#778701 - 08/14/12 04:03 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: ]
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Spawner
Registered: 12/09/08
Posts: 764
Loc: Seattle, WA
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The tribes are entitled to their half before reaching their own impact allowance. If you change the percentage of how many wild salmon or steelhead they encounter in their fishery, you run the risk of them not getting their half, which is what Carcassman was alluding to I believe.
I'm not sure I follow. If non-tribal and tribal are each entitled to half of the target population, couldn't the tribes just get a larger impact allowance if they are using less efficient/selective methods? In other words if the tribes kill 1 ESA fish for every target fish, and non-tribal kills 1 ESA fish for every 20 target fish, and you need to keep a 50/50 balance in the target harvest, what's to stop the authorities from allocating 2/3 ESA allowance to the tribes and 1/3 to non-tribal? I understand that's not fair, but I'm not sure what other alternatives there are for maintaining a 50/50 harvest split in that scenario.
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#778713 - 08/14/12 05:05 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Todd]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 3426
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P.S. In the entire run up to this initiative, all the misinformation on both sides of the debate (pro-initiative and the gillnetters), and all the "it'll do this!" and "it'll do that!", the most useful part so far is Kitzhaber saying that the economic benefits of sportfishing should be a, if not "the", driving factor in LCR management. Exactly! + 1,000,000 etc..... etc... Washington? .....your up to bat.
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#778716 - 08/14/12 05:23 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Eric]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Meetings on now, Gov's Rep said he will oppose CCA's Measure.
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#778731 - 08/14/12 06:03 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: ]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 12/30/07
Posts: 3116
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http://www.dfw.state.or.us/agency/commission/meeting in progress There must be a timing mechanism. It logged out and when I clicked on the play button, it expired. Go back and click on oregon fish and wildlife commission teleconference and then click on the address above or on the page on your computer to restore the session. meeting completed at 330 pm. no vote needed, they will move forward to rule making and schedule public meetings.
Edited by Lead Bouncer (08/14/12 06:32 PM)
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#778733 - 08/14/12 06:13 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: ]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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Not a name I'm familiar with (Bret Brownscomb) sp and a pretty green commission thats asking alot of basic questions.
Edited by SBD (08/14/12 06:16 PM)
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#778741 - 08/14/12 06:39 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: SBD]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 05/22/05
Posts: 3776
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Oregon Governor urges a No vote on measure 81.
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#778745 - 08/14/12 06:48 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: ]
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Returning Adult
Registered: 07/13/12
Posts: 257
Loc: Vashon
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Todd---right on!!
Nets out! Buy em out.
_________________________
Build a man a fire and he's warm for a night. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
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#778746 - 08/14/12 06:51 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Eric]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/30/09
Posts: 2267
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P.S. In the entire run up to this initiative, all the misinformation on both sides of the debate (pro-initiative and the gillnetters), and all the "it'll do this!" and "it'll do that!", the most useful part so far is Kitzhaber saying that the economic benefits of sportfishing should be a, if not "the", driving factor in LCR management. Exactly! + 1,000,000 etc..... etc... Washington? .....your up to bat. Talking about misinformation. Better reread the letter.
_________________________
The world will not be destroyed by those that are evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.- Albert Einstein
No you can’t have my rights---I’m still using them
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#778750 - 08/14/12 07:10 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Lucky Louie]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/30/09
Posts: 2267
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Of course they brought up needing public money to help out the gill netters in transition period.
_________________________
The world will not be destroyed by those that are evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.- Albert Einstein
No you can’t have my rights---I’m still using them
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#778769 - 08/14/12 08:30 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: MPM]
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12621
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In other words if the tribes kill 1 ESA fish for every target fish, and non-tribal kills 1 ESA fish for every 20 target fish, and you need to keep a 50/50 balance in the target harvest, what's to stop the authorities from allocating 2/3 ESA allowance to the tribes and 1/3 to non-tribal?
I understand that's not fair, but I'm not sure what other alternatives there are for maintaining a 50/50 harvest split in that scenario.
That's EXACTLY how it works. On a decent run of springers, the CR impact is set at 15% of the wild run... 13% to treaty tribes and 2% to non-treaty. Tribes already get 87% (13/15) of the impact to satisfy catch balancing. It is what it is....
