WSC Letter and Comments on Wild Trout Policy Development

On behalf of the Board of Directors and membership of the Wild Steelhead Coalition, please consider the following comments and recommendations regarding the current management and conservation strategies for wild trout in our state. Based on recent evaluations and scientific evidence, we believe the following changes are necessary to ensure the long-term sustainability and health of wild trout populations.

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LOST RIVER

Save Our Wild Salmon released Lost River, a limited-edition print with an essay by renowned author and conservationist David James Duncan, in 2005. Photographer Frederic Ohringer created the image, and Patagonia underwrote the project.   

  The words are as poignant today as they were 19 years ago.   

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What's The Skinny On The Adipose Fin?

Every steelheader recognizes that small fin on the back of the fish just forward of the tail, the adipose fin. Adipose fins are only found in a few groups of fish, notably the Salmonidae, or salmon and trout family (including whitefishes and grayling), but also several other groups of fish that many of you have probably never heard of unless you are a fish geek.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
Learning to Swim: The Early Life of Steelhead and its Implications for Management - Part Two

In Part 1, we left off with an outstanding question that has not been evaluated for steelhead: Do their offspring stay close to home like Atlantic Salmon and Brown Trout, or do they disperse broadly? In review, if the fry are highly mobile, then high density and intense competition would likely lead them to seek out unoccupied habitats rather than reduce survival. If they stay close to home, then high densities will lead to increased mortality, and in that case, we must know something about the distribution of spawning adults to make inferences about habitat capacity.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
The Boats Are Back In Town

On November 30, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife announced the 2023-2024 coastal steelhead season. Included are special rules allowing the expansion of fishing from a floating device on two sections of the Hoh River during certain days of the week. This conservation measure, touted to help minimize impacts on wild steelhead, is a surprising reversal from the last couple of years that recognized the need to limit this highly effective fishing method at a time of chronically low steelhead returns.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
Hatchery vs. Wild Steelhead: What the Science Says

The debate around the efficacy and impact of fish hatcheries has been ongoing for decades. On the one hand, hatcheries have played a role in commercial, subsistence, and recreational fisheries. On the other, there's growing concern about their impact on wild fish populations.

Thanks to a recently published literature review led by Trout Unlimited, with financial support from the Wild Steelhead Coalition and others, we now have comprehensive data that shines more light on this issue.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
TBT: Steelhead Country

Six years ago, the Wild Steelhead Coalition, Patagonia, and award-winning filmmaker Shane Anderson teamed up to produce a film series called Steelhead Country. The six-episode series explored the rise and fall of angling for wild steelhead in Washington State – from the heydey of steelheading on the Puyallup River to the litany of legendary rivers that are now closed throughout Puget Sound, including the mighty Skagit.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
Bridge Over Troubled Waters

The Hood Canal Bridge is again in the news, but not for the usual traffic or buffeting by weather headlines. Recognized as a significant impediment to migrating young steelhead, attempts are now being made to mitigate the impasse it makes for critical migrations of young steelhead heading out to sea.

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Wild Steelhead Coaltion
REDD ALERT

Steelhead anglers are taking advantage of the highly anticipated steelhead fishing season, where portions of the Skagit and its major tributary, the Sauk, were opened for a directed recreational steelhead fishery beginning on March 25 under catch and release regulations. 

However, this means the 2023 fishing season extends deep into the peak spawning time for steelhead compared to previous closures in mid-April, established specifically to protect spawning fish in the Skagit and Sauk mainstems.

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