Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
March 10, 2009
Top Item–
Salmon season may shut down again this year
San Francisco Chronicle – 3/10/09
By Peter Fimrite
(03-09) 18:07 PST
You know the fish aren't jumpin' when the very people who make their living reeling in chinook salmon are proposing a ban on ocean fishing for a second straight year.
That is exactly what happened Monday at the annual Pacific Fishery Management Council meetings in
Fishing-industry representatives on a council advisory panel looked at the dismal state of the fall run of Sacramento River salmon and proposed closing the 2009 ocean salmon fishing season, except, perhaps, for a bit of recreational fishing near the Oregon border.
"It is pretty simple in
The management council, a 14-member federal panel that manages the
There isn't much mystery about what the council will propose, given that the folks most likely to lobby for more fishing are proposing the elimination of the season. The only thing to decide, really, is whether to allow recreational fishing on certain dates in the summer from the
The current proposals would allow sportfishing over the July 4 weekend and from Aug. 15 to Sept. 7. An alternate plan would allow it only from Aug. 29 to Sept. 7.
Biologists estimated only 66,000 adult salmon returned to spawn last fall in the
The collapse led to an emergency declaration and appropriation of federal disaster assistance to keep fishing businesses alive.
The dismal spawning numbers are expected to continue this year. Fisheries biologists are projecting that the fall run of chinook in the system this year will be a little bit higher than last year. Still, the numbers will barely reach the council's spawning goals even if there is no fishing, according to the projections.
Both the Klamath and
Last year, more than 2,200 fishermen and fishing-related business workers lost their jobs. Fishing communities and fishing-related businesses lost more than $250 million, according to some estimates. Indirect economic impacts were even higher, according to fishing industry representatives.
The collapse in
The council is considering allowing fishing of only hatchery fish - identifiable because their fleshy adipose fins are removed - off the
A final decision on the ban and the hatchery fishing is expected in early April.#
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/09/BADD16BUCU.DTL&feed=rss.bayarea
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