Habitat

Columbia Basin Partnership Develops Preliminary Abundance Goals For Salmon, Steelhead

August 24th, 2018

At its meeting July 10 in Missoula, MT, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Fish and Wildlife Committee reviewed draft vision statement, guiding principles and qualitative goals developed over the past year and a half by the Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force.

At last week’s meeting the Committee, along with the full Council, took an extra step and delved into the details of the Partnership’s work.

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Habitat

Willamette Falls Sea Lion Task Force Meets Three Days Next Week To Review Lethal Removal Request

August 17th, 2018

Eighteen members of a task force will meet next week to review an Oregon request to lethally remove some sea lions at Willamette Falls on Oregon’s Willamette River to protect threatened and endangered fish that pass over the Falls into the upper reaches of the river and its tributaries.

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Habitat

Legislation Streamlining Sea Lion Removal In Columbia River Basin Clears Senate Committee

August 10th, 2018

U.S. Senate legislation that would change the existing Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 by giving more flexibility to remove sea lions that prey upon threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River passed one last hurdle before full Senate approval.

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Harvest

Scientists Review Yakama Nation Master Plan For Coho Salmon Reintroduction, Supplementation

August 10th, 2018

After a review requested by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Fish and Wildlife Committee, the Independent Scientific Review Panel found the Yakama Nation’s coho plan for the Melvin R. Sampson coho facility in the Yakima River sub-basin to be a well-conceived plan for coho salmon reintroduction and supplementation.

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Biological Opinions

Council Releases Report To Governors Detailing BPA Fish/Wildlife Costs For FY 2017

July 20th, 2018

The cost of federally funded fish and wildlife programs in the Columbia River Basin totaled $450.4 million in fiscal year 2017 (Oct. 1, 2016 – Sept. 30, 2017), according to the annual report released last week by the Northwest Planning and Conservation Council to Northwest governors.

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Habitat

Study Looks At Harbor Seal Predation, Wild Chinook Survival In Washington, British Columbia Waters

July 13th, 2018

Data from 20 wild fall chinook salmon populations in Washington and British Columbia waters has shown that 19 of the populations when returning as adults had been affected by predation by harbor seals as juveniles, and that 14 of those populations had negative effects that were significant.

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Biological Opinions

Council F&W Committee Talks Policy About BPA Project Funding Cuts, Columbia Basin Fish Accords

July 13th, 2018

Looking for a 10 percent cut in Bonneville Power Administration fish and wildlife funding and with an extension of the Columbia Basin Fish Accords still uncertain, one member of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council this week says he would like to see a closer coordination between the Council and Bonneville in determining priorities, especially with the Accords.

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Harvest

With Run Downgrade, Summer Chinook Fishing Below Bonneville Dam Ends Early; Sockeye Above Forecast

June 29th, 2018

Summer chinook recreational fishing that was to extend to the end of July was abruptly canceled downstream of Bonneville Dam where anglers have already exceeded a new catch allocation based on a 23 percent decline in the run size forecast.

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Habitat

Tie Vote In U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Lower Court Rulings In Washington State Fish Culverts Case

June 15th, 2018

Without offering an explanatory opinion, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down a tie vote Monday affirming the position of Washington Indian tribes in a lengthy litigation series requiring the state to modify road culverts that block salmon passage.

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Harvest

Ocean’s Wild Forage Fish Populations Under Pressure As Key Food Source For Farmed Fish

June 15th, 2018

Anchovies, herring, sardines and other forage fish play an essential role in the food web as prey for seabirds, marine mammals and larger fish like salmon. When ground into fishmeal and oil, they are also a key food source for farmed seafood and land-based livestock such as pigs and poultry.

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Climate Change

Study Says International Fisheries Agreements Outpaced By Movement Of Fish Species

June 15th, 2018

The world's system for allocating fish stocks is being outpaced by the movement of fish species in response to climate change, according to a study undertaken by an international team of marine ecologists, fisheries and social scientists and lawyers.

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Habitat

Science Panel Reviews Tribes’ Master Plan For Recovering Pacific Lamprey In Columbia River Basin

June 1st, 2018

A scientific panel completed its review of Northwest tribes’ master plan outlining activities to recover Pacific lamprey in the Columbia River basin, saying that the plan meets scientific review criteria with some qualifications.

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Habitat

Klickitat River Spring Chinook Master Plan Reviewed; Transition To Integrated Hatchery Planned

June 1st, 2018

A review of the Yakama Nation’s master plan to transition its Klickitat River hatchery program from a segregated to an integrated program in order to rebuild the river’s spring chinook salmon runs found the plan to be “well-conceived and presented,” but it also left the Independent Scientific Review Panel with questions.

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Harvest

Successful Lake Trout Suppression In Lake Pend Oreille Brings Back Kokanee; Walleye Next Challenge

May 18th, 2018

A suppression program in the largest lake in Idaho to significantly reduce the number of lake trout has been successful at recovering the lake’s kokanee population, but biologists are now worrying about another invasive predator – walleye.

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Harvest

Fearing Fish Disease Transmission, WDFW Denies Transfer Of Atlantic Salmon To Kitsap County Net Pens

May 18th, 2018

Citing the risk of fish disease transmission, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has denied permission for Cooke Aquaculture to transport 800,000 juvenile Atlantic salmon from its hatchery near Rochester to net pens at Rich Passage in Kitsap County.

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Habitat

Just Like Last Year, Sea Lions At Willamette Falls Hammering Wild Winter Steelhead Run

April 27th, 2018

California sea lions have taken as much as 18 percent of the 2017-18 wild run of winter steelhead at Willamette Falls prior to March 2018, the second year the sea lions, perched at the base of the falls near Portland, have taken a huge chunk out of a small run of fish that are listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act.

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Habitat

U.S. Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments In Washington State Salmon Passage/Culvert Case

April 20th, 2018

Lawyers involved with a long-running case related to culverts in Washington state that block salmon from migrating into historic spawning habitat got a tough audience in arguing the case before the United States Supreme Court Wednesday.

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Habitat

Lower Columbia River White Sturgeon Numbers Decent; Some Upriver Populations Show Abundance Decline

April 20th, 2018

After years of low abundance of legal-sized and adult-sized white sturgeon in the lower Columbia River downstream of Bonneville Dam, the numbers of fish are beginning to improve, according to a summary of sturgeon abundance throughout the Columbia and Snake rivers presented at the Northwest Power and Conservation Council meeting last week in Portland.

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Harvest

Low Bonneville Dam Passage For Spring Chinook Results In One More Fishing Day In Lower Columbia

April 13th, 2018

Despite few fish crossing Bonneville Dam and a spring chinook salmon run that for now doesn’t seem to be gaining steam, Oregon and Washington agreed to add one more day of fishing Saturday, April 14 for recreational anglers downstream of Bonneville Dam.

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Habitat

Long-Term Study Looks At Cutthroat Trout And Logging That Follows Oregon Forest Practices Act

April 6th, 2018

A decade-long study of cutthroat trout in the Oregon Coast Range has found that logging practices conducted in accord with the Oregon Forest Practices Act had no adverse impacts on coastal cutthroat trout and coho salmon populations or movements.

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Harvest

Harvest Managers Predict 23 Percent Decline In 2018 Fall Chinook Run, One-Half Of 10-Year Average

March 2nd, 2018

The US v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which provides fishery managers with in-season forecasts, is forecasting a 2018 fall chinook run into the Columbia River that is 23 percent less than the actual number of fish that returned last year and about one-half of the 10-year average.

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Habitat

Independent Science Panel Reviews Upper Columbia River Spring Chinook Recovery Efforts

February 16th, 2018

After a decade of habitat improvements spurred by a 2007 NOAA Fisheries recovery plan, upper Columbia River spring chinook salmon still remain a population at a high risk of extinction and a panel of scientists wanted to know why.

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Habitat

By The Numbers:Trapping,Transporting Salmonids In Reintroduction Efforts In Blocked Upper Deschutes

February 16th, 2018

Portland General Electric biologists are continuing to transport salmon and steelhead adults trapped downstream of the Pelton Round Butte Complex of dams on the Deschutes River and transporting them up into Lake Billy Chinook in their efforts to reintroduce the fish to blocked areas in the upper Deschutes basin.

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Harvest

Preliminary Data Shows Steelhead Mortality From Gillnetting May Be Lower Than Thought

January 26th, 2018

The ability of commercial gillnetters to fish the mainstem Columbia River has mostly been removed by harvest reforms in Oregon and Washington, citing gillnetting as non-selective and potentially damaging to salmon and steelhead, including the 13 species listed as threatened or endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act.

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Habitat

Puget Sound Chinook:WDFW Commission Advises Managers To Strike Better Conservation/Harvest Balance

January 26th, 2018

The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission this week advised state fishery managers to strike a better balance between conservation and harvest opportunities as they work with tribal co-managers to revise a proposed plan for managing chinook harvest in Puget Sound.

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Biological Opinions

Council Mulling Issues Likely To Arise During Coming Update Of Basin Fish And Wildlife Program

January 19th, 2018

Anticipating issues that could be included in a nearly year-long process to update its Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council Fish and Wildlife Committee at its meeting last week in Portland began to consider what might become important issues during that effort.

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Habitat

NOAA’s Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force Aims For Common Goals On Salmon/Steelhead Recovery

January 19th, 2018

One of the many ongoing efforts regarding recovery of salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River basin is being undertaken by a group organized by NOAA Fisheries known as the Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force.

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Harvest

Council Hears Rundown On Ocean Conditions Impact On Columbia River Salmon/Steelhead

January 12th, 2018

The initial period after ocean entry for Columbia River basin juvenile salmon and steelhead is when most of the mortality occurs during their lives at sea, so ocean conditions – temperatures and nutrient supplies – during that period are critical to how many of the fish will return to the river as adults one to three years later.

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Habitat

Long-Term Idaho Salmon Supplementation Study Delivers Mixed Results; Not A Stand-Alone Recovery Tool

January 12th, 2018

A newly published study finds that hatchery supplementation after 22 years in two Idaho drainages, increased chinook salmon abundance at some life stages, but the effects did not persist after supplementation of hatchery stock ceased and had no apparent influence on productivity.

