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Welcome to the Whatcom Salmon Recovery web site. Here you'll find information on the basic issues surrounding salmon recovery, the recovery projects in Water Resources Inventory Area No. 1 (WRIA-1), and the policies and public processes designed to recover salmon runs.
The salmon recovery plan is
now available!
Items of interest:
- 2008 SRFB Grant Round_Revised Announcement_050108
- 2008 WRIA 1 Project Checklist_032508_tables emb
- Narrative for WRIA1_2008-2010 Project List_Final
- 2008 WRIA 1 3-Year Plan Action Descriptions_Final
- Copy of 2008 WRIA 1 3-Year Plan Matrix_final
- 2008 Chinook Recovery Proj. Subset WRIA 1 3-Yr Project
- 2008 Chinook Recovery Subset List Project Descriptions

Bertrand
Creek Levee Setback
Bertrand
Creek is one of the major tributaries in the lower Nooksack River
watershed, with the lower creek flowing through primarily agricultural
and rural residential lands. Until this summer, the creek was tightly
constrained by levees, particularly near its confluence with the
Nooksack.
During
the winter, the lower Bertrand Creek levees inhibit the downstream
movement of floodwaters in the right bank floodplain. The levees
were prone to damage, requiring nearly annual repair and maintenance
work. When they failed, it was often a significant breach, with
the floodwaters strewing debris across adjacent fields.
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Bertrand
Creek
Originating in British Columbia and crossing into the U.S.
near the city of Lynden, Bertrand Creek is one of the Nooksack River's
largest lowland tributaries. The U.S. portion of the creek is 9.8
miles long, and drains 42.5 square miles, about half of which is
in each country.
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Q. If they’re endangered, why can I still buy
salmon in the grocery store?
A. Much of the salmon you see at the supermarket is
Atlantic salmon raised on farms in the U.S., Canada, and Chile. Most
wild salmon for sale comes from Alaska, where runs are relatively healthy
and habitat is functioning properly.
If Puget Sound runs of chinook and other salmon go extinct, it’s
true that there would still be salmon in other parts of the world. (However,
this could change if currently healthy habitats and salmon populations
are damaged in the future. Their recovery is important because it indicates
how well our community is safeguarding our waters and our natural environment.
Because salmon use the entire ecosystem—from headwaters to open
ocean and everything in between—their health, or lack thereof,
is a sign of the health of the general environment.
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