I don't know where you buy your fish but most certainly sockeye are 95% net caught throughout the Pacific and are available fresh, frozen or canned year round. The same is true of the other 4 species to some extent. I heard a local commercial fisherman interviewed - part of a family owned business who said they had done well for sockeye up north and in Barclay Sound plus for chinook near Bela Coola and that had offset the lack of a chance to fish the Fraser. A lot of people including me won't or avoid as much as possible farmed salmon.
Sockeye returns in 2010 and 2014 indicated that far from decline the Fraser system is quite able to produce lots of fish, more than enough for a robust harvest by all sectors. I've lived here for 60 years and it was always like this. Periods of low to mediocre returns and then sudden abundance.Why some runs fail and others do very well is a complex of many factors. Why sport fisherman invariably focus on just 2 or 3 - 2 of which are always rival user groups, is something you and others have to think about.
We are obviusly far apart on this but anyway,
I was talking about FRASER sockeye not about ocean caught.
Also I don't buy any fish from anywhere, my family eats what I catch and we do well so far. I don't trust the handling practises of most grosers.
Same question stays - how do you justify compromising a stock if it's only to put a product for a few weeks every few years which is the case of Fraser sockeye. And if it's like you were saying that commercial boats compensated with bigger catches in the chuck, why not make it the status quo? It wouldn't even be so significant impact on local economy because commies would still maintain same livelihood.
Even though I realise it's almost impossible to happen (before we ruin everything completely) but why not just ban commersial netting in Fraser and other rivers alltogether. Thousands of treathened species dumped back dead as by-catch, wild coho, steelhead, native trout even sturgeon all go wasted. How long before we ruin it to the point of no return if we are not long past it already.
Just keep commercial in the chuck and leave our rivers alone. And don't get me started on the depletion of the oceans because it's a whole different conversation.
Also it's not very acurate to point at last years return which was biggest so far in quite a while. What about the 2009 fish, what aboutthe chinook which is in such a dire straits I can't belive they still allow wild fish retention.
We polute and harvest all there is like there's no tomorrow yet pick on eachother for petty little stuff.