| British Columbia's smaller 
                    salmon-bearing rivers no place for jet boats Compiled 
                    by Ken KristianWith the use of jet boats on our waterways growing daily, area residents’
 fears for the Pitt River watershed, its wildlife, its wild 
                    salmon stocks and
 their vitally important habitat are likely to be echoed 
                    throughout the
 province in the not-too-distant future. To varying degrees, 
                    every river
 system in British Columbia is subject to similar 
                    environmental impacts and
 stresses as human populations increase, tourism grows and 
                    BC's residents
 seek new economic opportunities.
 By beginning now to identify the key issues that are vitally 
                    important to
 those who live, work and play in the upper Pitt River 
                    drainage, watershed
 users can begin the process of forging agreements with 
                    government agencies to protect those interests for future 
                    generations to come.
 In my opinion as an original founding member of the Pitt 
                    River & Area
 Watershed Network (PRAWN), former professional fishing guide 
                    and director of the Save Our Fish Foundation (SOFF), the 
                    upper Pitt River is not only a tiny piece of an 
                    ever-shrinking paradise that must be preserved, it's the 
                    crown jewel of salmon-producing rivers in southern British 
                    Columbia. I have no doubt whatsoever that with a proper 
                    community-based stewardship and
 management program, the upper Pitt River can set an example 
                    for the rest of British Columbia to follow.
 As stewards of the resource, each and every British Columbian must take
 responsibility for his or her actions. We must all put the 
                    resource ahead of
 our own interests, and above all else, let good judgment and 
                    common sense be our guides in leaving a legacy we can all be 
                    proud of.
 In closing I would like to remind the government agencies 
                    responsible for
 the well-being of our rapidly vanishing salmon, trout and 
                    steelhead stocks
 that British Columbians don’t want empty, dead, dying and 
                    fishless rivers.
 The fact is, all British Columbians desire, are entitled to 
                    and deserve
 Living Rivers."
 Below I have compiled some of the relevant information gained from the 
                    past studies on various rivers to help evaluate potential 
                    stressors and negative impacts on salmonids, wildlife and 
                    their habitat. This includes field notes, memoranda, and 
                    reports available to the public from biologists that have 
                    worked throughout North America.
 Ken Kristian
 Working hard to ensure a better future for the world's fish, 
                    their habitat,
 and generations of British Columbians yet to come.
 In the upper Pitt River country you can hear your true name
 ==========================================
 DESCRIPTION OF 
                    ADVERSE EFFECTS ON PACIFIC SALMON ESSENTIAL FISH HABITAT AND 
                    ACTIONS TO ENCOURAGE THE CONSERVATION AND ENHANCEMENT OF 
                    ESSENTIAL FISH HABITAT
 In 1991, the NPS funded a study of the effects of jet-driven boat 
                    turbulence on sockeye and other salmonid reproduction in 
                    Alaska streams. Much of the field work planned for the study 
                    occurred on American Creek in Katmai. The study was 
                    conducted by the Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife 
                    Research Unit at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The 
                    study, completed in 1994, found that jet driven boats can 
                    indeed kill salmonid embryos in redds. Water pressure was 
                    not found to be the culprit; instead, mortality occurs when 
                    river substrate (gravel) is moved by the direct discharge 
                    from a jet unit.
 The authors found that limiting jet boat activity may be warranted in 
                    small
 streams where the potential for substrate disturbance is 
                    high. Any such
 restrictions, however, should be made on a case-by-case 
                    basis. [106]
 Today, jet-driven boats are becoming more popular because of 
                    their shallow draft. Shallow headwaters are preferred by 
                    Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus) and rainbow trout (Salmo 
                    gairdneri) as sites of egg deposition for reproduction.
 Based on a 1992-1993 study by the University of Alaska at Fairbanks, jet
 boat operation can lead to significant salmonid embryo 
                    mortality through
 mechanical shock, intrusion of fine sediments into the 
                    gravel affecting eggs
 that remain in redds, and the removal of gravel covering 
                    eggs in redds with
 subsequent washing away of eggs (Horton, 1994).
 http://www.psmfc.org/efh/Jan99-sec3-1.html
 Studies in Alaska and New Zealand (Horton 1994, Sutherland and Ogle 1975) 
                    have found that in shallow water where boat use is high, and 
                    especially where channels are constricted, developing salmon 
                    eggs and alevins in the gravel can suffer high mortalities 
                    as a result of pressure changes caused by boat operations, 
                    which can result in removal of gravel or mechanical shock 
                    generated in the area under the mid-line of the boat.
 106 G. E. Horton and J. Reynolds, "Effects of Jet Boats on 
                    Salmonid
 Reproduction in Alaskan Streams," unpub. M.S. thesis (by 
                    Horton, with an
 executive summary by Reynolds), University of Alaska 
                    Fairbanks, 1994.
 http://www.nps.gov/akso/katmwrmp/issues.htm
 American Creek 
                    Streambed Disturbance
 American Creek is the headwaters of the Naknek drainage in KATM. This 
                    creek is an important spawning stream for sockeye salmon. 
                    Prior to 1978, only the lower one-mile of American Creek was 
                    within the boundary of KATM. During this time, motorboats 
                    were prohibited within the monument except on Naknek Lake. 
                    The creek was incorporated into KATM’s boundary in 1978 when 
                    the monument was expanded. At the same time when ANILCA 
                    re-designated the monument as a park and preserve in 1980, 
                    it opened the park unit to motorized access by float planes 
                    and motorboats. Now, most recreational uses in American 
                    Creek are concentrated within the lower 6 miles of the river 
                    (Jope and Welp, 1987).
 A study by NPS staff was carried out during the summers of 
                    1986 and 1987 to evaluate resource condition under the 
                    current permit system. The most
 serious consequence of human activity along American Creek 
                    identified during the study was the increased rate of 
                    erosion and alteration of streambed morphology that results 
                    from jet boat use. Permanent photo points were established 
                    in 1989 to monitor riparian vegetation cover and erosion 
                    along the creek every 2 to 4 years (U.S. National Park 
                    Service, 1994).
 Alagnak Wild River 
                    Bank Erosion by Boat Traffic
 The Alagnak River was designated as a Wild River in 1980 under ANILCA and 
                    the National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. The NPS and the 
                    State of Alaska co-manage the upper 56 miles of this 
                    navigable river. In 1983, a management plan was developed 
                    that presents the management objectives and the issues 
                    pertinent to the Alagnak. Visitation on the river is 
                    monitored at only one location, the Nonvianuk Lake outlet. 
                    No other activities have been initiated by KATM to monitor 
                    use levels, user impacts, or resolve visitor conflicts (U S. 
                    National Park Service, 1994). Since 1983, recreational use 
                    on the river has increased, and so have the water resource 
                    impacts. Although the river’s riparian areas are generally 
                    undeveloped and heavily vegetated, the banks are actively 
                    eroding in several areas as a result of boat wake impacts. 
                    In 1998, the U.S. Geological Survey initiated an erosion 
                    monitoring effort on the Alagnak (Dorava, 1998a). After 
                    monitoring 14 sites from July to September 1998, bank 
                    erosion measurements ranged from 0 to > 28 inches, where 
                    erosion exceeded the length of the erosion pin (Dorava, 
                    1998b). Along with the 1998 erosion data collected by the 
                    U.S. Geological Survey, a plan will be prepared for 
                    subsequent erosion monitoring along the river. This erosion 
                    monitoring effort by the U.S. Geological Survey is part of a 
                    3-year NPS/USGS water quality and monitoring partnership 
                    program, "Human Impacts on Water Quality and Riparian 
                    Habitats along the Alagnak Wild and Scenic River, Katmai 
                    National Park and Preserve", that will also include 
                    collection of the following information: human use data, 
                    fishery data, and water quality data.
