[env-trinity] Article on NMFS
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Thu Apr 6 08:46:22 PDT 2006
Byron
The refusal of NOAA to declare a fishery disaster is just one more
nail in the coffin of the salmon fishery! Just when you think that
the Bush regime can't stoop lower, it does!
Anyway, here's the press release on today's rally.
Dan
P R E S S R E L E A S E
Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA)
and the
Small Boat Commercial Salmon Fishermen’s Association (SBCSFA)
For Immediate Release: April 5, 2006
For more information:
Mike Hudson, President SBCSFA, (510) 528-6575 (h), (510) 407-0046,
Email: mike at sbcsfa.com
Zeke Grader, Executive Director PCFFA (415) 561-5080 x224; Cell:
(415) 606-5140
What:
Commercial FISHERMEN Rally and speak at final PFMC public input
meeting about the 2006 Salmon Season
Fishermen stage rally at Pacific Fisheries Management Council
(PFMC) Meeting, ask Council to adopt emergency regulations that would
provide for a meaningful salmon season while minimizing fishery
impacts on Klamath salmon stocks
Where:
Doubletree Hotel
2001 Point West Way
Sacramento, CA
When:
Thursday, April 6, 12 noon
Sacramento, CA - Despite large over-all numbers of fall chinook
salmon, particularly the very large runs coming back to the
Sacramento River, the Pacific Fisheries Management Council (PFMC),
meeting in Sacramento this week, is considering a total ban on ocean
commercial salmon fishing for 2006 from south to Point Sur to
Oregon’s Cape Falcon, nearly 700 miles of coastline, including what
were once the most important salmon ports outside of Alaska.
Yet many fishermen’s groups say such a draconian step of banning all
fishing is unwarranted, and would cause enormous economic damage
while providing very little conservation benefit.
“We are asking the Council to adopt an emergency rule that would
enable the fleet to go fishing in places were Klamath salmon are very
rare, places where some fishing could legitimately be done without
having any real impact on the survival of Klamath Salmon stocks” said
Zeke Grader, Executive Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA)
Dave Goldenberg of the California Salmon Council stated “The current
management system mandates that 35,000 wild Salmon return to spawn in
the Klamath River every year. However, this is a goal not to prevent
extinction, but to ensure maximum productivity of the stock. The
Klamath fall chinook are not listed as endangered or threatened under
the Endangered Species Act.” Thus there may be some flexibility in
applying this standard.
“The Klamath River has proven times and times again that record
numbers of offspring result from years with low returns of adult
spawners”, said longtime fisherman Sunny Maahs, “In 1992 only 12,000
adult Salmon came back to the river. The offspring of these 12,000
Salmon produced a near-record run of Salmon in 1995.”
Dave Bitts, another longtime salmon fisherman, a member of the
Klamath Fisheries Management Council and PCFFA’s expert on the
Klamath, agrees with Maahs’ testimony and adds, “Through the
emergency rule, we would tap into 10% of the available biomass of
this year’s salmon run with very little Klamath impact. The easy
question to ask is: Is saving an extra 3,000 Klamath salmon worth
putting the whole coast out of business? – The answer is NO.”
Most fisheries experts agree that over-fishing is simply not the
problem in the Klamath. Ocean and in-river salmon harvests have long
been tightly regulated. The problems, they say, are all within the
Klamath River. Years of artificially low flows and the effects of
warm water reservoirs behind several fish-blocking dams have
encouraged fish parasites to spread throughout the middle part of the
river, killing off the juvenile salmon in spring 2003 right after low
flows had already killed off 79,000 adult spawners in fall 2002 in a
massive fish kill. The salmon thus suffered a “double whammy” from
these two back-to-back losses that have greatly reduced this year’s
returning adults – which are primarily the few remaining survivors
from the fish kills of fall 2002 and spring 2004. Neither problem
was caused by fishing.
After the fish kill in fall 2002, the Pacific Fisheries Management
Council (PFMC) itself predicted that, as a result of this lost
reproductive potential, the numbers of returning fish would be way
down during 2005, 2006 and 2007. This prediction is now coming true.
Last year these Klamath declines triggered severe fishing
restrictions closing half the season that cost the California and
Oregon economies over $50 million in economic losses. If the season
is cancelled altogether this year, the additional losses could exceed
$150 million.
“Mother Nature has provided plenty of rain this year to flush
pollutants and parasites out of the river,” said Mike Hudson,
President of the Small Boat Commercial Salmon Fishermen’s
Association. “A federal Judge has recently decided that the Bush
Administration’s plan for Salmon recovery was severely flawed, and
ordered immediate water releases to the Klamath. All this will help
Klamath salmon survive in future years. Furthermore, the federal
agencies are now mandating fish passage at all Klamath dams, which
will make hundreds of miles of lost spawning grounds available to the
salmon once again. We are finally on the right track. For that they
should cut us at least a little slack.”
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