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Canada and the United States are halting the fishing of Canadian Chinook salmon in the Yukon River

WHITEHORSE – Canada and the United States are suspending fishing for Canadian-origin Chinook salmon from the Yukon River for seven years to protect the dwindling species.

WHITEHORSE – Canada and the United States are suspending fishing for Canadian-origin Chinook salmon from the Yukon River for seven years to protect the declining species.

The agreement covers the length of a fish’s life cycle and recognizes that the “sustained decline of Chinook salmon” has resulted in the failure to meet conservation goals in both countries.

Dennis Zimmermann, chairman of the Yukon Salmon Subcommittee, an advisory body that studies salmon, said the agreement took a year to draft and meant having a long-term plan to protect the fish rather than having to decide every year. how much fishing is allowed.

“(Chinook are) the lifeline of the Yukon River. They are part of this cultural fabric that brings people together. I mean, communities live on rivers because there is such an abundance of these big, adult, protein-rich Chinook salmon,” he said.

Zimmermann said people on the water have watched as the once large and meaty fish that travel thousands of miles to spawn in the Yukon and northern British Columbia rivers have become smaller and sicker and have returned in ever-decreasing numbers.

A statement from Fisheries and Oceans Canada said the Chinook population has declined since the 1980s to less than 10 percent of its historical average of 150,000 adult salmon from the Canadian part of the watershed.

It was reported that in recent years less than a third of the minimum number of adult Chinook salmon needed to maintain the population have returned to their spawning grounds in Canada.

The agreement covers all commercial, recreational and home fishing and runs from April 2024 to 2030. The aim is to increase the stock of Canadian-origin king salmon to 71,000 individuals.

Governments have agreed to work on habitat and stock restoration activities and support research to better understand the decline of Chinook salmon.

The statement said the declines were due to “a combination of historical overfishing, increasing disease prevalence and climate change and the resulting impacts on survival in marine and freshwater environments.”

The agreement also mentions factors such as habitat degradation caused by resource use and hydropower, as well as competition from fish farming.

Zimmermann expressed his hope that the changes would not come too late to protect the species.

“Ultimately, we have to give hope. We have to make sure that salmon stay in people’s hearts and minds, otherwise they are less likely to care. And then we are really in trouble,” he said.

The statement said the commitment was necessary to support the long-term recovery and rebuilding of Chinook in the Yukon River.

“Chicken salmon are an integral part of the environment, culture and structure of the Yukon and Interior/Western Alaska,” Diane Lebouthillier, the federal minister of fisheries and oceans, said in the statement.

“To ensure that we all work together to protect and restore this vital species for future generations, both Canada and the United States must cooperate internationally.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 22, 2024.

The Canadian Press