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Salmon River Suffers From Record Low Chinook Returns

by Dan Bacher
Record low returns of spawning fall chinook salmon on the Salmon River, a major, pristine tributary of the Klamath River, point to the catastrophic impact that dams, diversions, mining and logging have on the fishery
P R E S S R E L E A S E

SALMON RIVER RESTORATION COUNCIL

KLAMATH-SALMON MEDIA COLLABORATIVE


For Immediate Release: January, 23, 2006

For more information:
Nate Pennington, Salmon River Restoration Council (530) 462-4720 or (530) 462-4665 nathanielpennington [at] hotmail.com

Sara Borok, California Department of Fish and Game, (707) 822-0330

"Key Klamath Tributary Suffers Record Low Salmon Runs – Three Years in a Row"
Dams, Diversions, Mining and Logging continue to decimate Salmon River fishery

Forks of Salmon, CA - Scientists and Conservationists were shocked last week to find out that the Salmon River fall Chinook run had dipped even lower than the previous year’s record low. Only an estimated 320 fall Chinook returned to the Salmon River according to the California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG). CDFG has surveyed for spawning fall Chinook since 1978. A large tributary to the Klamath and one of the last refuges for wild salmon in the Klamath Basin, the Salmon River had an all time low in 2004 with a run of 626 fall Chinook. Before that the record low had stood at 780 in 1999.

“This is especially disheartening considering that last year was the lowest spring Chinook run on record. That makes this the third record low run in a row,” said Nat Pennington, Fisheries Program Coordinator for Salmon River Restoration Council. The three runs Pennington refers to are the fall run from 2004, the spring run of 2005, and the fall run of 2005.

Last fall’s run was low in most of the Klamath’s tributaries. For example, the Scott River had its second lowest run on record, following 2004’s record low run. Regulators and fishing communities alike worry that the last wild runs left in the Klamath basin are slowly going extinct. Complete Klamath Basin counts are expected to be released soon by CDFG.

The fisheries experts agree that over fishing is not part of the problem. Ocean and in-river salmon harvest quotas were the lowest in years. The Yurok Tribe even cancelled their commercial season to allow for more spawning in tributaries like the Scott and Salmon. Many point to the massive adult and juvenile fish kills in the Klamath in 2001 and 2002 when most of the adult salmon that returned to the river last year were born. Few will forget the Fish Kill of 2002, when low flows and high water temperatures left over 68,000 adult salmon dead before spawning.

According Karuk Tribe Biologist Toz Soto, “Over the past few years we have witnessed annual juvenile and adult fish kills because the Klamath has been too warm and the water quality too poor. These conditions are created by PacifiCorp’s dams in combination with the low releases from the Bureau of Reclamations’ Klamath Project. The salmon can’t take many more years of this.”

The Karuk Tribe’s ancestral homeland is in the middle of the Klamath Basin, below PacifiCorp’s dams. The Karuk is the second largest Tribe in California with over 3,400 members. Since time immemorial the Tribe has lived from the bounty of the river, but not any more. Last year Tribal fishermen caught a mere 200 fall Chinook. Recent reports indicate that loss of the fishery and other traditional foods are directly linked to the high rates of heart disease and diabetes among Tribal members.

“This is really not only about the fish, it’s about human health. These dams literally take food from the mouths of our children and affect our overall health,” according to Ron Reed, Cultural Biologist for the Karuk Tribe.

Regulators are still crunching numbers to see if the Klamath will meet the 35,000 fish natural spawning minimum set by the Magnuson Act. This population estimate is produced from the Klamath Basin Cooperative Chinook Spawning Surveys, involving the U.S. Forest Service, CDFG, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Schools and the Salmon River Restoration Council. The size of the Klamath fall Chinook run effects future salmon fishing regulations and commercial quotas. Those who noticed the higher prices last year for wild salmon at docks from San Francisco to Portland can attribute some of that price hike to increased fishing regulations protecting the wild Klamath run, once the third largest on the west coast.

Tribes, fishermen, and conservationists are hoping that PacifiCorp’s dams, which block over 350 miles of historic spawning habitat, will be removed as part of a dam relicensing agreement which could be decided on later this year.

Others hope that upper basin agricultural interests and down river fisheries interests can work out some win-win solutions to put more water in the river’s future and provide certainty for farmers. “One big problem is money - most of the government grant sources for grassroots cooperative restoration and continued scientific research are drying up. It has been 20 years since president Reagan signed the Klamath Fisheries Restoration Act, which expires this year. Now is the time for Congress to revisit it’s commitment to the Klamath.” said Pennington. Pennington also encourages people in the northwest to keep abreast of current threats to salmon restoration or swallow the cost of high priced salmon steaks again this year.

Editor’s note: For photos of Salmon River salmon and other pertinent information log on to http://www.srrc.org/

The author / photographer, and individuals quoted in this article authorize the contents of this press release including pictures and charts to be copied in part or entirety and used freely by individuals in the press.

Credit for downloadable pictures and chart: Salmon River Restoration Council
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