Protecting Orca by Restoring Salmon

  • National Wildlife Federation Blog - Can We All Agree? A Baby Orca Needs to Eat

    January 22,  2019

    By Jacqueline Koch

    Let’s commit to save a living national treasure from starvation

    Orca.Baby.MotherWhoop whoop! It’s a headline we’ve all been hoping for: New calf spotted among Puget Sound’s critically endangered killer whales. Along with the story is the photo of our unexpected newborn. It’s surfacing, swimming through the waves and bouncing with life.

    This newsbreak is a bright spot in a series of heartbreaking dispatches chronicling the heartbreaking struggle of the Southern Resident orca. The news story peaked last summer and fall with the death of two whales, a newborn calf among them. It marked a critical loss to an endangered group that was once 200 strong. Now, if this calf survives, there will be just 75 left.

    Why? These killer whales are trapped at the deadly intersection of pollution, noisy boat traffic and—most importantly—lack of food. The once robust spring Chinook salmon runs from the Columbia River basin, on which these orca thrive, are also critically endangered.

    Last August, we bore witness to an unprecedented event. Having lost her newborn, a clearly mourning mother orca—J-35, aka Tahlequah—carried her lifeless calf in a watery “tour of grief” through the Salish Sea for 17 days. We followed her journey as helpless observers, transfixed and stunned, all told, for a distance of more than 1000 miles.

    The scale of this tragedy didn’t escape The New York Times end-of-year recap, “The Lives They Lived.” Among the world’s notable thinkers, artists, writers, etc. who passed in 2018, we learned of the very short life of a nameless, newborn female orca.

    The essay poignantly captured the miracle of a marine mammal’s birth in exacting detail: a tiny whale, whooshing its way into a watery world, tail first, pushing to the surface, to the sky, for air. The female calf brought with it great hope for a population rebound, which would only deepened our collective sense of loss when it quickly lost its fight for life.

    Yet perhaps the most important point this essay captured is the meaning these creatures hold for us. They are the iconic wildlife of our Northwest coastal communities, but they represent more than a local or regional interest. They are a living national treasure. And their possible extinction, in tandem with the food they need to survive, puts the fragility of our planet, and our existence on it, into finer focus.

    Now, with this new baby orca in our waters, we urgently need to put our heads together. Because to thrive, both mother and baby need nourishment. They need to eat! The solution to more food, while complicated, is possible. However it must be prioritized, for this new calf arrives against a drumbeat of bad news for the Southern Residents. Tahlequah is not expected to survive to summer, along with another podmate.

    From the mountains, to the rivers to Puget Sound and the Salish Sea, we too, like this newborn orca, depend on a healthy ecosystem. We are interconnected. So let’s connect the dots. We can no longer just bear witness. We must pay attention and take action. This baby whale, which offers us hope, demands we do more. It’s hungry.

  • New study connects Puget Sound orcas and Columbia Basin salmon

    orca.risingFrom the desk of Joseph Bogaard 
    February 2, 2014 

    A recently-published study from the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America makes new findings that connect endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKWs) with threatened and endangered salmon of the Columbia and Snake Rivers. NOAA-Fisheries, the federal agency charged with protecting has previously identified the historic predation by these orcas on Columbia Basin chinook salmon and have previously described the decline of salmon in the Columbia River basin as “[p]erhaps the single greatest change in food availability for resident killer whales since the late 1800s...”

    Today, there is strong evidence that the SRKWs are often suffering from severe nutritional stress (starving). The lack of available prey has been documented as a key source of mortality and low reproductive success in recent years. This new study confirms the recent presence of SRKWs at or near the mouth of the Columbia River in March/April and speculates that they are drawn there to feed on oily, energy-rich spring chinook that also gather at the river’s mouth in March before beginning their upriver migration.

    Needless to say, a Columbia Basin that produces many more chinook salmon would be a very good thing for SRKWs and help address what scientist consider orca’s biggest threat: lack of a sufficient prey base to support their survival and recovery.

    The study’s abstract below nicely summarizes the study’s findings, followed by a link to the full study.

    Assessing the coastal occurrence of endangered killer whales using autonomous passive acoustic recorders.
    By M. Bradley Hanson, Candice K. Emmons, and Eric J. Ward
    Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, November 2013.

    Abstract:
    Using moored autonomous acoustic recorders to detect and record the vocalizations of social odonotocetes to determine their occurrence patterns is a non-invasive tool in the study of these species in remote locations. Acoustic recorders were deployed in seven locations on the continental shelf of the U.S. west coast from Cape Flattery, WA to Pt. Reyes, CA to detect and record endangered southern resident killer whales between January and June of 2006–2011. Detection rates of these whales were greater in 2009 and 2011 than in 2006–2008, were most common in the month of March, and occurred with the greatest frequency off the Columbia River and Westport, which was likely related to the presence of their most commonly consumed prey, Chinook salmon. The observed patterns of annual and monthly killer whale occurrence may be related to run strength and run timing, respectively, for spring Chinook returning to the Columbia River, the largest run in this region at this time of year. Acoustic recorders provided a unique, long-term, dataset that will be important to inform future consideration of Critical Habitat designation for this U.S. Endangered Species Act listed species.

    You can read the full study here.

  • New York Times: Orcas of the Pacific Northwest are Starving and Disappearing

    By Jim Robbins
    July 9, 2018J Pod

    SEATTLE — For the last three years, not one calf has been born to the dwindling pods of black-and-white killer whales spouting geysers of mist off the coast in the Pacific Northwest.

    Normally four or five calves would be born each year among this fairly unique urban population of whales — pods named J, K and L. But most recently, the number of orcas here has dwindled to just 75, a 30-year-low in what seems to be an inexorable, perplexing decline.

    Listed as endangered since 2005, the orcas are essentially starving, as their primary prey, the Chinook, or king salmon, are dying off. Just last month, another one of the Southern Resident killer whales — one nicknamed “Crewser” that hadn’t been seen since last November — was presumed dead by the Center for Whale Research.

    In March, Gov. Jay Inslee issued an executive order directing state agencies to do more to protect the whales, and in May he convened the Southern Resident Orca Task Force, a group of state, tribal, provincial and federal officials, to devise ways to stem the loss of the beloved regional creature. “I believe we have orcas in our soul in this state,” he said. At another point, he wrote of the whales and Chinook salmon that “the impacts of letting these two species disappear would be felt for generations.”

    The orcas are also facing a new threat. The recent agreement between the Canadian government and Kinder Morgan to expand the Trans Mountain Pipeline would multiply oil tanker traffic through the orcas’ habitat by seven times, according to some estimates, and expose them to excessive noise and potential spills. Construction is set to begin in August, despite opposition from Governor Inslee and many environmentalists.

    In the late 1990s, there were nearly 100 of these giant whales in the population. Following the salmon, they migrate in the Salish Sea to the northern coast of British Columbia and often surface in the south at Puget Sound within sight of downtown Seattle, especially during the spring and summer months. The males, which can weigh up to 22,000 pounds, typically live about 30 years, and females, up to 16,000 pounds, survive longer — up to 50 or 60 years, although one J-pod member, Granny, lived to be 105 years old.
    Not only are there fewer calves in recent years, but signs of inbreeding also point to a weakening population. In the 1970s and 80s, theme parks like Sea World captured nearly 4 dozen orcas from the region, possibly shrinking the pods’ gene pool. In the last three decades, just two males fathered half the calves in the last three decades, and only a third of the females are breeding, just once every decade instead of every five years. Researchers worry that reproducing females are aging out of the population, and won’t be replaced.

    Some conservationists are concerned that the orcas’ decline is another sign of a marine ecosystem in collapse. Beginning in 2013, something known as “The Blob” — a gigantic mass of nutrient poor, extremely warm water — warmed the Pacific from Mexico to Alaska, as much as six degrees above normal. Several years ago, starfish succumbed to a wasting disease and vanished from tide pools.

    Much is still unknown about the plight of these orcas, but biologists and conservation managers have zeroed in on several main factors — and they are all connected.

    The biggest contributing factor may be the disappearance of big king salmon — fish more than 40 inches long. “They are Chinook salmon specialists,” said Brad Hanson, team leader for recovery efforts for the Northwest Fisheries Science Center here, part of NOAA. “If they could, they would eat Chinook salmon 24/7.” Orcas gobble 30 a day. Hunting enough smaller prey requires a lot more energy.

    The underwater world in the region is also getting noisier, especially an area between the San Juan Islands and Vancouver Island called Haro Strait. It is one of the orcas’ favorite foraging grounds in the summer.
    “It’s also essentially a big rock ditch where sound bounces off. When you add in commercial vessel traffic going to Vancouver, recreational boaters and whale watching operations, it’s a pretty noisy place,” Mr. Hanson said.
    Researchers are studying noise there now. They believe the cacophony of ship traffic interferes with echolocation and makes it harder for the whales to locate their prey and to communicate prey location among themselves. It can also cause hearing loss.

    In recent years, officials have expanded the distance which vessels, including whale watching boats and kayaks, must keep from the whales. And there is a voluntary no-go zone near the San Juan Islands.

    “Just the presence of boats can cause the whales to spend less time feeding,” said Lynne Barre, of NOAA Fisheries, recovery coordinator for the orcas. “And it’s harder to communicate. They have to call longer and louder when boats are nearby.”

    Another factor is the pollution in Puget Sound. Whales that live off the coast of Seattle, Tacoma and other cities are effectively urban whales buffeted by municipal and industrial waste, and the occasional spillage from wastewater treatment plants into the ocean. Killer whales carry some of the highest levels of pollution of any marine animal.

    Of most concern are the lingering effects of chemicals and pesticides, including the now banned DDT, as well as PCBs and PPDE, widely used in flame retardants and found through the world. The pollutants accumulate in salmon as they feed, and when the whales eat salmon they also ingest PCBs at even higher levels.

    “It’s very lipophilic, which means it stays in the fat, and the females transfer a huge proportion of the contaminant burden to their offspring,” Dr. Hanson said. “About 85 percent gets transferred to calves through lactation.”
    And while much of the pollution is from the region’s industrial past, Boeing disclosed this spring that over the past five years it had discharged highly toxic PCBs into the Duwamish River, which flows into Puget Sound, thousands of times over the legal limit.

    These toxins suppress the whales’ immune systems, making them more susceptible to disease. They can also impede reproduction. That may be why tests show a high number of females who have become pregnant have failed to calve.

    However, the decline of the whales can’t be pegged, experts say, to contaminants alone. A separate population of transient whales near here eat mammals that eat fish, and so consume concentrate contaminants at even higher levels — many times as high as the resident pods. Yet they are thriving, which has left scientists scratching their heads. Global populations are robust as well.

    One possible scenario is that the dearth of salmon coupled with the interference of engine noise, which can affect their immune system, too, deprives the orcas of a sufficient diet. Their bodies then draw on fat reserves, which are laced with chemicals that suppress their immune system and reduce fecundity.

    But experts aren’t sure what is raising their mortality rate. Often, when a whale dies, their carcasses sink or wash up onto remote beaches and are hard to find and test.

    In recent years, researchers have been focusing on anthroponeses, diseases that humans may be passing to wildlife. Scientists have sailed out among the pods with a petri dish at the end of a 25-foot long pole to pass through the mist that whales exhale and see what they carry in their lungs. They found a range of pathogens that could be from humans, including antibiotic resistant bacteria and staphylococcus, which can cause pneumonia.

    “It doesn’t mean they are sick, we don’t have evidence for that,” said Linda D. Rhodes, a research biologist expert in marine microbes and toxins and part of the study. “It means they are being exposed. Whether or not the whales get sick is a product of how much of it is present in the environment and how well is the whale able to defend itself.”

    There is deep concern that a fatal human or animal disease has, or will, cross the species barrier and find its way into these immuno-compromised killer whales. “I’ve had dreams about it at night,” said Joseph K. Gaydos, a veterinarian with the SeaDoc Society in Eastsound, Washington in the San Juan Islands, who studies the southern residents. “Disease smolders in the environment but can break out. If there were a highly virulent virus to come through here it would take out a large part of the population and totally stop recovery efforts.”

    Disease threats are myriad. A young killer whale died from a fungal infection last year. Toxoplasmosis is a disease spread by parasites in the feces of cats. It is one of the top threats to the Hawaiian monk seal, killing eight of the remaining 1,400 since 2001. It’s not known, though, to affect whales.

    Canine distemper from dogs is also a concern. It’s a morbillivirus, which is an RNA rather than a DNA virus. Some 1,500 dolphins were killed by a single outbreak of morbilliviruses on the East Coast several years ago.
    “RNA viruses can mutate rapidly and cross species lines,” Dr. Gaydos said.
    Steps are being planned to help the whales persevere. More Chinook salmon are being reared in hatcheries as whale food, but that is far from a certain fix.
    In the end trying to maintain a population of whales in the shadow of one of the fastest growing cities in the country may not be possible.
    “It’s an ecosystem-wide problem,” Dr. Hanson said. “Things are out of whack and we have to get them back to where we can sustain killer whales. And the clock is ticking.”

    Losing the charismatic, intelligent animals with the distinctive black-and-white “paint job” and permanent smile would be a blow to the area.
    “There would be a great sense of loss,” Dr. Rhodes said. “They are such a part of our identity here. It would be a real sense of failure.”

  • Newspaper ads highlight the urgent plight of orcas (April 2021)

    Here's a copy of the half-page print ad that SOS published on Sunday, April 18 with nine partner organizations in four Washington State papers - Seattle Times, Tacoma News Tribune, Olympian and the Spokesman Review. These ads kick off a week-long outreach and mobilization project highlighting the urgent plight of the Southern Resident orcas as they struggle to find sufficent prey - chinook salmon - in the Northwest's coastal waters.

    "Restoring the lower Snake River is our best opportunity to restore salmon
    to abundance across the Pacific Northwest!"
    - Follow this linkfor further information, including office phone numbers and suggested messages -

    2021.orca.print.ad

    Visit www.wildsalmon.org/orca to learn more about this Washington State-based ad campaign and for guidance on calling and writing the offices of Senators Murray and Cantwell. Help us ask for their urgent leadership on behalf of endangered Snake River salmon, Southern Resident orcas - and the tribal and non-tribal communities across the Northwest that are working tirelessly to protect and restore them.

    Please call these offices - and share this project with your friends and networks.

    Thank you.

  • NOAA Fisheries & WDFW: Prioritizing West Coast Chinook salmon stocks for Southern Resident killer whale recovery

    orca chinookJuly 2018

    NOAA Fisheries and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife developed a prioritized list of West Coast Chinook salmon stocks that are important to the recovery of endangered Southern Resident killer whales. Several of these Chinook salmon stocks are also themselves listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).

    The list gives extra weight to salmon runs that Southern Residents have been documented as preying on, especially during winter when the whales may have a harder time finding sufficient food.

    Biologists cautioned that this priority list should not be viewed as a hard-and-fast ranking, but rather as a relative and dynamic picture of which West Coast Chinook salmon populations are currently supporting the Southern Residents. The Southern Residents prefer Chinook salmon as prey, although they also feed on chum, coho, steelhead, and other species such as halibut and lingcod.

    Focusing attention on species in need

    Only 75 Southern Residents remain. This endangered population faces three main threats to their survival and recovery: lack of prey, vessel traffic and noise, and chemical pollution and contaminants. Given the high risk of extinction for these whales, NOAA Fisheries identified the Southern Residents as a "Species in the Spotlight" and created a special Action Plan to address each of the threats. Identifying priority salmon stocks for the whales supports the plan’s goal of targeting salmon runs that are critical to recovering the Southern Residents.

    The first 15 salmon stocks on the priority list include fall, spring, and summer Chinook salmon runs in rivers spanning from British Columbia to California, including the Fraser, Columbia, Snake, and Sacramento Rivers, as well as several rivers in Puget Sound watersheds. The diversity of rivers reflect the variety of salmon stocks the whales encounter during their winter forays along the West Coast and during the summer months when they frequent the inland waters of the Salish Sea.

    Like the Southern Residents, many of the Chinook salmon runs have also fallen in abundance and are designated threatened or endangered. Extensive habitat improvements and other recovery efforts on their behalf have been underway for many years.

    Guiding habitat restoration and use of hatchery fish

    Biologists from the two agencies developed the list to better inform recovery efforts for both the killer whales and the ESA-listed salmon runs, particularly when it comes to funding habitat restoration that can benefit both species. The prioritization may also inform efforts to use fish hatcheries to boost the supply of prey for the whales, although any adjustments must also account for the long-term sustainability of threatened and endangered salmon runs.

    “We can use this information as a guide, based on the best science, to help inform decisions about how we spend recovery dollars for both salmon and Southern Resident killer whales,” said Chris Yates, Assistant Regional Administrator for Protected Resources in NOAA Fisheries’ West Coast Region. “We remain committed to recovery of all West Coast salmon stocks, and this helps us understand where we can maximize our resources and partnerships to help killer whales too.”

    The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation cited the priority list recently in a new solicitation for proposals for a share of up to $800,000 dedicated toward killer whale conservation this year.

    Using the latest research

    The NOAA Fisheries and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife model weighs salmon stocks based on how much their ranges overlap with that of Southern Residents. The model also incorporates the latest research identifying which salmon stocks the killer whales eat based on fecal samples and scraps of their prey collected by scientists. The model gives extra consideration to salmon runs that support the Southern Residents when access to food is limited, such as in winter when biologists know, based on aerial photographs, that some whales are underweight.

    The model depended in large part on data from NOAA Fisheries’ Northwest Fisheries Science Center, where scientists have tracked the whales and studied their prey and diet for more than a decade.

    This list is important to many partners who are diligently working to recover the Southern Residents and West Coast salmon runs. Salmon and whale biologists, managers, and recovery partners from the United States and Canada reviewed the model and the initial list at a workshop sponsored by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation. The information was also shared with the Task Force established by Washington Governor Inslee earlier this year to prioritize and support a longer-term action plan for Southern Resident recovery.

    Biologists noted that the priority ranking could change as they learn more about the Southern Residents’ diet and behavior.

    “The goal is to apply what we’ve learned to protect and recover the whales, but we’re always learning more,” said Michael Ford, director of the Conservation Biology Division at NOAA Fisheries’ Northwest Fisheries Science Center. “The better we understand the Southern Residents, the better position we’ll be to advance their recovery.”

    http://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/stories/2018/18_07182018_prioritized_salmon_stocks_for_srkw_recovery.html

    READ MORE

    Southern Resident Killer Whales

    Southern Resident Killer Whale Priority Chinook Stocks Report

    Questions & Answers about the Priority Chinook Stocks report

    Salmon & Steelhead

  • NPR: 2 newborn orcas spotted in Puget Sound in the same month

    orca.calfBy Angela King & Kim Shepard
    September 24. 2020

    Two new baby orcas have emerged in Puget Sound, spotted within the same month.

    Following news of an orca calf spotted in the region this September, the Center for Whale Research announced September 25 that a second killer whale calf has been confirmed.

    The mother, J41, is a member of the Southern Resident killer whales. She last gave birth in 2015 to J51, a male.

    The Center for Whale Research is waiting to give the new calf a designation until it is certain it is healthy, noting that about 40% of baby orcas do not survive.

    On the day the orca baby was born, the whales partied into the night.

    “That day, on September 5, was really remarkable,” said Howard Garrett, co-founder of the Orca Network.

    Whales from three pods converged in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, north of the Olympic Peninsula. The J-Pod orcas swam down from the Georgia Strait, where they’d been for five days.

    “K and L pods, which hadn’t been seen or heard from since July, came in from the West,” Garrett said. The whales “seemed to have had a pre-arranged meeting time and place,” he said.

    It’s been seen before: a whale party known as a “super pod” or a “greeting ceremony.”

    The whales whistled and clicked, vocalizing above and below the water. Amid the ruckus, the baby orca, known as J57, was born. The orca was “born looking very healthy and robust,” Garrett said.

    J57 has a famous mother: J35, or Tahlequah, who two years ago carried her dead calf for 17 days and 1,000 miles.

    Garrett said Tahlequah’s tour of grief, as it was called, “woke up so many people to the fact that these whales are having reproductive problems.” Scientists have pointed to lack of food, specifically Chinook salmon, as the problem. Chinook runs have dwindled in recent decades.

    But on this day, September 5, the orcas looked healthier than in years past, which suggested they were finding Chinook salmon to eat from down the coast.

    “And then, the next morning, they were gone,” Garrett said. “They had gone out west out to sea. So they were not there foraging. They were there to socialize, on the occasion of the new baby, apparently.”

    It’s unclear how the whales could have known to convene in the Strait of Juan de Fuca at the same time.

    “They seem to have some kind of communication system that's hard to imagine, because they were 100 miles apart and around several islands, so out of acoustic range,” Garrett said.

    “But somehow they were able to meet in that location at that time on the day of the birth of the new baby.”

    Orcas from separate pods will procreate during these super pod events, Garrett said; they tend to mate across pods for maximum genetic distance between them.

    Orca pregnancies take 18 months – twice the time it takes for a human.

    “It's gonna be a little while before we know if any new pregnancies may have come from the super pod,” Garrett said.

    But other orca calves may be born in the interim, as two other resident whales are pregnant.

    J57’s birth is happy news, but it’s just one calf born this year, Garrett said, bringing the number of new resident orca whales to three since January 2019.

    “That is not enough,” Garrett said. “There really should be two or three new births a year to begin to rebuild the population.

    There was also some disappointment about the J57's sex.

    "For the Southern Resident killer whale community's population sustainability, it is preferred that new calves are female," the Center for Whale Research wrote in a statement. "But regardless of gender, J57 is a very welcome addition. He is robust and appears healthy."

    A healthy population would be 150-200 whales, Garrett said. Given that they are fewer than half that goal, “they’ve got a long way to go.”

  • NRDC Blog: To Save Orcas, First Save Salmon

    Southern Resident orcas face many threats in the Northwest, but giving them more salmon could remedy most of them.

    May 26, 2016

    Brian Palmer

    wlds27 bcae9w 2400Southern Resident orcas—a group of killer whales that stay close to the Pacific Northwest coast—are slumping toward extinction. There were 86 members when the population was listed as endangered in 2005. After more than a decade of government protection—or what passes as protection—there are 83 left.

    Like most endangered animals, these orcas face several threats. Industrial chemicals accumulate in their bodies and inhibit reproduction. Shipping noise <https://www.nrdc.org/stories/turn-down-volume>  frequently drives the whales from their habitat, preventing them from foraging, mating, and raising their young. If these were the orcas’ only problems, they could probably manage. But a dramatic dip in numbers of Chinook salmon, which make up as much as 80 percent of the Southern Residents’ diet, has intensified the impacts of pollution and ocean noise on the orca population’s growth rate. The whales simply won’t be able to recover without more salmon.

    But replenishing the Chinook supply in the Pacific Northwest is much easier said than done. Dams, especially along the lower Snake River, make it nearly impossible <https://www.nrdc.org/onearth/whales-dam-problem>  for the fish to complete their normal migration patterns. Climate change exacerbates the challenges of their journey, as the salmon fight to survive in the hot, slow-moving water behind the dams. Not enough wild Chinook are reaching their historical spawning grounds at the higher elevations, where the water remains within the temperature range the fish are adapted to. As a result, the upper Snake River Chinook salmon population is down more than 75 percent compared with their numbers in the pre-dam era.

    In early May, a federal judge threw the Southern Residents a lifeline. Judge Michael Simon told the agencies <http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/lower-snake-river-dam-removal-back-on-table/>  that operate dams along the Snake and Columbia Rivers that they have been unjustifiably dismissing the effect their hydroelectric dams have on the salmon. By March 1, 2018, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) must produce a completely new set of conclusions regarding the dams’ environmental impacts. As part of that process, the judge advised that retiring the four lower Snake River dams must at least be considered. He deferred to the government’s determination that the dams do not directly jeopardize Southern Residents. That finding, however, was based on a lone study that many orca scientists consider outdated and an outlier. The connection between the survival of the Pacific Northwest’s resident orcas and the recovery of Columbia and Snake River salmon will be a central subject of the upcoming environmental review. In the meantime, these whales will need continued federal protection.

    “We’re gutting the Endangered Species Act <https://www.nrdc.org/stories/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-endangered-species-act>  each time we ignore its mandate to ensure federal projects operate in a way that does not put an entire species at risk of extinction,” says Giulia Good Stefani <https://www.nrdc.org/experts/giulia-cs-good-stefani> , an attorney for NRDC’s Marine Mammal Protection Project. “For decades, the government has been failing Columbia and Snake River salmon and the orcas that depend on them. The science is straightforward—if we lose the fish, we lose the whales.”

    You can learn more about how dams and climate change affect the salmon population here <https://www.nrdc.org/onearth/whales-dam-problem> , but it’s the interplay of all these threats—not enough salmon, toxic water, and noise pollution—that provides a fascinating and troubling insight into the shortcomings of the country’s conservation efforts.

    Poison in the water
    The oldest members of the Southern Residents have been swimming in a toxic cocktail of industrial chemicals for decades. Born when automobiles were first becoming popular, J2, also known as Granny, is the world's oldest known orca, at more than 100 years old. Blubber biopsies and tests on the flesh of deceased orcas reveal significant levels of the pesticide DDT <https://www.epa.gov/ingredients-used-pesticide-products/ddt-brief-history-and-status> , which was banned in the United States 44 years ago <https://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/ddt-ban-takes-effect> . Southern Resident orca blubber also contains PCBs <http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxfaqs/tf.asp?id=140&tid=26> , which the country banned in 1979 <http://www.deq.state.or.us/lq/cu/nwr/PortlandHarbor/docs/SourcePCBs.pdf> . Some of the pollutants found in the whales, though, are still being manufactured, such as a class of flame retardants known as PBDEs <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polybrominated_diphenyl_ethers> . The accumulation of these and newer chemicals should raise questions about our attention (or lack thereof) to marine mammals when developing chemical regulations.

    Studies suggest that industrial chemicals have a direct role in the stalled recovery of Southern Resident orcas. Orca mothers unwittingly use their fetuses as toxin receptacles. We know this by comparing the contaminant load in male and female orcas throughout their lives. Levels of DDT, PBDEs, and PCBs increase in females until they begin to bear calves. When females become pregnant, their chemical levels drop, strongly suggesting that the contaminants tragically pass to the fetus. Male orcas, by contrast, accumulate contaminants steadily throughout their lives, because they don’t give birth.

    The offspring continue to take toxins from their mothers even after birth. Most of these chemicals are lipophilic, meaning they concentrate in the animal’s fat. Since orca milk is approximately 70 percent fat, orca babies get sizable doses of PCBs and DDT with every meal.

    Infant mortality is high among orcas in any environment. This is what makes pollution especially dangerous for the Southern Residents, who lose more than 50 percent of their calves within their first year. As the population clings to its very existence, healthy offspring are essential to the group’s survival.

    Here’s where the salmon come in. Blubber serves as a sort of savings account for killer whales. They draw on these fat stores when food is scarce. If the Southern Resident orcas had enough salmon to eat, the toxins in their blubber wouldn’t be as damaging, because they wouldn’t need to metabolize as much blubber for energy. Mothers wouldn’t need to draw as heavily on their toxin-rich blubber when bearing and nursing their young. But because Chinook salmon have become scarcer and scarcer over the years, the orcas’ own hungry bodies unlock the industrial contamination’s most deleterious effects.

    Feel the noise
    Ships heading in and out of the ports of Seattle and Vancouver—two of the busiest on the planet—pass right through the Southern Residents’ habitat. Naval exercises involving sonar also take place near these congested waters. Much of the sound from these practices occupies the same frequencies orcas use to communicate. The noise pollution <https://www.nrdc.org/issues/ocean-noise>  blocks their signals about foraging and mating, and it can drown out communication between mother and calf.

    When large ships pass through the Southern Residents’ area of the Pacific Northwest, researchers sometimes see the whales swimming with their heads high out of the water in an obvious attempt to get their jaws into the air. Whale jaws are filled with a fatty fluid that transmits sound waves from the water to the inner ear. Swimming in this manner is a whale’s way of covering its ears.
    In other parts of the world, whales have been observed fleeing rapidly from military sonar. In the Caribbean, for example, animals that have beached themselves have exhibited punctured inner ears and symptoms of suffering from the bends, caused from too rapid an ascent.

    Noise was a potential contributor to the tragic death of the Southern Resident orca known to researchers as L112, or, more affectionately, Victoria (she was also known as Sooke). In February 2012, Victoria was found dead on the Washington coastline, at the tender age of three. The cause of her death remains controversial. NOAA claims that an unidentified blunt force trauma <http://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/protected_species/marine_mammals/killer_whale/l112_stranding_final_report.html>  was the primary factor, but some who study the orcas believe that the condition of her brain was consistent with a known impact of noise on whales.
    “Neither the United States nor the Canadian navy will admit to the activity that led to her death, but she was killed by an underwater sound,” says Deborah Giles, research director at the Center for Whale Research. “Half of her brain was liquefied.”

    As with toxins, lack of salmon intensifies the damage of ocean noise. In dark or murky waters, orcas locate food by using their own sonar to bounce sound waves off of their prey. Noise from shipping and military sonar in the whales’ hunting grounds interferes with those sound waves. The few Chinook salmon that now swim through the orcas’ habitat become increasingly difficult to detect. If Chinook were more plentiful, even orcas “blinded” by noise would have an easier time finding dinner.
    The other blackfish

    In case there was any doubt of how important salmon are to the Southern Residents, another population of orca, known as the Transients, makes it clear. Transients share habitat with the Southern Residents for part of the year and have a similar genetic makeup. The main difference between the two whale groups is what they eat. While the Southern Residents rely almost completely on salmon for sustenance, the Transient orcas have a more varied diet. For this reason, the Transients serve as a kind of scientific control group to study the impact of reduced salmon abundance on the Southern Residents.

    And the comparison is telling. At a time when the Southern Residents have been dwindling, the Transient population is actually growing. Transients face some of the same threats as Southern Residents. They are exposed to noise and industrial pollution, and blubber biopsies reveal chemical loads often as high as the Southern Residents’. And yet, these whales are more resilient.
    This comparison isolates salmon loss as the primary contributor to the endangerment of the Southern Resident orcas. Ocean noise and pollution are terrible problems, but killer whales are a hardy bunch. The experience of the Transients shows that. But this trifecta of threats is too much for even an apex predator to tolerate.

    The Southern Resident orcas have been on the Endangered Species List for 11 years. During that time, the only significant protection measure the government has taken is to increase the distance whale-watching ships must keep from the animals. In light of the whales’ struggle against pollution and ocean noise and lack of food, that’s not protection—it’s abdication.

    https://www.nrdc.org/stories/save-orcas-first-save-salmon?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=linkmain&utm_campaign=email

  • NRDC: New Study Offers Way Out of Hot Water & Salmon Crisis

    salmon.deadBy Francine Kershaw  Giulia C.S. Good Stefani
    September 22, 2017

    The Pacific Northwest’s salmon are in big, hot trouble. Billions of taxpayer dollars have been spent on a wild range of government efforts to save these sacred and essential fish—from transporting salmon in trucks around dams that block the river to shooting thousands of cormorants—with little recovery or success.

    A report released by Columbia Riverkeeper this summer sheds new light on what’s killing our salmon: hot water caused by dams. The Report’s findings confirm that if we are going to save the salmon—and the killer whales and countless other species that depend on these fish for their survival—it’s time to rethink the lower Snake River dams.

    Salmon need cool water to survive. Adult sockeye salmon have difficulty migrating upstream when water temperatures approach 68°F. Migration stops
    altogether when water temperatures reach 72 to 73°F. The fish then start to die from stress and disease.

    The summer of 2015 brought severe heat and drought to the region. During this time, parts of the lower Snake River stayed warmer than 68°F for two
    straight months, leading to the death of approximately 250,000 adult sockeye salmon. Only 4% of the Snake River sockeye that returned to the
    Columbia basin in 2015 made it past the four Lower Snake River dams. Survival of adult migrating Chinook salmon, the primary prey of the critically endangered Southern Resident killer whales, was also at an historical low.

    Columbia Riverkeeper ran a computer model of river temperature that compared conditions with and without the four lower Snake River dams. The model predicted river temperatures based on data about climate, the shape of the river, upstream water temperature, and other factors.

    The findings were striking. A free-flowing Lower Snake River would have remained cooler than 68°F during most of the summer of 2015. In contrast,
    water temperatures in most of the dammed Lower Snake – specifically the three downstream reservoirs – reached 68°F in mid to late June and
    remained near or above 68°F until September. The reservoir created by Ice Harbor Dam reached 70°F by the beginning of July and stayed at least that warm until August. To compare the two, see below Figure X.

    The bad news is that the four lower Snake River dams significantly heat the river by slowing flow and creating huge, stagnant, salmon-killing reservoirs that soak up the sun. Each of the lower Snake River reservoirs was found to raise the water temperature by 2 to 4°F.

    The good news is that without the dams, the lower Snake River would not warm up as significantly and would cool more quickly, as warm water would be flushed downstream by cooler upstream water. A ‘pulse’ of hot water takes roughly two weeks to pass through the dammed lower Snake, but it would pass through a free-flowing river in just a few days.

    This region is famous for its beautiful outdoors, its bountiful wildlife, its big trees, and roaring rivers. But what really brings the Pacific Northwest together is its salmon.

    In a recent interview in Street Roots News, Elliott Moffett, co-founder of Nimi’ipuu Protecting the Environment, explained why he is fighting to remove the dams on the lower Snake River (Weyikespe in Nimi'ipuu): “the salmon is not doing that well, and so our people are not doing that well, and that’s one of the reasons why we take this on, because we’ve gotta heal our community, as well as the community of salmon, and the ecosystems that they swim in.”

    Asked what the dams represent, Elliot said: “They represent an unnaturalness. …we believe the rivers have life, and they impede that life that we see. … When they dammed them, when they impounded them, they took it out of that life cycle. And now they’re just these big backwater, sediment-filled ponds, so our fish can’t survive in them. That’s what they represent to me. And I know for others they represent what they call progress, but that to us is not progress. It’s not sustainable.”

    Perhaps true progress begins with admitting past mistakes. There is a way out of this hot water crisis. We free the Snake River.

    ABOUT THE AUTHORS

    FRANCINE KERSHAW, Marine Mammals Science Fellow, Marine Mammal Protection Project

    GIULIA C.S. GOOD STEFANI, Attorney, Marine Mammal and Southern California Ecosystems projects

    Read this online here: https://www.nrdc.org/experts/giulia-cs-good-stefani/new-study-offers-way-out-hot-water-salmon-crisis

  • NWPR: Puget Sound's Southern Resident Orca Population Drops To 30-Year Low

    orca.aerialSep 27, 2017

    Orca researchers and conservationists are urging more steps to protect Puget Sound's endangered southern resident killer whales. The push comes in the wake of the death of a 2-year-old male orca known as J52.

    The death, which researchers say was caused by malnutrition, brought the population to a 30-year low.

    J52 is the seventh orca to die this year. That’s the biggest year-to-year decline ever recorded. The decline comes less than two years after a killer whale baby boom had researchers feeling optimistic about orcas' prospects for survival in Puget Sound.

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, which manages the southern resident orca population, listed them as one of eight species most at risk of extinction in a 2015 report to Congress.

    “We’re going to keep sliding down unless we take some immediate action to improve the situation for these whales,” says Robb Krehbiel, the northwest representative for Defenders of Wildlife.

    The southern resident orca population is suffering from two main problems: too much pollution, and not enough fish to eat. The two problems compound each other because, when orcas go through periods of starvation, they burn fat and release the toxins stored there into their bodies.

    That’s why “the biggest thing that we can do to help our southern resident orcas is restore Chinook salmon runs so that there’s just plenty of fish out there in the water for these guys to eat,” says Krehbiel, with Defenders of Wildlife.

    Krehbiel says the dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers need to be more fish-friendly; others are calling for the complete removal of the Snake River dams.

    At the same time, NOAA is considering expanding the area designated as the southern resident orcas’ critical habitat some time in 2017.

    Krehbiel says it’s not just federal agencies that can do something; everyone can help address the pollution of Puget Sound by being careful about what products they use on their lawns, vehicles, and for hygiene.


    To see more, visit EarthFix.

    http://nwpr.org/post/puget-sounds-southern-resident-orca-population-drops-30-year-low

  • NY Times: How Long Before These Salmon Are Gone? ‘Maybe 20 Years’

    Warming waters and a series of dams are making the grueling migration of the Chinook salmon even more deadly — and threatening dozens of other species.

    Salmon.Chinook.Dying.SpawningSeptember 16, 2019

    By Jim Robbins

    North Fork, Idaho — The Middle Fork of the Salmon River, one of the wildest rivers in the contiguous United States, is prime fish habitat. Cold, clear waters from melting snow tumble out of the Salmon River Mountains and into the boulder-strewn river, which is federally protected.

    The last of the spawning spring-summer Chinook salmon arrived here in June after a herculean 800-mile upstream swim. Now the big fish — which can weigh up to 30 pounds — are finishing their courtship rituals. Next year there will be a new generation of Chinook.

    In spite of this pristine 112-mile-long mountain refuge, the fish that have returned here to reproduce and then die for countless generations are in deep trouble.

    Some 45,000 to 50,000 spring-summer Chinook spawned here in the 1950s. These days, the average is about 1,500 fish, and declining. And not just here: Native fish are in free-fall throughout the Columbia River basin, a situation so dire that many groups are urging the removal of four large dams to keep the fish from being lost.

    “The Columbia River was once the most productive wild Chinook habitat in the world,” said Russ Thurow, a fisheries research scientist with the Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station.

    Standing alongside the Salmon River in Idaho, Mr. Thurow considered the prospect that the fish he had spent most of his life studying could disappear. “It’s hard to say, but now these fish have maybe four generations left before they are gone,” he said. “Maybe 20 years.”

    Thirteen species of salmon and steelhead trout are listed as threatened or endangered in the Columbia basin, an area that includes parts of Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Montana and British Columbia. Salmon are a keystone species in this region, critical as a food source for animals from bears to eagles to insects.

    That group of beneficiaries includes an endangere

    d population of orcas, or killer whales, along the West Coast that survive by eating Chinook in the winter and spring, up to 30 a day.

    Many experts believe the orcas are starving in large part because of the decline of wild salmon. This year alone, their number has dropped from 76 to 73, alarming conservationists and scientists. Last year, an orca mother carried a dead calf for 17 days on her back. She was presumed to be grieving.

    “The best thing you could do to get more spring Chinook for the orcas is to remove those four lower dams,” said Don Chapman, a retired fisheries scientist who worked as a consultant to the hydropower industry and defended the dams and mitigation efforts.

    He has since changed his mind about the dams: “They kill too many juveniles going downstream and some adults going back.”

    Salmon are swimming in warming waters, with uncertain consequences, according to a recent study. Breaching the dams also would help keep water temperatures cooler as the climate changes, Dr. Chapman said.

    Warming waters

    Chinook, or king salmon, are huge, powerful fish, the largest member of the salmon family in North America. Spring-summer Chinook make an epic migration thousands of miles through the Columbia River to the waters surrounding Alaska’s Aleutian Islands, and then back to the high elevations of the Rocky Mountains.

    Before the 20th century, some 10 million to 16 million adult salmon and steelhead trout are thought to have returned annually to the Columbia River system. The current return of wild fish is 2 percent of that, by some estimates.

    While farming, logging and especially the commercial harvest of salmon in the early 20th century all took a toll, the single greatest impact on wild fish comes from eight large dams — four on the Columbia and four on the Snake River, a major tributary.

    The four Snake River dams are used primarily to create reservoirs for the barging of Idaho’s wheat to ports. But the dams raise water temperatures and block travel migration routes, increasing fish mortality.

    Climate change also has raised both river and ocean water temperatures, which can be deadly to fish. In 2015, for example, unusually warm water killed an estimated 250,000 sockeye salmon.

    For decades, experts have tried to ameliorate the loss of the Columbia’s wild fish by installing ladders that allow the fish to swim around the dams, and by placing them in barges and trucks for transport around the dams. The massive efforts have not stemmed the decline, despite the fact that more than $16 billion has been spent on recovery over the last several decades.

    Now most scientists come down on the side of removing the dams. Last fall, orca researchers urged Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington and the Southern Resident Orca Task Force, a state government panel, to begin removing the four dams on the Snake River to aid the starving whales.

    Orca.Sunset.Leaping“Put simply, orca need more Chinook salmon available on a year-round basis, as quickly as possible,” they wrote, calling the removals “vital to ensure orca survival.”

    The federal agencies responsible for managing fisheries on the Columbia, though, maintain that removing the Snake River dams is not critical to the survival of salmon and that hatchery-reared fish have made up for the loss of the river’s wild fish for the orcas.

    The southern resident killer whales “do not distinguish between hatchery and wild fish,” the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in a statement.

    The National Marine Fisheries Service has proposed killing more than 1,100 sea lions along the Columbia River because they eat salmon as they gather to spawn.

    Those who want to keep the dams point to changing ocean conditions as a major factor in the decline of the salmon. Water temperatures have been unusually warm in recent years, which reduces salmon food sources. Federal officials just announced that the marine heat wave has returned this year.

    But hatchery fish are not the same, said Deborah A. Giles, science and research director at Wild Orca, a group that studies and advocates for protection of the whales. Orcas evolved eating big wild fish, some 300 to 350 pounds a day.

    “Wild fish are much bigger and more lipid-rich,” she said. “Having to catch the equivalent of 350 pounds in hatchery fish, which are smaller and lower quality, expends significantly more energy. They have to work a lot harder for their meals.”

    Nutritional stress is part of the reason that the whales are in decline. About 70 percent of pregnancies among the southern resident orcas are lost before the calves are born, an alarmingly high figure, according to a recent paper.

    Since 2001, federal courts have taken the agencies responsible for protecting the salmon, including NOAA and the Army Corps of Engineers, to task for not doing enough to ensure the survival of the fish. In 2016, Judge Michael H. Simon of the Federal District Court of Oregon ordered a new plan to restore the species, saying previous efforts had violated endangered species and environmental laws. The ruling cited the agencies’ refusal to consider removing the lower Snake River dams. The plan is due in 2021.

     

    Federal and state agencies have released untold numbers of hatchery-reared fish to replace wild fish in the Columbia basin. But some experts believe that hatchery fish could adversely affect the genome of the remaining wild fish.

    In 2016, a study found that 723 genes were operating differently in the first generation of hatchery-reared fish than in wild fish, affecting such functions as the immune system and wound-healing, as hatchery-reared fish adapted to crowded conditions.

    Traits that wild fish lose by mating with hatchery fish may one day be important for adaptation to climate change, Mr. Thurow said. The Middle Fork population, here in Idaho, is one of the few without genetic influences from hatchery-reared fish.

    A grueling journey

    The extreme migration of the spring-summer Chinook salmon is one of the natural world’s great journeys.

    Before the dams were built in the 1960s and 1970s, the fish born in the Middle Fork were swept by strong spring currents 800 miles to the sea. The rivers moved them rapidly along, from six to 10 miles per hour, and the young fish reached the brackish waters of the Columbia River estuary in a couple of weeks.

    As they travel, the parrs, or young freshwater salmon, undergo a profound transformation called smoltification, becoming smolts able to thrive in saltwater. After leaving the river, the fish turn north and travel to the North Pacific, near the Aleutian Islands.

    They spend up to four years feeding at sea, and then those that survive the seagoing journey return to the mouth of the Columbia. Their physiological changes are reversed as they move upstream, and they again become freshwater fish.Dams.HellsCanyon

    Picking up the scent of their natal stream, they fight the current, foregoing food on the grueling trip, gaining about 6,500 feet in elevation, and overcoming physical barriers in what biologists describe as a heroic journey.

    “I’ve seen them jump an eight-foot waterfall, and they are known to jump 12 feet,” said Mr. Thurow. “They are the definition of persistence.”

    Chinook are known as “high-fidelity” spawners, not only returning to the stream where they were born, but also often to the same shallows. Then the game is afoot: In their waning days, as males battle for dominance, females excavate a redd, a depression in the gravel riverbed.

    The female releases clusters of eggs as the male sidles up, releasing its sperm at the same time. The current mixes them, resulting in fertilization. The eggs are adhesive and stick to the gravel after they fall. The female buries them in an egg pocket.

    The mating is repeated multiple times; all told, some 5,000 eggs may be released by a single female. “By the times she finishes, she’s within a day or two of dying,” Mr. Thurow said. The next spring, the offspring emerge and make their own journey to the sea. Always a gauntlet, the migration now is far more deadly. The eight large dams along the Snake and Columbia rivers created 325 miles of slack water in reservoirs. The average speed of the water flowing downstream has dropped to less than 1.5 miles per hour, and it takes the fish far longer to reach the sea.

    When the parrs reach a reservoir on the way, they must swim instead of being pushed by the current, and often become disoriented and are more susceptible to predators. Delayed, they may go through smoltification at the wrong time.

    The young salmon eat plankton and insects. But the waters of the Pacific along the West Coast have experienced unusual warming — the so-called blob — which reduces the available food supply.

    Before the Snake River dams were built, three to six of every 100 fish that left their natal streams returned home, a ratio called smolt-to-adult return. Today that number is just under one. Biologists say it must reach four to rebuild the fisheries.

    It is not just orcas that are suffering because of the decline of salmon. An estimated 137 species rely on the surge of protein brought upriver by millions of fish each year. The salmon also provided phosphorous, nitrogen and other nutrients that nourish the great forests of the Northwest. Three-quarters of the nutrients in some trees in Alaska and British Columbia are derived from salmon.

    The Middle Fork of Salmon River will be critical as the waters of the Columbia warm, Mr. Thurow said. High-altitude streams are expected to warm less, and the Chinook here will find a cold-water refuge — and if they adapt, a base for repopulating other streams.

    “The outlook isn’t good, but these fish are what give me hope,” Mr. Thurow said. “Despite all of the obstacles, they are still here.”

  • NYT: Grieving Orca Carries Dead Calf for More Than 3 Days: ‘She’s Just Not Letting Go’

    By Mihir ZaveriJ35rip

    Her dead calf resting on her nose, an orca has swum in mourning for more than three days in the Pacific Northwest.

    The calf died Tuesday morning, half an hour after it was born off the coast of Victoria, British Columbia, to a 20-year-old whale called J35. It was the first calf known to have been born to the local population, known as the Southern Resident killer whales, since 2015.

    “I think she’s just grieving, unwilling at this point to let the calf go, like, ‘Why, why, why?’” said Ken Balcomb, founder and chief scientist for the San Juan Island-based Center for Whale Research, who has tracked the population for more than 40 years.

    Southern Resident killer whales, which consist of three different pods, generally stay near British Columbia and Washington State, though some swim north to Alaska and south to California. Researchers fear the decline of the population, which has been besieged by a shrinking gene pool, dwindling food supply and environmental degradation.

    Orcas have been shown to have complex social circles, use vocal communication, and exhibit emotions like grief. The whales do sometimes carry the bodies of their dead calves on the water’s surface — another whale was seen doing so in the Pacific Northwest for a few hours in 2010.

    But J35’s sad journey, which began near Victoria and has taken her some 150 miles around the San Juan Islands and Vancouver, has continued for an unusually long time, researchers said. It has become a devastating symbol, and an uncannily pointed one, for the whales’ plight.

    “We know it happens, but this one is kind of on tour almost, like she’s just not letting go,” Mr. Balcomb said.

    J35 was spotted again Friday morning near the southern end of the San Juan Islands, he said. She has largely been balancing the dead calf on her nose.
    “Sometimes she bites the flipper and pulls it up,” he said. “The calf sinks because it doesn’t have enough of a blubber layer, and it goes down. She dives down and picks it back up and brings it to the surface.”

    Mr. Balcomb’s team first started monitoring the area’s orca population in 1976. They numbered about 70 at the time, after approximately 50 were removed from the wild to become attractions in marine parks.

    About 20 years later, after federal protections were implemented, the number of whales in the population peaked at around 100. Then it started to decline again, and today, there are about 75 left.

    Given that number, there should be about nine babies born each year, Mr. Balcomb said. Instead, no calves had been born since 2015.

    “Once they stop reproducing, they may still swim around here for 50 more years, but there will be no babies,” he said. “Functionally, they will be extinct.”

    The population decline, and the lack of new baby whales, has largely been attributed to their primary prey, the King salmon, or Chinook, dying off.

    Jan Ohlberger, a research scientist at the University of Washington’s School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, said that the orcas prefer the larger Chinook salmon that are richer in energy, but that they have steadily declined over the last several decades.

    He said it could be because of overfishing or climate. “We don’t really know,” he said. “There’s a lot of hypothesizing about that.”

    Conservationists have said the whale population has also declined because of inbreeding, noise pollution from ship traffic, and municipal and industrial waste and other chemicals being spilled into the water.

    There are more potential threats on the horizon. A recent agreement to expand the Trans Mountain Pipeline, which carries oil from Alberta to British Columbia, would multiply tanker traffic through the orcas’ habitat and expose them to more noise and potential spills. Construction on that pipeline is expected to begin in August.

    In May, Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington convened the Southern Resident Orca Task Force, a group of state, tribal, provincial and federal officials, to help protect the region’s orcas.

    “The loss of a newborn orca calf from our endangered southern resident killer whale population underscores what’s at stake as we work to protect these iconic, beautiful animals from vanishing completely,” Mr. Inslee tweeted this week.

    Mr. Balcomb, who sits on the governor’s task force, said J35’s plight has become a rallying point for the efforts to protect the whales.
    “Everybody is devastated,” he said. “This is very, very dramatic, saddening, disheartening.”

  • Oceana: Study: endangered orcas are losing their unborn babies because they’re starving

    orca.oceanaBy Allison Guy, July 12, 2017

    A unique group of killer whales is miscarrying at an astronomical rate, and it’s because humans have wiped out most of their food supply.  

    A recent study in the journal PLOS ONE found that as high as 69 percent of Southern Resident killer whale pregnancies end in failure. These famous whales, which frequent the Salish Sea off Seattle and Vancouver, rely on Chinook salmon for the lion’s share of their diet. Once abundant, Chinook are now rare and the whales are going hungry. The study is the first to demonstrate a clear link between orca miscarriage and poor nutrition brought on by the scarcity of their main prey.

    Scientists at the University of Washington collected orca feces between 2008 and 2014 to measure hormones that regulate hunger, stress and reproduction. DNA profiling let them track the stages of pregnancy for individual orcas, and figure out when a female became pregnant and at what point she lost her baby.

    Lead author Samuel Wasser said that for mammals, spontaneous abortion becomes increasingly rare as a pregnancy progresses. This is not the case for Southern Residents. “Out of the 69 percent that aborted, about a third of those were in late pregnancy,” Wasser said. “That’s a period that’s extremely costly to females. It’s a pretty serious problem.”

    Past explanations for the Southern Resident’s sky-high abortion rate have included stress from dozens of whale-watching boats that encircle the orcas during tourist season, as well as poisoning from industrial chemicals. Wasser’s team found no correlation between ship traffic and miscarriage, but it was a different story for toxins. 

    Persistent pollutants like DDT and flame retardants get into the water and are passed up the food chain, where they’re eventually locked away in orcas’ blubber. Well-fed whales have little to fear, but starving Southern Residents must burn their fat stores to survive. Wasser found that burning blubber releases stored toxins and drives up miscarriage rates.

    “This study further underscores that Southern Residents are starving, and that they’re careening towards extinction,” said Oceana Pacific senior scientist Ben Enticknap.

    Southern Residents are among the most endangered whales in the United States. There are now only 78 whales left, including just 30 adult females. The sex ratio of calves is skewed 5-1 in favor of males, Wasser said, which may be a worrying sign of inbreeding.

    “Projections are that in a little more than a decade, they’re going to be down to 60,” Wasser said. “We’re about to lose these guys.”

    Dammed if you do

    Southern Residents almost exclusively dine on Chinook salmon. These fish are the largest salmon species and also the most threatened. In the Fraser and Columbia rivers — the two biggest remaining sources of salmon for Southern Residents — Chinook are at just a sliver of their historical abundance. In British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest, more than 50 native stocks of this species have already gone extinct. 

    Both Wasser and Enticknap agreed that the only way to prevent Southern Resident killer whale extinction is to restore Chinook salmon abundance. But politicians, tribes, dam operators, fishermen, loggers and farmers can’t agree how to restore the salmon.  They’ve clashed over the particulars of restoration since the first Chinook populations were declared endangered in the early 1990s. Some say fishing needs to be curtailed. Others advocate for habitat restoration or rearing baby Chinook in captivity.

    Many scientists agree that dams on the rivers where Chinook reproduce are a prime threat. Some dams are totally impassable, blocking fish from thousands of miles of historic spawning grounds. Even those equipped with fish-friendly improvements, like spillways and ladders to let salmon though, can be deadly. Dams create reservoirs that harbor once-rare predators that gobble up baby salmon. And the slow-moving waters above and below a dam can get hot enough to kill adults and juveniles alike.

