Sockeye, not this year.

OldBlackDog

Well-Known Member
Fraser sockeye fishery in peril
Commercial fishermen may be shut out as return projections plummet

Carla Wilson
Canwest News Service


Friday, April 11, 2008



CREDIT: Ian Smith/Vancouver Sun
Gillnetter Ken Alexson of of vessel Sea Spirit, pulls sockeye salmon from a gillnet on the Frasr River in 2005.

Commercial and recreational fishermen may be shut out of this year's Fraser River sockeye salmon run because projections point to plummeting numbers.

Well-below-average numbers are predicted for sockeye salmon returning to the Fraser River, Jeff Grout, Fisheries and Oceans Canada's region resource manager for salmon, said Friday.

Grout is expecting 1.9 million to 2.9 million sockeye to return to spawn, considerably lower than the historical average of 4.4 million for the low year in the sockeye run's four-year cycle.

"There is certainly the possibility there won't be an opportunity there for a sockeye fishery for the commercial and recreational harvesters," he said.

Low numbers last year also prompted fisheries officials to prohibit commercial and recreational fishing for Fraser sockeye.

Concerns over these salmon come as a total closure of commercial and sport chinook salmon fisheries off California and most of Oregon was announced Thursday by the Seattle-based Pacific Fishery Management Council.

"This is a disaster for West Coast salmon fisheries, under any standard," council chairman Don Hansen said.

The decision follows what the council called an "unprecedented collapse" of Sacramento River fall chinook and the poor state of coho salmon from Oregon and Washington State.

In B.C., fisheries managers will be monitoring the Fraser River run through test fisheries, which provide ongoing information on numbers of returning salmon. The first Fraser sockeye usually show up by late June or early July, peaking in early August, Grout said.

The Fisheries Department is expecting returns will be adequate to sustain the population, he said. The department anticipates there will be an opportunity for first nations to harvest Fraser sockeye for food, social and ceremonial purposes, he added.

Commercial fishermen typically catch Fraser sockeye as they head home through Johnstone Strait and in the river itself.

Irvin Figg, president of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers -CAW Union said he was prepared for the possibility of a closure, and that even when it is open, there's little money to be made in the low year of the sockeyes' four-cycle. "We expected this to be a poor year."

Marilyn Murphy, executive director of the Sport Fishing Institute of B.C., said, "I'm on the edge of my seat," waiting for word on Fraser sockeye.

In recent years, it has become more difficult to predict numbers of returning salmon and ocean survival has changed, Murphy said.

The more southern the distribution of salmon, the more challenges they have, Murphy said, adding that salmon stocks returning to northern waters are generally in better shape.

However, while there are areas of concern for this year's returns of salmon along B.C.'s coast, she was optimistic that recreational fishermen will have some good opportunities this year, especially near hatcheries.

Craig Orr, executive director of the Watershed Watch Salmon Society, said the reasons for the low Fraser sockeye returns are not clear and urged B.C. to protect groundwater around salmon rivers and streams.

Forecasts are often higher than the actual returns, he said from Terrace. "We could be looking at extremely low numbers. ... It is not a bright day for B.C."

First nations members are concerned about whether there will be enough salmon for their uses, Orr said.

© Canwest News Service
 
My jet will be getting wet in the salt and some interior lakes this season..As well as sturgie tagging and filming....
Won't mention salmon as we are learning to not say that word in our house right now..Just practicing for the upcoming extinction ...[}:)]
 
Truth is...sturgeon is a way better Sport fishery than most anything we have in BC.
The fact that most of those guy's targeting them realy work hard at the catch and release practises and conservation is great...I think that the guy's looking for a true sports fishery are right on target with sturgeon...
The sockeye fishery was always nothing more than a meat flossing fishery...good for some revenue and wars on the riverbank but let's be honest...not too sporting at all.
just my 2 cents
 
time will tell about numbers, DFO has been way off recently and all this doom and gloom is just a way of setting the table for them, Hopefully they're wrong again this year. Be prepared for native posturing about the subject and the STARVATION word will soon be out
 
If D.F.O. is going to reduce the white mans fishing oportunities then they should reduce the license fee. The natives can support their own fishery. The natives could build hatcheries and rear smolts etc. It would be a lot of work but they are hard working people.
 
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