SACRAMENTO- A record run of chinook salmon is
expected for California's Klamath River basin this year, boosting the
hopes of West Coast commercial and sport fishermen whose seasons were
cut dramatically last year.
The forecast prompted a federal fishery panel on
Friday to suggest that restrictions on the West Coast salmon fleet
should be eased for the 2007 season. That would bring relief to port
towns in California, Oregon and Washington that depend on the
commercial catch and recreational fishing, but not a full return to
the abundance enjoyed in past years.
Even if the government allows more fishing this
year, the health of individual salmon populations and the sheer number
of different fishing seasons means restrictions vary from region to
region.
"It's better than last year, but we should be
having five months of a full season," said Dean Estep, a
commercial fisherman from Fort Bragg.
He expects the fishing season along his pocket of
California's North Coast to last anywhere from six weeks to two
months, after being allowed to fish just five days in 2006. Even so,
he said he was frustrated that he would not be allowed the full five
months of a normal salmon fishing season.
"Dockage, fuel prices ... everything goes up
with the exception of our fishing seasons," he said.
The Pacific Fishery Management Council on Friday
adopted possible management options that will allow a longer season
for recreation and commercial salmon fishermen in California and
Oregon.
The season is expected to run between April and
October, which is normal for the industry.
The news isn't as good for Washington, where fishery
managers are forecasting fewer salmon for the 2007 season in the
Columbia River. In addition, new protections under the Endangered
Species Act will lead to a reduced season along coastal Washington.
The management council that met Friday makes its
recommendations to the National Marine Fisheries Service. That body
will issue a final decision about the various West Coast salmon
fisheries in April in Seattle after public hearings in the three
states.
This year's recommendations from the management
council amounted to mostly good news for beleaguered salmon fishermen.
Last year, the federal government imposed the most restrictive salmon
season on record for Oregon and California based on declining stocks
in the Klamath River basin.
Commercial fishing was limited by as much as 90
percent along 700 miles of coastline from Northern California up most
of the Oregon Coast.
The total West Coast commercial catch for 2006 was
12 percent of a typical year, representing direct losses to fishermen
of $16 million. That led U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez to
declare the West Coast salmon fishery a failure, but federal aid has
never materialized beyond small business loans for fishermen and
related businesses.
The closure was forced by three years of poor
returns to the Klamath River. Commercial and sport fishermen
complained they were hit unfairly by the restrictions, arguing that
they were paying the price for dams, habitat destroyed by logging and
mining, and poor water management.
This year, fishery biologists expect there will be
more than 500,000 adult chinook salmon returning from the Pacific
Ocean to the Klamath River, about five times the number from last
year.
Even with such numbers, commercial fishermen are not
likely to reap a bounty. Most of the returning salmon will be
three-year-old fish, which under federal guidelines must be thrown
back because they are smaller than 27 inches.
The news is brighter for recreational fishermen,
many of whom run charter boats for tourists who flock to the coast
during summer. They could return to a full salmon season in much of
California and Oregon.
In Washington state, the preliminary forecasts for
salmon returning to the Columbia River is 182,400 adult fall chinook.
That would be less than 80 percent of last year's count.
Meanwhile, the number of salmon returning in 2006 to
the Sacramento River in California was 435,000 fish. That was about
half the previous season's run and the lowest number since 1992.
The decline was not severe enough to trigger fishing
restrictions, however, because the population is still considered
healthy, said Chuck Tracy, a salmon expert who works for the Pacific
Fishery Management Council.
The council will hold public hearings about its
salmon-management proposals on March 26 in Westport, Wash., and Coos
Bay, Ore., and on March 27 in Santa Rosa, Calif.
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On the Net:
Pacific Fishery Management Council: http://www.pcouncil.org
National Marine Fisheries Service: http://www.nmfs.gov
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