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Latest CBB News
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's full-service website for those interested in regional salmon and steelhead recovery and other natural resource issues. We provide timely, trusted information that will keep you informed. Click here to Register as a MEMBER and you will have access to our 10 years of Archives.
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Corps Issues Draft Plan To Curtail Nesting Of Burgeoning Salmon-Consuming Cormorant Colony
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Interested parties can now comment on a plan to “dissuade” nesting of yet another salmon-eating bird species on a portion the lower Columbia River’s East Sand Island, which in recent years has become what is believed to be the United States’ largest double-crested cormorant colony.
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Ocean Indicators Report: Persistent ‘Negative Pacific Decadal Oscillation’ Positive News For Salmon
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Climatic and accompanying ocean conditions that have remained “persistently negative,” since late spring/early summer 2010, could bode well for Columbia River basin and other salmon populations that return from the Pacific to spawn next year, the year after, and possibly beyond.
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Report Addresses Benefits Of Marine Ecology Research For Columbia Basin Salmon Recovery
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Researchers from NOAA’s Fisheries Service, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, the private Kintama Research Services, Ltd., and Oregon State University have teamed up to explain why their ocean research benefits a program aimed at mitigating effects on fish and wildlife in freshwater.
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NOAA Forecast Center’s April-Sept. Streamflow Prediction Now Pegged At 92 Percent Of 30-Year Average
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Despite a mid-January burst of precipitation, snowpack in the Columbia River basin remains below “normal” as the region heads into wintertime’s home stretch.
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A Reservoir Drawdown To Stream Level Aiding Recovery Of Willamette Spring Chinook Stock
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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A return to old ways could well “make a contribution to recovery” of a Willamette spring chinook stock that was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 1999.
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Tsunami Debris: If Comes To NW Fall-Winter Will Go North; Spring-Summer Will Land In Oregon, Calif.
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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As the one-year anniversary of the devastating March 11, 2011, Japanese earthquake approaches, and debris from the ensuing tsunami moves closer to the West Coast, a group of Oregon agencies, university scientists, political staff, non-governmental organizations and others is preparing for its arrival.
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Corps Identifies Source Of Oil Leaks At Ice Harbor Dam; Testing Other Dams For PCBs In Oil
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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The Walla Walla District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently identified metal tubing failures as the likely source of several inadvertent oil leaks from power transformer heat exchangers or “cooling units” at Ice Harbor Lock and Dam on the Snake River.
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British Columbia Pilot Project To Test Raising Farmed Salmon In Land-Based Tanks
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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For years there have been concerns about the potential impacts – genetic contamination and disease -- from salmon farmed in British Columbia net pens upon wild Pacific salmon. Now comes a pilot project to reduce environmental risk by raising salmon in a tank.
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IDFG Confirms Rare Canada Lynx Sighting In East-Central Idaho, First Since 1991
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Idaho Department of Fish and Game biologists confirmed a recent sighting of a Canada lynx on the Salmon-Challis National Forest.
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Are Global Warming, Overharvesting Creating Worldwide Jellyfish Blooms? New Study Says No Hard Data
Posted on
Friday, February 03, 2012 (PST) |
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Blooms, or proliferation, of jellyfish have shown a substantial, visible impact on coastal populations — clogged nets for fishermen, stinging waters for tourists, even choked intake lines for power plants — and recent media reports have created a perception that the world's oceans are experiencing increases in jellyfish due to human activities such as global warming and overharvesting of fish.
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