Lower Snake River - Impact Area Special Groups

Participating stakeholders will discuss, update and finalize this section. The Group’s objective is to discuss solutions on how to restore the Snake River while also meeting the impact area needs and, most times, improving on what is thought to be possible today. To add your voice, to discuss your concerns and to collaborate on a mutual solution, please Join Us.

Fish Scientists and Anglers - Call to Action

The benefits of dam breaching for wild salmon restoration are undeniable. Through collaboration, we call on all Fish Scientists and Anglers to address the challenges with the urgency required to revive our wild salmon runs and restore the NW ecosystem for future generations.

  • Clearly establish the sense of urgency imposing existential threat on keystone wild salmon and other fish populations.

  • Evaluate the ecological impact and benefits of dam breaching on wild salmon populations, including improved migration routes and increased spawning habitat.

  • Acknowledge the increased survival rates and biodiversity that can result from dam breaching, such as enhanced juvenile migration and reduced predation.

  • Consider phased approaches and innovative solutions to transition smoothly from dam-dependent systems to free-flowing rivers, minimizing disruption to local communities and ecosystems.

  • Address the environmental impact of sediment release and water quality changes on wild salmon migrations and explore sustainable practices to mitigate these effects.

By uniting our expertise, we can develop a comprehensive plan that supports both the recovery of wild salmon and the health of our ecosystems.

Challenges & Benefits - Wild Salmon

A subset of topics included as starter - additional to be added by workstream leads and collaborators

  • In the Pacific Northwest, the Columbia River basin dominates the landscape stretching across 250,000 square miles and seven states. The Snake River, the main tributary of the Columbia River, was once free flowing and teeming with salmon and steelhead with more than two million fish returning annually. Between 1961 and 1975, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed four dams on the lower Snake that dramatically reduced survival of migrating salmon and transformed the once free-flowing river into a series of warm, slow moving reservoirs. Today, only 1-2% of the historical numbers of wild fish return to the Snake River. Despite billions spent on habitat improvement and fish passage, extinction is looming for the once abundant anadromous fish. Snake steelhead, Snake fall Chinook, Snake spring/summer Chinook are listed as threatened, Wild Snake sockeye are endangered, and Snake coho are already extinct. — American Fisheries Society (AFS).

Additional Topics & Resources

TBD by Subject Leaders and Experts

This section to be developed by the Leads in the Unification.

If you are a wild salmon or fish expert who would like to collaborate in restoring the Snake River please Join Us.

The Answers are Out There

We only need to ask HOW.