From Wild Salmon Center <[email protected]>
Subject Helping wheels turn in B.C., and making PALS on the Olympic Peninsula.
Date August 17, 2023 6:13 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Wild Salmon Center News - August 2023

MAKING PALS ON THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA
On Washington’s ferny Dickey River, mid-August flows were unusually low. Normally, that would bother Wild Salmon Center Fish Habitat Specialists Betsy Krier and Nicole Rasmussen. But they saw one bright side. Low water would make it easier to do the work of the next several weeks: tearing out fish barriers, while strategically “messying” up creeks with post-assisted log structures (PALS) and beaver dam analogs. Because restoration work doesn’t have to be high-tech. Sometimes it just takes elbow grease…and an Arnold . More here on the work we're piloting with our partners across the Olympic Peninsula.
[link removed]

ON B.C.'S CENTRAL COAST, THE NUXALK NATION PILOTS A SELECTIVE FISHERY PROGRAM
Right now on the Bella Coola River, the Nuxalk First Nation is running a pilot fishwheel project with help from Wild Salmon Center Senior Watershed Scientist Dr. Will Atlas. The wheel, a loaner, will inform the buildout of two permanent wheels in the next few years as the Nation develops a full fishwheel program for monitoring and selective harvest of Bella Coola salmon . “As they’re currently built, mixed-stock salmon fisheries like those off the U.S. and Canadian coasts are undermining the biodiversity Pacific salmon need to thrive,” Dr. Atlas says. ( One recent example: B.C.'s chum fishery.) “Luckily, we have hundreds of examples, going back thousands of years, of better ways to fish ”
[link removed]

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: OUR 2022 ANNUAL REPORT IS HERE!
Trust us: it's not just about the jaw-dropping photos. Our 2022 Annual Report also celebrates a stunning year of victories for wild salmon and steelhead, along with where we're headed next . In Alaska, we defeated Pebble Mine; now we aim to protect the entire watershed. In Oregon, we won key protections on private forestlands. Next, we hope to extend those wins to state forests. Across the Pacific Northwest, we’re tapping unprecedented federal funding for wild fish. And around the North Pacific, we're leading the way in salmon conservation science. We invite you to behold our report in glorious full color.
[link removed]

AT SALMONFEST, DEFENDING A WILD WEST SU
This month, Wild Salmon Center staff joined the Defend the West Susitna team at Salmonfest 2023. We talked to hundreds of festivalgoers about a misguided plan to build a 100-mile industrial road through the salmon-rich West Su wilderness , including new efforts to repackage the project, likely to bypass environmental review. “All the specifications make clear this publicly funded road would be built for industrial mining trucks, and this attempted rebrand to ‘public’ doesn’t pass the smell test,” said WSC board member and former state senator Rick Halford in a press release. “We have huge infrastructure and other needs around the state that should be prioritized over speculative industrial roads to nowhere.”
[link removed]

###

The mission of the Wild Salmon Center is to promote the conservation and sustainable use of wild salmon ecosystems across the Pacific Rim.

Share this email:
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]


Wild Salmon Center
721 NW 9th Avenue
Suite 300
Portland, OR 97209
United States
If you believe you received this message in error or wish to no longer receive email from us, please unsubscribe: [link removed] .
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis