May 20, 2005
Okanagan Nation releases 1.1 million sockeye salmon into Skaha Lake
(PHOTO of the Crowd Watching the Release of Salmon Fry
http://www.turtleisland.org/photo/okfry1.gif Larger image
http://www.turtleisland.org/photo/okfry2.gif Photo by R.Rae )
Penticton, BC -The Okanagan Nation Alliance (ONA) released 1.1 million
sockeye fry into the Okanagan River in Penticton this week, culminating
today with a community fry release, ceremony and feast. The fry will live
in Skaha Lake for one year before beginning their migration down through the Okanagan and Columbia Rivers to enter the Pacific Ocean.
"The Okanagan people have always lived on this land, and we have a
responsibility to protect and manage our resources so that our future
generations can benefit from a healthy and thriving environment," says Chief Stewart Phillip, ONA Chairman and Chief of the Penticton Indian Band. "The work that the Okanagan Nation is doing today, clearly demonstrates that we are responsible and effective managers of resources within our Territory."
Following the success of last year's small pilot reintroduction, this is the
first full year of a planned 12-year initiative to reintroduce and monitor
sockeye in Skaha Lake, which is a portion of their historic habitat upstream
of the current migration barrier McIntyre Dam. The initiative is headed by
the Okanagan Nation Alliance with scientific review provided by Fisheries
and Oceans Canada (DFO) and the provincial Ministry of Water Land and Air Protection (MWLAP), through the tri-partite Canadian Okanagan Basin
Technical Working Group (COBTWG).
"We initiated this project in the 1997 because our anadromous salmon
fisheries were almost non-existent", stated Byron Louis, ONA Title and
Rights Advisor. "This is a long-term commitment to rebuild and restore our
Okanagan Basin fisheries, and we are partnering with governments and
industries to help achieve this goal."
This year's program is being funded by Grant County Public Utility District
in Washington State as part of their mitigation for sockeye salmon losses
through the hydro-electric dams they operate on the Columbia River. Last
October, the sockeye eggs were collected on their spawning grounds near
Oliver, and they were fertilized, hatched and reared at the Shuswap Falls
Hatchery near Lumby. Once the fry are released, an intensive in-lake
monitoring and evaluation program will be conducted to investigate the
sockeye and kokanee interactions in Skaha Lake.
A feasibility study is also taking place to determine potential options for a hatchery in the South- Central Okanagan, which will assist in long-term salmon recovery goals in the Okanagan Basin.
"Although the project is scientifically designed, the reintroduction of
sockeye into Skaha Lake uses Okanagan Traditional Ecological Knowledge,
because our history and stories reveal that many salmon species and
fisheries were once as far north in the basin as Okanagan Lake," says Deana Machin, Fisheries Program Manager. "We are attempting to restore a food resource that was once abundant."
Following the sockeye fry release and ceremony, people were welcomed at the En'Owkin Centre for a community feast, and the Nakulamen Performanace Collective, performed a traditional salmon dance.
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For more information please contact:
Deana Machin, Fisheries Program Manager Tel: (250) 707-0095 Cell: (250) 215-0255 Howie Wright, Senior Fisheries Biologist Tel: (250) 707-0095 Byron Louis, Title and Rights Advisor Cell: (250) 878-3309
OKANAGAN NATION ALLIANCE
3255 C Shannon Lake Road, Westbank, BC V4T 1V4
Phone (250) 707-0095 Fax (250) 707-0166
www.syilx.org Okanagan Sockeye Reintroduction
Backgrounder
Elders’ accounts, and other forms of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) tell us that many species of salmon once came into the Okanagan Valley and tell us how coyote brought salmon up into the Okanagan Basin for the Okanagan people.
Historic accounts of sockeye, chinook, coho, and steelhead and potentially others have been documented as returning to the Okanagan.