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Ecology and salmon related articles

Chinook Season Proposals
Limit Fishing Days

by Eric Barker
Lewiston Tribune, February 15, 2019

With runs expected to be down again, Fish and Game officials are giving anglers options

Graphic: Snake River Steelhead have triggered the Early Warning Indicator of the Federal Columbia River Power System's 2014 Supplemental Biological Opinion Fisheries managers at the Idaho Department of Fish and Game are asking anglers if they’d prefer to fish just two days a week for spring chinook and be able to keep one adult salmon each day or if they’d like to fish four days a week but only be able to keep an adult fish on one of them.

The “would you rather” question pertains to the Clearwater River and its tributaries and is prompted by what is expected to be another down year for spring chinook returns. Regional fish manager Joe DuPont elicited sighs and groans from anglers at a meeting in Lewiston Wednesday when he informed them the state’s harvest share for the Clearwater River is expected to fall shy of 500 fish.

I hate this, and I know you guys hate this, but when we have runs like this we have to go to some extreme measures,” DuPont said.

A harvest share is the number of fish anglers can catch while leaving enough chinook to return to hatcheries for spawning the next generation of salmon. According to preliminary calculations, sport anglers licensed by the state would be able to catch 468 adult chinook during the spring season, as would Nez Perce Tribal fishers. That would allow 4,729 adult chinook to return to hatcheries and produce 6.4 million smolts for later release.

The proposed season structure limiting adult harvest to just one or two days a week would be a first for the state. The season would also include closures on several sections of rivers. For example, on the Clearwater River fishing would be allowed from the Camas Prairie Railroad bridge at Lewiston to the U.S. Highway 12 bridge at Arrow and from the Pink House Boat Ramp near Orofino to the Greer Bridge. Fishing from boats would not be allowed on the North Fork Clearwater below Dworshak Dam. Fishing would be allowed on the Middle Fork Clearwater River, but the South Fork of the Clearwater River would be open only from the Harpster Grade to the Mount Idaho Grade Bridge.

Proposed fishing regulations on the lower Salmon and Little Salmon rivers targeting chinook returning to Rapid River Hatchery will also operate on narrow harvest shares. There, the department is expecting the run to support a harvest share of about 1,478 adult chinook and is proposing a four-day-a-week fishing season, likely Thursdays through Sundays during which anglers would be able to keep two adult chinook per day. Fishing would be allowed on the lower Salmon River from Rice Creek near Cottonwood to Vinegar Creek Boat Ramp east of Riggins and on the Little Salmon River from its mouth to Smokey Boulder Road.

Related Sites:
Chinook Season Proposals Limit Fishing Days by Eric Barker, Lewiston Tribune, February 15, 2019
Poor Steelhead Returns will Likely Impact Small Towns that Bank on Anglers by Eric Barker, Coeur d'Alene Press, 9/6/18
Steelhead Fishing Closed on Large Section of Columbia River by Eric Barker, Coeur d'Alene Press, 9/6/18
States Slash Steelhead Bag Limits by Eric Barker, Lewiston Tribune, 9/2/18
States Close Columbia River to Steelhead Retention by Staff, Columbia Basin Bulletin, 8/30/18
Down to a Trickle; Steelhead Numbers Continue Descent by Eric Barker, Lewiston Tribune, 8/31/18
Oregon Closes Steelhead Sanctuary Off Mouth of Deschutes to All Fishing by Bill Monroe, The Oregonian, 8/8/18


Eric Barker
Chinook Season Proposals Limit Fishing Days
Lewiston Tribune, February 15, 2019

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