CDFW-Led North Yuba River Salmon Project Off And Running

North Yuba River photo by U.S. Forest Service

Great report in the San Francisco Chronicle about a new salmon restoration project in the North Yuba River. Here are some details:

Standing knee-deep in one of California’s famed Gold Rush rivers, a scientist gingerly held up a cheesecloth sack carrying 5,000 pink salmon eggs, each slightly smaller than a marble, with a big eye incubating within.

A series of dams have long arrested the natural flow of water on the North Yuba River in the Tahoe National Forest, blocking the salmon from these spawning grounds for more than 80 years. State officials are trying to bring the threatened spring-run Chinook salmon back, starting this week with 300,000 eggs planted in the streambed.

“Bye bye, little guys,” said Aimee Braddock, an environmental scientist with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, as she poured the eggs into a wide tube leading down to a hole she had dug in the gravelly streambed.   

More information on CDFW’s North Yuba River plan can be found here.