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Puget Sound salmon recovery is a collective effort of federal, state and local authorities and non-profit coalitions of universities, scientists, business and industry aimed at restoring Pacific salmon and anadromous forms of Pacific trout (Oncorhynchus) within the Puget Sound region.
Grays River supports populations of coho salmon, sea-run coastal cutthroat trout, and winter-run steelhead. While the river's coho numbers are fairly low—about one hundred per year—and the cutthroat numbers are low, the steelhead are a draw for sport fishing. In addition Sturgeon are present just off the river's mouth in Grays Bay. [10]
Salmon Creek is a 26-mile (42 km) tributary of Lake River in Clark County in the U.S. state of Washington.Beginning from its forested headwaters on Elkhorn Mountain, Salmon Creek passes through rural, agricultural, residential, and urban areas before flowing into the river just north of Vancouver Lake. [3]
Sustainable reef net fishing is a salmon harvesting technique created and used by Lummi and Coast Salish Indigenous people over 1,000 years. ... In the U.S. Pacific Northwest 28 populations of ...
A school of steelhead trout swim Oct. 18, 2021, in Trout Run which is a nursery waterway that flows in Lake Erie in Erie County. The run is closed to fishing but is one of the places law ...
The White River coho salmon are a mixed population of hatchery and wild fish. [4] The Puget Sound chinook salmon evolutionary significant unit (2005), the Puget Sound steelhead distinct population segment (2011), [8] and Puget Sound/Coastal bull trout (1998) are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
Southwest Washington ESU: Sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka; DPS/ESU Name Initial/Revised status Current status Boundary Map [1] Baker River ESU: Lake Pleasant ESU: Lake Wenatchee ESU: Okanogan River ESU: Ozette Lake ESU: Threatened (1999), (2005) [16] Threatened (2011) Quniault Lake ESU: Snake River ESU: Endangered (1991), (2005) [9 ...
The status of wild salmon in Washington is mixed. Out of 435 wild stocks of salmon and steelhead, only 187 of them were classified as healthy; 113 had an unknown status, 1 was extinct, 12 were in critical condition and 122 were experiencing depressed populations from a study from 1997. [18]