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Climate Change

Council Symposium Looks At White Sturgeon Survival Throughout Columbia Basin

January 5th, 2018

A symposium to share information about the state of wild and hatchery white sturgeon found in waters from the mouth of the Columbia River to the Snake River to the Kootenai River was hosted in mid-November by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council.

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Harvest

Fish Traps, Alternative To Current Commercial Fishing Methods, Being Tested In Lower Columbia

December 15th, 2017

Pound nets or fish traps used to capture large numbers of salmon were outlawed on the Columbia River in 1936, over 80 years ago, largely due to massive harvests of salmon and steelhead when using the gear. So why has a Northwest nonprofit been testing the fish traps near Cathlamet, Washington for the last two years?

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Harvest

Science Panel Hears Research On Sea Lion Consumption Of Spring Chinook Below Bonneville

December 15th, 2017

In the Columbia River between the Pacific Ocean and Bonneville Dam, a distance of about 145 miles, a substantial number of adult spring chinook salmon that are identified in the lower river continue to disappear before reaching the dam, research by NOAA Fisheries shows.

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Habitat

New Approach In Idaho Underway To Better Direct Salmon Habitat Restoration, Measure Results

December 1st, 2017

A group of Idaho fisheries conservation leaders has developed a new approach toward evaluating and prescribing effective habitat restoration measures for salmon and steelhead in the upper Salmon River Basin, with potential for the approach to be applied elsewhere.

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Biological Opinions

Columbia River Harvest: US V. Oregon EIS Completed, Preferred Alternative Extends Current Agreement

December 1st, 2017

NOAA Fisheries completed an environmental review of potential options that will guide the final agreement for managing salmon and steelhead fisheries in the Columbia River Basin for the next ten years.

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Harvest

Recovery Of West Coast Marine Mammals Dramatically Increasing Consumption Of Chinook Salmon

December 1st, 2017

Recovering populations of killer whales, sea lions and harbor seals on the West Coast have dramatically increased their consumption of chinook salmon in the last 40 years, which may now exceed the combined harvest by commercial and recreational fisheries, a new study finds.

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Harvest

Sturgeon Fishing Day Added, Mainstem Night Fishing Ban Lifted, Wild Steelhead Passage Still Very Low

October 27th, 2017

Oregon and Washington confirmed that tribal commercial platform, hook and line fishing will continue through the end of 2017, while also adding a day this weekend for recreational white sturgeon anglers and reinstating night fishing on the mainstem Columbia River, but excluding retention of salmonids.

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Habitat

Independent Science Panel Reviews Draft Report On Columbia Basin Salmon Survival

October 27th, 2017

An independent panel of scientists has completed its eighth annual review of the Fish Passage Center’s draft 2017 report on Columbia River basin salmon survival, again finding that the methodology used by the FPC when calculating such items as smolt-to-adult survival and juvenile migration time and survival is already developed and useful.

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Biological Opinions

Council Hears A USFWS Review Of Libby Dam Operations For Sturgeon, Bull Trout

October 27th, 2017

Since white sturgeon in Montana’s Kootenai River was listed as endangered in 1994, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has completed several iterations of biological opinions and critical habitat designations for the freshwater fish.

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Habitat

Washington State, Others, Request Supreme Court Review Ninth Circuit’s Decision On Culverts

October 13th, 2017

The state of Washington, joined by other Columbia Basin states, farm bureaus and business groups, is urging the U.S. Supreme Court to consider an appeal of a lower court ruling that compelled Washington to remove or replace fish-blocking culverts to comply with treaty rights of Native American tribes.

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Biological Opinions

Draft Annual Salmon Survival Study Considers Impacts Of Lower Snake Dam Breaching, More Spill

October 6th, 2017

An annual study that looks at salmonid survival through Snake and Columbia river dams for the first time evaluated juvenile fish survival in the Snake River with and without the presence of the four lower dams on the river, as well as the impact on survival if spill is increased, as it may beginning next year.

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Climate Change

Study Looks At How North Pacific Atmospheric, Ocean Circulation Trends Affect Wild Chinook

October 6th, 2017

Productivity of wild chinook salmon from the Columbia River to northern Alaska is subject to large-scale atmospheric and ocean circulation trends, especially the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation, according to a recent study.

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Habitat

Idaho Seeks Public Comment On Reopening Steelhead Angling For Hatchery Fish Under 28 Inches

October 6th, 2017

After considering an Idaho Department of Fish and Game proposal to reopen steelhead fishing for hatchery fish smaller than 28 inches and with a reduced bag limit, the Idaho Fish and Game Commission decided instead to ask for public input on the proposal.

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Harvest

Escaped Atlantic Salmon Continue To Be Caught; WDFW Says Fish Not Expected To Establish Themselves

September 22nd, 2017

Recreational anglers continue to catch stray Atlantic salmon in Puget Sound, the West Coast of Vancouver Island and as far north as the Queen Charlotte Islands in Canada. The salmon are some of the nearly 160,000 fish that escaped an aquaculture net pen at Cypress Island in the San Juan Islands of Washington in August.

