#261993 - 11/19/04 11:33 PM
WSC Op-Ed in the Seattle P-I
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Repeat Spawner
Registered: 03/06/99
Posts: 1231
Loc: Western Washington
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Bush proposal not good for wild fish
By RICHARD K. SIMMS GUEST COLUMNIST
Why do fishermen fish? For the men and women I know, it's not about the numbers of fish we catch. The real reason we roll out of bed at the crack of dawn on cold, rainy winter mornings and drive out to favorite rivers like the Hoh, Skagit or Stillaguamish is because in our hearts we're after one thing -- those rare, wonderful wild salmon and steelhead that grace the waters of this place we call home.
Wild salmon and steelhead represent all that is good and beautiful about Washington: clean water, free-flowing streams, lush forests, insects, wildlife -- the whole web of life that, as any attentive fisherman knows firsthand, is interconnected. Wild salmon and steelhead connect us to truths much bigger than ourselves. Born naturally in streams, they travel hundreds of miles in the ocean before returning back to their home streams to spawn. Wild salmon and steelhead fill us with wonder, and when we're pursuing them with a rod and reel, they can give us the thrill of a lifetime.
That is why the fishermen I know are at once baffled, insulted and angered by the Bush administration proposal to lump wild salmon and steelhead together with hatchery fish raised in concrete tanks.
Don't get me wrong -- I've caught my share of hatchery-bred salmon and steelhead. Hatchery fish have been a big part of the fishing experience in the Northwest, but, unfortunately, not always to the benefit of wild fish populations. Perhaps hatchery practices can be reformed so that hatchery fish can coexist safely with wild fish; the Wild Steelhead Coalition supports those efforts. But hatchery fish should never -- as the administration proposes -- be counted as equivalent to wild salmon and steelhead in deciding what species should be protected.
If the administration's policy were implemented, it would seriously erode protections for wild salmon and steelhead under the Endangered Species Act. Absent these protections, salmon and steelhead streams would be open to more destructive logging, development, agricultural practices, damming and overfishing. These are the reasons salmon and steelhead had to be listed as endangered in the first place.
The essence of this proposal has been with us for more than a century -- that we can pump our rivers full of hatchery fish to replace what's been lost in wild salmon and steelhead production. Yet for more than 100 years, hatcheries have never realized such lofty promises. The new NOAA Fisheries policy to equate hatchery and wild salmon threatens to weaken the common-sense land-use and clean-water protections needed to sustain healthy rivers and fish populations.
This is a case of politics trumping science, with the interests of industry winning out over those of fishermen and others who value a healthy environment. NOAA Fisheries asked some of the nation's top scientists to weigh in on the policy, but when the scientists responded and said hatchery salmon and wild salmon should not be counted together, the administration ignored scientists.
The scientific community has been loud and clear in its opposition to the proposed policy and in its insistence that when it comes to salmon and steelhead recovery, hatcheries are no substitute for healthy rivers.
The Bush administration is taking a narrow-minded, short-term view with this policy. Haven't we learned over the past 100 years that hatcheries and other techno-fixes aren't the answer to our problems? Haven't we learned that we can't mask real problems with Band-Aid solutions? Haven't we learned that in order to recover abundant, sustainable wild salmon and steelhead runs, we need healthy habitat first?
If we want our grandkids and great-grandkids to be able to fish for wild salmon and steelhead, we need to protect wild native fish in healthy streams, not hatchery fish in concrete raceways. Ultimately, salmon and people need the same things -- healthy rivers and clean water. The administration should take the advice of its own scientists and drop this harmful policy. And it wouldn't hurt to listen to some fishermen, too. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/200054_salmon18.html
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Ryan S. Petzold aka Sparkey and/or Special
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#261994 - 11/20/04 01:03 PM
Re: WSC Op-Ed in the Seattle P-I
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Alevin
Registered: 10/06/04
Posts: 13
Loc: algona
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more liberal blather. A healthy clean river cannot exist in and around the 4 million mass of humanity and thier concrete jungle, that is called western washington. The truth is without the hatcheries we wouldn't have fish. Wild fish need wild rivers in a wild land. It won't happen here unless you get rid of the humanity. That's not going to happen.
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bobert
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#261995 - 11/20/04 02:26 PM
Re: WSC Op-Ed in the Seattle P-I
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12619
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Originally posted by bobert: more liberal blather. A healthy clean river cannot exist in and around the 4 million mass of humanity and thier concrete jungle, that is called western washington. The truth is without the hatcheries we wouldn't have fish. Wild fish need wild rivers in a wild land. It won't happen here unless you get rid of the humanity. That's not going to happen. Thanks for that uplifting thoughtful commentary... NOT! You say, "The truth is without the hatcheries we wouldn't have fish. " The fundamental truth is that without wild fish for broodstock, we wouldn't have any hatcheries. Do you really think they mined all of those eggs out of thin air? Historically, wild hens were stripped from every available watershed to feed the hatcheries' insatiable appetite for more eggs. Thankfully, such rampant abuse no longer exists on a large scale. But to this day, there are hatchery programs that continue to "mine" eggs from systems with healthy fish habitat. One must ask why we pull wild spawners off their redds and into a hatchery when science clearly shows that more recruits (future returning adults) would result if those spawners had just been left in the river to spawn naturally. Moreover, the subsequent reproductive success of those recruits has been shown to be much greater among fish with wild origins versus those produced by the hatchery. Hatcheries were first conceived with the idea of replacing wild populations (decimated by various environmental assaults) with artificially propagated substitutes. With modern technology the popular view was that we no longer needed the rivers to make more salmon. Obviously some of our present-day decision makers still subscribe to the dangerous conceit that we can just make salmon the "old fashioned way".... we'll make them! The century-long failure of hatcheries to mitigate for losses in wild fish populations is undeniable. And even the notion that hatcheries can be used to rebuild wild fish populations is tenable at best. The ESA was enacted to protect habitat for self-sustaining wild populations. With rare exceptions hatchery fish are NOT self-sustaining. Counting them as "wild" makes absolutely no sense. It's just another way to gut hard-won ESA protections for our native anadromous fish stocks.
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"Let every angler who loves to fish think what it would mean to him to find the fish were gone." (Zane Grey) "If you don't kill them, they will spawn." (Carcassman) The Keen Eye MDLong Live the Kings!
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