From the guy who no like hatchery fish, but do like fish farm. Really buddy this is not making any sense.
Keep thinking about it troutbreath
I’m an advocate for wild salmonids but understand the necessity of hatcheries. Hell, I received a nice award for my contribution to the enhancement (read hatchery component) of Cultus Lake sockeye.
I catch, kill and eat hatchery steelhead, coho and chinooks in the C-V. But not all of us have the opportunity we readers do – that is, to catch our own.
Millions of people like to eat salmon and sadly, there just is not enough wild fish to supply the world wide demand, although China, North Korea, Japan and Alaska are trying with their product called “wild caught ranched salmon”. Do a Google search and decide for yourself how wild these fish are. I think BC and its economy deserves a piece of this salmon pie.
I believe BC salmon farms, properly managed and regulated, can relieve the commercial, environmental, and climate change challenged pressure on wild stocks and perhaps be their saviour; I also firmly believe salmon farms and wild fish can coexist together.
For so many reasons BC is in an enviable position to become a worldwide leader in salmon aquaculture, research especially; what a shame it would be to lose this opportunity because a few people don't or simply won't understand this.
Don't come back with crap about other countries (Chile, Norway) losing their wild stocks to salmon aquaculture; show me some defensible data that BC has lost significant numbers of wild fish to salmon farms.