Miami Herald (Sunday)

Northwest’s salmon may be running out of time

- BY MARIE FAZIO New York Times

A Washington state report put it bluntly: Because of the devastatin­g effects of climate change and deteriorat­ing habitats, several species of salmon in the Pacific Northwest are “on the brink of extinction.”

Of the 14 species of salmon and steelhead trout in Washington state that have been deemed endangered and are protected under the Endangered Species Act, 10 are lagging recovery goals, and five are considered “in crisis,” according to the 2020

State of Salmon in Watersheds report, which was released last week.

“Time is running out,” said the report, which is produced every other year by the Washington state Recreation and Conservati­on Office. “The climate is changing, rivers are warming, habitat is diminishin­g, and the natural systems that support salmon in the Pacific Northwest need help now more than ever.”

Researcher­s say recovery efforts — involving state and federal agencies, Native American tribes, local conservati­on groups and others — have helped slow the decline of some salmon population­s. The report found that two species — the Hood Canal summer chum and Snake River fall chinook — were approachin­g their recovery goals. It also noted that no new salmon species had been added to the endangered list since 2007.

“We are at least treading water,” said Kaleen Cottingham, director of the Washington state Recreation and Conservati­on Office. “We have not, however, seen the kind of progress that we had hoped for.”

With the effects of climate change expected to accelerate, researcher­s said that more must be done to prevent further population decline and the possible extinction of some species.

“We’re at a crossroads,” said Erik Neatherlin, executive coordinato­r of the Governor’s Salmon Recovery Office in Washington. “There is a lot at stake. If we continue doing the things the way we’ve always done them, we’ll just continue to see a slow decline. Or we can think about where we’re going and change course.”

Salmon play a vital role in the environmen­t, economy and culture of the Pacific Northwest. At least

138 species, from insects to orcas, depend on salmon for their food in some way. Salmon support an estimated 16,000 jobs in the commercial and recreation­al fishing industry, and they are a draw for tourists.

In the 1850s, Native American tribes in the Pacific Northwest signed treaties with the United States that relinquish­ed their land but allowed them to retain the right to salmon fishing and other resources.

Salmon begin their lives in freshwater, migrate downstream to estuaries and, eventually, the ocean, where they live for a while before returning to their natal streams to spawn. (It is estimated that less than 1% of salmon survive long enough to return.)

Before the 20th century, an estimated 10 million to 16 million adult salmon and steelhead trout returned annually to the Columbia River system. The current return of wild fish is 2% of that, by some estimates.

One of the largest factors inhibiting salmon recovery is habitat loss, Neatherlin said. A growing human population has led to developmen­t along the shoreline and the addition of bulkheads, or sea walls, that encroach on beaches where salmon generally find insects and other food. More pavement and hard surfaces have contribute­d to an increase in toxic stormwater runoff that pollutes Puget Sound.

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