C.-B.: le gouvernement cherche à aider les saumons à remonter la rivière Chilcotin

Water and debris are seen flowing down the Chilcotin River following a landslide near Williams Lake, B.C., in an Aug. 5 handout photo. Williams Lake First Nation says two and possibly three Indigenous cultural heritage sites sustained extensive damage when a torrent of water breached a landslide that blocked the Chilcotin River in British Columbia's central Interior. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Tsilhqot'in National Government, *MANDATORY CREDIT*

WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. - Plans to help migrating salmon make it up British Columbia's Chilcotin River to spawning grounds are in the works after a massive landslide breach created barrier challenges, but officials will wait to see if the water carves a new route for the fish, says Nathan Cullen, the provincial water, land and resource stewardship minister.

Cullen said Thursday that the breach created a new "choke point" on the river that could impede sockeye salmon movement upstream, but the fish are extremely resilient and face many challenges on their journey to spawning grounds.

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