A fisheries agency is asking for public input on whether to list a salmon from the Columbia River Basin as an endangered species.
The agency isn’t from Washington state or even the United States: It’s Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans, and the fish are Okanagan Chinooks.
They are the only remaining Chinook salmon in Canada's portion of the Columbia River Basin.
To reach their Canadian spawning grounds, these fish have to swim past 10 dams on the Columbia and Okanogan rivers in Washington state. (The international river is spelled “Okanagan” north of the border and “Okanogan” to the south.)
Another dam about 17 miles north of the international border blocks off habitats farther upriver altogether.
Canadian officials say dams and fishing in Washington are key factors in the salmon’s steep decline, as well as damage to their Canadian spawning habitat.