Let us make it simple. It is
necessary to maintain each watershed as a salmon optimizing ecology. That means keeping it clean and maximizing
the number of gravel beds for spawning.
Then we also optimize the bears in order to maintain a rich biome. Once all
is properly optimized we will have massive spawning runs that will need to be
culled and that level can easily be determined once the bear population is
maximized. Recall the bear population is
surely constrained by other factors independent of its salmon feeding.
As we learn more and more of these specific watersheds, we are getting
better at the husbandry. The Salmon
fishery has successfully focused minds on the correct questions and we are now
beginning to see results. The ultimate
outcome will be a sea full of salmon and a maximal fishery. There is still years of work ahead but today
the trend line is in the right direction and the knowledge base is been accumulated.
The lessons learned here need to be applied universally were rivers
have been negligently destroyed more often than not. In most cases, restoration alone takes active
human intervention, let alone any optimization of the productive capacity of
the ecology involved.
Why letting salmon escape could benefit bears and fishers
by Staff Writers
Santa Cruz, CA (SPX) Apr 12, 2012
In four out of the six study systems, allowing more salmon to spawn
will not only help bears and the terrestrial landscape but would also lead to
more salmon in the ocean. More salmon in the ocean means larger harvests, which
in turn benefits fishers.
http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Why_letting_salmon_escape_could_benefit_bears_and_fishers_999.html
New research suggests that
allowing more Pacific salmon to spawn in coastal streams will not only benefit
the natural environment, including grizzly bears, but could also lead to more
salmon in the ocean and thus larger salmon harvests in the long term-a win-win
for ecosystems and humans.
In a new article and
accompanying synopsis published April 10 in the online, open-access journal
PLoS Biology, Taal Levi and co-authors from UC Santa Cruz and Canada
investigate how increasing "escapement"-the number of salmon that
escape fishing nets to enter streams and spawn-can improve the natural
environment.
"Salmon are an essential
resource that propagates through not only marine but also creek and terrestrial
food webs," said lead author Levi, an environmental studies Ph.D.
candidate at UCSC, specializing in conservation biology and wildlife ecology.
Salmon fisheries in the
northwest Pacific are generally well managed, Levi said. Managers determine how
much salmon to allocate to spawning and how much to harvest. Fish are counted
as they enter the coastal streams. However, there is concern that humans are
harvesting too many salmon and leaving too little for the ecosystem.
To assess this, the team focused
on the relationship between grizzly bears and salmon. Taal and his colleagues
first used data to find a relationship between how much salmon were available
to eighteen grizzly bear populations in British Columbia, and what percentage
of their diet was made up of salmon.
"We asked, is it enough for
the ecosystem? What would happen if you increase escapement-the number of fish
being released? We found that in most cases, bears, fishers, and ecosystems
would mutually benefit," Levi said.
The relationship between salmon
and bears is basic, Levi said. "Bears are salmon-consuming machines. Give
them more salmon and they will consume more-and importantly, they will occur at
higher densities. So, letting more salmon spawn and be available to bears helps
not only bears but also the ecosystems they nourish when they distribute the
uneaten remains of salmon."
When salmon are plentiful in
coastal streams, bears won't eat as much of an individual fish, preferring the
nutrient-rich brains and eggs and casting aside the remainder to feed other
animals and fertilize the land. In contrast, when salmon are scarce, bears eat
more of a fish. Less discarded salmon enters the surrounding ecosystem to
enrich downstream life, and a richer stream life means a better environment for
salmon.
In four out of the six study systems,
allowing more salmon to spawn will not only help bears and the terrestrial
landscape but would also lead to more salmon in the ocean. More salmon in the
ocean means larger harvests, which in turn benefits fishers.
However, in two of the systems,
helping bears would hurt fisheries. In these cases, the researchers estimated
the potential financial cost-they looked at two salmon runs on the Fraser
River, B.C., and predicted an economic cost of about $500,000 to $700,000
annually. This cost to the human economy could help support locally threatened
grizzly bear populations, they argue.
While these fisheries are
certified as sustainable by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), the
researchers suggest that the MSC principle that fisheries have minimal ecosystem
impact might not be satisfied if the fishery is contributing to grizzly bear
conservation problems.
The researchers believe the same
analysis can be used to evaluate fisheries around the world and help managers
make more informed decisions to balance economic and ecological outcomes.
Levi T, Darimont CT, MacDuffee M, Mangel M, Paquet P, et al. (2012)
Using Grizzly Bears to Assess Harvest-Ecosystem Tradeoffs in Salmon Fisheries.
PLoS Biol 10(4): e1001303. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001303
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