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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Friday, April 23, 2010


As Posted earlier this week, the Native Fish Society focuses on the preservation and restoration of native fisheries across the Pacific Northwest. Russell Bassett is the River Steward Coordinator for this Group and he and his colleagues are hard at work on such projects as salmon recovery plans, limiting timber harvests on river adjacent floodplains and upland forests, creating Federal protected habitat designations for bull trout and getting Wilderness acreage in the John Day Basin.

Restore the Salmon,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,bring on the black bear and Griz as trophic top down predators of the fish.................................restore the watersheds of the Northwest to conditions that enable all of us animals to thrive ........................

Russell can be reached at 503 829 6211.........................We urge all of our Coyotes-wolves-cougars.blogspot.com readers in the Northwestern States to get involved in this great effort.






Native Fish Society River Steward Program


Dedicated volunteers, incredible achievements



The concept of river stewards is not new. The earliest stewards, or riverkeepers, served their communities as far back as the Middle Ages. They patrolled village streams and rivers to protect them for the benefit of all inhabitants. The first fulltime U.S. riverkeeper was a former commercial fisherman turned activist who was hired in 1983 by the Hudson River Fisherman’s Association to help identify polluters who were breaking environmental laws on the Hudson. During the past 25 years, riverkeeper programs have emerged in large urban rivers like the Willamette as well as classic fisherman’s rivers like the Russian River of California.





Today, the growing population creates challenges that were inconceivable for the early river stewards. Development, water rights, land use, farming, roads, hydro projects, recreation, commercial and sport fishing, hatcheries, logging, and climate change create greater impacts on our river systems.

Thankfully, there are dedicated individuals who have taken on this daunting task on many Pacific Northwest rivers – the Deschutes, the North Umpqua, the Rogue, the John Day, the Klamath, the Skagit, and the Molalla, to name a few. Native Fish Society River Stewards are mentored through a program that includes scientific and geologic education, retreats, policy issues, and tools to encourage involvement of local citizens. With more than 50 years of dedicated wild fish advocacy and study, the NFS staff provides for the growth and effectiveness of the Stewards.




The NFS River Steward Program began six years ago with the original purpose of compliance monitoring, making sure the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife fish management program is consistent with the Native Fish Conservation Policy. The program has grown considerably since its conception, and while NFCP compliance remains a strong focus, NFS River Stewards go beyond compliance to conserve, protect and restore native fish populations in their watersheds through a variety of ways, including identifying threats to recovery and developing solutions, creating coalitions to stop threats to native fish, habitat restoration, nutrient enhancement, fish monitoring, public education and community outreach.

There are currently more than 50,000 square miles of Oregon and Washington watersheds covered by 31 NFS River Stewards.






In its first five years, the River Steward Program has seen many incredible accomplishments for native, wild fish and their habitats in the Pacific Northwest. In 2009, these accomplishments include:



• Stopped threats to the Metolius River from destination resorts.

• Installed hatchery-fish exclusion weirs on the three most important wild steelhead spawning tributaries of the Deschutes River.

• Completed work on the first draft of Oregon’s next conservation plan through participation in the South Coast Fall Chinook Native Fish Conservation Plan Advisory Committee.

• Moved the Molalla River much closer to receiving Wild and Scenic designation, protections we expect to earn in 2010. The U.S. House voted to approve designation in November.

• Created recovery actions for Molalla River spring Chinook salmon and winter steelhead in cooperation with the National Marine Fisheries Service, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and a private fisheries consultant that are being incorporated in the Upper Willamette Recovery Plan, including a reintroduction of wild spring Chinook to the Molalla River.

• Successfully defended catch and release of N. Umpqua wild winter steelhead.

• Conducted watershed restoration and salmonid recovery educational presentations to more than 500 people on Central Oregon Coast watersheds.

• Conducted spawning surveys of Salmonberry River winter steelhead and coho, and Molalla River winter steelhead. Conducted temperature monitoring on the Molalla and Salmonberry rivers.

• Documented devastation caused by land use practices to the Salmonberry River.







The above accomplishments are proof that the Native Fish Society is on the forefront of effectiveness. We have no intention of slowing down, either! Examples of the projects and campaigns NFS River Stewards are working on into 2010 include:



• Helping federal and state agencies develop and implement scientifically-sound recovery plans. Current plans Stewards are working on include the Lower Columbia Spring and Fall Chinook, Steelhead and Coho plans, Mid-Columbia Steelhead, Upper Willamette Spring Chinook and Winter Steelhead, Columbia River Chum Salmon, Coastal Fall and Spring Chinook, and Oregon Coast Winter Steelhead

Developing a detailed threats assessment of the Upper Deschutes Basin

• Stopping increased timber harvest in Oregon state forests.

•regulations for keeping catch and release on N. Umpqua wild winter steelhead.

• Creating a citizen-based conservation plan for N. Umpqua wild winter steelhead

• Reintroducing wild spring Chinook to the Molalla River and constructing fish habitat on the N. Fork Molalla.

• Developing alternatives to a dam on Bridge Creek of the middle-fork John Day.

• Working within the City of Medford’s Comprehensive Plan to ensure fish-bearing Bear Creek tributaries are treated as such when the city approves development permits.

• Reducing or stopping trout stockings on the McKenzie River.

• Getting federal critical bull trout habitat designation for the Upper Deschutes

Bringing more lands into public ownership in the Alsea, Yachats, and Molalla river basins.

• Creating more wilderness in the John Day Basin.

• Removing the use of bait on the John Day and McKenzie River.



For more information on Native Fish Society River Steward Program successes and current projects and campaigns, please visit the NFS website at www.nativefishsociety.org. You can also join us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Native-Fish-Society/202725605549. If you would like to get involved, we are always looking for volunteers to help with spawning surveys, temperature monitoring and advocacy. We also need dedicated and passionate River Stewards who are willing to take the hard stands to restore native fish populations in the Pacific Northwest. For more information, please contact River Steward Coordinator Russell Bassett at 503-829-6211.

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