Ralph is right, the facts are obvious, future isn't looking bright for our fish, fish are getting screwed in every way possible.
He is indeed right. Regardless of what deniers say, all it takes is to analize the last 50 years or so. Some old timers here were around and fishing in the 60s and 70s, 80s and 90s, and they have witnessed first-hand the deterioration of the salmon runs, and with it, of our fisheries.
Heck, even I, who only began fishing salmon in the early 2000s, have seen a tremendous decline in the number of fish returning to spawn and the disappearance (justifiably so) of many sport fishing opportunities.
I remember days on the Squamish, Cheakamus, Vedder, Harrison, where my arms literally hurt from fighting dozens of salmon a day. Not even 20 years ago, I could get into double digits red springs on the Vedder on opening day. Limiting out was a norm, if you wanted to. Today, our salmon fisheres are but a thin shadow of their former selves.
I certainly believe that there is a correlation between climate change and receding glaciers, as well as a cause-effect relationship between climate change and the crash of our salmon stock. Add to that ocean survival challenges, DFO's incompetence, overfishing, and a myriad other factors, and the picture certainly looks grim.
When years ago DaveB said to me that he wouldn't fish for salmon and steelhead anymore because he didn't want to continue being part of the problem, I had a bit of a hard time to understand where he was coming from. For someone who hadn't experienced the golden age of salmon and steelhead fishing of the 60s and 70s, things still looked pretty darn good to me at the time. Today, some 10-15 years later, I feel the same way Dave does.
I'm a catch and kill angler, and if a fishery can't sustain it, I'd rather refrain from partaking.
Thankfully, the Stillwater Fishery Society of BC has done a fantastic job planting triploids in interior lakes, so fly-fishing for trout continues to be excellent and I get to scratch the fishing itch and get some tasty table fare.
I hope there is truth to what Superbobby says about the problem being temporary and things get better in a century or so. But from where I stand, salmon are suffering big time and we have a lot to worry about.