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CSPA
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Sportfishing Protection Alliance
“Conserving
California’s Fisheries |
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| "Ocean
conditions may be the potential icebergs for salmon populations,
but the ship is being steered by us humans. Salmon populations
can be managed to avoid an irreversible crash, but continuing on
our present course could result in loss of a valuable and iconic
fishery."
Peter B. Moyle |
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F&G Commission Closes Salmon Fishing On Central Valley Rivers
By Dan Bacher
May 9, 2008. For the first time ever, recreational
salmon fishing will be closed on the Sacramento River
and its tributaries this year with the exception of a
short season for late fall run run chinook. The
Sacramento River salmon season has opened on July 16
every year, but will remain closed this season until
November 1 when a limited stretch of river will be
opened to the take of salmon.
The California Fish and Game Commission voted
unanimously today to adopt a zero bag limit in all 14
Central Valley rivers and streams except for a
one-salmon bag limit in the Sacramento River from Red
Bluff Diversion Dam to Knights Landing from November 1
to December 31. The Feather, American, Yuba and other
popular salmon rivers will be closed to the take of
spring run chinook salmon also.
“The Department proposed and recommended this option,
a hybrid of the originally proposed Options 2 and 3,
because of concerns about impacts to spring chinook
salmon,” said Steve Martarano, Department of Fish and
Game (DFG) spokesman. “This option will provide
maximum protection to Sacramento River fall chinook in
the Central Valley while providing very limited access
to late-fall chinook.”
Anglers will be able to fish for rainbow trout,
steelhead, shad, sturgeon, striped bass, catfish, black
bass and other species on the Sacramento River and its
tributaries, according to Neil Manji, branch chief of
the inland fisheries division of the DFG. The closure of
salmon fishing on Central Valley rivers will cause an
estimated loss of over $20 million to the state's
economy.
This river closure follows the closure of all
recreational and commercial fishing on the ocean in
California and most of Oregon in April by the federal
regulatory body, the Pacific Fishery Management Council
(PFMC), and the state. The anticipated economic loss to
California of the closure of the recreational ocean
fishery will be around $167 million, while the economic
loss of the commercial fishery will be approximately $63
million, according to DFG data.
The Klamath and Trinity rivers will be open to salmon
fishing this year with the quota for recreational
anglers over 20,000 fish. "If there is any silver
lining to the dark cloud of the salmon closure, it will
be the fishery on the Klamath and Trinity," said
Manji. The specific bag limits and other regulations for
the Klamath system will be approved at the Fish and Game
Commission on May 22-23.
Expect to see lots of anglers on the Klamath and Trinity
this year, since this system will be the only one where
you will be able to take river salmon, other than the
limited late fall fishery on the Sacramento.
This decision to close the river and ocean waters to
salmon fishing is caused by the unprecedented collapse
of Sacramento River chinoook salmon, the result of years
of federal and state government mismanagement. Although
the state and federal government officials claim that
“ocean conditions” are the likely culprit, a
coalition of recreational and commercial fishermen,
Indian Tribes, conservation groups and some prominent
scientists contends the collapse was spurred by
increased water exports, declining water quality and
other freshwater habitat problems.
Peter B. Moyle, Professor of Fish Biology at U.C. Davis,
says blaming “ocean conditions” for salmon declines
is like blaming the iceberg for sinking the Titanic.
"Ocean conditions may be the potential icebergs
for salmon populations, but the ship is being steered by
us humans," observed Moyle. "Salmon
populations can be managed to avoid an irreversible
crash, but continuing on our present course could result
in loss of a valuable and iconic fishery."
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