Record Size Chinook Salmon Found on DFG Survey of Lower Battle Creek
Nov. 12, 2008
One of the biggest Chinook salmon ever recorded in
California was found dead of natural causes in lower Battle Creek near
Red Bluff last month. Department of Fish and Game (DFG) biologists
measured to estimate what the live weight of the dead fish would have
been. A standard size-to-weight formula was used to determine
approximate live weight. Based on measurements of the fish (51 inches
long), it could have surpassed the current state angling record for a
Chinook salmon. It was estimated to have been between five and six years
of age.
“I have counted tens of thousands of salmon during my
career and this is the biggest I have ever seen,” said Doug Killam DFG
Associate Fisheries Biologist. “When alive, it could have weighed more
than the largest Chinook officially recorded in California, an 88-pound
fish caught in the Sacramento River.”
The monster salmon was found during a routine
fall-run Chinook salmon survey conducted by DFG biologists. Biologists
walk through the spawning reach on lower Battle Creek on a weekly basis,
recording numbers of spawned-out salmon. Most of the salmon they find
weigh between 20 and 30 pounds. The size of this salmon literally
stopped them in their tracks. Killam was called and made a special trip
to the site with camera in hand to record the size of the fish.
Because Pacific Chinook salmon die after spawning,
surveys counting dead carcasses are commonly used throughout the Central
Valley to estimate the number of salmon spawning in each stream. These
monitoring surveys provide vital information on the number of salmon
returning to specific areas, baseline information for establishing sport
and recreational fishing seasons, evaluating hatchery programs, and
evaluating habitat restoration and improvement projects.
Killam supervises a crew of employees that work
year-round monitoring fish populations throughout the Upper Sacramento
River Basin. The monitoring projects use state-of-the-art under water
video monitoring techniques and traditional walking surveys to gather
information.
These surveys are cooperative efforts. They involve a
number of different state resource agencies along with federal entities
and non-profit groups and organizations. Four distinct runs of salmon
are surveyed: winter, spring, fall and late fall-run Chinook salmon, and
steelhead.
The winter and spring-run Chinook salmon and steelhead are
listed under the state and federal endangered species acts making
information on their population size vital in recovery efforts and for
state and federal water management activities.
“Hopefully this fish was entirely successful in
passing on its superior genetic potential,” said Killam. “This is one of
the few bright spots this year for one of California’s great sport fish,
the Chinook salmon.”
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