Programs
The North Pacific Ecosystem. Science and conservation in priority water basins.
Wild Salmon Center is working to identify and protect the last, best wild salmon ecosystems across the Pacific Rim --salmon strongholds. The salmon stronghold strategy complements conventional salmon recovery activities by supporting proactive, collaborative conservation projects in our last remaining healthy river systems where wild salmon are most abundant, biologically diverse, and have the best chance of surviving the long-term impacts of development and climate change.
North America
The Pacific Northwest is undergoing an unprecedented growth in human population and development, while climate change threatens to further reduce the quality and quantity of water that supports salmon. The Wild Salmon Center is working with scientists, government agencies, businesses and local communities to identify and conserve the most important remaining salmon strongholds along the Pacific Coast of North America.
Regional Programs
Wild Salmon Center has basin liasons working in key North American salmon stronghold basins to coordinate conservation efforts with local communities, landowners, watershed councils and regional governments. These place-based regional programs include John Day (OR), the Olympic Peninsula and Washington Coast and the Oregon North Coast.
North American Salmon Stronghold Partnership
To help reach our goals in North America, Wild Salmon Center established the North American Salmon Stronghold Partnership, a public-private partnership spanning the western United States and Canada. The Partnership consists of federal, state, tribal and local governments, land managers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and other stakeholders in stronghold river basins working together to implement high-value conservation projects across jurisdictional and political boundaries.
Pacific Salmon Stronghold Conservation Act
The Pacific Salmon Stronghold Conservation Act was introduced with bipartisan support in both the U.S. House and Senate in 2009 and if passed will establish a new, proactive policy to expand federal support and resources for the protection and restoration of North America's healthiest Pacific salmon ecosystems in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, California, and Alaska.
Western Pacific
The Wild Salmon Center has worked in the Russian Far East since the late 1990s. With our Russian partners we have conducted assessments of the biological diversity, habitat quality, and conservation potential of numerous river basins. Our success has depended on working with local communities and a wide range of stakeholders to ensure the long-term health of the region's wild salmon rivers. We are working towards advancing salmon ecosystem conservation, promoting sustainable use of natural resources and creating local conservation capacity.
Kamchatka
The Kamchatka Peninsula in the Russian Far East is one of the last, great unspoiled natural wonders of the world--producing up to one quarter of all wild Pacific salmon. Wild Salmon Center is working in partnership with local, regional, and international partners to provide permanent protection for some of the Pacific Rim's last whole, pristine salmon ecosystems.
Sakhalin Island
Russia's largest island, Sakhalin is the site of some of the most important wild salmon river systems. Through the Sakhalin Salmon Initiative, Wild Salmon Center is working with indigenous groups, commercial fishermen, energy companies, local governments, and other stakeholders to develop a broad scale conservation strategy.
Khabarovsk
Khabarovsk offers one of the largest remaining expanses of unfragmented temperate rainforest in the North Pacific. With our Russian partners, we have conducted assessments of the biological diversity, habitat quality, and conservation potential of priority river basins in the region.
Japan
Wild Salmon Center is working with regional partners to protect the last free-flowing salmon rivers in Japan. We have helped conduct assessments, develop salmon policy, and support regulation that protects wild salmon species, such as the critically endangered sea-run taimen.
Sustainable Fisheries
Finding common ground between the interests of wild salmon conservation groups and a billion-dollar-a-year salmon industry is a critical stepping stone to the long-term viability of this amazing species. Over the past several years, WSC has been building relationships with key stakeholders in Russia and Japan, offering our technical and scientific capacity, and harnessing the power of the global marketplace to advance the principles of sustainable salmon fisheries in the Western Pacific.
State of the Salmon Consortium
State of the Salmon (SoS) is a joint program of the Wild Salmon Center and Ecotrust that tracks the health, status and trends of wild salmon populations, and informs salmon management and conservation improvements across the Pacific Rim. It is the only non-governmental program dedicated to evaluating status and conservation challenges of wild North Pacific salmon across the six nations that comprise their entire range.
