Fishing derbies feel sting of new salmon rules 
By Kevin Laird CA Source: sooke news mirror 4/26/2019
Kevin Laird
Fishing derbies award prizes for the biggest fish and raise significant money for conservation. But new rules on sport fishing may put an end to the derby as we know it.

New restrictions from Fisheries and Oceans Canada are aimed at preserving chinook stocks – a favored food of the endangered southern resident killer whales – and local organizers of fishing derbies are bracing themselves.

Last year, the federal Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada delivered a bleak assessment of Fraser River chinook: of 12 subpopulations in the river’s watershed, seven were ranked as endangered, four as threatened, and one as being of special concern.
 

In response, the federal Fisheries Department announced several new rules last month in an effort to protect and restore dwindling salmon stocks, including:

• Closure of the commercial fishery until Aug. 20. The usual start date is in June.

• Overall recreational fishery limited to 10 chinook per person.

• First Nations chinook fishing restricted until July 15.

Several fisheries along the coast are already cancelled or postponed.

The Oak Bay Marine Group has cancelled its annual fishing tournament. The group cites low ticket sales and the government’s recent implementation of no-fishing zones within Juan de Fuca Strait – where the derby is usually held. The Sidney Anglers Association has postponed its annual derby.

The Sooke Saltwater Series is going ahead as planned, said organizer Ron Neitsch. The series offers three derbies in the spring, summer and fall for halibut and salmon.

 
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