Protest seeks shutdown of Atlantic salmon farms in Washington state
Activists
in Washington state plan to launch a protest flotilla on Saturday in the
Pacific Ocean’s Puget Sound over the accidental release of tens of thousands of
farm-raised Atlantic salmon that they say threaten dwindling stocks of wild
fish.
The
afternoon protest, which seeks to shut down farms that raise the non-native
salmon in underwater pens, is expected to draw dozens of boats, kayaks and
canoes on a route along the San Juan Islands where the spill happened.
Last
month, a damaged pen operated by Cooke Aquaculture, a global seafood
corporation based in Canada, accidentally allowed the salmon to escape.
That
raised fears they would compete with wild fish for food, prey on the young, and
expose them to disease. Protesters said native fish like Chinook salmon and
steelhead trout were already struggling before the spill.
“Our
wild salmon are in trouble and we can’t afford to have an industry in our state
that only adds to their problems,” Kurt Beardslee, head of activist group Wild
Fish Conservancy and organizer of the protest, said in a telephone interview.
Cooke,
which is privately owned, said in an email to Reuters that it “apologizes
humbly for this accident,” which is under investigation by state regulators.
The company pledged to review operations of other fish pens it has in
Washington.
Native
American tribes said they were told by Cooke and by state officials to “go
fish,” said Brian Cladoosby, chairman of the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community.
The invitation for anyone to catch as many of the fugitive fish as possible
was, at best, ineffectual, he said.
Swinomish
rights to fish in the Puget Sound are guaranteed by historic treaties and their
livelihoods depend on commercial fisheries.
“Many native salmon
populations in the Pacific Northwest are already endangered or threatened.
Putting this many Atlantic salmon, an invasive species, into the ecosystem
cannot be good for it,” Cladoosby said.
Atlantic
salmon are seen as particularly suitable for farming, due to their quick growth
and disease resistance.
Company
spokesman Chuck Brown said there was no evidence Atlantic salmon posed a threat
to wild Pacific salmon stocks. He added that Cooke had offered to fund a
two-year study examining the impact of the farmed fish.
Cooke
said it quickly took steps to contain the breach and gained emergency permits
from government officials to recapture escapees.
Findings
from a state investigation are expected to be released in November, said Cori
Simmons, spokeswoman for the state Department of Natural Resources.
Source: Reuters
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