Scientists Are Running Out of Salmon to Study 
By Brian Owens US Source: hakaimagazine 12/1/2021
Brian Owens
Credit: Mark Conlin/Alamy Stock Photo
For years, Steven Cooke, a biologist at Carleton University in Ottawa, has been traveling to British Columbia to research Pacific salmon migrations. But on the west coast, salmon populations are in dire straits. Several of the populations Cooke studies, including those in the Fraser River, have crashed to the point that even taking a small number of fish for research would be more than they can afford to lose. “We’re at the point with some populations where we have to be hands off,” says Cooke. “We don’t want to study them to extinction.”
 

Through years of precipitous declines, Cooke has found it increasingly difficult to study the fish in their native habitat. Now, he’s been all but forced to shift his team’s focus thousands of kilometers east, to Ontario’s Great Lakes.

More and more frequently, says Cooke, salmon numbers have been so low that his research permits have been canceled by the federal government or shifted to other watersheds at the last minute. A sudden move can be just as difficult as a cancellation, since the research team does not have any experience, contacts with local Indigenous communities, or even hotel reservations in the new location. This is particularly disruptive for his students, who may only have one or two field seasons in which to collect the data needed for their projects.

 
Salmon, Atlantic Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
5201Salmon restoration and new viewing platforms planned for Colquitz Riversaanich news2019-08-07CA
5202First coho of the season spotted in the Colquitz Riversaanich news2019-10-11CA
5203Bright red salmon appear at Saanich’s Colquitz River fish fencesooke news mirror2019-11-12CA
5204Striped bass were once extinct in the St. Lawrence. Now they're backCBC News2019-11-02CA
5205Does your walleye minnow matter?outdoorcanada2019-09-16CA
5206High risk species eradicated from GB: Black bullhead catfish Ameiurus melasnonnativespecies2014-07-02UK
5207Catfish close popular fishing hole near Fort McMurrayCBC News2015-07-02CA
5208Perryville man catches state-record black bullhead catfishNews Tribune2019-08-01US
5209Local anglers, first responders warn about dangers of river fishingCBC News2019-10-30CA
5210Salmon residue still coating environment around sites of N.L. farmed fish deathsThe Canadian Press2019-10-29CA
5211'It's a first': Rare poisonous fish washes up on Vancouver IslandCBC News2019-10-28CA
5212DFO considers release of toxins to control an invasive species in Miramichi LakeCBC News2019-10-28CA
5213Largemouth bass virus confirmed in additional lakes in Michiganclick on detroit2019-01-23CA
5214Angler reels in monster bass at Mill Lake Parkabbynews2019-03-26CA
5215A largemouth bass big enough to be worth considering what the Illinois record ischicago suntimes2019-05-01US
5216Persistence pays with catch of largemouth bass at Lake MeadReview-Journal 2019-09-04US
5217Is the Acadian Redfish Helping Puffins Adapt to Climate Change?Audubon2016-12-09CA
5218Feds urged to maintain redfish quota to allow further recoveryipolitics2018-06-04CA
5219Virus found in carp from Alder Lake in New DundeeWaterloo Region Record 2019-10-25CA
5220Confusion at the fish counter: How to eat fish responsiblysaltwire2019-10-23CA
5221Once considered a pest, Alberta's official fish is now under threatCBC News2019-10-23CA
5222Environmental concerns add new species to U.S. overfished listPatrick Whittle2019-08-02US
5223Russian Fishery CEO bullish with pollock prices set firm, new vessels, plants on wayundercurrent news2019-10-21RU
5224How To Tell If Your Tuna Is Real Or FakeHuffPost US2017-07-25US
5225Yellowfin and longfin tuna in HudsonAPP2015-10-23CA

214 215 216 208 of [217 - pages.]