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February 24, 2025

New program aims to boost salmon in Northern California river

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

For the first time in more than 80 years, Chinook salmon are swimming in the North Yuba River in Northern California thanks to an innovative wildlife program.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife, along with federal and local agencies, launched a to reintroduce Chinook salmon into their historic spawning grounds in the North Yuba River in Plumas County. This stretch of cool water, according to the state, is considered some of the highest quality and most climate-resilient in California.

But Chinook salmon disappeared from the waterway after the construction of the Englebright Dam prevented from swimming upstream.

In October, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife constructed a series of nests along the 12-mile stretch of gravel riverbed and then filled them with fertilized Chinook salmon eggs from a nearby hatchery. Four months later, these salmon eggs have begun to hatch and the first young salmon were observed on Feb. 11, according to the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

"The North Yuba represents a really unique location for us. Between the main stem and its tributaries there is somewhere around 40 to 50 miles of habitat that is ideal for spring-run Chinook salmon for holding, spawning and rearing," said Colin Purdy, a fisheries environmental program manager for the state.

"If we can develop this pilot effort into a full reintroduction program, we would be able to more than double the amount of available salmon habitat in the Yuba River watershed. And that's a huge win for spring-run Chinook salmon."

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The state project is one of many initiatives that aim to reintroduce salmon to California's cold-water habitats upstream of dams and other fish barriers. This includes several dam removal projects, including along the Klamath River, the largest dam removal in U.S. history.

However, unlike the Klamath River, there are no plans to remove dams in the Yuba River, which the state says are critical to maintaining water supply and flood protection. Because dams will remain in place, the state is collecting the newly hatched Chinook salmon in the North Yuba River, and they will be trucked downstream and released in the lower Yuba River, where they can continue their migration to the Pacific Ocean.

"This is a habitat that salmon haven't been in for a long time, so we have very little data to understand how salmon will respond," Purdy said. "... So there are a number of different things that we're going to be able to learn from this."

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Chinook salmon have returned to the North Yuba River in Northern California for the first time in over 80 years due to a new wildlife program. The initiative involves placing fertilized salmon eggs in constructed nests along a 12-mile stretch of the river. The eggs have begun hatching, marking a significant step in reintroducing salmon to their historic habitats. While dams remain, the young salmon will be transported downstream to continue their migration.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.