On California's Coast, Farewell to the King Salmon
For the first time there's no fishing for chinook salmon on the California coast. The search is on for why the prize catch is so scarce.
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Ryan Anson
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
It dawned on me that the gray current shifting and flickering below the surface of Raceway 5 was actually hundreds of thousands of three-inch-long fall-run chinooks. A hatchery worker scooped up a couple: squiggles with woeful expressions, they were barely princelings, never mind kings. But every so often one would snap itself suddenly out of the big pond, a hint of the athleticism that would one day launch it upstream.
We were there because the hatchery was taking a historic step. Usually, the federal facility—at the northern end of California's Central Valley—releases the juveniles out its back door into Battle Creek, which feeds into the Sacramento River six miles downstream. This year, though, natural resource managers had decided to load 1.4 million fish, about a tenth of Coleman's total stock, into trucks and drive them roughly 200 miles south to San Pablo Bay, above San Francisco Bay, bypassing the entire river, a tactic that state hatcheries have been using for years. I had already been startled to learn that between 50 percent and 90 percent of the Sacramento River's "wild" fall-run chinooks are actually born in hatcheries, which were created to compensate for the loss of spawning grounds to dams. Every autumn, hatchery workers trap returning adults before they spawn and strip them of sperm and eggs. The offspring are incubated in trays and fed pellets. Now this latest batch would not even have to swim down the river.
The shipment was an effort to rekindle future fishing seasons, Scott Hamelberg, the hatchery manager, said: "If you truck a fish from Coleman and bypass certain areas where mortality can happen, you may improve survival. You take out hundreds of miles of avoiding predators, water diversions, pollution, any number of things."
We spoke in his office, which held a shrine to Popeye, a cat who must have enjoyed an extremely happy tenure at the hatchery. Despite the low numbers of returning Sacramento salmon this year, Coleman planned to go ahead with its annual Return of the Salmon Festival in the third week of October, where in years past schoolchildren have shrieked over the chinooks jamming the creek.
Outside, a worker standing waist-deep in the raceway crowded the fish toward a hydraulic pump, using a broom to goad stragglers. Their shadowy forms shot up a transparent tube and into a tank on a waiting truck. In a few hours they would be piped into net pens in the bay, then hauled by boat farther out and released to swim out to sea. Some scientists say the hatchery fish are less physically fit than their wild brethren, with a swimming-pool mentality that does not serve them well in the ocean. And yet in years past, many survived to maturity simply because they were introduced in such overwhelming numbers. Some wildlife experts speculate that the hatchery-born fish may even be weakening wild populations they were meant to bolster by competing with the river-born fish for food and space, and heading home with them to breed, altering the gene pool.
The trucked fish won't know where home is, exactly. Many will likely never find their way back to Battle Creek, not having swum down the river in the first place. These strays might spawn successfully elsewhere, but without that initial migration it might seem that some essential quality of salmon-ness is lost.
If this is the price of keeping the species going, so be it, said Hamelberg, who wears a wedding band etched with tiny salmon. "There's a greater public good here," he told me. "We're providing fish to the American public to eat, and also for aesthetic reasons—just for people to know they're in the system, that they returned. Our obligation is to keep these runs as sound as possible."
The hatchery workers looked weary as the trucks pulled away. As it turns out, chauffeuring tons of pinkie-length fish hundreds of miles is trickier than it sounds. During shipping the day before, the circulation system in one of the trucks stopped working, and 75,000 chinooks died.
Native peoples of the Pacific Northwest used to think salmon were immortal, and it's easy to see why. Even though the rivers hosted spectacular mass death scenes every year and were filled for weeks with rotting bodies, the next season's fish always mobbed the gravel beds. To safeguard this cycle, tribes were careful to place the bones of the season's first catch back in the river.
But the California and Pacific Northwest salmon populations have been declining for more than a century and a half. Gold miners washed the gravel out of streams and loggers dismembered river habitats. Fishermen caught so many salmon that the canneries couldn't keep up; barge loads were dumped back into the sea, and salmon carcasses were used to feed hogs and fertilize fields. Today, the Columbia River supports at most 3 percent of the salmon it boasted when Lewis and Clark passed through. The Klamath River, which starts in southern Oregon, has suffered major salmon kills. Some Pacific salmon varieties may share the fate of their East Coast cousins, the wild Atlantic salmon, which were killed off in huge numbers in the 19th century by overfishing, pollution and dams and are today nearly extinct in the wild.
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Comments (11)
Not to change the subject of the salmon. I have always wanted to have a campground using old boats as cabin's. I could see the shells of these old fishing boats being set in the ground and refinished inside. Also a plaque on each boat to show the history. What a way to go green and also be able to let the history of these boats live on.
Posted by Ruth Callari on June 27,2009 | 10:29 AM
They shut down the entire ca. coast and allow fishing for salmon in the sacramento river where there sole purpose of the fish being there is to spawn. That alone doesnt make since to me
Posted by jason cuddeford on December 12,2008 | 11:26 PM
By providing fish passage and water on Butte Creek the salmon run there has been restored. We are attempting to follow that model on the Auburn Ravine in western Placer County, www.sarsas.org (Save Auburn Ravine Salmon and Steelhead)Inc. The marine fishery is in steep decline or even collapse. As the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) process goes on it is mandatory for human survival that the damage to anadromous fish populations and their habitat, caused by the federal governments policies, be mitigated. The first step is for the federal government to admit being responsible in large part for the crisis in declining fish populations. Water pollution, barriers to fish passage, allowing destruction of habitat, and water allocation away from spawning streams are all problems that the federal government has a hand in controlling and mitigating in the re-licensing process for power generation on California Rivers. Using the piece meal excuse to avoid responsibility is not acceptable. Projects being re-licensed by FERC have overlapping effects and also effects downstream from the licensee’s operations. The totality of the watershed and ecosystem must be considered when granting a 50-year operating license.
