10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015 Culling: Groups say lawsuit QRWDERXWµELUGVYHUVXV¿VK¶ Continued from Page 1A Salmon impacts Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife A small purse seine is deployed on the Lower Columbia River. The net is played out in a large circle, ready to be drawn or “pursed” in. Theoretically, any fish caught within the purse can be sorted through, with wild-spawning individuals released back into the wa- ter, while hatchery fish are retained. Seine: Plan to replace gillnet gear Continued from Page 1A Also, much has changed since 2013. Kitzhaber is no lon- JHULQRI¿FHDQGIRUPHUJLOOQHW strategist Bruce Buckmaster was appointed to the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission this spring. As questions remain about the viability of using seines on the river, opponents of the plan are feeling optimistic. “I’m feeling more hopeful than I was,” said Hobe Kytr of Salmon For All, an Asto- Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife ria-based association that rep- Fish are able to swim freely while crew members sort resents gillnetters. “Let’s put it through them. that way.” have done an admirable job in 5LYHU ¿VKHG XVLQJ ³UHVHDUFK collecting data and monitoring LPSDFWV´PHDQLQJWKHZLOG¿VK Questions Kitzhaber’s plan to replace seine operations. When Ellis they caught during the course gillnet gear with purse and went out on a boat this summer, RI QRUPDO ¿VKLQJ GLGQ¶W JHW beach seines and phase gill- WZRVWDWH¿VKHU\REVHUYHUVZHUH deducted from the regular com- mercial impacts. nets out by 2017 went into ef- also aboard. 7KLV ZDV WKH ¿UVW FRPPHU- fect in 2013, restricting gillnet FLDOVHLQH¿VKHU\WRRSHUDWHRQ ¿VKLQJ WR VLGH FKDQQHOV OLNH Landings Youngs Bay. Voters had shot /DVW\HDUVWDWH¿VKHU\PDQ- WKH /RZHU &ROXPELD 5LYHU LQ down the plan in 2012 only to agers opened the purse and decades, and the seiners were see Kitzhaber and Oregon and EHDFK VHLQH ¿VKHULHV IURP$X- able to catch and sell their salm- RQMXVWOLNHDQ\RWKHU¿VKHUPHQ Washington’s Fish and Wildlife gust through September. This year, the seiners were commissions proceed with it in By the end of the season, 2013. beach and purse seiners had considered part of the regu- For the last two years, state landed a total of 2,439 marked ODU FRPPHUFLDO VDOPRQ ÀHHW ¿VKHU\ PDQDJHUV LQ 2UHJRQ Chinook and 4,046 unmarked DQGWKHLULPSDFWV²QRORQJHU and Washington have operated Chinook, 1,031 marked coho billed as “research impacts” commercial purse and beach and 2,222 unmarked coho as ²FRXQWHGLQWKHVDPHZD\,Q VHLQH ¿VKHULHV RQ WKH ULYHU ² well as 703 steelhead, accord- WKHIXWXUH¿VKLQJVHDVRQSODQ- gear outlawed by Washington LQJWRDIDOOVHLQH¿VKHU\ ning could get complicated and in 1935 and by Oregon in 1950. observation summary published expensive with seines in the But according to interviews on the Oregon Department of mix, too, Ellis said, especially if seines do in fact have a high conducted with members of the Fish and Wildlife’s website. Oregon and Washington depart- This fall, purse seiners land- impact on salmon. There are also questions ments of Fish and Wildlife over ed a total of 2,312 Chinook and the past two years, questions 526 coho during the fall season, DERXWZKDWVXFK¿VKHULHVZRXOG have plagued Kitzhaber’s plan according to numbers available ORRNOLNHIRU2UHJRQ¿VKHUPHQ from the start. from Oregon. Beach seiners YHUVXV:DVKLQJWRQ¿VKHUPHQ Both state Fish and Wildlife Mortality studies released ODQGHG VLJQL¿FDQWO\ OHVV IURP last year seemed to indicate the August through the end of Sep- departments oversee the seine seines had too high of an impact tember, ending with 681 Chi- ¿VKHULHVDQGDOORIWKHSDUWLFL- SDWLQJ¿VKHUPHQWKLV\HDUQHHG- on salmon, meaning high per- nook and 61 coho. ed to have a current Columbia centages of seine-caught wild 5LYHU FRPPHUFLDO VDOPRQ OL- ¿VKZHUHPRUHOLNHO\WRGLHDIWHU The future being released back into the riv- For Kytr and the Lower Co- cense and be able to show that HU)LVKHUPHQ²ERWKVSRUWDQG OXPELD 5LYHU JLOOQHWWHUV YHU\ the had landed