 ========================
 http://www.fs.fed.us/r10/tongass/districts/yakutat/situkdec.html#4
 Issue: Complaints are often heard 
                    about the "obtrusive" nature of jet boats and other 
                    motorized boats between the 9-Mile Bridge and the Fish and 
                    Game weir. Conflicts and safety issues increase as the 
                    number of boats and anglers increase.
 1999 Action: River users were requested not to use motorized boats above 
                    the 9-Mile bridge. Below the 9-Mile bridge, we requested 
                    users to motor under no wake" speed and in a downstream only 
                    direction between April 15 and July
 31. The Forest Service adopted the following guide permit 
                    conditions as
 recommended by the Outfitter and Guide Association in April 
                    1999:
 1. no motorized use was permitted above the 9-Mile bridge;
 2. the two jet boat operators were permitted only one 
                    upstream trip per day. Their downstream travel between April 
                    15 and July 31 was required to be at speeds that did not 
                    generate wake;
 3. one other guide was allowed one upstream trip per day 
                    between 9-Mile
 bridge and the mouth of the Situk. His downstream travel was 
                    required to be no-wake;
 4. all other guides were restricted to one upstream trip per 
                    day up to 3
 miles above the weir from April 15-July 31. Their downstream 
                    travel was
 required to be no-wake.
 The Forest Service placed a buoy on the bank 3 miles upstream of the 
                    weir.
 The Forest Service continues to restrict guides and outfitters to boats 
                    with
 motors of 15 HP or less. Motorized use by the general public 
                    is not
 restricted. Motorized boat use, especially jet boats, 
                    continues to be an
 issue. Boating in a downstream direction only alleviated 
                    some of the
 conflict in 1999. However, we may see more boat rentals on 
                    the River which will increase the conflicts. We may 
                    eventually need to control use on the Situk through a permit 
                    system.
 Additional Action: The Department of Natural Resources will 
                    evaluate a
 Special Use Designation and Tina will recommend to the 
                    Inter-agency
 Navigability Team that they elevate the priority of the 
                    Situk River. In the
 meantime, the Forest Service will continue to exercise their 
                    authority
 through the permitting process and the State can coordinate 
                    with them to
 have their concern incorporated into the permit. YTT, CBY, 
                    and the Forest
 Service will link their web sites to promote sportfishing 
                    etiquette, the
 Situk river resource, and appropriate handling and care of 
                    fish. We will
 continue to ask users of the River to follow motorized boat 
                    use protocol and etiquette.
 ======================================
 Impacts of 
                    Recreational Boating on the Aquatic Environment
 http://www.nalms.org/bclss/impactsrecreationboat.htm
 Introduction.
 There are a number of compartments within the marine and freshwater 
                    aquatic environments in which the effects of recreational 
                    boating may be felt; there are also a number of different 
                    kinds of effects. These effects and compartments are not 
                    always present or of universal concern. One needs to 
                    determine on a site-, time- and use-specific basis whether 
                    or not the boats, the motors or the occupants are causing a 
                    problem. One simple
 all-encompassing statement will not be valid under all 
                    conditions. Direct
 effects of the boats and how they are operated are addressed 
                    in this report; secondary effects such as sewage pollution, 
                    littering and vandalism by the occupants of the boats or the 
                    effects of pollution by the engines are not covered.
 In the aquatic environment there are bottom sediment, bulk water column, 
                    surface microlayer and shoreline habitat compartments. In 
                    each of these there may be plant or animal tissue, 
                    non-living particulate matter and water sub-compartments. 
                    The effects on organisms can be categorized as physical 
                    disturbance and behavioral effects which also include 
                    reproductive failure.
 Habitat Erosion 
                    Concerns
 With regard to erosion problems on shorelines, boat speeds need to 
                    be
 reduced to ‘no wake’ speeds, rather than specific speeds, in 
                    shallow waters
 or narrow channels; this will result in quite different 
                    absolute speeds for
 different boat designs and loading. This is necessary to 
                    prevent bank
 erosion, sediment re-suspension and destruction of marginal 
                    vegetation and
 floating nests. Motorized boats should be restricted to 
                    water depths where
 the propeller, or jet drive, remains at least 2 meters above 
                    the bottom
 sediments.
 Conclusions and Observations.
 Rooted vegetation does not develop in the pathways of outboard engines 
                    where the propeller comes within 30 cm of the substrate.
 Disturbance of nesting waterfowl by boaters and anglers results in a
 significant increase in predation and brood loss and causes 
                    a serious
 long-term decline in waterfowl.
 Birds driven from prime overwintering habitat by boats, and forced to use
 less suitable habitat, are often unable to maintain the 
                    needed caloric
 intake. Compounding the problem is the fact they use up what 
                    little energy
 they do have flying away from the boats. The net effect is 
                    significantly
 lower survival rates over the subsequent winter season.
 Wave action by high-speed boats destroys nests and erodes 
                    the shoreline.
 In shallow water or narrow channels boats cause sediment 
                    suspension and bank erosion.
 Water ski boats travelling perpendicular to the shore, or in designated
 areas, do not need speed or wake limits.
 All water craft, including sail boats, sail boards, row boats and as well 
                    as
 other water surface activities, cause a significant 
                    disturbance to breeding
 and over-wintering waterfowl.
 Dense planting of floating and emergent vegetation will help to protect 
                    the shoreline from wave-caused erosion.
 Recommendations.
 To minimize bottom erosion, sediment suspension and vegetation loss,
 motorized boats should be restricted to water depths where 
                    the propeller or jet drive is at least 2 m above the 
                    sediment surface, except at carefully
 selected boat launch sites.
 To prevent bank erosion, sediment re-suspension and destruction of 
                    marginal vegetation, boats with a cross sectional area 
                    greater than 5% of a channel, confined boats, should not be 
                    permitted to use the channel at any speed.
 There needs to be a wider use of refuges and temporal restrictions on
 recreational boating activities during the critical breeding 
                    and over-wintering seasons of fish and waterfowl.
 To preserve viable waterfowl and fish populations, all boating, fishing 
                    and
 other human activities need to be excluded from breeding and 
                    overwintering habitats during the critical seasons.
 To minimize shoreline and bottom erosion, re-suspension of 
                    sediments and
 loss of marginal or shallow water vegetation in shallow 
                    waters (up to 4 m
 deep) and in narrow channels (up to 3 boat lengths wide) 
                    boat speeds should be restricted to no wake.
 The US EPA recommends restricting boating activities in breeding and
 overwintering habitats and during critical seasons, in order 
                    to protect fish
 waterfowl and wildlife.
 Propeller and Jet
 Organisms
 Sediments
 Organisms
 Invertebrates Lagler reported substantial reductions in invertebrate
 abundance in the path of an outboard boat operated over a 
                    prolonged period in shallow water (Lagler et al., 1950). 
                    Parallel effects would likely be
 observed in any restricted areas used by boats such as 
                    landings and confined channels.
 Aquatic Macrophytes Aquatic plants may form extensive beds which are both 
                    direct food sources for wildlife and habitats for 
                    invertebrates and small fish. These are, in turn, food 
                    sources for fish. The plants also serve to anchor sediments 
                    and reduce turbidity and re-suspension problems. However 
                    propeller driven boats, electric or gasoline powered, 
                    venturing into the shallows chop off the plants and scour 
                    the bottom destroying existing weed beds and their habitat. 
                    These areas are then found to have less fine
 sediment, a reduced pH and a reduced sediment redox 
                    potential. Aquatic
 vegetation and benthic organisms are absent or greatly 
                    reduced in shallow
 areas where boats are common, especially when propellers 
                    were within a foot of the bottom (Chmura and Ross, 1978); 
                    Ogilvie, 1981). Lagler found that prolonged use of an 
                    outboard in 75 cm deep water with the propeller 35 cm from 
                    the bottom, removed all plants and silt from a swath 1.5 m 
                    wide, leaving only sand and gravel (Lagler et al., 1950).
