KNAPPA ROLLS OVER WARRENTON; ASTORIA FALLS SHORT AGAINST NORTH BEND SPORTS • 10A 145TH YEAR, NO. 46 ONE DOLLAR DailyAstorian.com // Epoxy, tag, crab, repeat RESEARCHERS LOOK AT THE IMPACT OF DREDGING ON CRABS Warning signs for salmon Low levels of young fi sh off the coast By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian The numbers of young salmon caught off the Oregon and Washington state coasts during an annual federal survey cruise this June were among the lowest recorded in the p ast 20 years. In fact, numbers were low across nearly all the species researchers regularly catch or observe — from birds like the common murre to forage fi sh like anchovies and smelt. Months ahead of schedule, as a kind of heads up, West Coast researchers, project managers and program directors decided to send out a memo in mid-August detailing their initial fi ndings — data that would usu- ally be combined with other information and put out on a webpage at the end of the year. See SALMON, Page 7A Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Curtis Roegner, left, a fisheries research biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, tosses a Dungeness crab back into the waters of the Columbia River during a recent study of the species. By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian I t takes six hands to tag a Dungeness crab. One pair of hands preps and tests small cylindrical, acoustic tags. A second pair lifts a crab from a bucket and gen- tly dries a spot on top of its shell. A third has been busy mixing up epoxy in paper cups and now dabs a bit along a conve- nient groove at the top of the shell. The second pair of hands pushes the tag gen- tly down onto this puddle of epoxy. The crab looks a bit like a coal miner afterwards, head lamp in place, ready to plunge back into the darkness. For the p ast three years, Curtis Roeg- ner, a fi sheries research biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, has been tagging crabs in and around the Columbia River e stu- ary, tracking their movements and trying to get a better understanding of how these animals respond to a variety of events and conditions, especially how they weather dredge operations near the river’s mouth. As the dredges maintain the depth and width of important shipping chan- nels, they dump sediment at various spots out in the ocean and near to shore. Sedi- ABOVE: Dungeness crab wait for the glue holding radio tags on their backs to dry before they will be returned to the Columbia River. BELOW: A Dungeness crab before being fitted with a radio tag that will allow scien- tists to better study the species. ment dumps close to shore are intended to increase the amount of sand on beaches and alleviate erosion, but researchers weren’t sure what the process meant for Dungeness crabs, a multi million-dollar fi shery for Oregon and Washington state. “So far we’re fi nding there don’t seem to be any negative effects,” Roegner said. But, he added, their research is still preliminary. For as much as they have discovered, many questions remain. Roegner says the unanswered questions become even more important as researchers chart changes in the crabs’ marine habitats — from low levels of dissolved oxygen in the water to ocean acidifi cation and the widening sweep of climate change. Questions Dungeness crabs can use both the estuary and the ocean. Those that make it into the estuary appear to benefi t from the experience, growing faster and, as a big- ger crab, encountering fewer predators. But they can’t reproduce here and must return to the ocean eventually. “When they do that, where they go out there, we don’t know,” Roegner said. See CRABS, Page 7A Rich Landers/Spokesman Review A federal survey in June found low num- bers of young salmon off the coasts of Oregon and Washinton state. BACK TO SCHOOL Watch out for school buses and students as Clatsop County’s five school districts head back to class starting Tuesday. Astoria middle and high schools start Tuesday, along with Warrenton schools. John Jacob Astor and Lewis and Clark elementary schools will hold conferences Tuesday, with the first full day of school Wednesday. Classes begin Tuesday for first- through sixth-graders in Seaside, along with ninth-graders. The rest of Broadway Middle and Seaside High schools begin Wednesday. Kindergarten classes begin Thursday. For Hesse, tobacco prevention is addicting The county’s public face against tobacco By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian ulia Hesse has an ironic sense of humor about her role as a tobacco coordinator. “I can’t get away from it,” she said. “It’s addicting.” Hesse, 65, moved to Asto- ria from Colorado earlier this year and became the Clatsop County Tobacco Coordinator in March. Her arrival fi lled a seven-year vacancy. Health J Promotion Specialist Steven Blakesley had assumed the position’s duties in the mean- time. Hesse started before Gov. Kate Brown signed a law in August that, effec- tive in 2018, will ban sales of tobacco products to consumers under 21 years old. A part-time employee with the county, Hesse will be the public face of potential tobacco preven- tion policies . “The tobacco industry is a ruthless, predatory drug pusher. Countering their infl u- ence is really important to me,” Hesse said. “We have shifted from being health edu- cators to advocating for strong policy.” Hesse admits, though, that it won’t be easy. Tobacco consumption is linked to 21 percent of all deaths in Clatsop County, and the total economic cost to the county is more than $27 million. More than 20 percent of 11th graders, pregnant women and adults in general smoke tobacco. Submitted Photo See HESSE, Page 7A Julia Hesse is the county’s new tobacco prevention co- ordinator.