imo the outcome of no hatchery supplementation especially on system like Chilliwack is rather predictable, especially in today's day and age. There are too many negative factors for these fish to deal with from global warming to habitat destruction to poaching so on and so on...negative factors are continually getting worse, numbers will continue to dwindle. Long term stock survival and viability may very well depend on responsible hatchery augmentation even whether we fish for them or not.
There are responsible ways and irresponsible ways to go about it. I can't help but look at many prime hatchery specimens that return to the river and think to myself this thing has lived it's life from fry or smolt in river to ocean and back avoiding everything thrown in it's way has overcome all odds, to me, it's proven it's worth as a worthy fish to pass on it's genes. I will not automatically subscribe to the idea that because it was given a slight head start being hatched in hatchery that it is automatically going to harm or detriment the gene pool. Imo these fish need and will more so need the head start as time and conditions from river to ocean make it harder for the species to thrive.
Folks will point to other jurisdictions and say, look, this is why hatcheries don't work but I think most will agree not every hatchery programs were done thoughtfully or responsibly and those irresponsible hatchery programs shouldn't decide the fate of successful or potential successful programs everywhere else. Everything said I am not a professional or a scientist just an avid, concerned outdoorsman who's thoughts and perspectives based on my own observations.
I think it would be a shame if we would just shut a hatchery program down due to concern it would have on detrimental impact on wild stock while other more potential serious factors continue and worsen as time goes on ultimately sealing the species fate, hatcheries or not...
Good points wizard. One positive thing about curtailing the hatchery program on the C-V would mean up to 80 wild (or at least those with an adipose fin) would have the opportunity to spawn, and quite probably, fewer anglers would participate in the fishery resulting in perhaps a better angling experience for some, and less stress on wild fish caught and released.
I personally would prefer no hatchery augmentation on this system, but I’m not naïve, and realize hatchery fish are here to stay on the C-V. I do however care about the wellbeing of these fish so I suggest perhaps the hatchery program be modified to cut brood stock numbers in half, that is 20 pairs annually. These 40 fish should be matrix spawned to maximize genetic diversity
http://www.sehab.org/pdf/GenManGuide.pdf,
reared on optimum water temperatures and fed appropriately to achieve whatever is considered nowadays the optimum size for optimum survival. And, perhaps most importantly, these “best science available” fish be released sea worthy tolerant, meaning pre smolt and just past parr. In other words when released they bugger off and do not residualize. It currently costs DFO app 120K annually to rear the progeny of about 80 fish (interesting, as steelhead are managed by the Province but they pay nothing towards rearing these fish) so whatever savings are realized from caring for less I suggest be put into maintenance of off channel habitat areas, or the science to achieve proper juvenile release times.