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Harvest

Compact Extends Tribal Commercial Fishing One week; Ocean Coho Fishing Ends Off Oregon

September 8th, 2017

Treaty commercial gillnetting in the Columbia River targeting fall chinook was extended a week in water upstream of Bonneville Dam during a meeting of the two-state Columbia River Compact. The additional four and one-half days of tribal fishing begin 6 am Monday, September 11 and ends 6 pm Friday, September 15. The Compact met Wednesday, September 6.

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Harvest

Fish Farm Escape: Intent To Sue Filed, Washington Sets Up Incident Command Structure To Contain

September 1st, 2017

In the week since thousands of Atlantic salmon escaped a fish farm in Puget Sound’s San Juan Islands, the state of Washington has asked anglers to catch and keep the farmed salmon, formed a containment and recovery team of three state agencies (an Incident Command structure) and placed a moratorium on further permits for farmed salmon in Washington until the reasons for the escape are better known.

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Biological Opinions

Fish Managers: Low Steelhead Returns Likely Result Of 2015 Juvenile Fish Hitting Warm Ocean

September 1st, 2017

Although the summer has been hot, state fisheries managers have not seen the die-off of salmon and sturgeon this year that was experienced during the low flow and warm water conditions of 2015. Still, 2015 conditions likely had a big impact on current adult salmon and steelhead returns.

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Harvest

Fall Commercial Fishing Begins On Columbia, Low Steelhead Numbers Prompts Idaho To Suspend Retention

August 25th, 2017

Early commercial fall fishing began this week for both commercial non-treaty gillnetters and treaty gillnetters on the Columbia River mainstem while Idaho, due to historic low returns, suspended retention of steelhead in Idaho rivers as of August 17.

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Habitat

ODFW Analysis: With Continued Sea Lion Predation Willamette Winter Steelhead At Risk Of Extinction

August 11th, 2017

Upper Willamette River winter steelhead were listed as threatened under the federal endangered species act in March 1999 due to the impact on the native fish by federal dams and habitat loss. Harvest of the fish has not been allowed for more than 20 years.

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Harvest

Managing Snake River Steelhead With A-Run, B-Run Dichotomy: Is There A Better Way?

August 11th, 2017

As they set harvest limits on steelhead fisheries in the Columbia and Snake rivers, managers have long used timing, the number of the fish crossing dams and the length of the fish as their yardsticks. According to a recent study, this technique for fisheries managers may be an oversimplification and even out of date.

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Harvest

Snake River Sockeye Trickling Into Stanley Basin; Upper Columbia Sockeye Numbers Far Below Average

August 11th, 2017

After an 800 mile journey through eight dams and 6,500 feet in elevation gain, the first batch of endangered Snake River sockeye salmon are arriving in Idaho’s Stanley Basin, including four naturally produced fish and nine hatchery fish as of August 9, according to Idaho Department of Fish and Game information.

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Harvest

Alaska Announces Non-Retention Of Chinook Salmon Throughout SE Alaska, ‘Poor Production Conditions’

August 11th, 2017

Due to poor ocean survival conditions for chinook (king) salmon, which are persisting in Southeast Alaska and British Columbia, extreme management measures are necessary to restrict harvests in coast wide fisheries that are directed at stocks originating in Southeast Alaska, Northern British Columbia, the Fraser River, and the Washington Coast, says the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

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Harvest

Lake Roosevelt Northern Pike Numbers Rise; ‘Chronic Recruitment, Exponential Growth’

July 21st, 2017

The population of northern pike that is taking up residency in Lake Roosevelt, the reservoir created by Grand Coulee Dam, has spread south this year and has a team of experts saying that suppression of the fish could easily have begun a year or two earlier than it did.

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Harvest

Harvest Managers Approve More Tribal Fishing, Concerns Expressed Over Low Sockeye, Summer Steelhead

July 14th, 2017

After saying last week they would likely not continue gillnetting this week, Treaty commercial gillnetters added another 3.5 days of fishing this week – Wednesday, July 12, through Friday, July 14 – in the reservoir upstream of Bonneville Dam.

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Harvest

Summer Chinook Fishing Resumes Below Bonneville, Wild Summer Steelhead Passage To Date Very Low

July 7th, 2017

Recreational anglers downstream of Bonneville Dam to the Astoria-Megler Bridge turned out in higher numbers and caught more than expected fish early in the summer chinook salmon fishery that opened June 15. As a result, anglers zipped through the original harvest guideline quota and retention of summer chinook ended briefly Friday evening, June 30.

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Climate Change

Council Approves New Research Plan To Guide Research Aimed At ‘Critical Uncertainities’

June 23rd, 2017

A year-long effort to create a revised research plan that addresses the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s critical fish and wildlife uncertainties was approved by the Council last week.

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Harvest

Spring Chinook Run Forecast Stays At 118,000 As Harvest Managers Move Into Summer Chinook Season

June 9th, 2017

With the spring chinook run transitioning to the summer chinook run in just one week on June 15, the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which estimates fish runs in the Columbia River, decided at its meeting June 5 to stick with its last run size forecast of 118,000 fish at the mouth of the river. TAC expects 110,000 of the spring chinook will pass Bonneville Dam.