_________________________
"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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#778787 - 08/14/12 09:59 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: eyeFISH]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 05/22/05
Posts: 3776
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Aug. 14, 2012
Fish and Wildlife Commission directs ODFW to initiate rule-making for lower Columbia River fisheries management
SALEM, Ore. – The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission today directed agency staff to formally begin rule-making that will implement Governor John Kitzhaber’s proposed reforms of lower Columbia River fisheries management.
In an Aug. 9 letter, the Governor asked the Commission and ODFW to work with their counterparts in Washington state to develop a new management framework for Columbia River fisheries that prioritizes recreational fisheries in the mainstem of the lower Columbia, and enhances commercial fishing opportunities in off –channel areas while phasing out non-tribal gill nets in the mainstem.
The Commission directed the department to draft rules that reflect the proposals in the Governor’s Aug. 9 letter, as well as the additional details provided by his staff at today’s meeting. The Commission also directed staff to work closely with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and its Commission.
Bobby Levy, chair of the Oregon Commission, asked staff to develop and present the draft rules for its consideration before the end of 2012.
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#778837 - 08/15/12 12:07 AM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Illahee]
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12621
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From the other board....
First, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Spring Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Lower Columbia commercial fishermen do release wild Spring Chinook from their gill nets, but while stuck in the gill net these fish are easy pickings for seals and sea lions. Wild salmon taken by the seals and sea lions in gill nets are never counted against the very limited number of ESA listed fish that the gill nets are allowed to incidentally kill while attempting to harvest hatchery bred salmon. Changing to live capture seine netting will prevent this predation from happening.
Injuries from gill nets also cause disease leading to delayed mortality and reduce spawning success in Spring Chinook and other salmon species. Recent scientific study has found that up to 51% of salmon injured in gill nets are not expected not to reproduce successfully. If a wild salmon is released from a gill net, but can't spawn successfully due to an injury or disease as a result being in a gill net, it should be considered the same as if it had died in the gill net. Live capture modified seine nets don’t cause the injuries to released fish that gill nets do.
Second, we also know that fewer wild Summer Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Summer Chinook are the remnants of the once great runs of salmon that swam all the way to Canada via the upper Columbia River before Grand Coulee Dam was built without fish ladders. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective commercial fishery for Summer Chinook, where the wild fish are released and only the hatchery bred fish are harvested, like we do for Spring Chinook. The problem is that warmer summer water temperatures make releasing the wild salmon impossible with gill nets. So instead, the commercial fishermen are simply allowed to kill the wild salmon along with the hatchery bred ones. If IP-21 passes commercial fishermen can successfully release these wild Summer Chinook salmon too.
Third, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Steelhead will die if IP-21 passes. Ten years ago, in 2002, gill nets fishing the lower Columbia captured 21,700 Steelhead during the spring salmon fishery. It is estimated that around 50% of those were ESA listed wild winter steelhead and it is probable that over 4000 of those wild Steelhead died. Those mortalities wouldn't have happened with a live capture seine net fishery. Wild Steelhead are in the Columbia twelve months out of the year and are encountered in every single gill net fishery. All non-Indian sales of Steelhead are prohibited, so they are all 'released' when caught in gill nets, and too often ‘released’ dead. Live capture seine netting would allow them to be released alive instead.
Fourth, we know that fewer wild Sockeye salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Sockeye are the smallest of all Columbia River salmon and also are headed for both the upper Columbia and the Snake River. Sockeye were the first of the Columbia River salmon to be listed as endangered. A year after Sockeye that listing in 1992, only one Sockeye salmon (dubbed Lonesome Larry) made it to its home spawning grounds at Redfish Lake in Idaho. Since that time things have improved somewhat, but wild Sockeye salmon retention in the lower Columbia River is only allowed in years when a relatively large number of these fish are returning. On the years when the run of Sockeye falls, retention is prohibited. 2012 was a good year for Sockeye, and gill nets caught several hundred Sockeye salmon in the Summer Chinook salmon fishery. By switching from gill nets to live capture seining, lower Columbia River commercial fishermen could successfully release wild Sockeye salmon on those bad years when all the Sockeye are needed on the spawning grounds.
Fifth, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Coho salmon will die if IP-21 passes. The lower Columbia River wild Coho salmon was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2005. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective fishery for lower river Coho, where the wild fish are released and only hatchery fish are retained. Yet the lower river commercial fishery with gill nets is a 100% kill fishery, even though all hatchery bred Coho are marked with a clipped adipose fin for easy identification. Because of this clipped fin, recreational anglers have been successfully releasing wild Coho for many years. Going to a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 will allow commercial fishermen to release the wild Coho salmon too, and passing the measure will result in tens of thousands of fewer dead ESA listed wild Coho salmon each year.
