NEWS RELEASE
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
January 6, 2012
Contact: Bob Leland, (360) 902-2817
Fishing in rivers around Puget Sound
to close due to low wild steelhead returns
OLYMPIA – Fishing for steelhead and other game fish will close early
in several river systems in Puget Sound and along the Strait of Juan de Fuca
to
protect wild steelhead, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW)
announced today.
The early closures will affect the Nooksack, Skagit, Stillaguamish, Snohomish
and Puyallup river systems, along with several streams along the Strait of
Juan de Fuca.
Most river systems will close Feb. 1. However, the Puyallup River system
will close Jan. 16, and some waters near WDFW fish hatcheries are scheduled
to close Feb. 16.
Pre-season estimates developed by WDFW last fall indicate that wild steelhead
will return to those watersheds in numbers far short of target levels, said
Bob Leland, WDFW’s steelhead program manager.
“
By taking this action, we can protect wild steelhead that do make it back
to these river systems,” he said.
The early closures are timed in each watershed to coincide with the traditional
dates wild steelhead return to those Washington rivers, Leland said.
Wild steelhead returning to most of the rivers scheduled to close are listed
as “threatened” under the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA).
Although anglers are required to release any wild steelhead they catch in
these rivers, some of those fish inevitably die from the experience, Leland
said.
The closures are necessary to meet the conservation objectives of WDFW’s
statewide steelhead management plan and comply with provisions of the ESA,
he said.
Meanwhile, WDFW is proposing to make these early closure dates permanent
to help protect future runs of wild steelhead, Leland said. The deadline
for submitting written comments to the department on that and other proposed
sportfishing rules was Dec. 30, but the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission
will accept both written and verbal comments at its Jan. 6-7 meeting in Olympia.
For contact information, see http://wdfw.wa.gov/commission/.
The commission, which sets policy for WDFW, is scheduled to vote on the final
sportfishing rules package during a meeting Feb. 3-4. For more information
on the proposed rules, visit the department’s website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/regulations/rule_proposals/.
Waters closing to fishing Jan. 16, 2012, by emergency rule include:
Puyallup River System
·
White River from the mouth to the R Street Bridge in Auburn.
·
Carbon River from the mouth to the Highway 162 Bridge.
·
Upper Puyallup River from the mouth of the Carbon River upstream.
Waters closing to fishing Feb. 1, 2012, by emergency rule include:
Nooksack River System
·
Nooksack River mainstem from the Lummi Indian Reservation boundary to the
confluence of North and South forks.
·
North Fork Nooksack River from Maple Creek to Nooksack Falls.
·
Middle Fork Nooksack River from the mouth to the City of Bellingham diversion
Dam.
·
South Fork Nooksack River from the mouth to Skookum Creek.
Skagit River System
·
Skagit River mainstem from the mouth to the Highway 530 Bridge at Rockport.
·
Skagit River from the mouth of the Cascade River to the Gorge powerhouse
at Newhalem.
·
Sauk River from the mouth to the Whitechuck River.
·
Cascade River from the Rockport-Cascade Road Bridge upstream to headwaters.
Snohomish River System
·
Snohomish River from the mouth (Burlington Northern railroad bridge) upstream
to the confluence of the Skykomish and Snoqualmie rivers.
·
Skykomish River from the mouth to the Highway 2 Bridge at the Big Eddy Access.
·
Pilchuck River from the mouth to 500 feet downstream of the Snohomish city
diversion dam.
·
Sultan River from the mouth to 400 feet downstream of diversion dam (river
mile 9.7).
·
Wallace River from 200 feet upstream of water intake of salmon hatchery to
Wallace Falls.
·
North Fork Skykomish River from the mouth to 1,000 feet downstream of Bear
Creek Falls.
·
South Fork Skykomish River from the mouth to 600 feet downstream of Sunset
Falls fishway.
·
Snoqualmie River from the mouth to the boat ramp at Plum access.
·
Tolt River from the mouth to the USGS trolley cable near confluence of North
and South forks.
·
Raging River from the mouth to Highway 18 Bridge.
Stillaguamish River System
·
Stillaguamish River from Marine Drive upstream to forks.
· Pilchuck Creek from the mouth to Highway 9 Bridge.
·
North Fork Stillaguamish River from the mouth to the mouth of French Creek.
·
South Fork Stillaguamish River from the mouth to 400 feet below the Granite
Falls fishway outlet.
·
Canyon Creek from the mouth upstream.
Strait of Juan de Fuca
·
Dungeness River from the mouth upstream to the forks at Dungeness Forks Campground.
·
Morse Creek from the mouth to the Port Angeles Dam.
·
Salt Creek from the mouth to the bridge on Highway 112.
·
Deep Creek from the mouth upstream.
·
Pysht River from the mouth upstream.
·
Clallam River from the mouth upstream.
·
Sekiu River from the mouth to forks.
Waters closing to fishing Feb. 16, 2012, by emergency rule include:
·
North Fork Nooksack River from the mouth to Maple Creek.
·
Skykomish River from the Highway 2 Bridge at the Big Eddy Access to the confluence
of North and South forks.
·
Wallace River from the mouth (farthest downstream railroad bridge) to 200
feet upstream of the water intake of salmon hatchery.
·
Snoqualmie River from the boat ramp at Plum access to Snoqualmie Falls.
·
Tokul Creek from the mouth to the posted cable boundary marker.
·
North Fork Stillaguamish River from the mouth of French Creek to the Swede
Heaven Bridge.
·
Skagit River from the Highway 530 Bridge at Rockport to the mouth of the
Cascade River.
·
Cascade River from the mouth to Rockport-Cascade Road Bridge.
Leland reminds anglers that the Samish River, from the I-5 Bridge to the
Hickson Bridge, closed to fishing Dec. 1. The stretch of the Samish River,
from the mouth to the I-5 Bridge closed Jan.1.
For more information on the closures, check the emergency rule changes on
WDFW’s website at http://1.usa.gov/hfDjYl.