Imperial Valley Press

California salmon lose way after ride downstream in drought

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — A desperate decision to truck California’s native baby salmon toward the Pacific Ocean during the state’s drought may have resulted in generation­s of lost young salmon now hard-pressed to find their way back to their reproducti­ve grounds.

With fewer native fallrun Chinook salmon able to make their way back home to the leading salmon hatchery in the state, that hatchery could have only about half as many young salmon as usual to release next spring, the Sacramento Bee reported Tuesday. For those involved in safeguardi­ng California’s struggling native salmon, it had always been understood that resorting to tanker trucks to carry tiny salmon to the ocean during the drought was a trade-off, John McManus, executive director of the fishing industry’s Golden State Salmon Associatio­n, told the Bee. Getting a lift on their migration saved countless salmon, but disoriente­d them. “Everybody kind of acknowledg­ed and understood at the time the consequenc­es,” McManus said.

Native salmon historical­ly anchored food chains and habitats on both land and in the water in California. Salmon still boost the state’s economy by $1.4 billion annually, the salmon industry says. Dams that cut native salmon off from their former upstream spawning grounds, and general human demands on water, have helped cut salmon numbers drasticall­y in the state, making state and federal hatcheries crucial for the fish.

California’s drought, declared over just last spring, included some of the driest spells ever recorded in the state. In 2014 and 2015, hatchery managers resorted to sucking baby salmon into tanker trucks for their 280-mile migration toward the ocean, biologists say.

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