Fisheries management, Habitat restoration, Resilience and risk mitigation
Metlakatla Indian Community Watershed-scale Fish Passage Improvement Project

States

Alaska

This project will improve fish passage fish passage
Fish passage is the ability of fish or other aquatic species to move freely throughout their life to find food, reproduce, and complete their natural migration cycles. Millions of barriers to fish passage across the country are fragmenting habitat and leading to species declines. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's National Fish Passage Program is working to reconnect watersheds to benefit both wildlife and people.

Learn more about fish passage
by replacing six culverts on four streams on the Annette Islands Reserve in Alaska. These culverts restrict fish passage for coastal cutthroat trout, Dolly Varden char, Coho, pink, and chum salmon. Access to entire watersheds directly benefits the growth and fitness of individual fish which can have positive implications for fish populations and ultimately watershed scale population resiliency across the Reserve. Southeast Alaska has been experiencing higher intensity rain and rain on snow events in the past decade. This project will increase resilience towards climate change climate change
Climate change includes both global warming driven by human-induced emissions of greenhouse gases and the resulting large-scale shifts in weather patterns. Though there have been previous periods of climatic change, since the mid-20th century humans have had an unprecedented impact on Earth's climate system and caused change on a global scale.

Learn more about climate change
by bolstering local road infrastructure and support commercial and subsistence harvest for the community.

Project Quick Facts:

Project StatusIn Development
Location AK, Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area
NFPP Project Funding$630,000
Restoration TechniquesCulvert Replacement
Accomplishments6 Stream Miles Reopened, 62 acres reopened
Partner Project LeadMetlakatla Indian Community

The National Fish Passage Program combines technical expertise with a track record of success. 

Implemented primarily through the Service's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Offices, the National Fish Passage Program provides financial and technical assistance to partners across the country. Since 1999, the program has worked with over 2,000 local communities, Tribes, and private landowners to remove or bypass over 3,400 barriers to fish passage and reopen access to over 61,000 miles of upstream habitat for fish and other animals. Staff have expertise in fish migration and biology as well as financial, engineering, and planning assistance to communities, Tribes, and landowners to help them remove barriers and restore rivers for the benefit both fish and people. 

Fish passage project proposals can be initiated by any individual, organization, government, or agency. However, proposals must be submitted and completed in cooperation with a Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office. (Please note that fish passage projects being used for federal or state compensatory mitigation or required by existing federal or state regulatory programs are not eligible for funding through the National Fish Passage Program.) 

CONTACT A FISH PASSAGE COORDINATOR IN YOUR AREA TO GET STARTED. 

News

a fish with a birthday hat next to a cupcake. The text says "sorry, you're not invited to BIL's birthday". A culvert with eyes is saying "after all I didn't do for you?!"
While most two-year-olds are still blowing out their nappies, BIL (short for Bipartisan Infrastructure Law) investments are blowing out fish passage barriers across Alaska and no one is more relieved than the fish and people who depend on them.
looking out at a snowy stream from within a round metal culvert pipe.
The Department of the Interior recently announced a $35 million investment in fiscal year 2023 funding from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, including $4 million for six projects in Alaska that will improve fish and flood passage where roads cross rivers used by both migrating fish...

Programs

A person is walks through a large wide culvert that passes under a gravel road. A small river runs through the culvert.
Across the country, millions of barriers are fragmenting rivers, blocking fish migration, and putting communities at higher risk to flooding. Removing those barriers is one of the most effective ways to help conserve vulnerable species while building safer infrastructure for people. The National...