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Viewing adult chinook salmon in the new holding pond at the Issaquah salmon hatchery. |
![]() Chinook salmon in Lower Cottage Lake Creek near Redmond and Woodinville, October, 1999. Photograph by Bill Smith. |
Chinook
salmon in Issaquah Creek near Issaquah, October, 1999. |
Executive Ron Sims declares October is Salmon
Month in King County. |
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A Volunteer Cedar River Naturalist teaches
some small fry about the salmon life cycle. |
Volunteers plant native shrubs and trees
along the banks of the Sammamish river. Find out how planting vegetation helps salmon. |
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Bert the Salmon (the walking, talking species)
takes a break to chat with a few interested humans near the salmon-friendly
King County booths at Issaquah Salmon Days. |
Looking at a large chinook salmon at the
Issaquah Salmon Hatchery. |
![]() Spawning chinook salmon in Lower Cottage Lake Creek near Redmond and Woodinville, October, 1999. Photo by Bill Smith. |
King County DNR biologist Ken Carrasco takes
a tissue sample from a spawned out chinook as part of a DNA study. October,
1999. Photo by Bill Smith. |
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Cedar River Volunteer Naturalists illustrate
how large returning chinook could grow and show how to distinguish different
salmon species. |
New watershed
identification sign being installed at Vasa Creek on West Lake Sammamish
Parkway. Watershed identification signs will be posted throughout King
County at rivers and streams. |
Chinook
salmon in Lower Cottage Lake Creek near Redmond and Woodinville, October,
1999. Photograph by Bill Smith. |
Volunteers take part in Sammamish ReLeaf, a cross-jurisdictional effort to make the Sammamish River a healthier place for salmon. |
Chinook
salmon spawning in Issaquah Creek, |
At the Lonfellow Creek planting, volunteers
helped plant nearly 500 native plants and trees that will help salmon
by stabilizing the water temperature and water quality. |
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On the North Fork of Newaukum Creek, volunteers
planted 650 plants, helping this tributary supply cold, clean water to
the Green-Duwamish system. |
At Porter Levee, a reconnected side channel
was recently constructed and planted. The historic meander of the Green
River will provide habitat to salmon and other wildlife. |
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Over 100 volunteers helped at the Hatchery
Park planting near Auburn. This site, near the confluence of the Green
River and Soos Creek, is critical for rearing and spawning salmon. |
Volunteers at the Narita Levee project in
Kent planted native plants on an innovative regrade of a Green River levee.
This will provide salmon habitat during flood periods and help shade the
river, helping to keep water temperatures hospitably cool. |
| For questions
about the Department
of Natural Resources Updated: March 28, 2006 |
Related Information: |
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