OldBlackDog
Well-Known Member
FOPO – One Last Comment
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A final word on that Select Standing Committee on Fisheries (FOPO) meeting of June 5. (The message I sent them immediately prior to their meeting received an auto response acknowledging receipt from 2 of the 11. Time will tell if any of the 11 ever come back with anything more.)
Poul Bech, one of the participants who spoke on behalf of Thompson steelhead as a representative of the Steelhead Society of BC sent me an audio copy of the proceedings. For those of you who are masochistic enough to give a listen, here is the link:
http://parlvu.parl.gc.ca/XRender/en...ge=English&Stream=Video&useragent=Mozilla/5.0
My thanks to Poul for his excellent presentation and also to Dr. Eric Taylor, past chair of Canada’s Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC), the group that led the scientific review resulting in a recommendation to federal Minister of the Environment, McKenna, for an emergency listing of the Thompson and Chilcotin steelhead as endangered under Canada’s Species At Risk Act (SARA). Both of these gentlemen emphasized the point that the only way there will ever be meaningful change to the status quo is to force it by listing those fish, thus enacting the provisions of the SARA. They are so right!
In contrast to Dr. Taylor and Mr. Bech’s remarks, try listening to those from DFO’s Pacific Region Director General and the follow up questions and her replies. Process, process, process. We’re collaborating with the province, we’re going to do things under our Integrated Fisheries Management Plan, we’re going to fish selectively with our gill nets and seines, we’re going to cut back on the First Nations fishing…….. Bless me, how does DFO pass the red face test on such utterances? How many times do we have to remind those fence sitters that is precisely what got us to where we are?
From a technical perspective, it is ridiculous to be debating the fine points of steelhead versus resident rainbow trout genetics and uncertainties therein. We’re down to 150 spawners FOPO/DFO. What don’t you get here? If that isn’t a conservation crisis, what is? Do we want to play the genetics card game for sockeye versus kokanee too? And, you want to debate the influence of catch and release angling????? The rec fishery is closed, remember! How about we have a serious discussion about catch and release gill netting or even beach seining as it is now prosecuted along the Fraser?
Not to flog a dead horse but how about that other outlier that I’ve mentioned in several different arenas previously? I’m speaking of Coquihalla summer steelhead. Could one or all of the technical experts please explain how it is that tiny, totally re-configured little river (highway and pipeline construction history) with only a small fraction of the productive habitat of its upstream cousins, Thompson and Chilcotin, displays a relatively stable abundance and as fish as those other two combined over the same time period? Same smolt emigration time and route, same suite of hungry pinnipeds, same ocean rearing environment, same adult return route……..the only difference is those Coquihalla fish don’t see the same nets the Thompson and Chilcotin fish do because they return before the first egg bearing chum salmon do.
One last point relative to those nasty pinnipeds that have become the conservation scapegoat. Dr. Andrew Trites, the marine mammal expert from UBC has pointed out the seal population so many people believe is singularly responsible for the chinook conservation crisis has been stable for a decade. Then, if pinniped predation on chinook is the primary problem perhaps someone can explain the Cowichan circumstances. Science tells us those fish are long term Gulf residents and therefore much more available to the hungry hoard of seals and sea lions that frequent those waters. But, Cowichan chinook abundance has grown dramatically over the past three years (with the large majority being wild). Claims of success in rebuilding that stock are commonplace. Meanwhile there are so many sea lions hauling out on the log booms in Cowichan Bay there is now a well developed tourism industry focused on the viewing opportunity.
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FOPO – One Last Comment
UncategorizedComments: 0
A final word on that Select Standing Committee on Fisheries (FOPO) meeting of June 5. (The message I sent them immediately prior to their meeting received an auto response acknowledging receipt from 2 of the 11. Time will tell if any of the 11 ever come back with anything more.)
Poul Bech, one of the participants who spoke on behalf of Thompson steelhead as a representative of the Steelhead Society of BC sent me an audio copy of the proceedings. For those of you who are masochistic enough to give a listen, here is the link:
http://parlvu.parl.gc.ca/XRender/en...ge=English&Stream=Video&useragent=Mozilla/5.0
My thanks to Poul for his excellent presentation and also to Dr. Eric Taylor, past chair of Canada’s Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC), the group that led the scientific review resulting in a recommendation to federal Minister of the Environment, McKenna, for an emergency listing of the Thompson and Chilcotin steelhead as endangered under Canada’s Species At Risk Act (SARA). Both of these gentlemen emphasized the point that the only way there will ever be meaningful change to the status quo is to force it by listing those fish, thus enacting the provisions of the SARA. They are so right!
In contrast to Dr. Taylor and Mr. Bech’s remarks, try listening to those from DFO’s Pacific Region Director General and the follow up questions and her replies. Process, process, process. We’re collaborating with the province, we’re going to do things under our Integrated Fisheries Management Plan, we’re going to fish selectively with our gill nets and seines, we’re going to cut back on the First Nations fishing…….. Bless me, how does DFO pass the red face test on such utterances? How many times do we have to remind those fence sitters that is precisely what got us to where we are?
From a technical perspective, it is ridiculous to be debating the fine points of steelhead versus resident rainbow trout genetics and uncertainties therein. We’re down to 150 spawners FOPO/DFO. What don’t you get here? If that isn’t a conservation crisis, what is? Do we want to play the genetics card game for sockeye versus kokanee too? And, you want to debate the influence of catch and release angling????? The rec fishery is closed, remember! How about we have a serious discussion about catch and release gill netting or even beach seining as it is now prosecuted along the Fraser?
Not to flog a dead horse but how about that other outlier that I’ve mentioned in several different arenas previously? I’m speaking of Coquihalla summer steelhead. Could one or all of the technical experts please explain how it is that tiny, totally re-configured little river (highway and pipeline construction history) with only a small fraction of the productive habitat of its upstream cousins, Thompson and Chilcotin, displays a relatively stable abundance and as fish as those other two combined over the same time period? Same smolt emigration time and route, same suite of hungry pinnipeds, same ocean rearing environment, same adult return route……..the only difference is those Coquihalla fish don’t see the same nets the Thompson and Chilcotin fish do because they return before the first egg bearing chum salmon do.
One last point relative to those nasty pinnipeds that have become the conservation scapegoat. Dr. Andrew Trites, the marine mammal expert from UBC has pointed out the seal population so many people believe is singularly responsible for the chinook conservation crisis has been stable for a decade. Then, if pinniped predation on chinook is the primary problem perhaps someone can explain the Cowichan circumstances. Science tells us those fish are long term Gulf residents and therefore much more available to the hungry hoard of seals and sea lions that frequent those waters. But, Cowichan chinook abundance has grown dramatically over the past three years (with the large majority being wild). Claims of success in rebuilding that stock are commonplace. Meanwhile there are so many sea lions hauling out on the log booms in Cowichan Bay there is now a well developed tourism industry focused on the viewing opportunity.
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FOPO – One Last Comment
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