Early on a recent Wednesday morning, anglers in Anchorage lined Ship Creek and cast lines to catch returning chinook salmon. Just minutes after 6 a.m., shouts of “fish on!” fluttered across the shore.
A tanker carrying young salmon crashed. But most of the fish flopped into a creek and “hit the water running,” a wildlife official said. By Christine Hauser On a recent morning in March, while dew was ...
Fall is the time many see and fish for salmon in Whatcom County creeks as they return home to spawn, laying their eggs and dying. There are five species of salmon in the Pacific Northwest: chinook, ...
Recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) are helping the salmon farming industry maintain positive production amid growing biological challenges in sea pen production, according to the latest edition ...
On a recent morning, while dew was still on the road, there occurred the salmon smolt mishap of Northeast Oregon. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said on Tuesday that one of its tankers had ...
On a recent morning in March, while dew was still on the road, there occurred the salmon smolt mishap of northeast Oregon. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said on Tuesday that one of its ...