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#286051 - 02/04/05 11:11 PM Re: Columbia River Action Alert
Homer2handed Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 1395
Loc: DEADWOOD
The Columbia Basin Fish & Wildlife Bulletin

http://www.cbbulletin.com/default.aspx

STEELHEAD IMPACT RULE CHANGE GENERATES PLENTY OF COMMENT

Posted on Friday, February 04, 2005 (PST)


STEELHEAD IMPACT RULE CHANGE GENERATES PLENTY OF COMMENT

Posted on Friday, February 04, 2005 (PST)

Letters, e-mails and phone calls are flooding in to Oregon and Washington fish and wildlife commissions to, in large part, protest a proposal to relax limits on the incidental take of protected wild winter steelhead during the commercial harvest of hatchery-produced spring chinook salmon in the lower Columbia River.

The state fish and wildlife agencies that produced the proposal say it allows them the necessary flexibility to provide sustainable salmon-fishing opportunities while remaining consistent with recovery goals for wild winter steelhead.

The state agencies last year asked that allowable impacts on winter steelhead be increased from 2 to 6 percent. The request was approved for 2005 season via a NOAA Fisheries supplemental biological opinion. It judged that the higher impacts would not jeopardize the survival of three steelhead stocks listed under the Endangered Species Act -- parts of the Lower Columbia River, Upper Willamette River and Middle Columbia River "evolutionary significant units" or ESUs. The Upper Willamette River ESU includes only winter-run steelhead populations.

State officials say that they will continue to manage fisheries to minimize steelhead mortality and that impacts would rarely reach or exceed 2 percent despite the increased flexibility.

The state commissions will soon consider adopting a new joint policy regarding steelhead impacts. The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission will take up the issue tomorrow (Feb. 5) and the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission meets Feb. 11. Their policy guidance would be heeded by the Columbia River Compact as it manages the Columbia mainstem commercial fisheries that will likely begin in late February or early March. The Compact is made up of representatives of the ODFW and WDFW directors.

"The commission is getting a lot of feedback," said Cindy LeFleur, the WDFW's Columbia River policy coordinator. Likewise, is the Oregon commission, according to the ODFW's Compact representative, Steve Williams. Most of the early feedback is in opposition to the change, he said.

Sport anglers, who take an estimated 4 percent toll on the winter steelhead in tributary fisheries, have generally been opposed to a boosting of the impact limit for the commercial fishery. It is estimated that about 10 percent of wild fish hooked and released by recreational fishers do not survive.

Commercial fishers cite state and NOAA Fisheries data in saying that an average annual steelhead harvest mortality of as much as 10 percent is consistent with goals set out in a recently released Lower Columbia draft recovery plan. They also say increase impact flexibility increases the chance they can harvest their share of spring chinook. It is estimated that about 18.5 percent of steelhead released from small-mesh tangle nets die. The steelhead mortality associated with larger mesh nets is 30 percent.

Mainstem sport and commercial harvest are limited in springtime by impacts on fish listed under the Endangered Species Act. In recent years impacts to listed Upper Columbia and Snake River spring chinook caused fishery closures while the impact to steelhead from the commercial fisheries totaled only 1 percent and 0.8 percent respectively. The steelhead impact limits for non-tribal sport and commercial fisheries combined has been 2 percent since 1998. Sport impacts are minimal on the Columbia mainstem.

"This is one of the most ill-conceived ideas I've ever seen come out of either agency," said Liz Hamilton, executive director of the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association. Steelhead have been exclusively a game fish for non-tribal fishers since 1975 and have been placed "near the right hand of God" by anglers, she said. They have been heavily involved in efforts to restore habitat, protect the sanctuaries of spawning wild fish, implement mass marking so hatchery steelhead fish can be weeded out through harvest and fine-tune regulations.

"We didn't do this so they can become bycatch in nets. We did this so they would get back to the spawning grounds," Hamilton said of the wild fish. Sport fishers must release all unmarked steelhead.

