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 CBB's Top Picks

Idaho Statesman: Nez Perce Tribe opts out of salmon talks 

The Oregonian: Officials push for cleaner rivers, less risk to those who eat fish  

Kitsap Sun: Web Site a Public Portal Into Salmon Projects

The Oregonian: Oregon farmers design a breakthrough for fish, growers alike
A newly patented fish screen appears to protect fish and make money

Idaho Statesman: Don't equate strong sockeye return with recovery
The fish have survived 2 near extinctions and now are on track for the largest run in years, but they aren't sustainable yet

Idaho Statesman: Pelican vs. trout: F&G's still out
The agency is considering a plan that could call for destroying eggs from some pelicans, which anglers say are devouring trout. 

Eugene Register-Guard: Agency: Chemicals a danger to salmon 

Bellingham Herald: Man-made log jams help Nooksack River salmon runs 

Fairbanks Daily News-Miner: Warming waters pose threats to Alaska salmon, could reorder marine ecosystems

Toronto Globe And Mail: Showdown set over declining sockeye stocks 

The Missoulian: Ninemile Valley creek work called a model 

Seattle Times: Oregon to have world's largest wind farm
A state energy panel has approved building what developers say would be the world's largest single wind farm in Gilliam and Morrow counties... 

Anchorage Daily News: Colder water, weather may have cut salmon runs 

Everett Herald: Gov. Gregoire sees trouble in Puget Sound 

Vancouver Columbian: Deal puts Pacific Power in fish-hauling business

The Missoulian: Report details climate change's effects on Clark Fork Basin  

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THE COLUMBIA BASIN BULLETIN:

Weekly Fish and Wildlife News

The Columbia Basin Bulletin e-mail newsletter is delivered  free to subscribers, with newsletter stories posted on this page for approximately one week.  After one week the stories are available to Website Members  in the Archives. To subscribe to the free newsletter please enter your e-mail address in the box above and you will be sent a confirmation message. BECOME A CBB WEBSITE MEMBER and you will receive access to all website postings and the Archives for as little as $5 a month. For questions, contact Editor Bill Crampton at bcrampton@cbbulletin.com or call 541-312-8860



Corps Moves Forward On Multi-Million Dollar Dalles Dam Juvenile Fish Passage Project
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
Federal, state and tribal officials have yet to prioritize which research and construction projects will be funded in the fiscal year 2009 budget for the Columbia River Fish Mitigation program, but they'll have to fit their choices around construction of a second spillwall below The Dalles Dam. Read More...  

Officials 'Pretty Confident' Trapped Sea Lions' Deaths Caused By Heat Prostration
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
The death of six marine mammals found May 4 in two closed floating traps below the Columbia's Bonneville Dam was likely caused by overheating, according to the findings of a necropsy performed on each of the animals. Read More...  

Endangered Species Act 'Impact' Limits Forces Shutdown Of Columbia River Fish Harvest
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
With the prospect of breaching newly established Endangered Species Act "incidental take" limits, the states of Oregon and Washington and treaty tribes have all but ended, for now, Columbia River mainstem fish harvest activity. Read More...  

Council Allows More Time To Assess Success Of John Day River Habitat Project
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
The Northwest Power and Conservation Council's Fish and Wildlife Committee on Tuesday decided, in some corners begrudgingly, to give a long-running John Day River subbasin habitat project another chance to prove the work is improving the health of salmon and steelhead stocks. Read More...  

Council Recommends Funding For Lake Rufus Woods Stocking, 8 Other F&W Projects
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
The Northwest Power and Conservation Council this week recommended $247,465 in within-year funding adjustments for eight fish and wildlife projects, as well as a $464,000, two-year spending package to implement the Colville Tribes' Lake Rufus Woods creel survey and stocking proposal in central Washington. Read More...  

Corps Monitoring Northwest Rivers As Weekend Temperatures Point To High Snowmelt Flows
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Seattle District emergency management personnel are monitoring river conditions in Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana in advance of the predicted warm temperatures. Read More...  

Draft EIS Considers Additional Water Allocations From Lake Roosevelt
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
The Washington Department of Ecology has released a draft supplemental environmental impact statement that analyzes options for additional allocations of water currently stored behind Grand Coulee Dam. Read More...  

Northwest Has Cool, Dry April, Global Temperature Ranked 13th Warmest On Record
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
This past month was the coolest April in 11 years for the lower 48 United States, and fell into the lowest twenty-five percent of all Aprils based on records going back to 1895, according to an analysis by NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C Read More...  

Power Council: Northwest Energy Conservation Shows Record Year in 2007
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
2007 was a record year for gains in electric power efficiency in the Pacific Northwest, says the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. Read More...  

CBB Shorts:
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)
CBB Shorts: Koocanusa Refill; Bureau's New Regional Deputy Director; Oregon Conservation Grants; Washington's Healthy Watersheds Guide Read More...  
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THIS MONTH'S MOST VIEWED CBB STORIES

Redden Says Independent Science Review Of BiOp Likely Inappropriate -- For Now

Idaho's Sockeye Captive Broodstock Program Reaches Record Returns This Year

Research Project Simulates Dead Salmon To Restore Stream Ecosystems

Feds Oppose Science Panel For Legal BiOp Review; Judge Sets Aug. 21 Hearing 

14 Snake River Sockeye Make It To Stanley Basin; 847 Counted At Lower Granite 
 

USFWS Announces Changes in Pacific Region Leadership Positions

Pinks – Humpies – Defying Past Trends A Bit This Year In Columbia River

Mechanical Failure At Dworshak Alters Flow Aug Regime For Migrating Salmon

Oregon Asks Court To Throw Out New Biological Opinion For Salmon, Steelhead 

 This Year's Sockeye Boom Has Fishery Experts Trying To Identify Reasons

 Scientists Detail Impacts Of Non-Native Fish (Bass, Walleye) On Native Salmonids

NOAA Researches Impacts Of Toxics On Columbia Basin Salmon Survival

NOAA Issues Willamette Basin's First BiOp; Calls For More Fish Passage At Dams

 

The Columbia Basin Bulletin, 19464 Summerwalk Place, Bend, OR, 97702, (541)312-8860 fax: (541)388-0126 e-mail: info@cbbulletin.com Web System provided by Smart Solutions. Visit us on the web at www.smartz.com
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