
anglers can look forward to another solid recreational salmon fishing season on the ocean this year, based on data presented at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife's annual salmon information meeting in Santa Rosa on February 27.
The National Marine Fisheries Service has forecasted 379,632 adult Sacramento River Fall Chinook salmon are now in the ocean off the West Coast, compared to 223,854 a year ago at this time. The number is derived from the number of jacks, 41,184, that returned to the Sacramento River and its tributaries in 2018.
This forecast, along with data from the Klamath and Trinity rivers, other Central Valley rivers and coastal rivers, will be used by the Pacific Fisheries Management Council to set times and areas open to both sport and commercial ocean salmon fishing this year.
The ocean salmon fishery targets an escapement of at least 122,000 with a 67.9% exploitation rate. If the 2018 regulations were in place, there is a preliminary escapement prediction of 230,500.
Another factor impacting the ocean fishery is the constraints used to protect Sacramento winter Chinook salmon, a fish that was fought to protect under the state and federal Endangered Species Acts.
The winter Chinook run shows an abundance forecast of 1,924, which is larger than 2018, although well below historical levels. In 1969, over 117,000 winter run Chinook returned to the Sacramento River.
The maximum allowable age-3 impact rate for winter chinooks on the ocean is 15.7%. If the