A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MAY 30, 2019 IN BRIEF Halibut fi shing closes on North Coast The Pacifi c halibut all-depth sport fi shery on the North Coast closed a day early after fi shermen hit their quota. The fi shery in the Columbia River subarea, which was supposed to remain open through Thursday, is now closed for the rest of the year. Fishery managers say both effort and catch during the fi rst two sets of open days this month were high. Rep. Mitchell to hold town hall State Rep. Tiffi ny Mitchell, D-Astoria, will hold a town hall at 10 a.m. Sunday in the Warrenton High School gymnasium at 1700 S. Main Ave. — The Astorian DEATH May 25, 2019 MOORE, Colin Eugene, 64, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Ocean View Funeral & Cremation Service of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer MEMORIAL Saturday, June 1 WILLIAMS, Daniel Brian — Memorial at 2 p.m., Camp Rilea Log Conference Center, 33168 Patriot Way in Warrenton. false information and reck- less driving. Vazquez was stopped for going 100 mph in a 55-mph zone. Vazquez denied having ID, provided a false name and refused a breath test. Police later iden- tifi ed Vazquez and took him to the Clatsop County Jail, where he recorded a blood alcohol content of 0.03% and agreed to provide a urine sample and meet with a drug recognition expert. • State police arrested James Willott, 33, of Van- couver, Washington, on Sat- urday for DUII , reckless driving, attempting to elude, offensive littering and fail- ure to present an opera- tor’s license. According to police, Willott was observed by other drivers, and later an offi cer, eastbound on U.S. Highway 26 speeding and making dangerous passes. He allegedly fl ed from police after being pulled over. He pulled off on a logging road and approached someone’s house asking for gas. State troopers and members of the Washington County Sher- iff’s Offi ce arrived and found Willott in a garage. They arrested him after a short pursuit on foot. • State police arrested Danny Parker III, 36, of Portland, on Saturday for two counts of second-de- gree assault, attempting to elude police, DUII , hit-and- run and two counts of reck- less endangerment. Police responded to a two-vehicle crash on the Washington end of the Astoria Bridge. Park- er’s vehicle left the scene of the crash and traveled south- bound. After briefl y fail- ing to yield, Parker surren- dered to police and recorded a blood alcohol content of 0.20% • The Clatsop County Sheriff’s Offi ce arrested Thomas Moor, 51, of Asto- ria, around 2 p.m. Saturday near the Buoy 9 Restaurant in Hammond for DUII . PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Clatsop County Recreational Lands Planning and Advi- sory Committee, 1 to 3 p.m., fourth fl oor, 800 Exchange St. Youngs River Lewis & Clark Water District, 3 p.m., 34583 U.S. Highway 101 Business. Warrenton Planning Commission, 5 p.m., City Hall, 225 S. Main Ave. Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Sturgeon start biting as season’s end nears By LUKE WHITTAKER Chinook Observer ON THE RECORD Assault • Warrenton police arrested Kenneth Stan- dring, 22, of Warrenton, on Saturday for two counts of fourth-degree assault, third-degree criminal mis- chief, harassment and stran- gulation. According to police, Standring assaulted his sister, grabbing her by the neck and throwing her to the ground. • Warrenton police arrested Cody Atkins, 24, of Astoria, on Friday for fourth-degree assault, fi rst-degree burglary, sec- ond-degree criminal mis- chief and fi rst-degree crim- inal trespassing. According to police, Atkins broke into a camper trailer parked on Birch Court and attacked the owner. DUII • Astoria police arrested Joshua Ryan Hudak, 21, of Astoria, on Tuesday for driv- ing under the infl uence of intoxicants. Hudak, carrying two passengers, drove his vehicle down an embank- ment, missing multiple trees and vehicles, according to police. He and the passen- gers, all with facial and head injuries, initially fl ed the scene after the car came to a stop but were later contacted, after which police arrested Hudak . • Warrenton police arrested Shawn Driggers, 30, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Sunday for DUII and reck- less endangerment. Accord- ing to police, Driggers, who had three passengers in his vehicle, was observed by an offi cer speeding southbound on U.S. Highway 101 and unable to maintain lanes. He was pulled over on the Fort Stevens Highway Spur and recorded a blood alcohol content of 0.10% • State police arrested Eduardo Vazquez, 21, of Beaverton, on Sun- day for DUII , failure to carry a license, providing Deckhand Steven Perkins pulled a keeper sturgeon from the ice box as fellow deckhand Ryan Hung carried another sturgeon down the dock for a customer after a successful trip for the Sea Breeze Charter fl eet. Circulation phone number: 503-325-3211 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2019 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Subscription rates Eff ective May 1, 2019 MAIL (IN COUNTY) EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$11.25 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 Out of County Rates available at 800-781-3214 DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.00 ILWACO — Eli Jamie- son couldn’t help but smile as a small crowd gathered to admire his catch. It was the fi rst keeper sturgeon the Tygh Valley, Oregon, resident had caught in nearly a decade and at 49 inches and 43 pounds among the biggest brought to the Ilwaco dock this season. “It’s the fi rst keeper I’ve had in eight years,” Jamie- son said. “This baby was just shy of 50 inches.” The fi sh was soon whisked away by Sea Breeze Charter deckhand Ryan Hung and delivered to Sportsmen’s Cannery, where Kevin Ward began a familiar routine of removing the fi ns and delicately cut- ting away thick fi llets. After a relatively slow start to the season, stur- geon fi shing has heated up in recent weeks with more keepers being caught. The fi shery has been open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday since May 13 and will continue through Wednesday, from the Wauna power lines downriver to Buoy 10 and adjacent Wash- ington tributaries. The fi shery closes at 2 p.m. each of those days. Only white sturgeon mea- suring 44 to 50 inches from the tip of their