Sixth, fewer ESA listed wild Chum salmon will die if IP-21 passes. All lower Columbia River Chum salmon retention is prohibited, and all but one of the lower river Chum populations are at 'high' or 'very high' risk of extinction. Young’s Bay near Astoria is a primary population of the few Chum salmon remaining, yet the current intensive gill net Coho harvest at that location overlaps with their return timing. Chum salmon are easy to identify and easy to differentiate from Coho Salmon. They would be easy to release alive if a live capture seine net fishery was in place instead of the current 100% kill gill net fishery.
Seventh, fewer ESA listed wild lower river fall Tule Chinook salmon will die. Chinook salmon returning in the fall to the lower Columbia River are known as Tule salmon. Although these Chinook are not marked with a fin clip, they are very easy to visually identify. They have a much larger adipose fin than other salmon, they often appear brown instead of silver, and Tule Chinook have a distinctive strong smell. With all these characteristics, wild ESA listed Tule salmon should be easy for commercial fishermen to identify and release. Since Tule Chinook in freshwater are generally considered undesirable for eating as compared to other stocks of Columbia River Chinook salmon returning to the area at the same time, and since Tule Chinook bring low prices from fish wholesalers, commercial fishermen participating in a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 would likely willingly release them to increase their harvest of the more desirable types of fall bright Chinook salmon that are healthy stocks.
>>>>
Oh, and he forgot to mention the benefits for a crashing sturgeon population.
_________________________
"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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#778841 - 08/15/12 12:14 AM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: eyeFISH]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 10/28/09
Posts: 3361
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Before the end of 2012, or just before the Legislatures start session. Hmmmm....
This needs to be watched closely. The Gov's proposal, while it suggests an immediate shift toward increasing rec. opportunity in the lower river, calls for INCREASED gill netting in the "SAFE" areas and an immediate emphasis (with taxpayer funding) on developing selective commercial fisheries in the mainstem. If this goes through, we sporties may enjoy a couple seasons of solid opportunity below Bonneville, but we will be reamed, sans vasoline, when the cowboys are equipped to fish seines in the mainstem.
This is another government-sponsored prop-up of the non-tribal commercial industry, and it must be stopped. The first step must be to approve the initiative to ban gill nets on the Lower C. That would buy some time to plan for the next objective, which should be, as others have suggested, an END to the obsolete, non-tribal commercial fisheries on the lower river. It's not jobs the govt. is trying to save here (if it were, I would be much more sympathetic). Rather, it's a mess of dollars in campaign contributions from the middle men who profit from obsolete fisheries that the tribes can more than adequately replace with their treaty allocations. For once, let's make sure common sense prevails.
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#778908 - 08/15/12 11:33 AM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: FleaFlickr02]
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27840
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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I don't know who wrote that, Francis, but whoever it is, if he wants to set himself out as some sort of sportfishing spokesman he needs to get himself actually educated on how LCR fisheries work. There's almost nothing in that long post that is factual.
There is a lot of fantasy, however.
Fish on...
Todd
_________________________
 Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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#778927 - 08/15/12 12:22 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: eyeFISH]
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Returning Adult
Registered: 05/31/08
Posts: 257
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From the other board....
First, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Spring Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Lower Columbia commercial fishermen do release wild Spring Chinook from their gill nets, but while stuck in the gill net these fish are easy pickings for seals and sea lions. Wild salmon taken by the seals and sea lions in gill nets are never counted against the very limited number of ESA listed fish that the gill nets are allowed to incidentally kill while attempting to harvest hatchery bred salmon. Changing to live capture seine netting will prevent this predation from happening. predation is already factored in, and this is a slippery slope that folks can say about the sport fishery as well Injuries from gill nets also cause disease leading to delayed mortality and reduce spawning success in Spring Chinook and other salmon species. Recent scientific study has found that up to 51% of salmon injured in gill nets are not expected not to reproduce successfully. If a wild salmon is released from a gill net, but can't spawn successfully due to an injury or disease as a result being in a gill net, it should be considered the same as if it had died in the gill net. Live capture modified seine nets don’t cause the injuries to released fish that gill nets do.
