Salmon rescuers to blast rock to help fish spawn in Seymour River
Debris from a 2014 rockslide is preventing rare runs of coho and steelhead from spawning upstream
First, volunteers tried trucks. Now, it's time for explosives.
Salmon on the Seymour River have been unable to reach their spawning grounds upstream since a massive rockslide dumped rocks as big as houses into the North Vancouver, B.C. waterway in December 2014.
Last year, a concerted volunteer effort caught and trucked fish from the bottom of the river around the rockslide and then released the fish to spawn upstream.
Brian Smith, the hatchery manager with the Seymour River Salmonid Society, says the group will try to blast the rock away, because moving fish by hand was not a good long-term strategy.
"It was a gruelling endeavour and about 2,500 hours were put into it. We knew at the time that it wasn't sustainable."
The blasting plan includes using low-velocity explosives and drills to break up the rock, and then waiting for a big flush of water to move the rock away in early fall.
"We are going to take our time and be very careful ... considering the safety of people and the safety of animals that we're trying to protect."
The cracked rock should also make it easier for the fish progeny to swim downstream.
"We'll go back in and assess, then do another round of drilling and blasting," Smith said. "We're looking at 3 to 5 year program, at about $1.2 million."
Tremendous effort
Until the rock is blasted away, the society will still be moving fish upstream by hand. They have installed a floating fish fence downstream from the debris which Smith says will help volunteers intercept adult fish more easily before they reach the rock slide.
While the project will take a lot of effort and resources, Smith says, it is needed.
He says that through tagging they found that not one adult fish has been able to move past the rockslide, and since salmon always go back to spawn in the river they were born in and very rarely spawn elsewhere, the fish aren't surviving.
"Unfortunately, [many of these fish] die before they spawn."
The group will be working with a number of community partners including Metro Vancouver, the District of North Vancouver, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and the Squamish and Tseil-Waututh First Nations.
Salmon troubles
The efforts to preserve the Seymour salmon runs coincide with a vulnerable time for B.C. salmon.
The Seymour River supports rare runs of coho and steelhead salmon, Smith says.
In fact, he added, the steelhead summer run is only one of four summer runs in the entire Lower Mainland.
Meanwhile, the Fraser River is experiencing the lowest sockeye salmon run on record, which some experts say is because of the warmer than normal summer temperatures.
Recreational salmon fishing was banned on the Lower Fraser earlier this month, to conserve sockeye.
With files from The Early Edition
To listen to the interview, click on the link labelled Salmon rescuers blast rock to help fish spawn in Seymour River