The Northwest regional director of the West Coast's largest trade association of commercial fishers says the impact limits are a harvest allocation issue, not a recovery issue. The harvests are among the smallest of human factors in the decline of salmon and steelhead populations from historical levels, said Glen Spain, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Association. He cited habitat degradation and hydropower development as the biggest culprits.

"We fight over the last 5 percent of the fish. We need to work together to make sure the pie gets bigger," Spain said of habitat problems that continue to limit recovery of many of the winter steelhead populations. He said there are some harvestable surpluses of the steelhead because of the habitat's limited carrying capacity.

The proposal has been well studied to assure it won't harm listed steelhead, and fisheries will be well monitored.

"All of these things are well analyzed to minimize bycatch and minimize incidental take," Spain said.

"This is a lid that was scientifically put on there and it says it won't jeopardize the recovery of the run," said Les Clark of the Northwest Gillnetters Association. And even though it allows the flexibility, new selective fishing methods and management strategies would prevent fishers from ever coming close to a 6 percent impact, he said.

Terry Turner of the Washington Council of Trout Unlimited said recently that his organization is opposed to any increase in the allowable take of wild winter steelhead until those populations are recovered. He said that, despite characterizations of the winter steelhead stocks as much improved, there remains many weak runs within those stocks.

He said information contained in NOAA's supplemental biological opinion released recently shows weak runs and poor rebuilding trends in five of the 11 tributaries where the listed fish spawn.

He also said the overall upward trend is buoyed by recent favorable ocean conditions. Instead of increasing the allowable freshwater impacts on the fish, the agencies should maintain protections to gird for times of less favorable ocean survival conditions, he said.

Commercial fishers who have gone through years of economic hard times want to have access to abundant hatchery chinook bound for Columbia River tributaries.

"The spring season is our most valuable season," Jack Marinkovich of the Columbia River Fishermen's Protective Union said during a recent Compact meeting. The fish last year brought fisherman $4 to $5 per pound.

"We just cannot harvest a large enough amount to hold down the surplus escapement to the hatcheries, especially to the Willamette," Marinkovich said. With carefully orchestrated fisheries, the commercial fishers would not necessarily exact a greater toll on steelhead, he added.

Sport fisher Bruce Hunter, testifying during the same Compact, said the emphasis is wrongly placed on economics.

"You should maximize the effort to recovery the salmon, not harvest them," he said.

Angler Gary Kish said increasing the impacts would be "a very significant political mistake." Those who oppose funding for conservation efforts, and those who have worked and sacrificed to try rebuild fish stocks, would question such a decision.

"In this instance, I think it's a fair question," Kish said.
_________________________
Brian

[img]http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:VeLkiG2PPCrjzM:www.bunncapitol.com/cookbook[/img]

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#286052 - 02/05/05 09:25 PM Re: Columbia River Action Alert
eyeFISH Offline
Ornamental Rice Bowl

Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12767
It was nice meeting so many board members (and ex-board members) at the Commission meeting. A very strong showing today against the commercial fishermen.... we outnumbered them probably 8:1 but even so, it turns out our best efforts were not enough to de-rail this irresponsible plan. I testified but did not stay thru the end. I got a phone call from someone who did, and the vote wasn't even close. Very discouraging to say the least.

On to the next battle I guess.
_________________________
"Let every angler who loves to fish think what it would mean to him to find the fish were gone." (Zane Grey)

"If you don't kill them, they will spawn." (Carcassman)


The Keen Eye MD
Long Live the Kings!

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#286053 - 02/07/05 01:41 AM Re: Columbia River Action Alert
Homer2handed Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 1395
Loc: DEADWOOD
http://www.columbian.com/02062005/sports/240638.cfm

Officials bend on steelhead kill rate

Sunday, February 6, 2005
By ALLEN THOMAS, Columbian staff writer

OLYMPIA - The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission agreed Saturday to allow up to a doubling of the incidental kill of wild winter steelhead in the Columbia River in 2005 if the change is needed to help the commercial fleet catch its allocation of highly prized spring chinook.

