the film
forum
library
tutorial
contact

Scientists: Reform Needed
for Salmon Hatcheries

by Jeff Barnard, Associated Press
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 27, 2009

GRANTS PASS, Ore. -- Salmon produced by hatcheries in the Columbia Basin are no substitute for salmon spawned naturally in rivers, but can still help restore wild runs if significant changes are made, a team of scientists reported Friday to Congress.

The report said fish spawned in the wild have the genetic diversity to weather changes in their environment, but 130 years of substituting hatcheries for habitat has produced fish that are slowing efforts to restore dwindling runs.

"If hatcheries continue to be operated the way they are, the plight of natural populations may become worse rather than better," said Lars Mobrand, a Seattle consultant and former chairman of the review group.

The same narrowing of genetic variation was blamed partly for the crash last year of fall chinook on the Sacramento River in California, which led to a shutdown of sport and commercial ocean fishing off California and most of Oregon.

"We have so narrowed the genetic makeup of these populations that when we see things like changing ocean conditions and perhaps even climate change we don't have the ability for salmon to adapt to those things," said Peter Paquet, a member of the Hatchery Scientific Review Group. "Historically, salmon have been good at this - they have been for 10,000 years of various climate conditions."

The report, prepared at the behest of Congress, said outdated hatchery practices should be changed so that they focus on broadening genetic diversity and reducing the harm to wild runs, rather than pumping out the most young fish possible.

Studies have shown that hatchery fish produce up to 50 percent fewer eggs than wild fish when they spawn in the wild, and that behavioral characteristics that help fish thrive in hatcheries can make them less successful in the wild.

The Hatchery Scientific Review Group spent two years reviewing 358 populations of salmon and steelhead in the Columbia Basin and hatcheries producing 178 strains of fish.

They found most hatcheries are still operating to outdated standards, and some are so poorly maintained they violate environmental laws with their discharges.

Recommendations focused on ways to maintain and expand genetic diversity among fish, such as using wild fish from local waters to spawn young fish, and taking steps to prevent hatchery fish and wild fish from mixing on spawning grounds.

The panel said reforming hatchery practices would increase salmon runs more quickly than habitat restoration, and combined with habitat restoration would trigger stronger improvements than either one by itself.

Basin hatcheries date to 1877. Dozens are now operated by states, tribes, utilities and the federal government - intended to make up for spawning and rearing habitat destroyed by dams, logging, agriculture, and urban development as the Northwest's population has grown.

More than 80 percent of fish returning to the mouth of the Columbia are spawned in hatcheries, and 13 wild runs are protected by the Endangered Species Act.

For many years, no thought was given to preserving the range of genetic variations in fish that makes them succeed in a variety of conditions. The first ones into the hatchery were stripped of their eggs for the next generation. The others were dumped in landfills, or given to food banks.

Columbia Basin treaty tribes greeted the report warily. The recommendations would require changing hatchery production goals and harvest rates set by treaties and court cases.

"It is important that this report be taken as a tool, not a mandate," said Kathryn Brigham of the Umatilla Tribe. "We're not afraid of science. We've used our science to rebuild salmon runs."

Glen Spain, who represents California commercial salmon fishermen, said they welcomed reforms of hatcheries, but more federal funding was needed to bring many of them into the 21st century after years of neglect.

The report was welcomed by the governors of Oregon and Washington, and U.S. Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash.

"Our wild salmon and steelhead runs are in peril and must be protected with a paradigm shift in hatchery practices that promotes conservation," said Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski.

Related Pages:
Biologists Call for Changes to Columbia Salmon Hatcheries by Hal Bernton, The Seattle Times, 3/28/8


Jeff Barnard, Associated Press
Scientists: Reform Needed for Salmon Hatcheries
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 27, 2009

See what you can learn

learn more on topics covered in the film
see the video
read the script
learn the songs
discussion forum
salmon animation