Pacific salmon are vital to our culture and environment in British Columbia. They are facing unprecedented challenges with increasing impacts from climate change, pathogens, development, and predation. At the Pacific Salmon Foundation, we are working to save and restore wild Pacific salmon.
Our Climate Adaptation series focuses on seasonal issues that salmon face, issues that become challenges during extreme climate events. These challenges often result in amplified stressors to Pacific salmon.
How do wildfires impact salmon habitat?
The second segment in our summer series on Climate Adaptation is wildfires.
In this feature, we learn from PSF VP Salmon Jason Hwang about wildfires. These massive events can devastate the landscape and freshwater habitats by creating unstable slopes, which cannot absorb water and drive additional run-off and debris downstream. The debris effectively clogs salmon migratory paths. The good news is, PSF is developing a first-of-its kind Forest Fire Playbook.
Pacific salmon need our help, and we must do everything we can to save them. At PSF, we’re salmon first, salmon always — and we don’t go it alone. Special thanks to our knowledgeable partners in this video — Sarah Ostoforoff, Fisheries Biologist, DFO, and Paul Mozin, Fisheries Biologist, Scw’exmx Tribal Council.
The Pacific Salmon Foundation (PSF) has approved $7,000 in funding from the Climate Emergency Fund to support time-sensitive efforts in Ucluelet and Squamish to prevent salmon strandings and mortalities in light of recent heavy rains.
An…
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Ucluelet9-drone-flood.png8101281Braela Kwan/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngBraela Kwan2024-11-21 10:22:532024-11-21 10:22:53Reconnecting salmon habitat damaged by B.C.’s atmospheric river
During the extreme flooding event in November 2021 that severely impacted the Fraser Valley, the right arm of Big Silver River was blocked by debris and disconnected from Harrison Lake when water levels dropped in the summer months.
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Big-Silver-River-Sept-18-2024-05536-scaled.jpg17072560Chloe Fraser/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngChloe Fraser2024-10-30 14:38:112024-11-21 10:24:54River flows restored just in time for returning sockeye
Record-low snowpack, below-average freshet, and lingering drought conditions from 2023 set the stage for a challenging summer in salmon-bearing watersheds.
Drought conditions in British Columbia stretching back to 2022 continue to put pressure…
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Sep-5-2023_Jamieson-Creek_jh-31-scaled.jpg11522048Oscar Beardmore-Gray/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngOscar Beardmore-Gray2024-07-18 09:45:502024-07-25 13:35:33Drought risk remains a pressing issue for salmon in B.C.
PSF’s new Wildfire Playbook is a first to offer solutions to help salmon and their habitats recover after wildfires burn in salmon-bearing watersheds.
June 25, 2024
Vancouver, B.C. – As wildfires in British Columbia grow larger and more…
The 2024 wildfire season has already begun in British Columbia. The fire and drought impacts this summer will depend on how much rain falls throughout June, yet experts have predicted a long and dry fire season ahead.
Unfortunately, this…
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/2.png7201080Braela Kwan/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngBraela Kwan2024-06-13 13:15:462024-07-25 13:37:53The burning issue: wildfires and salmon
Sturgeon Bank — a stretch of the Fraser River delta located off the west coast of Richmond, British Columbia — has lost at least 160 hectares of tidal marsh habitat over the last three decades due to dredging, dikes, and other human interventions.
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Feb-26-2024-Sturgeon-Bank_bk-13-scaled.jpg13662048Braela Kwan/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngBraela Kwan2024-04-16 09:37:242024-07-25 13:38:07A habitat lifeline for juvenile salmon in the Fraser River
Extreme climate events like drought and flood can wreak havoc on salmon migrations. PSF worked with partners across B.C. this summer and fall during an unprecedented, province-wide drought to improve fish passage in rivers like xʔəl̓ilwətaʔɬ where salmon were stranded.
A collaborative effort near Lillooet has given thousands of salmon the chance to migrate upstream to spawning grounds after being stuck at a drought-stricken rapids section.
https://psf.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/2023-10-17_Bridge-Rapids_Brandon-Deepwell-39-scaled-e1698911442587.jpg12941940PSF/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PSF-Logo-2022-min.pngPSF2023-11-02 00:45:472024-04-15 12:48:08Urgent action allows thousands of salmon to pass through Bridge Rapids
As the province warns of “long-term, significant drought” this summer, impacts on salmon are imminent. While those exact impacts are to be determined, PSF and partners seek innovative, cost-effective solutions to help salmon adapt.