Pacific Northwest Salmon

Improved Essays
The Dam Problem with the Decline of Pacific Northwest Salmon
For generations upon generations, native Salmon have played a crucial part in the culture of the Pacific Northwest. Native American culture has been influenced and built around salmon. Today, salmon populations are at an all-time low and populations are still plummeting. Many subspecies have gone extinct. Throughout the next several pages, I am going to explore what salmon are, how they have been used, what led to their decline, what is being done to help them, and their importance to the Pacific Northwest.
Salmon are part of a family of fish called Salmonidae. Modern salmon began to appear in the fossil record about 6 million years ago. Salmon are anadromous, meaning that they migrate
…show more content…
Logging, agricultural practices, poor hatchery practices, commercial fishing, climate change, and pollution are just a few of hundreds of other reasons that have caused salmon to decline. Logging may not seem to have a large impact on salmon considering trees grow on land and anadromous fish live in water, but it does more than ever. Not only does the removal of trees around riparian areas warm water temperatures, but it leads to many more implications. Erosion and mass sedimentation becomes a serious issue for spawning grounds. The machinery used to harvest these trees causes damage to riparian ecosystems and increases the amount of loose soils near the stream. Agriculture, especially in recent years with the use of toxic chemicals and fertilizers, has had a large impact on many aquatic species, not just anadromous fish. This causes nutrient and organic overloads that is damaging to aquatic ecosystems and the fish themselves. The effects of agriculture and pollution go hand in hand. Hatchery and aquaculture practices have also had a large impact on salmon. Recently, in the Puget Sound of Washington, an aquaculture facility that raises Alaskan salmon had over 300,000 salmon escape into the wild. This poses a serious threat to native salmon populations and the northwest’s waterways. These farmed salmon “bring with them pollution, virus and parasite amplification” (Flat and Ryan). They compete with native salmon for food and spawning grounds. It is ironic that Atlantic salmon can be raised in the Pacific Ocean. A species that is non-native and poses a serious threat to our native populations. A problem that affects more than just fish, but wildlife, plants, humans and the whole world is climate change. Climate change ultimately impacts water temperatures and water flows. Anadromous fish rely on cold water for survival and especially

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    McEwen used an expert at UC Davis in order further prove his perspective. With the use of a quotation from an expert, making this article further believable and reliable. Stern explains the plan that most likely will not help the salmon, one of the main problems they want to get rid of. The paper explains through the use of ethos/ethics how the river plan will not work and how it will bring…

    • 955 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The steelhead trout used to be a native species to the Arroyo Del Valle in Pleasanton, California. Some are anadromous fish (i.e. they spend most of their time in freshwater developing after they hatch and then spend part of their later life in the sea or ocean) but others will remain in a freshwater stream or creek their entire lives. Typically, anadromous populations swim up the creek in winter to lay their eggs and then swim back, leaving the eggs to develop on their own. In order to lay their eggs, female steelhead trout need a stream riffle with a gravel bottom. The eggs then hatch, and the newborn steelhead (alevin) soon develop into fry that consume zooplankton for subsistence.…

    • 275 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    All tastiness aside, the discrepancy in funding for protecting different species in the case of Chinook salmon and steelhead makes perfect sense. Salmon is the lifeblood of the pacific northwest. It feeds the forests, wildlife, communities, and the economy. It is no surprise that nearly 80% of funding was devoted to these two species. Populations of Chinook salmon and steelhead have declined rapidly since the 1980s and it appears despite our best efforts they are continuing to decline.…

    • 512 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Did Salmon Rule? Enquiring when intensive storage and sedentism began on the Northwest Coast Introduction Background Namu, located in the traditional territory of the Heiltsuk Nation on the central coast of British Columbia is an archaeological obscurity, as no one can be sure of the actual time frame of intensive storage and sedimentation occurrences. On the Northwest Coast "salmon remains, the representation of cranial elements versus vertebrae, mass capture technology and storage structures are being debated as evidence for large-scale salmon storage" (Cannon and Yang, 2006). The use of this knowledge is to acquire sustainable information of when the sedentism and storage actually began.…

    • 1055 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    About a million salmon died every year after the opening of the Grand Coulee Dam. At the time the Colville Indians ate about 1 ⅓ pounds of fish every day. The Grand Coulee dam removed about 1,100 miles of salmon's natural spawning habitat.…

