The Welland Tribune

Escape renews fish-farming debate

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director of the Puget Soundkeepe­r Alliance, which opposes the project.

Ron Warren, who heads the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s fish program, said there’s no evidence the escaped fish pose a threat to native fish population­s, either through disease or crossbreed­ing with Pacific salmon.

Still, he said the state wants to protectnat­ivefishspe­ciesandhav­eurged anglers to catch as many escaped salmon, some up to 10 pounds, as possible.

Washington has the largest marine finfish aquacultur­e industry in the U.S. with farms producing about 17 million pounds of Atlantic salmon each year, according to the state.

While salmon farms have operated for more than 30 years in Washington, they still remain controvers­ial in the Pacific Northwest where wild salmon reigns supreme. Alaska has banned commercial finfish aquacultur­e. Several counties in the state such as Whatcom County have moved to limit commercial finfish aquacultur­e.

Cooke blamed high tides and currents coinciding with Monday’s solar eclipse for the failure over the weekend at its farm off Cypress Island in Skagit County.

“The ongoing tides were a huge challenge,” said Nell Halse, a Cooke spokeswoma­n. She said the company called in experts last month to stabilize the salmon farm during high tides, though no fish escaped then. “We put our best expertise to stabilizin­g this farm and we had no reason to believe that it would have collapsed on Sunday.”

Critics weren’t buying that reasoning, noting that tides weren’t higher than unusual over the weekend.

“They’re trying to imply that this was some unnatural natural event. This was absolute negligence on their part,” said Kurt Beardslee, executive director of the Wild Conservanc­y. Fish farms “are polluting every single day a massive amount of phosphorou­s and nitrogen into the waters that we’re trying to clean up.”

Halse said Cooke had applied for permits to upgrade the net pens at the Cypress Island to its level of standards. It also plans to make investment­s in operations across the state. The Lummi Nation has been so concerned about the fish escapes that tribal anglers have been trying to catch the Atlantic salmon before they enter local rivers. The tribe declared a state of emergency Thursday, saying the fish spill needs to be addressed immediatel­y. Tribal officials are worried that farmed salmon will eat native fish or disturb its spawning grounds.

Michael Rust, science adviser with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s aquacultur­e office, said farmed salmon tend to be domesticat­ed, raised on feed and not used to catching fish or escaping predators. Farmed salmon are more likely to be prey than predator, he said.

He and others note that science and technology advances have improved fish farming practices in the U.S. over the decades and aquacultur­e operations must meet strict regulation­s.

Jill Rolland, who directs the U.S. Geological Survey’s Western Fisheries Research Center in Seattle, said she’s not concerned that the escaped fish have any pathogens that will spread to wild fish. “We have a very strong regulatory environmen­t to ensure that these fish are under veterinary care,” she said.

 ?? DEAN RUTZ/THE SEATTLE TIMES/VIA AP ?? A man shows three of the farm-raised Atlantic salmon that were caught alongside four healthy Kings this week in Point Williams, Wash.
DEAN RUTZ/THE SEATTLE TIMES/VIA AP A man shows three of the farm-raised Atlantic salmon that were caught alongside four healthy Kings this week in Point Williams, Wash.

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