Would be nice to see the study. Seines that catch a tonnage of fish, wonder how they fair when being hauled aboard? Second, we also know that fewer wild Summer Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Summer Chinook are the remnants of the once great runs of salmon that swam all the way to Canada via the upper Columbia River before Grand Coulee Dam was built without fish ladders. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective commercial fishery for Summer Chinook, where the wild fish are released and only the hatchery bred fish are harvested, like we do for Spring Chinook. The problem is that warmer summer water temperatures make releasing the wild salmon impossible with gill nets. So instead, the commercial fishermen are simply allowed to kill the wild salmon along with the hatchery bred ones. If IP-21 passes commercial fishermen can successfully release these wild Summer Chinook salmon too.
Umm no....these fish likely always spawned in the Hanford Reach, and are not remnants, unless they are remnants of the fish that used to spawn in the Hanford Reach. They are not listed, so the commercial fishery gets X# of them. Why would less die? And who is producing hatchery summer run fish? Third, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Steelhead will die if IP-21 passes. Ten years ago, in 2002, gill nets fishing the lower Columbia captured 21,700 Steelhead during the spring salmon fishery. It is estimated that around 50% of those were ESA listed wild winter steelhead and it is probable that over 4000 of those wild Steelhead died. Those mortalities wouldn't have happened with a live capture seine net fishery. Wild Steelhead are in the Columbia twelve months out of the year and are encountered in every single gill net fishery. All non-Indian sales of Steelhead are prohibited, so they are all 'released' when caught in gill nets, and too often ‘released’ dead. Live capture seine netting would allow them to be released alive instead.
Once again no. This is blatantly false. The real sad thing is most people believe this. NOAA sets an ESA limit, the states & tribes fish to the limit. Doesn't matter what the limit is, people gobble it up. Simple at that, if you want more fish saved two things....have NOAA set a smaller limit or go smoke some of what the originator of the above statement is having. Fourth, we know that fewer wild Sockeye salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Sockeye are the smallest of all Columbia River salmon and also are headed for both the upper Columbia and the Snake River. Sockeye were the first of the Columbia River salmon to be listed as endangered. A year after Sockeye that listing in 1992, only one Sockeye salmon (dubbed Lonesome Larry) made it to its home spawning grounds at Redfish Lake in Idaho. Since that time things have improved somewhat, but wild Sockeye salmon retention in the lower Columbia River is only allowed in years when a relatively large number of these fish are returning. On the years when the run of Sockeye falls, retention is prohibited. 2012 was a good year for Sockeye, and gill nets caught several hundred Sockeye salmon in the Summer Chinook salmon fishery. By switching from gill nets to live capture seining, lower Columbia River commercial fishermen could successfully release wild Sockeye salmon on those bad years when all the Sockeye are needed on the spawning grounds.
Um....so Sockeye went in the toilet. Then are now coming back, (all the while the nets were still in during that time) but how many sockeye were caught during our fishery, and they weren't bycatch, but rather you could target them (I know I took home a few, legally) and from the compact I seem to remember sport fisheries took about 4,000 sockeye Fifth, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Coho salmon will die if IP-21 passes. The lower Columbia River wild Coho salmon was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2005. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective fishery for lower river Coho, where the wild fish are released and only hatchery fish are retained. Yet the lower river commercial fishery with gill nets is a 100% kill fishery, even though all hatchery bred Coho are marked with a clipped adipose fin for easy identification. Because of this clipped fin, recreational anglers have been successfully releasing wild Coho for many years. Going to a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 will allow commercial fishermen to release the wild Coho salmon too, and passing the measure will result in tens of thousands of fewer dead ESA listed wild Coho salmon each year.
Sixth, fewer ESA listed wild Chum salmon will die if IP-21 passes. All lower Columbia River Chum salmon retention is prohibited, and all but one of the lower river Chum populations are at 'high' or 'very high' risk of extinction. Young’s Bay near Astoria is a primary population of the few Chum salmon remaining, yet the current intensive gill net Coho harvest at that location overlaps with their return timing. Chum salmon are easy to identify and easy to differentiate from Coho Salmon. They would be easy to release alive if a live capture seine net fishery was in place instead of the current 100% kill gill net fishery.
