[env-trinity] Record low Klamath salmon run spurs Tribal, commercial and sport fishery closures

Dan Bacher danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Sun Apr 9 10:17:10 PDT 2017


http://www.sacmetronews.com/2017/04/record-low-klamath-salmon-run-spurs.html

http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/4/7/1651258/-Record-low-Klamath-salmon-run-spurs-Tribal-commercial-and-recreational-fishery-closure



Photo of the mouth of the Klamath courtesy of the Pacific Fishery  
Management Council (PFMC).

Record low Klamath salmon run spurs Tribal, commercial and sport  
fishery closures

by Dan Bacher

Fishery scientists are expecting a record low return of fall-run  
Chinook salmon to the Klamath River this year, due to a combination of  
several years of drought, water diversions in the Klamath Basin and to  
the Sacramento River and the continued presence of the PacifiCorp dams.
Tribal, commercial and recreational fishermen are currently waiting  
for the decision by the Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC) on  
the fishing seasons at its meeting in Sacramento on Monday, April 10,  
but the outlook is dismal, based on the low Klamath salmon estimates.

The pre-season numbers released by Michael O’Farrell of the National  
Marine Fisheries Service in March estimate only 54,200 Klamath River  
fall Chinook adults and 230,700 Sacramento River fall Chinook adults  
will be in the ocean this year.

Commercial fishermen and families and sport anglers are facing an  
“unmitigated disaster” in the Klamath Management Zone (KMZ) of the  
ocean extending from Humbug Mountain, Oregon to Horse Mountain,  
California, according to Noah Oppenheim, Executive Director of the  
Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.

This disaster takes place as Governor Jerry Brown continues to move  
forward with a Delta Tunnels project that will not only hasten the  
extinction of Sacramento River Chinook salmon, Central Valley  
steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt and green sturgeon, but will  
further imperil the salmon and steelhead fisheries of the Klamath and  
Trinity rivers.

Due to the poor status of Klamath River fall Chinook this year, none  
of the three alternatives proposed by the Council provide for any  
Chinook–directed fisheries in the Klamath Management Zone, although  
one alternative does include a mark-selective coho fishery in the  
Oregon portion of the zone and extending north to Cape Falcon.

“California and Oregon are facing an unprecedented crisis,” said  
Oppenheim, in a press teleconference on April 6. “We are facing a  
closure in the Klamath Management Zone and we also expect to see  
restricted seasons in Northern and Central California. This follows a  
disastrous salmon season last year.”

“Even if Klamath stocks were healthier, we would likely see fishing  
restrictions due to below average returns to California’s Central  
Valley. Salmon, the West’s original water users, are paying the  
highest price for this tragic water management failure,” stated  
Oppenheim.

Yurok Tribe: worst year in history for Klamath salmon

For the Yurok Tribe, who have fished the Klamath for thousands of  
years, the looming closure will be also be an “unprecedented  
disaster,” according to Amy Cordalis, the Tribe’s General Counsel, a  
Yurok Tribe member and fisherwoman.  Her family lives and fishes in  
Requa at the mouth of the Klamath River.

““This is the worst year in history for Klamath salmon,” said  
Cordalis. “There is no mystery as to why. The effects of an  
unprecedented drought were exacerbated by dams and diversions. This  
year, Yurok, Karuk and Hupa people will have little to no salmon for  
the first time in history. Although the fish are important  
economically, they are more important as an irreplaceable part of our  
identity as people who care for the river.”

“Since time immemorial we have practiced a fishing way of life. We  
have never ever relocated, but we are still on our river and continue  
our fisheries way of life,” she stated.

The Tribe will have no commercial fishing season this year, a fishery  
that many tribal members depend on for their income. And the  
subsistence allocation is 650 fish, the lowest allocation ever.

“That’s only 650 fish for a total of 6100 members of the tribe,”  
Cordalis said “Last year, it was 5,800 fish, the second lowest ever  
allocation. People in the community are devastated. They are coming to  
the tribal offices in shock. People are asking how they are going to  
feed their families and how they are going to keep the lights on.”

“When the fish leave our area, we are back home smoking and canning  
fish and talking about the great times we had,” said Cordalis. “None  
of this will happen this year. The great sense of community won’t be  
there. Our community is also suffering from already high unemployment  
and an 80 percent poverty rate. This is a social justice and is  
survival issue.”

“Our cultural covenant requires that we never take more than we can  
sustainably harvest,” Cordalis said. “Because there are not enough  
fish, we won’t have a commercial harvest this year. We won’t have  
income to support our families. Our people left with no other options.”

She emphasized, “Closing the fishery same for us as closing the plant  
in one plant town. It will be a hard time for us.”

Cordallis said this year’s fishery failure is the result of “200 years  
of water development and consumptive use in the Klamath Basin,” noting  
that the PacifCorp dams were built without fish ladders. The dams also  
cause poor water quality, spurring big toxic blue algae blooms and  
creating warm water conditions that allow fish diseases to spread.

The fish disease C. Shasta killed 81 percent of juvenile salmon on the  
Klamath and 90 percent in 2015 , resulting in this year’s record low  
numbers of fish. “These are sampled Chinook juveniles that are a  
surrogate to indicate rates of coho salmon (ESA) listed species)  
infection,” noted Craig Tucker, Natural Resources Policy Advocate for  
the Karuk Tribe. “You need a surrogate species as there are too few  
coho to sample.”