    • 685 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Sara salort Watts Humanities 6-7 Native American’s compare and contrast Chinook and Umatilla people have a lot in common and a lot of differences that you might Not know of , let me show you. They have a lot of similarities based off of food. For example,the umatillas main source of food was the Columbia river due to the fact that they couldn't reach the ocean they mostly got salmon,eels, and sturgeon etc. They gathered This food around winter,spring, and fall for the salmon runs.…

    • 395 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    My Taste Buds

    • 137 Words
    • 1 Pages

    Bill McEwen in the article, ”River Plan Too Fishy for My Taste Buds,” points out that those who are all for the restoration plan really should not be celebrating. Why right? McEwen supports his position by pointing out two big problems with this plan, one is putting salmon back in the river and the second is, there is no funding for the dams or river recirculation. The authors purpose is to expose the flawed restoration plan and to do that he clearly states that experts at UC Davis, who study California’s rapidly declining salmon population, prove that salmon need to be in clear, cool, and highly oxygenated water to thrive. The river has not been in the conditions since the 1940’s.…

    • 137 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    George Henry Burgess

    • 1892 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The extent of the fish and the pristine rivulet connote a solid riparian living space when news about the steep decrease of California's once inexhaustible salmon populace was spreading around the state. Pressure driven mining, agribusiness, urban improvement, and the expansion of dams destroyed numerous watersheds that managed salmon and other untamed life. In Brookes' opportunity, as today, salmon were symbols of the wellbeing of California's stream frameworks. A few of the state's salmon species are presently on the precarious…

    • 1892 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Fishing lines, lobster traps, crab pots, hooks and lures can get dropped in the ocean and it can cause marine animals to ingest them, get entangled and die. Those items can also cause health issues for any living creature who uses the water. Unregulated and unreported commercial fishing is the reason for the fall of fish stocks. Fishing is bad for the environment, and so is the camping occurring next to it, especially the…

    • 582 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Effects of Hatcheries on Wild Salmon Populations Salmonids are perhaps one of the most prominent fish in freshwater systems such as streams and lakes. Their success can be widely attributed to their anadromous lifestyle. However, despite their success, salmonid populations are on a continuous decline. Many species such as Pacific Salmon in Washington, Oregon, and California are critically endangered, while some are threatened with extinction due to several different factors (Moyle and Cech, 2004). In the wild, habitat destruction and land transformation of salmonid spawning locations have detrimentally affected wild populations.…

    • 1034 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Boldt Decisions

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The tribes had felt Washington had been violating the treaties by installing culverts that do not allow salmon to move freely up streams to spawning grounds. Our salmon develop in freshwater, making a journey out to sea, returning to freshwater to lay and fertilize eggs. The life cycle of salmon has been occurring for thousands of years. Salmon are a living link to our ecosystem and our future.…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The overfishing of the Nisqually River and transformation of tidal flats into farmland by colonists, nearly drove Chinook Salmon to extinction. The efforts of the Nisqually tribe to restore the natural habitat and the establishment of the Clear Creek Hatchery has prevented them from becoming extinct. In order to restore the Nisqually River there were political battles that had to be fought. The results of the restoration project has shown the extent of nature's resilience, leaving hope that we may be able to successfully restore the environment in areas in an effort to renew the resources we have depleted. Unfortunately, the success of the Salmon are still dependant upon the hatchery; however, there has been an increase in wild Salmon in the river.…

    • 1503 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The theories range from global climate change patterns to too many people dipping their setnets into the rivers. However, what we do know – conclusively – is that this problem is very real, and each day nothing is changed the problem persists, continuing to eat away at vibrant culture and economy. As biologists and researchers pry open the doors behind which the solution hides, the fishermen and small business owners of the several Alaskan communities that depend on this fish await with baited breath. Hoping to find that there is an answer, hoping that they will see the salmon return to color the Copper River red once more, hoping that all is not…

    • 1345 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Pacific Northwest was once full of an abundance of untapped resources, it was barely populated and was the definition of a hinterland. As the Pacific Northwest started to become known and resources started to become majorly exploited and shipped, we slowly become what we are now, not a hinterland. After all the overuse and misuse of the land we are not and will never hinterland again. The definition of a hinterland is defined as parts of the country that is less developed and unchartered. The Pacific Northwest use to be a hinterland, but as this area grew with the railroad system that brought people here.…

    • 972 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Pebble Mine Research Paper

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The land is wild and free as far as the eye can see. Salmon flood the streams of Bristol bay every fall; it is one of the world’s last pieces of untouched land. The area has been kept this way for centuries, but that could soon come to an end. Pebble Mine is a project that plans to excavate the region for copper. The mine started as an terrible idea, and now is on the brink of becoming a terrible reality.…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays