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Clearwater River steelhead limits reduced as B-run trickles in

Steelheaders fish the Clearwater River near Lewiston. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Steelheaders fish the Clearwater River near Lewiston. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)

FISHING -- As predicted when the forecast for B-Run steelhead was downgraded last week, Idaho Fish and Game has reduced bag and possession limits on steelhead harvested in part of the Clearwater River drainage during the fall and spring seasons.

The change takes effect when the fall steelhead harvest season opens Tuesday (Oct.15) in the Clearwater River drainage.

The limits for the fall season and the spring 2014 season are one fish per day and two in possession. In addition, in the North Fork Clearwater River and the mainstem Clearwater River downstream of the Orofino bridge only steelhead 28 inches or less in total length may be kept.

Read on for more details.

The overall return of steelhead to the Clearwater River drainage is less than forecast and numbers of large steelhead in the 2013-2014 return to the Dworshak Hatchery are lower than anticipated, and the fishery must be constrained to facilitate the hatchery meeting its broodstock goal.

The harvest seasons opens October 15 on the main stem of the Clearwater River above the Memorial Bridge, the South Fork Clearwater River, the North Fork Clearwater River below Dworshak Dam, and the Middle Fork Clearwater River below Clear Creek.

The steelhead harvest season that opened August 1, on a two-mile stretch of the lower Clearwater River from its mouth to the U.S. Highway 12 Memorial Bridge near Lewiston, will switch to the reduced limits and size restriction on October 15.

The harvest season already is open on the Snake, Salmon and Little Salmon rivers. The limits on these waters have not changed.

For additional information please consult the 2013 fishing rules and seasons brochure, available at all license vendors, Fish and Game offices and online.

  • See more details and insight in the following story by Eric Barker of the Lewiston Tribune:

IDFG cuts steelhead bag limits

Anglers will be allowed to keep only one hatchery fish per day, and they must be jacks below Orofino

By ERIC BARKER of the Tribune

Idaho will slash steelhead bag limits on the Clearwater River and its tributaries this fall in an attempt to make sure hatcheries meet spawning goals despite a dismal return of B-run fish.

Anglers will be allowed to keep just one hatchery steelhead per day, but will be restricted further when fishing between the river’s mouth and the Orofino bridge, where they will only be allowed to keep jacks — steelhead 28 inches long or shorter.

The normal bag limit on the Clearwater River and its north, south and middle forks, which open to catch-and-keep fishing Tuesday, is three per day. But this run will fall well short of normal.

About 5,800 large B-run steelhead are expected to return past Lower Granite Dam this fall, just a quarter of the preseason forecast. But only about 2,000 of those will be bound for Dworshak National Fish Hatchery, where nearly all Clearwater basin hatchery steelhead are collected for spawning or brood stock. The hatchery has a brood stock goal of 2,000 adults.

“You can see with 2,000 fish (returning), there is just not any room,”

said Joe DuPont, regional fisheries manager for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game at Lewiston. “We are convinced (without the changes) we would shoot way over and cut into the brood, so something had to be done.”

Some steelhead are trapped at Kooskia National Fish Hatchery, and some are collected on the South Fork of the Clearwater River, but not enough to alleviate pressure on the Dworshak-bound fish, he said.

The Clearwater is the primary destination for B-run steelhead, which are coveted by anglers for their size and strength. Most B-run fish spend two or three years in the ocean, compared to an average of one year at sea for A-run steelhead. That extra year or two allows them to grow large on the ocean’s bounty.

But the ocean can be fickle. It has not been kind to steelhead and spring chinook of late, but it has blessed fall chinook. The Columbia and Snake rivers are enjoying record runs of fall chinook but saw poor returns of spring and summer chinook earlier this year.

The return of A-run steelhead is below average and the B-run is as low as it has been since the mid- to early 1990s.

In 1994, only 4,500 B-run steelhead returned to the basin. The department did not lower bag limits that year and also did not meet its hatchery collection goals. In 1995, another poor return year, the department did not allow any harvest and instead opted for a catch-and-release season. It easily made brood stock goals.

With that history in mind and the grim prediction for this year’s run, some anglers welcomed the reduced harvest opportunities this fall in the hopes of better runs in the future.

“It’s the only responsible thing we can do,” said Randy Krall of Camp, Cabin and Home, a Lewiston tackle shop. “I totally support what Joe DuPont and those guys do. I’m a big fan of our fisheries managers; I think they do the best job they can.”

There is a bit of good news that will provide some harvest this year and could signal a much improved return next year — there are an estimated

1,300 jack steelhead returning to the basin. Without those fish, there might not be any harvest below Orofino.

“If that one-ocean run (B-run jacks) was really small, we probably would have just had catch-and-release, but there is an opportunity to catch those fish and not impact the brood,” DuPont said.

An above-average return of jacks usually portends a healthy return of adults the following year.

“It suggests next year’s run should be back up to what we have enjoyed in the past 10 years or so,” DuPont said.

Fisheries managers are at a loss to explain why the fall chinook run is so robust while steelhead, along with spring and summer chinook, performed so poorly. They suspect the ocean explains both.

Dworshak Hatchery had some problems a few years ago when about 1 million juvenile fish were lost to the disease IHN. But that would only effect this year’s three-ocean fish, which is usually a small portion of the run, and not those that were smolts two years ago. Spring flows were high when most of the fish returning this year left the basin for the ocean two years ago, which generally leads to high survival during the journey.

“The out migration conditions were good. They were very good,” said Becky Johnson, a fisheries biologist for the Nez Perce Tribe, which co-manages Dworshak Hatchery with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

“My best guess is it is the ocean.”

Biologists believe fall chinook go to different places in the ocean than steelhead and spring chinook, and they know they enter the ocean at different times. They speculate conditions were good for fall chinook but poor for the other stocks.

When the return of B-run steelhead is poor, it can effect harvest of fall chinook by tribal anglers on the Columbia River. Fishermen from the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Yakama and Warm Springs tribes fish for fall chinook in the Columbia. They are allowed to catch a small portion of the B-run but must stop fishing once they do.

As of this week, tribal anglers had caught 1,438 B-run fish, or 47 more than allocated, and the ongoing platform and hook-and-line season is scheduled to end today.

Members of the Nez Perce Tribe also fish for steelhead in the Clearwater River and its North Fork. Johnson didn’t know if the tribe plans to alter bag limits for its fishing, which generally doesn’t take place until the spring.



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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