
Feds
warn entire salmon season could be halted
Peter
Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer
March 12, 2008
So few salmon are living
in the ocean and rivers along the
Pacific
Coast
that salmon fishing in
California
and
Oregon
will have to be shut down
completely this year unless an emergency exception is granted, Pacific
Fishery Management Council representatives said Tuesday.
It would mark the first
time ever that the federal agency created 22 years ago to manage the
Pacific
Coast
fishery canceled the
coast's traditional salmon fishing season from April to mid-November.
Such a move would
jeopardize the livelihoods of close to 1,000 commercial fishermen from
Santa Barbara
to
Washington
State
and would significantly
drive up the price of West Coast wild salmon.
A decision to shut down
the fishery also would kill recreational salmon fishing for some 2.4
million anglers in
California
, an activity that the
American Sportfishing Association has estimated is worth $4 billion.
The council is expected
to make a recommendation in April to the National Marine Fisheries
Service, which will make the final decision about what to do about the
collapsing salmon fishery.
"This is
unprecedented," said Dave Bitts, a commercial salmon and crab
fisherman based in
Eureka
. "The
Sacramento
fish are our bread and
butter, and there are not even any crumbs. It's horrible. It means half
or more of my income is not going to be there at all this year."
Why
season can be closed
The prospect of banning
fishing came up during the first full day of presentations about the
salmon crisis during the council's weeklong meeting at the Doubletree
Hotel in
Sacramento
.
The council's salmon
management plan, first adopted as part of the 1976 Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act and amended several times since
then, requires the council to close ocean fishing if the number of
spawning salmon do not reach the conservation objectives set for the
fishery.
There are many ways to
count fish, depending on what rivers and tributaries are included, but
only 63,900 fall run salmon were documented spawning in the
Sacramento River
in 2007, far below the
122,000 to 189,000 objective the council had set.
The doom and gloom
brought on by the poor run was made worse by news that the number of
jacks - 2-year-old fish that return to the river a year early to spawn -
is the lowest ever recorded in the
Central Valley
fall run. Scientists use
the number of jacks that return as an indicator of what next year's
spawning season will look like.
Fisheries experts
expected 157,000 jacks, but counted only 6,000.
What it means is that all
fishing where the fall run chinook are caught must be closed unless
there is an emergency rule allowing an exemption, said Chuck Tracy, a
staff officer for the council. Chinook from the
Sacramento
and its tributaries are
caught in
California
,
Oregon
and
Washington
, but the catch in
Washington
is historically small
enough that it might not fall under the rule.
"
Washington
could be exempted, but
California
and
Oregon
will definitely be
affected,"
Tracy
said.
Cape
Falcon
, in northern
Oregon
, would likely be the
boundary for a fishery closure, said Peter Dygert, the fisheries
management chief of the sustainable fisheries division of the National
Marine Fisheries Service. "Any fishing south of
Cape
Falcon
will have to be implemented
under emergency rule. There are going to be relatively few fish in the
ocean overall."
Federal
disaster possible
The situation is so bad
that there have been discussions during the meetings about declaring the
salmon fishery a federal disaster,
Tracy
said.
The Klamath and
Trinity river
run, another major salmon
run along the
Pacific
Coast
, was declared a disaster in
2006 after a similar collapse, freeing up money to help those who are
financially dependent on the salmon industry. The Klamath and Trinity
crisis led to a dismal commercial and recreational salmon catch last
year.
"This is the same
situation we were in two years ago in the Klamath,"
Tracy
said. At that time,
"they did allow some fisheries in the ocean through an emergency
rule."
But, in many ways, the
situation is even worse now. Peter Lawson, of the
National
Marine
Fisheries
Service
Northwest
Marine
Fisheries
Science
Center
, told the council that five
different salmon stocks in the three states have failed two years in a
row, including chinook and coho salmon.
The emergency exemption
allowed some fishing along the
Pacific
Coast
after the salmon crisis on the Klamath, but Fisheries
experts were hard pressed to come up with any excuse the council could
use this time to justify an exception, given the dire circumstances.
"The
California
,
Oregon
and
Washington
coastal stocks are all
depressed,"
Tracy
said. "The
Sacramento
fall chinook are in the
worst shape. Is it a crisis? If you are a commercial fisherman or
someone who relies on the fishing industry, yes."
The
Sacramento River
fall run, the
San Francisco
Bay
's biggest wild salmon run,
was the second worst on record for spawning chinook. The worst year was
in 1992, but the fishery recovered and as recently as 2002 there were
hundreds of thousands of spawning salmon in the
Sacramento
watershed.
At its peak, the fall
run, which essentially means fish that are at their spawning peak in
September and October, exceeded 800,000 fish. Over the past decade, the
numbers had never fallen below 250,000 - until this past fall.
Nothing
to catch
Fisheries experts say
even if the salmon fishery remained wide open there would not be any
salmon left to catch.
The collapse is
especially troublesome because the recreational and commercial fishing
industries all along the Pacific coast depend on fish born in the
Sacramento River
and its tributaries. The
Central Valley
chinook, or king, salmon
pass through the
San Francisco
Bay
after hatching in the river
and roam the
Pacific Ocean
as far away as
Alaska
before returning three
years later to the place where they were born.
The fall run - named for
the time the fish pass through the
Golden Gate
returning to their native streams - is, in fact, the last survivor
of dozens of teeming salmon runs up and down the Pacific coast. The
Central Valley
's spring run may once have
been the largest, but most of the habitat is now behind dams.
The scientists, fishermen
and tribal representatives at the meetings this week are trotting out
various theories for the decline, including global warming, diversions
of freshwater in the delta, pumping operations, a lack of nutrient rich
deep ocean upwellings and exposure to pollutants. One document lists 46
possible reasons.
Dygert said the death of
so many salmon "is suggesting a broad-scale ocean survival
problem."
"One thing we know
is that these fish had plenty of parents," said Bitts.
"Something has happened since then."
The council, which will
propose three options for managing the fishery by the end of the week,
asked staff scientists Tuesday to investigate a variety of possible
causes, including hatchery operations and ecological changes in the
ocean and fresh water environments.
Fisheries
in crisis
What's next: The
Pacific Fishery Management Council, meeting in
Sacramento
, will consider recommendations by conservationists,
biologists, tribal interests and fishing industry representatives. The
council will propose three options Friday for what to do about this
year's fishing season.
Input: The
public can comment over the next month in writing or at hearings in
Oregon
and
Washington
on March 31 and in
Eureka
on April 1.
More information:
links.sfgate.com/ZCRE
and links.sfgate.com/ZCRF.
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Source:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/03/12/MNSLVHTM5.DTL
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