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NOAA’s Fisheries Service, the federal agency charged with protecting
northwest salmon listed under the Endangered Species Act, has published
and is seeking public comment on a proposed plan to recover threatened
sockeye salmon in Lake Ozette, its shore, tributaries and the Ozette
River. The plan took two years to develop with input from local citizens
and landowners. Recovery plans are a requirement for species listed
under the ESA.
The 7,550-acre lake, in Washington’s Olympic National Park on the
Olympic Peninsula, is the state’s third largest. Lake Ozette sockeye
salmon were listed as threatened under the ESA in 1999.
The Lake Ozette sockeye proposed plan is part of a larger commitment
made by NOAA’s Fisheries Service to develop salmon recovery plans
throughout the region. Elements of more than 60 subbasin and watershed
plans from all across the northwest are being incorporated into larger
regional recovery plans for salmon and steelhead in the interior
Columbia basin, the Snake River basin, the Oregon coast and Puget Sound
areas. Three of these plans and part of a fourth have already been
completed and are now being implemented.
The goal of the plan in part is for naturally spawning Lake Ozette
sockeye that are sufficiently abundant, productive, and diverse to
provide significant ecological, cultural, social and economic benefits.
The plan looks toward rebuilding Lake Ozette sockeye to levels that will
provide ecological, cultural, social, and economic benefits. The
proposed recovery plan is a roadmap and resource for people and
organizations willing to take action to help recover sockeye. It
provides a range of recovery actions that address the factors affecting
sockeye at all stages of its life cycle.
The plan has objective, measurable criteria that if met, would lead
to having these sockeye removed from the Endangered Species list, and
include standards of abundance, productivity, distribution and
diversity.
The proposed plan was produced over two years by NOAA’s Fisheries
Service with the active participation of the Lake Ozette Steering
Committee, a group made up of local citizens, landowners, forest
managers, biologists and representatives of several county, state,
tribal and federal entities, and the Washington governor’s salmon
recovery office. NOAA Fisheries Service’s Puget Sound technical recovery
team developed the population and biological goals that are the
technical basis for the proposed plan.
The agency said it would set a schedule of public workshops in Port
Angeles and Sekiu, Wash., over the next several weeks to discuss the
draft. A final recovery plan could come as early as the end of this
year.
Locally generated recovery plans for other listed salmon populations
in the northwest are expected this year and next.
Visit the
Lake Ozette ESA Salmon Recovery Planning Web site for the proposed
plan and related documents.
NOAA is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national safety
through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related
events and information service delivery for transportation, and by
providing environmental stewardship of our nation's coastal and marine
resources. Through the emerging Global Earth Observation System of
Systems (GEOSS), NOAA is working with its federal partners, more than 70
countries and the European Commission to develop a global monitoring
network that is as integrated as the planet it observes, predicts and
protects.
NOAA’s Fisheries Service is dedicated to protecting and preserving
our nation’s living marine resources and their habitat through
scientific research, management and enforcement. NOAA Fisheries Service
provides effective stewardship of these resources for the benefit of the
nation, supporting coastal communities that depend upon them, and
helping to provide safe and healthy seafood to consumers and
recreational opportunities for the American public. |