The floor, not the ceiling: salmon returns in the Columbia-Snake
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Save Our Wild Salmon
is a nationwide coalition of conservation organizations, commercial and sportsfishing associations, businesses, river groups, and taxpayer advocates working collectively to restore self-sustaining, abundant, and harvestable populations of wild salmon and steelhead to rivers, streams and oceans of the Pacific Salmon states.

 

Alaska Trollers Association
American Rivers
American Whitewater
Association of Northwest
Steelheaders
Columbia Riverkeeper
Defenders of Wildlife
Earthjustice
Federation of Fly Fishers
Friends of the Clearwater
Friends of the Earth
Idaho Rivers United
Idaho Steelhead and Salmon
Unlimited
Lands Council
The Mountaineers
National Wildlife Federation
Natural Resources Defense
Council
Northwest Sportfishing
Industry Association
NW Energy Coalition
Orca Network
Oregon Guides and Packers
Oregon Natural Desert
Association
Oregon Wild
Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Associations
Salmon For All
Sierra Club
SPAWN
Taxpayers For Common
Sense
Trout Unlimited
Washington Trollers
Association
Washington Wilderness
Coalition
Washington Wildlife
Federation
Wild Steelhead Coalition

 

 

 

Smoltinpipe2The floor, not the ceiling 
Salmon returns in the Columbia-Snake

This summer, the Columbia-Snake River Basin is witnessing a very positive return of salmon and steelhead. Scientists credit favorable ocean conditions, along with the court-ordered spill of water over some of the basin’s dams, for swelling the ranks of fish.
 
The increases in spill (the good kind) — won in court by Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition members alongside the legal team at Earthjustice — helps many more baby salmon survive their epic migrations from mountain streams to the sea where they grow to adulthood. Scientists also credit this spill with significantly contributing to a chinook salmon return currently 140 percent above the 10-year average and a sockeye run breaking modern records.

For those working to restore vibrant runs of salmon to the Columbia-Snake, this year’s salmon returns offer a glimpse of what could be achieved if we follow science to protect what was once the world’s most productive salmon watershed. For the communities that rely on these fish, and for the durability of the Endangered Species Act, these returns should represent the floor, not the ceiling, as we assess the recovery of Columbia-Snake salmon and the economic, cultural, and ecosystem needs of the region.  
Unfortunately, the latest federal salmon plan would cut back the spill of water for baby salmon and would let the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Bonneville Power Administration foreclose on what scientists say is an even more crucial step for the basin’s fish: breaching the lower four Snake River dams. To date the federal agencies have been unwilling to contend with these elephants in the room. As long as NOAA and BPA refuse to do what’s necessary to recover these salmon populations, we will never get to a real solution to the salmon crisis, and wild salmon will continue to decline toward extinction.

As you may know, the Columbia-Snake Basin— which includes parts of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Nevada— is one of the most dammed river systems on Earth. Dams on the lower Snake and mainstem Columbia are by far the biggest killer of endangered wild salmon and steelhead, but NOAA and BPA continue to downplay those impacts and instead attribute both good and bad returns to ocean conditions.
 
Ocean conditions always have been, and always will be, cyclical and largely beyond our control, and there are some indications that ocean conditions will not be so beneficial over the next few years. The science tells us the way to ensure strong salmon returns in variable ocean cycles is to fix their freshwater habitat, including removing the four lower Snake River dams. With strong actions like dam removal, salmon populations will be able to weather poor ocean cycles in good health and thrive when ocean conditions are good.
 
It remains critical that the federal government develop a new salmon plan that uses the best scientific and economic information available. Let’s hope the good news brought by the strong returns this summer gives President Obama and Congress the confidence to bring together fishing, farming, and energy interests to tackle the crisis in the Columbia Basin and restore our wild salmon and steelhead to healthy, abundant levels.
For more information on salmon returns, please contact Rhett Lawrence: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , 503.230.0421 x18

 

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