Man tries to save salmon swimming in Port Coquitlam streets during B.C. storm
Many roads looked more like rushing rivers during last weekend's atmospheric river, and some fish seemed to think so as well.
Large salmon were spotted swimming on flooded streets in Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam.
Ahmet Gurses was helping neighbours whose homes were flooding when he heard screaming outside.
"People were screaming, ‘There's a salmon in the water! There's a salmon in the water!’” Gurses said.
“In the water was a salmon, in just like maybe six inches, nine inches of water, just casually swimming around."
Watching the fish swim in street made him realize he couldn’t just leave it.
"I ran over and asked for a bucket, and me and two other guys corralled the salmon into the bucket," Gurses said. "I picked him up while he was flailing around."
He ran over to dump the floundering fish into Hyde Creek, a salmon habitat.
Near the Coquitlam River, some dead salmon were spotted days after the flooding.
"Those fish would be pretty unlikely to be able to find their way back into the actual creek and then go on and spawn,” said Dave Scott, the Lower Fraser research and restoration director with Raincoast Conservation Foundation.
He expects many of the fish in the street would have died, but said the storm shouldn’t have a major impact on the current salmon population. Instead, he's concerned about the incident creating an uncertain future for the next generation of fish.
"If there's fish that had already spawned and had already deposited their eggs in the gravel, and then you have all that heavy flow coming down, that would probably disturb those eggs. That would be the larger impact,” said Scott.
He says it could take up to four years to see a full lifecycle for the offspring of any currently spawning salmon, which would allow experts to assess the full impact of last weekend's storm.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada expands list of banned firearms to include hundreds of new models and variants
The Canadian government is expanding its list of banned firearms, adding hundreds of additional makes, models and their variants, effective immediately.
Could the discovery of an injured, emaciated dog help solve the mystery of a missing B.C. man?
When paramedic Jim Barnes left his home in Fort St. John to go hunting on Oct. 18, he asked his partner Micaela Sawyer — who’s also a paramedic — if she wanted to join him. She declined, so Barnes took the couple’s dog Murphy, an 18-month-old red golden retriever with him.
The world has been warming faster than expected. Scientists now think they know why
Last year was the hottest on record, oceans boiled, glaciers melted at alarming rates, and it left scientists scrambling to understand exactly why.
The latest: Water bottle, protein bar wrapper may help identify shooter in UnitedHealthcare CEO's killing
The masked gunman who stalked and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson used ammunition emblazoned with the words 'deny,' 'defend' and 'depose,' a law enforcement official said Thursday. Here's the latest.
7.0 earthquake off Northern California prompts brief tsunami warning
A 7.0 magnitude earthquake shook a large area of Northern California on Thursday, knocking items off grocery store shelves, sending children scrambling under desks and prompting a brief tsunami warning for 5.3 million people along the U.S. West Coast.
Saskatoon based dog rescue operator ordered to pay $27K for defamatory Facebook posts
A Saskatoon based dog rescue operator has been ordered to pay over $27,000 in damages to five women after a judge ruled she defamed them in several Facebook posts.
Pete Davidson, Jason Sudeikis and other former 'SNL' cast members reveal how little they got paid
Live from New York, it's revelations about paydays on 'Saturday Night Live.'
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim admits to being 'orange pilled' in Bitcoin interview
Bitcoin is soaring to all-time highs, and Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim wants the city to get in on the action.
Man wanted for military desertion turns himself in at Canada-U.S. border
A man wanted for deserting the U.S. military 16 years ago was arrested at the border in Buffalo, N.Y. earlier this week.