An article that
appeared in the UK newspaper “The Independent”
US west coast braced for ban on salmon fishing as stocks
collapse
By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles
Friday, 14 March 2008
America's west
coast looks set to lose almost all of its wild salmon harvest this year,
depriving fish retailers and restaurants around the world of one of their key
sources of high-quality fish, and raising troubling questions about the
viability of commercial fishing in an age of climate change and increased
competition over water use.
United States
government regulators have already closed down the early fishing season along
swathes of the west coast and are expected to issue a season-long ban in
California and Oregon, in response to an unprecedented collapse in the region's
salmon population.
The unexpected shutdown will have a
devastating effect on the 1,000 or so commercial salmon fishermen who ply their
trade between California's Central Coast and the Oregon-Washington state line.
It will kill the recreational salmon fishing industry, which attracts millions
of anglers each year and generates about $4bn (£2bn) in benefits to the coastal
economy.
And it will drastically change the
menu at restaurants and private houses on the west coast and far beyond. Wild
salmon had, over the past 30 years, slowly changed from a delicacy to a
relatively common and affordable menu item. This year, though, anyone wanting
to eat wild, as opposed to farmed, west coast salmon is going to have to rely
on the solid, but small, harvest of king or chinook salmon from Alaska and
Washington state – and pay through the nose for it.
"Brutally expensive," was
how one key wholesaler, Paul Johnson, of the Monterey Fish Market in San
Francisco, envisaged his wild salmon offerings over the next several months.
"Oh man, I'm telling you the king salmon is the icon in the [San
Francisco] Bay Area," Mr Johnson told The San Francisco Chronicle.
"This is going to be devastating to the economy."
The shortage of fish is so bad that
even the commercial fishermen understand there is no point lobbying for a
higher quota – or any quota at all – this year.
The most startling data comes from
the Sacramento river, the source of more than 80 per cent of all the mature
salmon caught off California. Last year, only 90,000 spawning adults returned
to the river, the second lowest figure on record, and the projections for this
year, based on sightings of two-year-old fish during last autumn's spawning
run, are for fewer than 60,000. To put those figures in perspective: the
Sacramento River once saw spawning populations of 800,000. The federal
government sets a minimum of about 120,000, below which it doesn't authorise
any fishing season at all.
The reasons for the drop-off are far
from clear. Some scientists blame the whole thing on changes in ocean currents,
which in turn disturb the pattern of marine nutrients coming to the surface of
the Pacific to supply a food chain that includes the west coast salmon
population. It is certainly true that wind and tide patterns have not been
favourable to this so-called "upwelling" of ocean nutrients, creating
food shortages for many forms of marine life.
Fishermen, though, point to other
less immediate causes too: competition over water resources involving big
farmers, property developers and big-city water resource managers. Water that
comes out of the giant river delta where the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers
meet in California's Central Valley is, they argue, water that salmon cannot
use to spawn and thrive in. They also accuse farmers of damaging fish stocks by
dumping pesticide-infected irrigation water back into streams and rivers.
Salmon runs up and down the west
coast have been affected over the years by everything from the construction of
golf courses – a big water siphon, especially in a dry region – to the mass
harvest of redwoods and other trees that prevent the silting of rivers.
Up to now the variety most affected
has been the coho salmon, a delicate-tasting fish now regarded as an endangered
species. King, or chinook, salmon, which is fished in the ocean, has tended to
remain plentiful.
Many west coast fishermen are likely
to flock to Washington state, which has not suffered the same sort of drop-off.
But it is likely to suffer very similar economic hardship because its fishermen
will be competing for a limited number of fish with a far higher number of
rivals than usual.
Illegal fishing off the California or
Oregon coasts is unlikely, however, because the fishermen recognise the scale
of the crisis. "I think if we do have fishing, we're shooting ourselves in
the foot," said a California fishermen's representative, Duncan
MacLean.