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02-16-2015, 01:49 PM
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Admin
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Behind the Orange Curtain in California
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The Next Shiny Fetish Object
The next shiny fetish object in the 'righty' war against the EPA. Food vs. gold.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/nation...y.html?hpid=z1
"Just north of Iliamna Lake in southwestern Alaska is an empty expanse of marsh and shrub that conceals one of the world’s great buried fortunes: A mile-thick layer of virgin ore said to contain at least 6.7 million pounds — or $120 billion worth — of gold.
As fate would have it, a second treasure sits precisely atop the first: the spawning ground for the planet’s biggest runs of sockeye salmon, the lifeline of a fishery that generates $500 million a year." WaPo
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02-16-2015, 02:56 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Derby City U.S.A.
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Leave it there and keep the price high! Serves the Salmon right thou to be on top of OUR gold!
Barney
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02-16-2015, 03:30 PM
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Ready
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Join Date: Oct 2013
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A lot of people make their living off the fish now. No one makes their living off the gold now. I'd say leave things as they are until the fish die off--climate change is sure to get them sooner or later. The gold will still be there.
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02-17-2015, 01:42 AM
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Senior Member
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Yes, a lot of people earn their living harvesting salmon that spawn in this watershed, but more importantly the native culture is rooted in the fish of these waters. No amount of gold can justify disturbing such a rich history and food source. Many salmon runs have been destroyed in Canada and Alaska from gold fever, we don't need to ruin any more.
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"You can't always get what you want" -Rolling Stones
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02-17-2015, 03:29 PM
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Admin
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Join Date: Dec 2011
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Well said Wasillaguy.
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02-18-2015, 11:14 AM
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Senior Member
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Commercial fishing is another problem- somewhere around 70% of the returning salmon are caught in nets at the mouths of the rivers by purse seiners that motor up from Seattle every year. In 2014, commercial fishermen harvested 28.8 million sockeye, 557K chum, 266K coho, 1.3 million pink, and 13K kings. This is in Bristol Bay alone.
Now imagine the days before commercial fishing, when all of those fish would have run into the interior, some hundreds and hundreds of miles inland, where they die and are then eaten by birds, wolverine, fox, coyote, bear, etc. Any that was not consumed by animals served to fertilize the river banks, promoting growth of a dozen types of berries as well as willow (which the moose eat).
How much less wildlife lives in these areas today than when it was annually blessed with all this meat? The rivers and creeks are literally the veins that carry the life blood of the interior. Taking the fish at the mouth is like applying a tourniquet.
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"You can't always get what you want" -Rolling Stones
Last edited by Wasillaguy; 02-18-2015 at 11:18 AM.
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02-18-2015, 11:41 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Sonoma County, CA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wasillaguy
Commercial fishing is another problem- somewhere around 70% of the returning salmon are caught in nets at the mouths of the rivers by purse seiners that motor up from Seattle every year. In 2014, commercial fishermen harvested 28.8 million sockeye, 557K chum, 266K coho, 1.3 million pink, and 13K kings. This is in Bristol Bay alone.
Now imagine the days before commercial fishing, when all of those fish would have run into the interior, some hundreds and hundreds of miles inland, where they die and are then eaten by birds, wolverine, fox, coyote, bear, etc. Any that was not consumed by animals served to fertilize the river banks, promoting growth of a dozen types of berries as well as willow (which the moose eat).
How much less wildlife lives in these areas today than when it was annually blessed with all this meat? The rivers and creeks are literally the veins that carry the life blood of the interior. Taking the fish at the mouth is like applying a tourniquet.
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Actually, large scale commercial fishing has been going on for a round 1,000 years. Long before Columbus, Basque fisherman, among others, traveled all the way to North America after Atlantic cod and other fish. When the continent was finally settled, the fish stocks were truly amazing and stayed that way until the middle of the last century.
The problem isn't commercial fishing per se. Rather, it's largely unregulated commercial fishing with catch limits that are unsustainable and licensing technologies like drift nets that decimate sea life that are the problem.
We need sensible regulation, designed to ensure healthy plentiful stocks in the long term instead of maximizing catches and profits for fleet owners and damn the consequences. We could start by outlawing purse seiners in favor of stern trawlers (no pairs), instituting lower sustainable limits and instituting a rotating no-go system where a given river mouth is off-limits for a season or two or three, then reopened and the next in rotation closed.
The Maryland oyster harvest in the Chesapeake Bay must be done under sail. It's a supremely elegant way to sustain a marine population. Maybe Alaska could require that the marine salmon harvest be accomplished by kayak.
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02-18-2015, 12:01 PM
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Reformed Know-Nothing
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: MoCo, MD
Posts: 25,909
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wasillaguy
Commercial fishing is another problem- somewhere around 70% of the returning salmon are caught in nets at the mouths of the rivers by purse seiners that motor up from Seattle every year. In 2014, commercial fishermen harvested 28.8 million sockeye, 557K chum, 266K coho, 1.3 million pink, and 13K kings. This is in Bristol Bay alone.
Now imagine the days before commercial fishing, when all of those fish would have run into the interior, some hundreds and hundreds of miles inland, where they die and are then eaten by birds, wolverine, fox, coyote, bear, etc. Any that was not consumed by animals served to fertilize the river banks, promoting growth of a dozen types of berries as well as willow (which the moose eat).
How much less wildlife lives in these areas today than when it was annually blessed with all this meat? The rivers and creeks are literally the veins that carry the life blood of the interior. Taking the fish at the mouth is like applying a tourniquet.
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While you make some good points, the Alaskan salmon fishery is considered one of the best managed fisheries in the world.
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As long as the roots are not severed, all will be well in the garden.
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02-18-2015, 12:18 PM
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Jigsawed
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 10,580
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The other question:
Could the gold be mined safely under very strict regime?
Last edited by Dondilion; 02-18-2015 at 12:45 PM.
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02-18-2015, 12:29 PM
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Resident octogenarian
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Maryland
Posts: 20,860
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Boreas
Actually, large scale commercial fishing has been going on for a round 1,000 years. Long before Columbus, Basque fisherman, among others, traveled all the way to North America after Atlantic cod and other fish. When the continent was finally settled, the fish stocks were truly amazing and stayed that way until the middle of the last century.
The problem isn't commercial fishing per se. Rather, it's largely unregulated commercial fishing with catch limits that are unsustainable and licensing technologies like drift nets that decimate sea life that are the problem.
We need sensible regulation, designed to ensure healthy plentiful stocks in the long term instead of maximizing catches and profits for fleet owners and damn the consequences. We could start by outlawing purse seiners in favor of stern trawlers (no pairs), instituting lower sustainable limits and instituting a rotating no-go system where a given river mouth is off-limits for a season or two or three, then reopened and the next in rotation closed.
The Maryland oyster harvest in the Chesapeake Bay must be done under sail. It's a supremely elegant way to sustain a marine population. Maybe Alaska could require that the marine salmon harvest be accomplished by kayak.
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It was when the Europeans started using dragnets on the Grand Banks that the cod fishery started to disappear.
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