Times Colonist

Sea lions evicted from Oregon streams to preserve salmon

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NEWPORT, Oregon — The 700-pound sea lion blinked in the sun, sniffed the sea air and then lazily shifted to the edge of the truck bed and plopped onto the beach below.

Freed from the cage that carried him to the ocean, the massive marine mammal shuffled into the surf, looked left, looked right and then started swimming north as a collective groan went up from wildlife officials who watched from the shore.

After two days spent trapping and relocating the animal designated #U253, he was headed back to where he started — an Oregon river 210 kilometres from the Pacific Ocean that has become an allyou-can-eat fish buffet for hungry sea lions.

“I think he’s saying, ‘Ah, crap! I’ve got to swim all the way back?’ ” said Bryan Wright, an Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife scientist.

It’s a frustratin­g dance between California sea lions and Oregon wildlife managers that has become all too familiar in recent months. The state is trying to evict dozens of the federally protected animals from an inland river where they feast on salmon and steelhead that are listed under the Endangered Species Act.

The bizarre survival war has intensifie­d recently as the sea lion population rebounds and fish population­s decline in the Pacific Northwest.

The sea lions breed each summer off Southern California and northern Mexico, then the males cruise up the Pacific Coast to forage. Hunted for their thick fur, the mammals’ numbers dropped dramatical­ly but have rebounded from 30,000 in the late 1960s to about 300,000 today due to the 1972 U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act.

With their numbers growing, the dog-faced pinnipeds are venturing ever farther inland on the watery highways of the Columbia River and its tributarie­s in Oregon and Washington — and their appetite is having disastrous consequenc­es, scientists say.

In Oregon, the sea lions are intercepti­ng protected fish on their way to spawning grounds above Willamette Falls, a horseshoe-shaped waterfall about 40 kilometres south of Portland. Last winter, a record-low 512 wild winter steelhead completed the journey, said Shaun Clements, the state wildlife agency’s senior policy adviser.

Less than 30 years ago, that number was more than 15,000, according to state numbers.

“We’re estimating that there’s a 90 per cent probabilit­y that one of the population­s in the Willamette River could go extinct if sea lion predation continues unchecked,” he said. “Of all the adults that are returning to the falls here, a quarter of them are getting eaten.”

Clements estimates the sea lions also are eating about nine per cent of the spring chinook salmon, a species prized by Native American tribes still allowed to fish for them.

Oregon wildlife managers said sea lions are beginning to move into even smaller tributarie­s where they had never been seen before and where some of the healthiest stocks of the threatened fish exist. The mammals also have been spotted in small rivers in Washington state that are home to fragile fish population­s.

California sea lions are not listed under the Endangered Species Act, but killing them requires special authorizat­ion under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, which was changed to address the issue of fish predation.

Biologists this spring started trapping the sea lions in the Willamette River and releasing them at the coast. They also have applied with the federal government to kill the worst offenders to protect the fish runs.

Native tribes, which have fished for salmon and steelhead for generation­s, support limited sea lion kills because of the value of the fish, said Doug Hatch, a senior fisheries scientist with the Columbia River Intertriba­l Fish Commission.

If U.S. officials grant the request, the trap-and-kill program would expand a similar and highly controvers­ial effort on another major Pacific Northwest river. Oregon and Washington wildlife managers are allowed to kill up to 93 sea lions trapped each year at Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River under certain conditions. In the past decade, the agency has removed 190 sea lions there. Of those, 168 were euthanized, seven died in accidents during trapping and 15 were placed in captivity, according to state data.

The Humane Society of the United States sued over the trap-and-kill program and might sue again if it’s allowed on the Willamette River, said Sharon Young, the organizati­on’s field director for marine wildlife.

The animals are not the only problem facing wild winter steelhead and chinook salmon.

Hydroelect­ric dams that block rivers, agricultur­al runoff, damage to spawning grounds and competitio­n with hatchery-bred fish have all hurt the native species, Young said.

While Oregon awaits word on the sea lions’ fate, wildlife managers are trapping them and hauling them to the ocean, which can sometimes seem futile.

Five days after his 2 1 ⁄ 2 -hour drive to the Oregon coast, #U253 was back at Willamette Falls, hungry for more fish.

 ?? DON RYAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A California sea lion trapped on a Columbia River tributary waits for its release into the Pacific Ocean this month in Newport, Oregon.
DON RYAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A California sea lion trapped on a Columbia River tributary waits for its release into the Pacific Ocean this month in Newport, Oregon.

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