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Climate Change

Draft Columbia Basin Fish And Wildlife Research Plan Moves To Full NW Power/Conservation Council

May 19th, 2017

A fish and wildlife research plan that has been in the works for more than a year will go to the full Northwest Power and Conservation Council for final approval in June.

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Harvest

Idaho Seeks Help From Anglers In Research On Land-Locked Chinook In Reservoirs, Lakes

May 19th, 2017

Idaho Fish and Game stocks land-locked chinook salmon in lakes and reservoirs, and biologists are asking anglers to help them learn more about these fish in Anderson Ranch, Lucky Peak and Deadwood reservoirs in southwest Idaho and Spirit Lake in north Idaho.

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Harvest

Study Finds Survival Benefits In Waiting A Year Before Releasing Steelhead Smolts

May 12th, 2017

Two-year steelhead smolts released from the Winthrop National Fish Hatchery on the Methow River in central Washington generally had better survival from the tributary into the Columbia River and migrated more rapidly to the Columbia estuary than did one-year smolts.

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Harvest

NOAA Fisheries Issues Reports On Fisheries Economics, Status Of U.S. Fisheries

May 12th, 2017

U.S. commercial and recreational fishing generated $208 billion in sales, contributed $97 billion to the gross domestic product, and supported 1.6 million full- and part-time jobs in 2015 – above the five year average, according to NOAA's Fisheries Economics of the United States report released this week.

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Harvest

PGE Seeks Appeal In Ninth Circuit On Deschutes Clean Water/Salmon Reintroduction Case

April 14th, 2017

A federal court decision denying Portland General Electric’s motion to dismiss a water quality suit against the company for the effects of its dam operations on the Deschutes River in Central Oregon may end up in appeals court as PGE seeks a second opinion at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

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Harvest

Ocean Salmon Fisheries Set: Low California Chinook, Puget Sound Coho Forecasts Constrain Harvest

April 14th, 2017

Recreational, commercial and tribal fisheries along the Pacific coast north of Cape Falcon will see similar quotas of chinook and coho salmon this year as was available in 2016, but those fisheries south of Cape Falcon will be limited to protect Klamath and Sacramento river chinook stocks.

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Harvest

Harvest Managers Extend Springer Fishing Citing Poor Water, Fishing Conditions

April 7th, 2017

Just 38 early season spring chinook salmon passed Bonneville Dam as of Wednesday, April 5, far below the 10-year average of 766 fish on the same date, and below the count last year on the same date of 706 fish. Fifty percent passage at the dam is expected by May 7.

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Habitat

On The Ground Forest Restoration With ESA-Listed Fish: Making It Work In NE Oregon’s Joseph Creek

April 7th, 2017

Joseph Creek, in the far northeastern corner of Oregon, is home to one the most viable steelhead populations in the Snake River basin. A forest restoration project designed for 100,000 acres of the lower Joseph Creek watershed does so with fish benefits in mind.

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Harvest

Oregon FW Commission Moves Closer To Washington State With Harvest, Gillnet Rules

March 24th, 2017

At the urging of Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission for the second time in two months changed Oregon harvest reform rules at its March 17 meeting in Corvallis, bringing the rules closer to those adopted by the Washington Commission in January.

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Harvest

Study Details Adult Spring Chinook Mortality From Willamette Falls To Tributaries, Sea Lion Injuries

March 24th, 2017

Some 10 percent to 21 percent of adult spring chinook migrating in the Willamette River will die before reaching tributaries to spawn, according to a recent study, and the fish most likely to die are those that were injured downstream of Willamette Falls by sea lions, as well as from other migratory-related causes such as descaling and head injuries.

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Climate Change

Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission Names Pinkham New Executive Director

March 24th, 2017

Jaime Pinkham, a member of the Nez Perce Tribe with more than three decades of experience in American Indian governance, policy, and natural resource management, is returning to the Columbia Basin to serve as the executive director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.

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Harvest

Oregon To Seek Parity With Washington On Lower Columbia Salmon Harvest Changes, Gillnet Rules

March 17th, 2017

After today, March 17, when the Oregon Fish and Wildlife commission meets, Columbia River salmon harvest rules will likely look similar in both Oregon and Washington, bringing both states into closer compliance with 2013 legislation that was intended to have completely removed commercial gillnetting from the river’s mainstem and allocate more fish to recreational anglers by the first of this year.

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Harvest

First 2017 Spring Chinook Sport Fishery: Smaller Run But Larger Share Of Catch Than Previous Years

February 24th, 2017

Fishery managers from Washington and Oregon Thursday, Feb. 23, approved an initial sport fishery for spring chinook salmon on the lower Columbia River that reflects a lower projection of returning fish but a larger share of the catch than in previous years for the recreational catch.

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Habitat

Large-scale, Long-Term Experiment On Olympic Peninsula To Test Innovations In Forest Management

February 24th, 2017

Scientists at the University of Washington and the state Department of Natural Resources intend to test a management approach that mimics natural disturbance patterns and processes across a large portion of the Olympic Peninsula, an area known for having the most rainfall in the lower 48 states, high tree-growth rates and old-growth forests, part of which remain today.

