For a second year in a row, a collapsed salmon run on
the Sacramento River in California will
mean almost no sport fishing for
fall-run Chinook off the central and
southern Oregon coast.
That's in contrast to a
north coast Chinook season that is on
par or slightly better than 2008.
Taking up the slack,
though, with a robust run of coho salmon
forecast, ocean sport fishing off of all
of Oregon promises to be the best in
years.
Seasons, the allowed
total catch and bag limits were approved
Wednesday in Millbrae, Calif., by
members of the Pacific Fishery
Management Council.
The recommendation will
be forwarded to the National Marine
Fisheries Service for approval by May 1.
Here's a rundown of
what's in store:
Columbia River Subarea:
From Leadbetter Point, Wash., south to
Cape Falcon, near Manzanita, the season
will run June 28 through Sept. 30 or
until 88,200 hatchery fin-clipped coho
are landed.
The cap on Chinook is
5,400.
The season will be open
seven days a week with a two-salmon
daily bag limit, but only one of those
can be a Chinook.
As in past years, open
days and bag limits could be adjusted to
keep the season open.
Cape Falcon to the
california border: Open June 20 through
Aug. 31 or until 110,000 hatchery
fin-clipped coho are landed.
Fishing would be open
seven days a week with a three-coho
daily bag limit.
After that, coho fishing
would be open seven days a week Sept. 1
through 30 or until 7,000 hatchery fish
are caught with a two-fish daily limit.
Also, any fish left over
from the June 20 through Aug. 31 season
could be rolled over to the September
fishery.
Humbug Mountain near Port
Orford to the California border: Along
with the coho season, a minimal Chinook
season will be open off the southwest
corner of the state.
Fishing would be open for
just 10 days, Aug. 29 through Sept. 7,
with a two-fish bag limit and a 24-inch
minimum size for Chinook.
Hardest hit in the
regulations are commercial anglers.
Chinook fishing will be
prohibited off the entire California
coast for a second consecutive year, and
a similar ban will be in place off
Oregon south of Cape Falcon.
But commercial salmon
anglers will have a limited coho fishery
in September between Falcon and Humbug
Mountain.
Sacramento Chinook stocks
are the driver for both commercial and
sport fishing off of California and the
southern half of Oregon.
The minimum set for
maintaining healthy stocks is 122,000 to
180,000 spawning adult Chinook on the
Sacramento.
In 2008, 66,200 fall run
Chinook returned to the river.
This year's projection is
for double that, about 122,100 fish, but
still not enough to meet the minimum to
open sport and commercial seasons.
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