I Listened to the show this morning and enjoyed the recap of 2012 fishing - a great year for sure. During the discussion the plight and future of PS steelhead came up.
The comment was made "what would it take to improve the situation?" And how little is known about steelhead and what is limiting our populations. Usually what then follows is what can we as angler do to aid in their recovery. I will focus on what we know and based on that what we anglers can contribute.
Recent studies have consistently found that many (typcially 20% or so) of the steelhead smolts leaving our rivers had at least one parent that was resident rainbow. This is in spite of the resident populations being severely limited. Not only do resident rainbows produce steelhead smolts they provide both a population and genetic safety net for future generations.
In the few years WDFW has closed the majority of the tributary streams to our anadromous rivers to fishing or for those left open the common regulation has required the use of selective gear. Those was done of course to protect the juvenile/pre-smolts of O. mykiss as well as any resident adults. The state has claimed this approach has paid great benefits. Just imagine what the benefits would be if that approach was applied to where the juvenile fish are being produced and where the anglers are most likely encounter them.
Consider for the Skagit 65% of the steelhead spawning (and by extension juvenile rearing) in recent years occured in main stem areas. For the Snohomish that figure was 80% of the spawning. Further I'm sure that it would be reasonable to estimate that more than 90% of the stream fishing in those basin occurs in those same main stem areas. If protecting those juvenile fish in tribs has been a wonderful thing would it not follow that protecting those same fish in the areas were the majority of the production and fishing occur would be even more successful.
The rub of course is that those juvenile fish and adult resident rainbows experience high mortalities (typically in the 30% range) when released after being caught on bait. As result if folks are serious about saving those juveniles and adult residents selective gear rules would be required. Because those resident fish are caught year round those rules are needed when ever the rivers are open.
Is the reader willing to give up their bait for all their river steelhead and salmon fishing for the cause of the wild steelhead? Typically the answer is no! Most folks are willing to go the extra mile to insure that theany wild adult encountered is given the best chance to survive that encounter. Why not extend that concern/care to the fish before they become an adult?
How serious are we about protecting the future our steelhead? Willing to give up your bait?
Curt