Taskforce ready for ’emergency enhancement’ of salmon stocks after B.C. landslide
WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — A salmon task force that is examining the impact of the massive Chilcotin River landslide in British Columbia says it’s prepared for the “emergency enhancement” of fish stocks after the disaster.
A statement from the Fisheries Department, which is part of the task force alongside First Nations and the B.C. government, says monitoring has confirmed that sockeye salmon have begun to enter the river.
But more assessment is needed to determine if upstream salmon migration has been restored following the July 30 landslide.
The department says chinook and sockeye salmon reared in hatcheries run by the federal government, First Nations and the community will release stocks “as needed.”