The bottom line is things will have to change if we want any kind of steelhead fishery on the C-V.
Hey Dave,
Great stuff with your list. I think most if not all are still very valid today. While there are a lot of different considerations at play on this issue, I think it can be distilled down to a fairly simple question of tradeoffs. Are interested parties (this includes recreational anglers, local residents, non-local residents with an interest, local FNs, local businesses, conservationists etc) willing to accept likely loss of a sustainable wild steelhead population on the Chilliwack in order to provide recreational fishermen the opportunity to catch and kill a steelhead? The pressure that is on the wild population is only going in one direction, as as other factors impact the producitivity of the wild fish the impacts being discussed here will become increasingly severe. Fishermen (and society in general) are not good at recognizing the clear tradeoffs that exist, and try to have our cake and eat it too. With salmonids it is apparent to me that that is no longer possible, so we either make a clear decision about what we are doing, or stand down and fix the harm we've done.
THe residualization issue is one I've observed at Chehalis as well when snorkelling in the canyon. There are thousands of clipped steelhead juveniles kilometres up in the canyon. Not good. In wild steelhead, trout are an important adaptive life history strategy but in hatchery systems this is nothing more than a symptom of issues with the hatchery program and an increasing pressure on the wild population.