Hey Gil, phone my cell
I too have a good understanding of coho salmon. I have spent the last 8 years working closely with a group here on Vancouver Island trying to keep a run, on a small river, from going extinct. Our habitat on our river is good for everything that these fish need. Others before me worked long and hard to make sure that this river was keep in a state that these fish need. We have everything in place yet our numbers are still going down. We have done studies on this river since 1995. We are doing another this summer to compare with all the others that we have done in the past. What will we find with this new study? Probably what we have found in the past, that this is a great Coho river and we should see thousands of coho. Well we know that our big problem is when our smolts leave the river and go out in the SOG. They spend some time out there and then make their way past your friends, at the fish farms, and we never see them again. Sure we get a few lucky ones that can run this gauntlet of death and come back, but most die. So if you think " IMO, there are not measurable impacts from this industry severe enough to warrant closure or removal." think of my river and the coho that live there, or more accurately, that use to live there. Is you love for this industry and the money if provides worth it? Sleep on that one and in the morning have a look in the mirror and ask yourself "Am I part of the problem or am I part of the solution."
GLG
Last edited by GLG; 06-02-2012 at 05:09 AM. Reason: spelling
"There are in fact two things , science and opinion,The former begets knowledge , the latter ignorance " Hippocrates
The Harper™ Government©: Winging it since 2006
Question here. Is there any evidence that young fish swim into pens because of the availability of food and then grow too large to leave?
“The Gods do not subtract from men’s lives - the time spent fishing.”
how are these smolts raised??? are they in closed containment ponds or are they in a more natural 'rearing channel'? now much are you feeding them or are they being forced for forage?
containment ponds typically yield <1% return rates so if that is what you are experiencing, you are at the norm. rearing channels, which also have the feed cut by about 75% have a much higher return rate but fewer smolt that survive before release. lots of variables in the raising of these smolt so the actual rearing practices could well be a major factor in very low return rates.
I'm no expert!!! Plain and simple. Just want answers. Reelfast, check the USA containment pond yields before salmon farms.... Are you sure they were 1%????? I'm under the impression you got greater yields from your hatcheries than that. Before fish farms? I'm sure Canadian hatcheries got better yields from hatcheries before the explosion of farms
Dave,
Charlie already provided you with a link to paper that shows wild salmon populations near salmon farms are declining at faster rates than adjacent populations where there are no salmon farms. This paper is a global assessment.
GLG provided you with annecdotal evidence from the work he has done with one stock of coho.
Here is a link to a very recently published paper on Fraser River sockeye population declines; http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1...2.00244.x/full
I know, it's not about coho but the methodology in this research could be applied to some local coho stocks if the data are available. That would be an interesting excercise. So let me put it to you: Accept the methodology and results of the sockeye paper and you do the work to apply it to coho. Could use Fraser River coho stocks and the same time frame to narrow the variables as much as possible. Then you could actually publish your results to prove the opposite.
I'm in agreement that there are many impacts that affect wild salmon stocks throughout their life cycle but I have to agree with others that recent harvest levels have been very precautionary and while freshwater habitat loss continues only at a much lower rate. Yet some coho stocks continue to decline. Therefore the question becomes what other impacts are there and what can be done about them?
Finally, and this is addressed to all, the proposed changes to the Fisheries Act will make it much more difficlut to protect and restore the habitat in many of those irrigation and roadside ditches that used to be salmon streams. This has got to be stopped!
Young baby Pacific salmon that swim into Atlantic salmon net pens become food. This destructive industry does not like to talk about that either. But if they do I am sure it will be something like “there is no proof”, at least no proof that is acceptable to them; that is their answer to everything.
LOL, almost impossible to grow to large to get back out of the farm pens from the inside of an Atlantics stomach.
Thanks for that link Cuttlefish; interesting stuff by some respected authors. Too bad we don't have better data on outmigrating wild juvenile coho, but that can be said for all salmonid stocks I suppose.