A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
February 1, 2008
3. Watersheds -
Editorial
Fishing for a lawsuit -
San Francisco Chronicle
Yuba's Wild Salmon Runs No Less Severe -
Editorial
Fishing for a lawsuit
San Francisco Chronicle – 2/1/08
Wow, this is rich: After two of the worst salmon fishing years in
If it sounds ridiculous, that's because it is. We're not saying that
These numbers are not insignificant, but nor can they hold a candle to the damage that water pumping and diversions have done to these fish. A recent federal court decision stated that
Still, the coalition says that it's just as important to stop other "factors" in the fish's decline.
"There's a host of factors contributing to the decline of the fish in the delta," said Boccadoro. "We're not suggesting the pumps aren't a factor. They are. But they're one of many factors. We're committed to researching all of those factors and taking action where necessary."
He added that the coalition had not yet done research to see how much damage pumping does to the smelt and the salmon. "We don't have the resources for that," he said.
Yet they had the resources to file a "thoroughly researched" lawsuit against two state agencies.
Well, they say the best defense is a good offense. Let's hope the smelt and the salmon will have such defenders from the public.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/02/01/ED7SUPT4P.DTL
Yuba's Wild Salmon Runs No Less Severe
By:
The Council reported additional bad news in that the count of "jacks"
(immature salmon that return 1 year prior to the main run) was only 2,000 compared to a long-term average of about 40,000 and a previous record low of 10,000. A routine forecast for next year's salmon run, the jacks suggest that we may see an even worse run of salmon in 2008.
In a statement to the press, Pacific Fishery Management Council Executive Director Donald McIsaac characterized the 2007
In a press release issued on October 19th, 2007, the South Yuba River Citizens League (SYRCL) sounded the alarm regarding the initial counts of the Fall-run Chinook on the
According to the PFMC, roughly 90,000 returning adult salmon were counted in the
On the
Although the California Department of Fish and Game has yet to authorize public release their year-end data for the fish-counter on the Yuba, NOAA Fisheries has published data indicating that mere 242 Spring-run salmon were counted at Daguerre in 2007. DFG estimates through their escapement surveys that 2,600 Fall-run Chinook spawned in the Yuba in 2007, compared to an estimate of 18,000 in 2005.
"
says Gary Reedy, SYRCL Fisheries Biologist.
What has most alarmed fisheries biologists and water managers is that the Fall-run has been the strongest Chinook run in the
produced) population of Fall-Run and Spring-Run Chinook, as well as the threatened population of Steelhead Trout.
A Recovery Plan for these threatened species is required of NOAA Fisheries, but has not yet been completed. However, a February 2007 report by twelve scientists from NOAA Fisheries and other organizations concluded that "to recover
The Upper Yuba River Studies Program recently published a report concluding that substantial habitats for salmon and steelhead exist in the watershed above Englebright Dam. "We have an opportunity, already backed by substantial public investment, to return the Yuba's wild salmon to their historic habitat in the upper
SYRCL, joined by Friends of the River, has also filed suit in federal court against the Army Corps of Engineers, National Marine Fisheries Service and Yuba County Water Agency for alleged failures to protect and recover the Spring-run Chinook Salmon, Steelhead trout and green sturgeon of the
under the federal Endangered Species Act.
"While the federal attorneys drag their heels in our legal claims, the conservation community will need to work with anglers and commercial fisheries to try to forge an enduring solution for salmon recovery. The salmon collapse represents a real unraveling of
In December 2007, NOAA Fisheries issued an updated Biological Opinion that is meant to govern operations at and around the two federal dams on the lower
SYRCL is a grassroots river advocacy organization that has been active in Yuba salmon issues for much of our 25 year history. A comprehensive overview of Yuba Salmon was delivered by SYRCL's Gary Reedy at a "Town Hall" meeting in October 2007. The complete slideshow can be viewed at www.saveyubasalmon.org.
http://yubanet.com/regional/California-s-Central-Valley-Salmon-in-Unprecedented-Collapse.php
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