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NOAA Works with Partners to Develop State-of-the-Art Fish Passage

Oregon’s Clackamas River hydroelectric project benefits fish and communities.
April 19, 2018 - Feature Story ,
Fish Migration Clackamas Hydropower Webstory 4 3x2.jpg

Entangled Puget Sound Whale Largely Freed After Unusual Chain of Events

NOAA Fisheries seeks help from public in spotting the gray whale and assessing its condition following entanglement.
April 18, 2018 - Feature Story ,
grapple_throw_lightened_CROP.jpg

Killer Whale Genetics Raise Inbreeding Questions

A new genetic analysis of Southern Resident killer whales found that two male whales fathered more than half of the calves born since 1990 that scientists have samples from, a sign of inbreeding in the small killer whale population that frequents Washington’s Salish Sea and Puget Sound.
April 18, 2018 - Feature Story ,
2 Killer whales, one breaching

New Study Reveals Cost of 2017 Salmon Fisheries Closure

Last year’s closure of the commercial ocean salmon troll fishery off the West Coast is estimated to have cost $5.8 million to $8.9 million in lost income for fishermen.
April 03, 2018 - Feature Story ,

Keeping Boats on the Water

The Fishery Regulation Assessment Model helps managers evaluate and recommend annual harvest allocations in fisheries up and down the U.S. West Coast. NOAA scientists and managers worked with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and industry representatives to provide genetic data in support of a recalibration effort aimed at improving the model and better understanding harvest impacts throughout the region. Results indicated at least one sensitive stock was encountered at lower rates than previously thought.
March 26, 2018 - Feature Story ,
A Washington Trollers Association member prepares to ice down Chinook salmon. Credit: WTA/Kim Reisbick, FV High Hope

West Coast Ocean Returning To Normal But Salmon Catches Lagging

Ocean conditions off most of the U.S. West Coast are returning roughly to average, after an extreme marine heatwave from about 2014 to 2016 disrupted the California Current Ecosystem and shifted many species beyond their traditional range.
March 20, 2018 - News ,
560x373-CCE-Fish-SWFSC.png

Endangered Salmon Set to Expand Their Range in California’s Central Valley

Biologists are capitalizing on a unique opportunity this year to “jump start” the recovery of Sacramento winter-run Chinook salmon, one of the nation’s most critically endangered species.
March 14, 2018 - Feature Story ,
Fish in a net being dumped into a holding tank

NOAA Appoints Kristen Koch as New Science and Research Director for the Southwest Fisheries Science Center

Today, NOAA announced the appointment of Kristen Koch, as the new Science and Research Director for NOAA's Southwest Fisheries Science Center.
March 13, 2018 - Feature Story ,
KKoch Headshot High Res.jpg

West Coast Ocean Returning to Normal but Salmon Catches Lagging

Ocean conditions off most of the U.S. West Coast are returning roughly to average, after an extreme marine heat wave from about 2014 to 2016 disrupted the California Current Ecosystem and shifted many species beyond their traditional range.
March 09, 2018 - Feature Story ,
Ocean conditions off the West Coast are returning to normal after years of unusually warm waters affected the marine ecosystem, the new report says.

Petition Prompts ESA Review of Upper Klamath and Trinity River Chinook Salmon

Petition to List the Upper Klamath-Trinity River Chinook Evolutionarily Significant Unit as Threatened or Endangered under the Endangered Species Act
February 23, 2018 - Feature Story ,
Swimming salmon near rocks