
WDFW
Says Low Coho, Wild Chinook Returns Will Limit Salmon Fishing
Columbia
Basin
Bulletin
March 7, 2008
Hatchery chinook salmon
returns to the
Columbia River
and portions of
Puget Sound
are expected to be up from
last year, but low returns of coho and wild chinook could put a damper
on upcoming salmon fisheries around
Washington
state.
Those salmon forecasts,
along with other preseason projections developed by the Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife and treaty tribes, were released this
week at a public meeting in
Olympia
.
Forecasts for chinook,
coho, sockeye, pink and chum salmon mark the starting point for
developing 2008 salmon-fishing seasons in
Puget Sound
, the
Columbia River
and
Washington
coastal areas. Fishery
managers have scheduled a series of public meetings through March before
finalizing fishing seasons in early April.
Salmon fisheries will be
constrained in some areas this year because of low returns to several
rivers of wild and hatchery coho, as well as wild chinook, according to
preseason forecasts. The most significant drop-off will be in the number
of
Columbia River
coho, which is expected to
total about 196,000, nearly 266,000 fewer fish than last year's run and
the lowest since the late-1990s.
Lower returns, along with
restrictions needed to protect both coho and chinook salmon populations
listed under the federal Endangered Species Act, will limit fishing
opportunities in the ocean and the
Columbia River
, said WDFW Director Jeff
Koenings.
"From
Alaska
to the Mexican border,
fisheries managers are considering harvest restrictions to protect weak
stocks," Koenings said. "For all of us conservation must be
our first priority, requiring a cautious approach in developing
fisheries. Recovering and protecting wild salmon populations is our most
important goal, and this season's fisheries will be designed to support
that effort."
Last year, WDFW added
seven new chinook salmon selective fisheries in
Puget Sound
. These fisheries allow anglers to catch and keep abundant
hatchery salmon but require that they release wild salmon -- many of
which are listed for protection under the ESA.
Consideration of
selective fisheries for hatchery chinook in
Puget Sound
once again will be on the agenda during this year's North of
Falcon meetings, said Koenings.
The overall forecast for
Puget Sound
chinook, including
ESA-protected salmon, is about 245,000 fish, a slight increase from last
year's forecast. But
Puget Sound
coho returns are expected
to drop to about 614,000 fish, nearly 16,000 less coho than last year's
expected return.
In the
Columbia River
, the overall forecast for
fall chinook is about 366,000 salmon, an increase of about 155,000 fish
compared to last year's actual return. Upriver "brights," a
main component of that run, is expected to return in abundant numbers
this year.
Another bright spot is
chum salmon. A strong chum return is forecasted for
Hood
Canal
and other areas of
Puget Sound
, where the run is expected
to total about 1.9 million fish.
But a
Lake Washington
sockeye fishery is unlikely
this year. The sockeye forecast is about 106,000, well below the minimum
return of 350,000 sockeye needed to consider opening a recreational
fishery in the lake.
State, tribal and federal
fishery managers will meet March 9-14 in
Sacramento
,
Calif.
, with the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (PFMC) to develop options for this year's commercial
and recreational ocean chinook and coho salmon fisheries. The PFMC
establishes fishing seasons in ocean waters off the
Pacific
Coast
.
Five additional public
meetings have been scheduled in March to discuss regional fisheries
issues. Input from these regional discussions will be considered as the
season-setting process moves into the "North of Falcon" and
PFMC meetings, which will determine the final 2008 salmon seasons. The
meetings are set for:
March 5 --
Grays Harbor
fisheries discussion,
6-8 p.m.
,
Montesano
City Hall
,
112 N. Main St.
, Montesano.
March 6 --
Willapa
Bay
fisheries discussion,
6-8 p.m.
, Raymond Elks Lodge,
326 Third St.
, Raymond.
March 12 --
Puget Sound
recreational fisheries
discussion,
6-8 p.m.
, WDFW Mill Creek Office,
16018 Mill Creek Blvd.
, Mill Creek.
March 17 --
Columbia River
fisheries discussion,
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
,
Vancouver
Water
Resources
Education
Center
,
4600 SE Columbia Way
,
Vancouver
,
Wash.
March 28 --
Grays Harbor
and
Willapa
Bay
fisheries meeting,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
,
Lacey
Community Center
,
6729 Pacific Ave.
, Lacey.
Two public North of
Falcon meetings, which involve planning fishing seasons for
Washington
's waters, including
Puget Sound
, will take place in March
and early April. The first meeting is scheduled March 18 at the
General
Administration
Building
in
Olympia
, and the second meeting is
scheduled April 1 at the Lynwood Embassy Suites. Both meetings will
begin at
9 a.m.
The PFMC is expected to
adopt the final ocean fishing seasons and harvest levels at its April
6-11 meeting in SeaTac. The 2008 salmon fisheries package for
Washington
's inside waters will be
completed by the state and tribal co-managers during the PFMC's April
meeting.
Preseason salmon
forecasts, proposed fishing options and details on upcoming meetings
will be posted as they become available on WDFW's North of Falcon
website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/northfalcon/.
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Source:
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