... As expected, Noggin and many others (not just antis) took this news story as gospel and did not look a little more into it to see what the real story was. Matt, I am surprised that you took the media story at face value without looking more into it.
Actually I have been aware of both the developing situation and the background behind it for better than a year now. I would strongly suggest you (and your compatriot) do a little digging of your own before suggesting I (and other locals) are simply and blindly jumping on a media bandwagon.
These are
NOT "
farmed fish" in any sense beyond being reared for 2 years in the facility they are being reared in. The broodstock for these fish was
EXACTLY the same as those employed by Robertson Creek Hatchery - the Federal facility on the same system. They are
NOT the progeny of some type of stock mutated as suggested for market performance. In fact they carry the exact same genetic make-up as those released annually by Robertson Creek.
As for nibbles comments regarding intermingling with "
wild" fish and obvious disregard for the potential of this experiment to positively effect Alberni Chinook production, here are a couple points to consider:
The Stamp system has been the focus of enhancement for chinook for decades now, and as of the past 10 or so years, has been directly managed towards an escapement barely sufficient to meet hatchery requirements. DFO itself has publicly employed the excuse for doing so that "
there is no significant wild component contributing to recruitment" on a repetitive basis. Genetic studies of the stock in question well suggest that every individual chinook in the system now indicate influence from the hatchery (drift). Under these circumstances, I have to wonder just WHAT "
wild brethren" he might be referring to?
The current practice of releasing first year smolts at ~ 3 months (Robertson Creek) has developed into something approaching a futile effort. Survival rates have dropped to 0.5% and below for subsequent years now, forcing the hatchery to produce ever greater volumes of clones simply to try and get the number of returnees up to something near requirement levels.
Should the 2 year freshwater experiment result in substantially increased survival, and subsequent return rates (as it has proven to in several well documented experiments south of the line), it could well provide the template for addressing those ever decreasing survival rates from our hatchery production coast-wide. And that of course has some pretty damn good potential for positively influencing the floundering chinook populations in the Alberni system and elsewhere.
As suggested, perhaps it would be a rather good idea for all of us to look a little more into the background of such situations before firing off "
armchair biologist" comments from afar...
More on the issue from last night's news:
http://www.cheknews.ca/?bckey=AQ~~%2CAAAA4mHNTzE~%2CejlzBnGUUKY1gXVPwEwEepl35Y795rND&bclid=975107450001&bctid=2492167722001Cheers,
Nog