Programs
If we are to enjoy wild salmon and free-flowing rivers in the future, we must take steps today to protect this region's remaining healthy wild salmon runs.
North America Program
The Pacific Northwest is undergoing an unprecedented growth in our human population, while climate change threatens to further reduce the quality and quantity of water that supports salmon. We believe that the political will and financial resources to protect salmon strongholds in the Northwest does exist. At the same time, we believe it is important to protect the most resilient strongholds in Alaska and Canada before they too begin a precipitous decline. It is less expensive to protect these populations now than it will be to allow them to decline and then attempt to restore them. Moreover, if we do not protect these remaining wild systems now, we will lose the seed sources to repopulate other areas where salmon are declining.
To draw attention to these resilient strongholds in North America, we are establishing a public and private partnership across the entire range of wild Pacific salmon in the United States, and soon in Canada. The purpose of the partnership is to protect and enhance remaining viable populations of salmon. Where effective actions are already underway at the basin scale, the partnership will support them; where they are not yet underway, the partnership will work with basin partners to identify and implement them.
North American Salmon Stronghold Partnership
Over the last year, the Wild Salmon Center has been building a public-private partnership of federal and state fish and land managers, tribes, and regional conservation organizations. The purpose of the Partnership is to protect the most productive and resilient salmon strongholds in North America. The partnership is working together to:
- Identify the most resilient strongholds for salmon in North America.
- Identify and address immediate threats to the biological integrity of the ecosystem.
- Work with scientists and local communities, build on existing conservation efforts to develop goals for a healthy ecosystem.
- Develop an action plan that is a synthesis of existing plans, adding additional conservation measures that may be needed to achieve the healthy ecosystem goals.
- Seek resources to implement action plans and provide long term protection for the salmon stronghold.
- Monitor the health of the stronghold over time.
Partnerships in Action
John Day is the second-longest undammed river in the American West, and the longest free-flowing river system in the continental United States with entirely unsupplemented runs of wild salmon and steelhead.
Olympic Peninsula and Washington Coast
The Hoh and its tributaries still have healthy wild salmon, trout, and steelhead stocks, and over half of the watershed remains in pristine condition.
With the largest expanse of unprotected, contiguous rainforest in the lower 48 states - the Oregon North Coast is an important opportunity to preserve healthy salmon habitat.
Nushagak River
The Nushagak River and its tributaries provide arguably the most important spawning and rearing habitat for sockeye salmon in the world. Over half the world's sockeye catch originates from this system that flows into Alaska's Bristol Bay. Other abundant salmon species include Chinook, coho, chum, and pink.