Lawsuits spur plan to increase river flows to mitigate disease

Although the outlook for 2017 is grim, Tribal, commercial and  
recreational fishermen say they have some cause for optimism, due to  
the current efforts to restore the river and the heavy snow and rain  
that fell in the Klamath and Trinity watersheds this season.

Water managers are currently developing a plan to increase river flows  
to mitigate for fish disease outbreaks. This plan is the result of  
successful lawsuits by the Hoopa Valley Tribe and the Yurok Tribe,  
PCFFA, the Klamath Riverkeeper and Earthjustice.

On February 8, a U.S. District Court judge ordered federal agencies to  
immediately take steps to protect juvenile coho salmon after several  
years of deadly disease outbreaks in the Klamath River. Klamath River  
coho salmon are listed as threatened species under the federal  
Endangered Species Act. The Hoopa Valley Tribe, who initiated the  
lawsuit, lauded the decision challenging the government’s inaction  
during two years of high disease rates and poor adult salmon returns.

“The Hoopa Valley Tribe depends on salmon for our livelihood and will  
not stand idle while our people’s culture is jeopardized,” said Ryan  
Jackson, Chairman of the Hoopa Valley Tribe. “This decision is a win  
for the Tribe and all communities that depend on Klamath salmon.”

The Hoopa Valley Tribe will also be greatly impacted by the looming  
salmon season restrictions, particularly  during their biannual white  
deer skin dance and world renewal ceremonies that will begin in  
August, according to Mike Orcutt, the Tribe’s Fisheries Director.

“Approximately on 130 fish will available for the  3400 members of the  
Tribe,” said Orcutt. “Not to have salmon for people participating in  
our ceremonies will be unfathomable.”

Dam removal plan moves forward

Tucker also said Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Energy, operating as  
PacifiCorp, has proposed “an ambitious plan” to remove the lower four  
Klamath River Dams, “a product of years of negotiations with basin  
stakeholders along with state and federal agencies." Many consider  
this the largest salmon restoration project in history.

Tribal fishery biologists said the high, flushing flows this year  
point to more promising salmon runs in future years. Mike Belchick,  
Yurok fishery biologist, said the trouble with the fishery we’re now  
seeing is largely the result of the disease problem the juvenile  
salmon migrating out of the river and its tributaries encountered in  
2014 and 2015.

“It’s too early to determine what happen with disease this year,"  
Belchik said. “With this year's large winter flows, we have hope for  
the future, althought it doesn’t help with the salmon run this year.”

Cordallis called on the entire nation to join the Yurok Tribe in  
supporting the restoration of the Klamath — and emphasized that this  
year’s salmon collapse impacts people throughout the Klamath watershed  
and in coastal communities through Oregon and California.

She said she is more hopeful than ever over dam removal, scheduled to  
occur in 2020. “According to the agreement, environmentalists, Tribes  
and fishermen will facilitate dam removal by going through the FERC  
process. I am so encouraged to have all the partners committed to dam  
removal now," she said.

Cordalis also said that river advocates must review and update the  
“whole set of laws" that determine how the operations system on the  
river is managed. She pointed out the need for comprehensive river  
management on an ecosystem basis.

Mike Orcutt emphasized, “In addition to the dam removal that we have  
supported through the FERC process, there’s major water quality and  
quantity ssues we need to address in the areas where the dams will be  
removed.”

Leaf Hillman, Natural Resources Director for the Karuk Tribe, said  
PacifiCorp’s dam removal plan gives him hope for the future.

“They know that dam removal is in the best economic interests of their  
shareholders and customers. And I know dam removal is in the best  
interests of the Karuk Tribe.”

“We’re confident that dams will come down,” concluded Cordalis. “We’ve  
always been on the Klamath and we will continue to be there. This  
fishery disaster will come to pass.”

Tucker said the dam removal plan requires no federal spending.  
PacifiCorp is contributing $200 million and California has committed  
up to $250 million in additional funds as needed. The Tribes and  
anglers are hopeful that the Trump administration will support dam  
removal, as did both the Bush and Obama administrations.

The dam removal proposal is now awaiting approval from the Federal  
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). A 2012 Environmental Impact  
Statement and other studies have concluded that Klamath dam removal is  
safe and will dramatically benefit Klamath fisheries and water  
quality, according to Tucker.

This will be last generation of salmon fishermen — unless salmon runs  
improve

Meanwhile, Oppenheim said commercial fishermen, along with Tribes, are  
working with state and federal agencies to take all of the steps  
necessary for securing disaster relief.

“We will hunker down and make this work,” he noted. “Commercial  
fishermen are a resilient bunch and will get support from local  
communities. Commercial fishermen will be defaulting on loans, selling  
boats, and taking other measures to get by. We need change and we need  
it now.”

Recreational anglers and charter boat skippers, particularly in the  
Klamath Management Zone, will also be impacted by the looming closures.

“This announcement means we’re going to have to fish for other species  
in order to make a living, that’s a fact,” said Tim Klassen, captain  
of the charter fishing vessel Reel Steel, fishing out of Eureka. “The  
long term health of salmon is more important than just one season.  
We’ve been through this before and it hurts, but if we don’t do  
something soon to improve our salmon runs, we will be the last  
generation of salmon fishermen in California.”

For the latest information on the Pacific Fishery Management Council’s  
decision on the salmon fishing seasons, go to: www.pcouncil.org.
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