The panel voted 8-1 to increase the ceiling on the inadvertent wild steelhead take from 2 percent of the run to 4 percent for this spring only. The more telling vote was 6-3 against keeping the lid at 2 percent.

Next Friday, the battle over the controversial proposal moves to Troutdale, where Oregon's Fish and Wildlife Commission will consider the issue.

Steelhead are caught inadvertently in the commercial net fishery for spring salmon in February and March in the lower Columbia between the mouth of the Willamette River at Kelley Point and the ocean.

A strong run of 413,000 spring chinook is forecast to enter the Columbia, along with 27,000 wild winter steelhead. Commercial fishermen can not sell or retain steelhead.

Excellent table fare, spring chinook earn commercial fishermen $6 a pound or more, compared to 50 cents to $1 a pound for fall salmon.

A five-year agreement signed in 2001 between state, federal and tribal fishery agencies stipulated up to 2 percent of the wild winter steelhead could be killed as an incidental catch in order to harvest chinook.

Wild winter steelhead in the upper Willamette, lower Columbia and mid-Columbia areas are protected under the federal Endangered Species Act.

The 2 percent limit was selected in 1998, when wild steelhead first were listed under the Endangered Species Act. At that time, the commercial fleet used large-mesh nets, which passed steelhead easily.

With the rejuvenation of the upper Columbia-Snake spring chinook run in 2001 came an opportunity for much larger sport and commercial fisheries.

The commercial season targets hatchery-origin spring chinook headed for the Willamette River and, to a much lesser extent, hatchery upper Columbia chinook.

To catch its share of Willamette salmon without using up its quota of wild upper Columbia chinook too quickly, the net fleet has shifted to tangle nets.

Tangle nets are a smaller mesh. They capture chinook and steelhead by the teeth or jaw, rather than the gills. Wild fish released from tangle nets have a much higher survival rate.

But tangle nets also result in a much higher handle of steelhead, thus the proposal to increase the incidental kill.

The proposal to increase the kill of wild winter steelhead has drawn the ire of sportsmen and wild-fish conservation advocates.

On Saturday, 27 of them testified before the Fish and Wildlife Commission, asking the panel to not waver from the 2 percent ceiling on steelhead. Eleven others, mostly Columbia River commercial fishermen, were in favor of an increase.

Guy Norman, regional director of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, said the goal is to stay within the 2 percent level. But the agency wants the flexibility to exceed 2 percent in years when the limitation would result in the gillnet fleet falling short of its chinook allocation.

Will Roehl, a commission member from Bellingham, said sportsmen kill as many as 6 percent of the wild winter steelhead in Southwest Washington tributary streams while catching hatchery fish, yet oppose the commercials getting more than 2 percent in the lower Columbia.

He said the "righteous indignation'' by sportsmen is "hypocritical.''

Commission member Bob Tuck of Selah was the lone holdout against the increase. He said there are good arguments on both sides of the argument, but "the tie goes to fish.''

Commission chairman Ron Ozment of Cathlamet pointed out that the decision is only for 2005.

Both the Oregon and Washington departments of Fish and Wildlife have committed to extensive risk assessments on wild winter steelhead runs prior to next year.
_________________________
Brian

[img]http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:VeLkiG2PPCrjzM:www.bunncapitol.com/cookbook[/img]

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#286054 - 02/08/05 02:23 AM Re: Columbia River Action Alert
Homer2handed Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 1395
Loc: DEADWOOD
Here are some more article to read:


http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/exclude/1107608841300720.xml

Salmon plan could sacrifice steelhead
To help Chinook gill-netters, Oregon and Washington want to raise the allowed accidental kill of wild steelhead
Saturday, February 05, 2005
JOE ROJAS-BURKE

http://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/bill_monroe/index.ssf?/base/sports/1107608824300721.xml

The Oregonian
Increased gill-netting a bad idea after dry winter
Sunday, February 06, 2005
Bill Monroe
_________________________
Brian

[img]http://images.google.com/images?q=tbn:VeLkiG2PPCrjzM:www.bunncapitol.com/cookbook[/img]

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