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Coho providing action for anglers in Wenatchee, Methow rivers

a female coho salmon, followed closely by a male, prepares to spawn in north-central Washington's Methow River, in Methow, Wash.. Biologists are cheering a record return this year of coho to the middle and upper Columbia River, where the fish were virtually extinct 20 years ago. (Bonneville Power Administration)
a female coho salmon, followed closely by a male, prepares to spawn in north-central Washington's Methow River, in Methow, Wash.. Biologists are cheering a record return this year of coho to the middle and upper Columbia River, where the fish were virtually extinct 20 years ago. (Bonneville Power Administration)

SALMON FISHING -- Anglers got some thrills last month from the Yakama Tribe's 15-year effort to reestablish coho salmon in upper Columbia tributaries.

This year's count of the late-spawning salmon into the upper Columbia region is the highest in 78 years, and more are still to come, allowing the first coho fishing season in memory in the Wenatchee and Methow rivers. The coho season closed Monday, but some steelheaders continue to hook into them occasionally.

As of Sunday, 28,662 adult coho swam up the fish ladders at Rock Island Dam, nearly a third more than the last big run in 2009.

Tom Scribner, a biologist who started the coho reintroduction program for the Yakamas in 1996, estimates between 30,000 and 40,000 coho will come over the dam before the run is over. The year he started, coho were all but extinct in the upper Columbia River. None made it to Rock Island that year, he told the Wenatchee World.

"Every year when we break a record it blows me away,” he said last week. ”In 2009, when we had almost 20,000 (adults at Rock Island), that was off the map. ... This (year’s run)is beyond my wildest dreams.”

On Oct. 5, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife opened the first coho fishing season on the Wenatchee and Methow rivers in at least 30 years. Jeff Korth, the agency’s regional fish manager in Ephrata, said he couldn’t find any record at all of a coho season on those rivers, and believes it’s been 40 or 50 years since one anyone has fished these two major tributaries for the late-run salmon.

A short coho season was held on the Icicle River in 2009.

Coho historically were the second most-abundant salmon species (behind chinook) in the Wenatchee and Methow rivers, Scribner told the World.

The return of the fish is creating one more reason NOT to go fishing in Alaska.

Read on for more of the story from the Wenatchee World.

Cody Kamphaus, Yakama Nation fish biologist who has worked to recover coho for the past 12 years, said more and more North Central Washington fishermen are beginning to know about coho, and he’s talked to several who came out specifically to catch one this year. ”They’re a good fighting fish, about the same size as a steelhead,” he said.

Coho return to fresh water as three-year-old fish, Kamphaus said. When they leave the ocean, they’re mostly silver with a dark blue or olive green back. By the time they make it to the Wenatchee, males have turned deep red on their sides, and developed a hump on their back and a hook on their nose. Females have changed to a lighter red or purple color on their sides.

Kamphaus said they can be two feet long, but generally don’t weigh more than 10 to 12 pounds in these waters, as they’ve lost much of their body weight in the long swim upstream.

Biologists agree that over-fishing is the main reason they stopped returning to their once-prolific spawning beds in the upper Columbia River tributaries. Scribner said unscreened irrigation canals also played a part in their demise.

He said that by the early 1900s, they had mostly disappeared, so hydroelectric dams weren’t to blame. Another effort to restore coho runs in the 1960s and 1970s failed, Scribner said.

So when the Yakamas started its coho reintroduction program in 1996, Scribner worried about using a broodstock from an area near the Bonneville Dam because these coho never had to swim as far, or pass as many dams, as their offspring would.

”I thought it would happen,” he said of their recovery, ”but not as fast as it’s happened. But I knew that coho was a resilient species of salmon.”

Scribner said favorable ocean conditions have helped. In addition, they’re not subject to fishing on the lower river, so more coho make it back. ”But the biggest thing is the hard work that my staff does,” he said.

Coho were already so close to extinction in this region that they were never listed as threatened or endangered. Scribner said that, too, has helped in their recovery because the tribe has more options for using hatchery fish in the effort to reestablish them. ”They don’t fall under the tight guidelines that the Endangered Species Act sets out, and that allows us more freedom to reestablish them,” he said.

He said while he’s pleased with the results, the coho recovery program is far from complete.

Today, about 95 percent of the returning coho are hatchery-raised fish. The Yakama Nation’s goal now is to develop a local broodstock that has proven its ability to return and spawn in the upper tributaries. Those fish can then be left to spawn naturally.

Scribner said tribal programs have also reintroduced coho in the Yakima and Klickitat rivers. ”All of the coho production above Bonneville is tribal. There wouldn’t be any coho up there if it weren’t for tribal programs,” he said.

In the bigger picture, he said, coho not only offer more fishing opportunities, but also bring more diversity to North Central Washington rivers and streams.

”They obviously provide a benefit by bringing in marine-driven nutrients. They’re the last species of salmon (to spawn in the fall), so they provide an important niche within the ecosystem,” he said.



Rich Landers
Rich Landers joined The Spokesman-Review in 1977. He is the Outdoors editor for the Sports Department writing and photographing stories about hiking, hunting, fishing, boating, conservation, nature and wildlife and related topics.

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