Seventh, fewer ESA listed wild lower river fall Tule Chinook salmon will die. Chinook salmon returning in the fall to the lower Columbia River are known as Tule salmon. Although these Chinook are not marked with a fin clip, they are very easy to visually identify. They have a much larger adipose fin than other salmon, they often appear brown instead of silver, and Tule Chinook have a distinctive strong smell. With all these characteristics, wild ESA listed Tule salmon should be easy for commercial fishermen to identify and release. Since Tule Chinook in freshwater are generally considered undesirable for eating as compared to other stocks of Columbia River Chinook salmon returning to the area at the same time, and since Tule Chinook bring low prices from fish wholesalers, commercial fishermen participating in a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 would likely willingly release them to increase their harvest of the more desirable types of fall bright Chinook salmon that are healthy stocks.
The rest of this is so wrong I don't even know how to answer. First, LCR Chinook (tules) are marked. Second the amount of hatchery fish raised for harvest in the coho & chinook fishery almost require commercial fisheries to occur. The HSRG said as much, but maybe that's why the initiative OKs selective gear. I'm for the initiative, but I hate to see posts that are clearly riddled with outright garbage and misleading information.
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#778938 - 08/15/12 12:52 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: rojoband]
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27840
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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Like I said...mostly fantasy.
Sportfishermen need to be factual in our presentation, the facts are already on our side, and the information is all out there...there's no excuse for being uneducated or making up facts.
Fish on...
Todd
_________________________
 Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle
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#778952 - 08/15/12 01:26 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: Todd]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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I don't know who wrote that, Francis, but whoever it is, if he wants to set himself out as some sort of sportfishing spokesman he needs to get himself actually educated on how LCR fisheries work. There's almost nothing in that long post that is factual.
There is a lot of fantasy, however.
Fish on...
Todd That guy doesn't have a clue what he's talking about other than he's trying to save some kind of UHaul boat rental buisness.
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#778959 - 08/15/12 02:00 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: SBD]
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clown flocker
Registered: 10/19/09
Posts: 3731
Loc: Water
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http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2012/08/gill-netting_ban_would_hurt_co.htmlWouldn't worry about money either I'm guessing someone will just run a bigger check across town in Vancouver to keep the ballot measure going. These people have already spent 25 million plus down here whats a few million more.
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#779024 - 08/15/12 04:29 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: SBD]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/30/09
Posts: 2267
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Looking at the headline I thought that there was going to be an explanation, but not one word devoted to the headline. Just like Todd unable to prove his point because he can’t. This is 1935 all over again, when the gillnetters compared the vast amount of fish each fish trap caught VS a gill net. Now of course that would be a true statement until they strung 1500 miles of gillnet up and down the river. Now they are trying to pull the same wool over the Oregon voter by saying a switch of gear will not help fish without conclusive proof. Nice try but no cigar.
_________________________
The world will not be destroyed by those that are evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.- Albert Einstein
No you can’t have my rights---I’m still using them
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#779027 - 08/15/12 04:31 PM
Re: Interesting letter
[Re: eyeFISH]
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Carcass
Registered: 11/30/09
Posts: 2267
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From the other board....
First, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Spring Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Lower Columbia commercial fishermen do release wild Spring Chinook from their gill nets, but while stuck in the gill net these fish are easy pickings for seals and sea lions. Wild salmon taken by the seals and sea lions in gill nets are never counted against the very limited number of ESA listed fish that the gill nets are allowed to incidentally kill while attempting to harvest hatchery bred salmon. Changing to live capture seine netting will prevent this predation from happening.
Injuries from gill nets also cause disease leading to delayed mortality and reduce spawning success in Spring Chinook and other salmon species. Recent scientific study has found that up to 51% of salmon injured in gill nets are not expected not to reproduce successfully. If a wild salmon is released from a gill net, but can't spawn successfully due to an injury or disease as a result being in a gill net, it should be considered the same as if it had died in the gill net. Live capture modified seine nets don’t cause the injuries to released fish that gill nets do.
Second, we also know that fewer wild Summer Chinook salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Summer Chinook are the remnants of the once great runs of salmon that swam all the way to Canada via the upper Columbia River before Grand Coulee Dam was built without fish ladders. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective commercial fishery for Summer Chinook, where the wild fish are released and only the hatchery bred fish are harvested, like we do for Spring Chinook. The problem is that warmer summer water temperatures make releasing the wild salmon impossible with gill nets. So instead, the commercial fishermen are simply allowed to kill the wild salmon along with the hatchery bred ones. If IP-21 passes commercial fishermen can successfully release these wild Summer Chinook salmon too.
