100,000 Live Salmon Spilled Off a Truck. Most Landed in a Creek and Lived.

U.S.|100,000 Live Salmon Spilled Off a Truck. Most Landed in a Creek and Lived. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/03/us/salmon-truck-creek-oregon.html You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. A tanker carrying young salmon crashed. But most of the fish flopped into a creek […]

100,000 Live Salmon Spilled Off a Truck. Most Landed in a Creek and Lived.

100,000 Live Salmon Spilled Off a Truck. Most Landed in a Creek and Lived. thumbnail

U.S.|100,000 Live Salmon Spilled Off a Truck. Most Landed in a Creek and Lived.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/03/us/salmon-truck-creek-oregon.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

A tanker carrying young salmon crashed. But most of the fish flopped into a creek and “hit the water running,” a wildlife official said.

A pile of silvery shiny fish in the dirt and grass of a creek embankment. A creek and trees are in the background.
A tanker truck full of Chinook smolts crashed on an Oregon highway. Most of the fish flopped into a creek off the road. They are expected to survive and continue their journey to the Pacific Ocean. Credit…U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Christine Hauser

On a recent morning in March, while dew was still on the road, there occurred the salmon smolt mishap of Northeast Oregon.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said on Tuesday that one of its tankers had been in an accident on March 29, resulting in the escape of thousands of live salmon that were being moved as part of a federal and state program to replenish stocks depleted by dams.

The driver, who had minor injuries from the crash, had just left a local hatchery in Elgin, Ore., in the tanker, which weighed about 80,000 pounds when loaded with water and fish. It was about 10:30 a.m., early enough for there to be dew on the road. After navigating a sharp corner, the 53-foot tanker, which was carrying about 102,000 fish, rolled onto its passenger side, skidded, went down a rocky embankment and flipped onto its roof.

Tens of thousands of live fish were hurled out of the truck and swept into the Lookingglass Creek or onto its banks. The young salmon, or smolts, lucky enough to drop into the creek are expected to persevere in their migration from the Grande Ronde River to the ocean.

Employees from a local hatchery, members of the Nez Perce tribe and the Union County Sheriff’s Office came to help and to clean up the fish. They counted the losses.

About 25,525 smolts that were thrown onto the creek banks “were not able to flop down into the water,” Andrew Gibbs, the department’s fish hatchery coordinator for eastern Oregon, said in an interview on Wednesday.


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