nose to the fork in their tale (“fork length”) may be retained. Fight is on to save salmon from toothy invader By COURTNEY FLATT Northwest Public Broadcasting The fi ght to save Colum- bia River salmon could hinge on a major battle taking place in the basin’s biggest reser- voir. It pits biologists against a fi sh: The invasive northern pike. Northern pike are aggres- sive. They eat anything in their path — they’ve even been spotted chomping on ducks and bats. That’s bad news for soft-bellied fi sh, like rainbow trout. “These pike here, they can really prey on a lot of fi shes that these other fi sh in the reservoir right now can’t,” said Travis Rehm, a fi sheries biologist with the Spokane Tribe of Indians. Rehm is one of the anglers standing in their way as the Spokane Tribe and other fi sheries managers launch a counterattack. Biologists are catching as many northern pike as they can in Lake Roo- sevelt, the reservoir held back by the Grand Coulee Dam. If the fi sh make it past Grand Coulee and the next dam downriver — Chief Joseph Dam — it could be game over for the Columbia’s threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead populations. These native fi sh popu- late the 545-mile section of the Columbia River below the Chief Joseph Dam, plus thousands of miles of tribu- tary rivers and streams. “Native species here hav- en’t evolved to deal with a predator that’s quite like pike,” Rehm said. To push back the north- ern pike’s steady progression, biologists will be on the water for much of the summer, set- ting and checking about 15 gillnets each day. The goal: snagging as many northern pike as possible. Rehm and two other biol- ogists, Andy Miller and Joe Cronrath, check the gillnets within 24 hours after they’ve set them in place. These biologists know where to place the gillnets: near channels, in shallower areas, where the northern pike — apex predators in these waters — like to ambush prey. Tribal biologists also set gillnets for northern pike last year. “The hotspots haven’t changed. The densities within those have, and they’re just increasing,” Rehm said. Gillnets are controversial Gillnets are controversial because fi sh that aren’t being Courtney Flatt/Northwest Public Broadcasting Travis Rehm holds up the largest northern pike biologists caught on May 21. The female fi sh was about 34 inches long. targeted — like smallmouth bass, walleye and northern pikeminnow — get tangled in the nets. But Rehm said they’re trying to be careful. “We’re doing our best to minimize bycatch and be as cognizant of everything as possible,” he said. All of the non native fi sh the team catch are gutted. If people will eat the fi sh, the biologists deftly fi let it — along with the northern pike — and take it to the Spokane Tribe’s food bank. They keep the heads of the larger north- ern pike. Tiny bones in the head can tell them how old the northern pike is and where it’s been. They clip its fi n to collect DNA, which can help biologists track northern pike spawning. Recently, biologists for six different agencies took an “all hands on deck” approach to netting northern pike. The cadre saturated known hotspots with gillnets for a week. In the end, they caught 439 northern pike. They especially want to catch female northern pike before they spawn. Each fi sh can have somewhere around 10,000 eggs. Fewer eggs mean fewer pike in the future. “We stopped at least 2,160,000 eggs from being released into the water during this one week survey,” said Holly McLellan, the lead biologist with the Confed- erated Tribes of the Colville Reservation. In a different area of Lake Roosevelt called the Sanpoil Arm, Colville biologists net- ted a whopping 28-pound female northern pike. McLel- lan said the eggs from that fi sh alone weighed 4 pounds. In this vast reservoir, the presence of these predatory outsiders means other fi sh could be in trouble. In Cali- fornia and Alaska, northern pike ate all the types of fi sh anglers like to catch. “The (hatchery) rainbow trout are getting hammered,” Rehm said. All day long, biologists fi nd hatchery rainbow trout inside northern pike stom- achs. One fi sh had recently eaten three rainbow trout. Illegally introduced Northern pike didn’t just all-of-a-sudden show up in Lake Roosevelt. They were illegally introduced into Montana as early as the 1950s — thanks to outdoorsmen who took it upon themselves to bring these game fi sh from the Midwest by the bucket- ful to stock Western waters. N owadays, conservation sci- entists refer to these folks as “bucket biologists.” Since then, the northern pike have been relentlessly swimming, reproducing and eating their way down the tributaries and lakes of Mon- tana, Idaho, and Washington state – all connected waters that are part of the Columbia Basin. Tony Grover is the fi sh and wildlife director for the Northwest Power and Con- servation Council, which can direct money toward the northern pike eradication. Grover said the only times these fi sh have been com- pletely stopped is in isolated waters. “Any time they’ve shown up in larger, interconnected systems, it’s been impossible to eradicate them. So now that they’re in the system, they’re here to stay, almost certainly,” Grover said. Once fi sheries managers recognized the threat these invaders posed to native spe- cies, they tried to stop it. The Kalispel Tribe of Indians knocked back the northern pike population in Washing- ton’s Box Canyon Reservoir on the Pend Oreille River. But some fi sh made it past their nets and on toward the Columbia. Northern pike entered Lake Roosevelt around 2011 and kept moving. They’ve nearly covered the lake’s 150- mile length and have been spotted within 17 miles of Grand Coulee Dam, where the Colville Tribe recently caught the large female north- ern pike. Grover worries smaller northern pike could one day slip through the Grand Cou- lee Dam’s turbines. He said it could be just a few more years before that happens. To help with the fi ght, managers are paying anglers $10-a-head for any northern pike they catch. Back at the lake, Rehm said he’s “cautiously optimis- tic” they can slow the pike’s progress. “If we can get a handle on them and be able to manage- ably net them, it’ll be a lot easier go,” Rehm said. On this day, Rehm and the other biologists catch 21 northern pike. “We’ll give them hell,” he said. “That’s the plan.”