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Next month, scientists in Idaho will try to produce endangered sockeye salmon.
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In some years, half of the Fraser's returning sockeye die before spawning.
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And the Fraser River canneries wonder why sockeye is getting scarce.
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The cannery opened five days in advance of the sockeye season on the Fraser.
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Great had been the "run," and the sockeye season was almost over.
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According to the EPA, the Bristol Bay watershed supports the world's largest fishery of sockeye salmon.
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Then we drifted into talk of the sockeye and of the hyiu chickimin the Indians would get.
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Until the early 1990s, about 8 million sockeye salmon returned each year to spawn.
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Snake River sockeye, which lay their eggs in lakes, in 1991 became the first salmon named to the U.S.
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We do sockeye, pink and chum salmon, roe herring, halibut, invertebrates, I say, and then pause, seeing her face fall.
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Five years ago, the researchers noticed that some Fraser sockeye appeared to show unusual signs of physiological stress while at sea.
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Flynn began fishing in Bristol Bay because the once-annual sockeye salmon harvest in Puget Sound is now held only every four years.
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After the steelhead season comes the sockeye blueback run, a salmon fishery unique to the Quinault reservation that has all but disappeared.
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The Bristol Bay region supports all five species of Pacific salmon found in North America, which include sockeye, Chinook, chum, coho and pink salmon.
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Its development, near one of the biggest sockeye salmon fisheries on earth, has been fiercely opposed by environmentalists, native groups and fisherman for years.
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The sockeye were counted between the lower Columbia's Bonneville Dam and McNary Dam, about 150 miles upstream, en route to the Snake River tributary.