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Making sure sockeye can make the journey home to Penticton

sa国际传媒業tsa国际传媒檚 cyclicalsa国际传媒: Around 14K sockeye returned this year compared to over 250,000 in 2022
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sa国际传媒淚sa国际传媒檓 in awe of fish,sa国际传媒 said Lee McFadyen of the Okanagan Similkameen Conservation Alliance to a crowd of about 40 people who came out to the Okanagan Lake dam in Penticton on Sunday to celebrate the return of the salmon and to find out more about Okanagan River restoration projects. (Monique Tamminga Western News)

sa国际传媒淚sa国际传媒檓 in awe of fish,sa国际传媒 said Lee McFadyen to a crowd of about 40 people who came out to the Okanagan Lake dam in Penticton on Sunday to celebrate the return of the salmon and to find out more about Okanagan River restoration projects.

McFadyen, of the Okanagan Similkameen Conservation Alliance (OSCA) has played a role in re-establishing the salmon population for the past two decades.

Born in freshwater, the sockeye spend one year before they travel to the ocean where they spend two years or more in salt water. They go down the Columbia River and leave the estuary where the fish start to go through a physiological change getting ready to adapt to salt water. They actually more or less turn their kidneys inside out so they can handle salt water. Their gills have to change as well, said McFadyen.

From spawning to returning to spawn takes four years and the whole extraordinary journey is 6,000 km long.

sa国际传媒淭his project and learning so much about the salmon cycle has made me have so much respect for fish and their abilities,sa国际传媒 said McFadyen.

Work north of Oliver to create natural areas and to put spawning beds near the McIntyre Bridge has brought huge success. Spawning beds and ladders have also been created all along the Okanagan River Channel.

That work is critical to the survival of the salmon because the Okanagan River is one of only two of the remaining sockeye salmon spawning grounds in the Columbia watershed, said McFadyen.

It has been a low sockeye return this year, with around 14,000 coming back to the Okanagan River.

But itsa国际传媒檚 cyclical. In 2022, over 250,000 fish returned, said Ella Braden, also of OSCA who was at the dam explaining the fish life cycle and what salmonsa国际传媒檚 main threats are.

For flood mitigation, diking and dams of rivers almost spelled the collapse of the salmon population in the Okanagan River. Channelling of the Okanagan River in the 1950s was done without thought for fish or without any consultation with the Indigenous people.

Thanks to the work of the Penticton Indian Band, Okanagan Nation Alliance and Okanagan Similkameen Conservation Alliance along with other groups who have worked tirelessly to make sure fish have a way to journey home.

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In 2014, the Penticton Indian Band built a state-of-the-art hatchery that is key to the local salmonsa国际传媒檚 success and can rear millions of eggs, said McFadyen. Of the 4,000 eggs a fish will lay, only one will make a return.

sa国际传媒淚tsa国际传媒檚 been a really well thought out conservation effort and partnership with Penticton Indian Band and Okanagan Nation Alliance,sa国际传媒 said Braden. sa国际传媒淭he level of foresight in combination with the fisheries biology work has been the reason this project has been such a beautiful success.sa国际传媒

Technology has also helped them track the fish.

sa国际传媒淲e tag the tiny fish so we know where they are along their journey. We know when they hit the ocean and when and where they die,sa国际传媒 said McFadyen.

OSCA gets their funding from Nature Canada and their main focus is going to schools to educate students. But these open houses are a great opportunity to show the public what important work is going on in the waters they live by.

Climate change is playing a role in the salmonsa国际传媒檚 success.

sa国际传媒淗eat and drought are not new for this area but I donsa国际传媒檛 remember having 28 C nights like we do now,sa国际传媒 she said. When the nights donsa国际传媒檛 cool down that means the water doesnsa国际传媒檛 either.



Monique Tamminga

About the Author: Monique Tamminga

Monique brings 20 years of award-winning journalism experience to the role of editor at the Penticton Western News. Of those years, 17 were spent working as a senior reporter and acting editor with the Langley Advance Times.
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