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Recovering Coho on the Oregon Coast

Location: Nehalem coho

Photo Credit: Danita Delimont, Shutterstock

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Support Oregon’s Wild Coho Comeback

Get updates on field research, habitat protection, and how you can help safeguard these threatened species.

About The Recovery

Location: Siletz River, Oregon

Photo Credit: David Herasimtschuk

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Natural Infrastructure: Elk River

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The Greatest Threats to Wild Coho

Clear-Cut Logging

Decades of streamside and steep slope logging brings heavier risks from landslides, road failures, and lethally warm water.

Failing Infrastructure

Up and down the Oregon Coast, old tide gates, culverts, and levees are failing, blocking fish passage and habitat access.

Agricultural &
Industrial Impacts

Human activities are eroding riverbanks, polluting water, and heating up streams across coastal Oregon.

Coast Coho Project Timeline

Explore the biggest wins and key moments since our work began.

What's Next

We’re aiming for nothing short of full recovery for Oregon Coast coho

This threatened species could become the first salmonid to be delisted from the Endangered Species Act: proving to the world that salmon recovery is possible, sustainable, and scalable.

2025
Coquille and Siletz basins get action plans; more to come

As we expand to new watersheds, local coalitions across Oregon and the broader Pacific Northwest are adopting our strategic action plan model for salmon recovery.

2024
A bright spot for coho recovery gets brighter

Favorable marine conditions and years of habitat recovery continue to drive coho recovery in Oregon, NOAA finds. Our strategic action plans are underway in eight Oregon watersheds and counting.

2022
Federal report links our work with stronger coho returns

A NOAA report finds hopeful signs for some salmon and steelhead populations, with Oregon Coast coho called out as “a bright spot for salmon recovery.”

2019
First Oregon basins get coho recovery action plans

The Elk and Siuslaw watersheds are the first in our series of science-driven game plans to restore coho populations across coastal Oregon. Next up: the Nehalem, Coos Bay, and Upper Rogue.

2017
Coast Coho Partnership launches

Wild Salmon Center and a coalition of local partners launch a bold new concept to recover threatened Oregon Coast coho salmon, watershed by watershed.

Our mission is to protect the world’s salmon strongholds.

These wild salmon rivers are essential to salmon survival.

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