Posted by Scott Johnson on December 3,2008 | 11:57 PM
The Chinook Salmon are our equivalent to the canary in the coal mine; when the salmon go, mankind and those of us living on the West Coast will not be far behind. We must save the Chinook Salmon because saving it is really saving ourselves.
Posted by Jack L. Sanchez on November 24,2008 | 05:54 PM
Thank you for the article about salmon. sharon petersen
Posted by sharon shay on November 23,2008 | 03:30 PM
A resident of Fort Bragg,Ca. watching your featured video was awesome.Great job Cyrus!I know someday soon that both you and the King Salmon will thrive together again and your dad will be in his glory watching every minute of it.Know we love you.Keep on keeping on.
Posted by Laurie Crowell on October 26,2008 | 01:03 PM
Great article. I also used to be a Salmon fisherman. The only difference is that I'm in Seattle. We used to gillnet in the Puget Sound, but no more. I believe a lot of it is stormwater runoff and other pollution that is harming the rivers and streams. We have a Salmon stream down the street and when it rains the stream is chocolate brown instead of clear. Now I manufacture filters for runoff to try and clean the streams. The Salmon need our help. salmonsaver.com Chris
Posted by Chris Probst on October 15,2008 | 01:27 PM
What a fantastic article! I found myself practically "swimming with the fishes," as you narrated the enduring plight of the King Salmon and their fight for survival. Great writing, thank you!
Posted by Nicholas on October 4,2008 | 09:50 PM
Prior to Hacheries and Dams on rivers the King Salmon wasn't declining. The general habitat has declined because of mega-agriculture and poor logging practices, especially for the Klamath River Salmon. The Silver Salmon are now in danger because "someone" has introduced Pike in the Eel River. The last of the Klamath Dam's was built in the 1960's and since then, the Salmon population declines. The Dams on the Klamath need to be removed (Warren Buffett has the power to remove them - He may like fish but I know he loves Investors/Conservatives). You must be aware that many areas of our Oceans are becoming stagnant. Use your common sense....no river flow, no ocean go. It's all a balance of Nature and of our Ecology. Farmed fish is pretty disgusting; you can't beat Mother Nature. Probably the reason the people with the Corporate Bucks and their unwitting "Conservative" Investors don't give a dam(n) is because there is no "bottom-line" for them when an individual or family can make a living from Nature. The true meaning of a "Conservative" is: a greedy person willing to destroy air, land, water and people for their personal profit. God help US(A).
Posted by Ellen Bryant on October 4,2008 | 07:52 PM
YOUR ARTICLE WAS GREAT ON THE KING SALMON. IT WAS WONDERFUL, BUT I WOULD LIKE TO KNOW WHO TO WRITE TO GET SOME "DEMAND WILD CALIFORNIAN KING SALMON" CAR STICKERS.
Posted by alfred cadena on October 3,2008 | 07:32 PM
having two brothers who retired from commercial fishing, i am priviledged to know that our hatcheries need to take lessons from the indian hatcheries here in wa. st. turning out the smolt at an earlier age, when they still have the natural instinc to hide. rather than keeping them till they are larger, and they become indifferent to their natural preditors.
Posted by lee gettmann on October 3,2008 | 12:46 PM
Thanks for the article but I wish I could sit down with you and talk this over. I've been doing tours in the delta for the last 7 years and I've seen the changes and understand the many points in question. There is a way to fix it and it does involve a canal and it also involves the farmers having to deal with a variable salinity estuary where in dry years the salts magrate up stream. The biggest disservice done was by the farmers when they filed suit against the State and Feds to force the State Water Resources Control Board to require the State & Fed water agencies to maintain an artificial fresh water estuary so they could get free fresh water for their crops. Then you had the Boswell political machine doing it's dirty deeds to play on the prejudices of water in the state to kill the peripheral canal (Read "The King of California"). The real fix would be to harvest water during the rainy season so flooding is minimized (the real reason for the dams) and then during the dry season you release the inflows straight through and then add what you need to harvest at the canal so the delta gets the full natural flow. All the farmers and cities need to start cleaning the water they put back into the system and Dam operators on the San Joaquin need to start releasing the natural flows so the San Joaquin river is in better shape too. There are a myraid of things this would solve. This is a problem that can be fixed and if you look at bulletin 3 that included the State Water Project and the Peripheral Canal because they knew in 1957 that it was needed for environmental purposes.
Posted by Michael Miller on October 1,2008 | 07:47 PM
Salmon lovers nationwide should not hesitate to speak out and have their voice heard in support of improving conditions for California's salmon. The water and habitat these fish need is being cut up and sold to farmers and developers, while every municipality along its shores dumps their warm wastewater into the mix. This wastewater and other nonpoint sources load the Delta and it's feeders with drugs, hormones, and pesticides whose detrimental effects to salmon are well documented but aren't reported through our management agencies (NMFS, DFG, etc) until we sue them. To learn more and help SAVE the ENDANGERED COHO salmon contact SPAWN at www.spawnusa.org.
Posted by Dr. Chris Pincetich on September 29,2008 | 04:39 PM
Thank you, Smithsonian. This article certainly helps bring awareness of the Sacremento River Salmon. May they continue to spawn forever. Let us hope the compromise elicited by the govenor will come to fruition. Until we run out of people there will be many conflicts with nature. Joyce
Posted by joyce on September 28,2008 | 06:45 PM