Clallam County’s Marine Resource committee to study abalone in strait

Project’s goal is to increase population of native marine snail

PORT ANGELES — The Clallam County Marine Resource Committee has a new project aimed at studying and potentially increasing the pinto abalone population.

During the county commissioners’ Monday work session, Marine Resource Committee (MRC) representatives shared the project and updated them on some other projects they’ve worked on over the past year.

The marine snail pinto abalone, a state endangered species, is the state’s only known indigenous abalone, MRC representatives said.

Later this month, the committee will begin assessing the species’ population levels through monitoring dives along the Strait of Juan de Fuca in Clallam County.

Committee representatives told the commissioners that a 2014 study indicated that the area’s pinto abalones are severely depleted, largely due to poaching.

To spawn, pinto abalones must have another abalone within a 15-meter radius. Because of that, Clallam County’s habitat biologist Rebecca Mahan wrote in an email interview that areas with low population densities may be unable to recover on their own.

“Recovery without human intervention appears unlikely,” Mahan wrote.

If necessary, the committee hopes to eventually spawn pinto abalones and place them back into the wild.

“That is years out,” Mahan wrote.

The committee is collaborating with organizations, including the Puget Sound Restoration Fund and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) for the project.

Some of the committee’s other projects include forage fish and pigeon guillemot surveys, kelp monitoring, oyster restoration, Ediz Hook revegetation, Elwha Beach stewardship and more.

For the forage fish surveys, volunteers collected forage fish eggs from four locations and sent them to WDFW for analysis.

Forage fish populations can be an indicator of the health and productivity of nearshore systems, according to CCMRC’s website.

Volunteers also spent 10 weeks between June and August surveying the nesting activities of pigeon guillemot, a bird species considered an indicator of nearshore health. That project was coordinated with the Salish Sea Guillemot Network and the Audubon Society.

The committee also monitored the kelp population at both Freshwater Bay and Clallam Bay. According to committee representatives, data indicates that the Strait of Juan de Fuca’s kelp beds are generally doing better than Puget Sound’s kelp beds.

Another committee project is the restoration of Sequim Bay’s oyster population, in partnership with the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.

This year, the committee spread more than 47 tons of clean oyster shells in the bay. Over the next year, it plans to spread about 50,000 oyster spats into the bay.

The project was partially in response to the 2021 heat dome, which killed a large portion of the bay’s oyster population.

The committee also helped revegetate Ediz Hook by planting 3,000 plants and 10 pounds of native beach grass seed, in partnership with the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and the Clallam Conservation District.

The committee also helped remove 47 pounds of trash from Elwha Beach.

The Clallam County Marine Resource Committee (CCMRC) is a volunteer advisory committee focused on protecting and restoring marine resources in Clallam County, according to its website.

________

Reporter Emma Maple can be reached by email at emma.maple@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Forest auctioned despite protest

Advocates ask for more protection for old forests

Sailor Vineyards owner Kit Africa works in a vineyard. (Jefferson County Farm Tour)
Jefferson County Farm Tour set this weekend

On-site maps available for self-guided event

Port of Port Townsend purchases 3.4 acres for future industrial park

Agency intends to use space for economic development

Laura Lee Wadsworth of Sequim looks out on Morse Creek near the Olympic Discovery Trail east of Port Angeles on Tuesday. Wadsworth said the creek is a peaceful place to enjoy a late-summer day. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Late-summer day

Laura Lee Wadsworth of Sequim looks out on Morse Creek near the… Continue reading

Rick McKenzie, a retired Coast Guard veteran, plays bagpipes at the 9/11 memorial at the Francis Street Park in Port Angeles on Wednesday. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
‘Emotions and memories’ part of ceremony to remember 9/11

Firefighters, police officers gather to honor those lost 23 years ago

Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News
Melissa Williams, executive director of the Feiro Marine Life Center, visits the site of the proposed Port Angeles Waterfront Center near Front and Oak streets in downtown Port Angeles on Wednesday. The site is being considered for a replacement of the current marine life center at Port Angeles City Pier.
Marine center to design building

Fundraising continues for $25M-$27M project

Scott Hanna, right, and Chad Vandehey, engineers with the state Department of Natural Resources’ Olympic National Forest unit, check out a new bridge over a tributary to the Calawah River. The project is a Good Neighbor Authority partnership between DNR and the U.S. Forest Service. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Joint project replaces culvert with steel bridge

DNR, Forest Service combine efforts on Calawah River tributary

Action on Port Townsend deer coming in 2026

Process to include data on traffic, behavior

Airport grant could help electrify Fairchild

Port of PA supports program for charging stations

Clallam PUD issues alert for water restrictions

The Clallam County Public Utility District has declared a… Continue reading

Carlsborg VFW Post 6787 representatives present a donation to the Captain Joseph House Foundation. Pictured, from left, are VFW representatives Denise Ashbran, Alan Morris and Commander Dave Yarnchak, Captain Joseph House founder Betsy Schultz, and VFW representatives Gary Vetie and Tom Cox. (Claire Rausch)
Carlsborg VFW donates $5K to Captain Joseph House

The Captain Joseph House Foundation has received a $5,000 donation… Continue reading

A number of schooners cross the Port Townsend Bay as they take part in the annual Northwest Schooner Cup race during the Wooden Boat Festival on Saturday at Point Hudson Marina. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Schooner Cup

A number of schooners cross the Port Townsend Bay as they take… Continue reading