Free: Contests & Raffles.
I understand the social need for the hatchery....salmon=good, no salmon=bad. Its just that millions of dollars will be spent keeping a non-native and artificial run of fish going (maybe) to support a fishery that is not historically very solvent when it comes to actually providing oppurtunity. Its got a 99.9% chance of becoming just another hole to pour money in. A new hatchery won't change the survival of the sockeye in the river,Lake Washington, or Puget sound/Pacific. WDFW already releases 17 million plus fry per year(at least thats the goal). Being able to rear more fry and conseqently release more fry is a dead end. There is not a linear relationship of input to returns and in fact, there might be the reverse relationship in most cases....There ARE however, three native species of Onchorhynchus in the river already (Fall chinook, coho and steelhead) that are basically on life support. Money would be much better spent on habitat issues in the lower Cedar (which all these fish rely on) than ramrodding sockeye into the Cedar in perpetuity...These native fishes will certainly not benefit from a new sockeye hatchery and especially won't benefit from hatchery supplementation to "recover" their numbers....research in the last decade+ has shown time and time again that hatcheries produce inferior product as compared to wild production and, in fact, lower the fitness of wild production fish. Look at what is happening on the Quillayute system RIGHT NOW...The Snyder Creek "supplementation" steelhead returning right now that were ment to provide oppurtunity for sportsmen contracted IHN in the hatchery as smolts, were released anyway, and now are interbreeding and infecting wild fish as we speak.It is ludicris to continue to expect that hatcheries are the answer to our problems... especially in the light of the historical poor performance of the Cedar sockeye hatchery...especially in light of evidence that suggests hatcheries lower the fitness of wild fish and especially with the potential demise of steelhead on our coast looming as a direct result of hatchery influence and the incompetence of WDFW and tribes at the helm. So no, I'm not in favor of the hatchery.
"A new hatchery won't change the survival of the sockeye in the river,Lake Washington, or Puget sound/Pacific". I'm pretty up to speed on all the latest studies on survival of these fish and up to this point it has been inconclusive what has caused the decline in numbers of Sockeye, most scientist's believe it has been the El Nino current's prohibiting return, as far as anything I've read, blaming any kind of existing hatchery production is grabbing at straws.
Creating more fish on the Cedar isn't going to create more tweaker's, that is a law enforcement issue, they are there 24-7 now.... We should have two different types of "cleanups" on local rivers...
Most WILD fish are hatchery escapees offspring. Hence no clipped fin, there are studies that I have read that suggest that the offspring of the escapees are as strong as wild fish.