 Aquatic vascular plants have been shown to respond to outboard engine use 
                    in two opposing ways: heavy use close to the bottom can 
                    prevent colonization and growth; or outboard use may act to 
                    increase weed bed productivity from the increased dissolved 
                    CO2. There is a quantitative relationship between plant 
                    community structure, submerged plant abundance and pleasure 
                    boat traffic. The causative factor is likely turbidity and 
                    its effect on light quantity and quality on submerged 
                    plants; emergent plants were not as strongly affected 
                    (Murphy and Eaton, 1983).
 Lagler found that rooted vegetation did not develop in the pathways of
 outboard engines where the propeller came within 30 cm of 
                    the substrate. In some deeper areas, water weed (Elodea 
                    canadensis) eventually impeded boat movement as a result of 
                    growth or wind drift. It was also noticed that
 turbidity caused by propeller wash was lower near beds of 
                    plants (Lagler et
 al., 1950). Zieman reported physical damage to turtle grass 
                    beds (Thalassia
 testudinium) in Florida as a result of outboard boat 
                    operation (Zieman 1976)
 Species composition did not vary from the expected successional patterns.
 The flora was dominated by bladderworts (Utricularia floridans), rushes
 (Juncus repens) and water hyssops (Hydrotrida caroliniana). 
                    The implications of these findings to BC is questionable 
                    given that they originated in small, soft, acidic lakes of 
                    warm temperate Florida. Equivalent research has not been 
                    conducted in north temperate systems. However, given the 
                    importance of aquatic macrophyte beds to fish and 
                    invertebrate communities, it would be prudent to limit 
                    outboard motor caused damage to macrophyte beds.
 Propellers cut and fragment aquatic vegetation (Liddle and Scogie, 1980).
 Turtle grass, Thalassia testudinum, beds in Biscayne Bay 
                    took up to 5 years to recover from the passage of a 
                    propeller through their shallow water beds.
 Under these conditions the propeller physically disturbed their roots
 (Zieman, 1976).
 The USEPA has noted that many shallow areas exhibit 
                    vegetation-free troughs due to the action of propellers and 
                    this leads to increased turbidity and loss of sediments 
                    which would otherwise be bound by the plant roots. Jet boats 
                    do not chop plants off but still scour the sediments. 
                    Propeller or jet driven boats should be banned from such 
                    shallow, and all vegetated, habitats
 Fish Outboard motor use has the potential to impact fish productivity
 through physical disturbance which may adversely effect 
                    behavior,
 reproduction or survival. Outboards also increases turbidity 
                    which affects
 the gills of fish Table 3. and Table 4.
 The impacts of propeller action and boat movement have been studied for 
                    the centrarchids (sunfishes). Studies are lacking for other 
                    groups. The
 experimental pond was subjected to 194 hours of engine use 
                    over a 10 week summer period. Engine use did not 
                    significantly affect production or
 recruitment of the bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus). The 
                    choice of sunfish
 nest locations did not appear affected by outboard use, 
                    although
 nest-guarding males temporarily abandoned the nests upon 
                    disturbance (Lagler et al., 1950).
 Nests were permanently abandoned only if they were practically 
                    obliterated by the turbulence. Pumpkinseeds (Lepomis 
                    gibbosus) were particularly resistant to disturbance: 
                    guarding males would usually return to the nest within 30 
                    seconds of the initial propeller blast at a distance of 1 m. 
                    Even with a high degree of nest disturbance by outboards, no 
                    increased mortality of eggs or fry was observed.
 There exists a wide variance of opinion concerning the effects of 
                    outboard boat activity on angling, ranging from belief that 
                    it stimulates fish to bite, to belief that it has no effect. 
                    Surprisingly, little objective
 research has been done to resolve the debate.
 Lagler conducted an experiment on a 36 acre (14.6 ha) lake, comparing the 
                    fish catch during days of outboard activity to alternate 
                    days of no activity On engine-use days, the boats were run 
                    within 16 m of each fisherman every half hour. After 66 days 
                    of fishing, it was concluded that there was no statistical 
                    difference in angling success between outboard and 
                    non-outboard days. The data analyzed included: the frequency 
                    of strikes, sizes of fish caught and fish biting behavior as 
                    the boat passed. In three instances, fish were hooked in the 
                    boat wake (Lagler et al., 1950). This was a short-duration 
                    study.
 This study was conducted on a warm water fish population of sunfish, 
                    perch, gars, bowfins, pike, bullheads and ciscoes. It may 
                    not be applicable to cold water salmonid populations. No 
                    studies of salmonid responses to outboard activity were 
                    found.
 ============================================
 http://www.npsc.nbs.gov/resource/literatr/disturb/biblio26.htm
 Human Disturbances 
                    to Waterfowl
 Annotated Bibliography
 26. Braun, C. E., K. W. Harmon, J. A. Jackson, and C. D. 
                    Littlefield. 1978.
 Management of National Wildlife Refuges in the United 
                    States: its impacts on birds. Wilson Bulletin 90:309-321.
 National Wildlife Refuges (NWRs) are located in 49 of the 50 
                    states and
 encompass more than 13,678,860 ha. Refuges are vital for 
                    habitats and
 overall conservation of many birds. In 1974, fishing was 
                    allowed on 171
 refuges with fishing waters being stocked on at least 18 
                    refuges. Excessive
 use of shallow vegetated areas of lakes and streams by 
                    wading and boating fishermen can disturb feeding and nesting 
                    waterbirds. Various publics have demanded and received 
                    access to 42 NWRs for motor boating and water skiing.
 Obvious and documented impacts of high speed boating are shoreline
 degradation, disruption of nesting and feeding with loss of 
                    production, and
 displacement of birds. Sport hunting of wildlife was 
                    permitted on portions
 of 184 national wildlife refuges in 1974, primarily for 
                    migratory waterfowl
 but also for resident game birds and big game. Where 
                    endangered species are involved, such as whooping cranes (Grus 
                    americana) and Mexican ducks (Anasplatyrynchos), it is 
                    difficult to see the rationale for sport hunting of 
                    lookalike species. Some refuges have been used as practice 
                    areas for low flying military aircraft, others as convenient 
                    and inexpensive routes for highway and utility 
                    rights-of-way.
 ==========================================
 GULKANA RIVER 
                    STUDIES
 http://www.glennallen.ak.blm.gov/gulkana/riverstudies/news/v2n1w99/p2-1.html
 Boating concerns include a dislike for float groups that 
                    remain for long
 periods of time at put-ins and takeouts or rafts that are 
                    tied together to
 float, blocking the river and potentially causing accidents 
                    with powerboats.
 Some expressed concern about the increasing number of 
                    inexperienced floaters seen on the upper river each year. A 
                    dislike of all powerboats or for too many of them was 
                    expressed. Their noise is offensive, especially jet boats 
                    and airboats. Airboats in particular are disliked on the 
                    West Fork where the channel is narrow. Other comments 
                    include concerns about the
 interrelationships of boat size, wake size, and their 
                    effects on boating
 safety. People stated that some individuals do not know how 
                    to properly
 operate jet boats, while others expressed a need for people 
                    to understand
 jet boat operation and the necessity for jet boats to remain 
                    "on step".
 Some expressed concerns that jet skis will be commonly used on the river 
                    in the future.
 There were many comments that "...some people don’t know the 
                    basics of river etiquette or safety." Some people seem to 
                    have a lack of what respondents called "common courtesy" and 
                    "common sense," or lack of skills, poor attitudes and 
                    ignorance about the resources. There were also concerns that 
                    there is a growing effort to restrict the use of the river 
                    corridor and that unnecessary regulations may be 
                    implemented. Some expressed that too much advertising leads 
                    to increased problems, and that the river will be used as an 
                    "escape valve" for other areas that are over-promoted and 
                    overused, such as the Kenai and Susitna Rivers, and Denali 
                    Park. Concern was also expressed that rapidly expanding 
                    recreational use of the river will negatively impact 
                    traditional local uses, including commercial and subsistence 
                    uses.
