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Ecology and salmon related articles

Salmon Runs Sluggish
Near Tri-Cities -- So Far

by Rich Landers
Spokesman-Review, June 27, 2017

Salmon fishing in the Tri-Cities area of the Columbia River has been fairly slow as chinook and sockeye runs have lagged so far this season. (File photo Tri-City Herald) Salmon fishing in the Tri-Cities area of the Columbia River has been fairly slow as chinook and especially sockeye runs have lagged so far this season.

The 48,405 adult chinook that passed upstream of Bonneville Dam from June 1-25 is 86 percent of the 10-year average, says Joe Hymer, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife salmon specialist in Vancouver.

But the 42,489 sockeye that passed upstream of Bonneville is just 28 percent of the 10-year average.

Chinook counts are averaging just under 3,000 a day and sockeye counts are varying 3,000 to 4,000 a day at Bonneville, the first dam the salmon reach as they head up from the ocean.

Chinook counts at McNary at the Tri-Cities are running just under 2,000 a day.

"River temperatures are still relatively cool at 62F at McNary and 59.5F in the Hanford Reach," he said.

Here's Hymer's fishing report based on creel surveys:

The summer chinook and sockeye fishery in the Tri-City area opened June 16. WDFW staff interviewed 70 of the 308 boats fishing for salmon.

An estimated 58 adult summer chinook, 4 chinook jacks, and 173 sockeye have been harvested and 35 wild adult chinook have been caught and released. Anglers are averaging a little less than a sockeye per boat (0.7), 20 hours per fish.

Chinook were harvested at one chinook per 4 boats, 29 hours per chinook.

Angler effort and catch began to rise last weekend. Sockeye fishing should improve as the counts over McNary rise.


Rich Landers
Salmon Runs Sluggish Near Tri-Cities -- So Far
Spokesman-Review, June 27, 2017

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