The Elk River is the largest tributary to Humboldt Bay and once provided many miles of high-quality habitat for Chinook and Coho salmon and steelhead. The Elk River is not only part of the Humboldt Bay Tributaries Coho salmon population, but is also listed as the highest priority for recovery and restoration efforts within the National Marine Fisheries Service Coho Recovery Plan.
A recent Eureka Times-Standard article, “The Elk River: Who gets what they want?” provides a good summary of the history of the Elk River’s degradation and the battle over current use.
A decades-old promise to deal with the sediment-choked Elk River watershed is now underway, but a relative newcomer to the area’s logging industry is not keen on having to pay for its predecessors’ mistakes.”
Recovery of the Elk River Watershed is one of CalTrout’s North Coast region’s top priorities. Regional Director Darren Mierau established a watershed-wide stewardship program and led the Recovery Assessment, working with stakeholders including Humboldt Redwood Company, the Regional Water Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, County Supervisors, and the restoration community. In the coming year, CalTrout will work with stakeholders to develop a sediment remediation action plan.
With the Board of Supervisors recently approving a nearly $175,000 grant to allow the watershed’s stakeholders to come up with solutions, CalTrout is poised to get to work.
Humboldt County Deputy Public Works Director Hank Seemann said that the state’s regulations are only one of three Elk River restoration efforts.
The proposed grant funding that went before the board of supervisors Tuesday will fund a Elk River Watershed Stewardship Program that Seemann said is designed to identify partnerships and restoration projects along the river for the next two years.
“The stewardship program is intended to support planning and implementing community oriented projects,” Seemann said.
The program will lean on a third component of the Elk River restoration effort — a technical study by CalTrout detailing which areas of the river should have sediment removed.”
To learn more about to CalTrout’s work to recover this quality habitat and help restore the fishery click here.
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Peter Moyle is the Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology and Associate Director of the Center for Watershed Sciences, at UC Davis. He is author or co-author of more than 240 publications, including the definitive Inland Fishes of California (2002). He is co-author of the 2017 book, Floodplains: Processes and Management for Ecosystem Services. His research interests include conservation of aquatic species, habitats, and ecosystems, including salmon; ecology of fishes of the San Francisco Estuary; ecology of California stream fishes; impact of introduced aquatic organisms; and use of floodplains by fish.
Robert Lusardi is the California Trout/UC Davis Wild and Coldwater Fish Researcher focused on establishing the basis for long-term science specific to California Trout’s wild and coldwater fish initiatives. His work bridges the widening gap between academic science and applied conservation policy, ensuring that rapidly developing science informs conservation projects throughout California. Dr. Lusardi resides at the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences and works closely with Dr. Peter Moyle on numerous projects to help inform California Trout conservation policy. His recent research interests include Coho salmon on the Shasta River, the ecology of volcanic spring-fed rivers, inland trout conservation and management, and policy implications of trap and haul programs for anadromous fishes in California.
Patrick Samuel is the Conservation Program Coordinator for California Trout, a position he has held for almost two years, where he coordinates special research projects for California Trout, including the State of the Salmonids report. Prior to joining CalTrout, he worked with the Fisheries Leadership & Sustainability Forum, a non-profit that supports the eight federal regional fishery management councils around the country. Patrick got his start in fisheries as an undergraduate intern with NOAA Fisheries Protected Resources Division in Sacramento, and in his first field job as a crew member of the California Department of Fish & Wildlife’s Wild and Heritage Trout Program.