    In the past few decades, four dams on the Snake River in Washington have drawn particular ire from conservationists. These dams hurt adult salmon migrating up the Snake and, according to one estimate, claim 50 to 90 percent of juveniles heading downstream. They also cost taxpayers far more money than they generate, a 2016 economic analysis found.

    To bring back Southern Residents, Enticknap said these dams need to go: “From my perspective, it’s the number one action we can take to recover spring Chinook.” These fish, which migrate up the Columbia and Snake rivers in the spring, are the last big meal Southern Residents can find before summer Chinook peak in August.

    There may be a glimmer of hope on the horizon. A new partnership of government officials, farmers, tribes, fishers and environmental organizations including Oceana is developing sweeping recovery goals for Columbia River Basin salmon over the next two years.

    Enticknap urged Congress and United States government agencies to take “quick and bold action” to recover Chinook salmon.  “Ideally, this would have happened 10 years ago,” he said. “The orcas need relief now.” 

     

  • OPB: Endangered Orcas Are Starving. Should We Start Feeding Them?

    orca.swimBy Tom Banse, Northwest News Network

    Jan. 25, 2018

    Washington state officials have proposed a new tack to save the Pacific Northwest’s critically endangered orca population. Their idea is to boost salmon hatchery production by 10 to 20 million more fish per year to provide more food for the iconic killer whales.

    No one wants to see orcas starve, but reliance on fish hatcheries leaves some whale advocacy groups uneasy.

    There are just 76 orcas left in the pods that call the inland waters of the Northwest home. That’s the lowest number in more than three decades. Numerous factors take the blame for the dwindling population, but one of the biggest according to biologists is lack of prey. Chinook salmon are the preferred food for these orcas.

    Sport fisherman Greg King can relate.

    “The science is there. They’re dying,” he said. “We’re on a world stage here right now. The whole world is watching us. Are we going to let these orca whales die and have that blood on our hands? I don’t think we want that.”

    King trooped to the Washington Legislature this month to support spending tax dollars to increase hatchery production of Chinook—also known as king—salmon. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife first proposed this idea and the governor is running with it.

    State Rep. Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, independently put forward the concept and is getting traction with both parties in the legislature. ?

    On one level, the idea is pretty simple. rear more salmon at maybe half a dozen existing hatcheries throughout the state with spare capacity and release them.

    Some of that could happen at the Hoodsport salmon hatchery on Hood Canal.

    “We want to see if we can add to that prey base here from Hoodsport,” State Fish and Wildlife Regional Hatchery Manager Rob Allan said.

    The big question is will it work? in the end, the fish have to be pretty big by the time the killer whales go for them.

    “We’re hoping so,” Allan said. “All we know is that we release fish, they go out to the salt (water) and then they come back. So then it’s up to the whales to go ahead and eat ‘em. We think it’s going to help.”

    But potential complications abound. The federal government will need to give the OK because both the Puget Sound orcas and many wild salmon runs they used to feed on are listed as endangered.

    “Hatchery fish has been identified as a bit detrimental to recovery of wild stocks,” Allan said. “They want us to put the reins on it a bit.”

    That’s because hatchery fish could compete for resources with wild stocks and they might interbreed. So it’ll be a challenge to identify the right salmon stocks, hatchery locations and run timing.

    “Where do we emphasize, you know a Chinook or a chum salmon? Where do they need to be when the whales are there?” Allan said. “Also where are we not going to have this impact on wild fish? So it’s a real juggling match.”

    The federal government’s Southern Resident killer whale recovery coordinator said she is in discussions about how to make this work.

    “We need to come up with creative solutions,” said Lynne Barre of NOAA Fisheries. “There is kind of a sense of urgency around the whales with the recent losses.”

    Environmental groups are the most wary of the orca food pantry concept as it proceeds through the Legislature, though not opposed. Darcy Nonemacher handles government affairs for the Washington Environmental Council.

    “Given the urgency with orcas and the critical need for food to be available to sustain orca populations, everything is on the table,” Nonemacher said. “At the same time, we do not want have hatcheries done in a way that undermines listed salmon and other species that orcas eat, in particular Chinook salmon.”

    The president of the Orca Conservancy, another group, said using hatcheries to feed the orcas should only be a “short-term” solution until wild runs rebound. The governor’s office says it may take years to figure out if the supplemental feeding strategy works so they’ve penciled in indefinite funding.

    One way to measure results would be to collect and dissect orca poop to see what they ate, which is easier said than done.

    Environmentalists have long favored breaching dams on the lower Snake River to boost salmon numbers and are now directly linking that to creating food for orcas. However, breaching those federal dams appears to have minimal support in Congress.

    Separately, the Washington Legislature is debating a bill to reduce noise impacts on orcas by imposing a seven knot vessel speed limit within 400 yards of an endangered resident killer whale. Additionally, the governor and state Senate have proposed to increase spending on marine patrols to enforce such a speed limit and existing rules for boaters to stay at least 200 yards away from whales.

    Both the governor’s office and legislators are talking about creating a Southern Resident killer whale task force to focus on securing more public and private resources and support for orca recovery efforts. Gov. Jay Inslee included nearly $4 million for various orca recovery initiatives, including increased hatchery production and vessel enforcement, in his 2018 budget requests now pending before the state
    Legislature.

    Canada is working on its own orca protection plan with many similar elements. The Southern Resident killer whales routinely cross the maritime border between Washington state and British Columbia.

    In 2014, WDFW hatcheries released around 145 million juvenile salmon and steelhead, about one-third of which were Chinook. A 10 million increase in king salmon production for the purpose of feeding hungry orcas would equate to a 20 percent increase in annual releases of that
    species.

    Hatchery fish not eaten by the killer whales may provide increased fishing opportunities for humans.

    The proposed budget authorization to rear the first cohort of Chinook salmon to feed the orcas comes in at $1.5 million.

    https://www.opb.org/news/article/npr-endangered-orcas-are-starving-should-we-start-feeding-them/

  • OPB: Dam Agreement Aims To Help More Salmon Survive Columbia River Journey

    December 18, 2018

    By Tony Schick, Cassandra Profita, and David Steves 

    seattletimessockeyePortland, OR - A new agreement aims to help more young salmon make their way past dams along the Columbia and Snake rivers.

    The agreement, released Tuesday, spells out new strategies for spilling more water over the dams — and sending less water through power-generating turbines — each spring. It signals a reprieve to the yearslong legal skirmishes that have been playing out in federal courts over how best to save salmon and steelhead from extinction.

    The fish face a number of challenges because of the hydroelectric dams built on the two rivers throughout the 20th century. Those threats include miles of slackwater behind dams, forcing juvenile fish to swim down rivers where currents previously carried them along. Dams also have created more opportunities for predators like sea lions and cormorants to prey on young salmon. And getting past the dams and their turbine blades presents dangers of its own.

    Government and tribal leaders announced the new agreement, describing it as a way to strike a balance between fish survival and continued hydropower generation from eight dams on the lower Columbia and Snake rivers.

    Spilling water has been ordered by the courts in the past, as recently as last spring.

    But those orders have created friction between salmon recovery advocates and groups that say curbing the flow of water means less electricity — and that means higher rates for customers.

    This latest approach calls for “flexible spill,” according to a joint statement released by the agreement’s parties. In other words, dam operators would control the volume of water that gets released to help move fish downriver; more water when electricity demand is lower, less water when there’s high demand for electricity. During those high-demand periods, more water would be sent through power-generating turbines.

     “I don’t think this piece would be the solution, but it might be the start of a move toward a solution, and that’s what I think we’re all hopeful for,” said Jim Litchfield, executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, a group that has opposed increased spill in the past.

    “At the same time, we are concerned about the unprecedented and scientifically unproven levels of new spill being contemplated by the agreement,” said Litchfield, whose group represents utilities, ports, farms and other operations that support dams.

    Fishing and environmental advocacy groups characterized the agreement an important incremental step in the right direction.

    “The urgency for strong action remains, while Columbia Basin salmon remain on life support,” said Glen Spain, Northwest regional director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.

    Tom France, regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation, called the plan a step to help both salmon and the endangered resident orcas of south Puget Sound. Their waning chance of survival has been directly linked to the historically declining population of Columbia and Snake river chinook salmon.

    “Much more will be needed, however, to protect endangered salmon — and orca — from extinction,” he said in a statement.

    The parties that agreed to the new spill strategy include the Washington, Oregon and the Nez Perce Tribe in Idaho. Other parties include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation, which operate the dams, and the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets hydropower to utilities and other customers.

    Bonneville Power Administration spokesman Dave Wilson said the plan could keep everyone out of court for the next three years.

    “The new approach is collaboration rather than litigation, working together the states, tribes, federal agencies,” he said. “We’re going to try to do it all.”

    Some, including the federal judge who previously presided over the case, and more recently, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, have called for research or consideration for the removal of dams on the lower Snake River. It’s an idea that’s been discussed as way to save salmon and ensure they are plentiful enough for orca survival in the Northwest — especially if more incremental steps don’t work.

    Todd True is an EarthJustice lawyer who has represented environmental groups in legal action over the dams and salmon. He said it would be great if, after the new agreement’s three-year period, the government can come up with a long-term solution to protect salmon and orcas.

    “Scientists have been saying for decades that’s the single biggest step we can take to put salmon on the path to sustainable populations,” True said. “So that is front and center and it’s an issue we think we need to come to grips with and address.”

  • OPB: Southern Resident grandmother orca missing and likely dead

    Dukes orcas thinkstock WEB 01252018 640x427By AP staff
    September 21, 2021

    The Center for Whale Research has declared an orca in one of the Puget Sound’s endangered Southern Resident killer whale pods “missing and likely dead.”

    The Bellingham Herald reports mother and grandmother L47, or Marina as she was also known, was missing from the center's 2021 census, according to a Monday news release, and she hasn't been spotted since Feb. 27.

    The 47-year-old orca “did not appear to be in particularly poor condition” in that sighting, but she was missing from surveys this summer conducted by Fisheries and Oceans Canada in the western Strait of Juan de Fuca, a body of water that separates Washington state from Canada.

    The Center for Whale Research said it had six encounters with L47’s matriline and photographed all of her offspring without finding her. “Her repeated absence meets our criteria for declaring a whale missing and likely deceased,” the news release said.

    Marina was born in 1974 and was among the Southern Resident’s most prolific females, giving birth to seven calves that survived long enough to receive an alpha-numeric designation, according to researchers.

    Four of the calves did not survive past their first year, but three — L83, (Moonlight), L91 (Muncher) and L115 (Mystic) — are still alive. L115 is a male, while females L83 and L91 are raising their sons, L110 (Midnight) and L122 (Magic).

    “As a mother and grandmother, L47’s death may have severe consequences,” researchers said. “Center for Whale Research data shows that older, post-reproductive females hold key leadership roles in this society, particularly when food is scarce.”

    According to the center, L115 has a three-times greater risk of death in the next two years than a male of the same age whose mother is still alive, while L47’s grandchildren face a six-fold increase in their chances of death over the next two years. Those risks will rise even higher if salmon abundance shrinks.

    In July, the endangered killer whales received new habitat protections from the U.S. government. While environmentalists praised the action, many also called for habitat protections for salmon to aid in the orca’s recovery.

    With the loss of L47 and the oldest Southern Resident male orca, known as K21 or Cappuccino, the current Southern Resident population is 73. Researchers said this week after presuming K21's death this summer, they could now confirm the death, as their teams have repeatedly censused all of K pod without finding the 35-year-old whale.

    The oldest Southern Resident on record was J2, or Granny, who lived to be 105.

  • OPB: To Help Orcas Catch More Salmon, Washington Plans To Increase Spill At Dams

    January 30, 2019

    By Courtney Flatt

    orca eating salmon CFWRIn an effort to help imperiled salmon, Washington officials are proposing more water be spilled at dams during fish migration. The hope is that this would also increase the amount of food for orcas in Puget Sound.

    Last year, state, federal and tribal officials came up with a plan to spill more water over the tops of dams during the spring. That would help young salmon migrating out to sea. At the same time, these flexible plans would keep hydropower costs low.

    Washington’s new proposal would bring the state’s regulations in line with those plans. The state’s plan would last for three years so that officials can test the effectiveness of the increased spill.

    “As always, science is our guide and we need to balance the potential benefits to juvenile salmon without too great of risk to other fish,” said Maia Bellon, director of Ecology, in a statement. “We want to be intentional and informed about any actions that significantly alter this complex ecosystem.”

    Increased spill is important to help salmon survive, said Joseph Bogaard, with Save Our Wild Salmon.

    “What we’ve been doing to date to address the threats bearing down on endangered salmon and steelhead in the Columbia Basin have been inadequate,” Bogaard said. “Increased spill is probably our best tactic to increase salmon survival in the near-term. It won’t be enough over time, but it’s certainly a step in the right direction.”

    Long-term, Bogaard said, the best way to ensure wild salmon survival is to remove the four Lower Snake River dams, a move federal judge Michael Simon ordered officials to put back on the table.

    Washington’s plans could result in more gas bubbles in the water spilled over dams. There are restrictions on what’s known as total dissolved gas above dams. Washington’s Department of Ecology monitor the gas levels. A department spokeswoman said the restriction above the dams helped officials know how much gas each dam was adding to the river.

    The plan is drawing criticism from dam advocates. One of their arguments involves the possibility of more gas bubbles in the water. They say some fish could suffer from something akin to the bends, which afflicts scuba divers when they ascend too rapidly.

    “The fish would get no rest in the amount of exposure (to total dissolved gas),” said Jim Litchfield, with Northwest RiverPartners, which represents agriculture and commerce groups that support dam operations.

    Wild fish advocates say that’s simply not the case. They say more spill is needed to help young salmon make it over the dams.

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee says this plan should help feed struggling orcas that mainly eat chinook salmon.

    “Helping more juvenile salmon survive the journey to the ocean is one of many steps we want to take to protect and restore salmon. Our hope is this will also support the recovery and sustained health of our orcas,” Inslee said in a statement. “This is an important short-term action we can take to help inform our decisions about what will work over the long-term.”

    People can comment on Washington’s plan through Feb. 28. The Department of Ecology is holding two public hearings:

    Feb. 13, 2:30 p.m., Washington State School of the Blind, 2214, E. 13th St., Vancouver.

    Feb. 19, 6 p.m., webinar

  • Orca advocates, businesses and scientists call on Governor Inslee to take action to rebuild endangered chinook salmon stocks

    From the desk of Howard Garrett, Director of Orca Network

    Jan 13, 2014

    orca and chinookThousands of years ago, when the ancestors of today’s Southern Resident orcas moved into the newly thawed Salish Sea, they learned they could depend almost entirely on chinook salmon for food. Then chinook  were plentiful, huge and packed with calories, not toxins.

    Now chinook are smaller and far fewer, and though orcas scan every current and crevice for miles around, during times of scarcity they can’t find enough to sustain themselves, and some of them inevitably starve. By tradition, they share their fish with the youngest and oldest family members, raising mortalities among otherwise healthy adults.

    By 2001 this extended orca family had dropped to just 78 members. Today there are but 80.

    We have a chance to help this once robust population by revitalizing salmon habitat and protecting the remaining salmon runs. Of the many ways to help salmon survive, perhaps the most effective in the near-term is to increase spills over Columbia and Snake dams in the spring and summer to allow more smolts to arrive more quickly and safely to the ocean, increasing adults spawners in years to come – and prey for hungry southern resident killer whales.

    With this letter to Washington State’s Governor Jay Inslee, we’re asking for his help make sure these endangered orcas can bring more generations back to the Salish Sea  to feast on chinook.

    Read the letter here.

  • Orca and Salmon - An Evening of Storytelling

    You're invited to a very special evening of storytelling about orca and salmon by three renowned writers and storytellers from the Pacific Northwest. The evening includes a reception with excellent food and drinks. We hope that you can join us!

    To help celebrate Orca Awareness Month and raise awareness and understanding about the majesty of and peril facing our iconic Sourthern Resident Killer Whales and Chinook Salmon, Save Our wild Salmon, Center for Whale Research, Earthjustice, and Natural Resources Defense Council are hosting a special evening featuring authors David Neiwert and Brenda Peterson, and Elwha Storyteller Roger Fernandes

    Orca and Salmon - An Evening of Storytelling

    Town Hall Seattle

    Wednesday, June 29 at 6 pm - 9 pm

    Our delicious reception will be catered by Kevin Davis / Blueacre Seafood.Beer will be provided by Fremont Brewing Company.We'll also serve wine and non-alcoholic beverages.

    Tickets are $20 per person, with a $10 student, senior, limited income option available.

    PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS HERE.

     
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    Further information on our presenters:
     

    David Neiwert is an investigative journalist based in Seattle, a longtime environmental reporter and currently the Pacific Northwest correspondent for the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project. He is the author of Of Orcas and Men: What Killer Whales Can Teach Us,published in June 2015 by The Overlook Press, as well as numerous other books, including And Hell Followed With Her: Crossing the Dark Side of the American Border,winner of the 2013 International Latino Book Award for nonfiction.Neiwert won a National Press Club Award in 2000 for Distinguished Online Journalism for his reportage on domestic terrorism for MSNBC.com, and had a long and distinguished career in blogging at such sites as CrooksandLiars.com (where he is still a senior editor) as well as at his own pioneering blog, Orcinus.

     

    Brenda Peterson is the author of 19 books, including the National Geographic book, SIGHTINGS: The Gray Whale’s Mysterious Journey and the memoir Build Me an Ark: A Life with Animals. Peterson’s children’s book, Leopard and Silkie: One Boy’s Quest to Save Seal Pupsand Seal Pup Rescue was chosen for Scholastic Books Fairs and selected by National Science Teachers Association as an “Outstanding Science Book” for students K-12. Peterson has been interviewed on PBS’s EarthFix  and NPR’s national “Living on Earth,”  “To the Best of Our Knowledge,” and many other NPR stations.  She has written extensively about marine mammals for The Huffington Post.
    Peterson lives in Seattle on the shores of the Salish Sea. Go here for further information.

    Roger Fernandes is a member of the Lower Elwha Band of the S'Klallam Indians from the Port Angeles, Washington, area. He describes himself as an urban Indian since his mother, Violet Charles, moved to the city of Seattle where he was born in 1951. He is from a family of four brothers who are all active doing various cultural things like singing, basket making, artwork, and storytelling.

    Roger has been storytelling for about seven or eight years. The stories he started with were simple legends. Over the years, he has moved into telling myths, creation stories, flood stories, and hero stories. In sharing these types of stories Native people can teach non-Natives about the aspects of their culture that go beyond food, shelter, and clothing. These stories actually define the culture of the tellers. In the course of learning Native American stories, Roger has integrated stories he has learned from other cultures around the world like Mexico, Africa and Asia. All stories speak the same human language and teach same lessons.

    With special thanks to:

         PC copy fremont copy   Blueacre.logo

     

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  • Orca Month 2016

     

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    For more information, contact Rachael Carrell at: rachael@wildsalmon.org

    Orca Month 2016 Calendar of Events

    Orca Month 2016 on Facebook

    Orca Salmon Alliance

     

     

  • Orca Month 2016 Calendar of Events

    OM.calendar.2016.1

    For more information, contact Rachael Carrell at:

    Orca Month 2016 on Facebook

    Orca Salmon Alliance

     

  • Orca/Salmon Alert - 5-day comment period closes TODAY (Oct. 29) - Act now!

    A few weeks ago, tens of thousands people raised their voices and joined a grieving mother orca and her family in sending a blunt message to Washington State Governor Jay Inslee and the Orca Recovery Task Force he created:

    orca.salmonOrcas are starving because their main food source, chinook salmon, has declined to levels nearing extinction.

    The Task Force received the message. It just issued new revised recommendations - and they include two actions scientists say are essential to orca survival - (1) increased 'spill' at federal dams in the Columbia Basin and (2) development of a plan to remove the four lower Snake River dams. These two urgent actions - as part of a larger regional plan - are needed to rebuild Chinook salmon populations in the Columbia and Snake Rivers as quickly as possible.

    The Task Force now needs to hear from you again. It has opened a very short five-day public comment period: Oct. 25 - Oct. 29.

    Some of the Task Force's 36 recommendations may be eliminated in the days ahead. We need your help to ensure increased spill and lower Snake River dam removal are among the final recommendations the Task Force delivers to Governor Inslee just a few weeks from now.

    PLEASE ACT! Tell Governor Inslee and the Task Force that any Southern Resident Orca Action Plan must include Recommendations #8 and #9 - in order to rebuild chinook salmon populations in the Snake and Columbia Rivers:

    RECOMMENDATION #8 calls for immediate action until these four dams are gone to increase the amount of water 'spilled' at all eight lower Snake and Columbia River dams so baby salmon migrating to the ocean in spring can survive and return as adults in greater numbers.

    RECOMMENDATION #9 calls for immediate action to begin planning for the removal of the four lower Snake River dams and restoration of this historic salmon river by convening government, tribal and other stakeholders now to develop a just transition plan for dam removal and river restoration.

    Scientists tell us that increased 'spill' and lower Snake River dam removal are two of the most beneficial actions we can take to increase salmon abundance for orcas, especially during critical months of winter.


    TO SUBMIT COMMENT: go to the Task Force's online comment form and take these three simple steps:

    First, indicate you "strongly support" Recommendations #8 (more spill) and #9 (dam removal transition planning) by clicking the appropriate button.

    Next, include #8 and #9 among your Top 5 Priority Recommendations.

    Finally, COPY the message below and PASTE it into the *comment box* at the end of the online comment form. Add your own personal message as well - about why restoring endangered orcas and the chinook salmon on which they depend matters to you.backbone.projection

    --------------------

    Governor Inslee and Members of the Orca Task Force:

    Time is short and the science is clear. The lower Snake River dams must go to restore chinook salmon to feed Southern Resident orca and help save them from extinction. Act now to establish a forum for local, state, tribal, and other stakeholders to develop (1) a transition plan for removal of the four lower Snake River dams and restoration of this historic river and its imperiled salmon populations and (2) a timeline for implementing this action.

    You also must ask the Washington Department of Ecology to immediately change state water quality standards that limit the amount of water that can be spilled at the dams during the spring juvenile salmon migration months as a critical interim measure to help salmon and orca now. The new standards must allow total dissolved gas levels up 125% of saturation. Salmon - and the orcas that depend upon them - urgently need 'spill' increased to this new level starting in 2019."

    Thank you.

    --------------------

    PLEASE ACT NOW --> the Task Force and Governor Inslee need to hear from you!

    Thank you,

    Joseph, Sam and the whole SOS team
    www.wildsalmon.org

    --------------------

    Here are links to further information on the plight of Southern Resident orcas and Governor Inslee's Orca Recovery Task Force:

  • Orcas and Salmon Roundup by Howard Garrett: Will The Present Administration Act In Behalf Of Orcas And Salmon?

    orca.sm- a three part series by Howard Garrett

    1) How Can Dams in Eastern Washington Affect Puget Sound Orcas?

    2) We Can Replace 1000 Megawatts. We Can't Replace Salmon And Orcas.

    3) If Hydropower Wins Then Salmon And Orcas Lose

  • Oregonian Opinion: Oregon’s orcas, too

    By Giulia Good Stefani, Sristi Kamal, and Colleen Weiler
    Feb 26, 2020orca.aerial

    Good Stefani is senior attorney of the Natural Resources Defense Council and lives in Mosier. Kamal is a senior representative for Defenders of Wildlife and lives in Portland. Weiler is the Jessica Rekos Fellow for Whale and Dolphin Conservation and lives in Newport.

    Gov. Kate Brown stepped forward earlier this month to offer Oregon’s help for orcas and everyone embroiled in the longstanding struggle for salmon restoration in the Columbia River Basin. Restoring salmon to the basin is essential for many reasons, including the fact that these salmon feed a critically endangered orca population.

    In a letter to Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, Brown announced her commitment to finding a comprehensive solution to the logjam of dams versus salmon—arguably one of the toughest ecological, economic, energy, and environmental justice challenges facing our region. Last year, Washington state made headlines for its orca and salmon legislation as well as its billion-dollar budget to save these two beloved endangered species. Partnership between our states is overdue.

    In her letter, Gov. Brown acknowledges that the critically endangered orcas, known as the “southern residents,” are Oregon’s orcas, too. Oregonians have an under-appreciated connection and responsibility to this magnificent family of whales. The southern resident orcas are dying, with another adult nicknamed “Mega” gone just last month. With the loss of Mega, there are just 72 southern resident orcas left, and the scientists who know and love the whales can identify each one. If we lose these whales, we lose a highly complex culture, an astounding apex predator and a big piece of the magic and richness of the Pacific Northwest.

    The biggest threat to the whales is a severe shortage of their preferred food, chinook salmon. Like any other animal, the whales suffer without adequate nutrition. Reproductive-age females in particular experience high rates of pregnancy loss, reduced body condition and increased mortality. Nearly 70 percent of pregnancies detected in recent years have failed, a heartbreaking statistic that was starkly illustrated in the summer of 2018 by a grieving orca mother who refused to let her dead newborn calf go.

    The mighty Columbia was once among the greatest salmon-producing river systems on the planet, and the Snake River—its largest tributary—historically produced about half the fish. Today, less than 1% of wild spring Snake River chinook return, a dramatic decline since the late 1960s when the lower Snake River dams were built.

    The collapse of salmon in the Columbia Basin has devastating implications far beyond the orca population. These fish are primary to Columbia Basin Native peoples’ identity, health, wealth, and culture. Salmon support a multi-million dollar commercial and recreational fishing industry, and they form the backbone of the entire Pacific Northwest’s ecology. If you live around here, you are living in salmon country with salmon people.

    Gov. Brown’s vision for salmon recovery, as stated in the letter, is a package of solutions choreographed to reach multiple objectives. Brown emphasizes the need for "an affordable, nimble and reliable power system that can help us to integrate renewables to meet our climate goals; continued water supplies for agriculture and municipalities; and efficient and affordable ways to get commodities to market." She also did not shy away from the fact that we must consider restoration of the lower Snake River by removing the four lower Snake River dams. “No other action,” she wrote, “can simultaneously address both the orca and salmon recovery dilemma while providing certainty” for the region, which has been deadlocked in conflict over the dams for decades.

    It’s time to stop fighting and to start asking what we need to support communities and help salmon recover—and orcas, too. Oregon is a vital part of those discussions, and progress will require a serious investment in the “collaborative, solutions-based discussions” that the governor suggests. Our common ground is a shared understanding that the Oregon life offers an increasingly rare kind of wild abundance. Let’s work together to keep it that way.

  • Outside Magazine: Washington's Bold Plan to Save Its Orcas

    January 23, 2019

    By Bob Friel

    Orca.Scarlet.Baby.MotherThe little orca known as Scarlet is dead. Will her death be a turning point for the Northwest's endangered Southern Resident killer whales? Washington State governor Jay Inslee is proposing strong action. The last time I saw Scarlet alive, rain from a dismal September sky was pattering the Salish Sea. Despite the weather, dozens of people lined the cliff of San Juan Island’s Limekiln Point State Park, the best place to watch killer whales from land. It was as if they’d turned out to pay their respects to a funeral train. I was on a NOAA Zodiac with a team that included a University of California at Davis wildlife veterinarian who was hoping to dose the sick three-year-old orca with an antiparasitic solution. As we approached Scarlet, she was struggling to keep up with her mother and three older siblings, all members of the Pacific Northwest’s critically endangered Southern Resident killer whales. The vet shot two darts filled with medication, but up close it was obvious that this and the other unprecedented attempts to save Scarlet weren’t going to be successful. Scarlet’s once white eye patches had turned bilious orange, and instead of highlighting the Rubenesque form of a healthy killer whale, they wrapped tightly around the shape of her blubberless skull. She’d lost so much of her buoyant, insulating fat that it looked like just surfacing for air was an effort. Less than a week later, after her mother had been seen several times without her, Scarlet was officially declared dead. The little orca likely just slipped away and sank forever into the cold, green water. Losing Scarlet dropped the Southern Resident’s population to 74, its lowest level in 35 years. Since she was a female with breeding potential, her death nudges the whales that much closer to extinction. The Southern Residents are sliding toward oblivion for three main reasons: fish, fish, fish. Chinook salmon makes up at least 80 percent of their diet, but many Chinook runs are also endangered. Man-made noise from vessels makes it harder for the orcas to communicate and hunt for what few fish are left. When they do catch a fish, it’s loaded with industrial and agricultural toxics. The attention garnered by Scarlet and, last summer, by her podmate, Tahlequah, who carried around her dead calf for 17 days, spurred some government officials to action. Canada curtailed salmon fishing in several known orca feeding grounds, continued a noise-reduction program for ships heading to and from Vancouver, earmarked some funding for salmon recovery, and finally matched the U.S. requirement to stay at least 600 feet from killer whales. On the Washington State side of the Salish Sea, governor Jay Inslee formed the Southern Resident Killer Whale Task Force and challenged the group to come up with a package of “bold” proposals to save the orcas. After a series of meetings and surveys that generated more than 18,000 public comments over six months, the task force delivered its report and 36-point plan on November 16. As an in-depth primer on the Southern Residents and Chinook salmon and the complex anthropogenic impacts that both have faced for more than 100 years, the report is an excellent read. As a set of actions to save both linked species, it’s a strong push in the right direction including, as advertised, some bold and contentious ideas, such as a moratorium on whale watching the Southern Residents. Governor Inslee, who’s eyeing a run for president in 2020 on the strength of Washington’s burgeoning green economy and his attention to climate change and other environmental issues, kept up the task force’s momentum by turning its recommendations into more than $1 billion worth of items in the state’s proposed 2019–21 budget, which will be up for approval with the legislature this spring. Much of that funding would go to enforce existing regulations protecting habitat and to continue or accelerate restoration projects, all aimed at increasing Chinook salmon, because no Chinook equals no orcas. It also includes money to support the sounds-good-at-the-end-of-the-bar fixes, such as culling seals and sea lions and increasing salmon-hatchery production. Sea lions will die because they’re smart enough to take advantage of the dam bottlenecks we created that block spawning salmon, serving them up at all-you-can-eat buffets for the pinnipeds. People forget that, to protect salmon populations, Washington long had bounties on seals and sea lions ($1 and $2.50 a scalp, respectively, back in 1903; $8 a nose in later years, before the bounties finally ended in the 1960s), and all that time the Chinook numbers still crashed due to overfishing and habitat destruction. The damage and disruption we’ve done to natural systems out West means we do need salmon hatcheries in the short and medium term, even though they threaten wild-run fish via competition and genetic dilution. (It’s the wild salmon that reproduce more successfully and have the resiliency needed to better face climate change.) Along with the bounties on predators, we also forget that before we adopted the Northwest’s orcas as beloved icons, they were killed by fishermen because they, too, competed for salmon. The orcas were also shot by the military just for target practice. And we had no problem letting them be rounded up, driven into nets by explosives, calves separated from mothers, and shipped off to marine parks to entertain us. 

    Our attitudes toward orcas have evolved quickly, but only after we set in motion a clear path to extinction for the Southern Residents, who can’t evolve fast enough to save themselves from us. Reading through the task-force proposals and governor’s budget, what’s apparent is that nearly all the beneficial orca and salmon actions will also serve to create a healthier, more productive environment for humans. Cleaning up toxics, preventing oil spills, letting rivers run more naturally, rebuilding fish stocks, and other steps to restore the ecosystem are all no-brainers, even if you don’t care about killer whales. The Washington State legislature should see it that way when it votes on the budget.  This billion dollars is not going to save the orcas, though. That will take decades of continuous effort at the state level as well as federal action on dams and mixed-stock salmon fishing outside Washington State waters. But it’s definitely movement in the right direction and a sign that the people of Washington are willing to invest, and maybe even inconvenience themselves, to help save a bellwether species that’s dying in order to show us what we’re doing to ourselves. The task force’s stated recovery goal is to add ten Southern Resident orcas in ten years. Around the same time Scarlet was declared dead, aerial photos showed that one female from each of J, K, and L pods that make up the Southern Residents was pregnant. On January 11, researchers spotted what they estimate to be a three-week-old calf with one of those whales, L77, Matia. Designated L124, the baby looked healthy, and all three pods came together that day in a “superpod,” which is a gathering of the clans accompanied by lots of socializing and playing—something we’d recognize in our culture as a celebration.  Unfortunately, according to the Center for Whale Research two adult orcas, including Tahlequah’s mother, J17, look thin, and there’s serious concern whether they’ll make it through the winter. Despite the federal government shutdown, NOAA just recalled its West Coast marine mammal stranding coordinator on an emergency basis, and wildlife veterinarians are making plans to conduct a health assessment on the two whales as soon as possible. With two orcas in poor health and the Southern Residents’ recent rate of failed pregnancies, the odds are long against the population growing more this year. But then the odds weren’t good that Tahlequah would carry her dead calf around long enough for the world to take notice of the orcas’ plight, or that Scarlet could hang on long enough to ensure that the public and political will was strong enough to act. The new baby and new actions means there’s hope for the Southern Residents. Hopefully it’s not going to take a continual procession of dead whales to keep us pursuing positive steps to fix the ecosystem both we and the orcas depend on.   

  • Press Release: Washington State, Oregon Lawmakers Press Trump Administration to Extend Columbia River System Environmental Impact Statement Comment Period

    United States Congress

    Washington

    For Immediate Release

    Tuesday, March 31st, 2020

    Contact:            

    Michael J. Brewer (Murray), 202-224-2834

    Washington State, Oregon Lawmakers Press Trump Administration to Extend Columbia River System Environmental Impact Statement Comment Period as Nation Works to Address Coronavirus Pandemic

    In a new letter, a group of Washington state and Oregon lawmakers urged the Council on Environmental Quality to extend the initial 45-day comment period for the draft environmental impact statement regarding the Columbia River System

    The request for an extension comes as the COVID-19 pandemic grips the Pacific Northwest region, demanding the full attention and resources of local and state governments

    The lawmakers pushed for an extension of the comment period until after the public health emergency is over to allow accessible, in person public comment

    Lawmakers: “The current crisis cannot plausibly provide for an environment conducive to robust public comment”

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Led by U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), the top Democrat on the Senate health committee, U.S. Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Ron Wyden (D-OR), and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), as well as U.S. Representatives Adam Smith (D-WA, 9th), Rick Larsen (D-WA, 2nd), Derek Kilmer (D-WA, 6th), Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR, 1st), Earl Blumenauer (D-OR, 3rd), Suzan K. DelBene (D-WA, 1st), Pramila Jayapal (D-WA, 7th), Kim Schrier, M.D. (D-WA, 8th), and Denny Heck (D-WA, 10th), sent a letter to Council on Environmental Quality Chair Mary Neumayr requesting an extension of the 45 day public comment period currently underway for the Columbia River System draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). In observance of public health guidance, and in light of the social disruption caused by the current COVID-19 pandemic and the federal, state, and local government attention it requires, the lawmakers pressed to extend the deadline for public comment until at least 30 days after the federal public health emergency is over.

    “Given the unique nature of this crisis, it is paramount that all of our national resources and energies be focused on effecting a comprehensive response,” the lawmakers wrote. “The current crisis cannot plausibly provide for an environment conducive to robust public comment. Public feedback should be solicited in an accessible manner and, crucially, in-person, so that the citizens who stand to be affected most directly can make their voices heard to the officials charged with making these decisions.”

    The lawmakers continued: “Accordingly, we request the extension of this comment period until no sooner than 30 days after the conclusion of the public health emergency as declared by the Secretary of Health and Human Services.”

    The Columbia River System draft EIS was originally released on February 28, 2020 with a 45 day public comment period. Public feedback is a crucial aspect of the federal rulemaking process, and considering the profound impact that the Columbia River System has on the region and its many diverse inhabitants, it is vital the public has a chance to voice their thoughts and opinions before any action is decided upon—options which are currently virtually impossible due to efforts to slow the spread of coronavirus.

    Read full letter below or HERE.

    .


    .

    March 30, 2020

    The Honorable Mary Neumayr, Chair

    Council on Environmental Quality

    730 Jackson Place N.W.

    Washington, D.C. 20506

     

    Dear Madam Chair:

    We write to request an extension of the 45-day public comment period currently underway for the Federal Register notice entitled EIS No. 20200052, Draft, BR, BPA, USACE, OR, Columbia River System Operations. Due to the ongoing 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic—and the specific toll that it is taking on the Pacific Northwest—it is our concern that this important matter cannot receive the thoughtful consideration that it requires under these circumstances.

    Given the unique nature of this crisis, it is paramount that all of our national resources and energies be focused on effecting a comprehensive response. The current crisis cannot plausibly provide for an environment conducive to robust public comment. Public feedback should be solicited in an accessible manner and, crucially, in-person, so that the citizens who stand to be affected most directly can make their voices heard to the officials charged with making these decisions. Accordingly, we request the extension of this comment period until no sooner than 30 days after the conclusion of the public health emergency as declared by the Secretary of Health and Human Services.

    The Administrative Procedure Act and the National Environmental Policy Act are clear: agencies must incorporate the feedback from public comments into final rules, including in instances when the rules stand to have significant and long-term environmental impacts. The Columbia River System is a vital resource to the region, and a diverse array of stakeholders are counting on this specific environmental impact statement to bring a degree of finality and certainty to these issues. This can only be accomplished through a transparent public comment process that includes public meetings. This is an issue not of ideology, but one of public safety and full faith in institutions to be responsive to the most pressing matters.

    We stand ready to work with the Administration to expeditiously extend the comment period or have the public comment period reopened once this national crisis has been addressed. In this moment, our collective energies are best served working to hasten that moment.

    Thank you for your swift consideration of this pressing matter.

    Sincerely,

    U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA)

    U.S. Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA)

    Ron Wyden (D-OR)

    Jeff Merkley (D-OR)

    U.S. Representatives Adam Smith (D-WA, 9th)

    Rick Larsen (D-WA, 2nd)

    Derek Kilmer (D-WA, 6th)

    Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR, 1st)

    Earl Blumenauer (D-OR, 3rd)

    Suzan K. DelBene (D-WA, 1st)

    Pramila Jayapal (D-WA, 7th)

    Kim Schrier, M.D. (D-WA, 8th)

    Denny Heck (D-WA, 10th)

     

    ###

  • Puget Sound Recovery Caucus: Puget Sound Recovery Caucus introduces “National Orca Protection Month” resolution

    June 21, 2018L116.orca.web

    
Washington, D.C. – Tomorrow the Puget Sound Recovery Caucus, led by U.S. Representatives Denny Heck (WA-10) and Derek Kilmer (WA-06) will introduce a resolution before the United States Congress declaring June 2018 “National Orca Protection Month,” to honor the iconic endangered whales. 
 


    The designation spotlights the Southern Resident orca population found in the waters of the Pacific Northwest and draws attention to the extreme danger they are in.


     
“In one year, our Southern Resident orca population has dropped from 78 to 75 orcas, the lowest number in more than 30 years with no signs of healthy orca calves being born,” Heck said. “At this rate, we are at serious risk of no longer having this iconic species as a part of our Pacific Northwest identity. This resolution would affirm that saving orcas is a priority of the Congress and of the United States. I urge my colleagues in the House of Representatives to pass this resolution and recognize in order to save the orcas, we need to save the salmon, and to save the salmon, we must save Puget Sound.”


     
“The Southern Resident population is in peril,” said Kilmer. “Congress must take action now.  This resolution represents our commitment to preserving this iconic species and the role orca play in our region’s identity for future generations.”
 

    
The Endangered Species Act lists Southern Resident orcas and several Chinook salmon stocks in Washington as endangered.  The Puget Sound Recovery Caucus introduced a resolution to designate June as National Orca Protection Month in 2016 and 2017. Puget Sound is home to 75 Southern Resident orcas in the J, K, and L pods.
 

    
On April 18, 2018, the Seattle Times reported that Southern Resident orca inbreeding could devastate the population, and on June 17, 2018, the Seattle Times reported another orca death brings the population down to 75, the lowest in 34 years.. A study  released on October 11, 2017, found that reduced acoustic disturbance and increased Chinook salmon populations could help the Southern Resident orca population grow by 2.3 percent. 
 
Heck and Kilmer are co-founders of the Congressional Puget Sound Recovery Caucus, which seeks to bring greater federal support for Puget Sound clean-up efforts.
 

  • Q13 Fox: Calls to breach Snake River dams to save Northwest orcas grow louder

    October 18th, 2018

    Watch the Q13 Fox story online here.

    screenshot.Q13breachdamsTACOMA, Wash.  — Calls to breach four hydroelectric dams in Washington state have grown louder in recent months as the plight of critically endangered Northwest orcas has captured global attention.

    Some argue the best way to get more salmon to the starving whales is to tear down four dams on the Lower Snake River, a tributary of the Columbia River, to help migrating fish.

    But federal agencies and others have pushed back, saying the dams provide benefits to the region in low-cost hydropower, navigation and recreation.

    Breaching the dams has long been contentious, but it's gained renewed attention as the orcas have hit the lowest numbers in more than three decades. The whales struggle from pollution, boat noise and lack of chinook salmon, which have been declining because of dams, habitat loss and overfishing. Just 74 animals remain in the small group.

    A task force called by Gov. Jay Inslee is prioritizing a list of potential solutions to address those three threats. At a meeting Thursday, there was little consensus on whether the group should recommend that the governor convene stakeholders to discuss issues related to possible future removal of the dams.

    Ken Balcomb, a scientist with the Center for Whale Research, who supports dam breaching, told the group that punting on the issue won't help the orcas. "They're reaching the bottom of their barrel," he said. "We have to move the ball forward. The time is now."

    A number of whale and fisheries scientists have urged the task force to recommend breaching the dams and spilling more water over Columbia and Snake river dams to help salmon. Many who have commented have also supported the idea.

    But dam supporters say the structures provide carbon-free electricity and support barging on the Snake River that moves millions of tons of cargo.

    "The dams along that river are the lifeblood of those communities," Tom Davis, government relations director with the Washington Farm Bureau. He called the talk over dams "a distraction" that continues to divide the state.

    Some say dam removal could be part of a long-term solution but note that more immediate actions could boost salmon, such as removing smaller dams or increasing habitat protections.

    "Everything has to be on the table," said state Sen. Kevin Ranker, an Orcas Island Democrat who supports dam removal but said more discussions would need to take place. Meanwhile, he said the state can move quickly on other actions, including creating a "no-go zone" that restricts vessels around feeding whales.

    Other ideas being weighed by the group include reducing boat noise around the orcas; creating a permit system for commercial whale watching trips; protecting habitat for chinook salmon and the smaller forage fish that they eat; boosting production of hatchery fish; and spilling more water over Columbia and Snake river dams.

    "There is no one magic solution to recovery of southern resident killer whales," said Rob Williams, a Pew Fellow in marine conservation and co-founder of Oceans Initiative. "The three main threats that the whales are facing are inextricably linked, so recovery actions need to be linked too."

    Federal agencies are currently studying dam breaching as one of many options to aid salmon recovery in the Columbia River basin after a federal judge in 2016 ordered a new plan and told the federal government to consider breaching one or more of the four lower Snake River dams. That environmental review won't be complete until 2021.

    Officials with the Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the four dams, and Bonneville Power Administration, which markets the power, said the structures provide low-cost electricity and adds reliability to the entire system.

    The dams produce an average of 1,000 megawatts of power a year, or about 5 percent of electricity generated in the Pacific Northwest, and account for about 12 percent of BPA's power.

    A number of conservation, fishing and other groups say dam removal represents the greatest opportunity to boost salmon runs and that planning must begin now. They note that the two Snake River runs are among 15 priority stocks of chinook salmon for orcas, and increasing those runs would be a big step forward.

    Michael Milstein, a spokesman with NOAA Fisheries, said those Snake River runs are important but not in isolation. The whales "depend on a number of stocks up and down the West Coast over the course of the year and they're all important," he said, adding that returns to the Snake and Columbia rivers have been up in the last 10 years. "We do think that the whales have access to the same volume of fish that they would have otherwise," he said.

    Jeff Friedman, U.S. president of the Pacific Whale Watch Association, said "the dams are not everything but it's a big piece."

    He said there are interests in eastern Washington that would need to be addressed but "it's time we have that conversation to find out what it is going to take for everybody."

  • Q13 Fox: Endangered orca J17’s health in dramatic decline

    May 17, 2019

    By Simone del Rosario

    ocra J17 BadHealthSEATTLE -- The health of an endangered southern resident orca is in rapid decline, a stark reality captured by drone images this month.

    NOAA Fisheries first sounded the alarm on J17's health last September, but new aerials from May 6 show how much worse she has gotten since then. Now, NOAA says her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter, J53, is also declining.

    Endangered orca J17's health is getting far worse. Drone images show just how bad her health has declined, even since NOAA sounded the alarm in September 2018.

    In the latest image, you can see the outline of J17's skull, commonly referred to as 'peanut head.' It's when an emaciated whale has burned through its fat storage trying to survive. Back in September, J17 was "very lean but had not yet developed such an obvious 'peanut head,'" according to NOAA.

    The image on the far left shows when J17 was pregnant with J53 and, according to NOAA, in peak condition.

    NOAA Fisheries will monitor both J17 and J53's conditions throughout the summer with aerial visuals and by collecting feces and breath samples and scraps of the whales' prey when possible. Scientists say that information can help determine the whales' diet, potential pregnancies and exposure to any diseases.

    J17's family has had a particularly difficult year. J17 is also the mother of J35, the southern resident orca who carried her dead calf on her head for 17 days last summer in a so-called "tour of grief."

    At this time, NOAA Fisheries says it has no plans at this time to intervene with either whale. Last summer, NOAA took unprecedented measures to save a young, severely emaciated whale, J50, including dart injections and live feeding trials. Still, the orca did not survive.

    NOAA is asking the public to give the southern residents more space on the water so they can better forage. A new Washington state law mandates all vessels stay at least 300 yards away from southern resident orcas on the sides and 400 yards away in front or behind the whales. The law also states boats must travel at seven knots or less within a half nautical mile of the endangered orcas.

    In Canadian waters, a new policy of staying 400 meters, or 437 yards, away from all killer whales will go into effect in June.

    A whale warning flag flown by any vessel in the U.S. or Canada is a signal to other boats to slow down, watch for whales and keep your distance.

    If you see a whale warning flag being flown by any vessel in the U.S. or Canada, it's a signal that whales are in the area and to slow down, watch for them and keep your distance.

    The southern resident orca population is in critical decline as a whole. There are only 75 whales left. The species has been listed as endangered since 2005. Scientists cite lack of prey, contaminants and vessel disturbance as the three main threats contributing to the population's decline.

  • Q13 Fox: Inslee voices support for short-term action on orcas as long-term decisions loom

    By Simone Del RosarioInslee Orca

    SEATTLE – Gov. Jay Inslee said Thursday that quick and dramatic action needs to be undertaken to in the Pacific Northwest, but stopped short of saying he was committed to breaching four dams on the lower Snake River.

    In an interview with Q13 News’ Simone Del Rosario, Inslee said short-term efforts to save the orcas are already underway, even as a newly appointed task force works to address the primary threats the whales face: Prey, vessels and contaminants.

    “We’re acting now to improve the production of Chinook, which is critical to their survival, and to take some short-term measures to reduce the interference with their hunting from noise,” Inslee said. “And some other measures that will reduce the other species ultimately that are preying on the Chinook themselves.”

    Since being listed as endangered in 2005, the southern resident orca population has gone down 15 percent. The steps that have been taken so far, including increased salmon hatcheries, voluntary no-go zones and habitat restoration, have not resulted in more whales.

    Inslee said some of his efforts to bolster the orca population have run into resistance in the state legislature.

    “I wish the legislature had followed my proposal to them sooner,” Inslee said. "A year and a half or two years ago I proposed to help the orcas by reducing toxicity. I’ve made proposals that would spend dollars to improve our habitat that have not yet been adopted by the legislature. I’m glad the legislature is now showing a little more support for this effort, and I’m hopeful they will when we get this task force recovery plan.”

    Inslee said a workable orca action plan will require sacrifice from people across the state. Some experts have suggested increased “no-go zones,” which apply to all recreational boats – fishing or otherwise – as well as commercial vessels, in an effort to minimize disruption to orcas’ fishing.

    “It’s a position I’ve had for some time, that we should follow science and have an appropriate level of protection of these orcas,” Inslee said. “That’s why right now we’re reassessing to see what the distance should be. I believe it’s going to have to be greater to provide the orcas a greater level of protection, and that’s what we’re going to know when we get this task force done.

    “This is some interference potentially with some of the tourism involved in this, but this is my point. If we are going to save the orcas, all of us are going to have to in some way pitch in to help. That’s Eastern Washington - we need additional flows down the Columbia River, that’s why I’ve supported additional spill, so we can move more smolts down the river faster so that there’s more food available to the orcas.”

    Perhaps the most beneficial – and the most difficult – action available is to breach four dams in the lower Snake River.

    According to Bonneville Power Administration, the Columbia River basin produces more hydropower than any other river system in North America.
    But according to orca researcher Ken Balcomb, it also used to produce a lot more Chinook.

    "The biggest watershed was in the Columbia and Snake River basin," he said. "That was 12 million fish, that was a huge amount of fish. Damming those rivers up and preventing access to their spawning grounds was the coup de grace for Chinook salmon."

    Inslee said he wouldn’t shy from that fight if necessary, but said it’s ultimately the federal government’s decision.

    “We should consider the science, and that is a decision that is being considered,” he said. “Under the federal court decision it is mandated, so that is now being considered. So I believe we should look at the science of that proposal to determine what its benefits could be to the orca, and what other alternatives could be to the Snake River dams.

    Inslee said more immediate action is needed in the meantime.
    “We need to reduce the mortality of Chinook smolts as they move down the river,” he said.

    Inslee said ultimately it’s up to the public to show their support for the orcas by voting for lawmakers at the state and federal level who are behind the effort.

    “You’ve got a President right now who’s working to reduce what we can do to help these endangered species,” he said.

     

  • Q13 Fox: Orca task force finalizes plan to save endangered southern resident killer whales

    November 16, 2018

    By Brett Cihon and Q13 News Staff

    Orca L92OLYMPIA, Wash. -- The state's southern resident killer whale task force handed its plan to save the endangered animals to the governor Friday.

    The plan consists of 36 recommendations - decided after months of debate and compromise - that may represent the best hope of ensuring one of the state's most iconic species survives.

    Southern resident killer whales' numbers are the lowest they've been in more than three decades, with only 74 left in the Puget Sound. Lead researchers say there are only about five years left until the current southern residents lose their reproductive abilities.

    The recommendations are wide-ranging and include ways to boost the Chinook salmon population, reduce boat noise and decrease pollution - all factors detrimental to resident orcas.

    No recommendations were made to breach the Lower Snake River dams, considered by some advocates as the only solution left to get enough salmon to the orcas. More than 600,000 people have signed a petition to breach the dams.

    Ten of the plan's recommendations will require state legislation to move; a harrowing prospect in a state Legislature not always known for action.

    The task force hopes the state increases Chinook abundance by restoring salmon habitat, boosting hatchery production and adjusting spillover rates on Columbia and Snake River dams in hopes of helping young Chinook. The task force also recommends the governor establish another task force to discuss breaching the Snake River Dams.

    Joseph Bogaard of the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition called the recommendations a good first step, and he looks on the Legislature to act.

    "We appreciate this initial set of recommendations from the task force," Bogaard said in a release. "But now all eyes are on the Governor and the legislature; they need to move quickly to fully fund and implement these actions. We are playing catch up today, and there is no time to waste."

    The task force also hopes the state will "more effectively manage" sea lions and other predators, and adjust catch limits for non-native fish like bass.

    Limiting boat interaction with southern residents is also a priority.

    In perhaps the boldest recommendation, the task force asked the governor to suspend viewing of southern residents by "all boats" in the Puget Sound for the next three to five years. This would require a vote by the state Legislature.

    Members also want the governor to ask the state to ask the Navy to limit exposure to sound from Navy aircraft.

    The task force received more than 18,000 written comments about the proposed plan during the draft period from the public.

    Some wildlife advocates said the plan didn't go far enough. Rob Krehbiel, a member of the task force's prey working group, said the recommendations laid a foundation, but weren't bold.

    The full report is posted on the governor's web page.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Q13 Fox: To help salmon migrate, state looks to spill more over dams

    February 19, 2019

    By Simone del Rosario

    sr.damVancouver, WA - While federal officials consider breaching one or more dams in Washington to increase salmon survival, state officials are considering increasing spill over the dams to help more smolts survive in the meantime.