 ===================================================
 http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:6PULSCgoJ7sC:ak.water.usgs
 gov/publications/pdf.reps/wrir97-4105v3
 pdf+effects+of+jet+boats+on+the+Kenai+River&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
 ================================================
 STUDY: LIGHT, 
                    EMISSIONS HURT TAHOE -- Research conducted on Lake Tahoe 
                    water
 Samples suggests that a combination of sunlight and exhaust from boats 
                    and jet skis is damaging fish larvae and zooplankton. James 
                    Oris, a scientist at Miami University in Ohio, said that one 
                    test indicated a 46-percent decrease in fish growth and a 
                    significant amount of zooplankton was killed during several 
                    experiments. Fish larvae and zooplankton are critical links 
                    in the food chain. The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 
                    working toward banning two-stroke engines from Lake Tahoe, 
                    said that the study is "important information that needs to 
                    be expanded." The National Marine Manufacturers Association, 
                    financer of the study, is fighting the proposed ban. Members 
                    of the association believe the research results are 
                    "inconclusive" and say the scope of Oris' work is too 
                    limited. The study will be released next week during an 
                    environmental toxicology conference in France. Associated 
                    Press in
 Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, CA) 04/10/98 (FS)
 ====================================================
 Montana Chapter of 
                    The Wildlife Society Semi-aquatic Mammals – September
 1999
 ABSTRACT
 Semi-aquatic mammals (beaver, muskrat, river otter, and mink) inhabit
 waterways and associated wetland and riparian habitats 
                    throughout Montana. Because these species require aquatic 
                    and adjacent shoreline
 habitats, they may be impacted by both water-based and 
                    shoreline
 recreational activities. The impacts of motorized boating 
                    are of particular
 concern. The number of boats registered in Montana increased 
                    34%
 from 1990 to 1998. Personal watercraft registration 
                    increased 700% from 560 to 4,470 in the same period.
 Impacts of recreation on semi-aquatic mammals include disturbance effects 
                    to the animals themselves and habitat effects related to 
                    water quality, bank integrity, and vegetation. Disturbance 
                    may cause stressful physiological reactions, interrupt 
                    activities, and displace semi-aquatic mammals from preferred 
                    habitats, with resultant energetic consequences. 
                    Displacement can vary from a short-term flight and return or 
                    longterm abandonment of the area Disturbance during spring 
                    and early summer (breeding, dispersal, parturition, and 
                    post-natal periods) may be most detrimental to productivity 
                    although disturbance at any time of the year may lower 
                    fitness, reproductive success, and survival. Cover 
                    availability and the type, frequency, predictability, 
                    location, and duration of the activity may all influence 
                    semi-aquatic mammal responses to recreational disturbance.
 Semi-aquatic mammals concentrate their activities along the shore.
 The closer the recreational activity is to the shoreline, 
                    the greater the
 disturbance potential. Semi-aquatic mammals may habituate to 
                    non-threatening recreational activities if they occur in 
                    predictable areas at
 predictable times. The type, frequency, duration, and 
                    location of the
 activities also May influence recreation effects on 
                    semi-aquatic mammal
 habitats. Substantiated impacts of motorized recreation on
 aquatic and shoreline habitats include shoreline erosion, 
                    pollution from
 boat engines, contaminant resuspension and increased 
                    turbidity, increased
 turbulence, and laceration of aquatic vegetation by 
                    propellers. Bank
 stability and shoreline vegetation are important habitat 
                    components for
 semi-aquatic mammals. Motorized watercrafts generate wakes 
                    that may hit the shoreline and cause bank and substrate 
                    erosion, which impacts shoreline vegetation. Loss of 
                    shoreline vegetation makes the bank even more susceptible to 
                    continued erosion by natural and boat-induced waves. Wakes 
                    may also swamp den sites, erode den entrances, erode muskrat 
                    canals, swamp river otter latrine sites, and compromise the 
                    structural
 integrity of bank dens, beaver lodges, beaver caches, 
                    muskrat houses, and
 muskrat feeding platforms.
 Reduced boat speeds and increased operating distances from shore can 
                    lower bank erosion rates.
 Motorized boats, personal watercraft, and snowmobiles operating on frozen 
                    surfaces introduce oil residue and various derivatives from 
                    the combustion process into the water. These pollutants may 
                    directly impact
 fish, thereby affecting the forage base of mink and river 
                    otters, and
 bioaccumulate in the food chain.
 Uptake of petroleum hydrocarbons by aquatic animals has been documented.
 Motor boat activity also increases sediment resuspension and turbidity,
 which may decrease water clarity and increase nutrient 
                    loading. The removal of riparian habitat to develop public 
                    recreational
 facilities, private docks, and homesites in conjunction with 
                    the
 proliferation of artificial bank stabilization measures pose 
                    serious threats
 to semi-aquatic mammals and their habitats. The cumulative 
                    effects of
 habitat loss and recreational activities (including 
                    trapping) on
 semi-aquatic mammal populations need to be considered to 
                    determine the
 overall impacts of recreation. Responsible management of 
                    boating and
 shoreline recreation is essential to the conservation of 
                    semi-aquatic
 mammals in Montana.
 Physiological Responses - Disturbance by recreationists may 
                    cause stressful physiological responses in semi-aquatic 
                    mammals. Gabrielsen and Smith (1995) reviewed physiological 
                    responses of wildlife to disturbance and explained the 
                    “active defense response,” better known as the flight or 
                    fight response, and the “passive defense response” such as 
                    hiding or playing dead. When river otters, mink, muskrats, 
                    and beavers encounter recreationists and flee in response, 
                    they are exhibiting the active defense response.
 Increased heart rate and blood flow are associated with this response.
 Semi-aquatic mammals that remain hidden in the den and do 
                    not flee may be exhibiting the passive defense response, 
                    which is also associated
 with physiological changes including decreased heart rate. 
                    Recreational
 activities that take place while semi-aquatic mammals are in 
                    their dens may
 be mistakenly interpreted as having little effect.
 Boating activity may also cause disturbance and possible abandonment of 
                    an area by fish and/or consequent reduced hatching success. 
                    This may impact the prey base for river otters and mink. 
                    Todd (1987) concluded that of the different types of human 
                    activities, canoeing during the spawning season probably had 
                    the most effect on small-mouth bass (Micropterus dolomieui) 
                    behavior. Nest disturbance by boaters was less in deeper 
                    water than in shallow water. Boats traveling at slow speeds 
                    near nests usually drove male nest-guarding long-ear sunfish 
                    (Lepomis megalotis) from their nests, increasing the 
                    likelihood of egg predation (Mueller 1980).
 Overall, if animals are denied access to areas that are essential for
 reproduction and survival, the population will decline. 
                    Likewise, if animals
 are disturbed while performing essential behaviors, such as 
                    foraging or
 breeding, the population will also likely decline (Knight 
                    and Cole 1995).
 Therefore, it is essential that both short-term and 
                    long-term effects of
 recreational disturbance throughout the year be evaluated 
                    for each species
 of semi-aquatic mammal.
 Obviously, not all types of recreational activities will be equally
 disturbing to semi-aquatic mammals. For instance, there are 
                    many types of
 watercraft, both motorized and non-motorized, and not all 
                    are equally
 disruptive. Non-motorized boats as well as PWCs, jet boats, 
                    and airboats can penetrate shallow water areas that are 
                    inaccessible to outboard motorboats and, thus, may cause 
                    greater disturbance. Tuite et al. (1983) generalized that 
                    “motorboats have the greatest disturbance potential because 
                    they involve both movement and noise, whereas sailing and 
                    canoeing are less disruptive as they involve only movement.” 
