Times Colonist

Interior Fraser steelhead face extinction, say B.C. fishing and conservati­on groups

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VANCOUVER — Fishery and conservati­on groups in British Columbia warn a unique species of ocean-going trout faces a “severe conservati­on crisis” and must be added to Canada’s Species at Risk Act.

Fifteen groups, including the B.C. Wildlife Federation and the Steelhead Society of B.C., have written to the federal environmen­t and fisheries ministers urging immediate action on behalf of dwindling stocks of Interior Fraser steelhead, a variety of rainbow trout.

The species, a member of the salmon family, migrates to the ocean for much of its life but hatches and spawns in B.C.’s Thompson and Chilcotin rivers.

The letter, also signed by Eric Taylor, the former chair of the federal Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, says numbers of the fish have been on a “precipitou­s decline” for the last decade.

In 2018, the steelhead were rejected for an emergency listing on the Species At Risk Act and a second recommenda­tion in 2020 still awaits ministeria­l considerat­ion, even though the groups say last year’s spawning population­s hit their lowest levels since records have been kept.

The letter urges the ministers to act, saying current plans offered by the Fisheries Act are not designed to recover fish population­s at risk of extinction.

“The [Interior Fraser steelhead] situation is the most severe conservati­on crisis for any wild sea-run fish in British Columbia,” the letter says.

No one from Fisheries and Oceans Canada was immediatel­y available to comment on the claims.

Fewer than 15 fish returned per tributary last fall, which the letter says is far lower than the numbers that prompted the two earlier recommenda­tions for species protection.

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