    If there is too little spill at hydrodams, more young, vulnerable salmon are sent down more dangerous turbines to get past them. If there is too much spill, they can die from the pressure, with gas bubbles suffocating their gills. It's similar to "the bends," a decompression illness that happens to scuba divers who come to the surface too fast.

    At the direction of the governor’s orca task force, Washington is trying to strike a balance by increasing spill thresholds so more smolts can make it through.

    "How much recovery value it has has always been the subject of debate, but pretty much everybody has agreed that more will help," said Michael Garrity, Columbia River and Water Policy Manager for Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    At a public hearing in Vancouver, Washington, the Department of Ecology heard testimony from people who wanted to weigh in on a measure to increase spill.

    "This is one of the few things the state can do to provide more salmon for orcas in just a few years," said Sristi Kamal of Defenders of Wildlife. "The more fish that are spilled, the more fish that return to the river as adults to spawn."

    The department is considering an increase on 'total dissolved gas,' or TDG, on the lower Columbia and Snake rivers from April to June. TDG measures spill around dams, relating it to normal river flows.

    For example, a TDG reading of 110 percent means that there is 10 percent more pressure in the water than normal. While Washington has a statewide TDG cap of 110 percent, it's higher around the Columbia and Snake River dams to help fish passage.

    While the governor’s orca task force mulls over effects of breaching dams on the lower Snake River for salmon survival, they recommended increasing spill over the dams up to 125 percent TDG. The increased spill would apply to eight federal dams, four on the lower Snake River and four on the lower Columbia.

    The Department of Ecology, however, is recommending a more minor increase to 120 percent in front of the dams, called the forebay. The water after each dam, the tailrace, is already allowed to reach 120 percent.

    "So 120, for sure we're comfortable with," said Heather Bartlett, program manager for Ecology's water quality program. "With 125, we would want to be able to evaluate the effects on other critters."

    Some scientific models estimate spill up to 125 percent could help stabilize Chinook salmon populations, but critics worry about the effects on other fish that are not as capable of avoiding the pressure.

    In addition, the state has signed on to a flexible spill agreement with operators of the hydrodams, allowing Bonneville Power and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to spill even less than that threshold for eight hours a day, when power is in high demand.

    Some people testifying in Vancouver argued these measures don't go far enough.

    "At a time when the governor asked us to be bold and when the governor puts a $1.2 billion budget out for orca, we really wanted to see more than a tweak," commented Liz Hamilton, executive director of Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association.

    Consistent increased spill may help salmon populations reach minimum targets for recovery, something biologists have struggled to achieve for years. Still, it might not be enough.

    "Additional spill is good, lower Snake River dam removal is another increment better," Garrity said.

    While dam breaching continues to be debated in a National Environmental Policy Act process, increased spill is close to a decision.

    The Department of Ecology is holding an online webinar and hearing Tuesday night for people to weigh in. The public has until February 28, 2019, to submit comment on the proposal.

  • Q13-FOX: Snake River dams drive wedge between farmers and orca champions

    OCTOBER 11, 2018

    BY SIMONE DEL ROSARIO

    Watch Simone Del Rosario's Q13FOX story online here.

    q13.barging.copyNEAR TRI-CITIES, Wash. -- Despite many improvements, the four dams along the lower Snake River in Eastern Washington still threaten the survival of endangered salmon that the critically endangered orcas eat.

    Salmon advocates believe the only solution left is to breach the dams. It is one of the most controversial actions being considered by Gov. Jay Inslee's southern resident killer whale task force.

    But in Eastern Washington, the agricultural community told Q13 correspondent Simone Del Rosario that losing the dams would threaten their livelihood. They use the dammed river to transport wheat on barges.

    In Paterson, Del Rosario met with Nicole Berg, a fourth generation farmer. Berg Farms has 21,000 acres and grows wheat, bluegrass, sweet corn and more. Along with being ingrained in the local farming community, Berg also serves on the board of the National Association of Wheat Growers, a lobbying group.

    "We feed the world in the Pacific Northwest," Berg said.

    How breaching the Snake River dams would impact irrigation in Eastern Washington:

    How barging works

    Many wheat farmers near the river rely on the river barge system to get their product to market.

    Farmers pay for the transportation costs, from trucking wheat to a grain elevator on the river to barging it down the river to Portland, Oregon.

    "We have some of the least expensive transportation costs in the United States," Berg said. "It’s 40 cents for me to get my wheat to Portland."

    Berg said she takes her wheat to a grain elevator on the Snake River. Del Rosario visited one 45 miles away in Pasco called Tri-Cities Grain and met with Randall Ward, a grain merchandiser.

    Grain merchandisers buy the wheat directly from farmers and load it up on barges to head down the river for export. The wheat they buy is grown in multiple states.

    "We'll take wheat from farmers in northeast Oregon, south Idaho, sometimes as far away as Montana and then all the way up Highway 2 in Washington," Ward said.

    Barging is possible because of the Columbia-Snake River System, a 465-mile river highway connecting Lewiston, Idaho, to the ocean. Eight federal dams have turned these rivers into a series of reservoirs to allow for transportation. Four of those dams are on the lower Snake River.

    As of 2016, roughly 9 percent of U.S. wheat exports barged through the Snake. It's a system that is now facing uncertainty with growing calls to breach the dams.

    One side of the story

    "I do think the people that are like, 'Dam, dam, dam, dam, let’s take them down,' I’m not sure, are you listening or are you wanting to listen to the science or both sides of the story?" Berg said.

    On this side of the story, in and around Tri-Cities, people see these dams as their economic lifeblood.

    Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse recently invited a congressional committee to Pasco to defend the dams' benefits.

    "The dams have provided so many things that have allowed this area to grow and develop, to provide food for not only those in this area but people around the country and around the world," he said.

    But those benefits are waning as shipping trends change.

    Salmon survival

    Pressure is growing with every orca death to breach the dams and give endangered fish a greater chance of survival.

    This summer, NOAA Fisheries ranked the most important chinook stocks for the critically endangered orca. Two of the top 10 come from the lower Snake River. Three more stocks are from the Columbia.

    In the first few months of the year, the southern resident orca can be found at the mouth of the Columbia River to feast on spring chinook as the salmon migrate upstream to spawn. Historically, adult salmon returns to the Columbia Basin were believed to be between 10 and 16 million fish per year. Today, the returns are a small fraction of that.

    Years before the government listed the southern resident orca as endangered, salmon advocates were already fighting to breach the dams.

    In 1995, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the dams, began a study looking at ways to increase juvenile fish survival.

    Even though that study found that dam breaching had “the highest probability” of fish recovery, the corps instead opted to make major dam improvements, in part, because the chosen option had “minimal economic impacts.”

    River economy

    The river economy is changing. Since the start of that study in 1995, total tonnage shipped on the Snake River has dropped 50 percent.

    The decline is largely because of two major trends: Portland stopped accepting container shipments, and new, high-capacity rail-loading facilities drew customers away from the river.

    But for some, the dams are still an integral part of their lives, from the grain merchandisers above the dams that might have to change their businesses if the Snake becomes too shallow for barging, to the farmer who might have to truck farther to get to a river barge on the Columbia or turn to rail.

    "If I can even get it there," Berg said. "Sometimes the rail system, for lack of a better word, is just plugged up. You can’t even get the rail cars."

    One four-barge tow carries the same amount of grain as 140 railcars or 538 trucks. Farmers are concerned that if the Snake River dams are breached, they'll face backups for barging on the Columbia River or burden the roads with more trucks.

    Still, Jim Waddell, an advocate for breaching the dams and a retired civil engineer with the Army Corps of Engineers, claims the Snake River transportation function can easily be replaced.

    "We’re not gonna put, like the pro-dam people say, hundreds of thousands of trucks on the roads," Waddell said. "It’s the same number of trucks; the only difference is instead of going to a grain elevator that goes to the river, some of those farmers will be taking it to a grain elevator on a railroad siding."

    The railroad would need some improvements to handle the load. The corps had previously estimated that would cost about $50 million. Grain elevators would also need multi-million-dollar adjustments.

    What cannot yet be accounted for is decline in competition. Pro-dam advocates argue that affordable barging on the Snake keeps rail costs low, even if barging has steadily declined the past two decades.

    Cost-benefit analysis

    For both sides of the dam breaching debate, the question is simple: Is it worth it?

    Salmon advocates point to the roughly $16 billion already spent on fish recovery in the Columbia-Snake River Basin.

    "What we can’t afford to continue to do is continue to put money in the kinds of programs that we’ve been doing for the past 20 years that have cost so much and yielded so little," said Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon.

    Because of that investment, fish survival has improved but it hasn’t been enough to delist the many stocks from the Endangered Species Act.

    As a result, many fighting to breach the dams argue that major investments to the dams have not worked and breaching is the only option left to consider for fish recovery.

    "I would have to disagree because I do think it has worked," Berg said. "I have seen salmon levels increase. I have seen us make strides forward. Now how big are your strides forward do you want to make?"

    Farmers argue that with the dams, there’s too much to lose. Conservationists argue the same.

    There is no one silver bullet to saving the orca. Science shows breaching dams give salmon the best shot at survival, but if the decision to breach were simple, the Snake River would already be a free-flowing river.

    This is the second installment of our series on the complex issue of breaching. In the next few weeks, Q13's Simone Del Rosario will look at the regional impact on power with and without the dams and cover the federal fight that has already started.

  • Revealing new data shows killer whales' affinity for the Columbia River mouth

    orca eating salmon CFWRFrom the desk of Howard Garrett, co-director of Orcanetwork

    Seeing orcas cruising by seems to bring out the best in people, and many residents around Puget Sound and beyond are often thrilled to see members of an extended family known as the Southern resident orcas (J, K, and L pods) foraging and playing in the waters of the Puget Sound. Watching orcas is like a drug-free mood lifter. People seem to open their eyes wide, smile and share their excitement when viewing the huge, graceful whales travelling in tight family groups, rising up to look around, or leaping clear out of the water in a mighty breach. Since the mid-1970s this tight-knit orca community has been the most watched and studied population of cetaceans on the planet. Researchers and fans alike have learned to recognize each individual whale, year after year, including their family histories.

    This particular clan of orcas is precariously close to extinction, however, largely due to the scarcity of chinook salmon, their primary, traditional food source. Chinook comprise about 80% of their diet, along with a side dish of chum salmon during fall months. These orcas refuse to deviate from that menu even when faced with starvation, as was shown by the drastically ramped up mortalities between 1995 and 2001 that correlated closely with region-wide declines in chinook numbers. The resulting 20 percent drop in the population to only 78 individuals in 2001 prompted the listing of this distinct population as endangered under the ESA in November, 2005. The most recent official count shows only 84 individuals.

    Most of the dietary studies have been done in summer months around the San Juan Islands, where these orcas are easily found chomping on Fraser River chinook from late spring to early fall. They tend to spend winter and spring at sea, however, and until recently there was very little clear data on where they go or what they are eating in the open ocean waters.

    It is known that the famed upper Columbia/Snake River chinook - the ones that began life far, far upriver and must climb the highest mountains in order to return as adults to spawn themselves - were generally the biggest and most plentiful fish. Many of those famous populations - like the fabled "June hogs" have disappeared as a consequence of the construction of dams like Grand Coulee, but a few still remain. They start their journey home early, gathering first in the salt water at the mouth of the river in the winter and spring, to be able reach their far-flung streambed destinations before winter returns. Historically, these were the most bountiful runs of chinook found anywhere in teh world, but are now at just a few percentage points of their former numbers largely as the result of dams and other forms of habitat destruction.

    Since 2006, winter data has trickled in indicating Southern Resident orcas eating upper Columbia and Snake River chinook. But the best evidence is just in from a young adult male orca from K pod, K25, (Scoter). On December 29, 2012 NOAA researchers tagged him with a satellite transmitter off Vashon Island. K25 always travels with his K pod family, and as of February 22 the tag was still broadcasting location data. A look at NOAA’s maps of his travels show that at least five of the maps, between January 21 and February 8 (to date) show that they consistently milled around, presumably foraging, near the mouth of the Columbia.

    orca.video.mapTake a look at this 90 second video showing the travels of K pod so far this winter. They are seen off the coast of Washington State, northern California, and everyone in between - but with a clear preference for the waters just off the mouth of the Columbia River, and just to the north along the Washington State Coast.

    These initial tagging data strongly reinforce previous data and logical assumptions that upper Columbia and Snake River chinook are vital for the survival of Southern Resident orcas, and that restoration of abundant runs of those chinook represents an essential opportunity to help this struggling orca clan get through the lean winter months.

    (video courtesy of NOAA's Northwest Fisheries Science Center)

  • Save Our wild Salmon's 2018 year-in-review - and look ahead!

    sockeye.river copy 3

    On behalf of the Save Our wild Salmon Coalition's (SOS) board and staff, "THANK YOU!" for your incredible assistance and support this year to protect and restore wild salmon and steelhead, the rivers they need, and the benefits they deliver to people, wildlife and ecosystems. SOS is leveraging linked crises today to move people, politics and policy to deliver durable, lawful, science-based solutions to meet the needs of wild salmon, Southern Resident orca, and Northwest communities. With your help, SOS covered a lot of ground this year and we’re geared up for new progress in 2019.

    This year-end update summarizes our recent achievements, the landscape today, and what we expect in the new year. We deeply appreciate your interest, activism and generous support. We can't do it without you! Our successes to date would not have occurred without our partnership with you and many others. Thank you!

    Please support our continued progress in 2019 with a generous, fully tax-deductible gift before December 31st, 2018. DONATE HERE.

    Thank you. Read on to learn more. Contact us with questions.

    Sincerely,

    JB.SM.sigs1


    orca chinook THE YEAR OF THE ORCA - 2018 OVERVIEW: The heart-breaking plight of starving Southern Resident orcas was the Northwest’s top natural resource story this year. SOS’ leadership and advocacy in the last 3-4 years helped usher and frame this story – with Columbia Basin salmon and lower Snake River dam removal as a central focus. Our coordinated coalition work to protect and restore endangered salmon – and the Southern Resident orcas that rely upon them - will deepen in 2019 – to educate and mobilize the public, expand political leadership, and secure new policy gains. The very real threat of orca extinction – just 74 whales survive today – add a particularly poignant, urgent reason to remove the costly lower Snake dams and restore productive access by wild salmon and steelhead to the immense, protected, high quality watershed upstream from them.

    In 2019, we will advance a two-pronged strategy to secure new regional support for dam removal by both blocking and exposing the efforts of those who would maintain a failed status quo and working with regional interests (including those with whom we may disagree) to build a new alternative path forward that restores salmon, protects orca and benefits communities. We will increase pressure on an unsustainable and unacceptable status quo (incl. looming extinction, escalating costs, illegal plans, uncertainty, BPA’s financial distress, and more) as we simultaneously work with partners, affected communities and policymakers to demonstrate the many ecological and community benefits that increased spill and a restored lower Snake River and wild salmon and steelhead will deliver.

    congress2018 HIGHLIGHTS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS: SOS’ coordinated organizing, communications (see our '2018 Top Ten'press links listed below), policy and legal work is shifting and leveraging Northwest policies to help at-risk salmon and orca - and struggling communities.

    Despite a Republican-controlled Congress, SOS and our coalition members successfully blocked Rep. McMorris Rodgers’ anti-salmon legislation and ‘anti-spill’ rider. Senator Murray’s (WA) leadership in this fight was bolstered by Northwest House and Senate Democrats and Governors Brown (OR) and Inslee (WA). Our successful ‘salmon defense’ in 2018 is significant in terms of policy and politics; it reflects weakened support for McMorris’ divisive approach and a growing openness by regional policymakers to new approaches to protecting salmon based on law, science and economics. As the heartbreaking narrative around orca and their urgent need for more salmon sinks in, we'll continue our work to build public demand for political leadership and real solutions.

    The midterm elections have created new opportunity too – we’ll play less defense and more offense in 2019. Oregon and Washington’s legislatures will be Democrat-controlled for at least the next two years. Governor Kate Brown of Oregon was easily re-elected. Governor Jay Inslee is mid-way through his second term. Though still a red state, Idaho now looks considerably more salmon-friendly: Representative Simpson was re-elected; Representative Labrador is gone; and moderate Brad Little replaces an entrenched Butch Otter as governor. This new landscape creates the potential for bi-partisan collaboration to aid endangered fish and rivers – but it will require smart, relentless, coordinated work by salmon advocates in order to realize.

    2018.OTF.Anacortes1SOS’ hard work helped secure two key recommendations among the 36 delivered by the Orca Task Force to Governor Inslee in November. These include (i) increased ‘spill’ at dams on the lower Snake and Columbia rivers starting next spring and (ii) convening a Tribal/stakeholder forum to develop key elements of a Snake River dam removal community transition plan by the end of 2019. These recommendations resulted from our coordinated work with allies – mobilizing our troops, informing media coverage, and educating Task Force members and much more. The Task Force’s two Columbia-Snake recommendations are critical to the survival and recovery of both salmon and orca. These successes drive and inform our work in 2019. Notably, both recommendations face opposition by the usual suspects and require strategic, coordinated work by SOS and allies to ensure Governor Inslee moves them forward – with the other recommendations – with commitment and urgency.

    More spill at Snake/Columbia dams: In partnership with the Nez Perce Tribe and State of Oregon (partnerships for which we are very grateful), SOS and its salmon-advocate allies secured a new court order in January (an order upheld by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals when challenged by the federal agencies!) to increase spill to the maximum levels currently allowed by state law. This new spill helped improve the survival of juvenile Snake and Columbia river salmon as they migrated to the ocean last spring, and will increase adult returns in the 2018.dont.be.bulliedyears ahead.

    Our efforts to further increase spill to benefit salmon and orca continue. As SOS and allies push the Task Force, we are simultaneously pressing state agencies in Oregon and Washington State to modify their water quality rules in order to allow for more spill. And, in an 11th hour effort to avoid a new round of litigation, regional sovereigns (agencies and tribes) are exploring ways to increase spill ‘flexibly’ – to further help to salmon while minimizing harm to BPA’s bottom line. Regardless of how these conversations turn out, we’ll continue to push new help for salmon in the near-term (more spill) and in the long-term (a restored lower Snake).

    SOS is building new support to restore the lower Snake River and its endangered salmon populations by developing and distributing new information and engaging regional stakeholders. SOS worked closely with NW Energy Coalition and other allies to develop and release its 2018 Lower Snake River Dam Power Replacement Study. This groundbreaking report shows how the dams’ power services can be feasibly and affordably replaced with no new emissions. The analysis is reshaping people’s views and advancing dialogue with 'the other side’. We expect new analyses in 2019 to shed further light on the dams’ true costs and benefits and opportunities to replace their services with cleaner, salmon-friendly alternatives. Information like the power replacement study will also help hold federal agencies accountable in the current court-ordered NEPA review as it informs policymakers and stakeholders.

    SOS’ involvement in important regional conversations exploring new approaches and replacement of the lower Snake River dams’ modest services will expand in the year ahead. We’re committed to working with Northwest Tribes and stakeholders – including fishers, farmers, shippers and power utilities to listen, share concerns, and explore real and lasting solutions for salmon and orca, regional energy consumers and national taxpayers. SOS will continue to encourage and participate in these types of discussions in 2019. In the Inland Northwest and in partnership with Nimiipuu Protecting the Environment and other allies, Sam is working with universities, community groups, and planners to help envision the opportunities and benefits that a free-flowing lower Snake River can deliver.

    2018.Flotilla.bridgeSOS Priorities in 2019 – in brief: Our successes in 2018 will drive our priorities in 2019. We’ll continue to lead strategic planning and close coordinated work with partners and allies to educate and mobilize the public, generate and inform media coverage, produce and leverage new analyses, and engage and move stakeholders and policymakers.

    We’re planning a number of public events, including a speaker series, regional screenings of two new excellent soon-to-be-released films; and we’ll co-host our 5th Annual (and biggest yet) Flotilla to Free the Snake! Processes we’ll impact in 2019: implementation of Orca Task Force’s recommendations, responding to the federal government’s 2018 Columbia Basin Salmon Plan (due in Dec. 2018), and the ongoing court-ordered NEPA environmental review, and much more.

    Thank you for all you doplease generously support our work in 2019, and don’t hesitate to reach out directly.

    – Joseph and Sam


    SOS'Top Ten News Stories in 2018 (there was a lot to choose from!) re: Columbia and Snake river wild salmon, Southern Resident orcas and Northwest communities and people, ordered by date:2018.seattletimes

    (1) Idaho Statesman: This agency spends the most to help Northwest salmon. But cuts are coming. (January)

    (2) Spokesman-Review: Poll shows Washington voters choose salmon over dams (March)

    (3) Idaho Statesman: Northwest could tear down 4 Snake dams & still have cheap, reliable power, says study(April)

    (4) Lewiston Morning Tribune: BPA at a crossroads(July)

    (5) Tri-Cities Herald Guest Opinion: Just in case the Snake River dams go away (August)

    screenshot.Q13breachdams(6) Seattle Times: Controversy heats up over removal of Lower Snake River dams as orcas suffer losses (September)

    (7) Spokesman Review: More than 600 turn out for Snake River protest Saturday (September)

    (8) Q13 Fox: Calls to breach Snake River dams to save Northwest orcas grow louder (October)

    (9) Seattle Times: Orca survival may be impossible without Lower Snake River dam removal, scientists say (October)

    (10) Everett Herald Editorial: Solutions for saving our salmon and orcas (November)

     

    donate1

  • Saving Salmon to Save Orcas

    orca eating salmon CFWRcredit: Center for Whale ResearchIt may seem obvious, but orcas (especially the Southern Resident Killer Whales in Puget Sound and other inland marine waters of Washington and British Columbia) eat a lot of fish. And salmon comprise a large part of their diet. With many species of salmon threatened, and the orcas endangered, there is a lot of debate about how best to address this issue. Orcas are a major source of tourism dollars for the Northwest, which makes this about more than preserving two critical species of our ecosystem – it’s also about enhancing our regional economy.

    A draft report was released in May by an independent scientific review panel assessing options for how to handle the complex issue of the effects of salmon fishing on orcas. The solution, it turns out, is not as complex is it may appear. While some may argue that we should further limit already drastically reduced salmon fishing (and thus hurt salmon jobs), the report finds it doubtful that that reduced fishing would have much impact on the health and success of the Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW).  Instead, the report concludes that “promoting salmon recovery is vital to long-term persistence of SRKW.”

    In other words, rather than be distracted by the marginal impacts of ocean fishing or sightseeing vessels on SRKW, we should instead be focusing our efforts on increasing the amount of salmon available to orcas in the first place. (See the comments submitted by SOS on that draft report here.)

    We must do more to restore the salmon runs that maintain our majestic orcas – and that means sitting down together and assessing the best available science and all options to create solutions not just for salmon, and not just for orcas, but for our economy as well.

    Show your support for endangered species and for a collaborative approach to salmon restoration.

    Watch our 2009 video featuring Ken Balcombe of the Whale Research Center on the connection between orcas and salmon:

  • Saving Snake River salmon will save Puget Sound killer whales

    The ecological connection

    Download the fact sheet.

    LATEST: An unpublished report by NOAA scientist Dr. Brad Hanson et al documents predation by Southern Resident Killer Whales of Snake River and Upper Columbia chinook salmon in the Winter-Spring 2009. Feces collection from the L pod occurred several miles west of Cape Disappointment just north of the mouth of the Columbia River. NOAA scientists have determined that “perhaps the single greatest change in food availability for resident killer whales since the late 1800s has been the decline of salmon in the Columbia River basin.”

    Read the study from NOAA scientists.

    Research shows that orcas are hungry, need more chinook:Hormone research by scientists at University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology have found the “data most strongly supports the reduced prey hypothesis” and concludes that  “it seems clear that mitigation efforts to increase number and quality of available prey to Southern resident killer whales will be an important first step towards assuring SRKW recovery."

    Read more from the Center for Conservation Biology.

    “This new baby will not have a life without salmon. Salmon make up the majority of their diet and they are good at finding and catching them; but, what happens if salmon populations continue to decline?"- Ken Balcomb of the Center for Whale Research reacting to the recent identification of a new member of the K-pod from the Salish Sea and Puget Sound, June 2010

    Scientists Call for Lower Snake Dam Removal to Help Endangered Orcas

    Full Text of the Letter from Scientists

    The Threats Facing Endangered Puget Sound Orcas

    orca.star

    Killer whales, or orcas, are found all over the world.  And yet their geographically distinct populations are actually genetically distinct populations. That is, the Southern Resident orcas found during the summer in Washington’s Puget Sound do not travel with other orcas, will not breed with other orcas, have a highly particular diet, and exhibit a variety of social and family traits that are completely distinct from any other orcas on the planet.

    But this endangered population faces several dangerous threats. Their food is very often contaminated with long-lived poisons (PCBs and PBDEs).  Being dependant on a form of sonar called echolocation, they have suffered with the increased noise that accompanies increases is the size and number of vessels on Puget Sound. Their population is so tiny (fewer than 90 whales) and their reproductive rates are so slow that it takes them a long time to add to their population.  And, perhaps most importantly, these giant marine mammals require a lot of food – and they aren’t getting enough.  

    The federal agency responsible for trying to recover these whales won’t say which problem is “primarily” responsible for their decline, but clearly these five-ton mammals cannot recover without enough food to eat.  Insufficient prey leads not only to starvation, but to increased mortality from disease and increased susceptibility to toxins, increased calf mortality, and drastically lower reproductive rates.

    Smoltinpipe2That’s where Columbia/Snake salmon come in. 

    Southern Residents feed primarily on chinook salmon. In fact, the government estimates that even at its current depleted population level, this population of fewer than 90 animals may require 1.75 million chinook each year.

    When the Southern Resident orcas are in the San Juan Islands off the northwest coast of Washington, they feed overwhelmingly on salmon from Canada’s Fraser River. But when they leave this area and head into the Pacific each winter, they must rely on chinook salmon from the other major salmon rivers – the Sacramento, the Klamath, and the Columbia. None of them is a shadow of what it used to be.

    At the turn of the last century, up to 30 million salmon returned to the Columbia-Snake River Basin, making it the most productive salmon-producing river system in the world. But today, only than one percent of that historic number returns to spawn. Chinook (like other salmon populations) have plummeted, due largely to dam construction and habitat degradation on the Columbia and its largest tributary, the Snake, which have wiped out entire runs and severely limited the food supply of Puget Sound orcas. All species of chinook salmon on the Columbia- Snake are either listed as endangered or already extinct. This has proved devastating for the salmon, the fishermen, and now the killer whales.

    Restoring Orcas’ Food

    Leading Northwest scientists and orca advocates have called for the government to remove the four outdated federal dams on the lower Snake River. They say this will restore Columbia-Snake River salmon and renew a critical food source for endangered Puget Sound orca populations.

    The science is clear that removing the four lower Snake River dams is the key to saving the Snake River’s four distinct salmon populations, including the chinook that are so important to the Southern Residents.  Coupled with appropriate harvest controls, sound land-use regulations, renewable energy alternatives and hatchery reform, lower Snake River dam removal could restore salmon abundance to 15 million acres of forest, high-desert and wilderness areas, for productive use by people, communities and iconic predators like the Southern Resident orcas.

    orca.smThe Southern Resident Recovery Plan

    The government initially opposed listing Southern Residents as an endangered species. After a federal court rejected the government’s position, Southern Residents were listed in 2005. The government then developed a plan to help guide efforts to recovery Southern Residents to a healthy population.  Prepared with input from the leading orca scientists in the United States and Canada, the plan contains two findings that should remain front and center as we contemplate the perils facing these spectacular icons of Puget Sound:

    - “It is vital that meaningful increases in salmon abundance be achieved above and beyond those associated with periods of favorable ocean productivity.”  SRKW Recovery Plan, p. V-8 (emphasis added).

    - The SRKW population must increase by an average 2.3 percent per year for 28 years – that is, to 164 whales – in order to be removed from the Endangered Species list. The population today is 88, the same as it was when it was listed as endangered five years ago. p. IV-4.

    For more information, contact:

    Save Our Wild Salmon206.286.4455 joseph@wildsalmon.org

    Orca scientists and advocates sound off

    “Restoring Columbia River chinook salmon is the single most important thing we can do to ensure the future survival of the Southern Resident Community of killer whales. We cannot hope to restore the killer whale population without also restoring the salmon upon which these whales have depended for thousands of years. Their futures are intricately linked."

    — Dr. Rich Osborne, research associate with The Whale Museum in Friday Harbor, Wash.

    "The new Federal salmon plan for the Columbia and Snake rivers is no better than previous plans in providing access to the basin’s best remaining salmon habitat in the upper reaches of the Snake River. The resulting declining salmon runs have a very real impact on the 88 endangered southern resident orcas that depend on these fish, as they have for centuries. As the salmon disappear, the orcas go hungry."

    — Howard Garrett, co-founder of the Orca Network.

    "Our leaders must look for solutions not only in Puget Sound, but also in the rivers that bring the salmon to the sea throughout the Northwest. The great salmon rivers like the Columbia and Snake can once again produce the healthy runs of chinook, on which our majestic orcas feed, but only if we recover salmon habitat. We must act quickly to restore clean water, abundant, sustainable salmon populations, and a safe home for orcas. The scientists tell us there is no time to waste."

    — Kathy Fletcher, executive director of People for Puget Sound

  • Seattle PI: 'Fish flush' could be part of orca and salmon recovery

    By January 30, 2019

    Joel Connelly 2salmonballet.webThe state Department of Ecology is unveiling a proposal that would increase water spilled over Columbia and Snake river dams, to assist downstream migration of young salmon and ultimately help endangered killer whales. The expanded spring "fish flush" is part of Gov. Jay Inslee's bid to increase fish populations in order to boost survival of the critically endangered southern resident population of orcas off the Washington coast and in inland waters. The killer whales are finicky eaters and exist largely on chinook salmon, which are also endangered.
     
    "Helping more juvenile salmon survive the journey to ocean is one of many steps we want to take to protect and restore salmon: Our hope is that this will also support the recovery and sustained health of our orcas," Inslee said in a statement. "This is an important short-term action we can take to help inform our decisions about what will work over the long term."
     
    The spill would apply to four Army Corps of Engineers dams on the lower Snake River, as well as four federal dams on the lower Columbia River.
     
    Any increase in water spill at dams is likely to generate opposition, particularly from two members of Congress from Eastern Washington, U.S. Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse.
     
    They managed to get a Republican-controlled House to pass legislation in 2018 that would have reversed U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon's order for increased spill, and put in place a 2014 salmon recovery plan that has not passed muster with federal courts.
     
    The "protection" of Snake River dams, which environmental groups want removed, has become holy grail for Republican politicians.
     
    "The man and the fish can coexist," then-presidential candidate George W. Bush told a 2000 rally in Spokane. As president, Bush staged an event at Ice Harbor Dam near Pasco, to celebrate one year's high salmon return.
     
    In a Tri-City Herald op-ed last year, McMorris Rodgers, Newhouse, and GOP Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler declared: "Dams and fish can coexist." They cited figures of steadily higher survival of salmon migrating downstream on the Snake River. "While anti-dam voices are persistent, they choose ideology over science, which would have a negative impact on you and your families," the House members argued.
     
    The "impact" comes in reduced power sales during spring months when, as the late Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus quipped, "Californians are using their hot tubs."
     
    The Sierra Club's point person on salmon, Bill Arthur, was lobbying for spill in Olympia on Tuesday. Spill is "essential for both salmon and Orcas," Arthur argued in a Facebook post.
     
    The Department of Ecology is responsible for regulating levels of dissolved gases in waters below the dams.
     
    The expanded "fish flush" would test benefits for fish passage with higher levels of oxygen and nitrogen in the water.
       
    "As always, science is our guide and we need to balance potential benefits to juvenile salmon without too great of risk to other fish," Maia Belton, director of the Department of Ecology, said in a statement.
     
    The Department of Ecology will hold two hearings on its proposal, which is supported by Gov. Inslee's proposed budget.
     
    The first will be Feb. 13th at 2 p.m. at the Washington State School for the Blind in Vancouver. The second, at 6 p.m., on Tuesday, Feb. 19th, will be by webinar. Information can be obtained on the Department of Ecology website.

  • Seattle PI: Orca whales need Chinook salmon, losing same

    orca.w.calfBy Joel Connelly

    November 3, 2017

    The Southern Resident Orca whale population, beloved by ferry and tour boat passengers, is in a decline that can be reversed only if its endangered food source˜Chinook salmon˜is put on a path to recovery.

    "The spawning population sizes of Chinook salmon are dangerously below federal recovery goals and our not improving," the Puget Sound Partnership said this week in a somewhat gloomy annual report.

    The PSP has hoped the Southern Resident population would rise to 95 by 2020, from 89 of the marine mammals in 2014. Instead, it is 76, the lowest number in 30 years.

    The causes discussed are multifold. One is declining biomass of Pacific herring, on which Chinook salmon feed. Another is the pressure of 1,000 people moving into the Puget Sound Basin each wweek. "Toxic chemicals are concentrating in the water and entering the food chain," the PSP argued.

    The Southern Resident Orcas have, curiously, never taken to the still- abundant sockeye salmon populations that return to spawn in British Columbia's Fraser River.

    Puget Sound has seen some habitat recovery. A once-great Chinook salmon stream, the Elwha River on the Olympic Peninsula, is experiencing recovery now that two old, salmon destroying dams have been removed.

    A coalition of 25 Northwest sport and conservation groups on Thursday called on Gov. Jay Inslee to support and enhance another major food source for the Southern Resident Orcas, the Chinook salmon runs of the Columbia-Snake River system.

    They wrote Inslee asking him to direct more spill over Columbia and Snake River dams, the so-called spring "fish flush" that speeds juvenile salmon on their migration to the Pacific Ocean.

    "Spill keeps migrating juvenile salmon safer by sending water over federal dams in the Columbia and Snake Rivers rather than through the powerhouses," said Liz Hamilton of the Northwest Sport Fishing Industry Assn.

    Dam operators and federal agencies have spent $10 billion in the last three decades, but not one of the Columbia River Basin's 13 populations protected under the Endangered Species Act has recovered.

    Federal judges have rejected five separate plans by the National Marine Fisheries Service and other agencies, as inadequate to restoring Columbia and Snake River runs.

    The state of Oregon has strongly backed recreational, commercial and tribal fisheries interests. Washington, with far more industry,
    agriculture and power production, has been far less supportive despite its "green" governors.

    "Salmon returns to the Columbia Basin reflect a new downward trajectory that fisheries experts predict is likely to continue for the foreseeable future without new and meaningful action to stop and reverse," the 25 groups told Inslee.

    Why is this important?

    "Washington State's wild salmon and steelhead play a defining role for our identity, culture, economy and ecology."

    http://www.seattlepi.com/local/politics/article/Connelly-Orca-whales-need-Chinook-salmon-losing-12329706.php

  • Seattle PI: Urgent, controversial orca whale recovery steps go to Inslee

    November 16, 2018

    By Joel Connelly

    Orca ShippingContainersUrgent recommendations for orca whale recovery, conveyed Friday by a task force he created, will test the depth of Gov. Jay Inslee's commitment to be America's greenest governor.

    The Southern Resident Killer Whale Recovery Task Force wants a three- to five-year moratorium on whale watching, "lethal and nonlethal" reductions in sea lion and seal populations, and more spill out of eight federal Columbia and Snake River dams.

    The task force recommended the creation of a panel that would consider consequences if four Army Corps of Engineers dams on the lower Snake River are removed, a proposal backed by conservation groups but anathema to agribusiness and barge operators.

    The proposals on dams are predicated on eating habits of the orcas: The great marine mammals feed almost exclusively on chinook salmon, listed under the Endangered Species Act. Sea lions and seals compete for the dwindling chinook population.

    "These whales are on (their) last leg," State Sen. Kevin Ranker, R-Orcas, a task force member, has said of the southern resident orca population, now to 74 marine mammals at last counting.

    Inslee praised the task force, but took a careful wait-and-see approach to the task force recommendations landing on his desk.

    "We heard from thousands of people from all over the state, region and world who are very passionate about saving these animals," Inslee said in a statement, and then added in "governmentese":

    "I will review these recommendations over the coming weeks and my staff and I will assess each more for the most impact in the short and long terms. I will roll out my budget and policy priorities in mid-December for consideration during the 2019 legislative session."

    Ten of 36 recommendations from the task force would require action by the Legislature.

    So far, Inslee has been most outspoken about a threat to the orca whales coming from north of the border.

    The Governor has spoken forcefully against a giant oil pipeline project, linking Alberta to an oilport just east of Vancouver, that would send 34 laden tankers a month through waters of the San Juan and Gulf Islands and the Strait of Juan de Fuca -- prime habitat for the southern resident population.

    Conservation groups seized on the spill recommendation, and potential removal of the Snake River dams.

    "The science is clear and the public strongly supports increased spill at the federal dams on the Columbia and Snake Rivers and removal of the lower Snake River dams," said Bill Arthur of the Sierra Club.

    "These are essential actions to rebuild salmon populations in the near and long-term. With its recommendations, the Orca Task Force has called for urgent action in the Columbia Basin. We call on Governor Inslee to prioritize these actions."

    Part of the public does not strongly support spill from the dams -- commonly known as the "fish flush" -- or removal of the dams.

    President George H.W. Bush first promised to defend the dams during a 1992 speech in Colville. Soon-to-be-President George Bush took up the theme in Spokane during the 2000 campaign, declaring: "The man and the fish can coexist."

    U.S. Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., tried to stop the "fish flush" in Congress earlier this year, after a federal judge ordered that it continue.

    Spill from the dams cuts into their power production, and cuts down on electricity that the Bonneville Power Administration can sell to California during the spring. The federal agency has long complained about what it must do for salmon.

    Upstream in the Snake River system, however, Idaho has a miles of unspoiled rivers in which salmon can spawn, much of it on the namesake Salmon River. A famous sign at the weir on Redfish Lake read: "Spawn your brains out."

    The late, great Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus suggested that his state print a bumper sticker saying: "Idaho has habitat, needs fish."

    Inslee did intervene earlier this year, opposing Republican lawmakers' efforts to curtain spill from the dams. Since the four Snake River dams are in Washington, however, the state's Democratic governors have never joined calls for their removal.

    The task force had other recommendations.

    It would reduce, by "lethal" and "non-lethal" means, the population of seals and sea lions that compete for the orcas' main food supply.

    The panel proposes to reduce limits on the catch of non-native predatory fish that compete for chinook salmon, such as bass walleye and channel catfish.

    The moratorium on orca watching is complicated by the fact that Southern Resident whales divide their time in the Salish Sea between waters of Washington and British Columbia.

    A moratorium here would not apply to both countries. Travelers on B.C. ferries through Active Pass, linking Vancouver Island with the B.C. mainland, frequently watch as whale watching boats get close -- too close -- to orca whales.

    Whatever is done, time is short, for both marine mammals and their prey. "We're playing catch-up today and there is not time to waste," said Joseph Bogaard of Save our Wild Salmon.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Seattle Time: Orca task force recommends whale-watching moratorium, studying dam removal to help endangered mammals

    November 16, 2018

    By Lynda V. Mapes

    Tagged whaleFrom dam teardowns to a temporary moratorium on whale watching of southern residents by any boat, a governor’s task force on orca recovery released its first round of recommendations Friday.

    Task-force members said at a news conference at the Seattle Aquarium that bold action is needed to save the critically endangered population of killer whales from extinction. Only 74 southern resident orcas remain.

    The recommendations will depend on significant new funding from the state Legislature as well as new legislation to take effect, so the wish list is a long way from becoming reality for the whales.

    Among the biggest changes called for is a 3- to 5-year moratorium on whale watching by any boat of the southern residents, to provide quieter waters for them.

    Some of the most controversial issues considered by the task force were put off, including breaching of the Lower Snake River dams.

    The busting of those dams — to support bigger returns of chinook salmon, orcas’ primary food — was the most broadly supported ask put forth in public comments to Gov. Jay Inslee’s task force.

    The task force demurred, putting the issue to a study committee, but did single out two dams for removal within two years in Puget Sound: a dam on the middle fork of the Nooksack River and a dam on the Pilchuck River.

    The task force also called for better enforcement of existing regulations to protect the whales.

    A total of 36 recommendation after six months of work are intended to increase chinook abundance, decrease noise from vessels and reduce exposure of orcas and the salmon they eat to contaminants.

    The task force also called for increasing the spill of water through the Columbia and Snake River dams, widely regarded by scientists as one of the best early steps that can be taken to help boost salmon survival.

    The task force also supported funding to determine how to re-establish fish passage above the Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams on the Columbia River and on the Tacoma Water Diversion, Howard Hanson and Mud Mountain Dams in Puget Sound.

    Boosts in hatchery production also were supported by the task force, where that doesn’t impede wild chinook recovery.

    The focus on prey was driven by the orcas’ biggest need: access to adequate, high quality food, especially chinook, the orcas’ preferred fish.

    Rob Williams of Oceans Initiative, a Seattle-based biologist who studies orcas on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, said he can’t tell because of a lack of modeling of the initiatives whether they go far enough to help the whales with a serious lack of food.

    His recent paper published with other colleagues shows the southern residents need about 662 big fat chinook every single day to meet their calorie requirements and a return to salmon abundance near the highest levels since the 1970s to help the orcas recover through prey abundance alone.

    Taking other steps to help the whales — such as reducing noise by 50 percent — combined with increasing chinook by at least 15 percent would allow the population to recover.

    Lack of modeling in detail in the scientific assessment of the task force recommendations makes it impossible to know whether if enacted they will result in recovery, Williams said. He said he hopes a deeper dive into science-based predictions will help policy makers understand if they go far enough.

    Other experts said the task force fell short. Ken Balcomb, a member of the task force and founding director of the Center For Whale Research abstained from voting on the report and panned its recommendations.

    “Frankly, I am embarrassed for the conveners and participants of Orca Task Force who had to endure blatant and ill-informed political manipulation of a process launched with the good intention of doing something bold to help recover the Southern Resident Killer Whales,” Balcomb wrote in a statement.

    He criticized the partial moratorium on whale watching as an ineffective political ploy, saying the “meaningless moratorium of a benign activity while skirting THE major problem for these whales — salmon population crashes throughout their range — is appalling.

    “Honesty was crushed by politics and vested interests, even within agencies whose responsibility it is to manage natural resources sustainably. The whales are on their own in their downward spiral toward extinction along with the natural wild runs of chinook salmon the we used to call “King.”

    Other task force members were more encouraged by the outcome, which they called a strong beginning on which policy makers must now build.

    “The orca urged us on … to achieve what many said was impossible,” said task force co-chair Stephanie Solien.

    Among the recommendations that will require legislative action are a half-mile go-slow zone around all southern residents, reducing vessel speeds to 7 knots or less, and an increase in the distance kept from the whales to 400 yards from the current 200.

    The moratorium on whale watching of the southern residents by all boats also will require legislation. The moratorium, already opposed by whale-watch representatives on the task force, promises to be a fight in Olympia, if it gets that far.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Seattle Times Guest columnists: Connect the dots to save orcas, salmon

    2004184584Most people realize that saving Puget Sound's beloved resident orca whales depends on saving the Sound itself, removing the toxic chemicals that are killing the whales, preventing oil spills, and restoring the orcas' essential food, salmon.

    By Kathy Fletcher and Howard Garrett

    Most people realize that saving Puget Sound's beloved resident orca whales depends on saving the Sound itself, removing the toxic chemicals that are killing the whales, preventing oil spills, and restoring the orcas' essential food, salmon.

    But it may be news that our local orcas also depend on restoring salmon runs in the Columbia River Basin. Recent reports of the dramatic declines in West Coast salmon populations make this connection between the mighty Columbia and Snake rivers and our endangered orcas all the more crucial to examine.

    Orca and salmon scientists alike have identified the Columbia River Basin, which once produced more salmon than any other river system on Earth, as an essential food source for southern resident orcas during their seasonal travels away from Puget Sound to coastal waters. In fact, the federal government's orca-recovery plan cites the decline in Columbia River Basin salmon as "perhaps the single greatest change in food availability for resident killer whales since the late 1800s."

    Strangely, though, the plan does not call for the one action scientists say is central to any Columbia Basin salmon-recovery plan: removal of four costly and outdated dams on the Lower Snake River, a tributary of the Columbia.

    Removing these dams will open up more than 15 million acres of nearly pristine spawning habitat to endangered salmon, while saving taxpayers' and electric ratepayers' money. Energy conservation and renewable energy can replace the small amount of power provided by these four dams, keeping in mind that there are more than 200 dams in the basin.

    Climate change makes removing the dams even more important, because the salmon and steelhead that will be saved are more likely to survive warmer temperatures. These fish spawn at higher elevations than any other — some at over 6,000 feet above sea level, where streams are likely to stay cooler. Removing the dams will also lower water temperatures downstream, providing help to fish in the lower river system.

    Despite these benefits, the orca-recovery plan notes only that dam removal will be addressed "elsewhere." Unfortunately, we can't find where that "elsewhere" is. The logical place to look would be in the federal government's recovery plan for salmon. But in the most recent draft of that plan, Snake River dam removal is not even considered for further study, much less as a potential action.

    A new draft is due by May 5 (after its predecessors were struck down by the federal courts for violating the Endangered Species Act) — that's where we'll be looking next. The current version of the federal salmon plan doesn't even make any reference to southern resident orcas, a federally listed endangered species that the same agency is obligated to restore.

    What we have here is a total disconnect. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is responsible for recovering both salmon and orcas. Its scientists have connected the dots. It's time for NOAA's decision-makers to put it together, too.

    As it stands, the federal salmon plan won't get us where we need to be if we want a healthy population of southern resident orcas plying the waters of Puget Sound for generations to come. And it certainly won't do the job for Columbia Basin salmon, either.

    When the final salmon plan is released in a few weeks, we will be watching closely to see whether it lays out a plan for real salmon recovery in the Columbia Basin. We ask Gov. Christine Gregoire and Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell to hold NOAA accountable to its mandate to protect and restore both orcas and salmon. Our leaders need to demand that NOAA take the necessary actions, including the removal of the Lower Snake River dams.

    The alternative is to be honest about the result of inaction: that this crucial food source will never be restored and the orcas must somehow survive without it — if they can.

    Kathy Fletcher is founder and executive director of People For Puget Sound. Howard Garrett is founder and director of Orca Network and the author of "Orcas in Our Midst."

  • Seattle Times Guest Opinion: Hungry killer whales waiting for Columbia River salmon

    orca eating salmon CFWRMarch 31, 2016

    By Deborah A. Giles, Giulia Good Stefani

    Special to The Times

    RIGHT now, southern-resident killer whales circle the waters off the mouth of the Columbia River eager to score their favorite meal — a fat spring chinook salmon. It’s late March and the Pacific Northwest’s rivers should be a surge of snowmelt and salmon. But they aren’t.

    The southern-resident killer whales are on the brink of extinction because they can’t find enough food. With eight new calves — the biggest baby boom this population has seen in almost 40 years — the moment to help our iconic blackfish is today.

    What can we do? The whales are showing us: We need to focus on Columbia Basin salmon.

    Last summer was a disaster for salmon and a shocking look into the possible future of Columbia and Snake River fisheries. Last July, reports emerged that more than a quarter million sockeye returning from the ocean had died as a result of high water temperatures in the Columbia and Snake rivers. In the end, 96 percent of returning endangered Snake River sockeye died before reaching Lower Granite Dam.

    The oldest member of the southern resident killer whale clan, a whale nicknamed “Granny,” who is estimated to be more than 100 years old, remembers the days before the dams and climate distress. Her memory of endless, enormous fish is what brings the southern-resident killer whales back at this exact time of year to the mouth of the Columbia River, where NOAA tracking data confirm the whales congregate.

    The Columbia River Basin once produced more salmon than any other river system in the world. It remains the gateway to millions of acres of pristine, high-elevation spawning habitat. But today, wild Columbia Basin spring chinook are returning to their natal streams at roughly 1 percent of their historic numbers.

    There are those who say it’s too late to turn this march toward extinction around. If you know these fish and these whales, like we do, then you understand that they are two of nature’s savviest and most resourceful species. We must not give up on them now.

    Each of the whales has a number, name and distinct personality. They travel in matriarchal pods and live in a web of caring, tight-knit social arrangements. Southern resident J26 (or “Mike”) frequently swims alongside his younger siblings, the orca equivalent of baby-sitting. “Oreo” (J22) is the mother of two boys, and almost 20 years ago, when her sister J20 (aka “Ewok”) died, she took over the parental responsibility of her young niece J32 (also known as “Rhapsody”) who was only 2 years old. If anyone can band together to come back from the brink, these whales can.

    The fish the whales depend on are equally remarkable. Salmon form the spine of the Pacific Northwest’s ecosystem. Without them, everything else totters and risks collapse. Somehow they continue to hang on over dams and against impossible odds. It’s as if they — like the whales — carry a memory passed down through generations of a time before the Columbia became the most hydroelectrically developed river system in the world.

    If we return to a healthy river, we’ll bring back the fish. Just look to the Elwha River restoration. More than 4,000 chinook were counted above the former Elwha Dam the first season after it came down.

    In December 2014, the killer whale “Rhapsody” washed up on shore dead with a near full-term fetus. A preliminary necropsy showed that her blubber layer was thin and dry of oil, consistent with inadequate diet for an extended period.

    The untamed outdoors is this region’s “second paycheck,” and our rivers, mountains and coast would be lifeless and lonely without the wild animals that make them pulse and sing.

    Both Washington state and the federal government are currently reviewing the endangered status of the southern-resident killer whales. The whales have been federally listed as endangered for more than 10 years — and yet they continue to decline.

    A federal judge in Portland is expected to rule soon on the adequacy of the most recent Columbia Basin salmon-restoration plan. The previous four plans have each been rejected by the court. We now need political leaders in the Northwest and Washington, D.C., to work with the people of the region to craft coherent solutions that honor these iconic, connected species.

    And we need to learn from the whales and focus our efforts where they do: on the Columbia Basin.

    Deborah A. Giles is research director at the Center for Whale Research based in Friday Harbor. Giulia Good Stefani is staff attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

    Read the full article here.

  • Seattle Times Special Report: Orcas thrive in waters to the north. Why are Puget Sound’s dying?

    seatimes.special1Here is the first in a special multi-part series by Lynda Mapes of the Seattle Times that will explore the plight of the Southern Resident orcas.

    A Seattle Times special report
    Orcas thrive in waters to the north. Why are Puget Sound’s dying?

    Southern resident killer whales are facing extinction, while orcas in British Columbia and southeast Alaska are growing in numbers. These whales in a better habitat expose why Puget Sound's orcas are suffering.

    Follow the link to the Seattle Times website - the story is accompanied by moving photos and video of the Southern Residents and the Northern Residents.

     


    inslee

     

    And here's how you can help: Contact Governor Jay Inslee today.

    Thank Governor Inslee for establishing the Orca Recovery Task Force earlier this year - then ask him to move quickly to support and/or enact its recommendations - including the two critical recommendations to (1) increase spill at the federal dams on the lower Snake and lower Columbia rivers in time for the 2019 juvenile out-migration, and (2) convene the Tribal/stakeholder to identify concerns and develop key elements of a dam removal transition plan for the lower Snake River.

    Thank you.

  • Seattle Times: ‘I am sobbing’: Mother orca still carrying her dead calf — 16 days later

    Tahlequah is still carrying her dead calf, for a 16th straight day, and researchers fear she could be in danger.

    orca.j35.seattle.timesLynda V. Mapes

    August 8, 2018

    Tahlequah, the mother orca also known as J35, was spotted Wednesday afternoon, still carrying her dead infant calf for the 16th straight day.

    “I am absolutely shocked and heartbroken,’’ said Deborah Giles, research scientist for University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology <http://conservationbiology.uw.edu/> and research director for nonprofit Wild Orca. <http://www.wildorca.org/>

    “I am sobbing. I can’t believe she is still carrying her calf around,” Giles said, adding, “I am gravely concerned for the health and mental well being of J35.

    “Even if her family is foraging for and sharing fish with her, J35 cannot be getting the … nutrition she needs to regain any body-mass loss that would have naturally occurred during the gestation of her fetus and also additional loss of nutrition during these weeks of mourning.”

    Michael Milstein, spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), said Tahlequah was spotted at about 1:30 p.m. by researchers at Fisheries Oceans Canada.

    Tahlequah was seen along with her entire family off the coast of the Olympic Peninsula. J50, the ailing 3 1/2-year-old orca in the same family also was seen, along with her mother, J16.

    NOAA has mounted an emergency rescue plan for the young whale, J50, who is emaciated and may also have an infection. The agency submitted paperwork Wednesday afternoon for consideration by Canadian officials to allow medical intervention for the whale in Canadian waters if need be, including an injection of antibiotics.

    All permits are already in hand to intervene in Washington waters, including with a possible emergency feeding plan.

