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Sockeye to be Trucked to Redfish Lakeby Associated PressChallis Messenger, July 8, 2021 |
LEWISTON -- Sockeye salmon at risk from high water temperatures will be captured at an eastern Washington dam to save as many of the endangered fish headed for Idaho as possible, wildlife managers said.
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game told The Lewiston Tribune that workers started trapping the salmon July 5 at Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River and trucking them to hatcheries to be artificially spawned or to Redfish Lake near Stanley.
Lance Hebdon of Fish and Game said water temperatures in the Snake and Salmon rivers have been as high as 76 degrees, which can be lethal for salmon. Fish and Game fisheries biologist Jonathan Ebel said Salmon River flows in one area are about 25 percent of average, and water temperatures are as high as 76 degrees. Much of the Northwest has been in a drought and recently experienced record heat.
"When flows are low and temperatures are high, it warms up no matter where you are," Ebel said.
Adult sockeye salmon returning from the ocean travel 900 miles up the Columbia, Snake and Salmon rivers to high-elevation Sawtooth basin lakes. There are eight dams total that the fish have to surmount -- four on the Columbia and four on the Snake River.
Snake River sockeye teetered on the brink of extinction in the early 1990s. They have been the focus of an intense recovery program after being listed for federal protection in 1991.
The goal of a self-sustaining wild population took a hit in 2015 when warm water in the Columbia River Basin killed nearly all the returning adult fish, with only 55 completing the journey to central Idaho. That was the last year wildlife managers trapped sockeye salmon at Lower Granite Dam, capturing 35 fish. Of the 90 total fish that year, five were released to spawn naturally and 85 went to the Eagle Fish Hatchery in southwestern Idaho for artificial spawning.
Fisheries managers said that through last week, nine sockeye salmon had made it to Lower Granite Dam. Early indications are that as many as 1,300 Snake River sockeye could pass Bonneville Dam and, based on an average survival rate, 800 could make it to Lower Granite Dam.
So far, water temperatures in the Columbia and Snake rivers below the dams are cooler than those recorded at the same time in 2015, fisheries managers said.
Related Pages:
Pacific Northwest Heat Wave Sets Up 'Grim' Migration for Salmon by Lynda Mapes, Northern New York 360, 7/1/21
'This is Worse' than 2015: Northwest Weather Heats Rivers, Puts Idaho Sockeye in Danger by Rocky Barker, Big Country News, 7/4/21
Count the Fish, 1977-2014, Salmon Recovery Effortsby GAO
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