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  1. Chinook Salmon | US EPA - U.S. Environmental …

    • Salmon are an iconic species of the Salish Sea. They play a critical role in supporting and maintaining ecological health, and in the social fabric of First Nations and tribal culture. Strong commercial and recr… 展开

    What's Happening?

    Just over 473,000 adult Chinook salmon were estimated by the Pacific Salmon Commission to have passed through the Salish Sea in 2018 (see charts below). This is a 60% reducti… 展开

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    Why Is It Important?

    Salmon provide food and support broader food-webs for a variety of wildlife, from bald eagles to killer whales to bears, and are a culturally invaluable food source for Puget Sound Tribes, Fi… 展开

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    Why Is It Happening?

    The steep historical decline in Chinook salmon is associated with four main factors: 1. Habitat loss and degradation. 2. Harvest rates. 3. Hatchery influence. 4. Dams that impede migratio… 展开

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    What's Being Done About It?

    U.S. Treaties signed in the 1850s granted tribes "the right of taking fish from all usual and accustomed grounds and stations… in common with all citizens." The 1974 Supreme Court r… 展开

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
     
  1. Chinook Salmon (Protected) - NOAA Fisheries

    5 天之前 · Our work to forecast salmon harvests, assess the impact of commercial fisheries on salmon, and evaluate how salmon populations respond to environmental changes enable us to estimate abundance and trends for …

  2. THE SALMON SITUATION: part two | Smoke Signals

  3. A brain microbiome in salmonids at homeostasis | Science …

  4. Recovery Through Reintroductions for California’s Central Valley …

  5. Putah Creek salmon numbers down 77%, but Putah-hatched fish …

  6. Bering Sea Chinook Salmon Bycatch Report (includes CDQ)

  7. New research reveals flawed approach to salmon recovery programs

  8. Climate Change Connections: Oregon (Chinook Salmon)

  9. Stock‐specific spatial overlap among seabird predators and …