
Salmon
arrive late, but
Klamath
Basin
returns beating goals
By JEFF BARNARD
The Associated Press
January 11, 2008
GRANTS PASS
,
Ore.
— After three straight
lean years, 2007 returns of wild fall chinook salmon to the
Klamath
Basin
have exceeded the minimums
set by federal fisheries managers.
However, the numbers of
young fish known as jacks returning to the basin so far indicate low
returns of mature fish in fall 2008, unless preliminary counts improve.
Preliminary counts from
fishing-counting stations and carcass surveys show about 50,000 salmon
returning to the Klamath and Trinity rivers and their tributaries in
Northern California
to spawn, California
Department of Fish and Game senior biologist Larry Hanson said Friday
from
Yreka
,
Calif.
For unknown reasons,
Klamath salmon returned three to five weeks later than normal, with some
stragglers showing up as late as January, Hanson added.
The returns, which do not
include fish from hatcheries, were particularly good in light of the
high level of fishing allowed in the ocean and at the river's mouth this
year, Hanson added.
The
Klamath
Basin
once was the third-biggest
salmon producer on the West Coast, but returns of fall chinook have been
struggling for decades from loss of habitat to logging, mining and dams,
and overfishing. Spring chinook are practically wiped out. Coho salmon
are a threatened species.
When Klamath returns are
weak, federal fisheries managers must severely restrict ocean fishing
for healthier stocks to avoid wiping out fish that spawn naturally in
rivers.
Returns in 2004, 2005 and
2006 failed to reach the 35,000 minimum set by the Pacific Fishery
Management Council, which sets ocean salmon fishing seasons and quotas.
Concerns for
Klamath River
fish were so great in 2006
that commercial salmon fishing was effectively shut down off most of
California
and
Oregon
, leading to a federal
disaster declaration.
Final counts of Klamath
salmon returns are due in February. The council will use those numbers
in making recommendations for salmon seasons in March. Final seasons
will be set in April.
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Source:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004121399_klamathsalmon12m.html
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