The US has spent more than $2B on a plan to save salmon. The fish are vanishing anyway. - OPB
Inland Northwest tribes are using technology to track young salmon in hopes of returning runs to the Columbia and Spokane rivers | The Pacific Northwest Inlander
This will mark the final release of juvenile salmon whose journeys down the Spokane and Columbia rivers are being tracked by several Inland Northwest tribes
KUOW - Seattle fish research could shake up global tire industry
Research in Seattle-area creeks has discovered tire bits shedding lethal amounts of a little-known, salmon-killing chemical called 6PPD-quinone.
Springers back in best numbers since 2016 | The Spokesman-Review
Spring chinook are continuing to make an impressive showing at Bonneville Dam.
Salmon Summit Teaches Kids About Conservation, Science - Northwest Public Broadcasting
$3 Million Will Help Tribes Study Salmon Reintroduction In The Upper Columbia Basin - Northwest Public Broadcasting
Bringing salmon back to the Upper Columbia River will take a lot of time and a lot of money, according to the Upper Columbia United Tribes.
PNW tribe brings lawsuit against Seattle on behalf of salmon | Crosscut
After clashes over Skagit River dams and fish passages, the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe is legally pushing for the fish's 'right to flourish.'
For decades, dams have kept salmon out of the Spokane River. Now, tribes are studying how to bring the fish back | The Spokesman-Review
On Wednesday, the Coeur d’Alene Tribe released more than 500 summer chinook into Hangman Creek
To Revive a River, Restore Its Hidden Gut - Scientific American
Removing Condit Dam spurred hopes, but it also begged questions the White Salmon River is slowly answering - OPB
Fisheries biologists with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife float the lower section of the White Salmon River each fall to count returning salmon.
New data could help scientists worldwide studying fish passage through dams - OPB
Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory tag young chinook salmon with tags slightly bigger than a grain of rice.
WAWG signs letter to governor, legislature on salmon recovery | WAWG
Our farmers have implemented conservation on their lands for decades and generations with help and in partnership with local conservation districtsv...
Debris from flooding kills over 3.5 million salmon at Mason County hatchery | South Sound | ifiberone.com
More than 3.5 million hatchery salmon became casualties of recent flooding in Mason County.
Passing the Private Forest Accord Would Help Oregon Catch Up with Washington and California - Sightline Institute
The resulting Private Forest Accord deal, signed in October 2021, would amend Oregon’s Forest Practices Act to expand riparian buffers, tighten protections against landslides and erosion, support small woodland owners, and improve the rulemaking process going forward
250K steelhead fish missing from Washington state hatchery - OPB
The smolts that were discovered missing on Sunday accounted for about 64% of Lyons Ferry Hatchery’s Wallowa stock summer steelhead and less than 8% of the overall hatchery steelhead production in the Snake River basin
Salmon are no longer kings of the Columbia. That has biologists worried - Columbia Insight
A recent report shows an explosion of growth of a non-native species in the Columbia River.
Oregon scientist, research vessel join international expedition to study salmon - OPB
Oregon scientist Laurie Weitkamp is preparing to depart on the largest research expedition of its kind in the North Pacific Ocean with scientists from around the world who want to learn more about salmon as climate change is causing unpredictable changes in the species.
'There is no more time when it comes to salmon': Inslee announces proposed investments for species recovery | The Spokesman-Review
Inslee announced Tuesday a proposed $187 million in investments for salmon recovery, as part of his policy and budget proposals for the 2022 legislative session. The plan includes correcting fish passage barriers, investing in clean water infrastructure and expanding monitoring of salmon populations statewide.
Salmon to Swim Free as Infrastructure Money Flows - Route Fifty
SEATTLE — The $1.2 trillion federal infrastructure package signed into law this month creates a new billion-dollar program designed to open thousands of miles of congested transportation corridors.
Those choked thoroughfares aren’t roads and bridges, however. They are creeks and streams used by migrating salmon when they return from the ocean to reach their spawning grounds.
Tribes Ask For More Support For Salmon Reintroduction To The Upper Columbia - Northwest Public Broadcasting
This Whiskey Is For Protecting Salmon - Northwest Public Broadcasting
“Salmon-Safe is substantially about water quality,” Scribner said. Good for farmers, and good for salmon, too.
Spawn patrol: East Fork of Lewis River great place to watch fish on their journey - The Columbian
The onset of fall and coming of seasonal rains is perfect timing for the salmon that spawn in the East Fork of the Lewis River.
At places such as Lucia Falls Regional Park, along Northeast Lucia Falls Road northeast of Battle Ground, visitors can watch the large fish jump the waterfalls on their way to their ancestral spawning grounds.
WA fish researchers use tiny sensors and other tech to save salmon | Crosscut
Ecologists are piloting a technology that is expected to help restore waterways like the Green River to eventually produce more fish.
Biden-Harris Administration announces steps to improve conditions for salmon in Columbia River Basin | Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune
WASHINGTON – The Biden-Harris administration announced an important step to chart a path forward in a longstanding Columbia River Basin conflict regarding the operation of 14 federal dams and their impacts on the region’s salmon and steelhead populations.
Salmon Spawning Above Grand Coulee Dam A 'Hopeful' Sight - Northwest Public Broadcasting
Salmon are now spawning in waters blocked by Grand Coulee Dam. It’s the start of a larger effort to reintroduce salmon into the blocked area.
$70 million allocated for Chehalis Basin flood, habitat improvements - Washington State Wire
Could A New Fish Passage System Help Snake River Salmon? | Northwest Public Broadcasting
Whoosh Innovations said its fish passage system could transport salmon quickly over the Snake River dams – and generate $60 million over 10 years by diverting water from fish ladders to hydropower turbines.
One Northwest company thinks it may have a better way to help adult salmon make it up and over the Snake River dams.
U.S. Senate Infrastructure Package Could ‘Significantly Improve’ Salmon Habitat | Northwest Public Broadcasting
Pacific Northwest salmon could get some help from the proposed federal infrastructure package.
Some of the funding in the U.S. Senate’s version of the bill could help remove barriers to salmon habitat – just not the same barriers on the Snake River that Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, had hoped to eventually include.
Heat wave evokes fears of another massive salmon die-off in PNW | Crosscut
In 2015, extremely warm water combined with low stream flows. The Snake River sockeye run that year was supposed to break records. Instead, nearly 99% of the run died before it reached Idaho’s Sawtooth Valley.
Improvements were also made to the system after 2015 to help temperatures at fish ladders. Idaho Fish and Game can also trap and haul sockeye captured at Lower Granite Dam to the Sawtooth Hatchery, when it deems the water is too warm.
'It's time to bring them back': Tribes' canoe journey calls attention to loss of salmon, legacy of residential schools | The Spokesman-Review
“It’s important to reconnect to the water, the land, the elders, but also to call the salmon home,” said Peone, who organizes the Spokane tribe’s canoe and often serves as its skipper. “But we need a good, clean home for the salmon to come home to.”
The tribes have been making strides toward that goal.
Late last year, Colville tribal biologists observed the first spawning chinook salmon in the Upper Columbia river system in a generation. This spring, Spokane tribal biologists found a newly hatched salmon in Tshimakain Creek, also spelled Chamokane Creek, on the eastern edge of the Spokane Indian Reservation.