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Plan
B: Salmon fisherman Rusty Boro rests on his boat, Bebe, dockside
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Salmon
tracker: A researcher inserts an acoustic transmitter into a young
salmon in |
Federal officials this
month canceled the salmon fishing season from southern
Farther north, salmon in
the
And up in the
Regarding the recent news
about the
"It's going to be
devastating," says Mr. Grader, executive director of the Pacific
Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations in
The economic impact of
the
The governors of
Among those challenges
and competing interests: farm irrigators, developers, industries that
pollute rivers and streams, commercial and sport fishermen, and native
American tribes that fished these waters long before European-Americans
pushed West seeking fur, land, and gold.
But most of all, it's
dams – hundreds of them, from small ones to the eight mammoth concrete
"mainstem" dams that turned the free-flowing Columbia and
Snake Rivers into a series of slack-water reservoirs producing
electrical power and irrigation and allowing oceangoing ships to sail
upriver to Lewiston, Idaho.
There's added urgency,
scientists say, because of global climate change affecting both ends of
a salmon's life cycle: ocean conditions where they spend several years
becoming mature adults as well as the far reaches of rivers and streams
where they return for spawning in the cold, clean water and natural
gravel beds.
A recent report by former
"Salmon are
exceptionally resilient and flexible and they will need all that
resilience to survive global warming," says Ms. Glick.
The Climate Impacts Group
at the
In
A major part of the
problem, critics of current water-management practices say, is the large
amount of delta water diverted south for agriculture and municipal
purposes. "This ruling makes it clear that there are biological
limits to the amount of water we can export south," says Mike
Sherwood, the Earthjustice attorney who represented the coalition of
fishing and conservation groups that filed suit. The recent cancellation
of the salmon fishing season along the coast of
"This is a disaster
for West Coast salmon fisheries, under any standard," says Don
Hansen, who chairs the Pacific Fishery Management Council, one of eight
regional fishery management councils established by Congress in 1976.
"There will be a huge impact on the people who fish for a living,
those who eat wild-caught king salmon, those who enjoy recreational
fishing, and the businesses and coastal communities dependent on these
fisheries."
The situation is grim for
salmon, but not without the possibility of resolution. "These
salmon are recoverable if we make smart choices and make them
soon," says Todd True, another Earthjustice attorney. "The
science tells us it's not hopeless, but it is increasingly urgent to pay
attention and change the way we're managing these three rivers so all
people can enjoy salmon again."
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
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Source:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0423/p13s01-sten.html