Arab Times

Baby fish hauled to river:

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These speckled, rose-tinted fish haven’t been spotted in this bubbling river in remote northeaste­rn Oregon for more than 30 years — until now.

But this week, the waters of the Lostine River suddenly came alive as hundreds of the 4- and 5-inch-long juvenile coho salmon shot from a long white hose attached to a water tanker truck and into the frigid current.

The fish jumped and splashed and some, momentaril­y shell-shocked, hid along the bank as onlookers crowded in for photos.

“All of us are speaking from the heart and our gladness for these fish coming back into this river, bringing something that has vanished, but has come back,” Nez Perce tribal elder Charles Axtell said. “We take care of each other and that’s what we are doing — taking care of this fish. We are the circle of life.”

The cohos’ baptism in this far-flung river marks the end of one journey and the beginning of another — an attempt to restore a lost species to a tribe and to a region.

The fish, raised by state wildlife officials in a hatchery outside Portland, were trucked 300 miles inland in nine water tanker trucks equipped with highly sensitive oxygen and temperatur­e sensors and a bubbling system that mimics a river’s current.

Now in the Lostine River, they must turn around and swim 600 miles to the Pacific Ocean over the next month and then swim home after a year and a half in the Pacific Ocean feeding and growing.

Biologists expect to see the adult fish returning to this remote corner of the state next fall.

Coho salmon once numbered 20,000 here each year and were part of a rich tribal tradition for the Nez Perce. The

tribe was driven from this part of Oregon by the US government more than a century ago, but its members consider the species critical to their history and have

fought for years to bring back the reddish, hook-nosed fish.

Numbers of coho declined throughout the 20th century due to pollution, human impacts on their habitat, overfishin­g and the constructi­on of hydroelect­ric dams that impeded their progress upstream.

The Nez Perce successful­ly reintroduc­ed coho salmon into the Clearwater River in Idaho in the mid-1990s. The program was so successful that Idaho permitted non-tribal fishing of coho during one season a few years ago, said Michael Bisbee Jr, coho project leader for the Nez Perce. The tribe hopes to repeat the Idaho project’s success in Oregon.

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Axtell
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Bisbee

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