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Ecology and salmon related articles

Spring Chinook Numbers on
Snake, Columbia Rivers Improving

by Associated Press
Spokesman-Review, May 19, 2018

The daily count surpassed 1,000 this week at Lower Granite Dam,
as the salmon make the journey back to Idaho spawning streams.

Graphic from Fish Passage Center, shows late arrival of this year's Chinook migrating up over Lower Granite Dam (2018) along with the 10-year average. LEWISTON, Idaho -- Spring chinook counts in the Snake and Columbia rivers are improving after a late start to this year's run, but fishery managers in Idaho, Oregon and Washington are still unsure how strong the final run will be.

Flows on the lower Columbia River have surged in recent weeks and may be the reason for a dip in the number of chinook passing Bonneville Dam last week and this week, the Lewiston Tribune reported.

Idaho's harvest share for the Clearwater River and its tributaries could range between 1,000 and 2,500, said Joe DuPont, regional fisheries manager for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game at Lewiston. The lower number is based on how strong the run will be if its timing lines up with an average of other late runs. The larger number is based on a run timing that matches last year's run, the latest ever recorded.

Likewise, the harvest share projection on the lower Salmon and Little Salmon rivers ranges between 363 and 1,200.

DuPont said there is some evidence the run will end up being similar to last year's, as far as timing.

"We don't know when the flows at Bonneville are going to drop. Last year, the flows dropped for just a few days and a huge pulse of fish came through, and right now I don't really see that," he said.

But the number of fish passing both Bonneville Dam on the Columbia and Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River is on the rise.

On Wednesday, 1,160 adult chinook were counted at Lower Granite, the first day in which the daily count surpassed 1,000. The cumulative count through Wednesday was 2,846. The 10-year average is 26,413.

At Bonneville Dam, the daily count was more than 4,500 Wednesday. It's been higher, but marks a recovery from last week's dip, which saw a low of 852. The cumulative count at Bonneville on Wednesday was 55,618. The 10-year average is more than 125,000.

"I would expect some harvest to occur but not much (this week), and then the following interval (harvest) will start to pick up," DuPont said.

Fishing on the Snake River in Washington continues, with another two-day season near Ice Harbor Dam today and Saturday, and a two-day season near Little Goose Dam and Clarkston Sunday and Monday. Fishing on the Columbia River has been halted.

Ryan Lothrup, Columbia River policy coordinator for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, said the cumulative fish counts at Bonneville Dam need to hit about 80,000 to 85,000 to account for harvest that has already taken place and harvest projected on the Snake River.

While the strength of the run remains unclear, Lothrup said there are likely many upriver-bound chinook that have yet to pass Bonneville Dam.

He believes the run will at least be strong enough to cover harvest that has already happened, but will likely fall short of the preseason forecast of 167,000 chinook.

"It's going to be a very slim chance for us to hit the preseason forecast. We would have to have almost the latest run timing on record," he said.

Related Pages:
Fisheries Managers Forecast 'Unprecedentedly Low' Summer Steelhead by George Plaven, East Oregonian, 5/22/17


Associated Press
Spring Chinook Numbers on Snake, Columbia Rivers Improving
Spokesman-Review, May 19, 2018

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