A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
August 12, 2008
3. Watersheds –
My View: A simple solution to help salmon
The Sacramento Bee- 8/9/08
By Peter Moyle and Richard Sitts, Special to The Bee
Chinook salmon are a fish of superlatives. The biggest of all salmon, they can reach weights of 100 pounds or more. In
These salmon are marvelously adapted to the hot Valley climate, with runs entering the rivers in the fall, late fall, winter and spring. With such diversity and abundance, they were mainstays of
Today,
The causes of the salmon population collapse are multiple and complex, an apparent "perfect storm" of interacting factors, man-made and natural. To supplement the wild populations, hatcheries produce approximately 31 million young salmon per year. Yet today, hatchery fish are part of the problem.
Hatchery fish are less-adapted for survival in the wild, but they can compete with and interbreed with wild salmon in rivers, overwhelming wild fish by their sheer numbers and weakening the offspring.
They are wonderful food, but when it comes to spawning and perpetuating the species, they are no substitute for truly wild salmon.
In previous years, up to 90 percent of salmon caught off
A major step toward solving the problem: Mark all hatchery fish. First, hatcheries could remove a small fatty fin on the back whose loss does not affect survival. Its absence is easy to detect on adult salmon. Second, hatcheries could inject a wire tag into each salmon's snout that encodes their hatchery of origin and other information. This marking technique has a long history of successful use worldwide.
If all hatchery fish have the mark and tag, the currently closed fishery could probably be reopened, albeit in a limited fashion. Fishermen could keep all marked fish. Unmarked fish would be released into the wild.
The inadvertent catching of some wild fish would cause some to die. Yet more would live. The marking and tagging program would also pay large benefits in improved management of salmon populations by providing more information on how salmon use the ocean and on the impacts of the fishery on wild fish.
This is not a new idea. The benefits of marking programs have long been recognized in
It would cost roughly $5.5 million to establish a program to mark and tag all hatchery salmon in the
Marking all salmon released from hatcheries is an important tool for salmon conservation in the
http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/1143307.html
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