My letter sent to Ahley.
Ashley Dobko,
Ashley your email was made available through an online discussion about the southern resident killer whales and the actions DFO plans to implement this spring. As someone who has been on the water very frequently with these very whales since the late 60's in want to share my thoughts. Firstly DFO holds the lions share of responsibility for the SRKW populations decline and that will come out loud and clear if serious steps aren't taken soon. From allowing the capture from this population for aquariums without proper science being done to support the numbers taken, over fishing of mixed salmon stocks by the commercial fleet of the past, inaccurate accountability by river fishing by some lower Fraser FN bands (lets call it poaching, that is what it is called for the rest of us) lack of financial support of effective enforcement, lack of financial support of SEP and allowing wild salmon populations to be put at risk by foreign fish farm operations. Federal and provincial governments are also responsible for pollution levels that now compromise the reproductive health of these whales, also poor logging and mining practices that destroyed salmon runs...etc etc.
Now the minister is seeking to do something as the whales are a hot topic of the day. Once again its a too little too late. I fear that many wild pacific salmon runs will follow these southern resident whales into probable extinction. Of the three main problems that have been identified facing these animals the most critical is a stable food supply. The US government seems to get it and has recently announced that they will be producing 10 to 20 million new Chinook salmon through hatchery production to provide them with this food supply. Canada (DFO) continues to do nothing. Wild salmon policy or not we haven't even implemented any kind (effective of not) of recovery plan for the Fraser River. The plentiful Chinook runs from the Fraser River had been the stable food supply that attracted these whales to our local waters in late spring every year. The Fraser Chinook runs have dropped to levels so low in recent years that the SRKW now only send a few individual pod members into Juan De Fuca Strait and the Salish Sea on scouting trips. These scouting trips have been quick overnight in and out again fishing expeditions. These scouts find very few fish, leave and don't bring the rest of the pod members back inside to fish. They are now spending most of their fishing efforts outside of their traditional summer fishing waters and targeting more plentiful US bound Chinook stocks. They aren't out there because the waters are quieter due to a lack of boat traffic. As a sport fisherman I know what the whales know. Fishing for everyone and everything now sucks inside Canadian waters in the approaches to the Fraser River! If not for the US hatchery efforts there wouldn't be enough Chinook salmon to warrant the cost of owning a boat and paying for the fuel to go fishing and there likely would be fewer SRKW alive today.
I'm asking you to please see through the BS and do what is required now. Recommend to the minister that DFO quickly supports and ramps up SEP for Chinook salmon that will positively impact the numbers within the traditional foraging waters of the SRKW. This can be done while still minimizing the impact to existing wild salmon populations. An example of this is the Sooke River Chinook Salmon project that the South Vancouver Island Anglers Coalition has already undertaken. (
www.anglerscoalition.com) This group has a production goal of 2 million Chinook to be released from their sea pen in 2020 and each year after. These fish are intended to become a part of that stable supply of food for the SRKW as they forage inside Juan De Fuca Strait. Wild salmon populations are very important as well and there has to be timely, serious and effective action taken to restore their numbers. DFO has known about the plight of certain Fraser River Chinook stream types for more than a decade and yet no effective action has taken place to date.
What won't work. Just as severely restricting recreational fisheries to bring back 4-2 and 5-2 stream type Chinook salmon has been a total failure doing the same to make more Chinook available to the SRKW will be just as ineffective. I'm reminded of the definition of insanity...doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. The numbers of Chinook that would be made available to the SRKW by further restricting (closing) south Vancouver recreational fisheries would only feed them for 2 weeks. This assuming they caught all of them which is impossible. As a recreational fisherman I want this problem resolved to the benefit of all that depend on healthy salmon returns and this includes the SRKW. I have grown up around these animals and have always admired them and respected them. Just so you know I have no problem with following the proposed bubble zone protocol being discussed. Turning off my sounder, pulling my gear and slowly moving away from them to allow them to forage more effectively is not a big deal. Will it make a difference? No! These whales have shown me time and time again in the last 50 years of fishing with them that they go where the fish are and regardless of boats. They will take fish off our lines and I have witnessed this many times. I'm still waiting for it to happen to me so it can be removed from my bucket list. If you want to see for yourself how killer whales are not bothered by boats and boat noise check out this video shot from a boat moving at speed.
I want these whales to do well and recover. Please support an effort to produce more enhanced fish in the short term and to implement effective policies to restore wild populations.
Rollie Rose/president
Sooke Salmon Charters Ltd
250-213-3055
sscl@shaw.ca
www.fishingbc1.com