'Absolute salmon factory': B.C. restoration project shows early signs of success
Read the full story at: https://www.vancouverisawesome.com/highlights/absolute-salmon-factory-bc-restoration-project-shows-early-signs-of-success-9818446
Read more about LFFA’s role in the project at here.
Katzie First Nation reconnects creeks and sloughs with Pitt River in bid to bring back salmon, protect against extreme weather.
Stefan Labbé
a day ago
The upper reaches of a major Metro Vancouver river have been opened up to migrating salmon in what proponents of the project say is one of the largest restoration projects in Western Canada.
The project, which spans 773 acres of land in the upper Pitt River bought by the BC Parks Foundation in 2021, brought together the federal government, environmental and fishery groups, and the Katzie First Nation. Katzie councillor Rick Bailey said overhauling vast stretches of creeks has breathed new life into his nation's territory.
“This year, it’s the most sockeye I’ve seen. I was like, hooray!” said Bailey.
Much of the damage to the watershed's streams stretches back more than 100 years ago, when logging operations helped to cut off tributaries from the Pitt River — a problem that extends beyond the territory of the Katzie and into the wider Lower Fraser River.
Since 1850, a network of culverts, dams, dikes and floodgates have destroyed about 85 per cent of the salmon habitat across the Lower Fraser River from Delta to Hope, according to one 2021 study. Logging, urbanization or reclaiming land for agriculture has erected 1,200 barriers that today prevent salmon from reaching 2,224 kilometres of streams, the researchers found.
The Pitt River restoration projects aim to undo that damage. After digging out sand and gravel, contractors used a series of canals and pipes to direct freshwater from the Pitt River into the once-choked streams. Katzie elders and youth helped replant native shrubs and trees along several kilometres of tributary.
“We’ve built new spawning channels and protected them so they don’t get blown out in an atmospheric river,” said Bailey.
Known as ‘The Fish Guy’ among the Katzie, the councillor has long held roles trying to restore salmon in the First Nation’s territory. He said work to bring salmon back accelerated about six years ago when a landslide hit a creek off the Pitt River. Bailey said he went up with a lodge operator and later a biologist.
"It was a chinook-spawning creek," said Bailey. "We said, 'We got to fix this.'"
Money from the World Wildlife Fund, and later land bought by the BC Parks Foundation, formalized the restoration work that extends across 10 to 15 kilometres of Pitt River tributaries.
“The area was choked off, gasping for life, but you could just feel the potential for it to be an absolute salmon factory if we could get water back into it,” Andy Day, CEO of the BC Parks Foundation, said in a statement.
'Fish would go in there and die'
The latest restoration project is the opening up of Red Slough — what could be the largest creek rehabilitation in Western Canada.
Red Slough is naturally rich in iron, so when it was choked of freshwater, oxygen levels dropped, according to Tse-Lynn Loh, the BC Park Foundation’s manager of land stewardship.
“It was a stagnant slough. The only flow it had was from the tide. Fish would go in there and die,” he said.
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