                    However, the engine noise from motorized watercraft may 
                    alert animals to the pending approach of recreationists, 
                    whereas silent canoeists or kayakers may startle 
                    unsuspecting animals.
 The frequency and persistence of the activity and whether or not it 
                    occurs in isolation or in conjunction with other 
                    recreational activities will also influence the response. 
                    For example, the simultaneous occurrence of hikers on shore 
                    and boaters in the water may be much more stressful and 
                    disturbing than if just one or the other was occurring. The 
                    frequency of the recreational activity will, in large part, 
                    determine if the response is short-term or long-term 
                    desertion of the area.
 The predictability of the recreational activity, if non-threatening, will
 determine if semi-aquatic mammals become habituated and show 
                    little overt response. Directing shoreline activities to 
                    designated areas will
 enable semi-aquatic mammals to predict locations of human 
                    activity and avoid encounters. Unrestrained dogs are not 
                    predictable and will increase the radius of unexpected human 
                    activity considerably. Semiaquatic
 mammals may habituate to motorized and non-motorized 
                    watercraft if the
 watercraft use is restricted to predictable areas or 
                    distances from shore.
 Secure den sites and escape cover are essential habitat 
                    components
 regardless of habituation.
 Motorized boats, particularly those using two-cycle outboard 
                    motors, have the potential to greatly impair waters 
                    inhabited by semi-aquatic mammals.
 National Park Service (NPS 1999) reviewed water quality concerns related 
                    to PWC usage and concluded that the use of PWCs has resulted 
                    in measurable water quality degradation in the nation’s 
                    lakes and reservoirs. Almost all PWCs utilize two-stroke 
                    engines (NPS 1999), which introduce pollutants into the 
                    water during operation. Compounds emitted from two-cycle 
                    outboard motors originate from unburned fuel that is 
                    discharged into the receiving water and the combustion 
                    process that discharges additional toxic compounds into the 
                    water. Estimates of the amount of unburned fuel discharged 
                    into the water vary. Wall and Wright (1977) estimate as much 
                    as 10% of gasoline from outboard motors may be discharged 
                    into the water. National Park Service (1999) states that a 
                    conventional two-stroke outboard PWC will expel as much as 
                    30% of the incoming fuel mixture,
 unburned, via the exhaust (California Environmental 
                    Protection Agency, Air
 Resources Board 1999).
 Jackivicz and Kuzminiski (1973) claim that more than half the original 
                    fuel
 mixture for outboard motors may be emitted, unburned, into 
                    receiving waters.
 Contaminants introduced into the water from outboard motors include oil
 residue and various derivatives from the fuel and the 
                    combustion process.
 Specific compounds discharged into the water during outboard
 motor operation include: benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene, 
                    xylene
 (collectively called BTEX); methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE); 
                    and
 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) (National Park 
                    Service 1999).
 The BTEX compounds readily transfer from the water to air, 
                    whereas MTBE and PAHs do not. The following information 
                    about MTBE, an oxygenate added to gasoline, and PAH 
                    contaminants is summarized from NPS (1999). The recreational 
                    use of two-stroke engines has been identified as a primary
 cause of MTBE contamination of lakes and reservoirs. For 
                    example, Donner
 Lake in California contained 45-65 pounds of MTBE prior to 
                    peak boating
 activity; 2 months after increased boating activity MTBE had 
                    increased to
 250 pounds (NPS 1999). In a newly constructed lake, MTBE 
                    levels ranged from 50-60 micrograms per liter after a 
                    three-day PWC event. This level is 10-12 times the level the 
                    state of California adopted as its standard for
 secondary drinking water (based on taste and odor) and 
                    3.8-4.6 times the
 MTBE level California adopted as its public health goal 
                    (does not pose any
 significant risk to health). Little is known about the 
                    ecological risks to
 aquatic organisms from MTBE, although one study indicated 
                    that
 adverse effects on rainbow trout were not expected until 
                    concentrations of
 MTBE in the water column reached 4600-4700 micrograms per 
                    liter (Johnson 1998). This study identified research needs 
                    that included
 investigation into the ecological risk to benthic 
                    invertebrate communities
 from MTBE. At least 5 water management districts in 
                    California have banned or restricted the use of motorboats 
                    on reservoirs because of
 water contamination concerns.
 The combustion process of a two-stroke engine creates several PAH 
                    compounds that have been detected in the water, at least 3 
                    of which are probably human carcinogens (NPS 1999). It is 
                    known that PAHs
 accumulate in the tissue of aquatic organisms, raising 
                    concerns about their
 effects on fish and their possible biomagnification in mink 
                    and river otters
 One study found that levels of PAHs in two-stroke motorboat
 emissions had significant negative impacts on fish growth 
                    and zooplankton
 survival and reproduction in Lake Tahoe (Oris et al. 1998). 
                    Tjarnlund et al.
 (1996) found several different morphological anomalies in 
                    fathead minnows
 (Pimephales promelas) and elevated levels of DNA-adducts in 
                    the blood, liver and kidneys of perch (Perca flavescens) 
                    exposed to two-stroke motor exhaust levels that would be 
                    found in or near the wake of such a boat. In rainbow trout (Onchorhynchus 
                    mykiss), DNA, enzyme activity, and carbohydrate metabolism 
                    functions were disrupted by exposure to exhaust components (Tjarnlund 
                    et al. 1995).
 National Park Service (1999) concluded, “the use of two-stroke engines,
 including PWCs, has resulted in the contamination of lakes 
                    and reservoirs.
 MTBE and PAHs are commonly observed two-stroke contaminants 
                    and pose the most serious threats to human and ecological 
                    health…. Aquatic ecological communities do not appear to be 
                    threatened by
 observed concentrations of MTBE; however, more research is 
                    needed to
 reinforce this conclusion. PAH concentrations in lakes and 
                    reservoirs with
 high motorboat activity have been found at levels dangerous 
                    to aquatic
 organisms. The concentrations causing adverse effects can be 
                    extremely low due to PAH phototoxicity, especially in 
                    oligotrophic waters where sunlight penetration is high. Some 
                    are concerned about possible adverse effects from PAHs bound 
                    to sediment, especially in waters higher is suspended 
                    solids; this phenomenon is currently poorly understood….
 Management strategies adopted by other agencies include outright bans on 
                    PWC and restricted use of twostroke motors.” The impact of 
                    PAHs, MTBE, and other contaminants from motorboats and PWC 
                    on semiaquatic
 mammals needs to be investigated. Factors affecting the 
                    quantity of
 compounds exhausted from two-stroke outboard motors include
 horsepower rating, crankcase size, composition of fuel 
                    mixture, tuning of
 the engine, and speed of operation (Jackivicz and Kuzminiski 
                    1973).
 Direct-injection two-stroke or four-stroke engines are not
 nearly as polluting as the conventional two-stroke engine 
                    (NPS 1999).
 Direct-injection two-stroke engines (the first model debuted 
                    in 1998) reduce smog-forming pollution in a typical 
                    90-horsepower engine by
 four-fold when compared to a conventional two-stroke engine. 
                    Four-stroke
 engines (used in automobiles) with the same horsepower 
                    reduce smog-forming pollution another four-fold as compared 
                    to direct-injection
 two-stroke engines.
 =========================================
 ===================
 Loving a river to 
                    death
 Kenai River, Alaska
 http://www.borough.kenai.ak.us/KenaiRiverCenter/RiverCenter/LovRiv.htm
 User Impact on Fish Habitat
 Private and commercial developments eliminate riparian 
                    vegetation. This
 weakens the streambank and reduces cover and food for 
                    juvenile salmon.
 Land clearing increases subsurface drainage rates streambank 
                    erosion.
 Structures along the shoreline alter water velocity and 
                    decrease useable
 habitat from juvenile salmon.
 Draining wetlands reduces subsurface flow and nutrients for juvenile 
                    salmon.
 Boat wakes increase erosion along banks where the vegetation has been
 damaged.
