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Fishermen,
Tribes and Enviros Propose Solutions to the Salmon Crisis
by Dan
Bacher
March 8, 2008
Representatives
from a broad-based coalition of commercial fishermen, recreational
anglers, California Indian Tribes and environmental groups will hold a
news conference proposing solutions to the salmon crisis on Friday,
March 14, at
10 a.m.
at the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (PFMC) meeting at the Double Tree Hotel in
Sacramento
.
The population of
Central Valley
chinook salmon, the
"work horse" of West Coast salmon stocks, plummeted from a
record abundance of 804,401 fish in 2002 to a record low of only 90,414
salmon in 2007. While the state and federal governments claim that the
cause of the collapse is "unfavorable ocean conditions,"
fishing, tribal and environmental groups point to the role of record
water exports out of the California Delta in recent years in the
decline.
Delta exports increased from 5 million acre feet to peaks over 6.3
million acre feet from 2001 to 2007, according to John Beuttler,
conservation director of the California Sportfishing Protection
Alliance. The collapse of Sacramento River salmon stocks has coincided
with the Pelagic Organism Decline (POD) in which four species of fish -
delta smelt, longfin smelt, juvenile striped bass and threadfin shad -
have crashed to record low populations. The number one cause of the
Delta fish decline is increases in water exports, followed by invasive
species and toxics.
In the DFG "information exchange" meeting regarding salmon
stocks in
Santa Rosa
on Wednesday, I proposed
that the state and federal governments hold an emergency meeting or
conference exploring the relation between ocean conditions and Bay-Delta
estuary conditions - and between the salmon collapse and the Pelagic
Organism Decline.
It is my contention that you can't separate ocean conditions from
conditions in the Bay-Delta Estuary. Ocean productivity is as reliant on
freshwater flows from the largest estuary on the West Coast, the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, as it is upon upwelling, water
temperatures, wind and currents.
The National Marine Fisheries Service, in a press release on Monday,
March 3, said an "environmental anomaly" was believed to be
responsible for the salmon collapse.
“The cold waters of the California Current flow southward from the
northern Pacific along the West Coast and are associated with upwelling,
an ocean condition caused by winds that bring nutrients to the ocean’s
surface and is the main source of nourishment for the ocean’s food
web,” the agency said. “In 2005 a southward shift in the jet stream,
delayed favorable winds and upwelling for the California Current, which
normally begins in spring. The winds instead arrived in mid-July,
causing high surface water temperatures and very low nutrient production
within the nearshore marine ecosystem.”
However, in the press release and an accompanying "study" the
federal agency's completely avoids discussing the impact of declining
habitat and water conditions on many salmon spawning rivers, as well as
the impact of record exports out of the Delta. This is obviously done so
they can avoid any responsibility for the years of state and federal
mismanagement of salmon and other species that have led to the current
collapse.
The sharp decline of the Central Valley king salmon is expected to
result in an economic disaster for the commercial and recreational
sportfishing industry, an industry already hammered by groundfish
restrictions resulting from decades of federal and state mismanagement.
Commercial fishermen, anglers, tribes and environmental groups will
outline their proposed solutions to the unprecedented collapse of
Central Valley salmon, until recently the most robust run of chinook
salmon south of the Columbia River, in this news conference.
Here is
the text of the press release:
P R E S S A D V I S O R Y
Commercial Fishermen, Anglers, Tribal Nations and
Environmental Groups Propose Solutions to the Salmon Crisis
For Immediate Release: March 7, 2008
Contact: David Nesmith 510-893-1330, cell (510) 693-4979
Dick Pool (925) 825-8560
“The Crisis and Recovery Strategies for Salmon”
News Conference Will Call For Immediate Actions
WHAT:
A panel of fishing, tribal and environmental groups will deliver
proposed solutions to the current crisis in the Delta fisheries and
unprecedented collapse of the Central Valley chinook salmon runs. The
group is proposing immediate, practical and necessary measures that will
begin to rebuild the stocks of salmon. We believe these solutions could
help prevent future fishery disasters for
California
. The actions of the Pacific Fishery Management Council
(PFMC) are tattered bandaids to the grievous wounds suffered by the
salmon.
WHERE:
Double Tree Hotel, Sacramento
Del Paso Room
2001 Point West Way
(916) 929-8855
Site of the Pacific Fishery Management Council Meeting
WHEN:
Friday March 14, 2008 at 10:00 AM.
WHO:
Bill Jennings, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance
Zeke Grader, Pacific Coast Federation of Fisherman's Associations, PCFFA
Dick Pool, Pro-Troll Fishing Products
Caleen Sisk-Franco, Winnemen Wintu Tribe
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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/2008/03/08/18484466.php
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