Biologist takes B.C. Liberals to court to save wild salmon 
By Travis Lupick CA Source: straight 5/6/2008
Travis Lupick
.

This morning (May 6), biologist Alexandra Morton went to court to challenge the provincial government’s constitutional right to regulate B.C.’s coastal waters. The issue is fish farms and the deadly effect they are having on wild salmon, she told the Straight.

“The federal government is in charge of the ocean and the provincial government has no business regulating fish farms,” Morton said in a telephone interview.
 

Morton, a member of the Raincoast Research Society and a founding member of Adopt-a-fry.org, said that she had filed a petition in the B.C. Supreme Court that argues that coastal waters are a federal jurisdiction. Therefore, she continued, the provincial government should not be allowed to renew leases on existing fish farms.

Straight.com previously ran an article by Morton in which she discussed the impact fish farms have on wild salmon. In the Broughton Archipelago in 2002, she wrote, 98 percent of young pink salmon inhabiting waters around fish farms were infected with sea lice; 99 percent failed to survive and spawn in nearby rivers the following year.

 
Salmon, Pink Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2301Fish feel 'pain, stress and anxiety': Organisation introduces proposal for their 'humane slaughter'wionews2022-10-10IN
2302A Giant Sunfish In the Azores Weighed In as the Heaviest Bony Fish On Recordtheinertia2022-10-13US
2303Colorado fishermen cited for poaching 460 pounds of salmon in Northern Michiganmlive2022-10-14US
2304A shock of cold water could help control exotic fish in Grand CanyonArizona Public Radio2022-10-14US
2305Switching from sturgeon – a look at global salmon and trout roe consumptionThe Fish Site2022-10-22US
2306Clean Water Act at 50: Environmental Gains, Challenges UnmetAssociated Press2022-10-17US
2307Tiny Tennessee Fish Protected, but US Has Yet to Say WhereAssociated Press2022-10-21US
2308Владимирская макалаОхотники.ру2022-10-21RU
2309Award-winning — plastic-eating robo-fish is finally here to rid our waters of wasteinterestingengineering2022-10-22US
2310Neurotoxic predatoryaked-science2022-10-20US
2311Thousands of salmon found dead as Canada drought dries out rivertheguardian2022-10-05CA
2312Worry, uncertainty felt at Little Campbell Hatchery as lack of rain holds up fish returnssurreynowleader2022-10-17CA
2313Why volunteers scoop thousands of fish out of Alberta irrigation canals each yearmsn2022-10-19CA
2314Otters kill over 40 koi & fishes leaving Bukit Timah residentmothership2022-10-03SG
2315Loons are harassing anglers by stealing fish off their hooksbangor daily news2022-10-03US
2316Rare all-black fish caught in East Tennessee rivercbs422022-10-05US
2317Agreement heralds a new chapter in char farmingThe Fish Site2022-10-19CA
2318Азарт рыбалки рождает союзниковОхотники.ру2022-10-19RU
2319‘River of fish’ making its way in desert is something you mustn’t missodishatv2022-10-09IN
2320Where can the biggest bass be caught in Northeast Tennessee?wjhl2022-09-23US
2321Woman catches super rare ‘gold’ fish in her backyard pondnypost2022-10-07US
2322Snail Darter declared officially recovered, ending decades-long conservation effortwjhl2022-10-04US
2323Florida freediver catches pending world record fish with spearusatoday2022-10-05US
2324600 dinosaur-like fish to be released into the Tennessee Rivernewschannel92022-10-05US
2325Which fish are best to catch when it gets cold in Tennessee?wjhl2022-09-30US

215 216 217 92 of [218 - pages.]