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I just fed myself a barbequed steak and Caesar salad...IMO way better tasting for my palate than some hatchery fish.If you don’t want to feed yourself, feed the river.
The eason to kill hatch fish is to assure that they don't unsuccesfully breed with a wild fish. Since the wildx hatch offspring die, you are essentially killing the wild mating partner.
Hatchery genetics invading hte wild gene pool is often a red herring of sorts. The more important issue is not them succesfully passing on thier genes it's them unsuccesfully spawning with a wild fish.
I like how they recommend considering alternative methods of marking fish - like those alternative methods won't have even worse adverse effects on the fish.There has been some research on this...Can't find the one I was thinking of, but this one has some interesting stuff.
Oh, that's been done, well freeze branding has. Unsurprisingly the effects are worse than ad clipping.They should try branding, like with cattle.
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I can't remember , it's either Chinook or Coho, but in CA they only clip 1/4 of the hatchery fish and then extrapolate the data.Not steelhead related, but there are a lot of unclipped hatchery fish being released.
You can keep unclipped fish in some marine areas or only during certain times. It may feel good to release a unclipped fish, but if you fish Puget Sound for coho you’ve undoubtedly released unclipped hatchery fish.
I have nothing against hatchery fish. Without them we’d have a lot less opportunities.
I just personally wish all hatchery fish were clipped regardless of what program they are produced from.
SF
Hatchery genetics invading hte wild gene pool is often a red herring of sorts. The more important issue is not them succesfully passing on thier genes it's them unsuccesfully spawning with a wild fish.
Cattle also get ear tags and notches…They should try branding, like with cattle.
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Thanks for pointing that out. It lead me to the 2 papers (or portions of) above. It seems like the hatchery fish in that basin are really succesful at spawning.Exceptions are granted by use of “often” and “of sorts” language … but it is worth a mention that one-third of naturally produced O.mykiss in Willamette River tribs that have hatchery plants are hybrids
isn't that genetics?Keep hatchery steelhead. To me it's not about genetics but the simple
Deleterious affects of hatchery fish spawning with a wild mate. They will produce
Less offspring that survive it's essentially the same as bonking that wild fish.
Im not in favor of laws but i think everyone should keep all the hatchery steelhead they catch.
It should also not be illegal to kill, tag, then leave your unwanted catch in the woods. It is not axwaste.
I agree with Rob on this.isn't that genetics?
Thanks for pointing that out. It lead me to the 2 papers (or portions of) above. It seems like the hatchery fish in that basin are really succesful at spawning.