6 Ways To Save California’s Trout And Salmon
Biologist releasing a Chinook salmon in Butte Creek. California. Photo Credit: Harry Morse, California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

A new report indicates that almost half of native California salmon, steelhead, and trout species are on track to be extinct in the next 50 years.

The report offers concerning data about the declining health of these fish populations and opportunities for stabilizing and even recovering many species. If present trends continue, 74 percent of California’s native salmon, steelhead, and trout species are likely to be extinct in 100 years, and 45 percent could be extinct in 50 years.

Sounding the alarm

“This report should rightly be considered an alarm bell, but it should also be seen as a roadmap for how we can correct course to better support native aquatic species,” says lead author Peter Moyle, professor emeritus in the department of wildlife, fish, and conservation biology and associate director of the University of California, Davis Center for Watershed Sciences.

“Thanks to ongoing scientific research, we now know what to do—and where—to improve the plight of native fish.”

A 2008 report established a baseline level of health for each of 32 types of native salmon, steelhead, and trout populations in the state, including the extinct bull trout.


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Since that time, the number of California’s native fish species likely to be extinct within the next five decades nearly tripled, from 5 to 14 species. And after five years of historic drought, 81 percent of the remaining 31 species are worse off today than they were a decade ago.

“The health of our native fish is a reflection of the health of our rivers and streams,” says Curtis Knight, executive director of CalTrout. “Declining fish populations indicate degraded waters, which threaten the health and economic well-being of all Californians.”

‘We must act now’

The report includes an analysis of key threats to the survival of each species, starting with the overarching threat of climate change, which is likely to reduce the availability of cold water habitat that salmon, steelhead, and trout all depend on for survival. It also highlights various other human-induced threats, such as dams, agriculture, estuary alteration, urbanization, and transportation.

“We have already lost one of our native fish,” Knight adds. “The bull trout was last seen in the McCloud River in 1975. The fact we haven’t lost another since 1975 is remarkable. These fish are resilient, but this report underscores that we must act now to prevent further extinctions.”

The report notes that improving salmonid status throughout California requires investing in productive habitats that promote growth, survival and diversity. CalTrout notes it has developed an action plan to return the state’s salmon, steelhead, and trout to resilience to help many of these species thrive.

What can be done?

To reverse the trend toward extinction, the report suggests prioritizing protection and restoration efforts in three general areas:

  1. Protecting the most productive river ecosystems remaining in California, such as the Smith and Eel rivers. These strongholds, among others, have the capacity to support diversity and abundance because they retain high-quality habitat and are not heavily influenced by hatcheries, supporting the persistence of wild fish.

  2. Increasing focus on source waters will keep more water in streams and reduce stress on fish during drought, buffering the effects of climate change. Sierra meadow restoration, springs protection, and progressive groundwater management all contribute to this effort.

  3. Restoring function to once productive—but now highly altered—habitats can greatly improve rearing conditions for juvenile fish, especially floodplains, coastal lagoons, estuaries, and spring-fed rivers.

Additionally, the report identifies three science-based strategies to support a return to abundance for California’s native salmonids:

  1. First, focus on opportunities to mimic natural processes within altered landscapes. For example, off-season farmland can mimic traditional floodplains and support rapid growth of juvenile salmon.

  2. Second, prioritize improving fish passage to historical spawning and rearing grounds that have been cut off over time.

  3. And pursue strategies that increase genetic diversity of wild fish.

“We know we are not going to turn back the clock to a time before rivers were dammed or otherwise altered for human benefit,” Knight says. “Using the best available science, we can make landscape-level changes that will allow both people and fish to thrive in California.”

California’s native salmonids facing the most immediate threat include:

  • Central California coast coho salmon
  • Sacramento River winter-run chinook salmon
  • Southern steelhead
  • Kern River rainbow trout
  • McCloud River redband trout

A longer, more detailed report is expected this summer.

Source: UC Davis

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