Chinook salmon forecast poor: Yukon official
Last Updated: Thursday, July 15, 2010 | 5:24 PM CST
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Fisheries officials fear the number of Chinook salmon in the Yukon River will set a record low this season, while subsistence fisheries in Yukon and Alaska are being asked to reduce how much they catch.
The Yukon River Chinook run has been turning up later than expected this year, and early counts of fish entering the Canadian side of the river are lower than previously predicted.
"At Rampart Rapids, the project there … has the lowest index value in the last 10 years," Sandy Johnston, a stock assessment manager with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans in Whitehorse, said Wednesday.
"Although it's still early in the season, the count estimate at Eagle, based on sonar, is the lowest in the last five years."
Late run
Johnston said given the later than expected run so far, many on the U.S. side of the Yukon River in Alaska are still waiting for their first chance to fish.
Some were angry to hear that fishermen at the mouth of the river accidentally took about 9,000 Chinook while fishing for chum salmon last week.
"I think [that] would have upper river users a bit concerned," Johnston said.
Johnston said the first big pulse of Chinook salmon should enter the Yukon side of the river — where the fish go to spawn — next week, with the pre-season forecast of 50,000 Chinook salmon still in effect.
"That's a relatively low number of fish. That would be enough to satisfy the First Nation fishery, but wouldn't allow much room for other fishers," Johnston said.
At least one Yukon First Nation has called on others to voluntarily cut back on how much fish they harvest.
The Yukon's aboriginal subsistence fishery harvests an average of about 8,000 Chinook salmon each year.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- Duffy expense claims reveal more about campaign travel
- Election spending records show additional days Senator Mike Duffy spent on the campaign trail in the 2011 election, including days he told the Senate he was on business, and days on which Deloitte auditors couldn't track him. more »
- Parts of Yukon on flood watch as rivers break up
- A warmer weather forecast for the Yukon means the threat of spring flooding is far from over. The communities of Upper Liard and Ross River are currently at a high risk of floods. more »
- Iqaluit cab driver not guilty in dispute with laundromat owner
- An Iqaluit taxi driver has been found not guilty of five charges against him. more »
- Yukon spending $1.4M to protect river trail from erosion
- A project to stabilize the Yukon River bank in downtown Whitehorse is well underway, at a cost of almost $1.4 million. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma murder case to plead not guilty
- The lawyer for Mark Smich says the Oakville, Ont., resident will plead not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man who disappeared earlier this month after taking two men on a test drive of his truck. Smich was charged today, after Dellen Millard of Toronto was also charged with first-degree murder. more »
- 2 more arrests linked to hacking death of British soldier
- WARNING: This story contains graphic content. Two more people have been arrested by officers investigating the hacking death of a U.K. soldier in London, say British police. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford fires chief of staff
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has parted ways with his chief of staff, the latest development in a tumultuous week at city hall where the pressure is growing for the mayor to comment on crack cocaine allegations raised by two media outlets. more »
- Body of missing Fort Resolution, N.W.T., woman found
- Police deem N.W.T. woman's death suspicious
- MMA fighter gets jail for assaulting ex-girlfriend
- Yukoners knit wooly mammoth a new coat
- Cab driver tried to run him over, says Iqaluit man
- Hunters not to blame for caribou decline, says NTI
- Arctic bacteria found multiplying at record –15 C
- Yukon couple hold record for longest marriage in country
- Arena fire may force Fort Smith to build outdoor rinks

