Federal regulators approve salmon fishing restrictions

Washington Hunter

Well-known member
Joined
May 8, 2002
Messages
4,133
Location
Rochester, Washington
Published April 07, 2006

BY TERENCE CHEA

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Federal regulators voted Thursday to impose severe restrictions on salmon fishing off the coasts of Oregon and Northern California to protect dwindling populations in the Klamath River.

The Pacific Fishery Management Council decided to close about 700 miles of coastline to commercial salmon fishing for most of June and July, the most productive months of the season.

Federal fishery officials said the closures were the broadest ever imposed on the West Coast salmon fishery.

The decision, which some members described as “brutal” and “gut-wrenching,” still must be approved by the National Marine Fisheries Service, which generally follows the panel's recommendations.

Fishermen were relieved the council voted to allow some fishing this season — many had feared a complete ban from Point Sur south of Monterey to Cape Falcon in northern Oregon — but they said it would be difficult to earn a living under such strict limits.

“We're getting a lot of fishing time in areas with no fish and very little fishing time in areas that do have fish,” said Mike Hudson, of Berkeley, who heads the Small Boat Commercial Salmon Fishermen's Association.

While salmon populations from the Sacramento and Columbia rivers are healthy, Northern California's Klamath River has seen poor returns of spawning salmon.

In recent years, Klamath water has been diverted for farming, leading to lower river levels, warmer water and an increase in parasites that attack young fish.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
How can that be...remember when Ten beers, BHR, and a couple other nut-cases said salmon were in fine shape?

Hey BHR, you bought your Idaho salmon license yet?

Remember when you lied and told me that I would always be able to fish salmon in Idaho? Remember how you lied and said dams werent causing anadromous fish declines?

Yeah....right then.
 
Well they may "say" that our Sacto salmon run is healthy but that is just when it comes to the Fall run fish. Winter run, though improved slightly over the past few years, is still nocking on deaths doorstep.

I believe the low in '91 for the winter return was a whopping 200+/- fish.
Management goals are around the 10,000 fish/annually but I don't remember it topping that number yet since I moved back to this state.

The Klamath run is indeed pretty poor, if they downstreamed a good flotilla of hay bales it would help quite a bit IMHO....:BLEEP:
 

Forum statistics

Threads
113,586
Messages
2,026,029
Members
36,238
Latest member
3Wapiti
Back
Top