-
Contrasting fortunes add Basque derby edge for Matarazzo's revived Sociedad
-
Asian stocks hit by fresh tech fears as gold retreats from peak
-
Kim vows to 'transform' North Korea with building drive
-
Peers and Gadecki retain Australian Open mixed-doubles crown
-
Britain's Starmer seeks to bolster China ties despite Trump warning
-
Kaori Sakamoto - Japan skating's big sister eyes Olympic gold at last
-
Heavy metal: soaring gold price a crushing weight in Vietnam
-
Kendrick Lamar, Bad Bunny, Lady Gaga face off at Grammys
-
Trump says 'hopefully' no need for military action against Iran
-
What's behind Trump's risky cheap dollar dalliance?
-
Minnesota Somalis organize house call care amid ICE raid fears
-
Sumo diplomacy: Japan's heavyweight 'soft power' ambassadors
-
The foreign POWs stuck in Ukrainian prison limbo
-
'Batman' confronts city over ICE Super Bowl plan
-
Trump says Putin agrees to pause Kyiv strikes amid harsh cold
-
US sprint star Richardson arrested on speeding charge in Florida
-
AI helps doctors spot breast cancer in scans: world-first trial
-
Arsenal seek fun factor as Frank searches for home comforts
-
Argentina declares emergency over Patagonia wildfires
-
Rose leads at Torrey Pines as Koepka makes PGA Tour return
-
US eases Venezuela sanctions after oil sector reforms
-
Trump turns to Venezuela playbook on Iran, but differences sharp
-
New York breaks out snow 'hot tubs' to melt winter storm snowfall
-
Anthony Joshua speaks on camera for first time since Nigeria crash
-
Apple earnings soar as China iPhone sales surge
-
Forest, Celtic head into Europa League play-offs as Villa win
-
With Trump administration watching, Canada oil hub faces separatist bid
-
What are the key challenges awaiting the new US Fed chair?
-
Trump's new Minneapolis point man vows 'smarter' operation
-
Trump says Putin to halt Kyiv strikes for week amid harsh cold
-
De Kock ton clinches T20 series for South Africa against West Indies
-
Chiles's appeal to retain Olympic bronze sent back to CAS
-
Iran threatens to hit US bases and carriers in event of attack
-
If not now, when? LeBron tears stoke retirement talk
-
Ex-OPEC president denies bribe-taking at London corruption trial
-
Another Arctic blast bears down on US as snow cleanup drags on
-
Iran's IRGC: the feared 'Pasdaran' behind deadly crackdown
-
Israeli settler leader lauds Jewish prayer at contested West Bank tomb
-
Iran blasts EU 'mistake' after Guards terror designation
-
Trump says Putin agreed not to attack freezing Kyiv for a week
-
US Senate rejects vote to avert government shutdown
-
Moscow records heaviest snowfall in over 200 years
-
Polar bears bulk up despite melting Norwegian Arctic: study
-
Waymo gears up to launch robotaxis in London this year
-
Colombia restricts import of drones used in explosives attacks
-
French IT group Capgemini under fire over ICE links
-
US border chief says not 'surrendering' immigration mission in Minneapolis
-
Oil jumps on Trump's Iran threat; gold retreats from highs
-
Melania Trump premieres multi-million-dollar documentary
-
Holders PSG, Real Madrid among clubs awaiting Champions League play-offs draw
Drought scuppers salmon fishing season in California
Gazing out at San Francisco harbor from her wooden fishing boat, Sarah Bates looks glum.
In happier times, she would head out to sea every morning. But for much of this year, she has remained hopelessly docked, due to a ban on salmon fishing as a result of California's drought.
"Salmon is my main fishery and it's 90 per cent of my income," says the 46-year-old.
In force since April along the entire coast of the Golden State, and parts of neighboring Oregon, the moratorium will last until the end of the salmon fishing season in September.
It was brought in as the number of salmon expected to return to the region's rivers has plummeted close to historic lows.
The decades-long drought gripping the American West, aggravated by climate change, has seen the levels of California's rivers drop, and their waters grow warmer.
With many dams already constructed on these waterways, these inhospitable conditions mean salmon are struggling to swim upstream to reproduce, and their offspring often die before reaching the ocean.
The ban is a significant blow to California, where salmon fishing generates $1.4 billion per year, and supports 23,000 jobs, according to the Golden State Salmon Association.
On the San Francisco harbor front, several restaurants have been forced to import salmon from further afield, including Canada, in order to keep the popular fish on their menus.
"Salmon is king... that's what people want," says Craig Hanson, a 60-year-old chartered boat operator specializing in sport fishing.
"They're also a very spectacular fish to catch... the salmon is going to fight you to the end."
- 'Marine heat waves' -
In summers past, Hanson would take his boat out every day. This season, the sailor weighs anchor only four times a week
He blames a lack of enthusiasm among customers for fishing halibut or striped bass.
Despite the loss of income, Hanson approves of the ban if it helps the future of the industry, and is optimistic that salmon can rebound soon thanks to recent months of heavy rain and snow.
Yet many fishermen fear another ban next year.
"The Chinook salmon that are fished here in California typically have a three- or four-year life cycle," explains Nate Mantua, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
"So when things happen to them in freshwater, as eggs or juveniles, we see it impacting the fishery two or three years later."
The decline in salmon numbers has been precipitous for at least a decade.
Low river water levels -- which authorities have tried to work around, by trucking baby salmon down to the ocean -- are only part of the problem.
Between 2014 and 2016, the Pacific reached temperatures never before seen off the west coast of North America.
"Marine heat waves" created "really poor growth and survival conditions for salmon", says Mantua.
Deprived of cold ocean currents that bring essential nutrients, the fish fell prey to other hungry species.
"It's not just a California problem. It's really the entire Pacific, except for a few exceptions," such as certain Alaskan species, he adds.
- 'Climate shocks' -
But in California, "our fish were already predisposed to being vulnerable to any kind of climate shocks," says Mantua.
This is because the state -- with a giant 40-million population, and a sprawling agricultural sector essential for feeding the United States -- has relentlessly developed its rivers, in order to support its cities and farms.
Due to countless dams and canals, salmon have lost 80 percent of the habitats in which they can spawn.
Water management, and the priority afforded to farmers in central California, is now a major source of grievance for fishermen.
In San Francisco, many are calling for water to be re-diverted into rivers, rather than supplying producers of water-intensive crops like almonds, pistachios and walnuts -- which are often grown for export.
"When it comes down to it, water is more important for the fish than it is for nuts," says Ben Zeiger, a 23-year-old deckhand working on a local sport-fishing boat.
Salmon fishers are waiting to receive financial compensation from federal authorities for this year's fishing ban.
But their priority is efforts to improve salmon habitats.
Along northern California's Klamath River, a giant project has just begun to demolish four hydroelectric dams, potentially reopening 400 miles of river for migratory fish.
"If we don't fix the water policy, we're going to be here again" in future drought years, says Bates, back on the wharf.
"Climate change is happening. And it's happening faster than I think any of us expected."
P.Anderson--BTB