NEWS
RELEASE
Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife
May
26, 2016
Contacts:
John Long, (360) 902-2733;
Laurie
Peterson, (360) 902-2790
Salmon
seasons set for Puget Sound;
area
waters expected to re-open to fishing soon
OLYMPIA
– State and tribal leaders today reached an agreement on Puget Sound fisheries
that is expected to pave the way toward opening summer salmon seasons and
waters recently closed to recreational fishing.
The
co-managers agreed on this year’s Puget Sound salmon seasons after several
weeks of extended negotiations. Anticipated low numbers of salmon – especially
coho – returning to Puget Sound made this year’s negotiations challenging.
Agreement
on fishing seasons is a key step in obtaining a joint federal permit required
to conduct fisheries in Puget Sound waters, where some fish stocks are
protected under the federal Endangered Species Act.
The
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) closed many Puget Sound-area
waters to fishing on May 1, after the previous federal authorization to conduct
fisheries expired.
“We
plan to re-open those waters as soon as we have federal approval,” said John
Long, salmon fisheries policy lead for WDFW. “We anticipate getting the new
permit within a few weeks.”
More
information on the fisheries that closed May 1 is available on the department’s
website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/pugetsound_salmon_update/.
In
the meantime, anglers can begin making plans to fish for salmon this summer in
Puget Sound-area waters, where most of those fisheries will target hatchery
chinook. Salmon fisheries throughout the Puget Sound area will be constrained
to protect coho salmon and other weak salmon stocks, Long said.
“Conservation
is key in developing these fisheries, especially in a year with such low
returns expected back to the Sound,” Long said. “We worked hard to meet those
conservation needs and provide fisheries that are meaningful for both state and
tribal fishers.”
Changes
in Puget Sound salmon fisheries since last summer can be found on WDFW’s
website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/northfalcon/, where information
on Washington’s salmon fisheries in ocean waters and the Columbia River also is
available. Some of those changes include:
- Marine
Area 10 (Seattle/Bremerton) will be open from July 16 to Aug. 15, or when
the quota of 1,395 fish is met. The area was closed last summer to chinook
retention. Marine Area 9 (Admiralty Inlet) will be open on the same dates
as Marine Area 10, but also could close sooner if the quota of 3,056 fish
is met.
- There
will be no coho fisheries in marine areas of Puget Sound, with the
exception of Hood Canal, where sufficient coho are forecast to return.
- WDFW
is closing some rivers and marine areas to all salmon fishing during
September and October, the peak months for coho salmon to return to Puget
Sound. Rivers slated for closures include the Skagit, Stillaguamish and
Nisqually. Lakes Washington and Sammamish also will be closed to fishing
during those months.
- The
lower mainstem of the Skokomish River will be closed to non-tribal fishing
this year due to a claim by the tribe that the river is part of the
Skokomish Reservation and public access is prohibited. WDFW is working to
evaluate this claim. The closed area includes the section of river from
the Tacoma Public Utilities power lines (near the mouth of the river)
upstream to the Bonneville Power Administration power lines (upstream and
west of Highway 101). The department advises anglers to observe this
closure of the state’s fishery that will be monitored by WDFW police.
More
details on salmon seasons in Puget Sound and other areas of Washington will be
available on WDFW’s website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/regulations/ later this month.
For
information on tribal fisheries, contact the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
(http://nwifc.org/).
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