Los Angeles Times

Fish returned to hatchery

Chinook salmon had been evacuated from river fed by troubled Oroville Reservoir.

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com Times staff writer Louis Sahagun contribute­d to this report.

More than a month after spillway damage at Lake Oroville triggered a massive evacuation of threatened fish, wildlife officials announced Monday that they had returned almost 1 million spring-run Chinook salmon to the Feather River.

The salmon were evacuated from the Feather River Fish Hatchery in Oroville beginning Feb. 9, when officials realized a damaged spillway was sending countless tons of suffocatin­g sediment into the river and hatchery holding areas.

The hatchery, which is owned and operated by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, is the largest in the state. The roughly 10 million young salmon it releases each year in the Feather River and San Pablo Bay, near San Francisco, make up more than half of the annual ocean and inland catch in California.

“Today’s fish release marks the success of federal and state agencies coordinati­ng and managing valuable resources while ensuring public safety during a crisis situation,” Howard Brown, the Sacramento River branch chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said in a statement.

Central Valley spring-run Chinook are a state and federally listed species, and their population­s have suffered greatly during the drought.

Monday’s release gives the fish enough time to “imprint,” or memorize, the river so that they can return to it for spawning, officials said.

It also gives them enough time to swim downstream before the Department of Water Resources drops the river water level again this week.

Another 1 million spring-run Chinook salmon and 3 million fall-run Chinook salmon are being kept at an annex hatchery, wildlife officials said.

During last month’s evacuation effort, an estimated 6 million salmon were trucked to another state wildlife facility about 10 miles from the turbid river.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? VOLUNTEERS help remove sediment from a salmon raceway at the Feather River Fish Hatchery last month. The state-run hatchery evacuated millions of fish because Oroville Dam’s damaged spillways were sending countless tons of suffocatin­g sediment downstream.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times VOLUNTEERS help remove sediment from a salmon raceway at the Feather River Fish Hatchery last month. The state-run hatchery evacuated millions of fish because Oroville Dam’s damaged spillways were sending countless tons of suffocatin­g sediment downstream.

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