Pacific Salmon are famous for returning to the same tributary stream they hatched in as a fry. Now this same instinct is driving them to their death as the Columbia River has become hotter as a result of the hot spring and summer. A spring and summer unlike any I have ever experienced in my 67 years in the Pacific Northwest. Pacific Salmon are foundation of coastal, and riverine ecosystems reaching far inland from the sea.
A conservation group recorded the video after a heatwave in the Pacific north-west on a day when water temperatures breached 70F
By Hallie Golden in Seattle
Salmon in the Columbia River were exposed to unlivable water temperatures that caused them to break out in angry red lesions and white fungus in the wake of the Pacific north-west’s record-shattering heatwave, according to a conservation group that has documented the disturbing sight.
In a video released on Tuesday by the non-profit organization Columbia Riverkeeper, a group of sockeye salmon swimming in a tributary of the river can be seen covered in injuries the group say are the results of stress and overheating.
The conservation group recorded the video following the heatwave on a day when water temperatures breached 70F (21C), a lethal temperature for these anadromous fish if they are exposed to it for long periods. The Clean Water Act prohibits the Columbia River from rising over 68F (20C).
VandenHeuvel compared the situation to a person trying to run a marathon in over 100F (38C) temperatures.
“The difference is that this isn’t recreation for the salmon,” he said. “They have no choice. They either make it or they die.”
I had hoped I would never live to see a disaster of this magnitude. As a boy I used to fish for Salmon off the mouth of the Columbia River at Ilwaco. The Columbia River biosphere on being stressed to the very brink of collapse.
President Biden needs to seriously consider declaring a Climate Emergency. Things are only going to get worse.