salmon from the commercial, on the river and real questions remain about the mainstem of the river or in se- RQWKHRFHDQ²DUHOLPLWHGWRD economic impact of losing the OHFWDUHD¿VKHULHVRIIWKHPDLQ- certain percentage of wild salm- PDLQVWHP7KHVHOHFWDUHDV² stem within the last two years. But while Oregon residents on they are allowed to catch, places like Youngs Bay specif- handle or keep. ically designated for commer- also needed to purchase a $32 Since 2013, the states have FLDO¿VKLQJ²FDQ¶WVXSSRUWWKH nontransferable experimental EHHQ VWXG\LQJ WKH VHLQH ¿VK- VDPHQXPEHURI¿VKHUPHQWKDW gear permit issued by ODFW if eries, trying to determine how the mainstem can, they argue. they were selected to participate they should function on the And, they say, not all gillnetters LQHLWKHURIWKHVHLQH¿VKHULHVLQ river and what a commercial are able to or want to switch Washington, the cost of partici- pation was higher. VHLQH¿VKHU\IRU&ROXPELD5LY- gear. :DVKLQJWRQ ¿VKHUPHQ ZKR .\WU¿UPO\EHOLHYHVJLOOQHWV er salmon even looks like. Each \HDU WKH\ KDYH UH¿QHG WKHLU are much better at catching the were selected to participate in ULJKW ¿VK OLPLWLQJ LPSDFWV RQ WKHVHLQH¿VKHU\ZHUHUHTXLUHG GDWD¿VKHU\PDQDJHUVVD\ WR KDYH DQ HPHUJLQJ ¿VKHU\ “As it’s gone along, I think wild runs. And, as Ellis points out, license and an experimental people are a little more com- fortable with the numbers go- there is still much work to be ¿VKHU\ SHUPLW ERWK LVVXHG E\ ing in,” Ellis said, looking back done if seines are to replace WDFW. While the experimen- WDO¿VKHU\SHUPLWGRHVQRWFRVW over the years since Kitzhaber’s gillnets. Last year, commercial sein- DQ\WKLQJ WKH HPHUJLQJ ¿VKHU\ plan went into effect. He and others say the states ers on the Lower Columbia license involves a $290 fee. Veterans: µ7KHLUVHOÀHVVTXDOLW\ should be an example for all of us’ NOAA Fisheries estimated that during 1998-2012, dou- ble-crested cormorants con- sumed 6.7 percent of juvenile steelhead, 2.8 percent of Chi- nook yearlings and 1.3 percent of juvenile sockeye migrating to the ocean. Looking at it another way, NOAA also calculated the birds ate an annual average of 12 million juvenile salmonids, many of them listed under the Endangered Species Act. The East Sand Island’s cormorant colony, estimated at 15,000 nesting pairs, rep- resents about 98 percent of the double-crested cormorant pop- ulation in the Lower Columbia 5LYHU ,Q WKH FRUPRUDQW breeding population was about 100 pairs. As tons of dredged rock and soil from the Columbia 5LYHUVWUHDPEHGSLOHGXSRYHU the years, avian predators, such as cormorants and Caspian WHUQVVHWXSFRORQLHVRQWKH¿OO The corps has a four-year plan to reduce the cormorant population in the estuary by 56 percent. The plan is spelled RXW LQ WKH ¿QDO HQYLURQPHQWDO impact statement, dated Feb. 6. Lawsuit pursues end to bird cull In response, the Audubon Society of Portland and four RWKHU JURXSV ¿OHG IRU D SUH- liminary injunction against the corps, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in April. The environ- mental groups argued their suit was not about “birds versus ¿VK´ 5DWKHU WKH\ VDLG IHG- eral agencies were targeting cormorants rather than operat- ing dams to minimize juvenile salmon mortalities. NOAA Fisheries calculated annual cormorant consump- tion rates of juvenile steelhead, yearling Chinook and juvenile sockeye at 6.7 percent, 2.8 percent and 1.3 percent, re- spectively, based on data from 1998-2012. U.S. District Judge Michael Simon ruled against the Audu- bon and its allies May 8, citing their failure to prove that le- Sondra Ruckwardt/Contributed Photo Fish-eating Cormorants are pictured here on East Sand Island near Chinook, Wash. thally removing the number of cormorants stated in the corps’ plan would likely cause “irre- vocable harm” to the overall population. The decision al- lowed the federal agencies to start their 2015 culling opera- tion in late May. Final oral arguments in the case are scheduled for March 7 before Simon. Meanwhile, on Goose Island upstream of the Co- OXPELD¶V FRQÀXHQFH ZLWK WKH 6QDNH 5LYHU IHZHU WKDQ nesting pairs of Caspian terns have been counted this year. “Last year, before the dis- suasion program, there were about 400 nesting pairs,” said Michael Lesky, natural re- source specialist for the U.S. %XUHDX RI 5HFODPDWLRQ¶V (SKUDWD¿HOGRI¿FH These Caspian terns wear ankle bracelets, actually bands that indicate where the bird was tagged. Tern populations have been big consumers of juvenile sal- monids. Studies conducted during 2008-2013 estimated terns were annually taking 16 percent of upper Columbia 5LYHU VWHHOKHDG VPROWV DQG 2.5 percent of spring Chinook. 