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Martin: its not just the bees- it's the entire ecosystem.

Michael

 

Salmon fishing ban possible this year

By SAMANTHA YOUNG, Associated Press Writer Fri Mar 14, 11:05 PM ET

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Federal fisheries managers took the first step Friday

toward imposing what could be the strictest limits ever on West Coast salmon

fishing amid a collapse of the central California chinook salmon fishery.

 

The Pacific Fishery Management Council unanimously adopted three options for

sport and commercial fishing off the Pacific Coast, including an

unprecedented complete shutdown of fishing off California and Oregon.

" This is a major disaster. We've never had one ever like this, " council

chairman Donald Hansen said after the vote. " It will have a major impact on

California commercial fisheries for salmon, recreational fisheries,

California charters. "

The closest the council has come to halting all salmon fishing was 2006,

when a decline in Northern California's Klamath River run forced severe

restrictions on the number of fish caught.

The other options are severely limiting fishing, or hiring fisherman to

catch and release salmon for scientific projects. Both those options would

require the federal government to grant an emergency rule because the salmon

numbers are so low.

The fishery council is expected to decide which action to take in April

during its meeting in Seattle.

" I think the likeliest outcome this year is no one will put a hook in the

water, " said Humboldt County fisherman Dave Bitts, who was attending the

weeklong meeting in Sacramento.

The Sacramento River chinook run is usually one of the most plentiful on the

West Coast, providing the bulk of the fish caught by commercial trollers off

California and Oregon.

But this year's returns - even with no fishing allowed - are expected to

reach less than half the council's goal for spawning a new generation. It

marks the third straight year of declines, and the outlook for next year is

no better.

After years of declining salmon runs, few fishermen rely solely on salmon

for a living.

Supplies of farm-raised fish and sockeye from Alaska are expected to remain

plentiful in supermarkets and restaurants, but there will be few chinook.

Also known as king salmon, they are the type of salmon most prized by chefs

and sportsmen.

Many coastal communities that still have salmon fleets have yet to recover

from long-standing downturns in fishing and timber.

" It's going to have a big effect on our coastal communities, " said Zeke

Grader, executive director of the San Francisco-based Pacific Coast

Federation of Fishermen's Associations.

It is the third straight year of hardship. In 2006, the season was curtailed

to protect struggling chinook returns to the Klamath River in northern

California. Last year, catches were poor despite a relatively open fishing

season.

Congress authorized some aid for fishermen after the 2006 seasons, and

California representatives are looking for more this year.

The council's action on Friday prompted Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the

governors of Oregon and Washington to urge the federal government to declare

a resource disaster if the fisheries are closed or severely restricted. Such

a declaration would make communities eligible for federal aid.

Closing fisheries in California and most of Oregon also could lead to higher

salmon prices for restaurants and consumers who would be forced to buy

Alaska-caught salmon instead of locally caught fish.

In most years, about 90 percent of wild chinook salmon caught off the

California coast originate in the Sacramento River and its tributaries.

Only about 90,000 adult salmon returned to the Sacramento River and its

tributaries to spawn last year, the second lowest number on record and well

below the government's conservation goals, according to federal fishery

regulators. That's down from 277,000 in 2006 and a record high of 804,000 in

2002.

Biologists predict this year's salmon returns could be even lower because

the number of returning young male fish, known as " jacks, " hit an all-time

low last year. Only about 2,000 of them were recorded, which is far below

the 40,000 counted in a typical year.

Other West Coast rivers also have seen declines in their salmon runs, though

not as steep as California's Central Valley.

Experts are uncertain about what caused the collapse, pointing to dozens of

factors.

Marine scientists blame an unusual weather pattern that triggered a collapse

of the marine food web in 2005, the year most of this year's returning

adults were entering the ocean as juveniles.

Fishermen, environmental groups and American Indians largely blame the

salmon's troubles on poor water quality and water diversions in the

Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

___

Associated Press Writer Jeff Barnard in Grants Pass, Ore., contributed to

this report.

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