Northern California River Sees Record High Salmon Fall Run


Over 20,000 Chinook salmon made a fall run to spawn in the Mokelumne River this year, wildlife officials say.

That’s the highest number of any year since record-keeping began in 1940, as KPIX reported.

“This year’s historic return highlights EBMUD’s longstanding collaboration in the region and our deep commitment to sustaining this vital fish hatchery and protecting the river’s habitat,” said Andy Katz, East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) board president, per an EBMUD press release.

The Molkelumne River runs for 95 miles from  the central Sierra Nevadas to the Sacramento-San Joaquin River (a lot of water is used for Central Valley agriculture irrigation and also provides water for the east San Francisco Bay Area via the Mokelumne Aqueduct).

It’s a main home for steelhead, rainbow trout, brown trout, and Chinook salmon, although their habitat has been damaged over the past century by damming and drought. The river is just a small tributary to the larger Sacramento-San Joaquin River (about 3% of its flow), but it represents about 50% of the entire salmon commercial catch in California, according to the Ledger-Dispatch.

A group of conservationists have been restoring the river for salmon spawning, which happens from August through July ever year, since 2014. They built a hatchery where they spawn salmon and steelhead eggs and release them above the Camanche and Pardee reservoirs on the river, per the CA Department of Wildlife.

The salmon born in the Chinook spend two to five years maturing in the Pacific Ocean, then return to their home to reproduce and die.

On October 29, 2023, EBMUD biologists tallied the largest one-day salmon count in 30 years: 1,941 fish, according to EBMUD.

Feature image via Unsplash/Drew Farwell.


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