Sockeye return to spawn in B.C.’s Adams River every year, but every fourth year, there is a dominant run in which the number of fish increases dramatically. In off years, sometimes only a few thousand ...
British Columbia's iconic Adams River salmon run, a spectacular natural event that has become an international magnet for tourism drawing up to 250,000 visitors a year, appears to have collapsed.
ADAMS RIVER, B.C.—They call it the salmon run, but when you see the huge fish at the finish line, the Adams River in the Shuswap, B.C., the red sockeye appear still in the water, patiently waiting ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Miriam Porter is based in Toronto and covers vegan and kind travel. Watching the salmon run in Tsútswecw Provincial Park is bucket ...
British Columbia’s Adams River is home to one of the largest sockeye salmon runs in North America. Every fourth year is a "dominant" year, when millions of fish can be seen in the river. (Photo: Carol ...
Fishermen who have been waiting four years to harvest the famous Adams River sockeye run on the Fraser River system could see their catches cut in half in an effort to save the endangered Cultus Lake ...
One of the world's best-known salmon runs could be in danger of extinction, forcing sweeping fishing closures this summer in British Columbia. Just a few years ago, the Adams River, near Kamloops, saw ...
Millions of sockeye salmon are returning to the Adams River near Kamloops in one of the most spectacular displays of natural beauty in the world. The salmon return to spawn every year, but every four ...
Despite some encouraging numbers from fish counting and test fisheries for the earlier runs of Fraser River sockeye, as well as pink salmon returns in the Campbell River area, scientists involved in a ...