South Island anglers to feed chinook to orcas

Whole in the Water

Well-Known Member
http://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/south-island-anglers-to-feed-chinook-to-orcas-1.2287615

A group of sport fishermen and members of the T’Sou-ke Nation are helping to feed southern resident orcas by stocking local waters with some of the marine mammal’s favourite food.

The South Vancouver Island Anglers Coalition has received federal approval to introduce 200,000 chinook salmon smolt to the Sooke Basin.

“The principal purpose of this is to provide additional food for the killer whales during a key time of year when they’re fattening themselves up to go into winter,” said coalition president Chris Bos.

One of the main threats to the endangered southern resident orcas, which number about 80, is a reduction in food sources.

Chinook make up more than 90 per cent of resident killer whales’ spring and summer salmon diet and their abundance is linked to killer whale mortality, birth rates and survival, the Raincoast Foundation says.

The chinook will be raised at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans’ Nitinat Hatchery until they reach the smolt, or juvenile, stage. They will then be transported to the Sooke Basin and placed in a netted marine enclosure for two to three weeks. Their health and environmental conditions will be monitored daily, Bos said.

“During that time, they will be able to condition themselves to the Sooke River,” Bos said. “The water from the Sooke River is passing through the area where the net is, so they will be able as adults to home back in on the Sooke River as their natal stream.”

Three to four years after the fish are released from their pens, they will return as large adults, some weighing more than 30 pounds. Between 2,500 and 5,000 adults are expected to return.

While anglers will benefit, it’s not about that, Bos said. If it were, they would try to build stocks for periods of lower abundance, which prompt fishing restrictions. Instead, the chinook they foster will return as adults between July and September, when there are no restrictions on chinook fishing.

Other partners on the projects include the Juan de Fuca Salmon Restoration Society and the Pacific Whale Watchers Association.

“We have killer whales that are endangered, we have a place where we can do something that will benefit those killer whales, and we have groups that want to do something from a community perspective,” Bos said.

The community group hopes to turn the salmon enhancement initiative into a multi-year project, possibly increasing broods to two million in a few years. It requested permission this year for a brood of 500,000, but was approved for 200,000.

Lara Sloan, spokeswoman for Fisheries and Oceans Canada, said the federal department must take into account all hatchery and salmon enhancement initiatives when granting approval to projects like this.

“There are a number of parties in the Sooke area who are interested in increasing productions and returns,” she said.

The 200,000 cap was deemed an appropriate start for determining the technical capacity and ability of the group.

“Once this is assessed, the target release number can be revisited in the future.”

asmart@timescolonist.com




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I am confident that we will all limit our fishing to make sure these salmon will be available to the orcas.

Always gotta be one in the bunch...The situation is a win win for fisherman and the wildlife. But jackwad here has to be cynical, which is not what we need when it comes to any sort of conservation efforts put forth by the sport fishing community. Sometimes not typing anything makes more sense, just saying.
 
Agree to disagree, nature is not natural any more..conservation and harvesting in the same sentence? You really think pulling the wool over the next generations eyes is going to work?

These and all hatch fish are considered invasive
 
We all know the reel answer, but "they" net the rivers anyway, so screw it...I'm just another hypocrite, if it wasn't for our friends to the south I'd barely ever taste flesh.
 
Why not produce millions of hatchery fish like the states? If we produced enough we could fish hatchery exclusively...? And conserve the wild populations. And feed the whales etc. Why is there a cap on amount of fish released?
 
I must say I have changed my habits, the older I get the less limits and filling the boat, cooler or freezer means. Now its about good weather, good company, the peace and quiet and if lucky a fish. More fish in the sea/rivers/lakes for all users is a great idea, how can anyone slam or argue that?

HM
 
Humpbubble...the Sooke River Chinook were wiped out by the late 70's...none were observed over a number of years. The Sooke Enhancement Society sought to restore a Chinook run to the Sooke and in 1980 began transferring Chinook eggs from the Nitinat Hatchery down to the Jack Brook's facility. Sooke Chinook and Nitinat Chinook are very similar in DNA profiles . Today the Chinook in the Sooke River have had a genetic comparison to Nitinat stocks and they are virtually one and the same. The Jack Brooks hatchery has been and continues to be limited in the number of Chinook they can raise each year with water being the limiting factor. They don't have the water reserves to increase their hatchery production as their facility is not located on the main stem. SVIAC is using the excess capacity available at the Nitinat Hatchery to raise the extra smolts for the Sooke River. These fish will be trucked down to the net enclosure to be placed in the Sooke Harbour in the spring of 2017. These fish will held and fed for 2-4 weeks so that they are given the maximum chance of survival and to imprint them to the Sooke river. There has also been a condition placed on this project by DFO that a large number of these fish be clipped and wire code tagged. They also want post spawn data as well.
 
