Hi guys,
It seems everyone has sockeye in their mind these days, and though I wish I could change things up with a topic other than sockeye, I did find myself wondering if the "problem" with hunting could be true for the sockeye fishery as well.
the hunting "problem" (in quotations because this is a fishing forum, and I don't want to open that can of worms) is as fopllows:
Using the cariboo herd as an example (it translates well to the sockeye... large group of migratory animals). All of the factors that kill off the cariboo herds during their migration (wolves, bears, climate etc) kill off the weakest of the animals, and the strongest are left to procreate after reaching the breeding grounds. Hunting, on the other hand, is often centered around harvesting the biggest, fittest percentage of the populatin, essentially decreasing the top end of the gene pool.
With the sockeye run, I wonder (and am far from sure) if the same thing applies. I know that there are different runs of sockeye (harrison and others), but I am pretty sure that the nets have gone out near the beginning of the sockeye appearance this year.
If the earliest sockeye were caught, with the later fish in any given run allowed to go through, would this be similar? I wonder if the strongest, healthiest fish, make it to the system first, while the less healthy fish take a little longer to reach the spawning grounds. Surely fish arriving to a spawning ground first would have the pick of tthe redds for their eggs, so this would be nature's way of rewarding the fittest and aplying Darwinism to the reproduction cycle.
Does the DFO consider this at all ( i don't know)?
Anyways, this is all hypothetical, but I am really interested in hearing everyone's take on the theory. PLEASE NOTE: This is not meant to be for or against commercial or FN fisheries. It is purely a biological theory that I had and am interested in hearing what everyone thinks.
Do the earliest fish to arrive in their respecitve runs represent the top of the gene pool, and if so, should we try to avoid catching them and allow them to spawn? This would surely be a way to increase future runs, with healthier gene pools, if it is accurate.
Thanks as always,
Andrew.