The Province

Huge slide decimated early salmon run

Sockeye and chinook spawning journey blocked last summer before remedial action

- BREANNA OWEN

Early runs of sockeye and chinook salmon were devastated last year when they couldn’t make it past a massive landslide on the Fraser River, government officials said Tuesday.

The officials with Fisheries and Oceans Canada told a Commons committee that 99 per cent of early Stuart sockeye and 89 per cent of early chinook were lost.

Rebecca Reid, the department’s regional director for the Pacific, said salmon survival improved later in the summer when work started to transport fish past the slide, helping them reach their spawning grounds.

Mortality during the salmon’s long journey inland is already high and it’s hard to say what exactly causes their deaths, Eric Taylor, a zoology professor and fish expert at the University of B.C. said.

But he said it’s clear that the landslide near Big Bar is the culprit behind last year’s elevated mortality rate.

It’s believed the massive landslide north of Lillooet occurred in late October or early November 2018, but it wasn’t discovered until last June after fish had already begun arriving.

Federal Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan told the committee the volume of the slide was equivalent to a building 33 storeys high by 17 storeys wide.

About 60,000 fish were helped over the slide last year, she said, while 220,000 made it past on their own once water flows dropped.

Jordan said so far just two chinook have been observed arriving this year.

Plans are in place to significan­tly increase the number of fish that survive and reach spawning grounds this year including using a pneumatic fish pump — a so-called salmon cannon — and building a series of boulders to create a fish ladder.

“The ultimate goal would be to clear it enough so that it’s a natural passageway for the fish, so that it’s not something that we have to continuall­y monitor or maintain,” Jordan said.

“But in the meantime, we are making sure that there are measures in place to get the fish through.”

Jordan said another small slide of about two cubic metres happened last month while no workers were present, an indication of the dangerous terrain at the remote site.

The committee heard that Fisheries and Oceans is also exploring how hatcheries could be used to restore runs affected by the landslide.

That means some salmon would be captured and their offspring reared before being reintroduc­ed into the wild.

“We know that there’s going to be a poor state for many of the upper Fraser River salmon, so we’re looking at emergency conservati­on enhancemen­t measures, including the hatchery component,” said Jordan.

A holding facility went into operation last week, she said, although she acknowledg­ed concerns that large-scale use of hatcheries could affect the genetic diversity of wild salmon stocks.

New Democrat MP Gord Johns, who represents Courtenay-Alberni on Vancouver Island, told the committee that B.C. needs a bigger financial commitment from Ottawa through a joint salmon restoratio­n and innovation fund.

The fund is worth up to $142.85 million over five years until the end of March 2024, and Reid said the total value of applicatio­ns under the program has so far been $340 million.

“Clearly, this program isn’t adequate to service the needs of coastal people,” said Johns.

“One thing that there is consensus on, with Indigenous communitie­s, local government­s, recreation fishers, commercial, is that we need more money (for) restoratio­n and habitat protection.”

 ?? —FORESTS, LANDS, NATURAL RESOURCE OPERATIONS AND RURAL DEVELOPMEN­T ?? Workers at a rock slide near Lillooet radio tag salmon, part of work that included building a fish ladder to help spawning fish move up the Fraser River last year.
—FORESTS, LANDS, NATURAL RESOURCE OPERATIONS AND RURAL DEVELOPMEN­T Workers at a rock slide near Lillooet radio tag salmon, part of work that included building a fish ladder to help spawning fish move up the Fraser River last year.

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