The National Marine Fisheries Service said has
begun a year-long biological "status review" of seven species of fish in Puget
Sound as a first step to determine if they need protection under the Endangered Species
Act. None of the species, interestingly, is a salmon. Several salmon species were listed
under the ESA in Marsh.
The seven are Puget Sound populations of Pacific herring,
Pacific cod, Pacific hake, walleye pollock and brown, copper and quillback rockfish. They
are part of a more expansive petition sent to the agency last February to examine 18 Puget
Sound species, the largest number the federal agency has ever been asked to consider under
the federal species-protection law. It is also the first time the agency has been asked to
conduct such a review of a West Coast fish species other than salmon.
Although until the early 1980s there was a commercial Puget
Sound hake fishery, and until recently there was a limited fishery for herring and their
eggs by both tribal and non-tribal commercial fishermen in Puget Sound, the remaining
species are typically targeted by sport fishermen.
The agency said there was insufficient information on the
remaining 11 species -- all varieties of bottom-dwelling rockfish -- to warrant a status
review of them. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, however, said a review was
not needed on any of them.
"We have already taken many actions to rebuild these
species, including restricting harvest and creating sanctuaries where no fishing is
allowed," said Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Director Jeff Koenings.
"These and other actions will serve as part of detailed, scientific conservation
plans that hopefully will allow us to avoid ESA listings." Koenings said that WDFW
expects the conservation plans to be delivered to the National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS) this fall.
But Mike Sato of People for Puget Sound, a Seattle-based
conservation organization, said the state is long on plans, but short on action.
"They talk about all the plans theyve got, but there is nothing in the
water," he said. "There is no firepower there. You will have to start dealing
with enforcement and compliance."
The status review, scheduled for completion next February,
will make a science-based recommendation on whether or not an Endangered Species Act
listing may be warranted. If at that time the agency makes a formal proposal to list any
of the seven species, it would have another year to make a final decision to commit to a
formal listing.
The agency said it would be working closely with the
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and the treaty Indian tribes in western
Washington as it progressed with its status review.
The petition was submitted by Sam Wright, a retired biologist
with the Department of Fish and Wildlife, who lives in Olympia, Wash. Wright could not be
reached for comment.
In his petition, Wright says species diversity in Puget Sound
has been markedly reduced, abundance of each species has declined precipitously and the
average fish size has become much smaller. There are few mature females, and each female
is producing fewer offspring.
The establishment of marine wilderness or no-fishing zones,
Wright says in his petition, is key to the survival of these fish. In 1970, a 27-acre
refuge from fishing was established in Puget Sound. The site, known as the Edmonds
Underwater Park, provides "unambiguous empirical evidence of true rockfish
capabilities," he says. He cites studies showing that there are between seven and 50
times more rockfish in the Underwater Park than in other heavily fished areas of Puget
Sound.
Several other no-take zones have been established in Puget
Sound, including the San Juan Marine Preserves, Sund Rocks in Hood Canal, and Titlow Beach
near Tacoma. In total, less than 1 percent of the habitats used by rockfish in Puget Sound
have been protected.
For several years, citizen groups like People for Puget Sound
and Friends of the San Juan Islands have tried to create the Northwest Straits National
Marine Sanctuary in the northern portion of Puget Sound, in waters between Whidbey Island
and the Canada-U.S. border. Congress killed the idea last year, passing instead a bill
creating a locally controlled Northwest Straits Commission as an alternative to a federal
marine sanctuary. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray and Rep. Jack Metcalf, calls on
seven Puget Sound counties to oversee the recovery of depleted species, creation of marine
protected areas and the protection of nearshore critical habitat. The commission also has
representation from Native groups and the governors office, but none from the
federal government.
Any county that participates in the commission gets $10,000 in
start up money so long as they embrace the goals of species recovery and habitat
protection.
"It is a far cry from a sanctuary," said Sato of
People for Puget Sound. "We consider it admittedly experimental but were
willing to go along with it. At least now there is a framework in the northern part of
Puget Sound that with the list of salmon, and the pending listing of groundfish and
herring, that puts all species on an equal footing."