Okay, got that and I agree aquaculture is a good source of food supply. I just don't agree it needs to be salmon grown in net-pens in the oceans and on migrations routes of wild salmon. Science that shows it causes minimum risk to wild salmon is what Justice Cohen called for and I support that recommendation. There seems to be a dearth of that science posted in these salmon farming related threads.
Perhaps then, spopadyn, you should be advocating for a more collaborative efforts to grow the more sustainable industry in Canada instead of ignoring the Precautionary Principle, calling down other posters, labelling what they offer as "stale dated", and demanding only science that conclusively proves negative cause-effect relationships.
I also support Justice Cohen recommendation. So where is this data? The info submitted by AA (only up until 2000, which is why I called it stale dated) contradicts what most of the posters are calling for. And, contrary to your belief, I am actually looking at any science that proves the hypothesis.
Look, we can't rationally pick an item out of a scientific document and then decide that if the data doesn't support our hypothesis, we need to ignore the data. That, my friends, is "junk" science. I keep asking the same questions, I just can't seem to get the answers. GLG said he works with coho and they are showing dramatic decreases. Awesome, that is the type of data we need. So what is the data? Where is it? AA is obviously a pretty savvy fact based contributor, although I don't necessarily agree him, I did review the article he sent. I just want to know why the chum and coho returns increased in the presence of FF's. This is the exact opposite of what GLG said and is supported by real data. Help me on this so I can switch teams or maybe some of you can help support your FF'ing industry.
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