
Panel
to consider ban on
California
salmon fishing
POPULATION
COLLAPSE INSPIRES DRASTIC TALK
By Mike
Taugher
Bay Area News Group
March 10, 2008
A key federal advisory
panel this week is expected to begin considering an unprecedented ban on
salmon fishing in
California
in response to an alarming
collapse of a signature fishery.
Salmon populations are
depressed from the Bay Area to
Washington
state, but the problem is
particularly acute for
California
's most productive run - the
Sacramento River
fall run, which produces
more than 80 percent of the salmon caught off the
California
coast.
Not only did numbers
plunge steeply and unexpectedly last year, but a key indicator suggests
things could be much worse a year from now. "The situation is
unprecedented and off the charts," said Donald McIsaac, executive
director of the Pacific Fishery Management Council.
Though many researchers
are pointing the finger at adverse ocean conditions, McIsaac and others
said fluctuations in the ocean's currents and surface temperatures alone
do not explain the problems.
And that is focusing
renewed attention on the delta and
California
's water delivery system,
which is already being blamed at least partially for the collapse of
several other fish species.
"I don't think you
can say it's just ocean," McIsaac said.
McIsaac cautioned that
the cause of the salmon collapse remains a mystery and that researchers
have 46 potential factors to investigate.
That list includes
everything from disease, hatchery problems and an increase in predators
to water diversions and a possible connection between the salmon
collapse and the delta's ongoing ecological crisis.
"People will be
looking at that," he said, adding, "There's no obvious single
smoking gun."
The fishery management
council, which meets through Friday in
Sacramento
, is expected to discuss the
California
salmon collapse Tuesday
with the goal of proposing three options for the fishing season by the
end of the week. A final decision is expected during its April meeting
in
Seattle
.
It is widely anticipated
that one option will be closing the salmon season entirely, a drastic
move that has never happened on the West Coast. The closest the council
got was two years ago, when the commercial fishing season was cut by
two-thirds to protect Klamath River salmon that had been battered by
poor habitat and upstream water diversions.
"I don't know if
they have any choices," said Zeke Grader, executive director of the
San Francisco-based Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's
Associations. "As some of my guys have said, even if they give us a
season, so what? There's no fish to catch."
Last year, state
economists estimated the economic output of recreational and commercial
salmon fishing in
California
was about $20 million, a
major decline from an industry that produced $100 million in the late
1970s and more than $40 million in the late 1990s.
Meanwhile, the commercial
salmon fleet in
California
, which 30 years ago numbered 4,500 boats, has dwindled to
fewer than 600.
"We're not making a
living. There's a lot of guys dropping out," said Larry Collins, a
salmon and crab fisherman out of
San Francisco
who blames state water
managers for his problems. "I'm struggling to make my
payments."
So far, most of the blame
for the salmon's collapse has been placed on ocean conditions.
Specifically, the
Pacific Ocean
in 2002 entered a warm
phase that delays the onset of current "upwelling" off the
West Coast and starves the marine ecosystem of nutrients and food.
Up and down the coast,
salmon stocks were depressed with runs doing worse the farther south one
looked, said Allen Grover, a biologist with the California Department of
Fish and Game.
Since the
Central Valley
runs are the furthest
south, it makes sense that they would appear the hardest hit, Grover
said.
The Pacific Decadal
Oscillation, which was discovered just 10 years ago, is a shifting ocean
and atmospheric climate pattern that affects West Coast currents and
salmon populations.
McIsaac and others say it
is likely to be only part of the story for the
Sacramento River
fish, which, for example,
took a sharper downturn than those in the
Klamath River
. Last year's return on the Klamath was strong.
"It's not the same
thing that happened on the Klamath River fish," McIsaac said.
Peter Moyle, a leading
University of California-Davis expert on California's native fish, said
a run of years with favorable ocean conditions might have masked
problems upstream.
During good years in the
ocean, baby salmon might have had a tough time as they swam downriver
and through the Delta to rear and grow strong enough to survive in the
ocean. But once they reached the open water, those survivors were able
to thrive.
When ocean conditions
soured though, salmon were hit with a double whammy.
"It's quite likely
that when ocean conditions got worse, suddenly you got this massive
collapse," Moyle said. "That suggests the ocean conditions
could no longer compensate for conditions upstream."
Although Moyle cautioned
there are numerous possible explanations for the decline in salmon,
"You can't dismiss the problems in the delta and the problems with
the diversion of water."
The numbers of returning
fall-run salmon in the Sacramento River last year - fewer than 90,000 -
were the second-lowest ever. They represent a steep decline from recent
years and wipe out gains made since the early 1990s, a span in which $1
billion was spent to improve conditions for Sacramento River salmon.
What's worse is the
number of 2-year-old salmon that returned last year - just 2,000, or a
quarter of the 8,000 jacks that preceded the disastrous 2007 return.
There is some good news,
however, in that the Pacific entered a cold phase last year, said Bill
Peterson, an oceanographer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
Peterson is convinced
that the ocean conditions and the poor upwelling in recent years is the
most likely cause of the salmon's decline.
"The salmon guys,
they look to the freshwater for all the answers," he said.
In 2005, for example,
upwelling was badly disrupted and that resulted in widespread deaths of
sea birds and other problems.
"At the time, we
said there are going to be problems with salmon in two years, and here
we are," he said.
Peterson added, though,
that the Pacific Decadal Oscillation appears to be changing, possibly in
response to a warming climate. The shifts have become more frequent and
its effects on upwelling may be more severe.
"What we're
wondering is whether last summer is the first of what we're going to
see," he said.
"We're getting
really strong winds late in the upwelling season. If that's the case,
that doesn't seem to be a good thing for salmon."
At a meeting last week in
Santa Rosa, a few hundred salmon fishers showed up to prepare for this
week's meetings in Sacramento. Many expressed uncertainty about their
future but no doubt about what is causing their problems - water
deliveries out of the Delta.
Several speakers urged
the commercial fishers, recreational anglers, ocean and river guides in
the audience to stop battling over access to fish and instead unite
against the water agencies they see as the bigger threat to the salmon
because of the large amounts of water they pump out of the Delta.
"If we want to get
our fisheries back, that's where the battle is," said Grader.
"You can't continue taking 6 or 7 million acre-feet out of the
estuary and expect it to survive."
Contact Mike Taugher at (925) 943-8257 or mtaugher@bayareanewsgroup.com.
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Source:
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