juandesooka
Active Member
From the Saltwater thread, seems there's a commercial fishing opening for herring in Georgia Strait: approximately 100,000 tons.
Every year I wonder about this ... herring are near the bottom of the food chain, feeding the salmon and halibut we all love to chase, and the other animals that chase salmon -- seals, sea lions, orcas. I don't know much about the herring biomass, but 100,000 tons seems like a lot of fish. Is there so much herring out there that this is just a drop in the bucket, or is this kicking the proverbial stool out from under the Georgia Strait ecosystem?
And is this fish really being used mostly for fertilizer and animal feed?
I know a story my dad likes to tell is a buddy of his who was a herring fisherman in the 70s, who achieved the mythical million dollar set ... one net set with $1million worth of herring in it. With all his herring fishing $$, this guy was a high roller, taking his entourage to vegas and drinks were always on him.
On a different but related note, I have also heard David Suzuki's lament that, as a kid, he used to catch halibut outside English Bay ... but they aren't there any more. And it's pretty clear the Georgia Strait salmon fishery is a shadow of what it once was.
Are these connected? Or is this just being alarmist? ("nothing to see here, move along")
Anyone have an informed opinion on this?
Every year I wonder about this ... herring are near the bottom of the food chain, feeding the salmon and halibut we all love to chase, and the other animals that chase salmon -- seals, sea lions, orcas. I don't know much about the herring biomass, but 100,000 tons seems like a lot of fish. Is there so much herring out there that this is just a drop in the bucket, or is this kicking the proverbial stool out from under the Georgia Strait ecosystem?
And is this fish really being used mostly for fertilizer and animal feed?
I know a story my dad likes to tell is a buddy of his who was a herring fisherman in the 70s, who achieved the mythical million dollar set ... one net set with $1million worth of herring in it. With all his herring fishing $$, this guy was a high roller, taking his entourage to vegas and drinks were always on him.
On a different but related note, I have also heard David Suzuki's lament that, as a kid, he used to catch halibut outside English Bay ... but they aren't there any more. And it's pretty clear the Georgia Strait salmon fishery is a shadow of what it once was.
Are these connected? Or is this just being alarmist? ("nothing to see here, move along")
Anyone have an informed opinion on this?