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Oregon Senate Bill 473 requires that Oregon consider hatchery-bred
anadromous fish to be the same as wild fish for management purposes. This is simply very bad science, and will lead directly and inevitably to the demise of truly wild populations of native salmon and steelhead in Oregon. Oregonians should consider dropping their state legislators a line letting them know they are opposed to this sort of voodoo science finding its way into Oregon's wild fish management policies. Text of SB 473: http://www.leg.state.or.us/05reg/mea...0473.intro.pdf How to find your legislators: http://www.leg.state.or.us/findlegsltr/ JR |
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JR wrote:
Oregon Senate Bill 473 requires that Oregon consider hatchery-bred anadromous fish to be the same as wild fish for management purposes. This is simply very bad science, and will lead directly and inevitably to the demise of truly wild populations of native salmon and steelhead in Oregon. Oregonians should consider dropping their state legislators a line letting them know they are opposed to this sort of voodoo science finding its way into Oregon's wild fish management policies. Text of SB 473: http://www.leg.state.or.us/05reg/mea...0473.intro.pdf How to find your legislators: http://www.leg.state.or.us/findlegsltr/ JR I'm a bit puzzled by this JR. I read the text a couple times, and I don't read it the way you do. I'm not an expert on this stuff, and I'd appreciate some education if you can point me at it. Please tell me what I've missed. It does say that any hatchery program must use wild fish. It does say that such returning hatchery fish are to be considered viable and allowed to spawn. Your synopsis implies that transplanted hatchery fish are to be counted as wild fish, and this bill would outlaw transplanted hatchery fish. I think this sounds like the best way to run a hatchery program. The only improvement in it for wild fish would be to outlaw the hatcheries entirely. I'm not certain that would be an improvement, but that's my ignorance talking. Why do you call this voodoo science? Thanks for your help Chas remove fly fish to e mail directly |
#3
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On Fri, 25 Mar 2005 00:19:54 -0600, chas
wrote: (snipped) Your synopsis implies that transplanted hatchery fish are to be counted as wild fish, and this bill would outlaw transplanted hatchery fish. I think this sounds like the best way to run a hatchery program. The only improvement in it for wild fish would be to outlaw the hatcheries entirely. I'm not certain that would be an improvement, but that's my ignorance talking. Why do you call this voodoo science? Thanks for your help Chas remove fly fish to e mail directly Because they're bred in a hatchery and raised in a hatchery. They aren't wild fish. In MN the distinction is clear. We can only keep (in certain places), fish with the back fin clipped and scarred over, because they're hatchery fish. The wild ones we have to do C & R on. Now if they can live long enough in the wild to breed and the offspring can grow to catchable size, I'm inclined to accept those offspring as wild fish. The genes that may be able to grow and live in a hatchery may be enough different to dilute the truly wild stock if the wild stock is permitted to be caught in and killed for lunch in any numbers. It's not all quite as strong a difference as between a Pomeranian and a wolf, but one is tame and one is wild. Even if the Pom successfully goes feral (sorry, had to stop to giggle), it's not going to be a wolf unless it breeds in with wolves and it's offspring and their offspring eventually dilute the specific Pom genes and the old wolf comes out of the dog. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
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Cyli wrote:
On Fri, 25 Mar 2005 00:19:54 -0600, chas wrote: (snipped) Your synopsis implies that transplanted hatchery fish are to be counted as wild fish, and this bill would outlaw transplanted hatchery fish. I think this sounds like the best way to run a hatchery program. The only improvement in it for wild fish would be to outlaw the hatcheries entirely. I'm not certain that would be an improvement, but that's my ignorance talking. Why do you call this voodoo science? Thanks for your help Chas remove fly fish to e mail directly Because they're bred in a hatchery and raised in a hatchery. They aren't wild fish. In MN the distinction is clear. We can only keep (in certain places), fish with the back fin clipped and scarred over, because they're hatchery fish. The wild ones we have to do C & R on. Now if they can live long enough in the wild to breed and the offspring can grow to catchable size, I'm inclined to accept those offspring as wild fish. The genes that may be able to grow and live in a hatchery may be enough different to dilute the truly wild stock if the wild stock is permitted to be caught in and killed for lunch in any numbers. It's not all quite as strong a difference as between a Pomeranian and a wolf, but one is tame and one is wild. Even if the Pom successfully goes feral (sorry, had to stop to giggle), it's not going to be a wolf unless it breeds in with wolves and it's offspring and their offspring eventually dilute the specific Pom genes and the old wolf comes out of the dog. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Your argument is wrong. The reason why hatchery fish aren't the same as "wild" is that weaker fish, even with "wild" genes may be able to survive in a hatchery when they would not in the wild. It also means that they might not build up defenses against diseases or be as strong as those having to survive in the wild. This doesn't change their genes, only their physical conditioning. |
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Cal Vanize wrote:
Your argument is wrong. The reason why hatchery fish aren't the same as "wild" is that weaker fish, even with "wild" genes may be able to survive in a hatchery when they would not in the wild. It also means that they might not build up defenses against diseases or be as strong as those having to survive in the wild. This doesn't change their genes, only their physical conditioning. Producing hatchery fish -- even ones bred from wild stock -- doesn't change the genes, but it does change the gene pool. Hatchery conditions and natural wild conditions exert two radically different kinds of selection, obviously. Even if you begin with a genetically pure wild stock, by the time the fish are released from the hatchery you can expect the frequencies of various genes in the population to be very different from the frequencies in a wild population. For example, suppose there's a parasite in the wild that kills 20% of the fry, and that there's a genetically based susceptibility to the parasite. Some fish succumb to it and some are resistant, depending at least partly on their genotypes. If the parasite is carefully kept out of the hatchery this selective pressure will be absent, and the gene pool of the hatchery fish will be different from that of the wild fish. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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![]() "rw" wrote in message nk.net... Producing hatchery fish -- even ones bred from wild stock -- doesn't change the genes... Yes, it does. Every environment has its mutagens. No two are the same. Wolfgang who may have read it in "scientific american"......but doesn't think so. |
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This may seem like a stupid question, but: "How do they intend to
identify one from another?" Aren't the hatchery fish just released, by the thousands, into the streams? Years ago, when I helped out in a salmon enhancement program in BC, I just remember trucking buckets of the fish to the creeks to be released. There was no identification of any sort. But that was long ago, and technology may have enabled ID'ing. Cheers WR |
#9
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BCITORGB wrote:
This may seem like a stupid question, but: "How do they intend to identify one from another?" They clip the adipose fin of hatchery fish. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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