Eat Pink!

stones93

Well-Known Member
A sockeye salmon is reeled in by a fisherman along the shores of the Fraser River near Chilliwack, B.C., Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. Reports that a potentially lethal salmon virus had been found in the waters off British Columbia last year drew a fast, co-ordinated response from the federal government, tied up resources of three federal ministries for months, and even required the assistance of Canadian consular officials in the U.S., newly released documents indicate.

Photograph by: Jonathan Hayward , THE CANADIAN PRESS


TERRACE - Sockeye salmon returns have plunged to historic lows in the Skeena River system of northwestern British Columbia, forcing drastic, never-before imposed, fishing closures.

Commercial and non-native recreational fisheries were shut down on the river last month but, for the first time ever, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans has closed First Nations food and recreational fisheries on the waterway.

Closures extend from the Pacific Ocean, up the Skeena River and its tributaries, while recreational fishing is also restricted in Babine River and Babine Lake, east of Smithers.

That closure angers the Lake Babine Nations, who have issued a release noting non-native recreational sockeye fishing continues in one section of the huge lake, and the closure to the aboriginal fishery amounts to a violation of First Nations constitutional rights.

Department of Fisheries North Coast area director Mel Kotyk estimates only 395,000 sockeye will return to the Skeena system this year, down from initial estimates of up to 800,000 fish.

He says the management plan for the river requires a total closure if counts fall below 400,000 and he blames conditions at sea for the poor returns, but doubts those conditions will affect next year's sockeye spawning cycle.
 
just realized rockfish posted this and other articles in a separate thread. oh well, the more the merrier.
 
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