Despite proclamations, exporting nearly 2 trillion eggs to Japan and grinding the herring into fish farm food rather than letting them grow into healthy wild herring, is not a sustainable fishery.
Photo Credit: Alan Fletcher
Sea Shepherd crew have been on the ground and in boats documenting this
year’s Roe Herring Fishery in the Strait of Georgia. Yesterday’s washing up
of a sea lion shot in the head on Hornby Island, leaves no doubt as to the
abuse of pinnipeds our crew has been observing on the water. With juvenile
fish washing ashore dead (likely victims of test seines) as well as torn
gillnets on the beach, our small team was left pondering the parade-like
gauntlet of over 200 commercial fishing vessels stringing the entire 6 miles
of spawn on the Denman Island Coastline.
Despite DFO’s Brenda Spence’s proclamations, exporting nearly 2 trillion
eggs to Japan and grinding the herring into fish farm food rather than
letting them grow into healthy wild herring, is not a sustainable fishery.
But as DFO is not present during the gillnet component of the fishery and
have no fisheries inspectors on the ground to observe, perhaps it does look
sustainable, from behind a desk in Nanaimo.
The seine fleet has failed to meet its quotas several years in a row, Sea
Shepherd has witnessed test seines pursing juvenile fish, with many floating
on the surface belly up once the seine is released.
After over 12,000 years of First Nations fishing herring sustainably,
commercial Harvests reached over 200,000 tons in the 1950’s, dwindling to
50,000 tons in the 1970’s. This year’s 27,500 ton quota looks paltry in
comparison to the era when one could rake for Herring at Ford Cove from the
dock. My Grandfather’s herring rake hangs on the mantlepiece at home and is
a good reminder that all is not well on this coast. DFO’s “Healthy levels”
mantra is just a PR fabrication.
With the Seine fleet closing at 7178 tons, and the gill net fleet scraping
up the leftovers and having trouble after 4 full days of setting nets to
reach a quota of 11,300 tons, how can DFO be so certain that this fishery is
taking only 20% of the biomass in the Strait of Georgia, where are all the
fish? Have they vanished like the DFO inspectors did last Friday? This
fishery used to open and close in hours not days.
Yesterday a sea lion with a gunshot wound to the head washed up on Hornby
Island during the roe herring fishery.
Dead Sea Lion - photo credit: Alan Fletcher
Fishermen including pseudo-organizations made up of active commercial
fishermen, are calling for a cull of sea lions to restore their fishery.
These are the same fishermen calling for the sea lions to “go back to
California”, what might be lost on them is that these sea lions have been
plying the waters of the West Coast longer than people have lived on this
continent, and the current swarm of sea lions during the herring spawn is
only a barometer that indicates the ecosystem is out of balance,
specifically, it has been over-exploited and overfished for too long, with
no respite for stocks to recover.
For the Sea lions, the Strait of Georgia Herring Spawn is one of the last
places they can feed. They come from far and wide to find food, who can
blame them when the other herring runs are all gone? Point Grey in Vancouver
was once a major spawning ground, along with many former herring spawns it
has been rubbed off the list, as DFO revises and adjusts the baselines in
keeping with its sustainable management plans.
Shooting pinnipeds will not bring back the salmon, nor the herring. Leaving
the spawning herring alone, as well as the marine wildlife that congregates
each year during this critical ecological event, will.
At times the best way to manage a problem is to do nothing, and in this case
for DFO, rather than continue a failed decades old industry driven
management scheme, doing nothing would mean placing a total moratorium on
the Strait of Georgia Commercial Roe Herring Fishery. By protecting spawning
grounds to ensure healthy herring populations can thrive, DFO would be
lifting the death sentence on iconic and endangered Chinook salmon and
calving orcas and improving its track record of overseeing collapsing
fisheries.
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