    The Lummi Nation is standing by to provide live fish for J50 if it is determined in a health assessment that such an unprecedented intervention makes sense.

    The whales were too far away too late in the day to attempt a health assessment Wednesday afternoon, Milstein said.

    The plight of the southern residents, in decline for years, has never been so stark. Down to just 75 animals, every calf matters. The plight of Tahlequah carrying her dead baby for hundreds of miles, refusing to let it go, has struck the hearts of people around the world.

    “It’s almost like a parable, the damndest thing I ever saw,” said Jason Colby, a historian at the University of Victoria and author of a new book <https://global.oup.com/academic/product/orca-9780190673093?cc=us&lang=en&> about killer whales and the capture era — which disproportionately targeted J pod.

    While orcas and other animals, including dolphins and gorillas, are known to carry their dead, Tahlequah’s is an extraordinary display. <https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/2018/Feb-Mar/Animals/When-Animals-Grieve>

    “This is absolutely unprecedented,” Colby said. To those such as Colby hoping for an urgent turnaround for the southern residents, Tahlequah’s witness to her loss, as she carries her dead calf day after day through the Salish Sea, is searing.

    “As a dad I can only imagine her grief and everything she has gone through,” Colby said. “It seems like she is in a dangerous loop now that she can’t get herself out of and who knows how long she went without feeding before this.’

    Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research <https://www.whaleresearch.com/> in Friday Harbor, called Tahlequah’s situation “tragic.

    “It’s just — continuing. Someday we’re gonna get weary of all this,” he said, of the sad plight of the southern residents..

    He said he hopes the situation stokes momentum for fundamental change, such as taking down the Lower Snake River dams to boost salmon runs.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/i-am-sobbing-mother-orca-still-carrying-her-dead-calf-16-days-later/

  • Seattle Times: 2 more Puget Sound orcas predicted to die in critically endangered population

    By Lynda Mapes

    January 2, 2019

    Orca.waveTwo southern resident killer whales are ailing and are not expected to live, according to the lead demographer of the orca population that frequents Puget Sound.

    Two more orcas are ailing and probably will be dead by summer, according to the region’s expert on the demographics of the critically endangered southern residents.

    Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research, said photos taken of J17 on New Year’s Eve showed the 42-year-old female has so-called peanut head, a misshapen head and neck caused by starvation. In addition K25, a 27-year-old male, is failing, also from lack of sufficient food. He lost his mother, K13, in 2017 and is not successfully foraging on his own.

    “I am confident we are going to lose them sometime before summer,” Balcomb said.

    Drone photography this past summer showed K25 to be noticeably thinner, and photos taken of him again in this winter show no improvement, Balcomb said.

    The troubling news comes on top of a grim year in 2018 for the southern residents, the J, K, and L pods of fish-eating orcas that frequent the Salish Sea, which includes Puget Sound and the transboundary waters of the United States and Canada, as well as the West Coast of the United States.

    The southern resident population is at a 35-year low after three deaths this past year in four months. There are only 74 left. “I am going to stop counting at 70,” Balcomb said. “What is the point?”

    Losing J17 would be a blow to the southern residents because she is a female still of reproducing age, said Deborah Giles, research scientist for University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology and research director for nonprofit Wild Orca. 

    Giles said she was not surprised to hear about K25. The social dynamics of the southern residents, in which older females help their pod, and especially their sons by sharing food, is both a blessing and a curse if that female dies, Giles said.

    “These large, adult, hungry males benefit by the females in their family,” Giles said. “There probably is still family foraging going on, but not like he had when his mom was alive.”

    As for J17, “that is the worst of those two, the thought of losing her, she is such an important member for the southern resident community,” Giles said.

    J17 is the mother of J35, or Tahlequah, who moved people around the world when in 2018 she carried her dead calf that lived for only one half-hour on her head for more than 1,000 miles over the course of 17 days.

    The family already has been through a lot.

    “We have no idea what that grandmother went through, watching her daughter carry around that baby as long as she did,” Giles said. “What would that have been like. To watch your daughter go through that grief and not have much you can do about it.”

    The same family in 2016 also lost J54, a 1-year-old whale the whole family tried to support, especially his sister, J46, feeding him, and lifting the baby whale up with their teeth every time he started to sink. “The other whales were trying to support him,” Balcomb said. “He had tooth rakes all over his body, but it wasn’t malicious, he was sinking.”

    It is hard to confront a new year with two whales already failing, Giles said. “It is this anticipatory grief. I am worried. And I am afraid.”

    Drone photography taken this past September showed the southern residents went into the winter thinner than they were when the whales arrived in the San Juan Islands last summer. They also are thinner than the northern residents, which have been steadily growing in population for the past 40 years in their home waters primarily in northern B.C. and southeast Alaska, where they have access to more fish, and cleaner and quieter water. The northern residents gave birth to 10 new calves last year.

    The southern residents look particularly thin next to the seal-eating transient, or Bigg’s, killer whales.

    “They are like marshmallows,” Balcomb said.

    The coming year is not looking any easier for the southern residents in terms of their food supply. The whales mostly eat chinook salmon.

    Ocean conditions and poor river migration, with warm water and low flows, have hurt chinook salmon returns in the past several years. Even Columbia River fall chinook, a bright spot by comparison in the region, came back to the river in such low numbers last summer that a rare emergency fishing closure was enacted on the river from the mouth all the way to Pasco.

    Only 186,862 fall chinook made it back below Bonneville dam in 2018, 65 percent below the 10-year average. Returns over Bonneville of jacks, or immature chinook, which can be a reliable predictor of this year’s return, were down to 61 percent below the 10-year average.

    Columbia River chinook are important to the whales because they are among the biggest, fattiest fish of all. The whales also target chinook returning to rivers in Puget Sound, and in the summer, to the Fraser River. Those runs have been declining as well.

    The whales’ behavior is changing as their food sources dwindle. They are arriving later and later in the San Juan Islands, because the Fraser River chinook runs they seek in those waters have so declined. The southern residents also are no longer often seen in large groups, in a pattern of feeding, then socializing, then resting before going on to a new spot.

    “They do not have enough fish to feed them, they are spread out all over, we never seem them like it was 30, 40 years ago, when they would travel and find fish, then be playful, then rest, then travel again, that was the pattern,” Balcomb said.

    “You don’t see them resting any more, they have to work all the time, every day.”

    He said proposals put forward for the whales in the governor’s $1.1 billion budget for orca recovery, including a temporary ban on whale watching of the southern residents don’t go far enough.

    “We need bold action,” Balcomb said. “Natural rivers and more chinook salmon.”

  • Seattle Times: 7-week-old baby orca missing, presumed dead

    web LostBabyOrca-2-620x411Associated Press and Seattle Times staff

    FRIDAY HARBOR — A killer whale born to much hope in early September apparently died while its pod was in the open ocean off Washington or British Columbia, the Center for Whale Research said.
    The baby was the first known calf born since 2012 to a population of endangered orcas that frequent Puget Sound in Washington.

    It has not been seen since its pod returned in recent days to inland waters of western Washington, said center’s Ken Balcomb.

    “The baby is gone,” he said Tuesday.

    The pod was offshore for a week to 10 days, and the orca designated L-120 might have been lost in a storm in the middle of last week, Balcomb said.

    “A baby would not be without its mother for that long of a period. They generally stick right with its mother,” said Shari Tarantino, president of the board of directors at Orca Conservancy, a Seattle-based non-profit.

    The baby’s body has not been found, she said, but it would be hard to find unless it washes ashore.

    The baby was a member of “L pod,” one of three closely tracked families within the dwindling Puget Sound population.

    Researchers observed the pod, but not the baby, on Friday in Puget Sound, on Saturday in the eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca, and on Monday in Haro Strait, between San Juan Island and Victoria, British Columbia.

    The mother is there, aunt’s there, big brother,” Balcomb said. “The baby didn’t make it.”

    That leaves 78 killer whales in the Puget Sound population.  In 2005, the group was protected under the Endangered Species Act.

    The newborn was spotted in the first week of September off San Juan Island. Two other whales are presumed dead after disappearing earlier this year, so the birth was hailed.

    “We were being guardedly optimistic that a turning point had been reached, but that is not the case,” Balcomb said.

    The unique population numbered more than 140 animals decades ago but declined to a low of 71 in the 1970s, when dozens were captured for marine parks and aquariums. Then orcas were listed as endangered in 2005.

    The striking black and white whales have come to symbolize the Pacific Northwest. Individual whales are identified by slight variations in the shape of their dorsal fins and distinctive whitish-gray patch of pigment behind the dorsal fin, called a saddle patch.

    The Puget Sound killer whales primarily eat fish, rather than other marine mammals. Offspring tend to stay with their mothers for life.

    http://blogs.seattletimes.com/today/2014/10/seven-week-old-baby-orca-missing-presumed-dead/?syndication=rss

  • Seattle Times: A new study nails dearth of chinook salmon as the primary cause of the endangered resident orca whale’s failure to rebound.

    orca-calf-1By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter, June 28, 2017

    A team of researchers has isolated lack of food as the primary factor — bigger than vessel traffic, bigger than toxins — limiting recovery of resident killer whales.

    In a paper published Thursday in PLOS ONE, a team lead by Sam Wasser, professor of biology and director of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington tracked the nutritional, physiological and reproductive health of southern resident killer whales — the J, K, and L pods of orcas that frequent the Salish Sea, including the San Juans and the waters of Seattle.

    The study links low reproductive success of the whales, with a total population of just 78 animals, to stress caused by low or variable abundance of their favorite prey: chinook salmon.

    Scientists continue to evaluate the role of vessel traffic, including whale-watch boats, toxins, and food supply in the orca’s troubles. Wasser said his results point to food as key.

    “It’s the fish,” said Wasser, whose team found that of 35 pregnancies among whales tracked from 2007 to 2014, only 11 produced a live calf.

    The females with failed pregnancies had levels of hormones indicating nutritional stress seven times higher than females that successfully gave birth.

    “Pregnancy failure — likely brought on by poor nutrition — is the major constraining force on population growth,” Wasser said of resident orcas, a federally listed endangered species since 2005.

    The number of pregnancies lost was actually probably higher: The team was unable to detect the earliest months of pregnancy, which is when failed pregnancies typically occur.

    Deborah Giles, research director at the nonprofit Center for Whale Research, and an author of the paper, said vessel traffic and toxics and lack of food are all bad for the whales, but when whales are well-nourished, other problems don’t affect them as much. “If the whales are well-fed, you don’t see a strong signature for stress hormones related to vessels,” Giles said. “They are going through problems of famine and deeper famine.”

    Some aren’t convinced lack of food is the orca’s biggest threat. “It is complicated,” said Brad Hanson, wildlife biologist with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries, who has used acoustic sensors and tags to track the whales’ movements, and study how vessel noise affects them.

    Noise is actually a piece of the food problem, Hanson said. Prey has to, of course, be available for the whales, but they also must be able to find it. Orcas seek and find their prey by echolocation, which can be overwhelmed by the racket of container ships and whale-watch boats and other vessels.

    Unanswered is why the orcas are so adamant about refusing other foods. That they would choose the largest, fattiest salmon — chinook — makes sense, in terms of targeting hunting effort at the most calories. But Hanson has watched orcas kill harbor porpoise and even tote them around under a fin, or push them along with their nose, yet never take a bite.

    It’s just not part of the resident orcas’ culture to eat marine mammals, Hanson said. With distinct languages and family groups that pass on the knowledge of what to eat, where to catch it and how to share it, resident orcas likely aren’t changing their diet anytime soon.

    Wasser said a lack of food also makes orcas burn their body fat, which in turn releases toxins bound up in the fat — from flame retardants to DDT — further suppressing their reproductive health. “It’s a double whammy,” Wasser said.
     
    To do its research, the team deployed a trained dog in the bow of the boat capable of catching the scent of whale scat on the water from up to a nautical mile away. The team collected 348 scat samples from 79 orcas between 2007 and 2014.

    The method is unique, allowing collection of samples in the wild and noninvasively that reveal intimate information, from pregnancy to stress levels and even types of stress the whales are under.

    The team also compared hormone data to records of chinook salmon runs in the Columbia and Fraser River, and saw large runs at those watersheds coincided with periods of lower nutritional stress in the orcas, and vice versa.

    “The take-home message is we really have to start looking at how to restore these fish,” Wasser said. That includes habitat fixes to boost salmon runs, including on the Columbia, where big, fatty spring chinook are a critical source of nutrition for the orcas in the early spring, carrying them until summer’s Fraser River runs, Wasser said.

    “Should we take out the Lower Snake River Dams? I don’t know, but we have to start looking at that,” Wasser said. “People are shying away from that, but it has to be investigated as a fix.”

    A federal judge has sent NOAA Fisheries back to the drawing board to determine an operation regime for the federal Columbia River hydropower system that does not jeopardize threatened and endangered salmon runs in the Columbia and Snake, its main tributary. The judge ruled in a 2016 court decisiondam removal must be on the table.

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/uw-professors-study-links-food-scarcity-to-orcas-failed-pregnancies/

  • Seattle Times: Another new orca baby born to J pod — the second this month

    By Lynda V. Mapes09252020 orca 094931 1536x1118
    Sep. 25, 2020

    Another new orca baby has been born to J pod, the Center for Whale Research confirmed Friday morning. It’s the second calf born this month for the endangered southern resident orcas that frequent Puget Sound.

    “We confirm that there is a new calf in J pod and the mother is J41,” Ken Balcomb, the founding director of the center, wrote in a text message to The Seattle Times on Friday morning.

    “We have to await the whales’ return to determine its health condition and hopefully determine its success. It is important to note that the observation was in Canada and we could not be there due to covid restrictions.”

    Center observer Mark Malleson caught up with the whales near Sheringham, British Columbia, Balcomb wrote. The whales were very spread out, foraging, and could not be located before dark.

    J35, the mother orca also known as Tahlequah, gave birth to a male calf on Sept. 4. Mother and baby were seen this week romping and feeding. Tahlequah raised worldwide concern in 2018 when her calf died shortly after birth and she carried it for 17 days and more than 1,000 miles.

    This is the fourth birth to the southern residents since 2019. In such a small population, every calf is celebrated. There are now 74 southern residents in the J, K, and L pods.

    The orcas face three main threats to their survival: boat noise and vessel disturbance; pollution; and lack of food, especially chinook salmon.

    The birth of the baby was witnessed by professional naturalists Talia Goodyear and Leah Vanderwiel, along with customers aboard the Orca Spirit Adventures vessel Pacific Explorer, according to a news release from the Pacific Whale Watch Association, which represents commercial tour operators on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border.

    According to Goodyear: “We spotted who we soon identified to be J41 just southwest of Race Rocks. She appeared to be alone at the time and stayed very close to the surface for a few minutes. After going under for several minutes, she reappeared, and this time it looked like she was pushing something with her rostrum. She surfaced like this 3 or 4 times.”

    It took them a little while to figure out what was going on. Was this tragic news? A repeat of mother orca Tahlequah pushing a dead calf? Was it a transient or Bigg’s killer whale tackling a seal?

    They soon realized the mother orca was helping the baby by holding it up on her head to get its first few breaths, “…at which point the little one started surfacing on its own,” according to Vanderwiel. “It appeared to be a rambunctious little bundle of baby …

    “It was an emotional time as we processed what was happening in front of us. It took a few minutes to realize what was actually happening, but then it was pure excitement realizing that it was a birth and the baby was very alive and boisterous.”

  • Seattle Times: Another Puget Sound orca dies; hope dim for her calf

    orca.1

    October 28, 2016

    By Sandi Doughton, Seattle Times science reporter

    One of the most easily recognized of Puget Sound’s resident killer whales has died, and her young calf will almost certainly follow — if he hasn’t perished already, biologists said Friday.
    The losses would bring the population of endangered southern resident orcas to 80, among the lowest levels in decades.

    “We have seen virtually no growth in this population in 20 years despite large amounts of money spent to study and recover them,” Ken Balcomb, director of the Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island, wrote in an “obituary” for the two animals.

    The mother whale, known as J28, was about 24 years old and in what should have been her prime breeding years. She was well-known to whale watchers because of a distinctive nick on her dorsal fin. Photos over the past few months showed her becoming more and more emaciated, Balcomb said. By Oct. 19, she had disappeared from her family group. Her carcass has not been found, but biologists say she probably died in the Strait of Juan de Fuca earlier that week.

    The mother’s death doomed her 10-month-old calf, said Howard Garrett, of the monitoring program called Orca Network.

    Photos showed his older sister and cousin attempting to support the young whale. Close-up shots show that his skin was scored by tooth marks, most likely incurred when his sister tried to push him to the surface to breathe.

    “His mother had died a day or two earlier, and probably wasn’t providing enough milk even before that,” Garrett said. “He didn’t really stand a chance.”

    The 7-year-old sister had also been catching and offering salmon to her little brother and mother for several months, but wasn’t able to provide enough food to sustain them, Balcomb said.

    The southern resident whales, whose range includes Puget Sound, the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the waters around the San Juan Islands, experienced a recent baby boom that raised hopes the population might be on the upswing.

    Nine calves were born between December 2014 and January 2016, the biggest number in more than 30 years. But three of those young whales have died, Balcomb said.

    Mortality is always high for young killer whales, but Balcomb blames the population’s overall decline primarily on a reduction in the species’ main prey — chinook salmon.

    A healthy population of whales would be producing five to 10 calves that live past infancy every year, Balcomb pointed out.

    Brad Hanson, a marine mammal expert for the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, said none of the other animals in J28’s pod, except for her calf, appeared emaciated. So it’s possible she had an underlying medical problem that contributed to her death.

    Federal biologists are reviewing the status of the southern residents, which are not meeting recovery goals.

    Whale advocates are pushing for removal or breaching of four dams on the lower Snake River, to boost struggling salmon populations. In May, a federal judge blasted federal agencies for failing to consider dam removal as a way to improve salmon runs. He sent the agencies back to the drawing board, with a March 1, 2018, deadline for a new approach.

    Sandi Doughton: 206-464-2491 or sdoughton@seattletimes.com

  • Seattle Times: Attendees criticized NOAA for coordinating the now-canceled rescue effort of the orca J50 with SeaWorld, the entertainment park that had for decades profited from capturing the animals for use in its aquariums.

    By Lynda V. Mapes <https://www.seattletimes.com/author/lynda-v-mapes/> <https://www.twitter.com/LyndaVMapes> Seattle Times environment reporter

    Sept. 16, 2018

    orca.tribes.salmonScores of local residents condemned the federal agency in charge of protecting local killer whales in two packed public meetings over the weekend, highlighting growing frustration after the deaths of three of the animals this summer.

    The endangered southern resident killer whales, of which just 74 remain, aren’t getting the help they need from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, speakers said at a Saturday meeting in Friday Harbor and another the following day in Seattle. The agency has also not been transparent in its efforts to bring the mammals back from the brink of extinction, they added.

    The public hearings were initially planned to discuss an emergency rescue plan for J50, a southern resident killer whale that was critically ill before being presumed dead on Thursday. Speakers demanded that NOAA take drastic steps to save the orcas, including shutting down fishing for Chinook, creating a whale sanctuary in known foraging areas so the orcas can hunt without vessel traffic, and breaching the Lower Snake River Dams to boost fish returns for the whales. Attendees criticized NOAA for coordinating the now-canceled rescue effort with SeaWorld, the entertainment park that had for decades profited from capturing the animals for use in its aquariums. Lynne Barre, director of southern resident recovery for NOAA, said the agency wanted to take advantage of SeaWorld’s “expertise and resources.”

    “NOAA has a huge credibility problem with the southern residents. You have known for over a decade they don’t have enough food and now SeaWorld is involved,” Sandy Wright, a Seattle resident, said at the Sunday meeting. “We will not be silent while SeaWorld tries to repair their reputation using the southern residents once again for their own selfish greed.”

    SeaWorld was a customer for many members of J Pod, one of the three families that make up the southern residents, which were hunted for aquarium display in the 1960s and 1970s, according to historian Sandra Pollard, author of “Puget Sound Whales for Sale.” All except one of the animals taken during that time — a third of the pods — have since died. Orca whales in the wild have similar life expectancy to healthy humans, with some living to be more than 80 years old.

    NOAA never intended to put J50 in captivity, and its efforts were only intended to get the animal back to health and into the wild, Barre said.

    “I hear a lack of trust with NOAA,” Scott Rumsey, deputy regional administrator for NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region, said at the Sunday hearing in Seattle. “The only way we can improve that trust is for you to engage and for us to listen … I promise to you right now I am here because I want to build that trust.”

    Agency officials present in both hearings said that they haven’t done enough, despite the start of recovery efforts in 2005, when the southern residents were declared an endangered species. Three of the animals have either died or were presumed dead this summer, including L92, a 23-year old male who was declared missing then dead in June. Last month, a calf died within minutes of being born, while J50 was presumed dead last week after going missing.

    In a community grieving ceremony for the whales by the Samish Nation in Bowman Bay, mourners  paddled offerings of salmon in a canoe out to the waters of the Salish Sea, to honor the whales’ spirits amid song and prayer.

    “I look at 2018, and I hope this is the low point,” Barry Thom, regional administrator for NOAA fisheries West Coast Region, said at the Friday Harbor High School hearing. “The clock is running out on killer whale recovery, and it is heart wrenching to see.”

    Curtis Johnson, one of the attendees at the Seattle meeting, was one of many that backed the idea of pushing for big changes from dam breaching to fishing shut downs to save the southern residents.

    “Business as usual is not going to get it done,” Johnson said. “It is past time for task forces, past time for talk, it is action time.”

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes <https://twitter.com/LyndaVMapes> . Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/angry-at-plight-of-southern-resident-orcas-speakers-rebuke-noaa-in-public-meetings/

  • Seattle Times: Both orca babies are alive, and all 3 southern resident pods have been spotted in Canadian waters

    August 14, 2019

    By Lynda V. Mapes 

    Orca.Baby.MotherResearchers documented this week that both babies in the southern resident killer whale pods are still alive.

    That was welcome news for the population of endangered orcas that dropped to just 73 this month, with three adults missing and presumed dead: J17, K25 and L84. The southern resident population has been in steady decline and is the lowest since the end of the live capture era in Washington waters in 1976.

    On Sunday, researchers with the Center for Whale Research, which tracks the southern resident population, photographed both babies, alive and seemingly well.

    Orca calves have a 50 percent chance of surviving their first year of life in the best of circumstances. So the persistence of the babies — J31’s new calf, J56, and L124, the calf born to L77 in January — is encouraging.

    Researchers have confirmed J56 is female. The gender of L124 is not yet known.

    In addition to the sighting near Clo-oose on the west side of Vancouver Island on Sunday, J pod was seen in the Strait of Juan de Fuca Tuesday, Ken Balcomb founding director of the Center for Whale Research, reported Wednesday morning in a text to The Seattle Times. The whales were headed inbound from Sooke, B.C., Wednesday night.

    The hour-to-hour location of the whales is of fierce interest to whale researchers waiting all summer to do their work, and hoping the southern residents will arrive to follow fall runs of chinook salmon to the Fraser River.

    Spring and summer runs have been so low the whales have not bothered to come around. The whales have been on the outer coast all summer, including an unprecedented two-month absence from their summer habitat in the inner Salish Sea, including the San Juan Islands.

    Sarah Colosimo is the lead of a four-person research team for Oceans Initiative seeking to document how the southern residents are influenced by the presence of boats.

    Since July 1, the team has been surveying for the whales from the west side of San Juan Island, watching from land all day. The whales have shown up only twice, on July 5 and 6, and only briefly. The whales made a fast shuffle up and down the island, then left.

    Days go by, as the team waits for them to come back. Their equipment is ready. Their protocol perfected. All they need is their study subject to show up.

    “It’s definitely frustrating,” Colosimo said.

    Undaunted, the team will keep at it through September, Colosimo said, watching for the whales from shore.

    The study, begun in 2017, has been helping to shed light on the behavior of the whales in the presence of ships and boats. Whales use sound to hunt, and noise by ships and boats blocks what they need to hear.

    A report from the Port of Vancouver last month on the effect of voluntary slowdowns in 2018 by shippers in Haro Strait found that slower speeds lower boat noise, and help reduce interference by shippers with whale foraging.

    The report also found that as underwater noise increases, there is a decrease in the probability that the whales will start foraging, and an increase in the likelihood that they would stop.

    Other peer-reviewed, published research has shown that even the presence of boats can cause orcas to stop foraging and travel. That matters for an endangered species that is struggling to get enough to eat.

    The absence of the whales most of the field season so far this year is bittersweet, Colosimo said.

    “Everyone that is working on this project is really passionate about the whales and invested in their well-being. It brings us some comfort to know they must be somewhere where it is quieter and less polluted, with more fish,” Colosimo said.

    “Maybe this is hopeful, that that they have figured out this isn’t the best place for them, and they have found somewhere better.” 

  • Seattle Times: Canada’s new protections for orcas go a little further than new legislation in Washington state    

    May 13, 2019
     
    By Lynda V. Mapes
        
    J PodCanada has adopted a suite of measures intended to improve orcas’ access to food by reducing commercial and recreational fishing for chinook salmon and quieting vessel noise and disturbance that can interfere with orcas’ foraging. Some of the policies go further than laws just adopted by the Washington State Legislature. The measures, announced Friday by Canadian agencies, create new sanctuaries for endangered southern resident killer whales in the Salish Sea that will be closed to vessel traffic. Washington has no such sanctuaries today. The sanctuaries will be in place from June 1 through Oct. 31 — prime southern resident orca season in the Salish Sea — at Pender and Saturna Islands and Swiftsure Bank, important feeding areas for the southern residents. The areas would be closed except to emergency vessels and indigenous food, social and ceremonial fisheries. The southern residents are at grave risk of extinction. Vessel noise is one the key threats to the southern residents’ survival, because it can interfere with their ability to find prey that also is scarce because of a downturn in the orcas’ preferred food, chinook salmon. The new policies also double the distance vessels must stay away from southern resident killer whales to 400 meters, (about one-quarter of a mile). That is more strict than the Legislature’s new policy for commercial whale-watch operators in Washington waters. Tours can’t approach southern resident killer whales in Washington waters closer than 300 yards, or follow from behind closer than 400 yards. Canada’s new policy also allows commercial whale-watch operators, in return for not offering southern resident tours, to watch transient or Bigg’s killer whales at only 200 yards. Commercial operators that sign on to the deal, which is still being finalized, could still watch the southern residents if they encounter them, albeit at the 400-meter distance. A voluntary slowdown to 7 knots for all small vessels within 1 kilometer of killer whales also was adopted. For commercial shippers such as bulk carriers, ferries, tankers and cruise ships, an ongoing voluntary slowdown was extended, and will start earlier, beginning June 1 if whales are present. The slowdown area is also being expanded from Haro Strait to Boundary Pass. To leave more prey available for the southern residents, recreational and commercial fishing closures were imposed for chinook in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Canadian Gulf Islands. The target date for implementation of the measures is June 1, except for the fisheries closures, which are in July and August, based on the area. All are interim policies, intended to be in place for 2019. In Washington, new restrictions on whale watching are still coming. Under 2SSB 5577, passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Jay Inslee, the Washington state Department of Fish and Wildlife is to develop new fees and regulations on whale watching by 2021 to reduce the daily and cumulative impacts of commercial whale watching on the southern residents. New restrictions are to consider the number of days and hours that tours can operate, as well as the areas in which tours may be given. Washington lawmakers also at the last minute of the 2019 legislative session included $750,000 in the state budget to fund an analysis by a citizen panel of impacts and possible responses to dam removal on the Lower Snake River. Lawmakers did not fund continuation of the governor’s task force on orca recovery, but it is expected to continue to operate using money from the governor’s office. The Canadian policies, particularly the vessel slow down to quiet boat noise, could benefit the southern residents, said Alan McGillivray, Canadian president of the Pacific Whale Watch Association  and owner of the Prince of Whales tour operation. The agreement not to offer tours of southern residents won’t hurt business, he predicted, because operators can still watch the whales if they are encountered — though at 400 meters, it’s not much of an experience for viewers, who won’t see much more than a fin in the distance, McGillivray said. Some Washington conservationists were unimpressed with the initiatives announced across the border. Canada is still pursuing the Trans-Mountain pipeline expansion, which will increase the risk of oil spills in the Salish Sea and vessel noise, “so it’s a double whammy,” said Robb Krehbiel, Northwest representative for Defenders of Wildlife, based in Seattle. Stormwater and sewage pollution from Canada also has not been addressed nearly as much as in the U.S. Canada’s farmed Atlantic salmon net-pen industry in the Salish Sea — which pollutes and can spread disease to wild salmon — also is among the largest in the world. “They are making progress but still have a long way to go,” Krehbiel said.

  • Seattle Times: Changes to dams on Columbia, Snake rivers to benefit salmon, hydropower and orcas

    December 18th, 2018

    By Lynda Mapes

    Lower Granite SpillA landmark agreement supported by states, tribes and federal agencies is expected to change how water is spilled at Columbia and Lower Snake River dams to boost the survival of young salmon while limiting the financial hit to hydropower.

    After decades of arguments and court challenges, a landmark agreement supported by states, tribes and federal agencies is expected to change how water is spilled at Columbia and Lower Snake River dams to boost the survival of young salmon while limiting the financial hit to hydropower.

    The agreement is to be recorded Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Portland and is intended to be in effect for the 2019 salmon migration season, and remain in place through 2021.

    The pact addresses how water passes over the hydroelectric dams during the crucial spring period when young salmon migrate downstream to the ocean.

    Spill would be cranked up, according to the agreement signed Friday, during the times of day when power is not in highest demand, and generating it is not as profitable. During the most profitable hours, typically during the mornings and evenings, spill would be reduced. The idea is to help salmon with higher spill, while keeping lost-power generation costs at, or potentially even below, current levels.

    The agreement tracks with one of the recommendations from Gov. Jay Inslee’s orca task force to boost spill as a near-term way to increase survival of chinook salmon, the preferred food of critically endangered southern-resident orca whales.

    For the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), which markets public power from Columbia River Basin dams, the agreement will give the administration more opportunity to sell electricity when prices are high. Greater revenues will help BPA pay for what is believed to be the most expensive fish and wildlife program in the world in the Columbia River Basin.

    BPA Administrator Elliot Mainzer described the agreement as an opportunity for an important change in direction on what has been a divisive issue.

    He said people “who historically have been on opposite sides of the table” found common ground on how to improve salmon survival and help the BPA take advantage of new opportunities in a changing energy market that will improve the economic viability of the hydropower system.

    “When you get both of those things, it’s a huge win-win,” Mainzer said. “It is such a great opportunity to bring the region together … We hope that we can do things differently going forward.”

    Mainzer said he had briefed Inslee and Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and hopes the agreement will limit the power-sales losses caused by spill to the 2018 calculation of nearly $240 million annually.

    The costs could be below that amount as BPA will be better able to take advantage of daily electricity- market fluctuations.

    The agreement also depends on Washington and Oregon changing their water-quality standards to allow greater amounts of dissolved gas in the river, caused by the plunge of water over the dams.  Washington and Oregon are signatories to the agreement.

    The orcas depend on a wide variety of chinook runs. Spring chinook from the Columbia and Snake rivers are important to the whales in the early spring. In summer, they follow chinook from the Fraser River in  British Columbia as well as Puget Sound rivers. In fall and winter they pursue Puget Sound chum and coho as well as other fish, in addition to salmon all the way along the U.S. West Coast.

    Spilling water to help salmon move past the Columbia River Basin dams began back in the late 1970s and has resulted in a long battle over management of the Columbia River hydropower system. Salmon advocates have pressed in court for more water to be spilled over the dams rather than run through power turbines.

    Spill, and other shifts in dam operations to aid salmon, has been a significant cost for BPA and the region’s ratepayers.

    Since 1981, BPA reports more than $7.7 billion in lost power-generation revenue and power purchases because of changes in dam operations to benefit fish. This sum represents close to half  of the $16.4 billion that has been spent on BPA-financed fish and wildlife programs in the Columbia River Basin through the decades, according to statistics provided by BPA to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council.

    The spill has come under attack by some in Congress, including two Washington House Republicans whose districts are east of the Cascades and who have been staunch supporters of the hydropower system. In a joint statement released Monday, Reps. Dan Newhouse and Cathy McMorris Rodgers challenged the benefits of spill and warned of harm to salmon.

    “The purpose of this agreement was to end litigation, but there is no indication that it will even do that … This costly plan is worse than useless,” the statement said, in part.

    McMorris Rodgers sponsored legislation that passed the House this year — but not the Senate — that would have barred an agreement such as this one without approval by Congress. The bill also would have rolled back court-ordered additional spill that took effect in 2018, and is projected to cost ratepayers $38 million annually.

    The cost of salmon restoration has been a big issue for regional utilities that buy the Columbia Basin power, and are concerned about rate increases. Utility officials have been aware of the negotiations over the flexible spill, but haven’t had a chance to offer direct comment, according to Scott Corwin, executive director of the Public Power Council, which represents about 100 public utility districts, cooperative and municipal utilities.

    “The bottom line is that customers can recognize the potential benefits of moving this out of the courtroom,” Corwin said. “But without more clarity around the costs and the risks, it is difficult right now to know the impacts to utility ratepayers or to fish.”

    Michele Dehart of the Fish Passage Center said monitoring over the next three years will be crucial to see if the benefits are as expected. “We have more than 20 years of studies that shows spill passage is the best thing for out-migrating fish and returning adults,” Dehart said.

    “But we don’t know what is going to happen, we have never implemented this before. We will collect data, and we will see.”

    Michael Tehan, assistant regional administrator for the interior Columbia Basin for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), called the agreement an important opportunity “to move from the courtroom to the river, and to learn more about how best to promote safe passage for fish in a way that contributes to their long-term recovery.”

    Passage through the dams is just one aspect of salmon survival. But making the trip through the dams as benign as possible helps counteract other factors, such as poor ocean conditions, said Guy Norman, a member of the Northwest Power and Planning Conservation Council representing Washington state.

    The hope, Norman said, is that the program can get Snake River chinook on a path toward recovery. NOAA recovery plans show wild Snake River spring chinook are headed toward extinction, even as BPA has been facing higher and higher fish costs and volatile power markets.

    Joseph Bogaard of the nonprofit Save Our Wild Salmon cautioned that the measures won’t be enough for the species’ recovery, and said his organization and others will continue to push for removal of dams on the Lower Snake River. Dam removal is going to be under review by a new governor’s task force in the coming year, and is under examination in the ongoing federal court proceeding in Portland.

    Shannon F. Wheeler, chairman of the Nez Perce Tribal Executive Committee, a signatory to the agreement, said in a statement the tribe has actively participated in the Columbia and Snake River litigation but will set it aside until completion of an analysis of the dam operations required by the National Environmental Policy Act.  “The Tribe has long supported breaching the four Lower Snake River Dams,” the statement said.

    But spill can help right now, said Michael Garrity of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. This is “a big deal, a really big step, and a meaningful step.”

  • Seattle Times: Chasing a memory - In California, orcas and salmon have become so scarce people have forgotten what once was. Will the Northwest be next?

    September 29, 2019

    By  Lynda V. Mapes 

    Orca.LeapingREDDING, Calif.  — If there is a hell for salmon, it probably looks like this.

    There were many more golf balls in the water than salmon this summer, whacked there by enthusiasts at Aqua Golf, a driving range on the bank of the Sacramento River.

    Below the surface, the gravel salmon need to make their nests had been mined decades ago to build Shasta Dam, 602 feet tall and with no fish passage. The dam cut off access to all of the cold mountain waters where these fish used to spawn.

    The hillsides above the river were blackened by wildfire. Houses, instead of forests, stood along the banks. Cars roared by on Interstate 5 as temperatures soared to 105 degrees.

    Yet the matriarchs of the orcas that frequent Puget Sound still remember the big winter chinook that used to thrive here. The fat, juicy fish are precious winter food for orcas at the southernmost end of their vast foraging range.

    The orcas, called southern residents for a reason, cruise all the way to California to feed on Central Valley salmon runs. L pod was off Monterey early this year. The oldest whale among all the southern residents, L25, born about 1928, led the way. She brought her whole family because her mother did before her, and her grandmother before that. In the southern resident pods, the matriarchs lead the search for food — particularly in times of scarcity.

    But was L pod chasing fish in California — or only L25’s memory of them? The fish have become so scarce, it is hard to know if the whales got any nourishment.

    Jonathan Ambrose is working to reintroduce Sacramento winter chinook back to their high mountain waters, above the dam, in a last-ditch effort to beat extinction.

    These fish can’t survive much longer where they are, said Ambrose, reintroduction coordinator for the Central Valley office of the National Marine Fisheries Service. The salmon are kept on life support with cold-water releases from the dam. But because of  increasing water use for agriculture and growing human population — and heat and drought only expected to intensify with a warming planet — some years there isn’t enough cold water for fish.

    Salmon still cruise under the Golden Gate Bridge in their journey to and from the sea. But San Francisco today is known for its tech boom and world-class urban amenities — not salmon.

    Salmon?

    Many people here have forgotten all about salmon, Ambrose said. They don’t know the Sacramento is a salmon river. That California is a salmon state. That orcas still come here, searching for salmon.

    “People don’t even know what we used to have,” Ambrose said.

    The decline of this river, once second in salmon production in the U.S. only to the Columbia River, is a cautionary tale, a time machine, depicting a possible future. What has happened to the Sacramento and its winter chinook could happen here, in the Northwest.

    Lack of adequate available food is one of the main reasons the southern residents are spiraling toward extinction. Three were presumed dead this summer. Last year, mother orca Tahlequah raised worldwide dismay when she carried her dead calf for 17 days and more than 1,000 miles. There are only 73 southern residents left.

    The whales made only a short visit to California waters this year because there isn’t much food there for them. And increasingly, the whales aren’t here in the Salish Sea much, either.

    Mostly, they have remained on the coast searching for chinook.

    As the orcas leave, more and more people arrive: Nearly 200 people a day are moving to the Puget Sound region, where the population, some 4 million people, is expected to grow to nearly 6 million by 2050.

    In suburban Snohomish County, housing is burgeoning as Stillaguamish River chinook are declining. In Central Puget Sound, most of the Lower Green River is walled off behind levees. The Lower Duwamish, into which the Green flows, has been converted to an industrial waterway. Yet the Stillaguamish and the Green-Duwamish rivers are still crucial producers of the chinook the endangered orcas need.

    On the Columbia and Snake rivers, another historic salmon stronghold, the Northwest region since 1981 has spent nearly $17 billion on fish and wildlife recovery, but has not budged a single salmon run from the endangered-species list. Puget Sound chinook also remain at high risk of extinction, despite 20 years of recovery efforts.

    The region is on a path to repeat the history of decline seen everywhere that salmon have ever thrived. First in the rivers of Europe. Then the East Coast of North America. Then California.

    In the Northwest there is no need to choose between salmon and prosperity, orcas and jobs.

    “We have a chance to do what other parts of the country have not done to save what remains, restore what is lost, and essentially, to have it all,” said King County Executive Dow Constantine. “This is a battle for the soul of this region.”

    The last stand in the Lower 48 for salmon and the orcas that depend on them is here. It is now. In the Northwest.

    Billions spent, salmon still endangered

    This cluster of slides, flumes and buildings looked like a water park in the middle of Washington wheat country.

    Here at the Lower Granite Dam, 20 seasonal workers are crammed into trailers, plunging needles into the bellies of tiny fish to insert tracking tags. More incoming fish zipped their way, backward and uphill in translucent plastic piping to their work station. The fish were temporarily zonked with a knockout potion, aptly called Aqui-S, to make them easier to handle.

    As the drug soaked in, the fish quieted, and workers standing in a line at a flume palmed each one to insert the tag. It enables managers to track the survival — or demise — of every salmon on its journey downriver from Lower Granite Dam, the inlandmost on the Lower Snake River, to Bonneville, more than 300 miles away, the last dam on the main-stem Columbia River before the Pacific.

    But in this industrialized river system, many salmon do not swim at all. Instead, they are taken out of the river, put on a barge to cruise toward the ocean. It’s a strategy intended to spread the risk between salmon migrating in the river and those getting a ride.

    It’s a dazzling and even bamboozling scene, as workers sort, tag and ship salmon that just minutes before were swimming downriver, minding their own business, until encountering a migration massively altered by hydroelectric dams that help power the region.

    Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on alterations to the hydro system, trying to address the basic problem that a soft, tiny fish no longer than a finger is trying to get past a cement wall 100 feet high, and a battery of turbines grinding electricity from the current. And the fish must run this gantlet over and over again as they navigate as many as nine dams.

    The Columbia still has banner years, in relative terms. But lately the tempo between good years and bad is quickening, and the wipeouts are getting worse.

    The harmful effects of the highly altered rivers are worsened by climate change. Ocean conditions are depleting marine food webs, and rivers are warming in a one-two punch that has diminished salmon returns to some of the lowest numbers in decades.

    Passage through long, slackwater reservoirs is perilous because salmon are cold-water animals. The cumulative effects of climate change are pushing water temperatures into the 70s in some reservoirs for more than a month at a time. The longer salmon are in warmer water, the more susceptible they are to disease and dying before they reach their home gravel to spawn.

    Orca L25 was about 10 years old when the first dam, Bonneville, started churning out kilowatts in 1938. Today, for her family, and for human families all over the region, the stakes on the Columbia and Snake are high.

    The dams are zero-carbon energy producers — critical as the region seeks to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels to fight global warming. Yet some orca experts maintain whale recovery is unlikely without removal of the four Lower Snake dams.

    Dam removal on the Lower Snake has been at the heart of a more than 20-year court battle and political fight, with federal judges six times finding that federal agencies are not measuring up to salmon-recovery requirements in operation of the federal hydro-power system.

    Passage for juvenile salmon has greatly improved, though a poorly understood phenomenon called “delayed mortality” that kicks in after the last dam, thought to be linked to stress from the hydro-power system, has made exact losses impossible to count.

    This much is certain: historically the Snake is believed to have been the Columbia basin’s most productive drainage for salmon and steelhead. It’s supported more than 40 percent of all Columbia spring/summer chinook. But today these fish are at high risk of extinction. Some runs are already gone.

    As people debate and argue about what to do, hungry whales are still looking — hard — for the fish that always sustained them, especially in the early spring. These Columbia and Snake fish are essential to the whales to carry them until the start of the summer-run salmon in the Salish Sea, their summer home. For as long as L25 can remember.

    Seattle’s only river

    A front-end loader pawed at a pile of scrap metal several stories high and heaped all the way to the river’s edge. Steel barges staged to tow shipping containers full of goods and materials to distant ports lined the west bank. One barge was stacked five containers high, and topped by a tour bus with a leaping orca painted on its side.

    There is still real wildlife here. Sandpipers fluttered over a mud flat; a kingfisher cut across the river. A great blue heron stood ready to spear a meal, oblivious to the Geico Insurance gecko leering from a billboard just overhead.

    To paddle the Lower Duwamish — into which the Green flows — is to witness all that can be done to a river without killing it.

    The natural estuary and side-channel habitat is almost entirely eliminated — smothered in fill, or walled off with levees, dredged and straightened. The Lower Duwamish is no longer a river at all, but what the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers calls a waterway, an industrial shipping channel, to Elliott Bay.

    To be sure, a lot of work has been done and is underway by governments, businesses, nonprofits and volunteers to restore the Green-Duwamish to health. A $342 million, 17-year Superfund cleanup is proceeding in the Lower Duwamish, with the goal of removing and remediating decades of toxic pollution. The Port of Seattle has completed more than 93 acres of habitat restoration in the watershed and Elliott Bay, and has a goal to do more. Community shoreline access and habitat improvements have brought life back to the Duwamish. All sorts of new directions and experiments are being pursued to improve water quality, even artificial floating wetland islands called “bio-barges.”

    A Re-Green the Green program has been underway since 2016, with a goal of planting more than 2,300 acres of trees in the Green River watershed and Central Puget Sound area by 2025 to improve conditions for salmon.

    It’s a tall order in an area hard-used to create the region’s wealth, and which for decades was paved and poisoned under practices mostly disallowed today.

     “For so many years the river was just used as an open sewer,” said David Schumate, a retired engineer and river advocate who lives by the river and was dwarfed by the tailfins of parked Boeing aircraft as he paddled his canoe downstream.

    The din of industrial machinery made it hard to talk amid a cacophony of traffic, rumbling airplanes and jet blasts from Boeing Field. Backup alarms, heavy equipment, banging, smashing, clanging. The roar of the kilns at multiple cement plants.

    A Lime rental bicycle heaved in the river glowed green in the muddy brown water. Suddenly a fish jumped near Schumate’s paddle — to his shock: “I’m surprised there are any fish left in here at all.”

    Rain started to pock the river, stoking discharge of wet-weather runoff, from all of the surrounding roofs, parking lots, roads, industrial facilities and junkyards that flows untreated into the river. Called stormwater, this runoff carries oil, grease, dirt, tire dust, soot from engine exhaust, and a witch’s brew of pollutants from any and every hard surface.

    The biggest source of pollution to Puget Sound, stormwater runoff is so toxic to coho salmon many females full of eggs die before they can spawn in urban creeks.

    The blubber of orcas carries the poisons, which are in the fish they eat. When they go hungry, they burn their fat, releasing contaminants into their bloodstream, where they can compromise their health. Orca babies carry the highest levels of contaminants relative to their weight because of the load of pollutants they take on from their mothers’ fat-rich milk.

    Eric Warner, research team leader for the fish division of the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe, knows from experience that the Green-Duwamish still is treated as a dumping ground. Even an Acura turned up during one cleanup effort, Warner said. “You hear about the need for large woody debris in the water for salmon. Well, we have shopping carts instead.”

    This is one of the most important rivers in the state, both for the survival of Puget Sound chinook and for southern resident orcas that eat them. Yet just like the orca and the salmon, the Green-Duwamish is fighting for its life.

    More than 80% of the Lower Green River already has been walled off from its floodplain, with levees intended to protect billions of dollars worth of property and what has become the second-largest warehouse industry on the West Coast.

    Managing even more growth and population yet to come with salmon and orcas in mind comes down to day-to-day decisions in places like this.

    Other county officials had proposed an alternate plan, to set the levee much farther back and provide flood protection along with environmental benefits, including better fish habitat. The flood district has built levees like that, including in Auburn. But this time, the flood district board went for the faster, cheaper choice, with less property acquisition from local businesses.

    Mature trees were cut to build it, and plantings intended to provide shade died. Much of the site, but for some willows, bakes in the sun in a river already hurting for shade.

     “It shows we have these good intentions and lofty aspirations and reassuring words about commitment to the environment, but when push comes to shove, the majority of the County Council, the Legislature, and the mayor and City Council in Kent, no one was willing to do the right thing,” Constantine said.

    A new process is underway now to create a long-term comprehensive flood-management plan for the river. Tribes, state agencies, county officials, the city of Seattle and many nonprofit conservation groups see a once-in-a-generation chance to set the Green-Duwamish on a course that protects property while also supporting salmon and orca recovery. “Why can’t we think outside the box?” Beaver said.

    “Politics gets us stuck. Let’s think about this, not only in terms of what is there today, but what could be … We need to raise the awareness that this river is an asset.”

    Municipalities, real-estate developers and farmers, meanwhile, are arguing for more levees — one option under consideration would build nearly 30 more miles of walls.

    Even where there is consensus, such as on providing passage for fish into the upper watershed, the Green-Duwamish is still awaiting bold action to boost salmon and orca survival.

    In the upper Green, Howard Hanson Dam rises. It was completed in 1962 in part to manage flooding, particularly in the heavily developed lower reach of the river in places including Auburn, Tukwila and Kent.

    Built without fish passage, this federal dam walls off more than 100 miles upstream of river and side channels, spawning habitat just waiting for chinook, chum, coho and steelhead.

    Despite decades of talk and more than $100 million spent, there still is no fish passage at the Howard Hanson.

    All parties agree this dam operated by the Corps of Engineers should provide fish passage. “The only controversy is why it is taking so long,” said Fred Goetz, Endangered Species Act coordinator for the corps’ Seattle district office.

    The agency started building a juvenile fish-passage facility here but quickly busted the project budget. With $108 million spent, the corps stopped work in 2011. By now work has been stalled for so long, the process to design, approve and fund the work needs to be restarted.

    NOAA has set a deadline to begin fish passage at the dam — in 2031.

    “This may be the most important single project that can be done for salmon recovery in Puget Sound. We have a tremendous opportunity here,” Goetz said. “The continuous decline of the orca is not helped if we are not able to accomplish these big missions.”

    Suburban sprawl, and what remains

    As the region grows, salmon and the orcas are in a race against time. To find the most endangered salmon in Puget Sound, head to some of its fastest developing landscapes: the suburbs.

    More growth means more people and, depending on how growth is managed, more pollution and runoff, as forests and open spaces that absorb rainwater and pollution are paved or converted to housing, shopping centers, office parks — and all the rest.

    Lack of affordable housing in cities is making the problem worse.

    Granite Falls, near the Stillaguamish River, notched the second fastest rate of growth among cities in the four-county central Puget Sound region in 2018-2019, state records show. One reason is affordability. At Suncrest Farms, $434,995 — about half the median home price in Seattle — buys a 2,668-square-foot single-family home with a yard and a three-car garage.

    “Sold out of inventory, more coming soon!” says the sign stuck in the ground not far from where swing sets stand at the ready in backyards for the families flocking here, to enjoy a lifestyle with more space, for less money.

    “Whoever would have thought that affordable housing and transportation would be our biggest conservation challenges?” said Jeff Davis, director of conservation for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. A recent congressional tour of the south Sound, where pavement also is pressing deeper into the remaining bastions for salmon, left him in despair.

    While restoration work is underway all over the state, Davis knows habitat loss is outpacing the gains. He doesn’t want his 9-year-old daughter to have to go to a museum to see a chinook.

    For Shawn Yanity, Stillaguamish tribal chairman, that day is already here.

    Yanity eyes silvery chinook circling in a tank, ghostly in the light of the hatchery. This captive-brood facility is a living gene bank for what has become one of the most endangered chinook runs in the state.

    Some years, there have not even been enough fish in the Stillaguamish to put salmon on the table for tribal ceremonies. The tribe has had to buy fish — and serve chicken and ham instead. What is being lost is a cultural heritage, a practice and way of life that isn’t replicated with chicken dinners.

    “It’s the teachings, the stories the elders tell, the protocol and preparation for fishing and hunting,” Yanity said.

    The captive brood is both necessary, he said, and crushing: “I don’t want to see my culture in a tank.”

    Western Washington tribes with a treaty right to fish fought all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court to compel repairs to fish-blocking state highway culverts, to help boost the runs.

    But it will take more than a paper victory promising hypothetical fish to put salmon back on tribal tables and in orca mouths, Yanity said. Many repairs done so far are stranded investments unless repairs made by the state are matched by local governments, fixing their culverts that block habitat, too, upstream and down, Yanity said.

    Despite it all, he has faith in the fish and the orcas that depend on them. Salmon and steelhead even rebounded in the Toutle River in Southwest Washington after the eruption of Mount St. Helens.

    Environmental laws are making a difference, from the Clean Water Act to the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Puget Sound is cleaner today than it was a generation ago. Gray whales, seals, harbor porpoises and the transient orcas that eat them have rebounded since hunting marine mammals was prohibited. Even humpbacks are making a comeback.

    Where investments have been made to restore the natural abundance of their habitat, fish have boomed back.

    After the largest dam removal in the world, more chinook are returning to the Elwha River than in a generation. The Coastal Watershed Institute of Port Angeles, a research nonprofit, also has documented more surf smelt along the nearshore of the Elwha. That’s a response to dam removal that restarted the river’s natural flow of sediment, and the institute’s restoration work tearing out shoreline armoring to restore the beach.

    A healthy beach hops with bugs on soft sand, essential spawning ground for sand lance and surf smelt. These forage fish, as well as herring, feed the salmon that feed the orcas.

    In bays and coves along Puget Sound, herring persist. Their jewel-like eggs sparkle on eelgrass beds brought back by local preservation nonprofits, government restoration projects and even individual families choosing to tear out bulkheads and riprap, or keep their shoreline natural.

    Just west of the mouth of the Elwha, sunbeams filter through turquoise water and alight on herring in silvery torrents twining through lush kelp forests. The herring surge, flashing like a constellation of stars. Fat young of the year, these are the little fish that will feed big chinook.

     “It’s working,” says Anne Shaffer, executive director of the Coastal Watershed Institute. “Don’t give up. Keep going.”

    No opportunity goes unnoticed by plants and animals ready to take advantage. Even at a tiny pocket beach scooped out from riprap and fill at the Olympic Sculpture Park near the heart of downtown Seattle, the water is alive. Crabs hustle over a habitat bench built to support the sea wall but also to shelter and nurture the living shore. Juvenile chinook make their way along the sunlit shallows. Perch glitter, squads of herring patrol the current and kelp is taking root.