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Humpbubble...the Sooke River Chinook were wiped out by the late 70's...none were observed over a number of years. The Sooke Enhancement Society sought to restore a Chinook run to the Sooke and in 1980 began transferring Chinook eggs from the Nitinat Hatchery down to the Jack Brook's facility. Sooke Chinook and Nitinat Chinook are very similar in DNA profiles . Today the Chinook in the Sooke River have had a genetic comparison to Nitinat stocks and they are virtually one and the same. The Jack Brooks hatchery has been and continues to be limited in the number of Chinook they can raise each year with water being the limiting factor. They don't have the water reserves to increase their hatchery production as their facility is not located on the main stem. SVIAC is using the excess capacity available at the Nitinat Hatchery to raise the extra smolts for the Sooke River. These fish will be trucked down to the net enclosure to be placed in the Sooke Harbour in the spring of 2107. These fish will held and fed for 2-4 weeks so that they are given the maximum chance of survival and to imprint them to the Sooke river. There has also been a condition placed on this project by DFO that a large number of these fish be clipped and wire code tagged. They also want post spawn data as well.
Thanks for the explanation as to how many smolts can be reared. Access to water! So new facilities( lots of money) would be needed if hatchery numbers were to be increased exponentially? If the SVIAC's program were successful in 2017, could this same model be introduced to rivers everywhere in BC?
 
The Sooke River is unique...there are no wild fish concerns as they were wiped out. This project would have been very difficult if not impossible to get approved if there were possible impacts to native wild stocks. Not quite a no but an explanation.
 
Humpbubble...the Sooke River Chinook were wiped out by the late 70's...none were observed over a number of years. The Sooke Enhancement Society sought to restore a Chinook run to the Sooke and in 1980 began transferring Chinook eggs from the Nitinat Hatchery down to the Jack Brook's facility. Sooke Chinook and Nitinat Chinook are very similar in DNA profiles . Today the Chinook in the Sooke River have had a genetic comparison to Nitinat stocks and they are virtually one and the same. The Jack Brooks hatchery has been and continues to be limited in the number of Chinook they can raise each year with water being the limiting factor. They don't have the water reserves to increase their hatchery production as their facility is not located on the main stem. SVIAC is using the excess capacity available at the Nitinat Hatchery to raise the extra smolts for the Sooke River. These fish will be trucked down to the net enclosure to be placed in the Sooke Harbour in the spring of 2107. These fish will held and fed for 2-4 weeks so that they are given the maximum chance of survival and to imprint them to the Sooke river. There has also been a condition placed on this project by DFO that a large number of these fish be clipped and wire code tagged. They also want post spawn data as well.

Thanks profish, I have asked the local leading authority, on invasive aquatic species, and the consensus is this is a bandaid solution.
Are the sooke chum returns not wild?

I just think that pretending it's not angler based for a hopeful "good" return is dishonest, and includes "us" with the rest of the greedy pack.
 
The Sooke River is unique...there are no wild fish concerns as they were wiped out. This project would have been very difficult if not impossible to get approved if there were possible impacts to native wild stocks. Not quite a no but an explanation.

No wild steelhead or cuddy?
 
The Sooke River is unique...there are no wild fish concerns as they were wiped out. This project would have been very difficult if not impossible to get approved if there were possible impacts to native wild stocks. Not quite a no but an explanation.
Gotcha
 
The concern is always that a hatchery stock of a species doesn't interfere with the wild fish of the same species. Cuddy adults benefit from healthy fall numbers of salmon spawners and why they are found in the streams at that time of the year. Coho and Chum spawn in the smaller tributaries of the Sooke while Chinook are too large (unless there are early and substantial rains) to enter these smaller systems and therefor spawn in the main stem.
When it comes to the project being a whale food project...you can take the position you speak to if you choose. If the starving whales were able to voice their opinion I doubt they would support it. One of the huge problems with projects like this that are NOT government or tax payer funded is obtaining the required donations from the public. Even more true when asking a specific/narrow group (sport fishers) is asked to open their wallets and donate to a cause. This project will seek donations from not only anglers but anyone who supports saving these whales. A much, much broader cross section of society and will not doubt make it much easier to fund this effort.
 
Profisher, Is there a fundraising goal? How much does it cost to fund a project like this? Aside from the considerable hours those already involved are putting in, is there room for others to get involved in the grunt work? It makes perfect sense to me to market the fundraising to a broader group.
 
I know volunteers are always welcomed and some of the most willing to support this project with funds and labour to date is the local whale watching industry. The original budget which was calculated based on 500,000 smolts and was $128,000.00. Obviously that will be reduced as we are now working with a smaller number of fish for the first year. Next spring we will require volunteers to help with daily net pen cleaning and feeding of the smolts prior to release. This project also involves restoration work on the Sooke River itself which will come in a later phase, more volunteer help will be required for that work as well. If we can sell out all 500 Alpine Group Juan De Fuca Fishing Tournament tickets for the 2016 event we project upwards of $40,000.00 being donated directly to this project and would go along way (along with the PSF grant) to covering the costs.
 
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