NEWS RELEASE
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife
December
4, 2007
WDFW
Contacts: Sandra Jonker, (360) 906-6722
Craig
Bartlett, (360) 902-2259
ODFW
Contacts: Rick Hargrave, (503) 947-6020
Charlie
Corrarino, (503) 947-6213
Early
hazing will help protect white sturgeon
OLYMPIA –
For the third straight year, crews from the Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife will begin non-lethal
hazing actions on the Columbia River to deter sea lions
from feeding on white sturgeon.
Hazing
with acoustic and percussive devices, flares, and rubber
bullets is scheduled to begin in mid-December from
Bonneville Dam downstream approximately six miles to
Navigation Marker 85, according to wildlife managers in
both states.
Those
methods have generally been effective in deterring
predation by Steller sea lions, which account for most
sturgeon lost to predation below the dam, said Charlie
Corrarino, ODFW Conservation and Recovery Program manager.
“White
sturgeon do not reach maturity until they are 12 to 20
years old, and Steller sea lions tend to target the larger
and older sturgeon,” Corrarino said. “We need to protect
these fish because they are broodstock for future
generations of sturgeon.”
Steller
sea lions ate more than 350 white sturgeon near Bonneville
Dam last winter, but took only 19 after hazing began in
March, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Fifty-five of the sturgeon taken last year were over five
feet long, some carrying millions of eggs.
“We plan
to start hazing a few weeks earlier this year,” said
Sandra Jonker, WDFW region wildlife manager, noting that
Steller sea lions have been observed near Bonneville Dam
since early October.
Hazing by
boat-based crews from ODFW and WDFW is scheduled at least
four days per week during daylight hours in the area from
Bonneville Dam six miles downstream to Navigation Marker
85. USDA Wildlife Services, under contract with the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, will also begin hazing sea lions
from the face of the dam on a similar schedule.
While
Steller sea lions have generally responded to non-lethal
hazing, that has not been the case with California sea
lions, which prey primarily on salmon and steelhead below
the dam, Jonker said. Despite hazing efforts,
observations by the Corps of Engineers indicate that both
the number the number of California sea lions and their
rate of predation on salmon and steelhead have increased
in recent years, she said.
Separate
from their hazing efforts, fishery managers from
Washington, Oregon and Idaho are seeking federal approval
to use lethal means to remove individual California sea
lions below Bonneville Dam that prey on chinook salmon and
steelhead listed for protection under the federal
Endangered Species Act (ESA).
The
states’ application, submitted last year under Section 120
of the Marine Mammal Protection Act, would not apply to
Steller sea lions, which are listed as threatened under
the ESA.
Last
month, an 18-member task force appointed to review the
states’ application recommended that NOAA-Fisheries
approve the states’ request, concluding that predation by
California sea lions has a “significant negative impact”
on ESA-listed salmon and steelhead stocks in the Columbia
River and Snake River basins.
NOAA-Fisheries
is expected to conduct an environmental assessment on the
states’ application, and expects to make a final decision
on the states’ request by next March, at the start of the
spring salmon migration past Bonneville Dam.
Whether
or not NOAA-Fisheries approves the states’ application,
the Pinniped-Fishery Interaction Task Force recommends
that the states continue non-lethal hazing efforts to
deter predation by California sea lions that might be
recruited into the area below Bonneville Dam.