    Even the Lower Duwamish Waterway, forgotten and left for dead by so many, is still very much alive.

    One morning this summer, Muckleshoot tribal members hauled in chinook salmon in a 12-hour overnight fishery in Elliott Bay and a stretch of the Lower Duwamish to the Highway 99 bridge.

    Amid the homeless camps, the cement factories, the traffic banging over the grated bridge decks, here was a harvest as old as Puget Sound, still going on, for generations uncounted of salmon, and people.

    Ask Nick Elkins, 25, why he wants to stay up all night fishing for chinook on this river and he has an instant answer. It’s not the money — he caught only five fish, selling three and keeping two for his family. “It’s the beautiful fish.”

    And beautiful they were: chrome bright, their eyes wide with the mystery of all they had seen in four years at sea.

    This is their home river, and despite it all, the Green-Duwamish is still every year either the first, second or third biggest producer of chinook in all of Puget Sound.

    The fish runs here — although a shadow of what once was, from Puget Sound to the Columbia and Snake — are a miracle of survival that proves what is still possible for salmon and for orcas if given a chance.

    The orcas still seek these fish on the coast, in the Salish Sea and even all the way into the urban waters of Puget Sound, hunting chum, coho and chinook. The special time for Seattle-area residents is when the southern residents, in their final seasonal rounds of the year, come here at last. Downtown killer whales. Who else has that?

    Sometimes the southern residents were here for days on end, thrilling ferry riders and people flocking to beaches to watch orcas blow and breach, right off shore. One day last November, J, K and L pods were all here at once. Dozens of orcas were cartwheeling and spy hopping, right past the Superfund site of the Asarco Smelter at Ruston, right past the dense-pack housing along the shores of central Puget Sound.

    They sculled upside-down, slapped their pecs and flukes seemingly just for fun, maybe just to hear the resonant, smacking sound.

    As the sunset painted the water gold, people turned out on beaches and shorelines from Maury Island to West Seattle, enchanted all over again at what it means to live here. In a place still alive, with salmon, and with orcas on the hunt.

    The Northwest is not California, where people have forgotten what they used to have. Not yet.

    At stake, as the region gets richer, is whether it also will get poorer. With only the grandmother orcas remembering what used to be.

  • Seattle Times: Concern over endangered orcas blows up approval of Trans Mountain pipeline in Canada

    August 30, 2018

    orca.tahlequahJ pod orca J35, known as Tahlequah, was seen earlier this month without her dead calf, which she had carried for at least 17 days. Her sad display captured the attention of the world and brought attention to the plight of the critically endangered southern-resident killer whales. (Ken Balcomb / Center for Whale Research)

    The Canadian government has recently moved to nationalize the expansion of the controversial pipeline. But the ruling Thursday by the Federal Court of Appeals is requiring the government to assess the project's possible impact on southern-resident killer whales, which use transboundary waters of the Salish Sea.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter

    Concern for critically endangered southern-resident killer whales has sunk the approval of Canada’s controversial Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
    Approval for the expansion was revoked by a federal court in Canada, which ruled Thursday that the effects of the pipeline on orca whales were not addressed and the concerns of First Nations were not adequately considered. The Federal Court of Appeals is requiring the government to redo its consultation with First Nations and assess the impacts of the project on the whales.

    The ruling comes after more than a dozen First Nations, the B.C. cities of Vancouver and Burnaby and several environmental groups petitioned the Court of Appeals after the pipeline’s expansion was approved in 2016.
    Developer Kinder Morgan issued a statement Thursday stating the company is suspending construction on the project, at least for now.

    “We are reviewing the decision with the Government of Canada and are taking the appropriate time to assess next steps,” CEO Ian Anderson said in a prepared statement. “We remain committed to building this project in consideration of communities and the environment, with meaningful consultation with Indigenous Peoples and for the benefit of Canadians. Trans Mountain is currently taking measures to suspend construction-related activities on the Project in a safe and orderly manner.”

    The pipeline would run for more than 700 miles — alongside a line that has been in service since 1954 — and would move 890,000 barrels a day from Alberta tar-sands deposits to the coast. A second pipeline is planned to be built from the interior of Canada to the coast at Burnaby to carry tar-sands crude for export. The project was considered not only for jobs, but for better oil prices that Canada hopes to garner in overseas markets.

    The decision was a major victory for Canadian First Nations, environmental groups and U.S. tribes that opposed the pipeline expansion. Critically endangered southern-resident killer whales face a sevenfold increase in oil-tanker traffic through their critical habitat if the project is built. Many First Nations also have adamantly opposed construction of the project through their territories.

    The Trans Mountain expansion is projected to balloon tanker traffic from about 60 to more than 400 vessels annually as the pipeline flow increases from 300,000 to 890,000 barrels per day. The tar-sands oil carried by the tankers would be especially disastrous in the event of a spill in the bays and coves and swift currents in the transboundary waters of the Salish Sea because the oil sinks, and comprises an ever-changing mix of chemicals added to the thick oil to make it flow.

    Down to just 75 animals, the whale pods that would share the water with the tankers is sliding toward extinction. The whales are threatened by vessel noise underwater, interfering with their ability to hunt, as well as possible pollution from an oil spill.

    Canada’s National Energy Board recommended approval of the project, even as it acknowledged it would set back recovery of southern-resident killer whales, a protected species in Canada. The board said the effects of marine traffic were beyond its scope. The court disagreed, sending the project back for reconsideration.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau approved the project — then in May nationalized it in an attempt to ensure the pipeline expansion would be built, despite extensive controversy on both sides of the border. The court decision does not affect Canada’s purchase of the project from Kinder Morgan, Anderson said in his statement.

    Kinder Morgan shareholders voted overwhelmingly, 99 percent, to approve the $4.5 billion Canadian (U.S. $3.4 billion) sale of the pipeline to the government shortly after the court decision was announced.

    Canadian Finance Minister Bill Morneau didn’t say whether the government would appeal the court decision, but said it will review the decision to ensure the environment is protected and that it meets obligations to consult with indigenous peoples.
    Environmental groups and many First Nations hailed the ruling.

    “Smothered by choking wildfire smoke this summer, we’ve experienced a taste of what climate change is bringing. This environmentally destructive project should never have been approved and the Trudeau Government must stop construction immediately,” said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, President of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC). 
    Chief Bob Chamberlin, vice president of the UBCIC, called the ruling “a major win with impacts that will be felt across the country.”

    “Our wild salmon and the orcas that they support are critically under threat. The increased tanker traffic that the … project proposes is entirely unacceptable,” he said.

    Some environmental groups said the ruling should give Canada all the reason it needs to walk away from the controversial project for good.
    “Today’s decision is a major win for Indigenous Nations and for the environment,” said Greenpeace USA Tar Sands campaigner Rachel Rye Butler. “It has long been obvious that the Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Project violates Indigenous sovereignty and would cause irreparable harm to our environment and the health of people, while threatening the extinction of the southern-resident orca. It’s time to pull the plug on this project once and for all.”

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee has often repeated his opposition to the project, and did so again Thursday.

    “I have made my opposition to this plan clear,” Inslee said in a prepared statement. “This proposed project runs counter to everything our state is doing to fight climate change, protect our endangered southern-resident killer whales and protect communities from the risks associated with increased fossil-fuel transportation … I hope this decision helps to bring this potentially devastating project proposal to a close.”

    Washington tribes also celebrated the decision Thursday.

    “The proposed pipeline would put more oil on the Salish Sea thereby increasing the threat of damage to our fragile and sacred ecosystem, not only for oil spills but also interference with our fisherman working to maintain our ancient way of life,” said Leonard Forsman, chairman of the Suquamish Indian Tribe, which along with the Lummi, Tulalip and Swinomish tribes fought the pipeline proposal before the National Energy Board. “Now is the time to invest in the health of our marine waters, as we try to save the orca and the salmon, rather than trying to expand investment in the fossil-fuel industry.”

    The ruling handed down Thursday was sweeping and far-reaching. The judge found that the recommendation for approval of the expansion by the National Energy Board was so deficient it could not be relied on.

    Missing was any consideration of the effects of marine-shipping traffic from the project, including on threatened orca whales, an exclusion the court found was impermissible: “The Board unjustifiably defined the scope of the Project under review not to include Project-related tanker traffic,” the ruling stated. “The unjustified exclusion of marine shipping from the scope of the Project led to successive, unacceptable deficiencies in the Board’s report and recommendations. As a result, the Governor in Council could not rely on the Board’s report and recommendations when assessing the Project’s environmental effects and the overall public interest,” the ruling stated.

    Further, while testimony was taken recording specific concerns of First Nations with the project and its effects on their lands, waters and ways of life, no response was made to address them. That makes the consultation to date inadequate, the judge found. “Canada failed … to engage, dialogue meaningfully and grapple with the real concerns of the Indigenous applicants so as to explore possible accommodation of those concerns,” the ruling stated. “The duty to consult was not adequately discharged.”

    Such a strong decision is a major stumbling block for the project, said Jan Hasselman, of Earthjustice in Seattle, who represented Washington tribes in their opposition to the pipeline expansion before the National Energy Board.

    “This is a watershed moment for a troubled and controversial project,” Hasselman said. “You have to make a choice. Is it going to be orcas, or is it going to be tar sands?”

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/concern-over-endangered-orcas-blows-up-approval-for-trans-mountain-pipeline-in-canada/

  • Seattle Times: Critically endangered orcas have governor’s, tribe’s attention

    Gov. Jay Inslee is expected to announce a plan and a task force aimed at saving and protecting the critically endangered southern resident killer whales, whose number has fallen from 98 animals in 1995 to 76 living today.

     By  Lynda V. Mapes                    
     Seattle Times environment reporter With just 76 southern-resident orcas left frequenting Puget Sound, Gov. Jay Inslee is expected to announce Wednesday immediate and long-term steps to save the giant predators from extinction.  In a news conference where he will be joined by tribal leaders from around Puget Sound, Inslee will direct seven agencies to boost orca recovery with a wide range of actions, and will announce the appointment of a task force to track progress and devise longer-term strategies.  Even as the governor prepared to roll out an executive order establishing the initiative, members of the Lummi Nation on Tuesday sought to draw attention to the dwindling orca population in the Salish Sea by putting a spotlight on one killer whale: Tokitae, also known as Lolita, a female who has lived in captivity in Florida since being captured in 1970.
      
    The tribe is seeking the return of the killer whale, proposing she be allowed to live out her days in an open-water sanctuary in a cove on Orcas Island. Killer whales are critically endangered and their decline is due to several causes, most critically a lack of their preferred diet — salmon, especially chinook.  Orcas also are affected by vessel noise because it interferes with their ability to locate prey, forcing the whales to work harder to find what fish are available.  Lack of food also causes the whales to burn their fat, releasing chemical toxins absorbed from the environment and stored in the fat.  Experts believe that both immediate and long-term actions are needed to rescue an animal whose population has declined from 98 animals in 1995.  There are three distinct groups — called J, K and L pods — that frequent Puget Sound. These animals make up a genetically distinct population of orcas called southern-resident killer whales.  Inslee will direct state agencies to work with federal, local and tribal governments to identity the highest priority watersheds for chinook salmon, with an eye toward boosting salmon populations by every means possible. Everything from habitat restoration to adjusting levels in the salmon harvest to helping the fish get past dams — it’s all on the table, according to the executive order. The operators of tourist whale-watch vessels are to receive response training in the event of an oil spill, and Washington State Ferries will be directed to run more quietly in areas critical to the southern residents. The state Department of Fish and Wildlife will be asked to review commercial and recreational fishing regulations, prioritizing areas and fish runs that are key for southern-resident recovery.  Future grants for Puget Sound recovery must also show how recovery of the southern residents would benefit, and the Department of Ecology must by July 31 prioritize funding for stormwater projects that benefit orca recovery.  Agencies must develop plans for increased enforcement of regulations to protect orcas from boat traffic, including recreational boaters and commercial whale-watch tours. The state budget includes $548,000 for that increased enforcement, and $837,000 to boost hatchery production of chinook salmon. Inslee’s task force will be charged with monitoring the immediate actions and building on progress with longer-term strategies, with a report due by Nov. 1.  That report must detail ongoing and new actions to address all threats to the southern residents. A final report, on lessons learned and unmet needs, will be due Oct. 1, 2019, when the task force will disband.  All of the task-force meetings will be open to the public.  Meantime, the Lummi tribe on Tuesday launched a campaign to repatriate the whale Tokitae, a female orca captured at Whidbey Island’s Penn Cove in 1970 and living in captivity since.  The whale currently resides at the Miami Seaquarium.  The tribe proposes moving her to Orcas Island, where she could feast on chinook from a hatchery.  At least from there, she could hear the L pod of the southern resident killer whales, in which some of her relatives still survive, said Lummi Tribal Chairman Jay Julius.  Perhaps one day she could even swim free, he said. “That would be the ultimate outcome, but it’s one step at a time,” Julius said.  The Seaquarium opposes the whale’s release, Eric Eimstad, general manager of the facility, said in a statement Tuesday.  “It would be reckless and cruel to risk her life by moving her from her home solely to satisfy the desire of those who do not understand that such a move would jeopardize her life,” Eimstad said.  Moving the orca would require a permit and would undergo rigorous scientific review by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries, said NOAA spokesman Michael Milstein.  Julius promised the tribe is in the fight for the long haul and announced a multicity tour of a totem pole carved by the House of Tears Carvers beginning May 9 to bring attention to Tokitae’s plight. “This is about all Washingtonians,” he said. “It’s about the Salish Sea. Where she belongs. And what she belongs to. We can make this better. Clean up the water. It all points back to the salmon.”  The tribe is also working with a filmmaker on a documentary about the whale, and released a trailer for it Tuesday. Tokitae is the sole survivor of a brutal era of orca captures in Puget Sound, and she has a message about the Salish Sea today for all people, Julius said.   “It’s about reflecting on our past and what we allowed to take place and who the hell we are,” Julius said. “It’s about the need for getting back on the right path, correcting where we are going.”
     
    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com

  • Seattle Times: Environmental impact of salmon decline: This isn’t just about fish

    By Duke's Seafood and Chowder, January 26, 2018

    A geologist might not be the first person that comes to mind when you think about salmon experts, but David Montgomery wrote the book on the decline of salmon: “King of Fish” in 2004.

    Montgomery, a geomorphologist and professor at the University of Washington, has a unique perspective on why salmon are so important to our region. Of course, there’s the importance to the indigenous people in our area and the delicious food they provide, but they also have a serious impact on our whole ecosystem.

    “Juvenile salmon are hatched in their natal home river streams and they’re tiny suckers, so they go out to the ocean and they get big,” Montgomery explains. “They spend most of their life out at sea in a more resource-rich marine environment then they bring their bodies back to the rivers and streams in Washington, and Puget Sound along the way, with these bodies full of nutrients.”

    After the salmon return home, spawn and die, those nutrients don’t just go away. “They get recycled,” Montgomery says. Decaying salmon feed tiny organisms in streambeds, which are eaten the next year by juvenile salmon. Salmon also get dragged onto the forest floor by bears and eagles and distribute their nutrients there. “Fully one-third of the nitrogen in those big old-growth trees in our forests swam up river as a fish,” Montgomery says. “When you lose those big runs of salmon, you lose those nutrients and it cascades through the whole system.”

    It’s no secret that those big runs are declining in a major way. Historically, adult salmon returns to the Columbia Basin were at least 10 to 16 million fish annually — today, across the Northwest, less than 5 percent of historic populations of wild salmon and steelhead return to our rivers and streams. Fifteen different salmon and steelhead stocks in Washington state are listed under the federal Endangered Species Act today.

    As Montgomery notes, the loss of these salmon means a domino effect to the ecosystem. More than 135 other fish and wildlife populations benefit from the presence of wild salmon and steelhead, from southern resident orca whales, which are at a 30-year population low, to eagles, wolves, bear, otter, coyote, seals and sea lions.

    Joseph Bogaard, executive director of the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition, says the impact on orcas is immense. “In 2015, the federal government declared southern resident orca off our Northwest coast to be among eight species most likely to go extinct without dramatic action. Just in the last two years, seven whales have died. Lack of chinook salmon has been strongly implicated as the main cause of decline.”

    Other animals and plant life aren’t the only ones that lose out when salmon are lost, our very landscape and culture are at stake as well, argues Langdon Cook, author of “Upstream: Searching for Wild Salmon, from River to Table.” “Salmon are a keystone species in the Pacific Northwest… they have shaped our landscape as much as the glaciers and volcanoes. As the ultimate stewards of salmon populations, we have a responsibility to them. But it’s also a responsibility to our own communities, since anything we do to benefit salmon — clean water, functioning ecosystems, and so on — will likely benefit us in the long run.”

    All is not lost, though, according to Bogaard. “Salmon are a very prolific species. If you give them a healthy river, they will do the rest,” says Bogaard. “The most important action we can take to help salmon and steelhead survive and thrive is to restore healthy habitat and access to healthy habitat.”

    Montgomery, studied three different salmon habitats in his book “King of Fish”: the United Kingdom, New England and the Pacific Northwest. He found all three had been negatively influenced historically by multiple factors. The biggest perpetrators were habitat destruction, blocking habitat by building dams, overfishing and the impact of hatchery fish on wild fish. “I researched those various factors and how they’ve affected salmon throughout history and found commonalities that were repeating in the Northwest that have already played out in Europe and New England, where their salmon decline was not only dramatic, it became permanent.”

    Save Our Wild Salmon, a coalition of more than 40 organizations including conservation organizations, recreational and commercial fishing associations and clean energy and orca advocates, is working to secure removal of the four lower Snake River dams in southeastern Washington state and to include “ecosystem function” in the upcoming U.S.-Canada Columbia River Treaty negotiations.

    “The Snake River Basin, in central Idaho, Northeast Oregon and Southeast Washington, has more than 5,500 miles of healthy, pristine, often high and cold, protected salmon habitat,” says Bogaard. “The habitat is there, but the fish aren’t. The problem? Four costly, outdated dams on the lower Snake River.”

    Bogaard believes dam removal is one of the most important opportunities to restore salmon habitats and access to those habitats. “We still have more than 400 dams and other river blockages in the Columbia Basin,” he says.

    He points to the Elwha River drainage in the Olympic Peninsula for proof this will help. Two dams were removed in 2012 from the Elwha. “Since then, salmon and steelhead populations have begun to reinhabit stretches of river that have not seen salmon in 100 years,” he says. “Wildlife populations in the basin are growing — including otter, American dippers and more. When rivers are restored and fish allowed to return, whole ecosystems can be restored.”

    In addition to dam removal, there are other environmental changes impacting salmon that we can reverse if we act soon, says Jacques White, executive director of Long Live the Kings, a 31-year-old conservation organization dedicated to protecting and restoring the wild salmon and steelhead populations. For instance: climate change, shoreline development and diking and dredging estuary marshes.

    White suggests learning more about salmon and what they need by supporting and tracking the work of groups like Long Live the Kings and local watershed groups. And take action in your own life. “You can help restore salmon habitat in your community by practicing low-impact landscaping and gardening,” says White. “Also, write letters to and visit your local, state and federal elected representatives to tell them you care about our salmon, steelhead and orcas.”

    Choices made at the grocery store can help save salmon, too. Some Pacific Northwest products are marked with Salmon-Safe eco-labeling. This label recognizes farmers who adopt conservations practices that help promote healthy watersheds and protect native salmon habitat, says David J. Burger, executive director of Stewardship Partners, an organization focused on improving watershed health.

    “The Salmon-Safe label is a great addition to organic certification because it shows a commitment to restoring local salmon streams, an important issue to farm customers and community,” Burger says. “Farms that go through the assessment sometimes have conditions that identify areas for improvement that include; manure management, fish passage, habitat restoration (planting trees and shrubs) and improving irrigation practices.”

    To get involved and stay up-to-date on salmon conservation legislation and news, visit Save Our Wild Salmon, a coalition of conservationists, fishermen and clean-energy and orca advocates pressing elected officials to restore the health of the Columbia-Snake River Basin.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/sponsored/environmental-impact-of-salmon-decline-this-isnt-just-about-fish/

  • Seattle Times: Extinction risk to southern residents orcas accelerating as researchers raise alarm

    orca.salmon

    April 2, 2024
    By Lynda V. Mapes

    Orca scientist Rob Williams always thought conservation was a knowledge problem, that once science showed why a species was declining, people would fix it.

    But new research published Tuesday concludes otherwise. Even in the case of one of the world’s most charismatic species, the endangered southern resident killer whales that frequent Puget Sound are facing an accelerating risk of extinction, a new population analysis shows.

    Despite all we know about them and why they are declining, this beloved species is hurtling toward extinction in plain sight — a peril scientists that published the paper memorably call “Bright Extinction,” oblivion happening right before our eyes.

    “There is no scenario in which the population is stable,” said Williams, co-founder and chief scientist at the research nonprofit Oceans Initiative, and lead author on the paper published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment. “We have a generation or two where the population is not fluctuating around zero, it is fluctuating around a decline, then it accelerates to a faster rate of decline to extinction. That is without all the threats that are worsening. That was a real eye-opener. This is what the status quo will do.”

    In their model, the scientists found the southern residents declining in population until falling off a cliff in about 50 years — two killer whale generations — with only about 20 of their family members left within a century. Accounting for increasing threats would make the picture even worse.

    This, Williams has had to face, is not a problem of adequate information. Instead, it’s a matter of inadequate action. “I assumed if only we had the right data, we would make the right decisions. But … not only do we know their biology and the threats they face,” he said of the southern residents, “we have known these things for a very long time.”

    Climate change accentuates the extinction risk.

    Warming water in the ocean disrupts ocean food webs that feed Chinook salmon — the primary prey of these orcas. And warming rivers hurt salmon survival and reproduction. Other threats, including ocean shipping traffic and other noise that disrupts orca hunting, and habitat destruction also are intensifying. Alteration of the environment is making it, at this rate, a place in which these coevolved animals can no longer live.

    Carl Safina, an author of many books on the intelligence of animals, including the southern residents, and ecologist and professor for nature and humanity at Stony Brook University in New York, sees in the doom of species extinction and looming loss of the southern residents a moral test for people.

    “This is like a slow-motion collision; this is where we see the brick wall or the cliff, it’s clear, the road is dry, it’s 11 a.m. on a Sunday morning and we are going 8 miles an hour, and it’s half a mile away, and then a quarter of a mile away and then we see it, and our smart sensors start beeping, and then we hit the accelerator and crash … Why do we do that?”

    Laws alone clearly are not enough: The Endangered Species Act, which turned 50 this year, calls for preservation of all species, no matter how humble. Yet here is one of the most intelligent animals in all the oceans, and its top predator, barely hanging on.

    What’s needed, Safina said, is a fundamental shift in how we all live here.

    “Socially, we need an ethic that values the life on this planet and that sees us as stewards.”

    So dire is the state of the southern residents — there are only 74 left — that it may be time to consider more drastic interventions, including preventive vaccination of at least some of the most biologically valuable members, the papers’ authors state. A plan also needs to be mustered to be ready for a catastrophic event, such as a disease outbreak requiring a veterinary response across the U.S.-Canada border.

    To give the southern residents a better chance at hunting success, the paper recommends some profound changes. Voluntary slowdowns already in place for ships have been found to cut noise levels by nearly half, according to the paper, which in turn results in increased hunting activity by killer whales. Yet at the same time, multiple development projects are underway that will increase shipping traffic in the region, with completion of the second TransMountain tar sands oil pipeline terminating at the port of Vancouver and a major expansion of the shipping terminal at Roberts Bank, the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 project, planned right at the Fraser River delta where orcas hunt.

    It may be time to consider mandatory ocean noise budgets, caps or limits to allow killer whales to hunt scarce prey more effectively, the paper found.

    A fresh look at fisheries management also is needed, according to the paper, to leave more fish in the sea for orcas. Moving fisheries in Alaska and British Columbia away from Chinook rearing grounds and migration routes in the sea to river mouth and estuarine locations would result in an immediate increase of Chinook critical to orcas of up to 25%, according to the paper.

    Such a fishery could also help recover a Chinook population more like what orcas evolved with. By not harvesting immature fish in marine fisheries and allowing large females to pass through to spawning grounds, a size increase in the Chinook of up to 40% could occur over a 50-year period, according to the paper. That would provide more of the big Chinook orcas need and prefer. Freshwater habitat restoration could also continue to support wild Chinook abundance, instead of releasing more hatchery fish into the sea.

    Hatchery fish compete with wild fish for food and spawning area. They also can weaken wild Chinook fitness by interbreeding or disease, noted study author Misty MacDuffee, salmon biologist with the Raincoast Conservation Foundation, a science nonprofit. She sees no pathway to orca recovery without fisheries reform and other changes to protect the orca’s preferred food.

    Another recent paper published in the peer-reviewed journal Ecosphere examined the relationship between the availability of prey and southern resident population ups and downs, to investigate how those relationships might have changed over time.

    The work confirmed the essential link between the southern residents and their preferred food. “Prey still matters,” said Eric Ward, an author on the paper and scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center. The paper also found that the northern resident orcas — whose population is increasing — could be affecting the southern residents’ survival because of competition for the same food in shared waters.

    Joe Gaydos, science director of the SeaDoc Society, a science research and education nonprofit and author on the Nature paper, said the population analysis was a wake-up call as to just how at risk the southern residents are, without a change in course. What he hopes now is that decision-makers and the public will use that information to ramp up efforts to save a species that defines much of the wonder of the region.

    “We have done a lot of great stuff for southern residents, and we need to do more,” Gaydos said. “It’s like when people go to the doctor in their 60s and say, ‘Should I eat better and stop smoking and drinking and exercise?’ and the doctor says, ‘Yes, and you need to do all of them, and you should have done it 20 years ago.’ That is what this paper is saying.

    “We don’t have time. We are talking about making some big changes in the next couple of generations of killer whales, or we are out of time.”

    That does not make this new work documenting the southern residents’ accelerating extinction risk a give-up-hope paper, Gaydos said, but the opposite.

    “Now is the time to show the money, and to make the effort.” For one thing, we owe it to these animals, Gaydos noted.

    The southern residents are in such deep trouble in part because of the capture era, during which a third of the whales were taken for sale to aquariums and other entertainment venues.

    “We just need to do what we need to do, make it happen, it is on us, we got them here. We are the reason they are endangered,” Gaydos said of the southern residents. “First with the captures and later with the salmon and the contaminants we made; those are not naturally occurring, and those are our boats out there.”

    Tim Regan, former executive director of the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission, who is not an author on the paper, says it’s not over for the southern residents. “I personally am one that would say it is never too late,” Regan said. Other species, from elephant seals to whooping cranes, have made remarkable comebacks, even from dire straits.

    The southern residents are the top predator in these waters, and they are symbolic of the wonder of our natural surroundings and a commitment to other forms of life that we cherish, Regan said.

    “They are such a beautiful reminder of the nature of other species. If we don’t care about them, I don’t know what we would care about.

    “You can’t be blamed for failing, but you can be blamed for not trying.”

    Seattle Times: 'Extinction risk to southern resident orcas accelerating as researchers raise alarm' article link

  • Seattle Times: Feds could restrict Pacific Ocean fishing over endangered orcas, NOAA letter says

    March 7, 2019

    Lynda MapesSalmon.Chinook

    VANCOUVER, Clark County — The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is taking a fresh look at whether new fishing restrictions are needed to help prevent the extinction of endangered southern resident killer whales that frequent Puget Sound.

    New evidence about the fish the whales depend on and the risk posed to orcas by depleted prey has caused the agency to write a letter of guidance to the Pacific Fishery Management Council, indicating the agency is examining whether new restrictions are needed — particularly on fisheries in the Lower Columbia and Sacramento River and on fall-run chinook salmon in the Klamath River.

    NOAA in 2009 concluded fisheries did not jeopardize the survival and recovery of killer whales.

    But since then, “a substantial amount of new information is available on SRKW (southern resident killer whale) and their prey,” and has the agency wanting to take another look at fishing, Barry Thom, regional administrator for NOAA’s West Coast region, wrote to Phil Anderson, chairman of the council, on Wednesday.

    That process is intended to result in fishing that lessens the impact on prey targeted by the whales. Possibilities include restrictions in time and places when fishermen and whales most intersect, or season closures. And not only in the ocean: NOAA is also evaluating fishing in Puget Sound and southeast Alaska to reduce impacts on orcas. The agency already, through the Pacific Salmon Treaty, worked to cut back harvest rates on salmon in Canadian fisheries.

    Fishing is just one aspect of what the agency has on the table, as it works to recover the southern residents. Pollution, vessel disturbance and noise, and other risk factors also are under study and consideration for action, in a multifaceted approach. 

    The Pacific Fishery Management Council is charged with helping to set up the ocean-salmon harvests off California, Oregon and Washington. NOAA wants the council to try to assess the fishing impacts on the stocks that orcas feed on as it comes up with the plan for the 2019 salmon season. The agency is also reviewing fisheries being set by the state agencies and tribes in Puget Sound as well as in Canada under the Pacific Salmon Treaty.

    In remarks Thursday to the council, Thom said the review is intended to ensure that salmon harvests don’t impede the recovery of the orcas. He noted that possible impacts on orcas could be more significant in years when salmon stocks are low.

    “We do need to make sure that fishery management is doing the right thing, at the right place and the right time to move forward,” Thom said.

    Some council members expressed skepticism that fishing could have a major impact on the southern resident killer whales.

    “The fisheries that have occurred … are not the cause of the ultimate decline in these stocks, in all likelihood,” Brett Kormos, a council designee with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. “Oftentimes the fisheries become the first knob to turn, and they often are the easiest knob to turn.”

    Marc Gorelnik, a California sport fisherman who serves on the council, said that the biggest problem confronting the salmon that return to the Sacramento River are the poor conditions in freshwater — not fishermen.

    The fishermen’s harvest “pales in comparison to what we are missing from the lack of production owing to inland conditions.”

    Joe Oatman, a council member with the Nez Perce Tribe Fisheries Department, said the salmon are very important to the region’s tribes and asked that NOAA ensure that tribes are involved in the assessment of the harvest’s possible impacts on orcas.

    The Center for Biological Diversity raised the issue of fishing and its effect on southern resident survival in a notice of intent to sue it sent to NOAA Dec. 18.

    In the letter, attorney Julie Teel Simmonds said new research has documented links between low chinook abundance in the Columbia and Fraser rivers and lost orca pregnancies. Even with the decision to reassess fishing impacts, NOAA still is not moving fast enough to protect the whales, Simmonds said.

    “We’re glad the Trump administration is looking at how the salmon fishery can be better managed to prevent these orcas from going extinct, as we requested in December,” Simmonds said in a prepared statement. “Southern resident killer whales are starving and they need more food to survive. But the federal guidance letter doesn’t address this urgent situation with the clear timelines and interim measures it requires. Federal officials and fishery managers can and should do better than this.”

    Lack of prey is one of the biggest threats to the southern resident killer whales. Shortages particularly of chinook throughout the whales’ vast migratory range make all of their other problems, including vessel noise and pollution, worse.

    Over the past decade, the southern resident population has declined from 87 whales to a historical low of 74, and future projections under status quo conditions suggest a continued decline over the next 50 years,  and the whales are at high risk for extinction.

    “Chinook salmon, the whales’ primary prey, are important to SRKW survival and recovery. Any activities that affect the abundance of Chinook salmon available to SRKW have the potential to impact the survival and population growth of the whales,” Thom wrote in his letter to the council.

    “Fisheries can reduce the prey available to the whales and in some cases can interfere directly with their feeding. Insufficient prey can impact their energetics (causing them to search more for fewer prey), health (decreasing their body condition), and reproduction (reducing fecundity and calf survival).”

    The agency would “like to work with the Council to reassess the effects of Council fisheries on SRKW in light of this new information and as needed to develop a long-term approach that ensures these fisheries appropriately limit any adverse effects on southern resident killer whales,” Thom wrote.

    Thom wrote that the agency anticipates developing a “long-term approach” and doesn’t expect changes for 2019 fisheries.

    However, the agency wants work to get underway as soon as possible, Thom stated.

    Killer whales are protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. Under the act, actions that jeopardize the survival of protected species are illegal.

  • Seattle Times: Feds seek expanded habitat protection as salmon, orcas battle climate  change, habitat degradation

    September 18, 2019 By Lynda V. Mapes Orca.Sunset.LeapingMost of the outer coast of Washington, Oregon and California would become protected habitat for southern resident orcas under a federal proposal released Wednesday. The new designation, if approved would greatly expand the area considered “critical” for the survival of the endangered orcas that frequent Puget Sound. Since 2006, the inland waters of the Salish Sea have been considered critical habitat for the southern residents. The designation requires review of federal actions within the areas that could affect southern resident killer whales, providing additional oversight by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Advocates for the designation say it provides another layer of review and more legal protection for the whales. “We are thrilled,” said Steve Jones, spokesman for the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental group that sued for the designation. “If you are proposing a project anywhere from the Canadian border to Big Sur, you have to take southern resident killer whales into account.“ The whales hunt salmon in a vast range, stretching from the Salish Sea to Southern California. But these fish are increasingly scarce because of factors including climate change and habitat loss, according to supporting documentation for the designation and other recent research. In a double punch, the habitats most altered by people are also home to some of the most intense effects of climate change. Salmon runs in the whales’ most southern ranges and salmon migrating long distances struggle to survive. The proposed designation comes after six orcas have died since 2018. There are 73 left, the lowest number for the orcas that frequent Puget Sound since they were hunted and captured for theme parks in the 1960s and ’70s. Lack of food — in addition to vessel noise and disturbance and pollution— is a critical challenge to the whales’ survival. The designation builds on years of research since the 2006 designation and marks a significant recognition by the federal government of the whales’ coast-wide range. However, Lynne Barre, head of killer-whale protection for NOAA, said she did not anticipate big changes if the designation is approved after a public comment period, because activities such as dam operations and fishing already are subject to review by the agency for their effect on endangered species. The southern resident killer whales have been listed for federal protection since 2005 and many of the salmon runs they depend on have been on the endangered species list longer than that. Any federal actions that could affect listed species must go through consultation with NOAA. “To be honest, we are not expecting sweeping changes in projects or actions because of the work we are already doing,” Barre said in an interview Tuesday. “These are things we are already looking at.” But Catherine Kilduff, the senior attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, said the designation now requires not only protection for the whales when they are on the outer coast, but for the coastal habitat that is critical to their survival. “It’s an entirely separate claim that we can bring in court,” Kilduff said. “It is really important that you can show this area on a map, and say, ‘This activity is happening in this area.’ It puts a different burden on NOAA.” The proposal would extend critical habitat for the whales along about 1,000 miles of West Coast waters between the depths of 6.1 meters (20 feet) and 200 meters (about 650 feet) from Washington’s Cape Flattery south to Point Sur, California, just south of Santa Cruz and Monterey Bay. The additional area covers about 15,626 square miles, or more than 10 million acres, according to a news release on the proposal. Off the Washington coast, the proposal carves out a large chunk of the protected area for military activities. Research by biologist Brad Hanson of NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center — used to support the designation — shows the whales target chinook from the entire West Coast and switch seasonally from an almost all-chinook diet in summer to eating more coho in September and chum in winter. While their diet is almost entirely salmon, he did find evidence of a few other surprise species in the whale’s diet: Ling cod, halibut, skate and anchovies were on the menu. Genetic analysis of the samples showed that on the West Coast the whales eat salmon from as far south as California’s Central Valley to as far north as the Taku River in Alaska. Most of the chinook the whales were documented eating came from the Columbia River Basin, including spring chinook from the lower Columbia, fall salmon from the middle Columbia, and spring/summer chinook from the upper Columbia. The whales’ use of the outer coast has become more intense since Hanson did his research, including satellite tagging of the orcas that ended in 2015. That work showed the biggest hot spot for the whales was the mouth of the Columbia River and the Grays Harbor area, where they were targeting Columbia chinook. From Puget Sound to California Central Valley to the Snake River, the chinook Hanson found the whales relied on in his field samples are among the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change, according to an analysis by Lisa Crozier of NOAA’s Northwest science center and other authors. Those impacts include hot water in the tributaries the fish return to in the spring and summer, scouring of their gravel nests by floods in the winter, and estuaries blocked by formation of sandbars because of sea-level rise. Dams add to the cumulative effect of climate change on the Columbia and Snake, where temperatures can hit 70 degrees in the reservoirs, sometimes for weeks at some sites. Salmon are cold-water animals and are more susceptible to disease and death at temperatures over 68 degrees. For more information or to comment on the proposal, visit NOAA’s website.

  • Seattle Times: For third day, grieving orca carries dead calf in water

    J35, a member of the critically endangered southern resident family of orcas, gave birth to her calf only to watch it die within a half-hour.

     By Lynda V. MapesJ35rip

    A grieving mother orca was seen still carrying her dead calf Thursday evening, laboring to push it through a 4-knot current, and making deep dives to retrieve it each time it slipped off her head and sank.

    “It is just absolutely gut-wrenching to watch,” said Taylor Shedd, program coordinator of Soundwatch, who has followed the whale nearly continuously in daylight hours, keeping state and federal agencies updated and urging boaters to keep their distance.

    Born Tuesday morning, J35’s calf lived for about a half-hour . She has been refusing to let her calf go, swimming with the calf balanced on her head. It’s an expression of grief biologists have documented in whales and dolphins all over the world.
      
    At times the mother’s breathing has been very labored.

    “We were worried about her health,” Shedd said. “She has 4 knots of current ripping at her, and she has to dive really deep to get the baby when it rolls off, to pick it up and keep pushing it in front of her.”

    The killer whale is traveling with her pod, working hard to keep up. “She is the last whale,” Shedd said. “It’s been that way for a while.”

    The Soundwatch boater-education program, run by the Whale Museum at Friday Harbor, puts educators on the water every day during whale-watch season to approach boaters as needed to remind them of the 200-meter distance required between boaters and marine mammals to minimize disturbance.

    During J35’s grief, Soundwatch has been keeping vigil with the whale, explaining to curious boaters what is happening, and why they need to keep their distance.

    Commercial whale-watch tours have been voluntarily staying clear to give the whale and her family privacy.

    “We are spreading out the fleet, keeping away, it is just so very sad,” said Jeff Friedman, president of the U.S. side of the Pacific Whale Watch Association.

    San Juan Island resident Lodie Budwill, of the Center for Whale Research, reported that on Tuesday evening, before sunset around 8:30 p.m., she noticed that a group of female orcas had gathered in a tight circle with J35 at the mouth of Eagle Cove on the west side of San Juan Island.

    “It was beautiful to observe, yet very sad knowing what had taken place earlier in the day,” she wrote in an email to The Seattle Times. She said the whales remained encircled with J35 in the same site for at least two hours.

    “The sun set, the moon rose and they remained centered in the moonbeam, continuing their circular surfacing. I perceived this to be a ceremony or ritual of some sort. It was no doubt a circle of family love and devotion. After observing for hours, it was hard to hold my binoculars up any longer.”

    Shedd said the mother was pushing the calf at 7:08 p.m. Thursday when he had to leave her for the night.

  • Seattle Times: Gov. Inslee, Washington state’s U.S. senators reject GOP congressman’s pitch on Lower Snake River dam removal

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter
    May 14, 2021

    2021.Lower Snake Dams ST.MapWashington state’s U.S. senators and its governor have joined forces against a proposal from U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, to remove four hydroelectric dams on the Lower Snake River and replace their benefits as part of a multitrillion dollar infrastructure bill being crafted by the Biden administration.

    The proposal had gained the support of Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., as well as many tribes, after it was announced last winter.

    But Republican members of Washington’s congressional delegation opposed Simpson’s plan before it was even officially released, and the state’s top Democratic elected officials were largely mum until Thursday.

    “While we appreciate Rep. Simpson’s efforts and the conversations we have had so far with Tribes and stakeholders, it is clear more work within the Pacific Northwest is necessary to create a lasting, comprehensive solution, and we do not believe the Simpson proposal can be included in the proposed federal infrastructure package,” U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Gov. Jay Inslee said in a joint statement provided to The Seattle Times.

    The two Democratic leaders added that regional collaboration on a comprehensive, long-term solution to protect and bring back salmon populations in the Columbia River Basin and throughout the Pacific Northwest is needed now more than ever.

    But they urged a process to a solution that would honor tribal treaty rights, ensure reliable transportation and use of the river, ongoing access for anglers and sport fishers and the continued delivery of reliable hydropower.

    “Washington state has a history of successfully bringing diverse groups together to develop solutions that benefit all stakeholders. This must be the model for the management of the Columbia River Basin,” the two continued in their statement.

    U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell also told The Seattle Times she does not support the Simpson proposal, though she does support salmon recovery not only in the Columbia Basin, but across the region, and collaborative processes to get there.

    “This proposal has some things we should focus on; diversifying beyond hydro is a great idea, planning for new investment is a great idea, but the rest is not well thought out enough at this point,” Cantwell said of the Simpson proposal.

    “Very, very valuable salmon recovery needs to happen and we shouldn’t miss the opportunity of this infrastructure bill to do that, and Puget Sound, being a powerhouse of salmon recovery opportunity, should be focused on. We should be clear that we are maximizing those opportunities.”

    Money to help pay for removal and replacement of highway culverts that block salmon passage is just one such investment that could be made in the federal infrastructure package, Cantwell said.

    Feds ramp up spill over dams to help salmon

    The statements came as the region undertakes unprecedented steps to rescue Snake River Chinook salmon runs that are headed to extinction.

    Federal agencies recently agreed to an operating plan for the dams that includes a broad suite of actions, including spilling large amounts of water over spillways at Columbia and Lower Snake River dams to help push young salmon now migrating to the sea downriver — and route them around, rather than through, powerhouses.

    Unprecedented amounts of water are being spilled over Columbia and Lower Snake River dams to help baby salmon to the sea. This video shows 73 percent of the flow of the Columbia River crashing over the spillway at John Day Dam on May 11. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers video by Christopher Gaylord)

    The spill program was initiated on an experimental basis in 2019 and has so far shown promise. The Bonneville Power Administration, which markets power from the region’s federal hydropower dams, was able to end last year in the black even while spilling water over the dams for fish instead of generating power. And customers suffered no compromise in reliability even as the U.S. Corps of Engineers, which operates the dams, directed spill rates of nearly 90% of the river flow at some times.

    The program is in place at four mainstem dams on the Columbia River and four on the Lower Snake. The system is run during the migration season to optimize spill 16 hours a day. The rest of the time, BPA picks the most profitable time of day to run water through power turbines.

    Early results show that young fish have been able to reduce their travel time to the sea, and are not traumatized by the spill. But the real results won’t be known for years, when adults come back to spawn.

    The most recent environmental assessment of dam operations for survival of fragile populations projects continued declines for Snake River salmon in poor years, such as will be more common under climate change.

    Climate change is severely challenging salmon, cold water animals that can become diseased or even be killed outright in temperatures above 68 degrees if the temperatures remain high enough long enough.

    Warmer sea surface temperatures caused by climate change also are predicted in recent published scientific research to particularly stress Snake River spring and summer Chinook, endangering them with extinction and requiring an even more intense effort to support their survival in all life stages.

    Snake River spring and summer Chinook are in dire shape, analysis by the Nez Perce Tribe shows. Many populations of Chinook already meet the threshold of quasi-extinction, meaning 50 or fewer adult spawners are making it back to their home streams, said Jay Hesse, director of biological services for the tribe.

    Simpson’s big pitch

    Into this logjam stepped Simpson last winter, with a proposal to breach the four Lower Snake River dams, digging out the earthen berms around them and leaving the dams in a mothballed status.

    To replace the benefits of the dams he proposes creation of a $34 billion Columbia Basin Fund within the national infrastructure bill, from getting agricultural products to market, to reconfiguring irrigation infrastructure, buying replacement power and modernizing the electric grid to accommodate more and diverse sources of clean energy.

    A dozen tribes across the Columbia Basin also issued statements last month in support of a legislative solution to the Columbia Basin salmon crisis.

    Some of the tribes were enemies with one another long ago, and even today have very different interests. But they are united in their commitment to salmon recovery, noted Shannon Wheeler, vice chairman of the Nez Perce Tribe and a proponent of the Simpson proposal.

    For tribes, salmon are a matter of cultural survival ensured as part of the bargain made in the treaties with the United States, Wheeler said. The Nez Perce reserved their rights to fish in all of their accustomed places in their treaty of 1855. “We ceded 13 million acres to protect a way of life,” Wheeler said.

    The Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians also is going to consider a resolution in support of the Simpson proposal, said Leonard Forsman, chairman of the Suquamish Tribe and president of the ATNI.

    Simpson said in an interview he has pivoted to a new strategy to provide the money for a Columbia Basin Fund in the national bill, but work out over the next year or two the writing of legislation to implement it.

    He acknowledged the proposal is a politically difficult lift — and said he’s been censured by the Republican Party in his own state for his efforts.

    But, Simpson said, he remains undeterred: “I think we were elected to solve problems.”

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes. Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/gov-inslee-washington-states-u-s-senators-reject-gop-congressmans-pitch-on-lower-snake-river-dam-removal/

  • Seattle Times: Gov. Inslee: Canada’s unneighborly pipeline deal threatens orcas and climate

    bb Jay Inslee 300x200

    By Jay Inslee

    Special to The Times

     

    Our neighbors in Canada have been good partners in the fight against climate change and efforts to keep our seas healthy. However, this week Canada took a major step backward.

    Our lands and waters share incredible bounty and beauty. Trekking across forests and mountains, exploring beaches in search of shellfish and fishing from clear waters are all part of our regional way of life and economy.

    This shared heritage is supported by Washington state’s efforts to act on climate, reduce toxics, protect our orcas, improve oil-transport safety and fight back against the Trump administration’s efforts to privatize national forests and expand offshore oil drilling.

    But now it appears a new threat is coming to us from the north. As Texas-based Kinder Morgan wavers over its intention to continue building its controversial Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion, the Canadian government announced it will spend billions of dollars to purchase the project and continue construction, in order to export oil to Asia.

    The pipeline expansion would increase Canadian oil-tanker traffic sevenfold, putting an estimated 350 more tankers a year in the Salish Sea, critical habitat where our orcas do most of their hunting. It would significantly increase the risk of oil spills and take us backward in our transition to a clean-energy future.

    This project runs counter to everything our state is doing to fight climate change, protect our endangered southern resident killer whales and protect communities from the risks associated with increased fossil-fuel transportation — by rail and by sea.

    Though we have a good safety record in Washington waters, accidents still happen. Our state has experienced numerous oil spills in the last few decades, including the Mobil Oil tanker spill on the Columbia River and the Nestucca oil barge spill near Grays Harbor.

    This pipeline would carry diluted bitumen, among the dirtiest of oils, across our waters and the Pacific. Production and consumption of this type of oil creates 10 to 40 percent more greenhouse-gas pollution than many conventional oil sources. A major spill in the Puget Sound, one of our most beautiful and fragile ecosystems, would be devastating and require entirely different equipment and strategies than those used in conventional oil spills. Researchers recently simulated a 4 million gallon diluted bitumen oil spill north of the San Juans, estimating that it would cover between 22 and 80 percent of the southern resident killer whale’s critical habitat. Alaska already has seen the vulnerability of local orcas to catastrophic spills, including the complete loss of reproductive females in one population.

    Now is not the time to increase our chances of a marine oil spill, nor is it the time to hinder our efforts to protect our endangered orcas. The effects of increased noise pollution from oil-tanker traffic is significant. Noise is one of the reasons the southern resident orca population is at a 30-year low. When large tankers cruise over the waves, the sound blankets the undersea world for miles, drowning out a whale’s ability to use echolocation clicks to find food and communicate.

    As we put more vessel traffic on the Puget Sound, we also increase pressure on treaty protected fishing rights that tribal nations rely upon. Tribes in Washington state are our allies in protecting orcas and salmon in Puget Sound, and protecting these waters is one way to demonstrate our support for their right to fish.

    This is a moment for seizing momentum to protect our orcas and combat climate change. Nations around the world — including Canada — are working to shift the global economy from dirty fossil fuels to clean energy. We must be vigilant in working to accelerate this transition, not slow or reverse it. Canada has aligned itself with a giant project that would promote and perpetuate greater consumption of fossil fuels — and greater carbon pollution.

    We have applauded Canadian climate announcements over the years, from British Columbia’s pioneering carbon initiative to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s plan for ambitious nationwide carbon pricing. So it is with great disappointment that we view this proposal. The pipeline expansion would take us backward in profoundly damaging ways. It does not have the support of Washington state. The eyes of the world are now on Canada, and I encourage our partner to the north to take the long view and focus its investments on clean-energy jobs of the future, not more infrastructure for dirty fuels.

  • Seattle Times: Gov. Jay Inslee’s orca-recovery agenda advancing, but billion-dollar funding yet to be seen

    April 19, 2019

    By Lynda V. Mapes

    Orca.HostileWaters.2.24Gov. Jay Inslee’s orca agenda is advancing in the Washington state Legislature, but with the budget yet to be decided how much of the governor’s billion-dollar-bold ambition will be accomplished is yet to be seen. Budgets passed by the House and Senate so far contain no funding to continue the governor’s task force on orca. There’s no agreement yet on funding the governor’s proposed panel to consider the affects of breaching the Lower Snake River dams. And revenue measures to help pay for everything, from increasing hatchery production to enforcement of habitat protections, have yet to be decided. There also were policy disappointments for the governor, who got no takers for his request for legislation to put a temporary stop on whale watching of southern resident killer whales; no lawmaker would introduce the bill. A vessel noise-reduction package will take years to implement with rule making yet to be done, and because U.S. Coast Guard regulations include important exemptions, including for commercial shipping that makes most of the noise that can disrupt orcas as they hunt. But the Legislature did pass its most comprehensive package of orca-recovery legislation ever, with four key measures intended to address the three core threats to the southern resident killer whales that frequent Puget Sound. The orcas are headed toward extinction because of lack of prey, especially chinook salmon; disturbance caused by vessel noise and boats; and toxics. Lawmakers also adopted long awaited improvements in habitat protection for shoreline areas, and to protect against oil spills. The initiatives grew out of the governor’s task force on orca recovery which made more than 30 recommendations after a year of work undertaken by more than 40 members. Differences on the bills are still being worked out in conference committees and funding for implementation is still up in the air. But the following bills appear certain to head to the governor’s desk for signature: SB 5135 would allow the state Department of Ecology, working with the state Department of Health, to initiate regulatory control of toxics and products that contain them that are harmful to children and endangered species, including orcas. Toxics are one of the key threats to orca survival. When the orcas are hungry, they burn fat where toxics are stored, releasing those poisons to their blood where they can disrupt endocrine function and depress the whales’ immune system. HB 1579 will allow the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife to stop work on projects to harden or alter the shoreline that have no permit or are out of compliance with permit conditions. The bill encourages voluntary resolution of permit issues as the first step in bringing projects into compliance, but also significantly raises fines for violations that are ongoing. Hardening shorelines destroys nearshore habitat that provides a crucial travel corridor and nursery ground for young salmon. Beaches also are where crucial forage fish, including sand lance and surf smelt, spawn. Those fish feed the salmon that orcas depend on. One of the biggest threats to orcas is lack of adequate salmon, largely due to loss of suitable habitat to sustain salmon survival. Fixing salmon habitat is vital to orca recovery. HB 1578  requires escort tugs for smaller oil tankers and towed barges carrying oil in the Rosario Strait, and establishes a process for a broader requirement for the escort tugs in Puget Sound by 2025. The goal of the bill is to provide the same sorts of protections against a spill as already is present for larger oil tankers.

    SB 5577 for the first time will regulate the whale-watch industry with new rules to be devised by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. The regulations are intended to limit the number of boats, number of hours and areas where whale watching of southern resident killer whales may occur. The bill also extends the distance that whale-watch boats must keep to as much as 400 yards — double the federal limit — and imposes a new speed limit of 7 knots on boats within half a nautical mile of a southern resident orca. The speed limit has important exemptions, including for all commercial shipping vessels, including tankers and container ships. Boat noise is one of the key threats to killer whale survival because noise can mask the sounds orcas need to hear in order to hunt prey that is already increasingly rare and hard to find as salmon runs decline. The physical presence of boats, even kayaks, can interrupt orca foraging.
     
