A Five-year Comprehensive Anadromous Fish Habitat Enhancement Plan for Oregon Coastal Rivers

A Five-year Comprehensive Anadromous Fish Habitat Enhancement Plan for Oregon Coastal Rivers

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 28

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

"Prepared to provide current information concerning opportunities to improve the present productivity of anadromous salmonid habitat (primarily salmon and steelhead) on Bureau [of Land Management] lands in coastal rivers of Oregon. Habitat rehabilitation and/or enhancement work is done to increase populations of wild fish, which results in greater numbers of fish available for harvest by recreational and commercial fisheries important to Oregon's coastal economy, communities and populace in general. The proposed habitat projects listed in this report constitute a logical plan for orderly fish habitat development work by identified district priorities over a five-year period"--Page 1


Pacific Salmon & their Ecosystems

Pacific Salmon & their Ecosystems

Author: Deanna J. Stouder

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-02-02

Total Pages: 681

ISBN-13: 1461563755

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The symposium "Pacific Salmon and Their Ecosystems: Status and Future Options',' and this book resulted from initial efforts in 1992 by Robert J. Naiman and Deanna J. Stouder to examine the problem of declining Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.). Our primary goal was to determine informational gaps. As we explored different scientific sources, state, provincial, and federal agencies, as well as non-profit and fishing organizations, we found that the information existed but was not being communicated across institutional and organizational boundaries. At this juncture, we decided to create a steering committee and plan a symposium to bring together researchers, managers, and resource users. The steering committee consisted of members from state and federal agencies, non-profit organizations, and private industry (see Acknowledgments for names and affiliations). In February 1993, we met at the University of Washington in Seattle to begin planning the symposium. The steering committee spent the next four months developing the conceptual framework for the symposium and the subsequent book. Our objectives were to accomplish the following: (1) assess changes in anadromous Pacific Northwest salmonid populations, (2) examine factors responsible for those changes, and (3) identify options available to society to restore Pacific salmon in the Northwest. The symposium on Pacific Salmon was held in Seattle, Washington, January 10-12, 1994. Four hundred and thirty-five people listened to oral presentations and examined more than forty posters over two and a half days. We made a deliberate attempt to draw in speakers and attendees from outside the Pacific Northwest.