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Chilliwack Progress
Fraser sport fishery closure ‘overreaction’
Halt sport fishery to save sockeye: Crey
Sockeye fishery may be a flop – again
Published: August 10, 2009 5:00 PM
Disappointing sockeye returns on the Fraser River are a major concern for recreational anglers and fishing guides in B.C.
But “panicked” calls from First Nations leaders to take sport fishermen off the river and shut down all fisheries is a “clear overreaction,” said Vic Carrao, president of the Fraser Valley Angling Guides Association.
“In a year where the guiding industry has been hard hit by a global recession, the very livelihood of our members is on the line,” he said in a press release.
They’re committed to ensuring “a sustainable fishery” in the Fraser Valley and the group “completely understands and supports” the rationale for keeping the sockeye fishery closed until numbers improve.
However, anglers catch only “a small percentage” of the sockeye when the fishery is open, Carrao said.
He cited 2004 statistics from the Pacific Salmon Commission in 2004, which showed that sport fishers caught 1.4 per cent of the sockeye run, compared to 21.8 per cent for First Nations and 25.7 per cent for the commercial sector.
“While the sport fishers’ impact on resources is minimal, their impact on the economy is significant,” Carrao argued.
About 400,000 licensed anglers spend $400 million on freshwater fishing in B.C. each year employing about 3,500 people, according to a 2007 study by the province.
But Ernie Crey, fisheries advisor to the Sto:lo Tribal Council, said he couldn’t buy the minimal sockeye impacts argument, or the economic one. He wasn’t in any way convinced, especially since the final results of the ongoing sockeye mortality study are not even in yet.
The guiding group is asking “everyone to accept, as an article of faith, that anglers are not injuring and killing sockeye before the facts garnered from the study are in,” said Crey.
But for many Sto:lo leaders, conservation of the sockeye runs should “take precendence over the tourist trade.”
It only makes sense to be extra cautious, Crey said.
“Besides, if the anglers don’t help conserve sockeye now, there won’t be much of a tourist trade based on the sport fishery in the future.
“Are folks in the salmon charter business suggesting we blow away the sockeye runs to meet their short-term goal of having a profitable season? Strange logic.”
Crey said he was highly disappointed to see the sport fishery “still blazing away” on the Lower Fraser River this weekend.
“I saw dozens and dozens of anglers’ cars and trucks along the highway between Hope and Chilliwack,” Crey said. “DFO has closed our fishery to sockeye, including the dry rack fishery. However, DFO continues to allow countless sockeye to be snagged and injured by the sport fishery crowd.”
They’re still demanding prompt action.
“I think it’s well past the time to throw a flag down on the sport fishery. I hope and expect that DFO will take prompt action to curb the sport fishery until we know what is going on with summer sockeye.”
But despite demands to close the recreational chinook fishery on the Fraser for the good of the sockeye, DFO officials are still holding firm at this point.
“We are monitoring the environmental conditions in the river and other factors,” said DFO area director for the Interior, and Fraser panel chair Barry Rosenberger last week. “They are taken into account when we make those decisions.”
Demands to shut down the recreational fishery peaked when river temperatures shot up above 20 degrees Celsius, and were being considered by DFO management officials last week.
The plan was to look at sockeye encounter impacts by chinook fishers.
“They specifically asked us to close the chinook recreational fishery for the protection of sockeye. But on that recreational fishery, the sockeye encounter rates are generally low,” said Rosenberger.
He pointed to last year’s early results from a sockeye mortality study, which indicated that the “instantaneous” mortality rate was just above one per cent.
“We’re looking to move this forward by getting all the data together on sockeye mortality,” Rosenberger added.
Temperatures on the Fraser were forecast to drop to around 18 degrees by mid-week.
jfeinberg@theprogress.com