Vancouver Sun

Sockeye salmon comeback

- SHANNON DININNY

Yakama Nation biologists released thousands of sockeye salmon into a central Washington lake over the past four summers to restore fish runs.

SALMON LA SAC, Wash. — Yakama Nation biologists released thousands of sockeye salmon into a central Washington lake over the past four summers to restore fish runs that were decimated with the damming of area rivers and streams.

Each fall, the just- released fish swam up the Cle Elum River to spawn and die. Their babies, meanwhile, spent a year in the lake before swimming to the ocean to grow into adulthood.

Four years after the first release in 2009, those adult fish are returning to their birthplace to spawn, and tribal members are celebratin­g what they hope is the resurrecti­on of a revered species to its native habitat.

“You are part of a sacred ceremony to celebrate the return of an important ingredient to our body, our hearts, our life,” Yakama elder Russell Jim told the crowd gathered on the shore of Cle Elum Lake. “It does my heart proud what I’m going to see.”

And with that, the gates were lifted Wednesday on a tank holding 27 sockeye salmon that had been caught at a downstream dam, sending the fish headfirst into the lake. The sockeyes were among 232 offspring biologists have counted so far that have returned from the ocean.

The celebratio­n marks one of several in recent years for restoratio­n of salmon in the Yakima River Basin, which stretches from Snoqualmie Pass to Richland. The constructi­on

The fact that these experiment­al stockings so far are producing fish makes us hopeful ...

JEFF TAYER

DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE

of large, earthen dams — built for flood control and to provide irrigation water for farmers — blocked passage for fish that hatch in rivers and live in the ocean before returning to spawn. Three species of fish were essentiall­y wiped out there: coho, summer chinook and sockeye.

Sockeye are revered by Pacific Northwest tribes. They are among the last species to spawn in the fall, giving tribal people sustenance through the winter. They also are the only species of salmon that rears in a lake rather than a river or stream — juveniles spend a year in the lake before migrating to the ocean, then return to their birthplace to spawn.

Historical­ly, at least 200,000 sockeye returned to the Yakima River Basin until the constructi­on of dams eliminated them.

Sockeye were extinct in the basin in 1933 with the constructi­on of Cle Elum Dam, though fish biologists are fairly certain they were eliminated years earlier — perhaps even 100 years ago — when other dams were built downstream, said David Fast, Yakama Nation senior fisheries biologist.

Across the Northwest, American tribes have led the way with the reintroduc­tion of lost species of fish.

In Oregon, the Confederat­ed Tribes of the Umatilla successful­ly restored spring chinook salmon to the Umatilla River and are working to replicate that success in southeast Washington’s Walla Walla River basin. And in north- central Washington, the Colville Confederat­ed Tribes have worked to restore sockeye to the Okanogan River.

Yakama biologists reached agreement with the Colville tribes and several Canadian tribes to capture 1,000 of those returning sockeye from below Priest Rapids Dam in 2009 for their own reintroduc­tion program in Cle Elum Lake. In 2012, that number was 10,000. But Cle Elum Lake is just the beginning of the restoratio­n effort, said Yakama fish biologist Brian Saluskin. Sockeye used to be found in four large lakes in the basin — Cle Elum, Kachess, Keechelus and Bumping.

There are still a number of variables that will determine whether the project succeeds, said Jeff Tayer of the Washington state Department of Fish and Wildlife. “But the fact that these experiment­al stockings so far are producing fish makes us hopeful that we can restore significan­t numbers of sockeye to the Yakima Basin,” he said. And he pointed to Canada for hope for the future.

Fifteen years ago, the country saw very few sockeye return up the Columbia River to the Okanagan, Tayer said. Last year, a half million sockeye returned. “If we can replicate their success, that will be a big win.”

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 ??  ?? Restocking programs led by American Indian tribes are returning sockeye salmon to central Washington, a century after they were largely wiped out by the damming of rivers and streams.
Restocking programs led by American Indian tribes are returning sockeye salmon to central Washington, a century after they were largely wiped out by the damming of rivers and streams.

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