Coastsider

Salmon population headed for collapse, season may be cancelled

posted by Barry Parr on Jan 31, 2008 at 02:03 pm in  Environment
3 comments • Click to email this story

Pacific Fishery Management Council said in a report Tuesday that the Sacramento River’s fall chinook salmon population is headed for collapse and suggested that it may be necessary to close the salmon season entirely.

That would spell disaster for both commercial and recreational fishermen at Pillar Point Harbor, who typically depend on the salmon and Dungeness crab seasons for their entire incomes. Poor salmon returns from the Klamath River in 2006 and 2007 previously caused regulators to cut the first month and a half of salmon season, which normally starts on May 1, resulting in untold financial losses for fishermen.
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Fishermen say they knew the Sacramento River runs were weaker than expected last year, but even they were shocked by the low number of chinook returning to the river to spawn. Only about 90,000 returning adult salmon were counted in the Central Valley in 2007, the second lowest number since 1973, according to the report.

More worrisome is that only about 2,000 2-year-old chinooks — whose numbers are used to predict returns of adult spawners in the coming season — returned to the Central Valley last year — by far the lowest number ever counted. On average, about 40,000 juveniles, or “jacks,” return each year.

Some believe the losses are related to changes in the ocean linked to global warming. Others blame the troubles in California on increased pumping of fresh water from the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta, which supplies drinking water to millions of people in drought-stricken Southern California, as well as irrigation for America’s most fertile farming region.

There’s more at the County Times website.

Comments

Comment 1 by Anneliese Agren  on  Feb 01  at  2:40pm  •  All my comments • 

At this point, eating vegetarian is not a silly fad, but a necessity.

 
 
Comment 2 by Barry Parr  on  Feb 01  at  3:26pm  •  All my comments • 

Although a major reason for the collapsing salmon population is the diversion of water for agriculture.

 
 
Comment 3 by Eric Schiller  on  Feb 01  at  4:09pm  •  All my comments • 

It is terrible when a local food source vanishes. We waste so much energy transporting food! Recently I was at the HMB fish store and saw a couple ordering scallops that had been flown in from New England, passing over all the wonderful local fish.

I try to buy local fish and produce when I can. It not only supports the local economy, but also saves energy.

Humans have eaten fish and seafood for a long, long, time and it is part of a healthy diet. We must try to preserve our local renewable resource. We need regulations to keep water available to the salmon.


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