Solutions & Heroes

The Heroes Protecting Your Fish

Our team is getting out there to actively try to protect your fish and improve the odds! In the coming months, you will hear from a few of the heroes that are devoting their time and energy to give your baby salmon a better chance at making it to sea. Thanks for tagging along!

1

Raven McAdams, Cal Poly Humboldt Graduate Student

"Though the Eel River is not my ancestral territory [as a member of the Yurok Tribe], it is the ancestral territory of other Tribes, and it is a really important watershed for those Tribes’ food sovereignty. I am proud that I can be a part of this program and a part of the solution for this issue we are having in the Eel River."

 

2

Alex Juan, Cal Poly Humboldt Graduate Student

There are a lot of pikeminnow in the Eel River, and it's an impossible wall to climb doing manual suppression. But I do think we're already seeing an effect on the larger size classes of pikeminnow, which are the ones that eat salmon and steelhead. Hopefully, by shifting the amount of the larger fish that are in the river, we can shift the number of juvenile salmon that they eat.” 

 

Chris2

Chris Loomis, California Department of Fish and Wildlife Specialist

"Salmon are perhaps one of the most culturally iconic species in North America and its important to me that we can continue to interact with salmon in a way that promotes reverence for the natural world. I hope that my work will help regenerate our salmon populations, ensuring that future generations get to witness the same awe-inspiring natural phenomenon’s that I’ve been lucky enough to observe."

 

3

Jason Shaffer, CalTrout Field Technician

I would be doing this for fun, and I'm doing it for work, so that's great! If we can continually suppress and depress the [pikeminnow] population, I believe we can return the balance to what it should be."

 

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Phil Georgakakos, UC Berkeley Project Scientist

“Pikeminnow are an interesting native fish [in other parts of the state] and a cool predator. They're fun to catch and interesting to watch underwater, and I think they're worthy of respect and admiration. That said, pikeminnow are not native to the Eel River, and the presence of these large predators limits our efforts to recover salmon and steelhead. We need to manage pikeminnow populations to reduce their impacts and give our steelhead and salmon a chance.”

 

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Charlie Schneider, CalTrout Senior Project Manager

"I have always loved rivers and grew up in a coastal town that was once dependent on fishing and logging to support the local economy. Poor management of those resources had a tremendous impact on people’s lives, including my family's which led to my interest in natural resources management. We must do a better job managing shared necessities like water to benefit everyone if we want our kids to have a livable planet, and salmon are a particularly useful bellwether for the health of our watersheds."

 

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Darren Mierau, CalTrout North Coast Regional Director

"I want to be part of a movement that turns the tide, swings the momentum back toward restoring the health of our rivers and fish populations, and brings transformative change to the ways we as a culture interact with our natural environment. Having witnessed for many years now the commitment, incredible talents and skills, and daily work ethic of the folks I work with up here in the North Coast and in our South Fork Eel science program, I am thoroughly convinced we can succeed at our mission."