Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Antlershed on May 15, 2014, 01:07:06 PMI'd rather have some hatchery fish to bonk than no fish at all which is where we will end up if we shut down all the hatcheries. The wild fish nazis need to come back to reality.The sport fishers need to stop being so greedy. Yes the rivers will be shut down. Yes it may be decades before they open. No you will not be able to bonk Steelhead for awhile. The end result will be an increase in true wild strains repopulating the rivers for sport fishing.You have to understand that decades of mismanagement, over consumption, and habitat degradation have got us to this point. It is going to take decades of recovery to reverse the adverse effects. You cannot fix this overnight. Patience will need to be exercised by all parties involved.You are aware of the issues with introducing non-native genetic species into river systems? Hatchery fish (with a few exceptions) are just that. They are non native. Some hatcheries are using wild genetic stock from the river to repopulate which should be the only active hatchery practice used for Salmonids in my eyes.
I'd rather have some hatchery fish to bonk than no fish at all which is where we will end up if we shut down all the hatcheries. The wild fish nazis need to come back to reality.
Can someone explain to me why hatchery steelhead are detrimental to wild? I would think they would take pressure off the native stock.
You should not shut down all Puget Sound rivers at one time to make they native fish rivers. THAT IS BS in my mind.Pick 2 or 3 and lets see how they do and take data metrics as the river comes back. I think many of you have no idea that pen raised salmon are bad for native and hatchery fish. If we are going back to native there should be no salmon pens near the path of the Native river.
Quote from: magnanimous_j on May 15, 2014, 01:57:11 PMCan someone explain to me why hatchery steelhead are detrimental to wild? I would think they would take pressure off the native stock.because they're a convenient boogeyman.the same problems that affect wild fish, affect hatchery fish. while hatchery fish do impact wild fish to some small degree(everything has an impact, after all), they're far from the elephant in the room. however, they are expensive, and it's easier for the general public to swallow hatchery cuts as a solution rather than address the big issues, such as habitat degradation and whatever the hell is going on in the ocean and puget sound.i've already accepted that steelhead fishing is pretty much done on the west side of the state, the closure of the puget sound rivers has already been putting intense pressure on the now fragile populations of the coastal rivers and it's only a matter of time before those get shut down too. the competition for the scraps we have left has sucked most of my enjoyment out of the hobby these days, i don't like like fighting over spots with the black hoody/flat brimmed ball cap crowd and the hordes of seattle guides in places i used to find some solitude.
Quote from: magnanimous_j on May 15, 2014, 01:57:11 PMCan someone explain to me why hatchery steelhead are detrimental to wild? I would think they would take pressure off the native stock.They are probably the easiest of all the factors to target, even if they are a very minor factor. We hear about how they breed bad genes into wild stocks....but also how they are so unfit as to not successfully breed outside of a hatchery box. Which is it? Whatever the argument calls for.They can add or divert pressure to the wild fish. By attracting any fishing, they would inadvertently pressure wild fish that are in the river at the same time. But having hatchery fish also gives the predators something else to eat and allows the wild to slip by (since supposedly hatchery fish aren't smart enough to evade).
Quote from: TheHunt on May 15, 2014, 02:10:29 PMYou should not shut down all Puget Sound rivers at one time to make they native fish rivers. THAT IS BS in my mind.Pick 2 or 3 and lets see how they do and take data metrics as the river comes back. I think many of you have no idea that pen raised salmon are bad for native and hatchery fish. If we are going back to native there should be no salmon pens near the path of the Native river. They need to implement the program they have on the Sol Duc if they want to keep the rivers open. It is working well and is using native stock.There should be no net pens anywhere on the Columbia, period.
Quote from: teal101 on May 15, 2014, 03:12:58 PMQuote from: TheHunt on May 15, 2014, 02:10:29 PMYou should not shut down all Puget Sound rivers at one time to make they native fish rivers. THAT IS BS in my mind.Pick 2 or 3 and lets see how they do and take data metrics as the river comes back. I think many of you have no idea that pen raised salmon are bad for native and hatchery fish. If we are going back to native there should be no salmon pens near the path of the Native river. They need to implement the program they have on the Sol Duc if they want to keep the rivers open. It is working well and is using native stock.There should be no net pens anywhere on the Columbia, period.That program has been shut down to turn the Sol Duc into a gene bank. It is being re-established on the Bogachiel. It did work well.
You should not shut down all Puget Sound rivers at one time to make they native fish rivers. THAT IS BS in my mind.Pick 2 or 3 and lets see how they do and take data metrics as the river comes back.
I think many of you have no idea that pen raised salmon are bad for native and hatchery fish. If we are going back to native there should be no salmon pens near the path of the Native river.
The sport fishers need to stop being so greedy. Yes the rivers will be shut down. Yes it may be decades before they open. No you will not be able to bonk Steelhead for awhile. The end result will be an increase in true wild strains repopulating the rivers for sport fishing.
You have to understand that decades of mismanagement, over consumption, and habitat degradation have got us to this point. It is going to take decades of recovery to reverse the adverse effects. You cannot fix this overnight. Patience will need to be exercised by all parties involved.
You are aware of the issues with introducing non-native genetic species into river systems? Hatchery fish (with a few exceptions) are just that. They are non native. Some hatcheries are using wild genetic stock from the river to repopulate which should be the only active hatchery practice used for Salmonids in my eyes.
Quote from: magnanimous_j on May 15, 2014, 01:57:11 PMCan someone explain to me why hatchery steelhead are detrimental to wild? I would think they would take pressure off the native stock.They've been known to inter-breed But then again not sure how that is really possible since they both arrive in the streams at differant times Good question