 Foot trails damage vegetation and root systems increasing the risk of
 erosion.
 Removing log jams and woody debris eliminates important rearing habitat 
                    for young salmon.
 Parking riverboats along the shoreline often results in damaged 
                    vegetation
 and increased erosion.
 Steep banks and water-saturated soils are subject to erosion and are 
                    easily damaged by foot traffic.
 Unfiltered runoff from city and state highways and parking lots is
 discharged directly into the Kenai River--lowering water 
                    quality.
 ============================================
 Kenai River, Alaska
 Researchers with Fish and Game and the U.S. Geological Survey studied the 
                    impacts of high use on the river and produced a series of 
                    eye-opening
 reports. They linked anglers and boat wakes with bank 
                    erosion, and riverbank construction projects with lost 
                    rearing habitat for salmon fry. Another study found 
                    worrisome trends in water quality.
 Recently, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game completed a study to
 evaluate what effect impacts to the riparian zone might be 
                    having on fish
 habitat. The Kenai River Cumulative Impacts Assessment of 
                    Development
 Impacts on Fish Habitat (Liepitz, 1994) was designed to 
                    identify and
 evaluate the cumulative impacts of development including 
                    public and private land use impacts on Kenai River fish 
                    habitat. Using chinook salmon as an indicator species and 
                    juvenile rearing habitat as a study variable, the
 study documented that: 11.1 percent to 12.4 percent (18.4 to 
                    20.6 miles) of the river's 134 miles of upland and 32 miles 
                    of island shoreline and
 nearshore habitats have been impacted by bank trampling, 
                    vegetation denuding and structural development along the 
                    river's banks. This amounts to a loss of approximately 2.2 
                    percent of chinook rearing habitat. The amount of habitat 
                    loss for other fish species is unknown. Although 2.2 percent 
                    may not seem like a large loss, numerous research studies 
                    have documented significant declines in fish productivity 
                    long before most available habitat is lost. In the case of 
                    chinook salmon on the Kenai River, available rearing habitat 
                    (generally a 6.0 foot-wide corridor along the riverbanks) 
                    constitutes only 121 acres over 67 miles.
 The diverse habitat types occurring along the river's 67 
                    mile length
 (approximately 166 miles of water frontage) provide a 
                    varying degree of
 habitat value to juvenile salmon. The nearshore waters of 
                    the Kenai River
 provide critical early life stage rearing habitat for 
                    juvenile chinook
 salmon during that period of the year when these fish are 
                    using this
 important part or the river (this includeds the late spring, 
                    summer and
 early fall period). Mainstem rearing habitat within the 
                    Kenai River, which
 occurs primarily in a very narrow (6.0 foot wide) corridor 
                    adjacent to the
 river's banks, has been described in previous studies by the 
                    ADF&G and FWS.
 ADF&G surveys of fish rearing habitat indicates that over 80 percent of 
                    all
 rearing juvenile chinook are found within this corridor. The 
                    total area
 within this narrow corridor including both the river's 
                    upland and island
 shorelines amounts to a mere 121 acres. It should be noted, 
                    however, that
 much of this 121 acres does not constitute preferred 
                    juvenile chinook salmon rearing habitat because: a) it is a 
                    tidally influenced reach with brackish water conditions and 
                    no cover habitat or lacks an adequate food source; b) it is 
                    naturally unsuitable to rearing juvenile salmon due to high 
                    water velocities and/or a lack of cover habitat; c) 
                    alteration of natural
 conditions by man associated with river access have led to 
                    vegetation loss
 and/or bank erosion; or d) the nearshore fish habitat has 
                    been degraded as a result of bank stabilization and property 
                    protection efforts.
 The field inventory and fish habitat classification analysis completed in
 this study has documented that 11.1 percent to 12.4 percent 
                    (18.4 to 20.6 miles) of the river's 134 miles of upland and 
                    32 miles of island shoreline
 and nearshore habitats have been impacted by bank trampling, 
                    vegetation
 denuding, and structural development along the river's 
                    banks. The two
 different lengths or percentages cited above relate to the 
                    habitat impacts
 measured at either the OHW line or at the top of the bank. 
                    Optimum fish
 rearing conditions (i.e., water velocities less than 1.0 
                    foot per second,
 undercut banks with overhanging vegetation, and 
                    gravel/cobble substrates) occur on only 80,440 feet (15.2 
                    miles or 9.2 percent) of this important fish rearing 
                    corridor along the entire river length. Study results 
                    indicate that 63,299.0 feet (12.0 miles) of this corridor is 
                    currently in the
 developed/impacted category, amounting to approximately 8.7 
                    acres of the
 total 121 acres of available juvenile rearing habitat. The 
                    sum of the
 impacted or altered habitats (8.7 acres) plus the lower 
                    quality habitat for
 rearing fish (which includes all of the Kenai River 309 
                    Study's Reach I or
 lower 10 miles of river nearshore habitat)(15.7 acres) and 
                    the heavily
 trampled/denuded areas documented on the river (5.1 acres) 
                    equals 29.5 acres or 24.4 percent of the river's total 
                    nearshore habitat. This leaves a total of 91.5 acres (75.6 
                    percent) of mainstem nearshore rearing habitat for juvenile 
                    fish of which only 11.0 acres (9.2 percent) provide their 
                    ideal
 rearing conditions.
 ==================================================
 Changing Tides
 Kenai River, Alaska
 http://www.peninsulaclarion.com/stories/072001/cha_0720010006.shtml
 ====================================================
 MY LETTERS TO 
                    GOVERNMENT
 =================
 Hi Devona,
 
 This is the letter you requested:
 ------------------------------------------------------------
 
 TO: The Honourable Gordon Campbell
 Premier of British Columbia
 
 I and other members of PRAWN (Dan Gerak in particular) have long had 
                    grave concerns about the impact that jet boats may have on 
                    the delicate eggs of trout, Dolly Varden char, salmon and 
                    steelhead – as well as tiny fry and parr in the upper Pitt 
                    River.
 According to reports that I have heard of, it may possible for the outer
 membrane on salmon and steelhead eggs to actually be 
                    ruptured from the
 intense force or shock created by water exiting a jet boat’s 
                    propulsion
 system.
 Being the owner of jet boat, I have often wondered how many hundreds of 
                    small fish suspended near the surface of the water get 
                    sucked into the
 intakes of the jets propelled by powerful V-8 engines. Truth 
                    be known, I
 would never consider taking my jet boat onto the shallow 
                    upper Pitt River at any time, but especially during the 
                    spring when the small salmon fry are
 migrating towards the deeper water and shelter of Pitt Lake.
 Although in my opinion as a former professional angling guide licensed 
                    for
 this area, I believe that the wash created by jet-boats 
                    would probably have minimal impact on some stretches of the 
                    upper Pitt River lined with larger rocks. Nevertheless, the 
                    wake and turbulence would certainly cause some major 
                    problems with sensitive salmon habitat containing gravel of 
                    suitable size for spawning and susceptible to the impacts of 
                    accretion.
 Considering the shape many of British Columbia's salmon runs are in these
 days, I don't think we can afford to lose a single fish to 
                    any man-made
 impact. And if we can do anything to help out Mother Nature 
                    by "not
 disturbing" precious salmon spawning habitat in any way, 
                    perhaps it would be a wise choice to do it.
 Being a founding member of PRAWN, you have my personal blessings to ban 
                    "all motorized boating activity on the upper Pitt River for 
                    the entire
 year. In my personal opinion, I firmly believe this river 
                    should be
 designated non-motorized boats only.
 On a final note, If someone that loves the great outdoors wants to enjoy 
                    the natural splendor, wildness and beauty of the upper Pitt 
                    River valley, what better to see it than from the safety and 
                    comfort of river raft or
 kayak?
