
Sea
lions at
Ore.
dam sentenced to death
By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
Associated Press Writer
Mar 18, 2005
PORTLAND
,
Ore.
- Traps, pyrotechnics and
beanbags shot at sea lions have failed to deter the annual springtime
feast of threatened salmon at a
Columbia River
dam,
so federal authorities gave some of them a death sentence on Tuesday.
The National
Marine Fisheries Service authorized
Oregon
and
Washington
officials to first attempt
to catch the sea lions that arrive at the base of the Bonneville Dam and
hold them 48 hours to see whether an aquarium, zoo or similar facility
will take them. Otherwise, they could be euthanized, along with those
that avoid trapping.
About 60 of the
California
sea lions, identified by
branding, scars or other markings, were deemed the worst offenders and
qualify for "immediate removal."
One, branded C404, became
something of a celebrity because of his ability to work his way into the
fish ladders of the dam, and even into the window where upriver-bound
salmon are counted to determine the size of later runs. Many sea lions
have been coming to the dams for years.
Fidelia Andy, chairwoman
of the Columbia Intertribal fish
Commission, said the order "was the right decision at the right
time" and asked for "the public's patience and support while
management activities proceed."
The ruling followed three
meetings of a task force comprising commercial and sport fishermen,
treaty tribes and animal rights interests.
But John Balzar,
spokesman for the Humane Society of the
United States
, said the idea that sea
lions must be killed to save salmon was "entirely bogus."
He said fishermen catch
three times as many salmon as the sea lions eat, and
Oregon
and
Washington
have proposed higher
fishing quotas. Federal estimates are that hydroelectric dams in the
Columbia
system kill nearly 60
percent of juvenile salmon headed downriver, he said.
The plan to shoot sea
lions, he said, coincides with estimates that this year's spring chinook
run will be one of the biggest in decades.
Sea lions are protected
under the 1972 Marine Mammals Protection Act. An amendment permits the
killing of sea lions if
Columbia River
states get federal
permission.
Oregon
and
Washington
asked for the permission in
2006, and
Idaho
offered its support.
Such permission has been
granted only once before — in the 1990s for sea lions in the Ballard
Locks in
Puget
Sound
in
Washington
, where five animals were
identified as offenders that drastically diminished a steelhead run that
has yet to recover.
Three were taken in by an
aquatic park before they were killed. The fate of the two others has not
been made public.
Sea lion populations have
soared since they and other marine mammals were covered under the 1972
act. They numbered about 1,000 in the 1930s, when they were hunted and
used, among other purposes, for dog food. They are thought to number
about 240,000 today.
Sharon Young with the
Humane Society of the
United States
said Tuesday the group is
studying the documents to decide whether to challenge the order in
court.
The order applies to sea
lions observed eating salmon or steelhead below the dam between Jan. 1
and May 31. The authorization is valid until
June 30, 2012
, and can be extended for
five years. It can be revoked by the National
Marine Fisheries Service on 72 hours notice.
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Source:
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