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Harvest

New Research Details Forage Fish Stocks Boom-Bust Cycles For Centuries

February 17th, 2017

New research shows in greater detail that forage fish stocks such as sardines have undergone boom-bust cycles for centuries, with at least three species off the U.S. West Coast repeatedly experiencing steep population increases followed by declines long before commercial fishing began.

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Harvest

First 2017 Hearing Setting Fishing Times:Spring, Summer Chinook, Sockeye, Smelt All Forecasted Down

February 3rd, 2017

In its first hearing of the year, the two-state Columbia River Compact this week set spring fishing for commercial select areas and tribal gillnetters, but with fewer fish forecasted in 2017, the Compact took a conservative approach to setting fishing periods.

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Biological Opinions

NOAA Kicks Off Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force: Can Salmon Recovery Efforts Be Integrated?

January 27th, 2017

An all-inclusive region-wide effort to connect various salmon recovery efforts was set in motion by NOAA Fisheries this week as it held its first Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force meeting.

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Habitat

Upper Deschutes Salmon Reintroduction: Genetic Testing Confirms Returning Sockeye From Mid-Deschutes

January 27th, 2017

More sockeye salmon returned to the upper Deschutes River’s Pelton Round Butte Hydroelectric Project in 2016 than they have since efforts began in 2010 to reintroduce the fish to the blocked areas upstream of the dam -- and most of those sockeye were native fish.

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Harvest

Oregon Harvest Reforms Differ From Washington In How Much Gillnetting Allowed

January 27th, 2017

Less than one week after the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission adopted changes to its Columbia River Fisheries Reform policy that reduced the time commercial gillnetting would be allowed on the lower river, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission adopted changes to its own policy – and the states’ policies are not the same.

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Biological Opinions

NOAA Completes BiOp For Mitchell Act Hatcheries, Proposes Reduction In Fall Chinook Releases

January 19th, 2017

NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region has completed a biological opinion of hatcheries funded under the Mitchell Act, potentially freeing the federal agency to make payments to operators of those hatcheries.

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Climate Change

Research: El Nino, Pacific Decadal Oscillation Correlates With Domoic Acid Shellfish Toxicity

January 19th, 2017

Researchers this month reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences a strong correlation between toxic levels of domoic acid in shellfish and the warm-water ocean conditions orchestrated by two powerful forces - El Niño events and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

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Harvest

Study: Using Smart Phones For Recreational Anglers’ Salmon/Steelhead Catch Reporting

January 6th, 2017

In the near future, recreational anglers could report their salmon or steelhead catch on their smart phone, giving fisheries managers a 2.6 to 3 times greater confidence in the information they receive from anglers than if they solely used traditional creel surveys.

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Harvest

Early Fish Forecast: Lower Returns Than Last Year Expected For Spring/Summer Chinook, Sockeye

December 16th, 2016

The forecasted return of adult spring and summer chinook salmon to the Columbia River basin in 2017 will be lower than initial estimates made last year in December, but the estimate of sockeye salmon is nearly twice the size of last year’s estimate, according to an early forecast of the runs released this week by the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee.

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Climate Change

Recovery Plan Aims To Make Oregon Coast Coho First West Coast Salmonid To Be Eligible For Delisting

December 16th, 2016

Will the Oregon Coast coho become the first of 28 threatened and endangered species of salmon and steelhead on the West Coast to recover to the point they can be delisted from the federal Endangered Species Act?

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Biological Opinions

Washington, Oregon Fish/Wildlife Commissions On Parallel Course With Columbia River Harvest Reform

December 9th, 2016

The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission will review three options on how to continue or modify the two-state harvest reform policy for Columbia River salmon and steelhead at its meeting this weekend, December 9 and 10, in Olympia.

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Harvest

Washington, Oregon Fish/Wildlife Commissions Considering Next Moves On Lower River Gillnetting

December 2nd, 2016

In its meeting today, December 2, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission is expected to approve rulemaking that would extend the transition period through January to implement the Columbia River Fisheries Reform aimed at removing gillnetters from the Lower Columbia River mainstem.

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Biological Opinions

Are Lower Columbia River Harvest Reforms (The Kitzhaber Plan) Working? Oregon Considers Next Steps

November 18th, 2016

Lower Columbia River gillnetters told the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission last week that fishery harvest reforms initiated in 2013 are not working economically, while salmon and steelhead anglers accused the commission of vacating its promise to get gillnetters off the river.

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Harvest

Oregon Commission To Review Columbia River Harvest Reforms, May Consider Extending Mainstem Gillnets

November 4th, 2016

As it reviews preliminary results of the 2016 commercial gillnetting and recreational angling season on the Columbia River at its meeting next week, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission will also begin considering statutory changes to Columbia River fishery harvest reform that could extend gillnetting on the mainstem river in 2017, beyond the reform deadline.

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Habitat

NOAA Fisheries Releases Proposed Recovery Plan For Snake River Spring/Summer Chinook, Steelhead

October 28th, 2016

NOAA Fisheries is inviting public feedback on a new proposed recovery plan for Snake River spring/summer chinook salmon and steelhead, two threatened species that once represented close to half of all salmon and steelhead returning to the Columbia River system.