 In closing, being the responsible owner of a jet boat, I again believe 
                    that
 there are big rivers in B.C.like the Fraser where these 
                    boats are at home
 and cause no damage whatsoever, and then again, there are 
                    little rivers
 (like the upper Pitt) where they can really raise hell if 
                    they are operated
 by someone irresponsible or perhaps at the wrong time of 
                    year.
 Good Fishin'
 Ken Kristian
 34337 Catchpole Ave
 Mission, BC. V2V6P2
 Phone: (604) 826-8007
 
 ==================================================
 
 Subject: RE: Jet 
                    Boats on the upper Pitt River
 
 Dear Mr. Kristian:
 Thank you for your email regarding the use of jet boats on the upper Pitt
 River.
 I appreciate how frustrating this situation must be for you. As this 
                    matter
 falls under federal jurisdiction, I have forwarded a copy of 
                    your
 correspondence to the Honourable Herb Dhaliwal, Minister of 
                    Fisheries and
 Oceans.
 Again, thank you for sharing your concerns with me.
 Sincerely,
 Gordon Campbell
 Premier
 pc: Honourable Herb Dhaliwal
 
 ========================================================
 Message:
 Minister of Fisheries and Oceans
 Ottawa, Canada Kl A OE6
 MAR l2 2002
 Dear Mr. Kristian:
 This is in response to your e-mail of November 11, 2001, 
                    addressed to the
 Honourable Gordon Campbell, and forwarded to my predecessor, 
                    the Honourable
 Herb Dhaliwal, regarding your concerns about the use of jet 
                    boats on the
 upper Pitt River.
 I appreciate the thought you have given to the potential harmful impacts
 that jet boats could have on various species of fish at 
                    various ages and
 reproductive stages. Fisheries and Oceans Canada has at its 
                    disposal the
 means of placing speed restrictions on powerboats where 
                    necessary in
 specific bodies of water through the Boating Restriction 
                    Regulations of the
 Canada Shipping Act. However, there is a need to balance the 
                    ability to
 restrict transportation with the need to ensure that the 
                    navigability of
 water bodies is maintained, as written into the Navigable 
                    Waters Protection
 Act.
 It is an offense under the Fisheries Act to destroy fish by means other 
                    than fishing, or to cause harmful alteration, disruption or 
                    destruction of fish
 habitat, unless authorized by the Minister or under 
                    regulations made by the
 Governor in Council under the Fisheries Act. In view of 
                    this, Pacific Region
 staff are investigating the extent of impacts caused by jet 
                    boats on the
 Pitt River. Preliminary information indicates that impacts 
                    on fish vary with
 the boating practices of individual boaters. With that in 
                    mind, staff will
 be finding opportunities to educate people using the Pitt 
                    River on boating
 practices that are respectful of fish and fish habitat.
 
 Yours truly,
 Robert G. Thibault
 c.c.: The Honourable Gordon Campbell, M.L.A.
 Canada
 ======================================================
 B.C.’s smaller 
                    salmon-bearing rivers no place for jet boats
 
 B.C.’s smaller salmon-bearing rivers no place for jet boats
 ALVIN, B.C.— Firstly, as an ardent angler of the upper Pitt 
                    River for
 45-years, a former commercial halibut, shrimp, and salmon 
                    fisherman,
 professionally licensed freshwater angling guide, former 
                    director of the
 Save Our Fish Foundation (SOFF) and a founding member of the 
                    Pitt River & Area Watershed Network (PRAWN), I would like it 
                    to be known that I
 personally own a 600 HP jet boat (and a gas-guzzling pickup 
                    truck to pull
 it) and don’t hold anything against anyone who owns one of 
                    these boats … as long as it is used in a “respectable” 
                    manner.
 The name of the game for many British Columbians is to live life to the
 fullest, have fun, and above all else, thoroughly enjoy the 
                    great outdoors
 that this beautiful province has been blessed with. Far be 
                    it from me to
 try telling anybody where or when they should or shouldn’t 
                    pilot or drive
 their jet boat. Why I wouldn’t dream of telling anyone what 
                    particular river
 that person should pilot their boat on anymore than I would 
                    tell a person
 not to drive up and down the street our family lives on. 
                    However, on the
 other side of coin, add excessive speed, a thoughtless 
                    jackass driver and
 all the neighborhood kids playing on the street into this 
                    picture and it’s a
 totally different story!
 Surprisingly, a considerable portion of today’s anglers and/or boaters in
 British Columbia don’t seem to realize that some species of 
                    young salmon and trout remain in the rivers of their birth 
                    for quite some time. In other
 words, lying just out of sight below the surface on any 
                    given salmon-bearing stream or river, there are potentially 
                    hundreds of thousands young salmon and certain species of 
                    trout living for extended periods of time before making 
                    their way to the Pacific Ocean.
 The fact remains that potentially a very large number of 
                    these young salmon and trout fry and parr suspended just 
                    under the surface in shallow water would almost surely be 
                    sucked into and killed by impellers in a boat’s jet drive 
                    water pump coupled to a powerful engines delivering about 
                    1400-1800 pounds of thrust while pumping 3000 to 4000 
                    gallons of water every minute at a pressure of 60 to 180 
                    pounds per square inch. Young fish, salmon or trout eggs in 
                    various stages of life, and their vitally important food 
                    source of aquatic insects and chironomids may also succumb 
                    to shock and concussion caused by the extreme crushing force 
                    of water exiting jet drives, or from the shear displacement 
                    of the boat’s hull in confined quarters of a shallow river. 
                    It would seem to suggest otherwise would only be wishful 
                    thinking, ignorance of the facts, or an obvious case of 
                    blatant stupidity on the part of the boat operator.
 The following information on Pacific salmonids found in the upper Pitt 
                    River
 and its tributaries comes courtesy of Fisheries and Oceans 
                    Canada:
 Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) school at the mouths of 
                    rivers and move up when fall rains increase rives flow. 
                    Generally a coho will not travel
 more than 150 miles up river from the sea or lake. Spawning 
                    takes place
 anywhere between October and January. After the female 
                    prepares the redd she will lay 2100-2789 eggs guarding them 
                    until she dies a few days later.
 The fry emerge from early March to late July and although some will 
                    migrate almost immediately, most remain at least one year in 
                    fresh water lakes or streams.
 Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) migrate as much as 600-1200 
                    miles upriver between July and November. The female digs the 
                    redd by lying on her side and thrashing the tail up and down 
                    forming a small hole where she lays her 4242-13 619 eggs. 
                    She dies within a few days to 2 weeks. This species utilizes 
                    about 260 streams in British Columbia, fewer than do other 
                    species.
 Unlike most other species of Pacific Salmon, Chinook young remain in
 freshwater for varying lengths of time after hatching. Some 
                    remain in
 freshwater for a few months to a year. In northern areas 
                    most spend at least one year in fresh water. The young in 
                    fresh water feed on terrestrial
 insects, Crustacea and adults, mites, spiders and aphids. 
                    Young chinook in
 fresh water are preyed on by rainbow and cutthroat trout, 
                    Dolly Varden, coho salmon smolts, squawfish, sculpins, 
                    kingfisher and other diving birds.
 Chum Salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) returning to spawn migrate 
                    to the rivers
 anywhere from July (in northern British Columbia) to early 
                    January (in
 southern B.C.) They rarely penetrate a river more than 100 
                    miles and often
 spawn in tidal areas showing a lesser ability to surmount 
                    obstacles than
 other species. An average female will lay 2400- 3100 eggs 
                    before dying a few days later. Hatching usually occurs from 
                    late December to late February.
 They remain in the gravel until late April to early May when they migrate 
                    to the sea. Food intake includes diatoms, dipterous insects, 
                    fish larvae, fish
 and squid.
