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North
Coast
Harvest Options Shrink For
Chinook, Better For South
Northwest Fishletter
March 28, 2007
The Pacific Fishery
Management Council is calling for a reduced chinook catch off the
Washington Coast, but is backing improved harvest options for southern
Oregon and California commercial fishermen, who faced severe cuts in
2006 that allowed more Klamath River fall chinook to spawn.
After NOAA Fisheries recommended reducing harvest on lower
Columbia
tules from 49 percent to 42
percent to offer more protection for the ESA listed wild fall chinook
stock, the PFMC whittled down the range of harvest recommendations of
its own salmon panel for the region north of
Oregon
's
Cape
Falcon
. The numbers went down from
a 25,000 to 45,000-fish range to 26,000 to 35,750, spread over three
options, all lower than last year's total allowable non-Indian catch of
65,000 chinook.
The final decision will
be made at the next PFMC meeting April 2-6.
With the latest stock
abundance forecast yet to be plugged in, the 35,750-fish ceiling may
need further reduction because the Council estimated that such a level
of catch would put the exploitation rate on the tules' index stock (Coweeman
River) above the feds' recommendation by a couple of percent, up to 44.3
percent.
Coho harvest options
developed by the salmon panel (only marked fish harvested) for the north
coast ranged from 80,000 to 160,000, but were reduced to an 80,000 to
140,000 fish range. At the high end, about 117,600 coho would be
allotted for recreational fishers. Last year, the north of Falcon coho
quota for sportfishers was about 73,000 fish.
The improved outlook for
Klamath River
chinook in 2007 should
boost fishing opportunities significantly off the southern
Oregon
and northern
California
coasts. Managers have
estimated the Klamath chinook age-4 component at the lowest level on
record, around 26,000 fish, but the age-3 component, is estimated at the
highest level on record--515,400 fish. Most spawners are age-4's.
The PFMC
report said if last year's draconian regulations were repeated this
year, coupled with no sportfishing in the river, more than 60,000
chinook would be allowed to spawn, about twice the number that did last
year.
Last year's harvest cuts
were expected to yield about 21,000 spawners, but more than 30,000 made
it back. After much political wrangling, a $60-million disaster aid
package was approved last week by the Senate Appropriations Committee to
help
California
and
Oregon
fishermen and related
businesses who were affected by the harvest reduction.
The
Central Valley
fall chinook forecast is
for about 500,000 returning fish, 80 percent of last year's pre-season
forecast and the lowest estimate since 1992. That's better than last
year's actual return of 435,000, which came in nearly 50 percent less
than expected.
The PFMC's March report
noted several "concerns," including uncertainty over the ocean
harvest impacts on lower
Columbia
coho, which were listed for ESA protection in 2005. Little
data is available from coded-wire-tag data to determine the ocean
distribution pattern on the stocks involved.
The change in commercial
fishing patterns off
Vancouver Island
has also thrown off
traditional harvest models, which based the size of Canadian catches on
effort that was focused on chinook stocks throughout the summer. With
commercials fishing earlier to avoid their own weak stocks, the PFMC's
salmon technical committee says it intends to modify the Pacific Salmon
Commission's model to update the composition of the Canadian catches.
But they said methods to
update the chinook FRAM [Fishery Regulation Assessment Model] model have
not yet begun. A WDFW harvest report on Puget Sound chinook stocks
completed last year said the FRAM model underestimated the Canadian
commercial and recreational chinook catch off BC and in Georgia Strait
by 191,000 fish in 2005. It was actually on the order of 708,000, rather
than the model's projection of 516,000 chinook.
However, the model's
projection of north of Falcon commercial, tribal and sport chinook
catches in U.S. waters over-estimated the actual 127,000-chinook catch
in the 2005 fisheries by about 5 percent.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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.newsdata.com/fishletter/228/2story.html
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