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Harvest

Chinook Forecast Decline, Low Steelhead, Coho Return: Recreational Fishing Shut Down On Mainstem

October 21st, 2016

With another drop in the fall chinook forecast and a continuing poor run of steelhead and coho salmon this fall, the two-state Columbia River Compact and the state of Washington shut down angling for salmon and steelhead from the mouth of the Columbia River to the Hwy 395 Bridge near Pasco as of Saturday, Oct. 22.

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Harvest

Columbia River Fall Chinook Return Downgraded; Wild Steelhead Past Bonneville Dam Below Average

September 23rd, 2016

The expected number of fall chinook to the Columbia River mouth was downgraded again this week to 802,200 fish, 84 percent of the preseason forecast, but the Group-B steelhead forecast was upgraded to 38,200 fish, about 50 percent more than preseason numbers.

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Habitat

Tribes Urge Washington State To Drop Appeal Of Ninth Circuit’s Fish Culvert Ruling

September 23rd, 2016

Tribes involved with long-running litigation over fish-blocking road and highway culverts are urging the state of Washington to drop a recent appeal of the case. The tribes say continuing the case will be unnecessarily costly, but the state has long maintained the cost of removing and replacing culverts will be cost prohibitive.

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Harvest

Fall Chinook Run Downgraded But Catch Rates Allow Extended Fishing; Steelhead Numbers Way Down

September 16th, 2016

The forecasted run of fall chinook salmon into the Columbia River was downgraded 10 percent, but with lower than anticipated catch rates among recreational anglers, the two-state Columbia River Compact Wednesday extended angling for fall chinook from Warrior Rock at St. Helens, Oregon to Buoy 10 at the river’s mouth.

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Biological Opinions

NOAA Fisheries Stipulates No Mitchell Act Funds For 10 Hatcheries Until Hatchery BiOp Completed

September 9th, 2016

NOAA Fisheries and the Wild Fish Conservancy have stipulated that the agency will not disburse Mitchell Act funds to 10 Northwest hatcheries until the federal agency has completed its hatchery biological opinion and incidental take statements for the disbursements.

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Harvest

Study Shows More Than 30 Percent Of Hells Canyon White Sturgeon Have Ingested Hooks Embedded In Them

September 9th, 2016

Some 31 percent of white sturgeon in the Hells Canyon reach of the Snake River were confirmed through hand held metal detectors and X-Ray to have hooks embedded in them and most of those hooks were acquired from the bottom of the river, not directly from anglers, according to a recent study.

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Habitat

Tribes’ Efforts Reducing Non-Native Lake Trout In Flathead Lake

August 12th, 2016

The Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes are winning their battle to reduce the number of non-native lake trout in Flathead Lake and surrounding streams that feed on, among other native species, bull trout.

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Harvest

As Many As 45 Percent Of Tagged Spring Chinook In Estuary Disappear Before Reaching Bonneville Dam

July 22nd, 2016

NOAA Fisheries research indicates that after accounting for harvest, in some years as many as 45 percent of the salmon tagged in the estuary disappear before reaching Bonneville Dam, according to a presentation last week to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council.

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Habitat

Feds Seeking Nominations For New Salmon/Steelhead ‘Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force’

July 22nd, 2016

NOAA Fisheries is seeking nominations for a new Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force to provide information and advice on the establishment of long-term goals for salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River Basin.

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Habitat

Federal Agencies To Prepare EIS To Help Guide Columbia River Salmon/Steelhead Harvest Post-2017

July 15th, 2016

With the current 10-year federal court agreement – U.S. v. Oregon-- that guides Columbia River basin salmon and steelhead harvest set to expire next year, federal agencies have announced their intention to prepare a joint environment impact statement to help guide a new harvest agreement post-2017.

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Habitat

John Day Basin Study: Steps To Increase Beaver Dam Building Benefits Salmonids

July 15th, 2016

Utah State University scientists report a watershed-scale experiment in “highly degraded” streams within Oregon's John Day Basin demonstrates building beaver dam analogs allows beavers to increase their dam building activities, which benefits a threatened population of steelhead trout.

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Harvest

Sockeye Surging Over Bonneville Dam; Far Exceeding Pre-Season Forecast

June 24th, 2016

As Oregon and Washington canceled the second Bonneville Dam reservoir white sturgeon season and opened up more fishing for commercial gillnetters in the lower Columbia River select area fisheries, the run of sockeye salmon already has exceeded pre-season estimates.

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Harvest

As Spring Chinook Fishing Ends, Harvest Managers Set Summer Chinook Season

June 17th, 2016

The spring chinook salmon fishing on the Columbia River ended Wednesday evening and was followed immediately by a summer chinook and summer steelhead season for Treaty Indian gillnetters, Treaty platform and hook and line fishers, commercial gillnetters and recreational anglers: in short, everyone is fishing.

