Chilliwack Progress
Stop bottom bouncing to save sockeye: DFO
Sockeye salmon.
DFO PHOTO
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Text By Jennifer Feinberg - Chilliwack Progress
Published: August 14, 2009 8:00 AM
Updated: August 14, 2009 9:41 AM
0 Comments Anglers are being asked to avoid using the fishing method known as bottom bouncing on the Fraser River — or else.
A fishery notice issued from Fisheries and Oceans Canada on Tuesday is aimed at protecting sockeye runs given the dismal numbers this season and higher-than-average water temperatures.
"If sockeye encounters are not reduced to ensure the adequate passage of sockeye, then further actions such as spot closures or a 'no fishing for salmon' restriction may be implemented," reads the notice. "The first principle of selective harvesting is to avoid catching non-targeted stocks. This means that anglers should use methods that do not catch sockeye."
The bottom bouncing technique on the Fraser generally involves casting with a two- or three-ounce weight called a 'bouncing betty' and the use of a longer leader.
Sport fishermen are being asked to employ more "selective" methods, which are specifically defined by Fisheries as: bar fishing, trolling spoons at creek mouths, float fishing, pulling plugs or fly fishing.
Vic Carrao of the Fraser Valley Angling Guides Association said the consequence of the DFO request to avoid bottom bouncing on the Fraser to avoid sockeye could be "devastating" for anglers and guides.
"It's ridiculous. In the past the recreational has always taken the high road on issues such as conservation," he said. "What we've suggested is coming up with a definition for sockeye fishing, which could be 'bottom bouncing with a leader in excess of one metre.
"So when conservation concerns come up, they would simply say, no sockeye fishing. It takes the politics out of it and makes it clear."
He argued that bottom bouncing is a legitimate fishing method used widely across North America.
"If leader length is the issue, let's define it as such. But this is not about conservation one bit. They're trying to say we need every sockeye to get through, but how does that explain the lack of enforcement on illegal netting and drifting that we still see going on from Mission to Hell's Gate?
"So how can they realistically come to the recreational community now and ask us to fish selectively and not bottom bounce?"
The sport fishers are always the first ones taken off the river and the first to be asked to modify the way they fish, Carrao stated.
"And we understand that. But we are also a large contributor to the local economy. Our impact is huge but we're the last to get opportunities."
He thinks that DFO's estimate of sockeye mortality at 10 per cent is way too high, even using the most generous numbers in the calculations.
"We truly believe our impact on the resource is negligible, but we still want to closely work with DFO, and have those discussions to make the right management decisions for the future."
jfeinberg@theprogress.com