
Hundreds of people, including commercial fishermen, charter boat skippers and recreational anglers, packed a large room at the Sonoma County Water Agency offices in Santa Rosa on Wednesday, March 2, to hear the discouraging news from state and federal scientists about the prospects for this year’s ocean and river salmon seasons.
Low ocean abundance forecasts for Sacramento River and Klamath Chinook fall-run Chinook salmon point to restrictions in the recreational, commercial and tribal fisheries this upcoming season, according to data released in the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s annual salmon fishery information meeting.
Agency scientists estimate that there are approximately 299,600 adult Sacramento River fall Chinook salmon and 142,200 adults from the Klamath River fall Chinook run in the ocean this year, based on the returns of two-year-old salmon, called jacks and jills. The salmon from these two rivers comprise the majority of salmon taken in California’s ocean and inland fisheries.
The forecasts are lower than in recent years and suggest that California fisheries may see salmon seasons in 2016 that have reduced opportunities over last year, said Brett Kormos, a senior environmental scientist with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the moderator of the meeting, in a news release issued right after the meeting.
We’re in an unprecedented situation where fishermen face constraints both in the north (Klamath) and the south (Sacramento), said Dr. Michael O’Farrell of the National Marine Fisheries Service.
These forecasts, in addition to disturbing information on endangered Sacramento River winter Chinook salmon, will be used over the next couple of months by federal and state fishery managers to set sport and commercial fishing season dates, commercial quotas and size and bag limits.
A total of 112,434 Sacramento River fall adult salmon and 19,554 jacks returned to spawn in the river in 2015, according to Vanessa Gusman, CDFW environmental scientist. By basin, 17 percent of these fish were from the American Basin, 32 from the Feather and 49 percent from the Upper Sacramento.