Forks of Salmon, Salmon River, Ca. July 24-27
2nd
Annual Spring-run Chinook Symposium Poster
2nd
Annual Spring-run Chinook Symposium Agenda and Registration Form
The
Salmonid Restoration Federation and Salmon River Restoration Council are
hosting the 2nd Annual Spring-run Chinook symposium following the annual
Salmon River Spring Chinook and Summer Steelhead Dives. This is a truly
collaborative educational event with diverse symposium co-sponsors including
the Department of Fish and Game, Klamath tribes, the Mid-Klamath Watershed
Council, US Fish and Wildlife Service, US Forest Service, and the Bureau
of Reclamation.
SRF is pleased to offer this opportunity for local landowners, restorationists,
tribes, fisheries biologists and agency staff to participate in the Salmon
River Dives and the Chinook Symposium including workshops, field tours
and presentations on problems and solutions specific to Spring-run Chinook.
The event kicks off with a dive safety training on Tuesday, July 24, and
the actual dives or a Salmon River Education and Exploration workshop
on July 25. A locally organized event, the dives bring together a coalition
of agency personnel, tribal members, and concerned citizens who form small
teams to dive the entire Salmon River in order to get the best possible
estimate of the salmonids holding in the Salmon River. The Salmon River
Surveys are a focal point in the effort to protect and restore Klamath
Spring Chinook, bringing together communities, tribes, academia and agencies
in a cooperative approach to recovery.
The Spring-run Chinook Symposium offers restoration practitioners training
and networking opportunities on issues affecting California’s threatened
Spring-run Chinook populations. The Thursday symposium will begin with
an orientation with several Klamath tribe speakers followed by three concurrent
field tours. The Karuk Tribe will host a Traditional Management Practices
and Current Restoration Techniques tour, including road decommissioning,
riparian restoration and forestry management for fire fuels reduction.
Toz Soto, Leroy Cyr and Will Harling will lead a Mid-Klamath Mainstem
Thermal Refugia Float, with a discussion of refugia use and importance,
creek mouth enhancement, and salmonid identification. Petey Brucker and
Nat Pennington of the Salmon River Restoration Council will lead a workshop
and tour about community approaches to restoration of Salmon River Spring
Chinook that will include a snorkel tour. Thursday evening will include
a FERC relicensing and Klamath Dam removal presentation with Kelly Catlett
from Friends of the River, Craig Tucker, Karuk Tribe, and Mike Belchik,
fisheries biologist with the Yurok tribe.
Friday will begin with an opening presentation by “Overview of
Spring Chinook Salmon in California” by Dr. Peter Moyle, author
of Inland Fishes of California. Petey Brucker from the Salmon
River Restoration Council will discuss Spring Chinook on the Salmon River
and the Klamath Salmon Spring Chinook Voluntary Recovery Program. Concurrent
sessions will include “All about Spring Chinook” focusing
Chinook Stock Identification, life history investigations, and limiting
factors, Fish Disease including Cal-Nevada Fish Health Lab and Hoopa Tribal
presenters, and Spring Chinook of the Trinity River. Another presentation
will follow entitled, “Spring Chinook Reintroduction in the Klamath
River Basin and the Importance of Having a Metapopulation” with
fisheries biologists from the Klamath tribes.
The symposium will conclude with a panel discussion about Klamath Basin
Spring Chinook Conservation Management with Moderators Will Harling, Petey
Brucker and presenters from the symposium. The overarching question that
participants and presenters will discuss is: What do we need to do
to create a conservation strategy and management objectives for Spring
Chinook in the Klamath River Basin?
After the symposium, folks can migrate to the Jammin’ for the Salmon
music festival.
So come for the Dives and the Symposium, do underwater networking while
counting the last of the wild Klamath spring Chinook, then stay Friday night
and Saturday, July 27th and 28th for the “Jammin’ for the Salmon” benefit
concert. For more information about this exciting event please check out
the Salmonid Restoration website at www.calsalmon.org or www.srrc.org or
call (707) 923-7501.