    The budget is where key decisions still lie ahead affecting orcas. So far the budget does include money to pay for rule-making and environmental review of increased spill over dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers in order to aid migration of juvenile salmon to the sea during the spring runoff. Increasing spill is regarded as one of the single most effective tools to boost juvenile-salmon survival in the Columbia and Snake and is sought under a new agreement signed last year by the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Nez Perce Tribe and state of Oregon. The so-called flexible spill agreement is a new approach that allows BPA to sell power when it can make the most money but spill more water when power rates are lower to benefit fish. The fate of another key element in the governor’s orca agenda is still to be determined in budget negotiations. A panel to assess the affects of taking out the Lower Snake River dams is funded in the Senate version of the budget, but so far not in budget passed by the House. The panel is intended to examine the benefits and costs and changes to be expected if four dams on the Lower Snake were removed to boost salmon recovery. The southern residents hunt salmon over a vast territory and depend on salmon from the Columbia and Snake, especially in the early spring when food is scarce elsewhere in their migratory range. Scientists in a letter last October advised the orca task force, Inslee and lawmakers that salmon recovery in the Snake River is key to orca survival and that dam removal is a key step to boost both salmon and orca recovery. However, eastern Washington lawmakers and local Eastern Washington port officials have been seeking to block Inslee’s proposal. Amy Windrope, assistant director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and a member of the orca task force, said dam removal came up at every task-force meeting. “I know it’s controversial but I think we need to have the hard conversations,” Windrope said. The work still ahead before the Legislature’s adjournment scheduled for April 30 will be critical to realizing a holistic approach to orca recovery, Windrope said. “These really are steps in the right direction. There are still big question marks around funding.”
     

  • Seattle Times: Grieving mother orca falling behind family as she carries dead calf for a seventh day

    Researchers are keeping vigil over the orca mother for a seventh day. Now she's falling behind her pod.

     By  Lynda V. MapesJ35rip

    A grieving mother orca is falling behind her group as she labors through the water at about 6 knots, continuing to carry her dead calf in a seventh day of mourning.

    J35, or Tahlequah, gave birth to the calf which lived for only one half-hour. She has refused to let go of it ever since, carrying the infant either by one fin, or pushing it through the water on her head.

    “Sometimes it just looks like a silver wave,” said Jenny Atkinson, executive director of the Whale Museum at Friday Harbor, which runs the Soundwatch program that is monitoring the mother continuously from a distance in daylight hours.
      
    J pod, the mother’s clan, has been staying with her and has turned out in force, with more members of the pod by the day staying with her.

    On Sunday, Tahlequah was surrounded by her entire family. Researchers who are with the whales daily have been concerned for her, especially as to whether she is getting enough to eat. “This has to be so hard for her,” said Michael Weiss of the University of Exeter, who with the Center for Whale Research at Friday Harbor was monitoring the clan Sunday as the whales surged alongside her.

    Taylor Shedd, also watching from the Soundwatch boat, said he saw Tahlequah breach three times Saturday evening, and her body still looked healthy and strong. “You could not see any ribs,” he said.

    Tahlequah is a member of the endangered family of southern-resident orca whales, with only 75 members. Every birth matters, and every female in particular. The crisis with J35 comes even as another member of J pod, J50, appears to be starving to death.

    On Monday Shedd and his crew continued their vigil with the mother, sighting her at 12:07 p.m., still carrying the calf.

    “Falling behind group, but J17s (her family line) are 500-600 yards ahead and rest of J pod a mile or so ahead,” Shedd wrote in a text message. “She’s been traveling at speeds up to 6 knots. Observed her drop the calf, swim in a tight circle, breathing about six times before taking a deep dive to retrieve the calf.”

    The crew’s monitoring work has been stressful, emotional and continuous. Atkinson said she has the equipment for an oil change at the ready for the boat, to quickly service it when the crew comes back in for the night and be ready to get right back out on the water.

    “I feel like a NASCAR pit crew,” Atkinson said. “We need to keep that boat on the water.”

    It has been moving to watch Tahlequah’s family stand by her, Atkinson said. “We believe the pod has been taking turns with this, to stay with her.”

    Soundwatch is, too. “We are respectfully monitoring from a distance, we are committed, we are here to help her through this.”

    In addition to monitoring her condition, the Soundwatch crew is helping to keep boaters away from the whales. The nonprofit has educators on the water every day during the whale-watch season, to remind boaters to keep at least the required 200-yard distance from the whales.
     
    But this has been a season like none other, as the world watches and holds its breath over the sad tableau of the grieving whale and her baby.

    The outpouring of interest and support helps the crew go out day after day, Atkinson said. “We really appreciate the love and support.”

  • Seattle Times: Groups sue to restrict salmon fishing, help Northwest orcas

    April 3, 2019

    By Gene Johnson

    J35 againFederal officials say they may restrict salmon fishing off the West Coast to help the Pacific Northwest’s critically endangered killer whales, but two environmental groups are suing anyway to ensure it happens.

    The Center for Biological Diversity, which filed a lawsuit nearly two decades ago to force the U.S. government to list the orcas as endangered, and the Wild Fish Conservancy asked the U.S. District Court in Seattle on Wednesday to order officials to reconsider a 2009 finding that commercial and recreational fisheries did not jeopardize the orcas’ survival.

    The National Marine Fisheries Service issued a letter early last month indicating that it intends to do so. Julie Teel Simmonds, an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, said the point of the lawsuit is to ensure they finish the job with urgency, given the plight of the whales, and to take short-term steps in the meantime to help provide more of the orcas’ favored prey, Chinook salmon.

    “We have got to figure out how to get them more salmon,” she said. “Since 2009 it’s become much more crystallized just how critical prey availability is to their reproductive success and survival.”

    The Endangered Species Act requires the government to certify that any actions it approves won’t jeopardize the survival of a listed species. In the 2009 review, experts found that it wasn’t clear how a lack of prey affected orcas, but that the fisheries were not likely to contribute to their extinction.

    Since then, however, the population of whales that spend their summers in the waters between Washington state and Canada — known as the Southern Resident killer whales — has fallen from 87 to 75. A calf born in December is the first to have lived past birth since 2015. And scientists have learned much more about how crucial it is for orcas to have enough of the large, fatty Chinook: As they starve, the whales start burning their blubber. Because toxins from water pollution are stored in the blubber, that can harm the whales’ reproductive ability, scientists believe.

    The orcas typically spend about two-thirds of the year in the open ocean off California and Oregon.

    In December, the Center for Biological Diversity told the fisheries service it was intending to sue to force it to reconsider how salmon fishing off the coast affects the orcas. Last month, Barry Thom, the regional administrator for the fisheries service, said in a letter to the Pacific Fishery Management Council it would do just that.

    The council helps establish ocean-salmon harvests off the West Coast; it reported more than 300,000 Chinook caught last year.

    Thom urged the council to consider the effect of salmon fishing on orcas as it sets the 2019 fishing seasons, especially with regard to Chinook runs considered especially important to the orcas in the Lower Columbia, Sacramento and Klamath rivers.

    Michael Milstein, a spokesman for the fisheries service, said Wednesday the agency is reviewing the lawsuit.

    “Since the Southern Residents are endangered, the Endangered Species Act requires us to consider the impacts of fisheries on the whales, and we just recently underscored how we’re doing that in a letter to the Pacific Fisheries Management Council,” Milstein wrote in an email. “We are reviewing all the relevant fisheries in the same light.”

    Teel Simmonds called the fisheries service response “a great sign,” but that it wasn’t a clear enough step to avert the lawsuit.

    She added that while habitat restoration and dam removal might do more in the long run to bring back the salmon, officials must also restrict fishing if that can help the whales now.

    The lawsuit is the third the Center for Biological Diversity has filed since last summer to force the government to do more for the orcas. The others seek protections on the orcas’ full West Coast habitat and a “whale protection zone” in Puget Sound to shield the whales from boat noise.

  • Seattle Times: Hunger, the Decline of Salmon Adds to the Struggle of Puget Sound’s Orca

    February 24, 2019

    By Lynda Mapes

    HOSTILE WATERS, Part 3: Twin monarchs of the Pacific Northwest, chinook salmon and southern resident orcas, are struggling for survival after a century of habitat losses. From the Pacific to the inland waters of Puget Sound and its freshwater rivers, the changes have outpaced adaptation.

    The crew of the Bell M. Shimada hauled in the net, long as a football field and teeming with life. Scientists, off the coast of Washington for a week on this June research trip, crowded in for a look.

    Each tow of the net revealed a changing world for chinook salmon, the Pacific Northwest’s most famous fish — and the most important prey for the southern-resident killer whales that frequent Puget Sound.

    There were salmon the scientists expected, although fewer of them. But weirdly also pompano, tropical fish with pretty pink highlights, iridescent as a soap bubble, that were not supposed to be there at all.

    What the scientists see each year on this survey underway since 1998 has taken on new importance as oceans warm in the era of climate change.

    Decadelong cycles of more and less productive ocean conditions for salmon and other sea life are breaking down. The cycles of change are quicker. Novel conditions in the Pacific are the new normal.

    “It used to be up, or down. Now, it is sideways,” said physiological ecologist Brian Beckman, of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle.

    That’s bad news for endangered orcas that rely on salmon for food. When salmon decline, orcas suffer.

    The search to understand why Puget Sound’s orcas are in decline continues, as scientists probe a range of threats, from inbreeding and disease, to pollution and vessel noise. But a key area of investigation is the primal necessity of regularly available, adequate, quality food.

    Across the Pacific Northwest, 40 percent of chinook runs already are locally extinct, and a large proportion of the rest that remain are threatened or endangered. Meanwhile, most other marine mammals are surging in population, adding to the competition both southern residents and fishermen face.

    Now, even the water itself has turned hostile.

    The southern residents evolved to take fish out of a vast area, on the outer coast of North America, from California to British Columbia, and throughout the inland waters of the Salish Sea, connecting the U.S. and Canada. They even come all the way to Seattle’s Elliott Bay.

    Top predators, they can travel 75 miles a day, following the salmon they eat nearly exclusively, since the fish were always so big, so fat, and so plentiful.

    But in just the past 150 years all that has changed. Humans have altered everything from the climate and the ocean food web to the estuaries and freshwater rivers where salmon begin their perilous years-long journey to sea and back.

    Despite being listed as a threatened species 20 years ago, the prospects of Puget Sound chinook remain unimproved.Hostile.Waters.OrcaNeeds.2.24

    How much chinook do southern residents need?

    Scientists in the Cetacean Research Program at Fisheries and Oceans Canada estimate it takes the equivalent of at least 723 chinook to feed the entire population of southern residents every single day — but it could be as many as 868, depending on the age, body size and condition of the whales and the fish. A recovered population of killer whales would need even more fish, perhaps as much as 75 percent more, said Rob Williams, of Oceans Initiative, a Seattle-based science nonprofit.

    Without more food, the whales will be extinct within 100 years, Williams and other colleagues found in a 2017 paper.

    “Let’s not kid ourselves, we have a long way to go,” Williams said.

    A changing ocean

    Back aboard the Bell M. Shimada, nighttime for some of the scientists was prime time for towing a net alongside the ship to gather samples of zooplankton to assess the ocean’s food supply for salmon.

    The crews got up twice each night, the ship ablaze with lights, to capture tiny animals migrating upward in the water to feed on plankton — the great green pastures of the sea, each individual tiny green life feeding these animals that feed everything else.

    Held to the light, a jar of seawater comes alive with a sampling of animals caught in the net. These are the tiny lives that feed the forage fish that baby salmon eat — and eat they must, to fatten and grow, before they get eaten by something else.

    Most juvenile salmon that leave the freshwater river where they hatched don’t survive to return as an adult to spawn, because they get eaten first by a predator. If a baby salmon doesn’t get bigger than a bird’s beak — and fast — it will never live to feed an orca.

    Scientists want to see four times as many juvenile fish survive as they do in the sea. But ocean conditions haven’t been that good in decades. Then, they got even worse.

    “When The Blob hit, everything changed,” Beckman said.

    The Blob, a gigantic mass of warmer-than-normal water off the Pacific Coast, began forming in late 2013. It depleted the ocean’s food supply and killed an uncounted multitude of animals, including sea birds and marine mammals.

    In June 2017, scientists caught so few juvenile chinook they thought there might be holes in the net. Freakish numbers of species, such as pyrosomes, a firm, plastic like tubular animal of subtropic seas, covered the decks.

    Those most dramatic influences of The Blob are dissipating, said Brian Burke, a supervisory research fish biologist at NOAA’s science center and chief scientist on the 2018 survey.

    Still, in some places where juvenile chinook in past years had been most abundant, very few were caught at all.

    So powerful are the effects of ocean conditions, they can swing even abundant runs of salmon into dramatic downturns — or provide a bonanza of spectacular bounty. After decades of little change, more than a million chinook came back to the Columbia River system from 2013 to 2015, smashing records and capping 15 years of greatly improved returns. Yet as the full effects of The Blob developed, the runs crashed again.

    Now forecasts for chinook in 2019 all over the West Coast are even worse.

    The southern-resident orcas eat only fish, mostly salmon. In winter, as much as half their diet is coho and chum, and even a little steelhead and some lingcod, skate or flatfish. What these predators need the most, however, is chinook. As the ocean becomes even more unpredictable, what will it mean for salmon?

    “What if the frequency of these events increases, even if they don’t get worse?” Ritchie Graves, chief of the hydropower division for NOAA’s Northwest Region, said of The Blob. “We lost 20 years of investment in improving the status of stocks. We are almost back down to where we were in the bad times of the late 1990s,” years of record-low salmon returns.

    And as chinook heading back to the Columbia crash, salmon already have been struggling in the great inland sea of Puget Sound, and its rivers.

    Fewer fish, more demand 

    The Nisqually River slid toward Puget Sound, whirling and sparkling when suddenly, a sleek brown head popped up.

    The sea lion surfaced with a big chum salmon clamped in its jaws, shaking its head violently, sending chunks of the fish flying. It dived underwater to go get the pieces. Back up in minutes, the sea lion tipped its head back like a sword swallower and downed the rest of its meal.

    Sea lions never used to come up this river, said Willie Frank III, a member of the Nisqually Tribal Council. Today, seals and sea lions travel more than 20 miles up the Nisqually after chum. These are not just any fish. These chum are unique, among the latest winter salmon runs in the state.

    They are the prime fish the southern-resident orcas are hunting when they come to Central Puget Sound in winter.

    But this chum run has declined so much tribal members barely get a fishing season anymore, said Frank, whose late father, Billy Frank Jr., was repeatedly arrested in the 1960s and ’70s defending the tribe’s fishing rights.

    Frank sees a parallel in the tribal elders and the southern residents, both struggling to find enough fish.

    “To see the little ones out there, and their moms, it breaks your heart,” Frank said of the whales.

    Now, a population boom in marine mammals — other than southern-resident orcas — may be complicating the picture, as everything from seals to sea lions and Alaskan and northern-resident killer whales beat the southern residents and fishermen to the catch.

    A paper published in 2017 was a shocker for many, when Brandon Chasco and other researchers showed that the resurgent population of marine mammals, thanks to the ban on hunting enacted in the federal Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972, may have had unintended consequences.

    Today, the chinook catch by marine mammals West Coast-wide is up 150 percent from 1975 to 2015, and down 41 percent by anglers.

    Whether to cull marine mammals is under regionwide debate. But the whales and salmon also confront much bigger problems.

    The salmon decline began with non-Indian settlement of the Northwest in about 1880. It’s not been a unilateral slide. Some runs are in better shape today than during the heyday of unregulated logging, irrigation, mining and industrial discharges to Puget Sound and rivers throughout the Northwest.

    But historic overfishing took its toll. So do hatcheries releasing hundreds of millions of fish that can compete with wild fish for food and habitat, and even spread disease. Dams impede, and some even wholly block, the rivers in which salmon spawn. Bulkheads harden shorelines.

    Estuaries and tide flats have been filled. Rivers have been straightened and walled off with dikes and levees. Thousands of inadequate highway culverts block access to miles of spawning habitat. Water withdrawals for irrigation and other uses diminish river flows. A warming climate is boosting summer water temperatures above safe levels for salmon in rivers all over the state.

    Preliminary findings by a total of 60 nonprofits, universities, tribes, state and federal agencies on both sides of the border in a marine survival study launched by Long Live the Kings and the Pacific Salmon Foundation are revealing devastating trends in the Salish Sea.

    While coastal stocks of chinook have cycled up and down with ocean conditions, chinook, coho and steelhead in the Strait of Georgia and Puget Sound have declined up to tenfold since the 1980s and have remained depressed, the research project is finding. Many salmon die in Puget Sound, victims of everything from pollution to predators to habitat destruction and changes in the food web, long before they ever make it to the open sea.

    From the orcas’ perspective, their food supply has cratered in just a few generations, compared with the historic numbers of fish, their availability across the seasons, and even their size.

    Brad Hanson, a research wildlife biologist with NOAA’s science center, said people forget about how much the baseline for salmon and orcas has shifted, and how fast.

    “If you look at all the areas the whales take fish out of, it’s a huge swath of North America, all the way to B.C. These animals evolved to depend on all these different stocks,” Hanson said. Today, scientists are concerned about what they call seasonal serial failures: When, from one season to the next, in one river after another, there is not enough food regularly available for the whales.

    “If California is bad, and the Columbia is bad, and the Fraser is bad, that takes out six or eight months of the year,” Hanson said. “You are not going to make it. You are potentially losing calves, or individuals, and that is what we are seeing.”

    B.C. salmon stocks in general are at just 36 percent of runs in the 1800s, and Puget Sound stocks are also at a fraction of their historic abundance, Oceans Initiative’s Williams and his co-authors reported in a 2011 PlosOne paper.

    Farther south, the Columbia River was once the mightiest salmon river in the world, with some 4.5 million chinook a year returning. Now even in a good year, typically less than a million chinook come back. California’s Sacramento River salmon runs — once an abundant source of vital winter food — have collapsed.

    There have been fishing reforms, but fishing still takes a toll on the orcas’ food supply.

    Commercial, sport and tribal fishing in all marine waters in the U.S. and Canada reduces the amount of adult 4- and 5-year-old chinook returning to Puget Sound rivers by about 20 percent, according to a 2012 study by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Fraser River chinook are depleted by about 15 percent.

    Even some chinook marketed as abundant, sustainable wild Alaskan salmon may have started their life as a hatchery fish in the Columbia or elsewhere in Washington. That is because most fish leaving Washington waters, especially the Columbia, head northward in their migration, where many are later caught in mixed-stock ocean fisheries. They are never seen in Washington again — except on a plate.

    Targeted fishing closures may help the southern residents, a panel of scientists concluded in 2017. But their confidence was not high, because whatever one angler doesn’t catch may just be caught somewhere else, or eaten by another predator. The researchers put more confidence in reducing vessel disturbance to make fish easier for the whales to locate and catch. How best to quickly get more food to the whales is still under active debate.

    Salmon abundance is more than a numbers game; it’s also about the size of individual fish, and seasonal variety of chinook available for the whales. Over time, that diversity has become greatly reduced.

    Of 396 populations of chinook that used to be available to southern residents all over the Northwest, 159 today are gone, leaving gaps in the calendar year in which the orcas’ preferred prey is no longer available. Chum also are depleted, with 23 of 112 populations no longer there, according to a scientific paper published in 2007.

    With so much diversity lost, recovering the whale population isn’t just a matter of pumping up existing stocks, said Mike Ford, director of the conservation biology division at NOAA’s science center in Seattle.

    For instance, in the Columbia over the past 20 years, fall chinook runs have mostly been doing better than in the previous 60 or 70 years. Yet the whales continue to decline.

    That’s because the southern residents need salmon year-round, throughout their home range. And spring chinook — the biggest, fattiest prize — throughout the Northwest are among the most depleted, including in the Columbia and its largest tributary, the Snake River.

    There’s no rescue underway that is right-sized to the southern residents’ food problem, said Andrew Trites, professor and director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the Institute for Oceans and Fisheries at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver. Fixing just one place or piece of the problem will never save the whales, Trites said.

    “They live in a very large house and we need to look at every room.”

    Size matters, too. For chinook, also called king salmon, big isn’t what it used to be.

    The giants that used to lumber up and down the Columbia and cruise the North Pacific from California to Western Alaska have HostileWaters.Size.2.24shrunk, Jan Ohlberger of the University of Washington’s School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, and other authors found in a 2018 paper published in the journal Fish and Fisheries.

    The researchers documented a widespread trend in both wild and hatchery fish. All are smaller and younger today, researchers have found, examining 85 chinook populations along the West Coast.

    Coast-wide, the weight of 4-year-old chinook on average dropped by 20 percent from 1975 to 2005, Ohlberger found. Giant salmon such as the legendary June Hogs of the Columbia, tipping the scales at 80 pounds as recently as the 1920s, today exist only in historic photos.

    A sampling of chinook caught in Washington from 1970 to the present by purse seine and troll gear indicates puny average weights, ranging from around 10 to 15 pounds.

    That’s just a snack for a 6-ton killer whale.

    Hunger hurts, even kills 

    It comes suddenly: sharp, and unmistakable. A foul, sour, sewer-gas stench. The smell of death.

    “That is J50,” said Deborah Giles, resident scientist at the University of Washington Friday Harbor Labs and the science and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca.

    It was Giles who last summer was among the first to alert NOAA scientists to the declining condition of the J-pod whale, just 3 years old. What Giles smelled that July day, while out on a research survey offshore of San Juan Island with the southern residents, was the foul breath of an animal in compromised health.

    Orca.Peanuthead.HostileWaters.2.24Over the course of the summer, researchers worried as J50 continued to decline, eventually developing a deformed, emaciated shape known as “peanut head.”

    By August, NOAA had developed an elaborate, unprecedented rescue plan. For the public, the plight of the young whale had new urgency after watching another southern resident, Tahlequah, swim for more than 1,000 miles carrying her dead calf, which had died shortly after birth, in a dramatic ritual that lasted 17 days. But before J50 could be helped, the whale sank forever out of sight. It was the third death for the southern residents last summer.

    Why she died is still unknown, and why Tahlequah’s mother, J17, now also is failing is a puzzle. Why are some members of the pods so extremely affected? Is it disease? Starvation is not seen throughout the population. But malnutrition is occurring.

    Researchers began a health assessment of the southern residents using drone photography in 2008, tracking the orcas’ body condition in spring and fall.

    “There is this growing recognition they are in poor condition presently,” said John Durban of NOAA’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla.

    Drone photos taken by Durban and Holly Fearnbach, of the Seattle-based nonprofit SR3, are telling, when compared with the orcas’ northern neighbors in B.C. and the waters of southeast Alaska.

    “The northern residents are not that far away, and even feed on some of the same salmon runs, but they also have access to different fish,” Durban said. “It is very different with the southern residents, to look at the shifting baseline. You have to remind yourself what robust looks like.”

    Transient killer whales that feed on seals are flourishing as well. “They are very, very robust, fat killer whales,” Durban said.

    And while both the transients and the northern residents have been steadily reproducing, the southern residents have a high rate of failed pregnancies. In 69 percent of pregnancies tracked from 2008-2014, no live calf was produced, according to a 2017 study led by Sam Wasser, director of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington. Wasser documented a connection between failed pregnancies and stress hormones in the whales’ scat and periods of low salmon abundance in the Columbia and Fraser rivers.

    Starving whales also burn fat to survive, releasing toxics into their blood where they can do damage to the whales’ immune system and reproductive capacity.

    So hunger hurts. Even kills.

    Giles, the researcher who sniffed out J50’s peril, led the field team of researchers on Wasser’s multiyear survey of killer-whale scat.

    On a trip last July, she followed the whales’ fluke prints — large glassy patches on the surface created by the movement of the orcas’ tails as they swim along — guided also by the acute nose of Dio, a blue-heeler mix at the bow.

    Handled by trainer Collette Yee, Dio is one of the dogs, all of them rescues, in Wasser’s Conservation Canines program, crack environmental detectives trained to track everything from invasive plants to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and grizzly-bear scat.

    Before long, Dio located a particle that looked like a bloated, wet dog kibble.

    Giles set the scat spinning in a vial in the shipboard centrifuge, for analysis back at the lab. This sample would tell researchers everything, from what the whales were eating, to the orcas’ condition and, using DNA analysis, the species of fish.

    “Within four days we see the impact if they are not getting enough nutrition,” Giles said. “Any animal goes through feast and famine, that is normal. But their periods between feast and famine are bigger.”

    It used to be the whales showed up in the San Juan Islands in May, and were around nearly every day, even in large gatherings known as superpods, with J, K, and L pods all present at once.

    More typically today, as some of the salmon runs in the Fraser River the orcas feed on have declined, the southern residents arrive much later, and are split up and spread out, with only a few of the families together in any one location. They socialize and rest less, and travel more. Looking for food.

    A river reborn

    On a stretch of the Elwha River outside Port Angeles, great clouds of insects hummed over spawned-out salmon carcasses. A kingfisher clattered from a branch, and diving ducks flew upriver. Eagles cruised overhead, and a big juicy dragonfly hawked after bugs.

    Fins cut the water: chinook, battling upriver. Back home from their great journey to the sea.

    A big male zipped across the channel, chasing off a rival. As the river sang over the clean, graveled bottom, other fish held steady in the current: females, guarding their redds, the telltale pale patches on the river bottom where they had turned over the stones with their tails, digging their nests.

    While recovery is slow here on the Elwha after the largest dam removal ever, all five species of Pacific salmon are recolonizing every reach of the river.

    Salmon and orcas are tough survivors, weedy even, surging to reclaim most any place returned to them.

    After a generation of the southern residents were trapped for aquariums, they battled back to a recent population peak of 98 in 1995. Their deaths at times correlate with chinook salmon declines. Today, only 75 southern residents survive.

    But chinook come back. Replacing highway culverts, ripping out dikes to restore estuaries, improving flows in streams — restoration work is going on all over Washington.

    Dam removal is on the table. Gov. Jay Inslee is seeking funding from the Legislature to study the effects of breaching the four Lower Snake River Dams.

    It will take a wide variety of strategies all over the state to rebuild salmon runs. Some of the region’s efforts already have been historic.

    Beginning in 2011, people did the once unthinkable, and in a grand experiment took out both dams on the Elwha. That opened 70 miles of unspoiled habitat to salmon for the first time in a century. There were doubters of the $350 million investment in the salmon, but the fish are proving them wrong.

    Last summer, about 7,500 chinook returned to the Elwha, the most in more than a generation.

    Mel Elofson, Lower Elwha Klallam Tribal member and assistant habitat manager for the tribal fisheries department, picked up an eagle feather from the ground as he watched the fish go upriver last August. With the return of the salmon have come the animals, with tribal members seeing more eagles along the river than anyone could remember.

    Elofson recently saw a bear eating salmon on the bank of the Elwha. “It was great to see that bear feeding in broad daylight,” Elofson said.

    The eagles and the bears aren’t the only ones to notice the big kings are back.

    In August, researcher Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research, got a call to come document dark dorsals cutting the water offshore of the mouth of the Elwha.

    Twin monarchs of the Northwest, Puget Sound’s orcas and king salmon, were back in their home waters.

    At the river’s mouth, J pod was hunting.

  • Seattle Times: Inslee calls Canada pipeline ‘profoundly damaging,’ fears for orcas in surprise deal

    tribal t1170Linda Mapes

    An unprecedented deal between the Canadian federal government and Houston-based Kinder Morgan to expand the Trans Mountain Pipeline poses grave risks for the critically endangered southern-resident killer- whale population, and drew a stiff rebuke from Washington’s governor, who called the pipeline “profoundly damaging.”

    The expansion, planned to bring bitumen oil from Alberta to the West Coast for sale to Asian markets, would increase by seven times the oil-tanker traffic in the transboundary waters between Washington and Canada, prime orca habitat.

    That would ramp up noise levels underwater that already are interfering with the whales’ foraging time for scarce chinook salmon. The whales have not managed a successful pregnancy in two years, in part because they are starving.

    The increase in traffic through tricky navigation channels by tankers also puts the J, K and L pods at risk of extinction in the event of an oil spill. The pipeline twins an existing line built in 1953 for more than 600 miles and will nearly triple capacity for the Trans Mountain to 890,000 barrels of bitumen oil per day.

    Bitumen is one of the most energy-intensive oils to produce, and carbon-polluting to burn. Mixed with chemicals to make it flow, it sinks in water and defies conventional cleanup methods.

    On Tuesday, Canada’s federal government agreed to buy the pipeline system and expansion project for $4.5 billion Canadian and to work with the board of Kinder Morgan to seek a third-party buyer for the project.

    The government also will pay to resume planning and construction work this summer by guaranteeing all costs under a separate line of credit guaranteed by Canada.

    It has been undisputed for years that the pipeline expansion would make both noise and the threat of a spill worse for orcas.

    In its assessment of the project, Canada’s National Energy Board stated in its approval in May 2016 that the pipeline expansion “would likely result in significant adverse effects to the Southern resident killer whale.”

    The energy board recommended approval anyway. The board also said the project would set back recovery efforts for the population of fish-eating whales unique to Puget Sound and would undermine cultural values of First Nations and tribes in the United States that regard the whale as family.

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee was given no courtesy call before the announcement of the plan to rev up construction of the pipeline this summer, spokeswoman Tara Lee said. Inslee vehemently voiced his disagreement.

    “Now is not the time to increase our chances of a marine oil spill, nor is it the time to hinder our efforts to protect our already endangered orcas,” Inslee wrote in a statement to The Seattle Times. “The effects of increased noise pollution from oil tanker traffic is significant. Noise is one of the reasons the southern resident orca population is at a 30-year low. When large tankers cruise over the waves, the sound blankets the undersea world for miles, drowning out a whale’s ability to use echolocation clicks to find food and communicate with other whales. This is a moment for protecting orcas and combating climate change. The proposed pipeline expansion would take us backward in profoundly damaging ways. It does not have the support of Washington state.”

    Inslee has just created a task force charged with restoring the southern-resident killer-whale population, dwindled to only 76 animals.

    “The proposed pipeline expansion project would undermine efforts to protect our communities and economy from the risk of oil spills, fight climate change, and save the orca population,” Inslee said in a prepared statement. “I have expressed my concerns about this project repeatedly and I believe this is the wrong direction for our region.”

    Opposition remains strong beyond Washington, with 22 British Columbia municipalities and 150 First Nations registering opposition, 14 legal challenges in the Canadian Federal Court of Appeal, and ongoing public protests.

    More than 250,000 people have signed a petition against the project, with an additional 24,000 pledging to “do whatever it takes to stop the project.” More than 200 people, including several members of Parliament and First Nations leaders, have been arrested.

    The deal, set to close in August or in the fourth quarter of the year, does not displace the lawsuits, which include a challenge by the B.C. government to the permits for the project and challenges by First Nations because the pipeline would cross their lands without their consent.

    Kinder Morgan in its statement Tuesday said the backing of the Canadian government ensures the project will be built. “We are pleased to reach agreement on a transaction that benefits the people of Canada, Trans Mountain Expansion Project shippers and Kinder Morgan Limited shareholders,” said KML Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Steve Kean.

    “The outcome we have reached represents the best opportunity to complete the Trans Mountain Expansion Project and thereby realize the great national economic benefits promised.”

    Opponents warned that the costs will be far higher and that the project will haunt the liberal Trudeau government, which has backed the project in hopes of higher prices overseas for Canadian oil than in the U.S. market, plus tax revenue on those sales.

    However, indigenous leaders warned Tuesday the fight is just getting started.

    “The answer is still no,” said Will George, Tsleil-Waututh member and spokesman for the Coast Salish Watch House, a spiritual gathering place and de facto headquarters for the opposition. “The cost they did not calculate in their $4.5 billion purchase is that indigenous front lines will stop this pipeline. The Watch House will continue to stand in the way of pipeline development.”

    The Tsleil-Waututh, or People of the Inlet, have opposed the project since its inception and on Tuesday vowed that outrage at the federal decision would spur direct action against the project.

    “The fight is far from over, and now that Justin Trudeau has turned the Canadian government into a fossil-fuel company, it’s crystal clear who we are up against,” said Aurore Fauret, Canadian tar-sands campaign coordinator for 350.org, which opposes fossil-fuel projects.

    In addition to Inslee, 79 elected leaders from around the region, including King County Executive Dow Constantine and 29 Washington state legislators, last week sent a letter to B.C. Premier John Horgan in solidarity with his government’s opposition to the project.

    Even Al Gore weighed in Tuesday, tweeting, “Fossil fuels are subsidized 38x more than renewables globally. Now the Canadian government wants to spend billions more of taxpayer dollars to increase its country’s contribution to the climate crisis. This is not in the public interest. We must keep fighting to #StopKM.”

    For the orcas, the Salish Sea already has become a hostile place they visit with increasing rarity. In a new paper published by the San Juan Island-based Orca Behavior Institute in the journal Pacific Conservation Biology, research documented what longtime Pacific Northwest residents already know: The whales are spending less time here.

    Peak whale-watching season in the Salish Sea for the southern residents used to be April through September.

    Twenty years ago it was typical to see the southern residents frolicking and feeding in the Salish Sea every day in May. This year, no whales have been seen locally since April 7.

  • Seattle Times: Mother orca Tahlequah and her dead calf, one year later. How did she change the conversation?

    July 24, 2019

    By Lynda Mapes

    J35ripIt was a year ago Wednesday that mother orca Tahlequah rallied attention to the plight of endangered southern resident killer whales and their struggle for survival.

    When she swam more than 1,000 miles carrying her dead calf that lived only one half-hour, millions of people around the world followed her journey. Hers was the most read story in The Seattle Times in 2018. Tahlequah was invoked by countless policy makers, urging changes to save the killer whales that frequent Puget Sound.

    So on her anniversary, the Times asked readers if they still think of her. And took stock of some of what’s changed since her journey, for better and for worse.

    Amid the 145 reader responses, most said Tahlequah is still in their thoughts. “Yes. Forever,” one reader said.  A few said they didn’t see the point of Tahlequah’s story, or understand the reaction to it: “Nature, including human nature is bereft with death and loss. Why on earth would we still be grieving the death of an orca calf a year later.”

    Taylor Shedd, Soundwatch program coordinator at the Whale Museum of Friday Harbor, spent nearly every day of Tahlequah’s journey with her on the water. He followed her at a distance, to keep boaters away, and explain to curious onlookers what was happening as she carried the more than 6-foot-long calf, weighing hundreds of pounds.

    “She was struggling. Making deep, awkward dives. Labored breathing,” Shedd recalled. “It was behavior we had not seen before, and pretty sad to see, to leave her at the end of every day and think, ‘Well I hope she is here tomorrow.’ To have that sense of urgency in the morning to find her, and be happy to see her alive and then flushed with that sadness again, once you saw the calf, that she was still carrying it.”

    Yet a year later, orca advocates calling for “bold action” to save the whales would be largely disappointed. Of 36 recommendations from Gov. Jay Inslee’s Task Force on orca recovery, only eight today are on track, five are going nowhere, and the other 23 are somewhere in between, with the task force scheduled to disband in October. And of 11 priority habitat improvement projects around Puget Sound before to the state Legislature for consideration last session, only three were funded.

    Meanwhile, the region is adding 188 people a day, according to the Puget Sound Regional Council. And threats to the orcas in the past year have continued to increase. The Canadian government has approved an expansion of a major oil pipeline that will increase the risk of oil spills and increase tanker traffic in the whales’ critical summer habitat. Another marine shipping terminal is planned in the Fraser Delta, and shipping lanes are busier than ever — raising the impact of noise on whales trying to hunt, and even the risk of ship strikes.

    “Mistakes happen,” said Dawn Noren, a physiological ecologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center. She helped determine there was nothing significantly wrong with southern resident J34 — until he was killed in December 2016 in Canadian waters. His injuries were massive and consistent with ship strike, she said, a risk that grows with busier waters.

    There are only 76 southern residents left.

    Lawmakers did pass new laws intended to help prevent oil spills, give regulators more latitude to move to restrict toxics and further armoring of the shoreline for single family homes. A panel was funded to discuss the effects of dam removal on the Lower Snake River. And new whale watching restrictions were approved, with more regulations to be drafted by the state Department of Fish and Wildlife. In all, $275, million was budgeted to fix state highway culverts to improve salmon passage.

    It’s the whales themselves though, that have made the biggest changes, with two births, one in L pod, and one in J pod, arresting the population’s downward slide. It’s a tenuous advance. The mortality rate of new calves is 50 percent. And now concern is heightened that adults J17 — Tahlequah’s mother — and K25 have not yet been seen this spring or summer. Both were looking thin and in poor condition last winter.

    The whales also seem to have managed the need for more food and better habitat by simply … leaving.

    The southern residents have been seen only five days so far in their summer habitat of the inland waters of the Salish Sea, including the San Juan Islands, down from about 20 days by this time last year, and nearly every day come spring and summer in the recent past.

    “It is really sad they are not here, this is their ancestral home and territory, this is their critical habitat and where they have lived for thousands of years. It is definitely a shame that we have forced them out of these waters,” Shedd said.

    “Hopefully they are finding more food and less polluted waters and quieter water elsewhere. You kind of have to be OK with them not being here. They are not here for a reason.”

    Joe Gaydos, head scientist for the SeaDoc Society, a marine science and education nonprofit, and a member of the Orca Task Force, said the meaning of Tahlequah’s journey needs no translation, last year, or now. “You didn’t need to be a scientist to tell you, it was very clear to everyone, people saw her mourning,” Gaydos said. “No one should have to bury a child, that is every parent’s worst nightmare. And for her to put that on display?

    “There is only so much these animals can do for themselves. It up to us now to take better care of this place.”

  • Seattle Times: New drone, underwater footage of orcas stuns researchers, gives intimate look at killer whales’ family life

    New drone, underwater footage of orcas stuns researchers, gives intimate look at killer whales’ family life.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter
    Nov. 5, 2019

    orca.salmon.swimmingWho knew orcas were so playful, so full of affection, so constantly touching one another?

    New footage taken by drone as well as underwater stunned researchers who spent two days with the southern resident orca J pod off the British Columbia coast, including with the newest baby, and more time with northern resident killer whales in B.C.’s Johnstone Strait. The footage taken during three weeks in August and early September was filmed in collaboration with the Hakai Institute, a science research nonprofit.

    “It took our breath away,” said Andrew Trites, professor at the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries Department of Zoology and director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Trites is co-lead researcher on a study that over five years is taking a close look at resident killer whales and their prey.

    Researchers are comparing the hunting of northern resident orcas like these with the behavior of endangered southern residents. Footage of the whales shot by drone and underwater is opening new understanding of orcas’ lives in the wild. (University of British Columbia / Hakai Institute)

    Researchers are comparing the hunting of northern resident orcas like these with the behavior of endangered southern residents. Footage of the whales shot by drone and underwater is opening new understanding of orcas’ lives in the wild.... More

    The drone footage was gathered non-invasively, with the camera hundreds of feet above the whales, who did not seem to even know it was there, Trites said. Combined with underwater microphones, tracking devices used to follow adult chinook, and underwater footage, a spectacular new look into orcas and their day-to-day life in the wild is emerging.

    The big standout so far is just how much the orcas touch one another, something not as visible from a boat.

    “We like to think we are hardened research scientists, but it tugged at our heart strings,” Trites said, “Especially the mum and calf.”
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    In that footage, a northern resident baby is nuzzled by its mother and slides all along its mother’s body seemingly just for fun, and playfully tail slaps its mom on the head.

    “These drones are opening up avenues of their lives we have never seen before,” Trites said. “The same way we hug our kids and hug our friends, touch furthers those bonds. That’s the power of touch, and here we have killer whales reminding us of that — who would have thought?”

    J pod’s newest baby, here swimming with her mother, carried a salmon in her mouth for two days this summer near the Fraser River in British Columbia, even though she is 3 months old and feeding on her mother’s milk. Was she teething? Learning how to be a big killer whale some day? (Andrew Trites / University of British Columbia)

    J pod’s newest baby, here swimming with her mother, carried a salmon in her mouth for two days this summer near the Fraser River in British Columbia, even though she is 3 months old... (Andrew Trites / University of British Columbia) More

    J pod’s new baby whale, J56, also was seen near the mouth of the Fraser River toting a salmon around in her mouth for two days, even though she is only 3 months old and entirely feeding on her mother’s milk. Is she teething? Or learning how to how to act like a grown-up killer whale?

    The core question the investigators are exploring is whether southern residents can get enough chinook salmon — their preferred prey — to eat in the Salish Sea. Data could help answer the question of why for the past three years the southern residents have not been coming back as usual to their core foraging areas in San Juan Island and B.C.
    Hostile Waters: Orcas in Peril

    The southern residents also are thinner on average than the northern residents and have been steadily declining in population, to just 73 animals, while northern residents have been slowly growing in population to more than 300. Like the southern residents, the northerns eat only fish, preferable chinook, but their core habitat while far smaller has more abundant fish runs, and cleaner, quieter water.

    By observing both populations and their prey, researchers hope to compare their foraging conditions and hunting behaviors and learn whether it is more difficult for the southern residents to capture prey. “One of the conclusions is, yes, there is a food problem,” Trites said. “But we have to be able to answer that with not just an impression or belief, but with data.”

    “We are putting all these pieces together to see what is going on,” Trites said.

    The $1 million project is part of the federally funded Whale Science for Tomorrow initiative by the Canadian government, with additional funding and support from other sources.

    See the full story and images here.
    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/new-drone-underwater-footage-of-orcas-stuns-researchers-gives-intimate-look-at-killer-whales-family-life/

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes. Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

     

  • Seattle Times: New orca baby born to southern resident L pod

    By Lynda V. Mapes
    Feb 17, 20202020.orca baby

    A new baby has been born to the L pod family of southern resident killer whales, scientists reported.

    Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research, confirmed the birth Wednesday.

    The mother is L86, and the sex of the baby, L125, is not yet known.

    After word that the J, K, and L pods were in Haro Strait, near San Juan Island, the center dispatched two boats with field researchers, where they encountered and photographed the new calf.

    “It is nicely filled out and appears to be a nice young perfectly normal little calf,” said David Ellifrit, the center’s photo identification expert.

    The baby’s size and shape are typical of a calf in good condition. It is so young — just a few weeks old — that it still has fetal folds showing on its skin.

    This is the first calf born into L pod since January 2019.

    Other calves born to the southern residents also were seen Wednesday: J57 and J58, both born in 2020, looked to be doing well.

    The birth is a bright spot for L86, who also was the mother of L112, killed by blunt-force trauma in 2012, Balcomb said.

    She had another calf, L120, that was born and died in 2014. Her first calf, L106 was born in 2005 and is still swimming near his mother today, Balcomb said.

    The southern residents are endangered, so every baby counts.

    The newest birth brings the population to 75 in total. The first complete count of southern resident killer whales, which took place in 1974, found 71 whales.

    L86, nicknamed Surprise!, was born in 1991.

    “It’s just wonderful to see a new birth this early in the year; it’s pretty exciting,” said Deborah Giles, researcher with the University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology. “It gives you hope for the other ones.”

    Another orca, J46, also known as Star, was very visibly pregnant last fall but she lost the calf, according to Holly Fearnbach, marine mammal research director at SR3, a science research nonprofit based in Seattle.

    Fearnbach and John Durban, senior scientist with Southall Environment Associates, photographed her on multiple occasions using a drone and from their research documented that she was no longer pregnant in December.

    The southern residents lose about two-thirds of their pregnancies, according to research led by Sam Wasser at the Center for Conservation Biology. The losses were linked in the research to nutritional stress.

    The southern residents face at least three known threats to their survival: noise and disturbance by ships and boats, pollutants, and lack of food, especially chinook salmon, their preferred prey.

     

  • Seattle Times: Newborn southern resident orca spotted in Puget Sound

    Newborn J pod calf Photo by Maya Sears under NMFS Permit 27052Researchers spotted a new calf with J pod this week. (Courtesy of Maya Sears / NMFS Permit 27052)

    Dec. 27, 2023
    By Isabella Breda

    The J pod of endangered southern resident orcas has a new baby.

    Researchers Maya and Mark Sears spotted a new calf with J pod on Tuesday. The Center for Whale Research hadn’t spotted the baby in recent encounters with the orcas, likely making the calf just a few days old.

    The calf was seen near J40, also known as Suttles, an adult female who has not yet had a calf. J40 seems to be the most likely mother, the center said in a social media post, but researchers will try to confirm this in future encounters.

    The calf was spotted near President Point in Puget Sound, said Brad Hanson, wildlife biologist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, in a phone call Wednesday.

    This summer, the center spotted two new additions to the L12 subgroup of the L pod in the Strait of Georgia off the shores of Canada.

    Survivorship from the last baby boom in 2015 wasn’t quite what researchers had hoped for, Hanson said.

    “It’s really, really good news,” Hanson said of the new calf. “It also comes with the trepidation of how they’re going to fare throughout the first few years of their life.”

    It isn’t unusual for calf survivorship to be low, he said. And sometimes researchers are concerned about first-time moms because they haven’t yet figured out how to be a mom, Hanson added.

    J pod is one of three families within the southern resident orca population that frequents the Salish Sea. The 2022 census by the Center for Whale Research tallied just 73 orcas, one of the lowest population counts among the J, K and L pods of whales since 1974, when 71 orcas were counted after the live capture era, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. There are now estimated to be 75 orcas.

    The population peaked at 98 in 1995 but declined by almost 20% by the end of the decade, leaving 80 whales in 2001.

    “In order for the population to grow, you really need them to have five or six successful calves,” Hanson said. “And that’s just not been happening in the population.”

    They’re not having that many calves, Hanson said. And some are not surviving long enough to fully reproduce.

    Generally, the southern residents are struggling to survive in the face of at least three threats: lack of chinook salmon in their foraging range, pollution, and underwater noise that makes it harder for them to hunt and communicate with each other.

    Researchers have found two-thirds of southern resident pregnancies end in loss because of lack of food. More recently, studies have found that the southern resident females have less hunting success than their neighbors up north, and that the shrinking, increasingly inbred population of southern residents could be plummeting toward extinction.

    Seattle Times: Newborn southern resident orca spotted in Puget Sound article link

  • Seattle Times: Orca baby boom continues with discovery of fourth calf

    orca.calfBy Paige Cornwell  /  March 31, 2015

    Whale-watching crews spotted a new baby orca in the Salish Sea on Monday, marking the fourth documented southern-resident killer-whale birth in three months. Whale-watching crews spotted a new baby orca in the Salish Sea on Monday, marking the fourth documented southern-resident killer-whale birth in three months.

    The calf was spotted among the J-pod near Galiano Island, B.C., about noon, according to the Pacific Whale Watch Association.

    Researchers spotted the calf while watching the subgroup known as the J16s with its 3-month-old calf, known as J50, according to the association, which represents 29 whale-watch operators in Washington and British Columbia.

    “We were assuming we had only the J16s,” naturalist and researcher Jeanne Hyde said in a news release. “And as they passed in front of the boat, I saw a small calf surfacing next to J16 and said ‘there’s the baby.’ But then J50 surfaced behind all the rest.”

    The calf has heavy fetal folds, indicating that he or she is a newborn.

    The birth brings the endangered killer-whale population to 81. A female calf in the J-pod was spotted in late December and a second calf was spotted in early February.

    The third calf, in the L-pod, was observed a few weeks later.

    Monday’s sighting hasn’t yet been confirmed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/orca-baby-boom-continues-with-discovery-of-fourth-calf/

  • Seattle Times: Orca death brings southern resident whale population to lowest level in 34 years

    The southern resident population of killer whales grew from 74 in 1984 to 98 in 1995, but has fallen back to 75 now.

     By Mike Rosenberg, June 16th 2018Orca L92

    An orca whale is missing and presumed dead, bringing the local killer whale population to its lowest point in three decades.

    The Center for Whale Research said Saturday an adult male known as L92 has not been seen since November 2017 and was “conspicuously absent” from recent coastal sightings of other whales.

    The whale, nicknamed Crewser, was 23 years old.

    The animal was a member of the L pod — the largest of three groups, along with the J and K pods, that make up the southern resident group of killer whales, which typically travel between the inland waters of Washington state and southwestern British Columbia for most of the year. It was the second-to-last member of the L26 matriline — the only surviving whale is now its aunt, known as L90.

    The loss brings the total southern resident population of orcas down to 75, the lowest since 1984. The population has fluctuated in recent decades, reaching a peak of 98 whales in 1995. Just two years ago, there were 83 orcas here.

    Whales in recent years have died from various causes, including malnourishment, infections and being struck by boats. Researchers say the decline of chinook salmon — the whales’ main prey — has contributed to the deaths, as have vessel traffic and noise. They have been listed as endangered species in the United States since 2005.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/orca-death-brings-southern-resident-whale-population-to-lowest-level-in-34-years/

  • Seattle Times: Orca J50 presumed dead but NOAA continues search

    A search effort has been underway for J50, as a superpod gathering of J, K and L pod orcas converged in waters near Race Rocks. She was not among them.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter

    September 13, 2018

    orca.j50J50 was presumed dead Thursday after a search for the whale by boat, plane and from shore failed to spot her.

    About 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research, declared J50 presumed dead. He is on contract with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) as the keeper of demographic data of the southern resident population of orca whales.

    But NOAA and partners helping in the search have not given up hope, said Michael Milstein, spokesman for the agency.

    “We have had a huge amount of help today, and it is really important that if she is there that we find her,” Milstein said. “We certainly have not determined at this point that we are giving up. And we are determining that day by day, we are not setting a timeline.” A massive search was mobilized for J50 all day Thursday on both sides of the water. The search in Washington waters included a Coast Guard helicopter, several NOAA researchers in separate boats, Soundwatch, the boater education nonprofit, and multiple whale-watch vessels, as well as members of the West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network. In Canada, the Marine Mammal Rescue vessel, the M Charles midwater patrol vessel, Straitwatch, a nonprofit, a Coast Guard helicopter, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans enforcement airplane and a floatplane all were deployed.
    “The message brought by J50, and by J35 and her dead calf a few weeks ago, is that the southern resident killer whales are running out of reproductive capacity and extinction of this population is looming,” Balcomb wrote in a news release, “while the humans convene task forces and conference calls that result in nothing, or worse than nothing, diverting attention and resources from solving the underlying ecological problems that will ultimately make this once-productive region unlivable for all.”

    Last seen Sept. 7, the 3-year-old whale was not with her family on several sightings in local waters around the San Juan Islands, including a superpod gathering Thursday in which some 60 whales from J, K, and L pod were together near Race Rocks. However, J50 was not among them.

    Balcomb said he and others with the center had looked hard for the whale on multiple days this week with no results, and doesn’t expect further efforts to turn up a live J50 to be successful. “They can look all they want. They can look til Christmas,” he said.
    J50 would be the second death in the critically endangered family of southern resident orca whales in less than two months. Tahlequah, or J35, brought worldwide sympathy as she swam more than 1,000 miles for 17 days through the trans-boundary waters of the Salish Sea, clinging to her dead calf, which lived for only a half-hour. The southern residents have not had a successful pregnancy in three years.

    NOAA has plans underway for a rescue of J50, which include taking her into temporary captivity for rehabilitation.

    J50 had a tough life from the start. Always small for her age, she got the name Scarlet from deep rake marks near her dorsal fin, a sign, researchers believe, that she was pulled out of her mother by other whales in a midwifed birth because she was in a breech position.
    She was known for her spectacular breaches, as many as 40 in a row, sometimes with her body in an arch.

    But while always small for her age, J50 became the object of scientists’ concern as over the course of 2017 and this year she lost more and more weight. She became so emaciated it became increasingly hard for her to swim and hold her head up, as the fat pad in her cranium shrank, reducing her buoyancy. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) mounted a progressively more intense effort involving veterinarians and biologists from Canada and the U.S. to save her.

    First, they sampled her breath, then darted her with antibiotics, then launched a practice feeding effort, sluicing live chinook to her from the back of a boat, with the hope of giving her medicated fish if she would eat fish put right in front of her. She did not.

    Finally this week, the agency announced a plan to capture the whale and take her into temporary captivity for assessment and, if possible, rehabilitation since all efforts to treat her in the wild had failed. The agency said it would act immediately if the whale stranded — turned up on a beach, or was unable to swim. Debate swirled over whether the agency should act, or why it hadn’t acted sooner, and the ethics of such extreme intervention.
    J50 was the first of the “baby boom” among the southern residents that caused so much celebration in late 2014. Of the 11 babies born between December 2014 and January 2016, only four now are known to still be alive. Biologist Deborah Giles, research scientist for the University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca, used to often see J50 babysat by her brother, the largest of J pod, with her the smallest. “They were really sweet together,” Giles said.

    She was a spunky whale with an independent streak, Giles said, spending time off on her own while her family foraged. She also glided along in the slipstream of her mother, J16. “You could see she just wanted to be lifted up all the time; these whales are very playful, they will lift up their calves and toss them, and the calves will swim over their backs.”

    Known for a belly flop achieved by launching her body out of the water, “she just had a really sweet personality,” Giles said.
    Public meetings held by NOAA to hear concerns and thoughts from the public about southern resident killer whale recovery are still on schedule for this weekend, including one at 7 p.m. Saturday in Friday Harbor at the high school and 1 p.m. Sunday at the Haggett Hall Cascade Room at the University of Washington in Seattle .