5HFODPDWLRQDQGWKHFRUSVZLOO release estimates next month of the number of juvenile salmon and steelhead taken by Caspian terns in 2015. Lesky, who visited the ref- uge in May, said he saw the birds nesting, rearing their young and using the habitat there. The purpose of the new California habitat is to attract Caspian terns away from the &ROXPELD 5LYHU WR D ORFDWLRQ where there are fewer or no ESA-listed species for prey. The San Francisco Bay refuge LVRQWKHELUG¶VDQQXDOÀ\ZD\ It won’t be known if Cas- pian terns at the Don Edwards refuge are terns from Goose Island until agency personnel have information from satellite tags on the terns, which will come later this year, Lesky said. The terns nesting there could also be from East Sand Island on the Lower Columbia, where efforts to reduce their numbers have met with limited success. To redistribute Caspian terns, a method called social attraction is used to entice them away. This involves the Corps of Engineers building up islands at appropriate loca- tions, and biologists then hold- ing a big, loud party there. In- stead of setting out chairs and tables and turning on music, they plant the new terrain with Caspian tern decoys and blast audio recordings of screeching terns. Social attraction seems to work to lure a limited number Relocation efforts of the terns to new areas, but it As part of the dissuasion is hard to predict whether this plan, federal agencies have cre- widely dispersed and migra- ated alternative Caspian tern tory species will continue to nesting habitat at Don Edwards return to a new island or breed 1DWLRQDO :LOGOLIH 5HIXJH LQ there, and whether relocation San Francisco Bay. The alter- helps reduce Caspian tern con- native habitat was available for sumption of juvenile salmon the 2015 spring nesting season. and steelhead on the Columbia. CO M IN G IN FEBRUARY! 2016 ED ITIO N of th e a w a rd-w in n in g publica tion from th e publish ers of Coa st W eeken d T h e on ly region a l m a ga zin e focused on just th e Colum bia - P a cific region Continued from Page 1A Eight-grader Isabella Mor- rill explained why she thinks Veteran’s Day is important. “Veterans give their free- dom to give us ours. Their VHOÀHVV TXDOLW\ VKRXOG EH DQ example for all of us in Amer- ica,” Morrill said. “Why do we celebrate Vet- eran’s Day? To give our grat- itude, our honor. We must re- alize that Veteran’s Day is not a pointless holiday. Veteran’s Day is not a day that Ameri- cans should shuck aside.” Members from Veterans of Foreign Wars Fort Stevens Post 10580 attended, giving RXWEXGG\SRSSLHVWKHRI¿FLDO PHPRULDOÀRZHURIWKH9): Leroy Dunn, quartermaster of the Fort Stevens chapter, read “When a Soldier Dies,” a poem written by Jim Willis, a former director of the Ore- Edward Stratton/The Daily Astorian Leroy Dunn, quartermaster of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Fort Stevens Post 10580, took the stage to read the poem “When a Soldier Dies” by Jim Willis, a former direc- tor of the Oregon Department of Veterans’ Affairs, during a Veteran’s Day celebration Wednesday at Gateway Com- munity Church. gon Department of Veterans’ Affairs, in 2004. “So enjoy your freedom, your family and fun, but stop to remember where it all came from,” the last stanza of Wil- lis’ poem reads. “Freedom is triumph over evil and lies, and it’s paid for each time a sol- dier dies.” RES ERVE YO UR S PACE TO DAY! 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