How we're working to save them:
- Working with stakeholders to find a water sharing balance, which has been disrupted by Scott and Van Arsdale Dams on the Eel River and Coyote Valley Dam on the Russian River, to recover CC Chinook. Marking all hatchery Chinook Salmon in the ESU range and implement a Genetic Stock Identification program to determine the origins of harvested salmon.
- Implementing an extensive monitoring program for the Eel River to evaluate restoration activities and adaptively assess salmonid recovery.
- Leveraging partnerships with public and private landowners, law enforcement, legal precedent, and volunteer efforts, to reduce illegal water diversions and secure streamflows for all salmonids
- Click here to learn about Cal Trout's overall "Return to Resilience" plan to save California's salmonids from extinction.
Where to find Chinook Salmon:
California Coast Chinook Salmon Distribution
The CC Chinook ESU includes salmon that spawn in coastal watersheds from Redwood Creek (Humboldt County) to the Russian River (Sonoma County). In general, small coastal Streams within this range can support CC Chinook Salmon as loon as they have open estuaries during peak migration times (fall through spring). In the Eel River watershed, CC Chinook Salmon could historically access habitat up to natural boulder roughs on the upper mainstream Eel River, but they are currently blocked from accessing this habitat by Scott Dam and Lake Pillsbury (Lake County).
How the Chinook Salmon Scored:
Characteristics
CC Chinook Salmon can be distinguished from other salmon species by heavy spotting on their tails, and black coloration inside their lower jaws at the base of their teeth. CC Chinook Salmon are nearly identical in appearance to other Chinook Salmon, and are separated from other Chinook based on their geographic distribution and genetic differences. CC Chinook Salmon in the Eel River average around 56cm (22in) in length.
Abundance
Abundance of CC Chinook Salmon has likely decreased by more than 90% from historical numbers – though reliable estimates are lacking – especially for the Eel River watershed. The Eel River once supported a cannery with catches of over 500,000 Chinook and Coho Salmon combined per year in the late 19th century. In "good" years, historic runs were on the order of 600,000 fish combined in the ESU, perhaps dropping to 30,000–50,000 in "bad" years. Present numbers total approximately 5,000–20,000 fish each year.
Habitat & Behavior
CC Chinook are all fall-run salmon; the spring-run life history has been lost throughout the ESU, CC Chinook typically return to their natal rivers after spending two or three years at sea between September and early November, often following large early winter storms. Spawning in the larger basins peaks between ate October and December, and eggs hatch after 40–60 days. The majority of CC Chinook Salmon juveniles emerge fro the gravel in the late winter or early spring, and migrate downstream within a few months. Smolts use food-rich tidal or flooded habitats with overhanging cover or undercut banks to forage before migrating to sea.
Genetics
CC Chinook Salmon in the Eel River are more closely related to populations in norther watershads than to those found along the Mendocino Coast. Chinook Salmon of unknown origin occasionally migrate to coastal basins south of the Russian River (e.g. Lagunitas Creel, Marin County), and are under consideration to be included in the CC Chinook Salmon ESU in the future, based on their reported genetic similarities.
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