Spotted a few chum and coho salmon on our patrol looking for spawning salmon on Byrne Creek in SE Burnaby today. Also few other birds and beasts.
Chum salmon
Small coho jack
NOTE: It’s illegal to interfere with spawning salmon. Streamkeepers have training and permission to monitor returning salmon, and assess them for species, sex, size, and spawning status after they die.
Super spawner patrol on Byrne Creek in SE Burnaby, BC, today. A total of 17 spawners seen. Great to see chum moving upstream into the lower ravine!
Above two coho salmon
This, and below, chum salmon
NOTE: It’s illegal to interfere with spawning salmon. Streamkeepers have training and permission to monitor returning salmon, and assess them for species, sex, size, and spawning status after they die.
Great to see a Barred Owl and a Pileated Woodpecker on our patrol for spawning salmon on Byrne Creek in SE #Burnaby.
It was also fun showing a new volunteer where and how we patrol for spawning salmon. We assessed one female chum that was fully spawned, and saw a couple of live chum.
The female chum was completely spawned out with almost no eggs left. That’s wonderful to see!
NOTE: It’s illegal to interfere with spawning salmon. Streamkeepers have training and permission to monitor returning salmon, and assess them for species, sex, size, and spawning status after they die.
We did some rambling on trails near the Capilano Dam on the north shore today. Fun to see a Great Blue Heron and several Common Mergansers in the “surf.”
I didn’t have time for a complete spawner patrol on Byrne Creek in Burnaby, but I took a peek between the bridges and in the sediment pond coming home from some errands.
Two dead coho between the bridges, I reached and processed one of them, male, not spawned, 43cm. The other one was not reachable without rubber boots.
Also saw 4 live chum below Southridge, but I did not have time to check the ravine.
NOTE: I like to add that streamkeepers have training from PSKF, and permission from DFO and the City of Burnaby to monitor spawning salmon, and process them for species, sex, size, and spawning status after they die.
It is illegal to interfere with spawning salmon, or remove them from the creek. Please stay out of the creek and enjoy this spectacle of nature from a reasonable distance.
If you see fish cut in half, that indicates that streamkeepers assessed them, and cut them to ensure we do not double-count carcasses.