the film
forum
library
tutorial
contact
Ecology and salmon related articles

First Sockeye Salmon Make
Their Arrival at Stanley Basin

by Staff
Lewiston Tribune, August 7, 2020

This June 13, 2006 file photo a year-old sockeye salmon peers through the glass of a lab beaker at the Eagle Fish Hatchery at Eagle Island State Park, west of Boise, Idaho. STANLEY -- Sockeye salmon have begun to trickle into the Stanley Basin here, completing a 900-mile journey from the Pacific Ocean.

According to Idaho Fish and Game, the first adult sockeye, a naturally produced female, was caught in a trap on Redfish Lake Creek July 31. A second fish arrived Aug. 2.

Through Wednesday, 438 sockeye had been counted at Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River in eastern Washington. Last year at this time, only 58 sockeye had been counted at the dam and just 17 reached their spawning grounds at the base of the Sawtooth Mountains.

This year, fisheries officials are expecting a return of 124 to 165 adult sockeye to the basin. Returning adults are trapped in weirs and then taken to the Eagle Fish Hatchery. Some of the trapped fish will be incorporated into a captive breeding program at the hatchery and the rest will be released into Redfish Lake to spawn.

Sockeye salmon are Idaho’s most imperiled anadromous fish. They are protected as endangered under the Endangered Species Act.

Related Pages:
Count the Fish, 1977-2014, Salmon Recovery Effortsby GAO


Staff
First Sockeye Salmon Make Their Arrival at Stanley Basin
Lewiston Tribune, August 7, 2020

See what you can learn

learn more on topics covered in the film
see the video
read the script
learn the songs
discussion forum
salmon animation