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes. Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/orca-j50-declared-dead-after-search-southern-residents-down-to-74-whales/

  • Seattle Times: Orca Tahlequah is a mother again

    September 5, 2020
    By Lynda V. Malesorca.aerial

    Mother orca Tahlequah has had her baby.

    The endangered southern resident killer whale, J35, touched hearts in the Pacific Northwest and around the world in August 2018 when she lost a calf that lived only a half-hour. She carried the calf for 17 days and 1,000 miles, refusing to let the calf go.

    “It’s fabulous news,” Ken Balcomb, founding director of the Center for Whale Research, said of the new baby, which he documented Saturday in the San Juan Islands. The gender is not yet known.

    Tahlequah and several of the southern resident orcas were known to be expecting, after a recent drone survey of the orcas by John Durban, senior scientist at Southall Environmental Associates and Holly Fearnbach, marine mammal research director of the nonprofit SR3.

    The photo surveys are used to assess body condition of the southern residents over time.

    “We are really encouraged she carried it to term,” Durban said of the baby, in a text Saturday evening. “And hope our continued monitoring shows it to be in good condition, and [to] document its growth.”

    Every calf matters for the J, K and L pods in a population that has dwindled to 72 orcas, the lowest in more than 40 years.

    The southern residents have recently returned to their summer home range of the San Juan Islands for several weeks.

    Scientist Deborah Giles was on the water with all three pods Saturday with her scat-sniffing dog to collect fecal samples from the orcas for ongoing research by the University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology.

    “It was a fantastic day with members of all three pods,” she texted from her boat. “We were hugely successful, collecting 7 samples, our daily record for the year.

    “The whales behaved much like we used to see them, socializing, with lots of amazing surface active behavior.”

    This sort of behavior has become less common in recent years, as chinook salmon runs decline, and the orca families spread out to hunt and spend more time foraging than socializing.

    The southern resident orcas are struggling to survive against multiple threats, including lack of adequate chinook salmon, their preferred food, boat noise and disturbance that makes it more difficult for them to feed, and pollution.

    The birth of Tahlequah’s baby is the third to the southern residents since 2019 and so far the other two young whales continue to survive.

     

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes. Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

  • Seattle Times: Orcas headed to extinction unless we get them more chinook and quieter waters, report says

    orca.threeA new study published in Scientific Reports finds that a lower abundance of salmon in a sea noisy from vessel traffic means the whales must forage longer to find their food — stressing their already-endangered population.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter
    October 27, 2017

    Orca whales are on a path to extinction within a century unless they get a big increase of chinook salmon to eat, and significantly quieter seas in which to find their food, a new study has found.

    The research, published in the journal Scientific Reports, evaluated the relative importance of known threats to the survival of southern-resident killer whales, the salmon-eating whales that frequent Puget Sound.

    An international team of scientists reviewed 40 years of data and the threats of lack of food, pollutants and excessive noise under different future scenarios.

    A clear finding emerged: lack of food, specifically chinook salmon, was the orcas’ biggest threat to long-term survival, so much so that a 30 percent increase in chinook above average levels is needed to recover the orca population. That increase could be cut to 15 percent if vessel noise also is reduced by half.
    Featured Video

    Otherwise, the populations will continue to decline and there is a 25 percent chance the whales will be lost within 100 years, the scientists found.

    The findings reflect the unique biology of southern-resident killer whales, which insist on targeting chinook salmon for their diet, virtually to the exclusion of other prey. They also use echolocation — sound — to find their food.

    Lower abundance of salmon in a sea noisy from vessel traffic means the whales must forage longer to find their food — even as chinook populations also are declining. And if they can’t get enough to eat they burn their own fat, laden with chemicals stored in their tissue, absorbed from pollutants in the waters of the Salish Sea.

    The linked nature of the threats to orcas means progress must be made on all three fronts, noted Rob Williams, an author on the paper based at Oceans Initiative in Seattle, a nonprofit scientific research firm.

    The orcas already are in a 30-year population low, with just 76 animals in the J, K and L pods.

    “The very first thing we should be doing is holding the line, and not increasing threats and harms that are already there, clearly we don’t want to be adding to the problem,” said Paul Paquet of the Raincoast Conservation Foundation in Sydney, B.C., a lead author on the paper.

    “There is an urgency here that is not well-appreciated; they are certainly in jeopardy,” he said of the orcas. “There is no doubt about that.”

    Bob Lacy, a conservation biologist with the Chicago Zoological Society, and another lead author on the paper, said the southern residents are “just holding on; the population is too fragile to withstand any increased threats.

    “It is not a cheerful story, but it is a wake-up call.”

    Lynne Barre, Seattle branch chief of the Protected Resources Division at NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region, said the agency is well aware of the orcas’ predicament, as their population — at the lowest numbers since the 1980s — continues to drop. They are listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act.

    “We are moving in the wrong direction,” Barre said. The agency is looking for partners at every level — local, state, federal and across the border in Canada, to ease threats to orca survival she said.

    It’s not a problem orcas might just fix on their own by turning to other prey.

    While so-called transient killer whales in Canada feast on marine mammals, especially seals, the southern residents will not switch from chinook — the most calories for the hunting effort of any salmon — even when the region’s most prized fish is scarce.

    “It seems to be cultural, this is what they learned from their mothers, they live in tight family groups and it makes them unique and very special, but it might be a downfall as well,” Barre said.

    Chinook are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act both in the Columbia River and in Puget Sound. Orcas forage for chinook at the mouth of the Columbia in the early spring and again in Puget Sound in the summer, especially on the west side of San Juan Island.

    Scientists have been studying the whales’ foraging behavior and can see that vessel traffic affects it, she noted.

    The agency is considering a proposed change in the critical habitat protected for the whales to include the West Coast all the way to the San Francisco Bay Area, to reflect what scientists are learning about how far the orcas travel for their food, Barre said.

    Also under review is a protection zone that extends three-quarters of a mile offshore of San Juan Island from Mitchell Point in the north to Cattle Point in the south.

    All motorized vessels would be excluded from the zone to give the whales a refuge from their noise.

    The proposal from Orca Relief Citizens Alliance and other conservation groups, under review by NOAA since January, received more than 1,000 comments, including suggestions of new approaches to the problem.

    James Unsworth, director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, even suggested that instead of a fixed protection zone, what is needed is a floating go-slow bubble extending 1,000 yards around every orca as it travels anywhere in Washington’s inner marine waters. Within the bubble, vessel speeds would be restricted to not more than 7 knots on the water.

    That would be a big increase in the 200-yard, no-approach zone around every orca imposed by NOAA in 2011.

    Slower travel speeds help orcas by quieting vessel traffic. Some change is already underway on a voluntary basis.

    The Port of Vancouver, B.C., in a pilot program last summer, asked ships to cut their speed to 11 knots — a reduction to nearly half speed for some vessels — to reduce noise levels in a 16-mile-long area of the orcas’ prime feeding ground. More than 61 percent of ships using Haro Strait voluntarily participated.

    It’s the kind of measure that perhaps could buy the whales some time and take the pressure off a population struggling to survive, Williams said.

    “This is a really small population that is teetering.” Not because of some catastrophe, such as an oil spill, he noted, but just because of what their environment has become. “We are looking at their daily lives.”

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com

  • Seattle Times: Puget Sound orca numbers rise fast after 30-year low in 2014

    After nine births, Southern-resident orcas in Puget Sound number 85.

    By Evan Bush , Seattle Times staff reporter
    January 20, 2016

    orca.times.mom.calfIn just over a year, Puget Sound has welcomed nine baby Southern-resident orcas to the fold, as the pod continues to rebound from 30-year-low numbers reported at the end of 2014.

    The newest members of the J and L pods, which inhabit Washington’s inland waters along with the K pod, face myriad hazards, including pollution, busy shipping traffic and a threatened food supply.

    The cetaceans have been listed since 2005 for protection under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Chinook salmon, the orcas’ favorite food, are also listed under the ESA.

    In photos taken from a drone, released last fall, the whales appear to be in good health:

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/killer-whales-enjoy-rebound-in-health-5-more-orcas-counted-in-seattle-area/

    Evan Bush: 206-464-2253 or ebush@seattletimes.com

    on Twitter: @EvanBush.

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/puget-sound-orca-numbers-rise-fast-after-30-year-low-in-2014/

  • Seattle Times: Puget Sound’s killer whales looking good

    orca.drone copyThe J, K, and L pods of southern-resident killer whales appear to be in robust health, new photographs show, and several appear to be pregnant, scientists say.

    By Lynda V. Mapes
    Seattle Times environment reporter

    Puget Sound’s most celebrated residents — the J, K, and L pods of southern-resident killer whales — are looking good.

    The 82 endangered whales are fat and sleek, and several appear to be pregnant. The news was revealed by photogrammetry <http://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/podcasts/2015/10/uav_killer_whale.html> : measurements made from photographs that help scientists understand the health of whales and other wildlife.

    In the case of the orcas, photos and videos taken this summer using a drone about the size of a large pizza reveal the animals are looking robust.

    The information is particularly important as a warm El Niño climate pattern sets up along the West Coast, which could lead to declines in salmon runs, especially chinook, the preferred food of Seattle’s picky cetaceans. Other orca whales will eat seals, but not the orcas that frequent Puget Sound. They not only confine their diet mostly to salmon, but specifically the best quality, high-fat chinook.

    The situation of one endangered species relying on another animal that is also struggling for survival — chinook salmon — as its primary prey has added to the plight of the orcas. The whales are among the eight most endangered species in the country, and are trying to survive in waters crowded with shipping traffic, tainted by stormwater runoff and other pollution. Orcas are among the most contaminated marine mammals in the world, carrying residues of pesticides, flame retardants, industrial coolants and solvents.

    Southern-resident populations dropped last December to 78 whales, a 30-year low, prompting concern. Photos in 2008 and 2013 also revealed a decline in the condition of the southern residents, and the loss of several calves.

    But this summer’s births and the animals’ apparent good condition offer hope, according to experts gathered to release the photos Wednesday at the Vancouver, B.C., Aquarium. The photos also offer a baseline to judge the animals’ health going forward.
         Scientists used a hexacopter drone the size of a large pizza to photograph and measure all 81 southern resident killer whales in the San Juan Islands. (Video courtesy of NOAA Fisheries & Vancouver Aquarium)   

    The photos were transformational for scientists getting their first close-up look at southern-resident killer whales going about their daily lives.

    “They make visual the social bonds between these whales; they spend most of their time traveling so close together they can touch,” said Lance Barrett-Lennard, senior marine-mammal scientist at the aquarium.

    “It makes them look very fragile … You cease to see them as these big black and white animals that can eat anything in the ocean, they are fragile animals and we have to take care of them.”

    The connection between the health of the orcas and salmon is well established.

    A 2014 special report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on southern-resident killer whales pointed to limited salmon populations, vessel traffic and noise, and chemical contamination as the main threats to the whales. They have been listed for protection under the Endangered Species Act since 2005 but their numbers have continued to decline.

    It is a unique family group, sharing its own language and greeting ceremonies. Recent research reveals southern residents will eat chum and even bottom fish if there is nothing else, but their preferred diet is chinook salmon. Scales and fish tissue samples from fish kills by orcas has enabled researchers to trace those fish to Canada’s Fraser River in the summer, and the Upper Columbia and Snake River in the winter.

    That information can help researchers understand what the orcas need to survive, said Brad Hanson, a wildlife biologist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle who tracks the orcas’ diet and travels.
     
    One orca male Hanson tagged and tracked in the winter of 2012-13 ranged up and down the coast as far as California at least three times, and hung around the mouth of the Columbia River just in time for the spring chinook run — the biggest and fattiest salmon of them all.

    “We know those orcas are hungry,” said Joseph Bogaard, executive director of the Save Our Wild Salmon in Seattle, which, with other conservation groups, is pushing for removal of four dams on the Lower Snake River to boost salmon runs for the whales.

    “It is not just any salmon anywhere,” Bogaard said. “It is delivering the fish that are very important to them, the fatty fish that provide them what they need and that already fit within their known set of behaviors.” The Snake is the Columbia’s largest tributary, and the stronghold for chinook.

    Protecting that food source may be critical to ensure killer-whale population stability and survival for the southern residents, notes Sam Wasser, a conservation biologist at the University of Washington.

    He has noticed in his research on orcas that thyroid hormone levels that set metabolic rates are highest when the orcas arrive in late spring, suggesting the whales are arriving in Puget Sound after feeding on a rich food source: spring runs of Columbia chinook salmon.

    The level goes down as the Fraser River chinook runs decline in the fall, further corroborating the nutritional impact of chinook on the orcas.

    Lynne Barre, branch chief for the protected resources division in NOAA Fisheries’ Seattle Office, said the photos revealed both good and bad news.

    The photos confirmed the survival of a total of five new calves in the southern-resident families this year.

    “But they are only at 82 whales and they are not growing at the rate we would like to see, or where they need to be to get to recovery.”

    She said the photos can be used with other data, including the diet studies, to better understand how management decisions can be made to help the orcas survive.

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/killer-whales-enjoy-rebound-in-health-5-more-orcas-counted-in-seattle-area/

  • Seattle Times: Researchers tracking killer whales took this video of a new calf from the endangered orca population

    orca.videoBy Hal Bernton

    NOAA Fisheries researchers tracking killer whales off the Northwest coast took this video of a new calf from the endangered wild southern resident orca population that spends much of its time in Puget Sound. These whales often make winter forays along the Washington and Oregon coasts, and good weather and ocean conditions gave researchers excellent access during a three-week cruise, according to a statement released by NOAA Fisheries.

    The research crew observed the calf with other whales in the L-pod, one of three families of southern resident killer whales, according to Brad Hanson, a biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries.

    This is the third calf documented this year for the southern residents. Hanson told the Associated Press last month that the baby looks great and was very active when seen.

    The scientists, who recently completed the cruise, worked on board a NOAA research ship based in Newport, Ore. Some of the whales were tagged, so scientists were able to follow the whales with the aid of satellite technology. At times, the scientists worked out of a Zodiac boat that allowed them to scoop up scat and bits of prey left behind as they researched the orcas’ diets, according to Michael Milstein, a NOAA Fisheries spokesman.

    “They were able to be with the whales 24 hours a day for a few stretches, and they were really happy about that,” Milstein said.

    The southern resident killer whales were designated as endangered in 2005. Possible factors in their population decline include the quantity and quality of their prey, as well as toxic chemicals and disturbance from sound and vessel traffic, according to NOAA Fisheries.
     
     Hal Bernton

    http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/footage-of-new-baby-orca-off-washington-coast/

  • Seattle Times: Southern resident orcas that frequent Puget Sound may not survive without breaching the Lower Snake River dams to help the salmon the orcas live on, scientists say.

    By Lynda V. Mapes
    Seattle Times environment reporter

    Dam.Snake River DamLeading killer-whale scientists and researchers are calling for removal of four dams on the Lower Snake River and a boost of water over the dams to save southern resident killer whales from extinction.
    The scientists sent a letter Monday to Gov. Jay Inslee and co-chairs of a governor’s task force on orca recovery.

    The whales need chinook — their primary prey — year round, scientists state in their letter, and the spring chinook runs in particular returning to the Columbia and Snake are among the most important. That is because of the size, fat content and timing of those fish, making them critical for the whales to carry them over from the lean months of winter to the summer runs in the Fraser River, the scientists wrote.

    The need for Columbia and Snake river fish is so acute, “we believe that restoration measures in this watershed are an essential piece of a larger orca conservation strategy. Indeed, we believe that southern resident orca survival and recovery may be impossible to achieve without it.”

    Based on the science and the urgency of the current threats confronting the southern residents, the scientists recommended two top priorities for the task force in its recommendations for orca recovery: Immediately initiate processes to increase the spill of water over the dams on the Columbia and Snake, to create more natural river conditions, and to breach the Lower Snake River dams.

    The letter comes as the death of three southern resident orcas in four months last summer, one from L pod and two in J pod, have added fuel to the long running-campaign to free the Snake.

    Lower Snake River dam removal has been debated in the region for decades as a way to boost salmon runs. Three federal judges in a row in five rulings since 1994 also have called for an overhaul of hydropower operations at eight federal dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers to boost salmon survival, including a serious look at dam removal. The latest court review now underway will not be concluded until 2021 and calls for NOAA, the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), which markets power from the dams, and other agencies to take a serious look at dam removal.

    However, the scientists call for urgent action now because the orcas are continuing to decline and need food. “Orca need more chinook salmon available on a year-round basis as quickly as possible,” the scientists wrote.
    As orca advocates joined forces with dam busters, BPA has pushed back. In a recent press briefing, BPA managers said the Columbia and Snake produce only some of the fish the orcas use, and that the four Lower Snake River dams are important to the region.

    However, the reliance by orca whales on spring chinook from the Columbia and Snake in particular is well documented, the scientists wrote.

    All three pods are spending less time in their spring and summer habitat of the San Juan Islands, and more time off the coast, because of diminished Puget Sound and Fraser River chinook runs. Their travels reflect their search for food. The whales depend on chinook from rivers all over Puget Sound as well as the from the Fraser, Columbia and Snake rivers.

    Chinook recovery has been a long struggle in the Columbia and Snake rivers, where hatchery fish make up most of the runs. Hatchery chinook recently have been surging, data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows. Yet even good returns are a fraction of historic numbers. Wild runs — the basis for long-term recovery in the Columbia and Snake — have remained far below the level of adult returns required for recovery — let alone to prevent extinction.

    Signing the letter were Sam Wasser, director of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington, and Deborah Giles, who is resident scientist at the University of Washington Friday Harbor Labs and the science and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca.

    Their research shows a steady increase in mortality and orca pregnancy failure. Those two factors in combination have led to the recent decline in the southern resident orca population, which today stands at just 74 individual whales — a 35-year low.

    Also signing the letter was David Bain, chief scientist for the nonprofit Orca Conservancy, and Katherine Ayers and other scientists whose work has documented that vessel noise disrupts orca feeding. That disruption, as well as toxins in the food chain, are more harmful to orcas when they do not have enough food, because the orcas when hungry metabolize the toxins stored in their fat.

    The letter comes as the governor’s task force on orca recovery is set to convene its final meeting and public hearing before making its recommendations to Gov. Jay Inslee, due Nov. 1.

    The meetings are scheduled for all day Wednesday and Thursday at the Tacoma Landmark Convention Center at 47 St. Helens Ave., in the Plaza Grand Ballroom.

    The agenda includes three hours scheduled for public testimony between 5 and 8 p.m. on Wednesday.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/orca-survival-may-be-impossible-without-lower-snake-river-dam-removal-scientists-say/

    Lynda V. Mapes:
    206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @LyndaVMapes. Lynda specializes in coverage of the environment, natural history, and Native American tribes.

  • Seattle Times: Southern-resident killer whales lose newborn calf, and another youngster is ailing

    orca.with.dead.calfBy Lynda Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter
    July 24, 2018

    One calf lost within half an hour, and another youngster is ailing in the critically endangered population of southern-resident killer whales. A new calf born to the critically endangered southern-resident killer whales Tuesday died within a half-hour of its birth.

    The loss of the calf reported by Ken Balcomb of the Center for Whale Research continues the reproductive failure of the southern residents, which have not managed a successful pregnancy in three years.

    The calf’s mother, J35, was seen Tuesday carrying her dead calf as she swam, refusing to let her go, hour upon hour, Balcomb said. “Maybe this is her protest.

    “I told the governor it was going to happen,” Balcomb said. “More and more will happen. We are losing them … The whales are not going to stand for it. They are going to pass away.”

    Balcomb, a member of Gov. Jay Inslee’s task force on orca recovery said steps need to be taken immediately to get the whales more salmon — their preferred food.

    Up to two-thirds of pregnancies were lost among the southern residents from 2007 to 2014. A multiyear study linked the orca population’s low reproductive success to stress due to low, or unreliable abundance of chinook salmon.

    “The (southern residents) have very little reproductive potential left, and we are wasting it in a process that cannot succeed unless thinking leaves the box,” Balcomb said. “We have to call it quits or fight like hell to restore wild salmon in as many ecosystems as possible as soon as possible. Hatchery fish are catchable and edible, but not sustainable.”

    On Tuesday, J35 swam as she balanced the stillborn calf on her head.

    “The dead calf would occasionally slip off her (head) and sink, at which time J35 would dive down and retrieve the carcass,” he said.

    Meanwhile the health of another member of the pod, J50, is also raising concern.

    Brad Hanson, wildlife biologist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, was alongside the whale on Saturday with a petri dish on a 20-footlong pole, collecting droplets of her breath.

    Delivered weeknights, this email newsletter gives you a quick recap of the day's top stories and need-to-know news, as well as intriguing photos and topics to spark conversation as you wind down from your day. “She is very thin, there is no question about her body condition, it is very emaciated,” Hanson said. “We are very, very concerned. It is hard to say at this point what her long-term likelihood of survivorship is.”

    The breath samples are intended to diagnose whether the whale is ill. Biologist Deborah Giles, research scientist for University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca, told Hanson last week that she smelled foul breath coming from the direction of the whale while out on the water collecting fecal samples from the whales for analysis of their diet.

    J50 is nearly 4 years old. She was the first of the “baby boom” among the southern residents that caused so much celebration in late 2014. Of the 11 babies born between December 2014 and Jan 2016, only five are known to still be alive.

    J50 is 4 years old and is the size of a 1-year-old, Giles said.

    “In my opinion she is definitely not getting enough to eat,” Giles said. “It will be a miracle if she survives.”

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/southern-resident-killer-whales-lose-newborn-calf-and-another-youngster-is-ailing/

     

  • Seattle Times: Southern-resident killer whales’ inbreeding may devastate the population

    orca10April 18, 2018

    Just two males fathered more than half the calves born since 1990 to Puget Sound’s killer-whale population, and few females are giving birth in the three pods.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter

    Just two male whales fathered more than half the calves born since 1990 in the population of southern-resident killer whales, a sign of inbreeding, scientists have learned.

    “It was a shocker to find out two guys are doing all of the work,” said Ken Balcomb, director of the Center for Whale Research and an author on a paper published this week in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Animal Conservation. The findings are based on a new genetic analysis of the whales that frequent Washington’s Salish Sea and Puget Sound.

    Already a small population of 76 animals, the southern residents are acting more like a population of only 20 or 30, with few animals breeding, said the lead author, Michael Ford, a conservation biologist at NOAA Fisheries Northwest Fisheries Science Center.

    The paper builds on earlier work and raises new questions about whether inbreeding is another factor contributing to the southern residents’ difficulties, Ford said in an interview.
    “We found kind of a hint of a suggestion that more inbred individuals survive at a lower rate,” Ford said. “But that is uncertain, and we want to understand that better, to learn if there is a negative relationship between being inbred and the probability of survival.”

    Scientists discovered through DNA analysis of skin and fecal samples that just two whales, J1 and L41, are the fathers of more than half the other sampled whales born since 1990.
    Unlike many other wildlife species, southern-resident killer whales don’t leave their families as they mature to find mates and new territory. They stick together for life — and even breed with family members, scientists have discovered.

    Genetic analysis indicates mating occurred between a mother and son in the J pod; a father and daughter in the J pod; half-siblings in the L and K pods, and between an uncle and a half-niece in the L and K pods.

    “I don’t want to give the impression that it’s necessarily a cause for giving up on the population,” Ford said of inbreeding.

    Staying with their family groups for life may be an advantage to the whales, allowing them to hunt together and share food.

    The southern residents are long-lived. Males typically live for about 30 years but can live as long as 50 to 60 years. Females typically live about 50 years but can live as long as a century. The matriarch of the southern residents J2, estimated to be perhaps as old as 100 years, making her the oldest known orca in the world, was declared dead by the end of 2017 when researchers had not seen her since October, 2016.

    What is most remarkable to him, Balcomb said, isn’t even the inbreeding in the population, but the cratering birthrate, and small number of breeding females among the southern residents. No babies have been born and survived in the southern residents’ J, K and L pods since 2015, Balcomb said. One J pod whale was born early in 2016, but it did not survive. Half (three of six) of the baby whales that were born in the “baby boom” in 2015 also perished. And the whales are not on track to boost productivity.

    “There are really only 10 of the 27 females that are now producing calves,” Balcomb said. Those births also occur at longer intervals of one nearly every 10 years. It used to be about one every five years, Balcomb said.

    Further, even assuming there are no more deaths in the pods — not likely — there are only nine young females that will mature into reproducing age in the next 10 years, while just about as many females will age out of breeding, Balcomb said.

    That is the most optimistic scenario over the next decade, he said.

    That trend, combined with the decline in the whales’ primary food source — chinook salmon — causes him grave concern.

    “I don’t want to make it sound hopeless,” Balcomb said. “But the bad news is that with current trends in southern-resident demographics and prey resources, the situation may be unsolvable and lead to extinction.”

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/southern-resident-killer-whales-inbreeding-may-devastate-the-population/

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com

  • Seattle Times: Struggling orcas heavily rely on urban chinook from Seattle-area rivers, new analysis shows

    Orca or Killer Whale with salmon by Ken Balcomb 600x433Southern-resident orcas depend on a wide diversity of chinook-salmon runs throughout a big geographic range, according to the analysis by NOAA Fisheries and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times environment reporter
    July 24, 2018

    Struggling orca whales need even urban chinook to survive, new findings show.

    A new look at just where orcas are eating big kings reveals the importance of rivers in north and south Puget Sound to the orcas’ survival. Even the Puyallup, Green and Duwamish rivers count for the top predators.

    The Nooksack, Elwha, Dungeness, Skagit, Stillaguamish and Snohomish to the north and Nisqually, Puyallup, Green, Duwamish, Deschutes and Hood Canal river systems to the south were among the rivers most important to the whales for providing the chinook that the critically endangered southern-resident killer whales eat, according to the analysis by NOAA Fisheries and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. The preliminary findings also shed new light on the wide variety of chinook stocks needed by the whales. Rather than being animals only of the Salish Sea, including Puget Sound, the southern residents also are targeting chinook runs headed to rivers all up and down the coast.

    The analysis was built by integrating the results of drone surveys of the whales that reveal body condition with DNA analysis of scat and scales and other food scraps collected by researchers in the field.

    Scientists considered three factors in ranking the relative importance of rivers for the orcas’ diet: the home range of the whales, evidence that the whales prey on chinook from a river that overlaps with their home range, and evidence that the river is feeding the orcas in winter. Rivers that helped orcas through the lean winter months were given extra weight in the ranking.

    Drone photography has shown that the whales seem to have a harder time finding food in winter, judging by their skinnier appearance in May, compared with images of the same whales captured in September after they have been feeding on summer fish runs, said John Durban, Leader, Cetacean Health and Life History Program at NOAA’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla, California.

    Durban has been using drones to document the body condition of the southern residents since 2008. The photos document a shifting baseline toward skinnier whales, particularly mothers and calves, Durban said. “There is a growing recognition they are in poor condition presently,” he said.

    The southern residents rely solely on fish for their diet, and preferentially target chinook salmon, the biggest, fattiest fish. The southern-resident orca population is unique in the world and down to only 75 animals, in part because they don’t have enough food to survive. Several studies have nailed lack of chinook as the leading factor in the whales’ continued decline.

    Wide-ranging top predators capable of swimming many miles a day, the southern residents can sample their environment and cruise to fishing grounds targeting multiple runs across a broad geography in every season of the year.

    The list of rivers is intended to identify chinook-salmon stocks important to southern-resident killer whales to assist in setting priorities to increase critical prey for the whales. “They are particularly in need of additional food right now because of their decline and lack of population growth,” said Mike Ford, director of the conservation biology division of the NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle.

    Research has shown that the whales will eat other fish — chum, coho, steelhead, halibut and lingcod. But their preference overwhelmingly is chinook — and in particular, runs that are themselves endangered or threatened, including Puget Sound chinook. While the analysis clearly shows chinook is the orcas’ main food source, it also underscores that it will take a broad recovery effort to supply the orcas’ needs for a diverse range of chinook stocks across their home range.

    “One of the things that has been challenging about the whole prey problem is you can’t point to just a single stock and say, if we only fixed that, that would do it,” Ford said. “They utilize a wide variety of stocks.”

    Pumping up hatchery production to get more chinook in the rivers has to be weighed against the danger of swamping wild chinook runs also struggling for survival.

    NOAA has been working to reform hatchery practices to protect vulnerable wild fish, “and we don’t want to impact that at all with new hatchery releases for southern resident killer whales,” said Lynne Barre, director of the Seattle branch of the protected resources division for NOAA.

    Any new hatchery programs, such as those that are under consideration by the governor’s task force on orca recovery, would have to be federally approved under genetic management plans intended to protect wild fish. In some instances, it might make more sense to focus on habitat restoration rather than increasing hatchery releases, Barre said. “It has to be evaluated on a watershed level.

    “It’s not just ‘let’s make more fish to feed the whales,’ hold on, there are a few things to consider.’”

    She said the list is intended to help managers make smart investments in salmon recovery. “It gives us a better indication of where we can invest to benefit the whales.”

    The model for the analysis was developed in cooperation with NOAA Fisheries Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, whose scientists generated much of the data.

    Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2515 or lmapes@seattletimes.com

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/struggling-orcas-heavily-rely-on-urban-chinook-from-seattle-area-rivers-new-analysis-shows/

     

  • Seattle Times: Ten years after ESA listing, killer whale numbers falling

    2025279620

    Puget Sound’s already small killer-whale population has declined in the decade since it was protected under the Endangered Species Act. Some experts view the death this month of a pregnant female orca as an alarm bell for the region’s southern residents.

    By Craig Welch, Seattle Times environment reporter

    December 20, 2014

    The death of J32, the pregnant orca known as Rhapsody, is renewing concern among some scientists about the fate of the rest of Puget Sound's southern resident killer whales.

    He’s trailed them and photographed them, mapped their family trees and counted their offspring, coming to identify individuals by their markings, sometimes even ascribing personalities based on behavior.

    For much of the past 40 years, the dean of San Juan Island orca research has vacillated between hope and frustration about the future of Puget Sound’s southern resident killer whales.

    But the death this month of J32, an 18-year-old orca known as Rhapsody — who was pregnant with a nearly full-term female calf — is pushing Ken Balcomb closer to despair.

    “The death of this particular whale for me shows that we’re at a point in history where we need to wake up to what we have to consider: ‘Do we want whales or not?’ ” said Balcomb, with the Center for Whale Research.

    With 2015 marking the 10th anniversary of the government’s decision to protect these orcas under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), the numbers certainly don’t look good.

    The population of J, K and L pods has dropped from a high of 99 in 1995 to 77 this month — the lowest since 1985. No whale has successfully given birth in more than two years — a first in the decades since whales have been monitored. And the small number of female whales able and likely to give birth reduces the potential for a speedy rebound.

    In fact scientists had hoped young J32, who was just coming into adulthood, would help turn that pattern around for decades to come.

    “We’ve not only lost her, but we’ve lost all of her future reproductive potential, which will potentially have an impact on the population,” said Brad Hanson, killer-whale expert with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Northwest Fisheries Science Center. “That’s disconcerting.”
    Even the apparent cause of J32’s demise — an infection spread by the death of her unborn calf — leads Balcomb to suspect the worst. He thinks the whales’ chief source of food, chinook salmon, is in such short supply that J32 relied on its own blubber, releasing stored contaminants that harmed her immune and reproductive systems.

    But officials overseeing whale recovery say it’s too soon to say the situation is, in fact, dire. The root cause of the infection’s spread is not yet clear and may prove complex. It’s not known if the lack of successful new births is a trend or anomaly. And whale numbers have been lower than this before and bounced back, suggesting to some that there is room for optimism.

    After all, said Will Stelle, West Coast administrator for NOAA Fisheries, Snake River sockeye runs were so depleted in 1992 that only one fish — known as Lonesome Larry — returned to spawn in Idaho’s Redfish Lake. This year, after decades of work by scientists, 1,600 fish returned, nearly 500 of which were naturally spawned.

    “That’s not to say the issues around Snake River sockeye are the same — they’re not,” Stelle said. “But if you look in the rearview mirror, you’ll see that in fact over the last decade we’ve made substantial progress in building the basic foundation for a long-term conservation strategy for southern residents. We’re by no means there. But a decade ago we were in the dark ages.

    “This is not the time to light our hair on fire, or to run about saying ‘The sky is falling, the sky is falling,’ ” he said. “What is really important here is to take the long view.”

    But even Stelle agreed a central question remains: How much time do orcas have?

    Salmon declines
    J32 was born into a family where adult females tended to die early. She was the first and, presumably, only calf of a 15-year-old whale that died two years later. The matriarch of the family died a year after that at 37 — early for a species with a life span similar to humans.

    But it’s a sad irony that this salmon-eating machine wound up dead in front of a chinook-fishing charter business in British Columbia.

    Long before her carcass was towed ashore on the east side of Vancouver Island near Comox, B.C., early this month, scientists had begun to wrestle with the role salmon declines may be playing in whale survival.

    “The reality is, the basic problem is food,” Balcomb said.

    In the 1960s and 1970s, an orca population that a century earlier may have numbered anywhere from 140 to 200 was decimated by the aquarium trade. Entrepreneurs drove orcas into net pens in coves and sold them to marine parks around the globe until their numbers had plummeted to just 71 in 1974.

    Only in the last 10 years have researchers truly documented their troubles.

    “Since then we’ve improved our understanding of the individuals themselves, their population dynamics, their geographic distribution and diet and pollutant loading and contaminants and the effects of all that on productivity,” Stelle said.

    But two of the whales’ three biggest problems — the buildup of pollutants such as DDT and polychlorinated biphenyls in their blubber, and disturbance by marine traffic — appear to be worsened by a third, a reduction in available prey.

    These whales can eat sockeye and halibut, but overwhelmingly prefer fatty chinook from Puget Sound and Canada’s Fraser River, distinguishing them from other fish by using sonar to sense differences in the animals’ swim bladders. And Puget Sound chinook numbers have dropped to about 10 percent of their historic high. They, too, are listed for protection under the ESA.

    When killer whales are hungry, research suggests they may metabolize poisons built up in their fat over years, and expend energy they can’t afford if they have to avoid disturbance from boats and other traffic.

    Yet scientists continue to disagree on how much of a role that has ever played in any deaths. Few whales wash up dead for them to study. Among those that have, only one — Rhapsody’s uncle, J18 — offered clues that led some, but not all, to believe hunger was a factor in his death.
    Government scientists certainly agree that a diminished food supply is a major issue. But they’re still running tests on J32’s organs, skin and fatty tissue to help narrow down her health issues more precisely.

    “If southern residents are on a lower nutritional plane, then the effects of contaminants may be allowed to cause some sort of problem in a random way that disease events would be able to take over,” Hanson said. “But a lot of times what we’re seeing is these skinny animals and a lot of people say ‘these whales are starving to death.’ But it’s not that simple.”

    For example, whales hunt in groups and sometimes share prey, and may give away food to others that they themselves could use.

    Regardless of whether food availability helped trigger her death, government researchers share some of Balcomb’s concerns about the state of the population.

    “It’s not so much that there are fewer reproductive-age females now than there used to be,” said NOAA whale scientist Mike Ford, “but rather that they may not be giving birth as often as expected.”

    Deep concern
    For Balcomb, the loss of J32 suggests it’s time to consider drastic measures, such as a ban or steep curtailment in chinook fishing, even though fishing is likely the least of the threats chinook face.

    “It’s a wake-up call — we know what the problem is, whether it’s dams or fishing or habitat destruction,” he said. “It’s just what happens when millions of people move into the watershed. (But) stopping fishing, at least for a while, is something we can do immediately.”

    Stelle, whose agency helps oversee chinook-harvest levels, said fishing has been curtailed already by about 30 percent in agreements with the Canadians, but he couldn’t conceive of a day when he’d seriously consider an outright ban, which would violate tribal-treaty rights. Still, he doesn’t rule out even more drastic cuts.

    Stelle, like most experts, maintains that one of the hardest problems to address for orcas is controlling stormwater so even more contaminants aren’t flushed into the Sound, where they can work their way up the killer whale food chain. That is likely an expensive fix.

    The other is reducing development in areas harmful to chinook survival — estuaries, floodplains, areas that alter drainage into river beds. But that problem is made ever more complex by the fact that dozens of government entities oversee all that decision-making.

    “The particular challenges I think that are daunting can best be illustrated by driving south on I-5 and looking around,” he said. “That built-out landscape fundamentally poses the most significant challenge for us. It is: How do we reconcile the continued human-population growth projected for the basin with trying to rebuild the productivity of the most important habitats for orcas and their prey.”

    Martha Kongsgaard, who leads the Puget Sound Partnership, a government agency charged with cleaning up the Sound, agreed J32’s death puts into relief just how much is at stake if the region doesn’t pick up the pace in tackling these problems.

    “You don’t want to raise the alarm every time a whale dies, but I think we are really on the brink of possibly losing them,” she said. “And we ignore the orcas’ incredible totemic and symbolic power at our peril. They’re telling us it’s an emergency right now.”

  • Seattle Times: The great salmon mystery, Scientists go to unprecedented lengths to find out where chinook go

    July 14, 2019

    By Lynda V. Mapes 

    CohoFernsAboard the Zephyr, along the Washington coast — Flashing silver, the salmon loomed up from the deep, hooked and thrashing.

    With a tug, scientists hauled it aboard and quickly dunked the fish in a cooler full of anesthetizing knockout potion: They had plans for this big chinook. This fish was going places, and they wanted to know where.

    For as long as there have been fishermen and fish, people have wanted to know where salmon go in the sea and why, but their travels have always been a mystery. As the southern resident orcas that frequent Puget Sound battle extinction, both the whales and their primary prey, chinook salmon, are the focus of concern.

    With a $1.2 million research grant from the U.S. Navy, scientists are deploying new tools to help scientists track chinook in part to better understand the travels of the whales, which are shifting.

    Usually reliable summer residents of the inshore waters of the San Juan Islands, this year the whales have been seen only for a couple of brief trips since May, an unprecedented orca dearth possibly linked to a lack of adequate prey. The orcas are believed to be traveling the outer coast — in search of chinook.

    Scientists are looking, too: This spring they dropped 115 receivers into the sea, weighed down with 26,000 pounds of sand in burlap bags, 3 to 10 nautical miles off the Washington Coast to track tagged fish. It’s a risky and ambitious project that starts with tossing a lot of expensive equipment in the drink.

    “Seven pallets full, bloody fingers, it was just madness,” said David Huff, Estuary and Ocean Ecology Program Manager at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    “I went out and dumped $400,000 in the ocean. And I have to just trust it will still be there,” he said of deploying the receivers and other equipment. “What if it’s not? What if there’s no data? There is so much uncertainty.”

    But that’s science on the open sea. “It’s a hostile environment,” Huff said. “A dangerous place to work.”

    The scientists placed the receivers about 2.8 miles apart in a grid from Neah Bay to Westport. Each is about the size of a 1-liter bottle. By summer’s end, the scientists on the so-called Salmon Ocean Behavior and Distribution study also hope to tag 300 fish with a pinger — an acoustic tag that makes a crisp knocking noise — detected by the array of receivers.

    The equipment on the sea floor will be listening for the tagged fish as they swim by.

    Ten other fish will be tracked by satellite, everywhere they go. Scientists also will fly an underwater, unmanned glider periodically over the array to track tagged fish and record environmental information. The hope is to form diverse sources that piece together a picture not only of the movements of salmon but the possible mechanisms behind them, from the availability of food to ocean conditions including temperature.

    But first, they’ve got to get tags inside the fish.

    On a recent early morning at sea, biologist Joe Smith of the science center and Bill Matsubu, a scientist with National Research Council working with Huff on the project, checked on the chinook just caught aboard the Zephyr, a few miles from the toothy gray pinnacles off the coast of Shi Shi Beach. The gleaming fish was calm but not knocked out — just right for surgery.

    Lifting the fish to a work station set up on the back deck, they gently flushed an anesthetic over its gills while making a slit long as a pinkie nail in its belly.

    The fish never flinched as they poked in the battery-powered tag, a smooth, cylinder about an inch long and big around as a pencil eraser.

    Orca can hear the tag pinging. How or if they would respond to it is not known. An orca could eat a tagged fish with the tag passing through their system without harm, Huff said.

    With a few quick sutures, the fish was ready for the recovery box, another cooler full of circulating seawater. Within minutes from when it was caught, Huff slid the tagged fish from his hands, back into the sea. The tag is not expected to change the behavior of the fish — in part because of its size, relative to the mass of the fish, Huff said.

    The 2-year-old chinook now had an individual tracking number: 7512. Any time it’s within about third of a mile of the receiver, its travels will be logged. That’s new: a glimpse into the days in the life of a fish, live from inside 7512.

    The data could revolutionize our knowledge of chinook behavior at sea.

    In the past, information on where salmon travel has been largely based on coded-wire tags implanted in young fish at a hatchery, and dug out of the head of the fish as an adult when it’s caught. Such a tag tells nothing about fish that aren’t caught, or about areas where there aren’t fisheries. And nothing about what happened in between getting tagged, and getting caught. The new fish telemetry is going to help fill in some of those blanks.

    Tom Quinn, 65, is a professor at the University of Washington School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences who literally wrote the book on the behavior and ecology of Pacific salmon and trout.

    To him, two years of tracking data on an individual fish is an incredible bounty.

    He remembers when following tagged fish around meant swigging coffee to stay awake, wearing headphones and following pings until the tags’ batteries died, within usually two days.

    New battery technology has changed everything, said Quinn, aboard the Zephyr to observe the work by scientists now in the jobs he helped them prepare for in their graduate work at the UW.

    Quinn has long been fascinated with the migration of salmon. From freshwater to the sea, salmon undertake a miraculous journey: “They haven’t been there before, and they are with no one who has ever been there before,” Quinn said of out-migrating salmon. “At least with birds, they can look down, and follow the adults who have been there.”

    Analysis of coded wire tagging data has shown certain types of salmon from certain rivers go more or less to the same broad areas of distribution, using the earth’s magnetic field to guide them. But salmon may also have a mapped sense of the ocean, Quinn said. Even stocks raised in hatcheries and planted outside of the home rivers of their DNA still head to the “right” place in the ocean for salmon of their kind.

  • Seattle Times: Three southern resident orcas missing, presumed dead

    August 7, 2019

    By Lynda V. Mapes 

    Orca.HostileWaters.2.24Three more southern resident orcas are reported missing and presumed dead, according to the Center for Whale Research.

    Ken Balcomb, founding director of the center, said the missing whales are J17, K25 and L84. In his annual population survey, Balcomb reported the population of endangered southern residents is now 73.

    Due to the scarcity of suitable chinook-salmon prey, the southern residents also rarely visit the core waters of their designated critical habitat: Puget Sound, Georgia Strait and the inland reach of the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

    It has been more than a month since the whales have been seen in their summer waters, and L pod has not been in the inland waters of the Salish Sea this summer.

    J17 is a 42-year-old J pod matriarch and mother of Tahlequah (J35), who carried her dead calf for an unprecedented 17 days last year. She was reportedly not in good body condition last winter, perhaps from stress. She is survived by two daughters, J35 and J53, and son J44.

    Her death puts her family at risk because older female whales help feed their families. Sons in particular, at any age, are eight times more likely to die within a year if they lose their mothers.

    Also missing is 28-year-old K25, an adult male who was not in good body condition last winter. He is survived by two sisters, K20 and K27, and a brother, K34.

    A 29-year-old male, L84, has been missing all summer. L pod has not come into the Salish Sea yet this summer. L84 was the last surviving member of a matriline of 11 whales.

    The population of southern residents is now the lowest it has been since the live-capture era ended in the 1970s.

    The whales are declining because of lack of adequate food, particularly chinook salmon; disturbance and noise by boats; and toxins in their environment.

  • Seattle Times: Washington state to regulate federal dams on Columbia, Snake to cool hot water, aid salmon

    January 31, 2019

    By Lynda V. Mapes 

    Salmon.DeadSummer temperatures in portions of the Columbia and Snake rivers are up by 1.5 degrees Celsius since 1960 because of the combined effects of climate change and dams, according to a new draft analysis by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

    Temperatures are so high, sometimes exceeding 70 degrees, that they kill migrating salmon.

    The state Department of Ecology on Wednesday initiated a public comment period on proposed new regulations on federal dam operations. Ecology’s goal is to for the first time initiate work toward meeting state water-quality standards, including temperature, at federal dams on the Columbia and Snake. Washington has long had an uppermost temperature limit of 68 degrees (20 degrees Celsius) in state waters, but it’s never been enforced at federal dams.

    “This is a big deal,” said Heather Bartlett, head of Ecology’s water-quality division. “We want for the first time to have parity at federal dams with the nonfederal dams. They are either meeting state standards, or they have set up a strategy to meet them.”

    It is up to dam operators to determine how they would come into compliance with state standards, under plans such as those already implemented at dams run by private investor-owned utilities, irrigation districts, public utility districts and municipalities.

    “It’s a path, not a light switch,” Bartlett said of the compliance process, which is intended to strike a balance between environmental protection and energy generation.

    But some were skeptical about how much can really be done.

    Ritchie Graves, head of the hydropower division for the West Coast region at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said the Snake historically heated up in summer above the standard before the dams were built, with temperatures nearing 79 degrees at its confluence with the Columbia. What can be done with the dams in place today to modify temperature already is being done, Graves said.

    “It’s all well and good to say there is a new sheriff in town, [saying] we are going to get to 68 degrees, but I am not sure how you get there,” Graves said. “In the face of climate change, can you achieve that?”

    The state wants to ensure its standards are met, but recognizes the value of regional hydropower generation, Bartlett said.

    “The energy sector they fill is an important niche. I look at what we are doing as a good balance between the need to meet the state standard and the need to provide the region with cheap electricity,” she said.

    Action by the state to regulate federal dams is sure to stoke ongoing controversy over the structures, and their effect on salmon and orcas. Those are already the subject of litigation, legislation and lobbying before the state Legislature this session.

    Dams are important for hydropower, irrigation and barge transportation. But in summer their mileslong reservoirs can act like giant heat sinks. Portions of the rivers get hot — so hot they exceed in some places the state’s upper limit on temperature of 68 degrees for weeks at a time.

    Unprecedented Analysis

    In examining water-quality data from 2011-2016, EPA’s Region 10 office found river temperatures in August to exceed 68 degrees more than 90 percent of the time at seven of 11 dams on the Columbia, and two of four dams on the Lower Snake. The John Day dam is the worst, with on average 65 days each summer in which the river exceeds 68 degrees, measured in waters just below the dam, known as the tailrace.

    The agency looked at the source of the problem, and determined climate change and dams are the dominant forces raising river temperatures, with impacts that are an order of magnitude higher than any other influence. Nothing else, not inputs from tributaries, agricultural water withdrawals or permitted discharges to the river, came close.

    In addition to dams constructed between 1932 and 1982, the warming trend due to climate change has significantly affected the rivers since the 1960s, and the impacts continue to increase, the agency found. Climate change has increased summer temperatures in the Columbia and Snake by 1.5 degrees Celsius since 1960 with .5 degree margin of error, according to the EPA.

    HotWater.SeattleTimesThe EPA also modeled potential water temperatures under different conditions, and found that taking out the four Lower Snake River dams can dent the problem, bringing temperatures there into compliance in August. Nothing, however, was projected to fix the Lower Columbia River in August, where the best option for fish is protecting refuges of cold water that currently exist, particularly in tributaries.

    The EPA’s draft report was released to the state, tribes and federal agencies in December for peer review as part of a separate process long in the works for the EPA. The agency is also working for the first time to set temperature limits in the rivers under the Clean Water Act.

    Columbia Riverkeeper was successful in 2014 and again in 2017 in winning settlements that are spurring the EPA to issue pollution discharge permits for the Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation for operations of dams on the Columbia and Snake.

    It is the issuance of those permits, which Ecology now has under review, that opened the door for the state to regulate federal dam operators to work toward meeting all of Washington’s water quality standards. The public comment period closes on Feb. 19.

    Next, EPA will issue its permit, with Ecology’s conditions, for public review.

    Many are eager for Ecology to step into a regulatory role and work with dam operators to make progress on water temperatures at federal dams.

    “The temperature standard has been violated for some time,” said Dennis McLerran, an attorney advising Columbia Riverkeeper and a former administrator of EPA Region 10 under the Obama administration.

    Heat Kills

    The damaging effects of climate change and water temperature on salmon migration and spawning in the Columbia and Snake are well-known. Sockeye were slaughtered in the Columbia in 2015, a year of record heat and low flows, with thousands of fish dying before they could even make it back to their home tributaries to spawn.

    Steelhead were the next to suffer, struggling home in hot water and record low numbers in 2017.

    Scientists predict salmon are in for worse conditions as the climate bakes, particularly species at the southern edge of their range and traveling long distances to inland spawning grounds.

    The conditions faced in 2015, when 95 percent of sockeye headed to the Stanley Basin of Idaho died in the Columbia, were extreme in terms of drought, low flows and hot weather.

    Lower Columbia River waters are so warm that sockeye salmon have sought out the cool water trickling out of the Little White Salmon hatchery pipe outflow for relief. Many are diseased, including the sockeye swimming in the background, with large patches of fungus from warm-water exposure. In addition to dams constructed between 1932 and 1982, the warming trend due to climate change has significantly affected the rivers since the 1960s.

    But because of climate change, those could become typical conditions, scientists found in a 2018 paper published in the scientific journal Transactions of the American Fisheries Society.

    That is because climate change means more winter moisture comes as rain rather than snow. Less snowpack leads to lower stream flows earlier in summer, even as air temperatures warm. Warmer water also expands the range of predators, and warm water aids the spread of disease. If the water is hot enough for long enough, fish eventually become lethargic and die.

    Some federal agencies had a wait-and-see reaction to Ecology’s new role. At the Bureau of Reclamation, Michael Coffey, spokesman for the agency, said the bureau has an excellent relationship with Ecology, and was ready to work as required toward solutions.

    “I am sure when they are ready to sit down and have conversations with us, we are more than happy to find … solutions for the challenge we face,” Coffey said.

    Federal dam operators already are taking steps to moderate temperature at the dams, said David Wilson, a spokesman for the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets power from the dams. Cold water is released from the depths of the reservoir behind Dworshak Dam in Idaho in summer and provides significant cooling in the upper portion of the Lower Snake River. However, the cooling benefit diminishes toward the mouth of the Snake, the EPA analysis found.

    Pumps also have been installed to move cool water in to fish ladders at Lower Granite and Little Goose dams, also on the Lower Snake, Wilson said. On the ground, habitat work on both rivers also is underway to address changing climate conditions and anticipate what fish and wildlife will need to survive, Wilson said.

    Columbia Riverkeeper won another lawsuit last September, requiring the EPA to issue its first temperature limits for the Columbia and Snake. That work is ongoing, pending the result of an appeal from the U.S. Department of Justice to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

    It was for the development of those temperature limits that the EPA’s Region 10 office undertook the assessment of the effects of climate change on the rivers.

    McLerran said Ecology has an important role to play that can start making a difference now for orcas and salmon.

    “This is a chance to get a seat at the table … to address more water quality issues that are really impacting the salmon and the orcas. There are likely things that could help that doesn’t necessarily call the ultimate question on dam removal that could make a difference in salmon and orca recovery.”

    He envisions a gradual approach.

    “Let’s take a hard look at all the things that make a difference, knowing management for the river is changing, and see what could be done. We may reach a determination that we can’t meet the standard, and then there are harder questions to come.”

    The state Legislature already this session is smack in the middle of the state’s long-running conflict over the Lower Snake River dams, with a proposal from Gov. Jay Inslee to put $750,000 in the state budget to study the effects of dam removal. Ports and municipalities and public utility districts from Pasco to Lewiston have written Inslee strongly opposing the idea, which came out of his orca-recovery task force.

    “After decades of using other arguments in their attempts to justify removing the four Lower Snake River Dams some environmental groups have latched on to the plight of the orcas,” the letters state. ” … these groups are using the orcas to play on the public’s sympathies.”

    The Orca Salmon Alliance, a consortium of 17 environmental groups, also wrote to Inslee, urging that Ecology pursue its authority to implement water quality attainment plans at the dams.

    Both sides already are gearing up to make their case to lawmakers. Dam busters are organizing a Free the Snake Advocacy Day on Feb. 4, and the Washington Association of Public Utility Districts organized a “what you need to know” briefing for lawmakers about the Columbia and Snake river dams Wednesday, with briefings from dam operators and power marketers.

    Meanwhile, a fight over dam operations on both rivers has ground on in the federal courts for more than 20 years. A new environmental impact statement — including an analysis of the effects of the dams in the era of climate change — was court-ordered in 2016, and is underway.

