about
Columbia Basin fish and wildlife issues.
---------------
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bcrampton@cbbulletin.com. Please put "feedback"in the
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Northwest Power and Conservation Council's Columbia Basin Fish
and Wildlife Program.
@Copyright 2013, INTERMOUNTAIN COMMUNICATIONS
====================================================
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