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Canada media: The sockeye’s woes in BC get a national airing

Wall-to-wall coverage of governmental hearings is usually – in the US for sure – okay for C-SPAN but seldom a menu item for daily TV and print news and popular tweetmeisters unless political peccadilloes with a sex angle are the topic. Ditto for Canada one presumes, but this week a body called the Cohen Commission – which the prime minister appointed – is in the media bullseye. It is sitting in Vancouver, BC. That is not so very far from the mighty Fraser River. Its sockeye salmon run has been in dreadful decline lately – with some exceptions (Last year a Seattle Times report by Hal Bernton called one of that year’s runs of these  fish – of striking coloration when spawning – a surprising whopper that confounded the trend). The commission has been at work most of this year, and just resumed its hearings after a recess.

It’s just one river’s population of one species of fish, but it touches on vital issues in Canada: fish farming, aboriginal or First Nation rights, and environmental stewardship generally. The science issues are deep – why is the run so sporadic with a dismal trend? Is it the river itself, a virus picked up at sea, overfishing….? Are farmed fish making the wild ones sick? Activists have made themselves colorful fixtures at the hearings.

One big issue is whether, as one Canadian researcher suggested in a Science paper, a virus is the reason. Somehow or other, anti-aquaculture forces have seized on that possibility despite no strong reason to blame any such virus on the salmon pens that squat in the inland passage threading its way through the archipelago along Canada’s western shore from Puget Sound to Alaska. The scientist told the commision the virus is only hypothetical, so far. But the government put a gag on her anyway until she told the commission her ideas first. A gag! They can do that up there? The Bush administration down here, with notably scant impact other than to make gov’t researchers depressed, angry, or alternately back and forth,  tried that with climate change.

Stories:

Tip of the Hat to Brandon Keim for suggesting a roundup on these stories. He is not covering them but is following the hearings avidly. He also whispers that he has done some enterprising Canada salmon reporting before. Two years ago, all on his own, he set out at the blog site Hive Mind (E Pluribus Hmmm)  to estima-guess the monetary value of one salmon run. Clever way to tackle it – calculate the biomass of the fish coming into the river, convert that into fertilizer and nutrient equivalent, and look up their market values. He got a little hyperbolic to make the point with this thumper of a closing line: “The Pacific northwest grew in part on a $30 trillion line of credit, and we’ve nearly cut it off.”

Grist for the Mill: Cohen Commission website.

- Charlie Petit

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