 Sockeye Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) females sockeye lays 2,000 - 5,000 
                    eggs in a shallow redd. Fertilized by a single male, her 
                    eggs mature in the pebbley gravel, hatching in two months as 
                    yolk-heavy alevins. Alevins emerge from the river bed and 
                    migrate to lakes in early spring. Here they reside in fresh 
                    water for the longest duration of all the salmonids - for 
                    one to two years, and in rare strains, for as long as three 
                    years - before migrating to the ocean.
 Pink Salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) females lay 1200 - 1900 eggs - the 
                    fewest number of any species. As with other salmonids, eggs 
                    reside within a relatively thick (.45 millimeter), 
                    structurally complex membrane. Millions of sperm dash 
                    frantically for the only opening in the egg, the micropyle, 
                    which closes immediately upon fertilization. In three to 
                    five minutes, unsuccessful sperm swell with water and 
                    explode.
 Pink salmon spend their entire lives at sea, a characteristic shared only
 with chum. After emerging from the gravel bed, pink migrate 
                    immediately to
 the ocean, migrating north along the coast of British 
                    Columbia and the
 Alaska panhandle at a rate of 3 - 16 miles per day.
 Steelhead Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) just like salmon, the 
                    steelhead female digs a nest (redd) with her tail and the 
                    male fertilizes her eggs at the same instant she lays them. 
                    Temperature is the key factor which determines when the eggs 
                    hatch and when the yoke-bellied alevin break free to grow 
                    between the gravel. Once the young steelhead complete using 
                    their yoke food reserves they squirm up through the gravel 
                    and become free swimming fry. The life expectancy can be as 
                    low as 3-4 years but generally the steelhead lives 6-8 
                    years. They first feed on plankton then insects and as they 
                    grow older, crustaceans and other fish. They live in their 
                    home stream for two, three, or even four years before they 
                    enter the smolt stage and migrate downstream to the ocean. 
                    Prior to reaching the ocean they 'silver-up' adapting to the 
                    osmotic change that will occur when their body moves from a 
                    fresh water environment to a salt water medium. Rainbow 
                    Trout prefer food items that are just becoming available 
                    during the season. Trout feeding throughout May, for 
                    example, will have already gorged themselves on Chironomid 
                    hatches.
 Cutthroat Trout (Oncorhynchus clarki) adult anadromous forms return to
 freshwater spawning streams in late autumn and early winter 
                    but spawning
 takes place there in February to May. In both forms of 
                    cutthroat trout
 spawning takes place in small, gravelly streams where the 
                    male courts the
 female by nudging and quivering. The female prepares the 
                    redd where she lays 1100-1700 eggs. Hatching occurs 6-7 
                    weeks later. Cutthroat remain near shore favouring brackish 
                    or estuarine waters. They usually remain in estuaries of 
                    rivers from which they entered the sea. Young cutthroat 
                    remain in fresh  water for periods of from one to as 
                    much as five years.
 Dolly Varden & Bull Trout (Salvelinus malma) the Dolly 
                    Varden is a fall
 spawner. The female digs the redd and is attended by 4-5 
                    males. Generally
 this species lives 10-12 years. The bull trout is known as 
                    the most serious
 predator on young salmon and a bounty was long paid on them 
                    in Alaska.
 Another important factor to consider is the impact of 
                    sedimentation and
 siltation on salmonids caused by jet boats traveling in 
                    shallow reaches on
 the upper Pitt River. While this serious problem is not 
                    readily seen by the
 people traveling upriver in the boats themselves, it is 
                    clearly visible to
 anyone who happens to be downstream along the banks. After 
                    any number of jet boats have traveled upriver through 
                    shallower sections of the river, the effects are dramatic 
                    and immediate directly down stream in the form of water 
                    completely clouded by silt.
 Years of road building and logging have caused major sedimentation 
                    problems in the upper Pitt River and its tributaries. Jet 
                    boats frequently traveling through shallow water on the 
                    upper Pitt River continually stir sediment deposits on the 
                    bottom substrate. Eventually, when sediment-laden water is 
                    stilled, that sediment settles to the bottom of the stream, 
                    river, lake, or estuary. When sediments settle out, they may 
                    cover or destroy important habitat such as salmon and trout 
                    spawning beds. Sediment still suspended in water increases 
                    infection and disease among fish by irritating their gills.
 When sediment settles, it can bury and smother bottom-dwelling insects 
                    and reduce the survival rate of fish eggs.
 All of this can add up to devastating impacts upon the upper Pitt River’s
 salmon, steelhead and trout.
 It may be of great interest at this time to note an on-going study 
                    located
 in the Southeast corner of Barkley Sound on the west coast 
                    of Vancouver
 Island, it has been the site of Carnation Creek Experimental 
                    Watershed
 Project since 1970. The small watershed has also been known 
                    for thousands of years by Huu-ay-aht First Nation peoples as 
                    C*ac^aasyas.
 Preliminary results of the Carnation Creek project indicate 
                    we may be
 seriously underestimating the effects that siltation and 
                    sedimentation play
 in the role of determining healthy, sustainable salmon 
                    stocks in B.C. The
 report states fine silt fills in the spaces between gravel 
                    in spawning beds,
 making it difficult for eggs to hatch and young fish to 
                    survive by mainly
 sight-feeding on very small chironomids and tiny aquatic 
                    insects which may
 be difficult to see — or in the worst case scenario, cannot 
                    been seen at all
 — by fish in turbid water conditions. All this can 
                    apparently add up to
 salmon and trout appearing fully developed on the outside, 
                    but on the inside of the fish it’s a different story 
                    altogether.
 Like it or not, the current trends seem to be shifting to privatization 
                    and
 a user-pay scenario in British Columbia’s sport fisheries. 
                    Government has
 stated in no uncertain terms that sport fishery funding will 
                    be cut, some or
 most hatcheries will close, and community-based river 
                    stewardship groups
 raising funds to support our rivers and fish may be the way 
                    of the future.
 With the vast majority of our wild Pacific salmon stocks well below 
                    historic levels and some now teetering precariously on the 
                    brink of extinction, each and every British Columbian would 
                    be wise do everything in their power to ensure healthy, 
                    sustainable salmon runs for future generations of British 
                    Columbians to marvel over and enjoy. As responsible stewards 
                    of our rivers and the magnificent salmon and trout that call 
                    them home, it is up to each one of us to “respect the 
                    resource” and to leave a lasting legacy our children can be 
                    proud of.
 Sadly, I have heard it said time and again by concerned anglers and 
                    former commercial fishermen that British Columbia’s 
                    sports-fishermen have sentenced our rivers and fish to a 
                    death by a thousand cuts. On the other hand, the same saying 
                    holds true for both federal and provincial government bodies 
                    responsible for the well-being of our rapidly vanishing fish 
                    stocks and their all-important habitat.
 While it's hard for me to do, I’ll have to admit DFO might be right about 
                    a
 growing body of so-called sport anglers with a total 
                    disregard for the
 regulations, the resource, and fellow fishermen. The sport 
                    fishery today
 does appear to be taking up right where the commercial 
                    fishery left off in
 terms of destruction of an irreplaceable natural resource.
 In closing, I would like to remind all British Columbians of the words of
 Robert G. Thibault, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Canada: 
                    It is an
 offense under the Fisheries Act to destroy fish by means 
                    other than fishing, or to cause harmful alteration, 
                    disruption or destruction of fish habitat, unless authorized 
                    by the Minister or under regulations made by the Governor in 
                    Council under the Fisheries Act. In view of this, Pacific 
                    Region staff are investigating the extent of impacts caused 
                    by jet boats on the Pitt River. Preliminary information 
                    indicates that impacts on fish vary with the boating 
                    practices of individual boaters. With that in mind, staff 
                    will be
 finding opportunities to educate people using the Pitt River 
                    on boating
 practices that are respectful of fish and fish habitat.
 — Ken Kristian
 YOU WOULDN'T RIDE YOUR MOTORCYCLE IN A HOSPITAL NURSERY 
                    WARD, WOULD YOU?
 
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