Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections
Personal tools

Conservationists and Commercial Fisherman Successfully Defend Klamath River Salmon

Klamath coho remain protected

For more information, contact
Jan 11, 2005

At a hearing Tuesday, a federal district court judge rejected an attempt to remove Endangered Species Act protections for coho salmon in the Klamath River. The judge, ruling from the bench, left in place the listing for the southern Oregon/northern California coast (SONCC) coho. Thirteen environmental and fishing groups, represented by Earthjustice, intervened in the lawsuit to defend efforts to restore coho salmon runs in the Northwest.

"As a result of this ruling, the federal government must leave enough water in the Klamath River so that they dont kill off the coho this spring when the irrigation season starts," said Michael Mayer of Earthjustice. "This helps not only the coho, but every other fish in the Klamath River, including commercially valuable chinook."

The court did find that the coho listing itself was flawed, adhering to a September 2001 ruling that stripped endangered species status from wild Oregon coast coho. However, because the National Marine Fisheries Service has already reviewed its salmon listings based on the 2001 decision and intends to keep the SONCC coho listing in place, the judge found that a temporary de-listing would only cause needless disruption and harm to the fish.

Bob Hunter of WaterWatch said, "We involved ourselves in this case to make certain someone was speaking up for wild fish and healthy rivers. We are pleased that our voices were heard."

"Those who would spill the entire Klamath River onto farm fields fail to realize there are many other wage earners downstream that rely on the fish in the Klamath River to pay their bills," stated Glen Spain of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations. "Fishing communities have a right to exist. We also have a right to rivers with both water and fish."

The lawsuit would have dismantled protections for coho salmon in coastal rivers and streams stretching from Cape Blanco, Oregon to Punta Gorda, California, including the Rogue and the Klamath Rivers. Coho salmon throughout this region have suffered from decades of excessive water use, dams, poor logging practices, and water pollution.

"Our intention was to inject some balance into a situation clearly being fueled by politics and misinformation," said Jeff Curtis of Trout Unlimited. "We can't allow wild salmon and the protections they need to be used as pawns in a broader political game, in the Klamath, the courts or anywhere."

WaterWatch of Oregon, Oregon Natural Resources Council, Pacific Rivers Council, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations, Institute for Fisheries Resources, Trout Unlimited, Sierra Club, Siskiyou Regional Education Project, Klamath Forest Alliance, Northcoast Environmental Center, Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center, Center for Biological Diversity, and the Environmental Protection Information Center, represented in court by Earthjustice, intervened in the case to defend the coho listing.

###

Document Actions
powered by Plone | site by Groundwire and served with clean energy