Idaho steelhead fish run down, but not done

Published: December 11, 2012 

It’s been a sobering steelhead season. We’ve been having such stratospheric runs in the last decade that 2012 has been a return-to-earth year.

The run just broke 100,000 steelhead since June 1 over Lower Granite Dam, and it is pretty much over for the year.

Taking a look back, we totaled about 110,000 fish for 2012, which includes fish from the tail end of the 2011 run. Each run starts in late summer and ends with a few stragglers in the spring.

But it’s easier to compare calendar years because the vast majority of each run crosses the dam between June and December.

According to the DART fish passage center, 2012’s steelhead count at Lower Granite is the lowest since 1999, when 99,000 crossed the dam. To keep that in perspective, 2012 still would have topped every year between 1993 to 1999, when counts at Lower Granite varied between 48,000 and 99,000.

But 2012 is a runt cousin to the runs between 2000-2011 that produced between 113,000 and 323,000 annually.

Here are the take-home points. Steelhead and salmon runs are cyclical, so there’s no reason to panic because of one down year.

Another thing: One year does not make a trend.

On the other hand, it’s a little depressing to see one-third the number of fish we had in 2009.

That doesn’t mean you should write off steelhead fishing. The fish are well distributed throughout the rivers, there’s plenty of time to catch them, and I’m willing to bet there will be good fishing between now and spring.

Roger Phillips

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