Monday, May 21, 2018

Columbia River Sturgeon 2018 Fishing Charters

Columbia River Fishing Guide
Columbia River Sturgeon
The Columbia River is open for Sturgeon Retention for the 2018 Season! 

BOOK A COLUMBIA RIVER STURGEON FISHING CHARTER ONLINE HERE FOR 2018 SEASON

Fish the Columbia River now through June 4th on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday for Keeper Sturgeon.

You can keep 2 sturgeon for the year and 1 sturgeon per day between 44-50 inches.

The easiest way to catch sturgeon is going to be with a fishing guide since it's only open 3 days per week for 10 days the sturgeon fishing charters and guides will be out there everyday and they will know where the keeper sturgeon are hiding out.

White Sturgeon are native to several large North American rivers that drain to the Pacific Ocean. They primarily live in estuaries of large rivers, but migrate to spawn in freshwater, and travel long distances between river systems. Reproducing populations have been documented along the West Coast, from northern Mexico up to the Aleutian Island in Alaska. White Sturgeon are commonly found in deep, soft bottomed areas of estuaries, where movements in the water column is dependent on salinity.[6] Historical ranges have been modified substantially by overharvesting, habitat changes due to dams, and river regulations; all affecting habitat quality, suitability and connectivity.[3]
In the lower Fraser River, British Columbia, movement and abundance are assessed by acoustic tags and mark recapture methods. While the model developed by Robichaud, English and Nelson[7] assumes a closed homogenous population, acoustic tags and mark-recapture data shows that they are sedentary during the winter months and mobile in the spring and fall, with data indicating that they leave the Fraser River and enter the Strait of Georgia during their mobile periods; this conclusion has been validated by microchemical evidence of marine exposure in Fraser River White sturgeon fin rays.
Construction of dams for hydroelectric power production affects seasonal movement of White Sturgeon in many river systems, with the Columbia River Basin being a large contributor to shifts in the distribution and movement. The dams present in the basin have largely blocked the upstream movement of sturgeon, due to designs of fish ladders being more specified for salmon and steelhead. While downstream passage of sturgeon through the dams has been reported, the route of passage was never identified. Downstream movement through the dams are only possible through operating turbines, open spill gates and the ice and trash sluiceway.




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