SALEM,
Ore.— For
the third straight
year, the Oregon
and Washington
fish and wildlife
departments
are hazing sea
lions to deter
them from preying
on runs of threatened
salmon and steelhead
below Bonneville
Dam on the Columbia
River.
Using
non-lethal deterrents
such as crackershells,
rubber buckshot
and underwater
firecrackers,
crews will be working
from boats seven
days per week
through May 31
in an effort to
drive the marine
mammals away from
fish congregated
below the dam. The
hazing area extends
six miles downstream
from the dam
to Marker 85
“As
in previous years,
our goal is to
change these animals’ behavior,” said
Jeff Koenings,
director of the
Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW). “Predation
by sea lions on
fish in the tailrace
of Bonneville Dam
is a fairly recent
phenomenon, and
we don’t
want any more of
them to learn that
behavior. We
want them to recognize
that this is not
a good place to
find an easy meal.”
Like
last year, the
Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife
(ODFW) and WDFW
will conduct the
hazing in cooperation
with the National
Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS)
--the agency that
is funding the
ESA salmon/steelhead
protection effort--,
U.S. Department
of Agriculture
Wildlife Services
Program, Columbia
River Inter-Tribal
Fish Commission,
and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers,
operators of the
dam. Hazing
methods will remain
the same as last
year, but this
year’s
seven-day-per-week
schedule marks
a significant
escalation in
the effort to
deter predation
by sea lions,
said Sandra Jonker,
regional WDFW
wildlife manager.
“We
want to give non-lethal
deterrence every
chance to succeed,” Jonker
said.
California
sea lion numbers
have burgeoned
since the 1970s.
A September wildlife
survey by WDFW
documented 1,200
California sea
lions at the mouth
of the Columbia
River, among an
estimated West
Coast population
of 300,000 animals.
Despite
previous hazing
efforts by Oregon
and Washington
in 2005 and 2006,
the number of
sea
lions entering
the Columbia River—and
their rate of
predation on
ESA-listed salmon
and steelhead
below Bonneville
Dam—has
increased significantly
since 2001,
according
to surveys by
the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
Estimated
predation on
salmon
and steelhead
immediately
below Bonneville
Dam has reached
over 3 percent
of the total
upriver run
in some years,
according to
surveys
conducted by
the
Corps.
“In
addition to the
impact on salmon
and steelhead,
we remain very
concerned about
the predation
on white
sturgeon,” said
Charlie Corrarino,
ODFW Conservation
and Recovery
Program
Manager. “Broodstock
male and female
sturgeon are
being preyed
upon at an alarming
rate,” Corrarino
said.
In
February, for
the second year,
Oregon and Washington
conducted a separate
state-funded hazing
campaign designed
to protect those
slow-maturing
fish, some of which
can carry as many
as three million
eggs. But the primary
focus of the current
hazing effort
is to protect migrating
salmon and steelhead,
many of which
are listed for
protection under
the federal Endangered
Species Act.
Upper
Columbia River
spring chinook
are listed as “endangered” under
the ESA; lower
Columbia River
chinook and steelhead,
middle Columbia
River steelhead,
Snake River spring/summer
chinook, and
Snake River Basin
steelhead are
all listed as “threatened.” Concerned
about predation
on those populations,
fish managers
in Oregon, Washington
and Idaho jointly
applied last
November
to NMFS for
permission
to use lethal
means – if
necessary – to
remove individual
California
sea
lions that
prey
on chinook
salmon
and steelhead
below Bonneville
Dam. The application
was submitted
under Section
120 of the
Marine Mammal
Protection
Act, which
allows lethal
removal of
individual
pinnipeds
that
negatively
impact federally
protected
salmonid stocks.
NOAA
Fisheries
is soliciting
public comments
on the states’ application
through April
2.
“In
the meantime, we
need to do everything
we can to protect
our fish resources,” Jonker
said.
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