Third, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Steelhead will die if IP-21 passes. Ten years ago, in 2002, gill nets fishing the lower Columbia captured 21,700 Steelhead during the spring salmon fishery. It is estimated that around 50% of those were ESA listed wild winter steelhead and it is probable that over 4000 of those wild Steelhead died. Those mortalities wouldn't have happened with a live capture seine net fishery. Wild Steelhead are in the Columbia twelve months out of the year and are encountered in every single gill net fishery. All non-Indian sales of Steelhead are prohibited, so they are all 'released' when caught in gill nets, and too often ‘released’ dead. Live capture seine netting would allow them to be released alive instead.
Fourth, we know that fewer wild Sockeye salmon will die if IP-21 passes. Sockeye are the smallest of all Columbia River salmon and also are headed for both the upper Columbia and the Snake River. Sockeye were the first of the Columbia River salmon to be listed as endangered. A year after Sockeye that listing in 1992, only one Sockeye salmon (dubbed Lonesome Larry) made it to its home spawning grounds at Redfish Lake in Idaho. Since that time things have improved somewhat, but wild Sockeye salmon retention in the lower Columbia River is only allowed in years when a relatively large number of these fish are returning. On the years when the run of Sockeye falls, retention is prohibited. 2012 was a good year for Sockeye, and gill nets caught several hundred Sockeye salmon in the Summer Chinook salmon fishery. By switching from gill nets to live capture seining, lower Columbia River commercial fishermen could successfully release wild Sockeye salmon on those bad years when all the Sockeye are needed on the spawning grounds.
Fifth, we know that fewer ESA listed wild Coho salmon will die if IP-21 passes. The lower Columbia River wild Coho salmon was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2005. Fisheries scientists recommend a selective fishery for lower river Coho, where the wild fish are released and only hatchery fish are retained. Yet the lower river commercial fishery with gill nets is a 100% kill fishery, even though all hatchery bred Coho are marked with a clipped adipose fin for easy identification. Because of this clipped fin, recreational anglers have been successfully releasing wild Coho for many years. Going to a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 will allow commercial fishermen to release the wild Coho salmon too, and passing the measure will result in tens of thousands of fewer dead ESA listed wild Coho salmon each year.
Sixth, fewer ESA listed wild Chum salmon will die if IP-21 passes. All lower Columbia River Chum salmon retention is prohibited, and all but one of the lower river Chum populations are at 'high' or 'very high' risk of extinction. Young’s Bay near Astoria is a primary population of the few Chum salmon remaining, yet the current intensive gill net Coho harvest at that location overlaps with their return timing. Chum salmon are easy to identify and easy to differentiate from Coho Salmon. They would be easy to release alive if a live capture seine net fishery was in place instead of the current 100% kill gill net fishery.
Seventh, fewer ESA listed wild lower river fall Tule Chinook salmon will die. Chinook salmon returning in the fall to the lower Columbia River are known as Tule salmon. Although these Chinook are not marked with a fin clip, they are very easy to visually identify. They have a much larger adipose fin than other salmon, they often appear brown instead of silver, and Tule Chinook have a distinctive strong smell. With all these characteristics, wild ESA listed Tule salmon should be easy for commercial fishermen to identify and release. Since Tule Chinook in freshwater are generally considered undesirable for eating as compared to other stocks of Columbia River Chinook salmon returning to the area at the same time, and since Tule Chinook bring low prices from fish wholesalers, commercial fishermen participating in a live capture seine net fishery as proposed by IP-21 would likely willingly release them to increase their harvest of the more desirable types of fall bright Chinook salmon that are healthy stocks.
>>>>
Oh, and he forgot to mention the benefits for a crashing sturgeon population. To top this off, there is documented proof of early 1990’s gill net test fisheries in SAFE areas that produced up to 11 to 1 non targeted fish to targeted fish and that’s not a misprint. Although most off channel SAFE areas had a 7 to 1 bycatch to targeted fish ratio. Kill nets in the SAFE areas show the ignorance of those promoting gillnets instead of eradicating these antiquated relics. Washington State representatives need to convey and restore some sanity when they come to the table with their Oregon counterparts.
_________________________
The world will not be destroyed by those that are evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything.- Albert Einstein
No you can’t have my rights---I’m still using them
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