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Dire
Situation of
Sacramento River
Chinook Run Results In Probable
Closures
by Dan
Bacher
Friday Mar 14th, 2008
9:33 PM
Two of
three options for recreational and commercial salmon fishing seasons
adopted by the Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC) today in
Sacramento
would result in complete
closures for the first time in history. The collapse of
Central Valley
chinook salmon that has
spurred the proposed closures is largely the result of abysmally poor
management of the fishery by the state and federal governments.
Fishermen, Indian Tribes and environmentalists believe that massive
exports of water from the California Delta by the Bush and
Schwarzenegger administrations are the main cause of the decline.
Report
From the PFMC Meeting in Sacramento
By Dan Bacher
For the first time since commercial and recreational fishing began along
the West Coast in the Nineteenth Century, salmon fishing off the
California Coast and most of Oregon is likely to remain closed on May 1
when the federal fishing season would normally begin, due to the
unprecedented collapse of Sacramento River fall chinook salmon.
The Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC), a quasi-governmental body
that manages ocean and anadromous fisheries, today adopted three public
review options for the 2008 salmon season off the West Coast.
Two of these will leave
California
and most of
Oregon
without a fishing season,
while the other option will provide a very limited “token” season.
Seasons for northern
Oregon
and
Washington
options are also
drastically more limited than usual. The Council will select a final
option at their next meeting in
Seattle
,
Washington
on April 6 – 12.
The PFMC on Wednesday closed or delayed the opening of salmon season in
seven zones, including four recreational zones and three commercial
zones. The recreational fishing season from
Horse
Mountain
to Point Arena, open since
mid-February, is slated for closure on April 1, while the recreational
season below Point Arena, originally scheduled to open on April 5, will
remain closed.
“The status of
Sacramento
fall Chinook has suddenly collapsed to an unprecedented low
level,” said Donald Hansen, Chairman of the PFMC. "The effect on
California
and
Oregon
salmon fisheries is a
disaster by any definition.”
“I do not think there will be any ocean fishing for salmon in
California
and southern
Oregon
this year,” forecasted
Hansen. “If there is any fishery at all, it will be a minute one.”
To have even limited fishing, the Council will have to obtain an
emergency rule from NOAA Fisheries. “We will have to weigh the risks
to the stock versus the economic benefits to fishermen resulting from an
emergency rule,” said Frank Lockhart of the National Marine Fisheries
Service in
Seattle
. “This year is a
particular challenge because of the
Sacramento River
chinook collapse.”
The return of fall run Chinook to the
Sacramento River
is projected to be 58,200 under the option with all salmon
fishing closed and 52,400 under the option that allows small fisheries
in specific areas. The run impacts the fishery primarily in
California
and
Southern Oregon
.
The minimum conservation goal is 122,000 – 180,000 spawning adult
salmon. As recently as 2002, 775,000 adults returned to spawn.
“I think that we made the right decision in adopting the three options
today,” said Dan Wolford, PFMC member and Coastside Fishing Club
science director. “The stocks have reached an unprecedented collapse.
I believe that recreational anglers will support these options to
protect the future of
Central Valley
salmon stocks.”
The PFMC claims that the reasons for the sudden collapse of the
Sacramento
fall Chinook stock is
“not readily apparent.”
“Ocean conditions have been poor, and there are a lot of things that
can go wrong for salmon in freshwater, “ said David Artmann,
Vice-Chairman of the PFMC.
However, fishermen point to massive increases in water exports from the
California Delta in recent years as the key factor in the decline,
accompanied by dams, increasing water pollution, poaching, unscreened
diversions, habitat loss and other problems.
"There are many factors that went into our salmon decline, but none
as significant as the loss of freshwater flows to the Delta and San
Francisco Bay which are essential for maintaining the biological
function of this estuary and sustaining native salmon and other fish
populations,” said Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific
Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, in a press conference
held by a coalition of fishing, tribal and environmental groups at the
Double Tree Hotel in Sacramento where the PFMC was meeting today.
"Our task now will be keeping our commercial and recreational
salmon fishermen and business solvent while we focus on fixing the Bay
and Delta, restoring flows and with them the fish,” Grader stated.
In my testimony today at the Council meeting, I said it was clear that
the collapse of
Central Valley
fall chinooks wouldn't have
occurred if the federal, state and regional governments had done their
job of protecting salmon and their habitat. Although ocean conditions
certainly played a role in the decline, I agreed with Grader that the
most significant significant factor in the collapse is the lack of
adequate freshwater flows into the Delta and
San Francisco
Bay
. The massive increases in
water exports in recent years coincide with the collapse of
Sacramento River
salmon and the collapse of
the California Delta food chain. Many of the salmon never made it from
the river into the ocean.
I urged the PFMC to exert all of the pressure they could to make the
state and federal governments fix the problems, led by increases in
water exports, causing the collapse. A good start would be for the
Council to review the relationship between the Pelagic Organism Decline
on the Delta and the salmon collapse, as well as the relationship
between Bay-Delta Estuary water and forage conditions and ocean
conditions. I believe that you can't separate ocean from Delta
conditions if you want to restore
Central Valley
chinooks and other
California Delta fish.
Meanwhile, the PFMC has requested a multi-agency task force led by the
National Marine Fisheries Service’s West-Coast Science Centers to
research about "50 potential causative areas" and report back
to the Council at the September meeting in
Boise
,
Idaho
, according to a press
release from the National Marine Fisheries Service.
For coastal waters off Oregon and California (South of Cape Falcon to
the U.S./Mexico border), the options for commercial and recreational
fishing range from no salmon fishing for Chinook or coho, to allowing a
small fishery of coho off central Oregon and short seasons in selected
areas for Chinook. As recently as 2003, fishermen caught as many as
944,000 Chinook and 84,000 coho.
The three detailed options adopted by the Council for the 2008 salmon
season for public comment and a schedule for meetings seeking public
comment will be posted on the Council’s web site, http://www.pcouncil.org,
in the near future.
As the Council was meeting, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Oregon Governor Theodore R. Kulongoski and Washington Governor Christine
O. Gregoire sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Carlos M.
Gutierrez requesting a fishery resource disaster declaration.
“If the fisheries are closed or restricted, those communities will
experience economic hardship even more severe than the losses they
endured after restrictions were imposed on West Coast ocean salmon
fisheries in 2006 in response to the low abundance of
Klamath River
fall Chinook salmon,” the letter stated. “Hence,
economic assistance will again be critical for the well-being of our
fishing communities and states.”
The
Klamath River
, where a normal run is
expected this year, should see much better fishing than normal, since
the catch normally shared with ocean commercial and recreational
fishermen will be allocated to in-river recreational fishermen. The
allocation would be an estimated 17,900 fish under option one, 21,900
fish under option two and 22,600 fish under option 3.
The Klamath fish are split 50/50 between Indian Tribal (Yurok and
Hoopa
Valley
) fisheries and recreational
and commercial fisheries under federal law.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/03/14/18485697.php
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