    Federal agencies recently issued a new timetable for the review per an order from President Donald Trump. He demanded the new environmental impact statement for the federal hydropower system be completed by the end of 2020.

    His order lopped a year off the schedule agencies had requested to give them enough time for their work. Trump’s new schedule also truncated time for public review and comment by eight months.

  • Seattle Times: We won't give up as long as she doesn't—Orca mother carries dead calf for fourth day

    A grieving mother orca is holding tight to her calf on the fourth day since it died shortly after birth.
     
    By  Lynda V. Mapes J35 YET AGAIN
        
    SAN JUAN ISLANDS — Researchers continue to keep vigil Friday as an endangered orca mother carried her dead calf for a fourth-straight day in the Salish Sea, a heart-rending spectacle that has drawn worldwide attention.

    “It’s tough to watch and hard work, but we won’t give up as long as she doesn’t,” said Taylor Shedd, program coordinator for Soundwatch, who is watching over the mother and her calf.

    Southern-resident killer whales lose newborn calf, and another youngster is ailing
      
    Just after 1 p.m. Friday, the orca known as J35 was continuing to carry the dead calf on her rostrum, the area of her head just behind the nose.
      
    “Her breaths are deep and long,” Shedd said. “She takes a few seconds longer to surface than the other animals. I can’t even pretend to imagine what she’s going through, but it must be horrible. There’s not a whole lot we can do for her now, but anything we can do is worth it.”

    “To be very clear, nobody would ever take this calf from her, but if she leaves the calf and clearly moves on for an extended period of time, an attempt to recover the calf would be made,” Shedd said. “So that we can have a better understanding of what happened and hopefully come up with solutions or means to never let something like this happen again.”

    The orca is traveling with the rest of her family, each within 400 yards of each other.

    The younger whales, including her other calf, are foraging, and Shedd said he hoped they may be catching fish to feed her, but he could not tell for sure.

    “She is still pushing her calf, but doesn’t seem to be in the pattern that we left her in yesterday. Where she would drop the calf and have to take deep dives to retrieve it. She seems to be traveling in a more ‘normal’ pattern.”

    Shedd said Soundwatch  is keeping vessels clear of J35 and educating those close by, monitoring her health, and her behavior and if she decides to drop the calf.

    The Soundwatch program is run by the Whale Museum at Friday Harbor. The program has educators on the water every day to remind boaters to keep at least 200-plus yards away from marine mammals.

    The whale-watch fleet has been voluntarily keeping clear of J35 and her family to give her space and privacy.

    Barbara King, emerita professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary and author of the book “How Animals Grieve,”  said the duration and extent of J35’s efforts indicate intense grief.

    “This is a real change from baseline behavior, she is laboring, not taking care of herself, not acting the way she normally would in order to keep her baby,” King said.

    Alternative explanations, such as that she does not understand the calf is dead, are out of the question, King said. “There is no way I believe that, given what we know about orca intelligence.”
     
    King has documented grief in primates, elephants, companion animals, farmed animals and others. The gathering of other females with J35 on Tuesday evening, which continued for hours, also did not surprise her.

    “Grief and love don’t belong to us, we share it with other animals.”

    The day-after-day spectacle of the grieving mother brought an outpouring of concern not only for her but for the fate of the southern resident population.

    Every calf matters in a clan with only 75 members, said Billie Swalla, director of the Friday Harbor Laboratories of the University of Washington on San Juan Island, where the grieving whale has been the talk of the research campus.

    “Everybody is worried about her,” Swalla said of J35. “I am just so sad, and they are in decline so this is just so worrisome. And she is a grieving young mother. This is just very hard to watch.”

    The story has drawn interest around the world as news accounts have circulated on the internet.
     
    “I am beside myself about this,” Michelle Connor, CEO of the nonprofit Forterra in Seattle, wrote The Seattle Times in an email.

    “This is our family.”

  • Seattle Times: Where are the salmon and the orcas? Tribe, scientists grapple with unprecedented disappearance in Washington waters  

    August 6, 2019 By Lynda V. Mapes orca.chasing.salmonAboard the Lengesot in the Salish Sea — The tote was loaded and full of water, the cedar boughs cut and stacked on deck. But as Lummi tribal members headed out on their traditional waters to offer a ceremonial feeding of live chinook salmon to the endangered southern-resident killer whales, neither whale nor fish was anywhere to be found. In this historic summer of unthinkables, day after day is passing without the orcas and fish that normally enliven the waters of the inland Salish Sea. Tuesday marks a month since the southern residents were last seen in their usual home waters in and around the San Juan Islands. Usually present nearly every day at this time of year, the orcas have shown up only a handful of times this year, and then, only for brief visits before quickly leaving again for waters of the outer coast. Meanwhile, the chinook runs to the Fraser River the whales are usually hunting in their ancient foraging grounds have cratered . And on a recent weekday on the waters of northern Puget Sound and the San Juan Islands, but for a cluster of oil tankers staging offshore from the refineries in and around Cherry Point, the waters were quiet and still. “Do you have any fish?” Raynell Morris asked on her cellphone, calling one fisherman after another from the boat. Senior policy adviser in the Sovereignty and Treaty Protection Office of the Lummi Indian Business Council, she and other Lummi tribal members normally would have loaded the tote with fish for the whales before heading out. But with no fish to be had at home, they decided to chance getting some from fishermen as they were out on the water. As she dialed, Richard Solomon prepared. A spiritualist for the Lummi Nation, his prayers were to be offered along with the fish for J17, a matriarch of the southern residents not yet seen this spring or summer, and feared dead. And for K25, also missing. And for the extended family of the southern residents, or in the Lummi language, qwel lhol mech ten: the people who live under the sea. “They are starving people, like we are starving, wondering where we can go, where is our food,” Solomon said. “They are looking for fish, just like we are looking.” He prayed for the whales as the boat sped over the glassy sea. “We want to find food for you. Please come home. We ask for your help, we need your courage, your wisdom and your knowledge.” The whales have to travel, though, wondering how to keep their families fed, Solomon said. “They are telling us, giving us the message about the demise of the salmon.” In this season of scarcity, human fishermen are hurting, too. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has entirely closed the chinook fishery in the San Juan Islands for the month of August, because of low returns to Puget Sound, including the Stillaguamish and Nooksack rivers and Hood Canal. Canada also has closed and cut back recreational and commercial fishing seasons on Fraser River chinook in an effort to get more fish back to the spawning grounds. “We have seen chinook populations decline for the past number of years, but this year is the worst. It is a real challenge and a great concern,” said Jocelyn Lubczuk, spokeswoman for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada. “This is part of the biodiversity loss that is part of climate change, the warming water is posing a huge risk to chinook salmon.” In addition to long term human damage causing the decline, a natural rock slide also is imperiling the Fraser River salmon. Canadian officials are scrambling to help salmon blocked by a 16-foot-high waterfall created by the slide. After hours of searching for whales and fish, the Lummi decided to offer what they could. Aaron Hillaire, of the Lummi Nation, docked the tribal police boat used for the voyage at an ancient Lummi village site in the San Juans, dating back more than 4,000 years. Solomon had painted his face for spiritual protection. An ermine skin flashed white from his cedar hat. Morris, carrying the cedar boughs, followed him as he walked ashore. Solomon stopped and rinsed his face with cool, clean water. On the way to the village site, he suddenly stopped again, and plucked ripe blackberries, fat and succulent. He held onto them though, without eating a one. Then Morris and Solomon walked down the beach to the water’s edge, where with song and prayer, they offered the berries, floated on cedar boughs, to the whales. Afterward, sitting amid driftwood logs on the beach, Solomon scooped up a heap of white shell fragments in his fisherman’s hands, still red from ceremonial paint. He held the shells, and their memories. They had calved off from an archaeological deposit called a shell midden: bits of shell and bone left in the ground from cooking. The midden was layered in white bands in the ground stacked head-high along the shore. As he walked back to the boat, Solomon paused, looking out over the cove, and sang his grandmother’s song. She had grown up here. It felt so good to be back, he said, with the memories of this place. “This is when we get to time travel,” he said, still holding the shells, pouring them slowly, carefully, from one palm to the other. They made a soft rattling sound. Ken Balcomb, of the Center for Whale Research, keeps the official count of southern residents, and usually announces the whales born and died since the previous July. But for scientists, too, it is a summer so far without precedent. Research scheduled for summer encounters with the whales has been impossible to conduct. Balcomb said he would go out in search of the southern residents to take stock if they haven’t come home by mid-August, when Canadian scientists end their field season. Those researchers have recently been seeing the southern residents on the west side of Vancouver Island, he said. L pod was even seen off the coast of California, in Monterey Bay in April. Morris said she was not yet ready to call the offering the Lummi made for J17 and K25 a memorial. But she knows their family is in trouble. “We are here for them, and all the whale people,” Morris said. “Famine; there is no word in Lummi for what is happening.”
     

  • Seattle Times: Yakama, Lummi tribal leaders call for removal of three lower Columbia River dams

    October 14, 2019

    By  Lynda V. Mapes 

    SeattleTimes.JoeDeGoudy.CRRemovalAnnouncementCELILO VILLAGE, Wasco County, Oregon — In a historic stand, the Yakama and Lummi nations called Monday for taking down the Bonneville, The Dalles and John Day dams on the Columbia River to restore salmon runs once the mightiest in the world.

    The three big energy producers churn out enough electricity to power more than 2 million Pacific Northwest homes annually and also provide an important inland navigation route for commercial goods.

    Jay Julius, chairman of the Lummi Nation, and JoDe Goudy, chairman of the Yakama Nation, gathered — on Indigenous Peoples Day — at Celilo Village, all that is left of the fishing and cultural center at Celilo Falls, the most productive salmon fishery in the world for some 11,000 years. The falls were drowned beneath the reservoir of The Dalles Dam in 1957.

    Julius and Goudy said taking down the dams is the only hope to save the salmon runs their people depend on, and restore to health the endangered southern resident killer whales. The Columbia River Basin once produced as many as 10 million to 16 million salmon per year.

    Returns today are a fraction of that even in good years.

    Goudy said Columbus Day, a federal holiday also on Monday, celebrates the invasion of the lands and waters of indigenous people under the colonial doctrine of discovery, under which Christian Europeans seized native lands.

    The lower Columbia River dams inundated many usual and accustomed fishing sites of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, and led to the decline of salmon, lamprey and other traditional foods.

    “The tribe never consented to the construction of the lower Columbia River dams,” Goudy said.

    “On behalf of the Yakama Nation and those things that cannot speak for themselves, I call on the United States to reject the doctrine of Christian discovery and immediately remove the Bonneville Dam, Dalles Dam and John Day Dam.”

    Julius said the Lummi Nation stands with Yakama in calling for the removal of the dams. Tribes throughout the region are in a constant battle to defend their way of life, Julius said. “Whether defeating coal ports, opposing increased vessel traffic on the Salish Sea, repairing culverts or removing invasive Atlantic salmon, to leave to future generations a lifeway promised to our ancestors 164 years ago,” he said.

    While calls for removal of the four dams on the Lower Snake River have been heard for decades, the demand to knock out some of the region’s larger main-stem dams is a first. How such a removal would even proceed, and what it would mean for energy or salmon recovery, has never been analyzed.

    In addition to power generation, the dams are part of a system of locks that provide inland navigation all the way to Lewiston, Idaho. Some $2 billion in commercial cargo travels the Columbia and Snake river systems each year, according to U.S. Army Corps of Engineers statistics reported by The Associated Press. In 2017, that cargo included 53 percent of U.S. wheat exports.

    Southern resident orcas prey on Columbia and Snake River fish, as well as fish from Puget Sound, the Fraser River in B.C. and even California’s Sacramento River. The loss of Columbia and Snake fish is probably the single biggest change in the amount of food available to them, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s recovery plan for the whales.

    There are only 73 southern resident left. Lack of available, adequate, quality food is one of three main threats to their survival, in addition to pollution and noise.

    The three dams are among the oldest in the Columbia and Snake River system. They back up miles of the river, which pools in reservoirs that heat up in the summer. The reservoirs lengthen the travel time of young fish heading downriver, and warmer water temperatures caused by the cumulative effects of climate change are adding to the stress salmon endure. In particularly bad years, salmon also die in the thousands before reaching their spawning grounds.

    The call for main-stem dam removal adds a new drumbeat for change on the river, where power markets already are shaking up the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets electricity from the dams.

    A surge of wind and solar energy on the grid — along with power generation from natural gas — have upended BPA’s historic position as the low-cost provider in the region.

    BPA must foot the bill for the costs of maintaining an aging hydroelectric system and for bankrolling salmon restoration efforts. The administration is also scrambling to remain competitive when long-term contracts with public utilities come up in 2028.

    Yet as coal plants increasingly are phased out of the Western power grid, hydropower will become an increasingly important asset as the regional grid operators struggle to reduce the risk of brownouts or blackouts during periods of peak demand that unfold during days when solar and wind power may be at a low ebb.

    The lower Columbia dams have deep regional support that would likely make any effort to remove them an even tougher battle than the years-long campaign by salmon advocates to remove the Lower Snake River dams.

    “We have great respect for the Yakama and Lummi nations and for Indigenous Peoples Day, but we believe that the lower Columbia River dams are a critical carbon free resource in our fight against the climate crisis that threatens the health and well-being of the entire Northwest, “ said a statement released by Northwest RiverPartners, which has a membership that includes ports, businesses and consumer-owned utilities.

    The Portland-based BPA also released a statement responding to the tribes’ Monday announcement.

    “We remain focused on continuing our work with our many partners throughout the region to address the environmental, economic and cultural issues within the Columbia River Basin,” said the statement. BPA officials declined further comment

    Yakama, Lummi tribal leaders call for removal of three lower Columbia River dams

    In Washington, Gov. Jay Inslee’s spokeswoman Tara Lee said that the governor “supports rebuilding fish runs to tribal communities … including improving fish passage, and exploring ways to reintroduce salmon in areas blocked by dams such as the upper Columbia.”

    When ask to clarify that statement, Lee said Inslee “previously said he is open to exploring options around the dams.”

    Federal agencies are seeking approval from a federal judge for operation of their hydropower system. The agencies have since 1992 been on the defensive against calls for a major overhaul on the river that go back to the first federal judge who heard the case, Malcom Marsh, in 1993.

  • SIGN THE PETITION: Endangered orca and salmon need bold action now!

    CampaignMiscImage 1538082087.8955Last week, the Task Force created by Governor Jay Inslee to protect critically endangered Southern Resident orca from extinction released it initial set of draft recommendations. The Task Force is now taking public comment.

    PLEASE SIGN SOS' PETITION to the Governor's Orca Task Force!

    SOS and its leaders have participated in AND bird-dogged this process since it began in March. These draft recommendations reflect an important first step, but fall short of the Governor's call for actions that are "bold" and "urgent". The draft recommendations must be strengthened before they are finalized and delivered to the Governor - And they must include a call for real, tangible action on lower Snake River dam removal.

    Just 74 whales remain today. We must act quickly, or they could disappear forever.

    The public comment period is short - it closes on October 7. Please act today!

    Sign the SOS petition here.

    The petition identifies priority recommendations that are especially critical to orca survival and recovery - and it emphasizes actions to increase chinook salmon populations orca need in both the near-term and long-term by protecting, restoring and reconnecting healthy, resilient habitats and ecosystems.

    Add your name and help send a powerful message: "The Orca Task Force must strengthen and adopt key recommendations if we hope to protect orca from extinction."

    Please share this petition widely with your networks and over social media before Oct. 7!

    Thank you for your support,

    Joseph, Sam and the whole SOS team
    http://www.wildsalmon.org

    PS - For more information, read these excellent articles from the Seattle Times:

    Another Southern Resident orca is ailing - and at least three more are pregnant (9.25.2018)

    Controversy heats up over removal of the lower Snake River dams as orcas suffer losses (9.22.2018)

    Read the Orca Task Force's Sept 24 Report and full list of draft recommendations here. (draft recs begin on page 20).

  • Skagit Valley Herald: New alliance has big goals for salmon, orca recovery

    skagit copyBy KIMBERLY CAUVEL @Kimberly_SVH
    Oct 16, 2015
      
    Even with Endangered Species Act protection, two iconic Salish Sea species are struggling, and a newly formed alliance is calling attention to their plight.

    “It’s pretty critical that we have to do something, so let’s put the prey and predator together and let’s save them,” said Ken Balcomb, executive director of the Center for Whale Research based on San Juan Island.
    The center is one of many local, national and international groups that recently formed the Orca Salmon Alliance.

    Orca Network Director Howard Garrett said the Orca Salmon Alliance’s goal is to restore enough salmon to sustain the endangered southern resident orcas.

    Alliance members shared their mission with the public for the first time at the Seattle Aquarium last week, with an Oct. 7 event called Intertwined Fates: The Orca-Salmon Connection.

    Seattle Aquarium CEO and President Bob Davidson said it was a historic occasion having “orca and salmon people” all in the same room.

    The connection between salmon and orcas is well known — salmon are the whales’ primary food source — but researchers often don’t focus on both.

    The federal and state endangered species listings for orcas calls the decline in chinook salmon the greatest challenge to southern resident orca recovery. Yet after 10 years of federal protection for the whales, the population has not grown.

    The southern resident orcas stay along the Washington and Oregon coasts in three pods, or family units, called J, K and L.

    The population has remained steady at around 80 whales since 1995.

    The deaths of new calves in 2013 and 2014 heightened concerns about the whales’ demise, Garrett said.

    When orca J32, known as Rhapsody, was found dead and carrying a full-term calf near Bristish Columbia in December 2014, it was a “devastating blow for those who watch and care about the orcas,” he said.

    The loss of Rhapsody was the final straw, “prompting many to search for ways to rebuild chinook salmon runs as quickly as possible,” he said.

    And so the Orca Salmon Alliance was born.

    The group has big goals for increasing chinook salmon numbers and in turn supporting the orcas that need between 100 and 300 pounds of fish per day to maintain their weight, according to NOAA.

    The quickest way to progress would be removing four dams from the Snake River, which would open

    140 miles of riverbed and 5,500 miles of upstream habitat for salmon, Garrett said.

    Restoring chinook populations is essential because the southern resident orcas rely on the salmon for about 80 percent of their diet, unlike transient orcas that primarily eat mammals.
    “Their jaws and teeth are not as robust as mammal-eating orcas,” Garrett said.

    If they don’t have access to their food supply, they will starve, he said.

    Earthjustice oceans program managing attorney Steve Mashuda said the legal agency has focused on protecting salmon on the Columbia River system. The Skagit River, the second largest in Puget Sound behind the Columbia, is also important for salmon.

    “The Skagit River is important because it’s got the biggest opportunity for chinook recovery in Puget Sound, and it comes down to estuary health,” he said.

    What’s harming the salmon?

    “It’s really the classic combination of things that is concerning,” Mashuda said. “You’ve got legacy pollution, as well as new things like stormwater.”

    Plus, there are dams and culverts blocking fish access to spawning areas, he said.

    So what will help?

    “It would be good to see a handful of really big projects to restore systems like the Skagit River to historic (salmon-bearing) capacity,” Mashuda said.

    Biologist and author Carl Safina, keynote speaker at the Seattle Aquarium last week, called attendees to action at the sold-out event.

    “Act now or lose them all,” he said.

    There has been some good news this year. Four orcas were born, though experts say the mortality rate is high in the animals’ first year.

    The Orca Salmon Alliance is asking citizens to contact state Department of Fish and Wildlife Director Jim Unsworth, who set up an online comment system called Washington’s Wild Future, or other state and federal officials to urge more action to save these Salish Sea species.

    http://www.goskagit.com/all_access/new-alliance-has-big-goals-for-salmon-orca-recovery/article_88d2e83f-5b3e-5d8e-a7c3-7dae4651c7f0.html

    — Reporter Kimberly Cauvel: 360-416-2199, kcauvel@skagitpublishing.com, Twitter: @Kimberly_SVH, Facebook.com/bykimberlycauvel

  • South Whidbey Record: UW study pins orca pregnancy problems on lack of salmon

    orca.w.calfEvan Thompson, Wed Jul 19th, 2017

    A new study links a lack of salmon to failed pregnancies in Puget Sound’s resident orca pods.

    Two-thirds of pregnancies in the Southern Resident population, from 2007 to 2014, appeared to have failed, according to a multi-year study by the University of Washington published in the journal PLOS ONE. The data connects the endangered orca population’s low reproductive success to stress from the low abundance of their most nutrient-rich food source, Chinook salmon.

    Of the 35 pregnancies in the seven-year time span, only 11 were successful.

    “That’s drastic,” Howard Garrett, co-founder of the Langley-based Orca Network, said. “We didn’t have that number until now.”

    Garrett said the study corroborates “from a completely different angle” that a lack of salmon is causing the population to decline, while also stunting the orca whales’ recovery process. Less salmon directly damages reproductive success, while nutritional stress leads to the release of toxins that is normally absorbed in the whales’ fatty tissues when they are properly fed, Garrett said.

    “The Chinook are the key — they’re the pivot that it all revolves around,” Garrett said.

    It was also troubling to Garrett that one-third of the failed pregnancies occurred late in the gestation period, meaning the mothers invested ample time and energy into the calves. Pregnancies are typically 17 months, Garrett said.

    “It’s a tremendous loss,” Garrett said. “It weakens the mother and sets back their ability to start over.”

    These setbacks could also further weaken the population, said Garrett, as the mothers are at a higher risk of infection or other complications. There are 79 individuals in the L, J and K pods as of Jan. 2017, including Lolita, which is confined at the Miami Seaquarium.

    The study was conducted by researchers from the university’s Center for Conservation Biology, as well as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and the Center for Whale Research. Researchers measured key physiological and sex hormones in orca fecal samples, or scat. They also used orca DNA extracted from the scat to identify the individual whales.

    Dogs trained to sniff out floating orca scat from the bow of research boats trailed Southern Resident pods and could detect the scat from up to one nautical mile away.

    They collected 348 scat samples from 79 orcas between 2007 and 2014.

    Researchers could glean hormone progesterone and testosterone levels from the scat and also differentiate between stress due to poor nutrition and stress due to external responses, such as boat traffic in the Salish Sea, for example. They could also determine how far along the pregnant female was in the gestation period.

    The pregnancies likely ended in spontaneous abortions, the study said.

    Findings from the study are also said to have helped resolve a debate about which three environmental stresses are most responsible for the population decline: food supply, pollutants and boat traffic. Sam Wasser, a professor of biology at the University of Washington and director of the Center for Conservation Biology, said in a University of Washington news release that a lack of salmon is now determined as the foremost cause for low reproductive success among the Southern Resident killer whales.

    Southern Residents are unlike other transient orca populations because more than 95 percent of their diet consists of salmon, while other orcas feed on marine mammals. Chinook salmon is the Southern Residents’ go-to food source.

    The research teams compared the whale’s hormone data to records of Chinook salmon runs in the Columbia and Fraser rivers, which contain the most Chinook in the Southern Residents’ range. When returns of salmon at the two watersheds were high, nutritional stress was low. But, it flipped when there were poor runs at either river and nutritional stress increased.

    Garrett says efforts to restore salmon with culvert removals and estuary recoveries are helping, but the population decline will likely continue unless a drastic measure is taken. Garrett said the removal of the four Lower Snare River Dams would help immensely by adding as many as 1 million fish within five or 10 years. Garrett said the dams remain active largely due to sentimental reasons.

    “It’s really an irrational and emotional attachment to those dams,” Garrett said. “The reasons given don’t hold up.”

    Southern Resident sightings have been rather sparse this summer, said Garrett, at a time when they should be at their peaks. But, sightings of transient whales are through the roof. Multiple groups of transients, also known as Bigg’s Killer Whales, have been seen in the Puget Sound area more and that their presence has increased gradually for about 10 years.

    Garrett said he hopes the Southern Residents will still come down Admiralty Inlet and be seen from Whidbey Island between October to December if the salmon are running in good numbers.

    http://www.southwhidbeyrecord.com/news/uw-study-pins-orca-pregnancy-problems-on-lack-of-salmon/

  • Spokesman Review: More than 600 turn out for Snake River protest Saturday

    Sept. 9, 2018

    By Eli Francovich

    2018.FreetheSnakeCLARKSTON – Navigating the slack water of the Snake River near Lewiston, Bill Chetwood remembers the days when the water was free-flowing.

    The staunch conservative and former marine remembers watching salmon streaming below his boat. He remembers a riparian area that cut through the dry and high desert hills winding all the way to the Columbia River.

    Chetwood, 88, is a lifelong resident of the Lewiston area. He is one of the few who can recall the Snake River before four dams slowed the river’s water.

    He wants all that back.

    On Saturday, Chetwood joined roughly 600 others in the annual Free the Snake Flotilla, a protest of the four lower Snake River Dams.
    Participants brought a variety of craft, including kayaks, motorboats, sailboats and stand-up paddleboards.

    They came from Idaho, Washington, Minnesota, California and elsewhere. Anglers, environmentalists and tribal members were represented, among others.

    “This is the biggest flotilla yet,” said Sam Mace, the Inland Northwest Director for Save Our Wild Salmon and one of the organizers of the event.

    Saturday morning, roughly 20 members of the Nez Perce, Colville, Kalispel, Coeur d’Alene and Spokane tribes launched traditionally made dugout canoes upstream of Lewiston on the Clearwater River.

    The tribal members headed downstream, meeting up with the larger Free the Snake Flotilla.

    One reason many attended this year’s Free the Snake was the plight of the southern resident killer whales. The orcas garnered international attention earlier this year when Tahlequah, a southern resident orca, pushed the corpse of her newborn baby for weeks.

    Tahlequah is one of 75 orcas remaining in the Puget Sound, a 30-year-low. Salmon make up roughly 50 percent of the orcas’ diet.

    Spring and summer chinook, fall chinook and steelhead were all listed as threatened in the 1990s.

    “The orcas are going to die if we don’t breach the dams,” said Chiara Rose, a student at Western Washington University in Bellingham. “They are very dependent on this specific ecosystem.”

    Like Chetwood, others attended the flotilla because they’d like to see large returns of wild salmon again in the Snake River system. And for members of the Nez Perce Tribe, the dams represent an historical injustice: When built, they flooded many traditional Nez Perce gathering
    sites and burial grounds.

    “We talk about the injustice, it’s ongoing,” said Julien Matthews, a Nez Perce tribal member. “Our relatives are buried there under that water.”

    2018.FreetheSnake2Matthews is also a board member of Nimiipuu Protecting the Environment, an environmental organization that focuses on upholding tribal treaty
    rights.

    After the flotilla, environmentalist and activist Winona LaDuke addressed the gathering at a campground west of Lewiston. In a wide-ranging talk, she urged those present to keep fighting for the removal of the dams and “make it beautiful.”

    Following LaDuke, Democratic candidate for Idaho governor Paulette Jordan took the stage and committed, if elected, to fight to decommission the four lower Snake River Dams.

    The four dams in question are Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite.

    On the same day, and just miles upriver from the Free the Snake Flotilla, a pro-dam event was held. For many in the Lewiston and Clarkston areas, a world without dams is inconceivable, those demonstrators said.

    River Fest, as the counterprotest was called, was hosted by the Port of Clarkston in conjunction with the Port of Lewiston. The festival aims to
    celebrate the Snake and Clearwater rivers in all their uses, said Wanda Keefer, the Clarkston port manager.

    The festival was held in Granite Park, near the confluence of the Snake and Clearwater rivers.

    “This whole town is built on these dams,” said Jeff Sayre, the chairman of the Snake River Multi-use Advocates. “(Dams are) an easy target to point at, but there are not silver bullets to this issue.”

    Sayre calls the dam issue the “most complicated” natural resources issue in the country.

    “To me, a lot of the rhetoric out there has more to do with dam removal than salmon survival,” said David Doeringsfeld, the Lewiston port manager. “To a lot of people, dam removal is a religion.”

    The dams ship grain grown in Idaho and Washington to Portland and beyond, supplement the electrical grid during peak power times and the pooled flatwater allows boats and fisherman to recreate on a lake-like surface, Doeringsfeld said.

    However, barge traffic, which was one of the primary reasons for the construction of the dams in the first place, has declined in recent years.

    And a study in April found that the energy produced by the four lower Snake River dams could be replaced by a mix of other clean energy
    sources.

    The study was commissioned by the NW Energy Coalition and conducted by Energy Strategies, a Utah-based company, using the Bonneville Power Administration’s data. However, some questioned the study, arguing that the amount of energy that could be created from solar and wind was unrealistic and that the increased cost to ratepayers was underreported, among other things.

    The dams will stay in the public eye, even if outrage over the orca whales’ plight diminishes.

    In 2016, a federal judge ruled the U.S. government hasn’t done enough to improve Northwest salmon runs and ordered an environmental review that’s due in 2021, urging officials to consider removing the four dams on the Snake River.

    But for Chetwood, that might be too late.

    “I’m a little afraid I’m not going to see a free-flowing river,” he said.

     

    http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/sep/09/more-than-600-turn-out-for-snake-river-protest-sat

  • Spokesman-Review Guest Opinion: Time for BPA to act on dams

    By Linwood Laughy
    Saturday, Dec. 22, 2018 lin.lThe Bonneville Power Administration has a problem. The federal agency sells hydropower from 31 dams to 135 public utility districts across the Pacific Northwest. Referring to the wholesale power market, BPA Administrator Elliott Mainzer recently told the Northwest Power Council, “It’s been a bloodbath.” Over the past eight years, BPA raised its contracted PUD customers’ power prices by 30 percent, avoiding even greater increases by blowing through $900 million in financial reserves.

    BPA’s challenges include a disappearing California market for BPA’s surplus energy, aging assets requiring major capital investment, and the rapid expansion of Northwest wind and solar capacity. BPA is also legally and financially responsible for a costly fish and wildlife program for 13 threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead species, none of which is on a path to recovery.

    The only glimmer of light in Mainzer’s darkening tunnel is BPA’s master contract with those 135 PUDs, which lasts until 2028. But BPA’s “cheap” power is no longer cheap. The agency sells power to its contracted customers for $36 per megawatt hour. The average open market price for BPA’s surplus power is approaching $20 per MWh. If BPA can’t close that price gap by significantly reducing its costs, those PUD customers will walk.

    BPA, meanwhile, hopes to sell more surplus energy at higher prices into a glutted and shrinking market. One source of that surplus energy is the four lower Snake River dams. Since 2009, no power from those dams has been needed to meet contracted customer load demand – none. Taking a position similar to arguing the sole cost of owning a car is gasoline, BPA claims LSRD power production costs $13-$14 per MWh. LSRD fish and wildlife costs alone add at least $12 per MWh to that cost of production.

    If BPA is unable to offer competitive pricing to PUDs by the end of five years, argues Mainzer, the PUDs will look to other sources for some or all of their power. BPA could be forced to spread its costs over fewer customers, with higher prices resulting in more defections, and BPA would enter what in economics is called a death spiral.

    Salmon advocates believe Mainzer could save BPA and salmon, plus southern resident killer whales that need chinook salmon to survive. According to the Fish Passage Center, breaching the four lower Snake River dams and providing increased spill on four dams on the lower Columbia could lead to a four-fold increase in Snake River salmon production. Breaching those dams, which, incidentally, were designed to enable breaching, could boost commercial and recreational fishing while helping feed starving orcas. Dam breaching could also remove excess energy from the supply chain and take four unneeded, costly assets off BPA’s books. The billboards across Eastern Washington that once read “Save our Dams” might now read “Save BPA, Remove the LSR Dams.”

    But the status quo resists change, perhaps especially when cast in concrete. Washington’s 5th District congresswoman continues to declare Columbia Basin salmon runs are doing fine even as Washington and Oregon closed 300 miles of the Columbia River to angling because of record low fish numbers. BPA ratepayers continue to pay an estimated 15 percent of their monthly electricity bills to support a 20-year, multibillion-dollar fish and wildlife program that has recovered none of the 13 ESA-listed Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead species.

    University of Idaho College of Natural Resources professor Patrick Wilson suggests the status quo usually remains in place until a crisis occurs. BPA faces a financial crisis. Wild Snake River B-run steelhead are in a state of collapse. The Idaho Fish and Game Department acknowledges Snake River sockeye are on “biological life support.” And southern resident killer whales move steadily toward extinction.

    Bonneville Power Administration is a major power broker in this drama. Elliot Mainzer plays a lead role. His choices are hero or villain. The audience grows restless. It’s curtain time.

    http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/dec/22/linwood-laughy-time-for-bpa-to-act-on-dams/

  • Spokesman-Review: Inslee task force would study possible dam breaching to help salmon, orcas

    December 14, 2018

    Jim Camden

    Inslee.OTFOlympia - A small part of Gov. Jay Inslee’s $54.3 billion budget is a study of whether removing federal dams along the Snake River would help the region’s efforts to save salmon, and with them, orcas.

    But the $750,000 proposed for a task force to review breaching and other options for the four dams may generate controversy way out of proportion to its share of the overall budget.

    Less than two hours after Inslee mentioned the task force as part of his public presentation of the budget, Eastern Washington’s two Republican members of the U.S. House of

    Representatives were criticizing the proposed review as a waste of tax money, noting that the question of breaching was beyond Inslee’s authority.

    “We commit to do everything in our power to save our dams,” Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse said in a news release.

    The prospect of dam removal is the source of long-standing arguments between environmentalists and farmers, Democrats and Republicans, urban and rural residents. It could also be at odds with one of Inslee’s other key goals for his upcoming budget.

    Inslee wants to minimize the use of fossil fuels to generate electricity, having the state rely more on renewable sources that don’t create carbon pollution that contributes to climate change. Hydropower is one of the key carbon-free sources of electricity in the Northwest.

    Inslee acknowledged the dichotomy between the two goals in a news conference. He said he wasn’t calling for dam removal but rather assigning a task force to lead a process of discussing options that would help formulate the state’s response in an environmental impact statement ordered by a federal judge.

    The task force would look at the costs as well as the benefits of different alternatives, not just dam removal. But it would consider how the power generated by those dams might be replaced with other sources like wind and solar, as well as other options to the navigable transportation the dams provide for barges carrying cargo from Lewiston to port cities closer to the Pacific Ocean.

    The task force will hold public “community conversations” around the state, starting in July, with a goal of having information to Inslee by next November, said J.T. Austin, his senior policy adviser on natural resources.

    The question of dam removal has been studied multiple times, but this will be a chance to hear from the communities, Austin said. The decision to remove them would be up to Congress, not the governor, she added.

    “There are still a lot of questions to be answered, and a lot of consensus to be built,” Inslee said.

  • Street Root News: Save the orcas: Protesters want Snake River dams breached

    Demonstrators demand the Army Corps of Engineers remove dams to restore salmon for Puget Sound whales

    by Stephen Quirke | 12 Oct 2018

    orca.protestBraving the rain and cold, 80 people marched with 20-foot banners to lay flowers, cedar and ferns in honor of recently deceased orcas. They had a 10-foot salmon and a giant inflatable orca in tow.

    The crowd was gathered Oct. 5 at Holladay Park in Northeast Portland to demonstrate against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Bonneville Power Administration.

    Facing the Northwest District Headquarters of the Army Corps on Northeast Holladay, participants gave speeches through megaphones between shouts of “Breach the dams! Free the Snake!” and “Save the Salmon – Save the Orcas!”

    The crowd then marched around the corner to the Bonneville Power Administration on Northeast 11th Avenue, led by Palouse Chief Jesse Nightwalker, and listened to Native drummers and singers while laying down flowers for the baby of the orca mother Tahlequah, who lost a newborn calf in July. Tahlequah spent an agonizing 17 days swimming through Puget Sound on what whale experts called a “tour of grief,” carrying her calf’s body for over 1,000 miles even after it began to decompose. Flowers were left in a memorial in the courtyard.

    For the past three years, no newborn member of the southern resident killer whale population has survived past birth, producing widespread fear that this critically endangered species is sliding into extinction. Their primary food source, Chinook salmon, has had its spring run threatened in the Lower Columbia River since 1999, and last month, state fish managers closed all fall Chinook fishing up to Pasco due to their disastrously low rates of survival. Another resident orca, Scarlet, was declared dead Sept. 13.

    Rally organizer Michele Seidelman has been organizing weekly overpass actions to build momentum for the rally and plans to return to the Army
    Corps building every week until the dams are breached. Seidelman said she is driven by a personal bond with the orcas and her certainty that they cannot survive unless the lower Snake dams are removed.

    “There’s no chance of their survival if we don’t do it. Zero,” she said.

    “There’s a 2002 environmental impact study that taxpayers spent millions on, and it’s just sitting there gathering dust. They’ve used all the options except option No. 4, which is to breach. And they need to breach this year. The people who can make this decision are working in this
    office,” Seidelman said.

    “We come today to the rally to push the Corps of Engineers to breach the dams, the four Snake River dams in Washington, because our orcas are starving to death,” co-organizer Miguel Ramirez said. “If we breach the dams, we allow the salmon back in the waters and heal our ecosystem in the Columbia River and Pacific Ocean.”

    Demonstrators carried signs with the names of Army Corps officials they said can save these orcas by restoring the salmon in the Snake River. As the largest tributary to the Columbia, the Snake historically provided as much as 50 percent of the salmon eaten by the resident orcas. One sign read, “Ponganis – Do The Right Thing – Breach The Dams.” David J. Ponganis is the director of programs for the Army Corps’ Northwestern Division.

    A day earlier, the Army Corps and Bonneville scheduled a media conference call to “set (the) record straight” on orcas. On that call, federal officials with both agencies disputed the connection between Snake River dams and the death of salmon and orcas. Corps officials further insisted they did not have the authority to breach the dams without special approval from Congress.

    Each of these claims is disputed by Jim Waddell, a retired Army Corps engineer who worked on the Army Corps’ breaching study in 2002 and now runs the website DamSense.org. Waddell said he has documented communications with then-Assistant Secretary of the Army Jo-Ellen Darcy, confirming that the $33 million study he worked on is still the
    framework for ongoing decisions at the Army Corps – meaning the agency can use its breaching option without delay.

    “I’m reading what the reports are saying, the empirical data, and I’m saying if we don’t breach two dams, starting in December this year, the empirical evidence says you’re likely to lose Chinook and orcas,” he said. “Certainly orcas in the sense that they will lose their breeding population. There’s 73 orcas left, but there’s only one male and five females that are actively breeding. If you lose those, you’ve made a huge hit in your genetic pool.”

    An online petition started by Waddell asks the Army Corps to use its authority to begin breaching the dams this year. In September, the petition had 335,000 signatures; it now has more than 600,000.

    The day after the agencies’ conference call, a rally was opened with speeches from the Lower Snake River Palouse matriarch Carrie Schuster and her son, Chief Nightwalker. They were joined by the Umatilla elder Art McConville and Native drummers from across the region.

    Schuster spoke to the crowd about how the lower Snake River dams came to be built and what they cost her family. Widely opposed initially for their threats to fish and wildlife, construction began on Ice Harbor dam in 1955, Lower Monumental dam in 1961, Little Goose dam in 1963 and Lower Granite dam in 1965. A fifth dam was proposed but was ultimately
    defeated.

    “We were the last opposing village in existence on the river,” Schuster said. “They kicked us out of there in 1959 ’cause that’s when the water started coming up, and they had the county sheriffs there. They asked the state patrol ’cause they knew they were gonna have problems with my mother.”

    Schuster said her mother made a handshake agreement with U.S. Sens. Warren Magnuson and Henry Jackson, who promised that after 50 years, her land would be returned and the dams would come down.

    “That’s the reason that we’re trying to get them to honor the agreement,” Schuster said. “Bringing the dams down – that’s the only thing that’s really going to help, not only the salmon but also all the pods of orcas that are now threatened.”

    Like the orcas, Schuster and other local people had much of their food on the Snake River obliterated by the dams – as well as homes and villages buried beneath reservoirs. One 1999 report produced for the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission showed that 90 percent of the salmon originally harvested by the Nez Perce Tribe in Idaho had been lost since European contact. The same study referenced an interagency scientific study called PATH, originally funded by Bonneville Power Administration, that found breaching the lower Snake River dams created the best chance of recovering endangered salmon in the Snake River - with an 80 percent likelihood of success.

    It concluded that “Lower Snake River dams, together with dams on the mainstem Columbia, contributed significantly to the destruction of Nez Perce Treaty-reserved salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, eulachon” and that failure to take strong actions “commits to continued suffering, ill health and premature death for the peoples of the study tribes – all at unconscionable levels.”

    On Oct. 5, Nightwalker led the crowd on its march route for three hours, singing several songs with other Native performers before the crowd circled back in to the park’s center, where dozens gathered under canopies to dry their hands and write letters to Army Corps officials.

    “I’ve been following the story ever since I heard of Tahlequah carrying her baby, and that really broke my heart,” Marley Delgado said. “I’m writing to the Army Corps of Engineers, asking them to please breach the lower four dams on the Snake River, because they and I both know that’s their only chance at survival at this point. Extinction is forever, and I want to know if that’s the legacy that they want to leave behind.

    “It’s time to breach those useless dams,” Holly Cooper said. “We’re not the only ones that live on this earth. Take responsibility. Time is of the essence. These animals are starving to death.”

    Other protesters had personalized the suffering of the orcas, carrying their stories as they trudged through the rain in orca costumes.

    “Each one of us represents an individual orca. Everybody’s got their own identity,” said Debra Ellers, a traveler from Port Townsend who played the role of matriarch orca Ocean Sun.

    “These dams were really built without any meaningful tribal consultation. In my prior life, before I became an orca, I was actually an attorney. And I do believe the dams violated the terms of the treaty because it’s affecting their usual and accustomed places to fish. And many cultural sites are also literally under water,” Ellers said.

    “I grew up on a farm, and so did Oreo (another orca) here, so I’m very sympathetic to farmers. But the thing is these dams were just built in the ’60s and ’70s. They’re not like the great pyramids of Egypt that have always been there for thousands of years. So the farmers on the Palouse got their wheat to the market long before, for a hundred years before those dams went in. I do think that when the dams are breached, there should be mitigation packages. I’m totally sympathetic. It would actually be a lot cheaper for taxpayers to pay the farmers to ship alternative ways than to keep doing these crazy salmon engineering fixes.”

    At 70 years old, Shuster still believes she will see the dams come down, restoring the home she was forced to leave when she was 9.

    Seidelman, the rally organizer, also has hope.

    “Since Tahlequah calf’s death, there’s been a new spotlight,” Seidelman said. “We’ve got people doing actions in Chicago, New York, Las Vegas, Florida, Tacoma and Seattle. We’re just getting started.”

    Street Roots is an award-winning, nonprofit, weekly newspaper focusing on economic, environmental and social justice issues. Our newspaper is sold in Portland, Oregon, by people experiencing homelessness and/or extreme poverty as means of earning an income with dignity.

    https://news.streetroots.org/2018/10/12/save-orcas-protesters-want-snake-river-dams-breached

  • Tacoma New Tribune: Removing dams on Puyallup and Snake rivers is key to salmon and orca survival

    orca srkw population 768x720By Emily Pinckney
    September 27, 2020

    Like many people throughout the Pacific Northwest, I was recently uplifted by the news that Tahlequah, the mother orca who captured the world’s attention during her tour of grief in 2018, gave birth to a healthy new calf. Southern resident orcas are one of the world’s most endangered wildlife populations, so every new calf is precious.

    While I am cautiously optimistic, I remain concerned about the future this newborn orca and his family face as they search for increasingly scarce salmon.

    Salmon are the lifeblood of the Pacific Northwest’s ecosystems, culture and economy. Over 100 species of wildlife rely on salmon. Recreational and commercial fishing businesses support countless rural communities from the coast to the Palouse.

    For tribes who have lived in the Northwest since time immemorial, salmon are both an essential food and a keystone of tribal culture. Sadly, salmon runs have been devastated after years of damming and polluting rivers across the Northwest.

    Today, salmon are reaching a tipping point, threatening the survival of humans and wildlife alike.

    With fall now here, southern residents will soon be heading towards Tacoma; they will follow the chinook salmon that will return to the Puyallup River, which was recently polluted by owners of Electron Dam.

    This isn’t the first time Electron has killed off endangered salmon and threatened the Puyallup Tribe’s fisheries. Missteps by dam operators resulted in the listing of the Puyallup as one of the country’s most endangered rivers.

    Other river systems in the region need attention, too. Spring chinook in the Columbia River are critical to pregnant females to support and raise growing calves.

    But once-abundant spring chinook salmon are increasingly difficult to find. That’s because four dams on the lower Snake River destroyed more than 100 miles of spawning habitat, restricted access to over 5,000 miles of free-flowing rivers, flooded tribal fishing villages and devastated critical fisheries.

    Recently, these Snake River dams were implicated in heating water temperatures to lethal levels for salmon.

    Computer models have shown that by removing the four dams, water temperatures will be cold and safe enough for salmon as they migrate through the Columbia and Snake rivers. Removing the lower Snake River dams would be the single-most impactful action for struggling salmon and orcas.

    River restoration is critical to honoring tribal treaty rights. Tribes across the region have led the way on many dam removal efforts, including the Elwha, Pilchuck, Nooksack and White Salmon rivers.

    Time and again after a dam is removed, salmon come back in greater numbers, benefiting the ecosystem.

    Today, Puyallup tribal elders are calling for the removal of Electron Dam, and almost every tribe in the Pacific Northwest sent comment letters to the federal government supporting the removal of the four lower Snake River dams.

    Removing dams can be complex. Fortunately, people across the region — business owners, tribes, farmers, elected officials — are beginning to look at how we can do things differently on our rivers.

    Even utilities, which buy power from dams, are saying we need to think in new ways. Puget Sound Energy recently announced it would cancel its power purchase agreement with Electron. And eight regional utilities, including Tacoma Power, joined conservation organizations in outlining shared goals to recover lower Snake River salmon while maintaining affordable and reliable electric service for the region.

    Salmon built and defined this region, and the people who have lived here the longest have always known that what’s good for salmon is good for all.

    With the arrival of the newest orca, we have an opportunity to decide what sort of future we want.

    Do we want to struggle to find salmon for our community? Or do we want a future where Tahlequah’s newborn can thrive, with abundant salmon runs from a restored Puyallup River to a free-flowing Snake River?

    Emily Pinckney lives in Tacoma and serves on the Washington State Environmental Justice Task Force, Sustainable Tacoma Commission, 500 Women Scientists and the South Sound Urban League Young Professionals.

     

  • The Columbia Basin Bulletin: Independent Science Review off Salmon Survival Study Shows Concern Over Low Smolt-To-Adult Returns 

    November 2, 2018

    The Columbia Basin Bulletin

    seattletimessockeyeFor eight years running, the Independent Scientific Advisory Board has reviewed the Fish Passage Center’s draft Comparative Survival Study for salmon and steelhead in the Columbia/Snake river basin.

    It completed its ninth review of the latest draft CSS October 18, saying the FPC’s annual report is “mature,” inferring that at this point the study typically includes only updates using the latest year’s data.

    One thing the CSS report has consistently reported the last few years is that many anadromous fish species fail to meet the 2 to 4 percent smolt to adult survival goal called for in the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program. Species that aren’t meeting the goal are Snake River wild spring/summer chinook, Snake wild steelhead populations, as well as the hatchery fish of these species, and Snake River sockeye salmon. Most wild and hatchery steelhead, chinook and sockeye in the middle and upper Columbia River and tributaries also are not meeting the Council’s goal.

    However, according to the CSS report, steelhead in the John Day, Umatilla, and Deschutes rivers have consistently higher SARs than other species and meet the Council’s goal more often, if not every year.

    The Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program calls for such an annual independent science review of the FPC’s analytical products, including the FPC’s draft CSS report, the ISAB review says.

    The draft CSS – titled “Comparative Survival Study of PIT-tagged Spring/Summer/Fall Chinook, Summer Steelhead, and Sockeye” – was released for public review by the FPC and the Comparative Survival Study Oversight Committee at the FPC website on Sept. 4. Comments were due October 17 and some of the most comprehensive and technical comments each year are those from the ISAB.

    The ISAB reviews of the CSS reports began with the draft 2010 annual report and most recently the draft 2017 report. The draft 2018 CSS report covers the period Dec. 1, 2017 through Nov. 30, 2018.

    “Many of the methods have been reviewed in previous ISAB reports and so now receive only a cursory examination,” the ISAB review says. “As more data are acquired, new patterns and questions arise on the interpretation of the results—this is now the primary focus of our reviews.”

    Among the ISAB’s observations of the draft 2018 CSS report are:

    -- The ISAB said it’s concerned that the overall pattern of low smolt to adult returns of upper Columbia and Snake river spring/summer chinook salmon and steelhead in 2015-16 (Chapter 4 of the CSS report, “Patterns in Overall SARs”) is likely to continue, “particularly in light of the apparently poor early ocean survival of juvenile salmon in 2017 and unprecedented ocean conditions in 2018 in the Northern California Current and Gulf of Alaska.”

    -- Rather than trying to do a single study to estimate the effects of alternative tag-types (PIT and coded wire tags), “it may be opportune to do a meta-analysis of the many existing studies to try and figure out why there are different results; for example, is it species specific or just random noise?” the ISAB says.

    -- The ISAB says that Chapter 7 in the CSS report (“CSS adult salmon and steelhead upstream migration”) is a revision to last year’s Chapter 7. It looks at the relationship between survival of adults upstream of Bonneville and travel time, temperature and arrival date. “A Bayesian imputation method is used to account for the fact that travel time is, by definition, not available for fish that are not detected at the last upstream dam,” the ISAB review says. “The analysis seems to be well formulated and executed. However, information about the distribution of the latent travel times is very indirect, and so the primary concern that the ISAB has is with the sensitivity of the results to a different choice of latent distributions for travel times.”

    -- Chapter 8 (“PIT tag and coded-wire tag effects on smolt to adult return rates for Carson National Fish Hatchery spring chinook salmon”) reports on an experiment to investigate effects of different types of tags on various estimates of the population processes. “Unfortunately, lower than expected returns implies that the power to detect effects has been reduced compared to original plans. Given the reduced sample sizes, it was not surprising there was no evidence of an effect of tag-type on apparent survival or SARs,” the ISAB review says. “There was evidence for a decrease in PIT-tag retention over time once the adult fish entered the holding tanks. The ISAB is concerned about the effects of heterogeneity in overall survival when age 3, 4, and 5-year-old adult fish are pooled in the analysis, and some potential impacts of over-dispersion on the results.”

    -- The new methodology described in Chapter 9 (“Preliminary Development of an Approach to Estimate Daily Detection Probability and Total Passage of Spring-Migrant Yearling Chinook Salmon at Bonneville Dam”) to estimate the detection probability (and abundance) of smolts passing the dam could be applied at each dam in the hydrosystem, and thus some progress could be made toward understanding density dependence effects on survival, especially if multiple stocks are involved.

    The latest CSS report incorporates many of the ISAB’s suggestions from past reviews, including: life-cycle models have been extended to more populations and the effect of tag-type (i.e., PIT vs CWT) on SARs and estimates of survival are now being investigated.

    The board of scientists also made additional suggestions for next year’s CSS report. Among those suggestions are:

    -- Chapter 2 (“Lifecycle evaluation of upper Columbia spring chinook”) should be extended to investigate potential benefits on survival of management actions on the hydrosystem, such as spill modifications, as has been done in previous CSS reports. “The CSS indicates in their report that it is under active investigation. We look forward to the results,” the ISAB says.

    -- The ISAB recommends expansion of ocean survival estimates to additional salmon and steelhead populations with sufficient data, and collaboration between CSS and NOAA to address relevant questions about salmon ocean survival in an adaptive management framework.

    -- PIT-tagging is important throughout the Columbia River basin and a more in-depth treatment is warranted in Chapter 8, the ISAB says.

    -- Chapter 9 is important because estimates of abundance are needed when investigating compensatory and interactive effects among stocks, according to the ISAB review. “The authors estimated the probability of detection at Bonneville Dam which forms the basis of the estimator for abundance. A similar approach may be applicable for each dam in the hydrosystem. The feasibility of extending the analysis to the other dams should be explored.”

    The draft 2018 CSS report was prepared by the Comparative Survival Study Oversight Committee and the Fish Passage Center.

    The committee includes Jerry McCann, Brandon Chockley, Erin Cooper and Bobby Hsu, Fish Passage Center; Steve Haeseker, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Robert Lessard, Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission; Charlie Petrosky and Tim Copeland, Idaho Department of Fish and Game; Eric Tinus and Adam Storch, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife; and Dan Rawding, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    The ISAB serves the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, NOAA Fisheries and the Columbia River Indian Tribes by providing independent scientific advice regarding scientific issues that relate to the respective agencies' fish and wildlife programs.

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