Free: Contests & Raffles.
I think it was NPR that had a bio on saying there might be too many pinks, apparently at some point they crowd out the other species. He mentioned pinks are something like 70% of the biomass of salmon and they only come back every other year.I would love to hear from an ologist why the Snohomish pinks are not doing well. I think it's one of the few, if not only pink returns that is low the last couple of cycles.
It sounded like they had some data where big pink years are followed by lower chinook returns in some areas. Maybe causal, maybe coincidental. At a high level it does make sense that any ecosystem can only support so many creatures. Some of the chinook runs are so low it probably wouldn't take much at all to knock them down.I'll do my part again this year.
Record run for a fish they don’t manage!
Quote from: Stein on May 02, 2025, 02:56:10 PMIt sounded like they had some data where big pink years are followed by lower chinook returns in some areas. Maybe causal, maybe coincidental. At a high level it does make sense that any ecosystem can only support so many creatures. Some of the chinook runs are so low it probably wouldn't take much at all to knock them down.I'll do my part again this year. Just wait till next year...we are loosing another blackmouth season because of the nooksak..As for pinks... although sometimes fun they are quite annoying..Hopefully they do right thing and add the 4 pink bonus limits..no reason not to for a fish they don't manage.
That 2 fish limit is a joke. Less than 8 million shad return every year to the Columbia. No limits at all yet they return every year in force. I suppose this green state would rather I go out many times in the gas hog to fill the smoker.