
Officials
shut salmon fishing in seven coastal areas of California, Oregon
By Matt
Weiser
March 13, 2008
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A4
Wildlife officials moved
Wednesday for early closure of seven coastal salmon fishing zones in
California
and
Oregon
, a sign of dire conditions
facing the
Central Valley
chinook.
The action came in a
conference between fisheries managers gathered in
Sacramento
for a series of meetings by
the Pacific Fisheries Management Council.
Officials representing
California
,
Oregon
and the federal government
opted to close the seven zones to protect salmon that remain alive in
the ocean.
They
decided early closures are needed because the council won't make a final
ruling on the 2008 salmon season until mid-April, and seasons that
normally open before then could jeopardize the species.
Commercial and sport
fishing are affected, from
Oregon
's
Cape
Falcon
to the Mexican border.
The California Central
Valley fall chinook salmon, a normally robust run that underpins the
fishery in both states, is in steep decline.
Last year's run was the
second-lowest in 35 years of record-keeping; this year is likely to be
worse.
Peter Dygert, National
Marine Fisheries Service biologist, said closing both commercial and
recreational seasons early is rare.
"It's always been
done to preserve some options for future fisheries," said Dygert.
"Now, the context is different. Now it's just to save fish for
spawning."
The seven zones include
two
Oregon
commercial areas that were
set to open Saturday and a
California
zone near
Fort
Bragg
that would have opened
April 7.
The rest of the
commercial season usually begins May 1.
Opening the two
Oregon
zones will be delayed until
April 15 at the request of
Oregon
officials.
But future actions
probably will keep them closed, Dygert said.
Four recreational zones
also were closed early. They cover the entirety of the
Oregon
and
California
coasts, except for a zone
near the
Klamath River
, and would have opened
either March 15 or April 5.
One near
Fort
Bragg
has been open since Feb. 16
and will now be closed April 1.
Joe Janisch of
Fort
Bragg
, president of the nonprofit
Salmon Restoration Association, said the closures will hurt his
community.
"There's probably
200 boats in this harbor that go out on the weekend to chase salmon that
won't be going," he said.
The council Friday is set
to adopt three options for the bulk of the 2008 season.
One is likely to include
total closure of all commercial and recreational salmon fishing in
California
and
Oregon
.
It will choose a final
option in April. State and federal agencies adopt that as formal
regulations.
California
is likely to also close
fishing on
Central Valley
rivers.
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Source:
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/781917.html
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