[env-trinity] Federal Government Puts Hatchery And Wild Salmon Under Same Umbrella
Daniel Bacher
danielbacher at hotmail.com
Wed Jun 29 10:43:45 PDT 2005
Bush Administration Puts Hatchery And Wild Salmon Under Same Umbrella
by Dan Bacher
The federal government on June 16 issued its final policy for considering
hatchery salmon in making Endangered Species Act listing determinations,
putting 131 strains of hatchery fish under the same protection as their wild
cousins.
NOAA Fisheries also determined that 15 populations of Pacific salmon and
steelhead would remain protected under the ESA, while it added lower
Colombia river coho salmon to the threatened list. In addition, the agency
changed the central California coho listing from threatened to
endangered status, which better reflects Californias endangered listing
under state law.
The agency also delayed for six months a final decision on 10 listed
steelhead populations and Oregon coho salmon. These steelhead populations
include five populations in California from Southern California to the
Oregon Border, as well as populations of the Columbia, Snake and Upper
Willamette rivers.
The ESA provides for a 6-month extension of a final listing determination
if there is substantial disagreement on the sufficiency or accuracy of the
available data relevant to the determination.
The agency considered more than 300 strains of hatchery fish in making the
determination, spurred by a review of policy mandated by the Hogan federal
court decision of 2001, according to Brian Gorman, NOAA Fisheries spokesman.
The decision, Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans, said the federal governments
exclusion of hatchery salmon in the listing of Oregon coast coho under the
ESA was illegal. The ruling forced NOAA Fisheries to develop a new policy
for listing salmon throughout the Pacific Northwest and California.
The federal government heralded the final decision as a big victory for
salmon recovery efforts in the Pacific Northwest and California. This
policy reinforces our commitment to protect naturally spawning salmon and
their ecosystem, said retired Navy Vice-Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher,
Jr., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA
administrator.
A properly managed hatchery program can provide a great boost to natural
populations of fish. We intend to use this as a key component of our salmon
recovery efforts, which, along with favorable ocean conditions, have
contributed to record returns over the past few years, he said.
Trout Unlimited, a nationwide conservation group, said the feds new
hatchery policy defies science and common sense, although they were
relieved that 16 stocks of salmon previously listed under the ESA would
remain protected. They forecasted that the new policy would lead to more
controversy and lawsuits and ultimately diminish the protection and hinder
the recovery of salmon and steelhead.
They chose the most complicated, nonsensical and non-scientific option that
they could have, said Caitlin Lovell, NOAA Fisheries could have done the
right thing and followed the scientists recommendation to separate wild and
hatchery populations, but they didnt. They had no reason not to do that
what NOAA is doing is very suspicious.
Dr. Jack Williams, senior scientist for Trout Unlimited, concurred. The
conclusion of the vast majority of fisheries sciences finest minds whove
studied this problem is that hatchery fish and wild fish are different
animals and must be managed accordingly, especially under the auspices of
the ESA. Its puzzling that NOAA Fisheries would issue a policy that
contradicts the advice of its own scientists.
The groups cited scientific reports by the Salmon Recovery Panel and the
Independent Scientific Advisory Board that concluded that hatchery fish
should be excluded from ESA listings to properly manage them.
In addition, NOAA Fisheries also ruled against the sentiment of the vast
majority of the public. Over 90 percent of public comments that NOAA
received supported listing only the wild component of individual salmon
stocks.
Glen Spain, Northwest Regional Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermens Associations, said that the agency overall did a fairly solid
job in their decision.
The agency is walking a careful line between extremes, said Spain. In
taking a stock-by-stock analysis, the agency is doing a reasonable job at
looking at the differences as well as the similarities between hatchery and
wild fish. However, Im not sure that the Hogan decision required them to
lump hatchery and wild stocks together.
The NOAA decision occurs in the context of the increasing attacks by the
Bush administration and Congress on the Clean Water Act, Endangered Species
Act and other laws that protect fish and wildlife habitat. The timber
industry, agribusiness and mining industry, united under the banner of the
wise use movement, have been fighting fish habitat protections
relentlessly in court and in Congress.
The Pacific Legal Foundation, an organization that represents property
rights activists, won the Hogan Case that resulted in the recent decision by
NOA Fisheries. Russell Brooks, PLF lawyer, was unhappy with the federal
agencys ruling and plans to file another lawsuit.
"What amazes me most is that after the agency lists hatchery salmon as
threatened with extinction, which is crazy in itself, it then exempts
hatchery salmon from ESA protection," Brooks said in an Associated Press
article by Jeff Barnard on June 17.
The mixing of wild and hatchery fish in the 131 stocks could in the future
create problems for commercial fishermen and recreational anglers pursuing
salmon along the California, Oregon and Washington coast.
Now that the hatchery and wild fish are included in the same evolutionarily
significant unit, the states will have to file hatchery management plans,
creating more bureaucracy, said Lovell. Anglers will still be able to
harvest fish, but sportfishing and commercial fishing regulations will have
to go through more hurdles.
By putting hatchery and wild fish under the same umbrella, the burden of
restoration is put on commercial and recreational fishermen, rather on the
bad timber, agribusiness, mining and development practices that resulted in
the dramatic decline of salmon throughout California and the Northwest. And
fishing and conservation groups fear that the new policy will result in more
habitat destruction by allowing abundant hatchery fish to count the same as
the less common wild fish.
Were pleased that the wild fish that were protected before will have
continued protection in the near term under this policy, concluded Lovell.
But as the same time, its disappointing that NOAA has seemingly squandered
the opportunity to adhere to the science, address wild salmon recovery
head-on and resolve the issues that landed us all in litigation the first
time around. Theres little in this policy to give us hope that we wont end
up there again.
More information about the env-trinity
mailing list