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Harvest

States Set More Columbia River Chinook Fishing;Springers Running Below 10-Year Average At Bonneville

June 2nd, 2016

With quotas still unmet, the two-state Columbia River Compact, meeting last week and this week, sent recreational anglers and commercial gillnetters downstream of Bonneville Dam -- along with tribal gillnetters upstream of the dam -- fishing for the last remnants of the spring chinook salmon run.

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Harvest

Harvest Managers Downgrade Spring Chinook Return But Approve More Fishing Days

May 20th, 2016

The estimated size of the upriver spring chinook salmon run was reduced by nearly five percent this week by the U.S. v Oregon technical advisory committee. Still, the two-state Columbia River Compact, which met Wednesday, set additional recreational and non-Indian commercial fishing dates.

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Habitat

Council Approves Another Step Forward On $8 Million Sturgeon Hatchery To Boost Numbers In Mainstem

May 20th, 2016

A plan to develop a white sturgeon supplementation hatchery near Toppenish, Wash. proceeded to the second step of the process last week. The Northwest Power and Conservation Council at its meeting in Boise, Idaho approved the step after a review by the Independent Scientific Review found that the latest version of the hatchery master plan meets scientific review criteria.

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Climate Change

Study: Ocean Acidification Threatens Northwest Dungeness Crab, Region’s Largest Fishery By Revenue

May 20th, 2016

Ocean acidification expected to accompany climate change may slow development and reduce survival of the larval stages of Dungeness crab, a key component of the Northwest marine ecosystem and the largest fishery by revenue on the West Coast, a new study has found.

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Habitat

Wallowa Lake:Lodge Owners, Nez Perce Work Together On Easement That Could Aid Sockeye Reintroduction

May 6th, 2016

More than 100 years ago sockeye spawned along the southern shore of northeast Oregon’s Wallowa Lake and the inflowing river.

This year conservation-minded investors and the Nez Perce Tribe came together to protect 10 acres of prime spawning habitat owned by Wallowa Lake Lodge – habitat that could play an important role in the return of sockeye to the lake.

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Harvest

States Extend Chinook Fishing Above Bonneville; Springers Passage At Dam Surged This Week

May 6th, 2016

With lower fishing success than expected by recreational anglers fishing upstream of Bonneville Dam to the Oregon and Washington border, along with a surge of spring chinook salmon passing the dam, the two-state Columbia River Compact yesterday extended recreational fishing through this weekend.

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Harvest

Oregon Adopts Summer/Fall Salmon Fishing Regulations At Buoy 10, Columbia River

May 6th, 2016

At its April 22 meeting in Bandon, Oregon, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission adopted cautious regulations, timing and limits for summer and fall seasons on salmon fishing in state waters in the ocean, and Buoy 10 in the Columbia River upstream to the Oregon and Washington State border.

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Harvest

Oregon Commission Hears Review Of Fishing Reforms Banning Lower Columbia Gillnetters From Mainstem

April 22nd, 2016

The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission at its March meeting reviewed fishery harvest reforms on the Columbia River that effectively remove commercial gillnetters from the mainstem river by 2017, but allows gillnetting in the lower river in select areas.

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Harvest

Gillnetters Say ‘Kitzhaber Plan’ Crowding Them Into Tight Areas

April 22nd, 2016

With a low number of upriver spring chinook salmon left in the early spring commercial allocation, gillnetters and the two-state Columbia River Comact decided Tuesday to wait a week before gillnetters are again allowed to fish in off-channel areas of the lower Columbia River and in Youngs Bay near Astoria.

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Harvest

Pacific Fishery Management Council Recommends Sharply Limited Ocean Salmon Fishing To Protect Coho

April 22nd, 2016

A weak coho salmon run this year will limit the number of chinook salmon (a strong run) that anglers can catch in ocean fisheries. In Puget Sound, salmon fisheries may remain closed as the state and tribes have not been able to come to an agreement on a season.

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Harvest

WDFW Hatcheries Releasing Steelhead Into Rivers After Newly Approved Federal Permits

April 22nd, 2016

Washington State fishery managers have begun releasing more than 500,000 juvenile steelhead from five state fish hatcheries into Puget Sound rivers after receiving word from NOAA-Fisheries that those facilities meet federal environmental standards.

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Habitat

Hatchery Plan For Upper Columbia White Sturgeon Passes Latest Science Review

April 8th, 2016

A hatchery plan for upper Columbia River white sturgeon passed the latest review by the Independent Scientific Advisory Panel in March, which said the latest version of a Master Plan meets scientific review criteria for a Step Two review, but with qualifications.

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Harvest

Survey Shows Washington Wolf Population Increased 32 percent In 2015, Four New Packs

March 18th, 2016

Washington state’s wolf population continued to grow last year and added at least four new packs, according to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s annual survey. By the end of 2015, the state was home to at least 90 wolves, 18 packs, and eight breeding pairs.

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Habitat

Salmon/Steelhead Returns Forecasted For Another Decent Year; Yet, Poor Ocean Conditions To Linger

March 11th, 2016

The infamous warm-water ocean “blob” has evolved into a more coastal phenomenon – the region is now at the trailing edge of a warm El Nino weather pattern, and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation is in a very warm period, according to Brian Burke, research fisheries biologist at NOAA Fisheries’ Northwest Fisheries Science Center.

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