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Fears for Scotland’s salmon

SCOTLAND’S SALMON RIVERS ARE WORLD FAMOUS BUT THE NUMBER OF FISH BEING CAUGHT HAS PLUMMETED ... AND NO ONE KNOWS WHY VICKY ALLAN REPORTS

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ABROAD grin stretches across Robert White’s face when I come in from the frost at the Catholes hut, a wooden cabin, perched on a dramatic bend on the river Tay. He had woken up to a clear sky. After weeks of Storm Ciara’s dirt, wind and torrents, of river heights always above 9ft, it happens that today has brought a window of bright clarity – perfect salmon-fishing weather.

In fact, he says, he’s already been down to the water and hooked himself a 16lb-er. “When I got up,” he says. “I looked out the window and thought, ‘We’re in with a shout today.’”

Not long after 9am he got in the boat, and started casting furiously. But the time ticked by and there was nothing. Then he cast out, and recalls, “Suddenly the line just went tight. I thought, ‘Christ, what the hell’s that?’ I could feel there was a bit of weight to it. I thought, this is no kelt [salmon that has already spawned], because a kelt is spent and they come like a dog. This thing meant it.”

The salmon fought so strongly that in the end, he had to call a friend who was further down the river and ask him for a hand. He pulls a photograph up on his phone of silverwhit­e form being held in a net at the river’s edge.

“We didn’t weigh it. I wanted just to release it. We know pretty much by looking at it that it was about 16 lbs.”

This comes as a surprise to me because the story I have come to tell is of the disappeara­nce of salmon from Scottish rivers – yet even before I’ve arrived one has been netted.

However, it becomes rapidly clear that White’s excitement is all the more because salmon catches these days are increasing­ly rare. In fact, he is so frustrated at seeing the population­s drop, that he launched a petition asking that the Scottish Government commit to a full consultati­on on stocking the rivers – an idea that had been rejected in Marine Scotland’s recently published stocking policy.

“If you look at the chart of salmon numbers,” White says, “there’s a distinct line that is going down, but the last few years it has really crashed, to the point where it’s commercial­ly just about unviable. I’ve got four beats that I look after and we’re making a whacking loss.

“The thing I always tell people when they come here is that there was a time when I would have been able to say to you, ‘We’re going to go out and you’re going to get a chance of catching a fish today.’ I can’t say that any more. It’s more of a lottery now.”

The story of the decline of salmon isn’t just a Scottish one. It’s happening in all the countries around the Atlantic where the

fish once swum in vast numbers. Mark Bilsby, of the Atlantic Salmon Trust, a driving force behind a coalition of groups investigat­ing and campaignin­g around the crisis, called the Missing Salmon Alliance, tells me, “In the mid-1980s there were between 8 and 10 million salmon swimming around the Atlantic. That number has dropped to 2-3 million. It really is a dramatic decline and it’s not showing any signs of levelling out. ”

WILD Atlantic salmon is now being discussed with increasing urgency – at a meeting in January in the Scottish parliament, the Government’s lead scientist, John Armstrong, warned that unless we act, it could be extinct within 20 or 30 years – and Bilsby, like many, believes that the problem is part of a much larger environmen­tal crisis. The salmon, he says, is the “canary in the coalmine”.

“These fish,” he says, “are pretty uniquely placed. They tell you about the quality of the rivers they are living in for the first few years of their life, and also what’s happening at sea – and they’re telling us that something’s really wrong with both our rivers and our sea. That’s why salmon are important.”

The Missing Salmon Alliance plans to work its way through what Bilsby calls the “likely suspects” or causes of the collapse, collating and bringing together the best internatio­nal research, as well as doing its own. “It sounds really simple but it’s not been done before, this look at what’s causing the problems and where to focus energy on resolving them.”

One of the questions the trust has already started looking into is where the majority of fish were being lost. It was always assumed that this was mostly at sea, but their research, in the Moray Firth tracking project, revealed that many of the fish were disappeari­ng in freshwater. “We found that large numbers of fish went missing in freshwater. That’s worrying because it’s telling us about the state of our rivers.”

The Scottish Government, meanwhile, has identified 12 pressures impacting on salmon. Among them are exploitati­on, predation, “genetic introgress­ion” (escaped farmed fish interbreed­ing with wild, causing a change in genetic make-up), sea lice transferra­l from farmed fish, water pollution from agricultur­e, changing temperatur­es. Many of these are the result of human impacts. They are a litany of the sort we find in any list of causes of biodiversi­ty loss.

Among the many suspects, Bilsby says, is climate change. “The rivers are getting warmer on average over the course of a year. ” Another is pollution from agricultur­e. “We know that pesticides in very high dosages kill fish. But there’s also much more sub lethal impacts at lower levels. ”

Another significan­t impact on wild salmon population­s is believed to be the salmon farming industry – through a combinatio­n of escaped farm fish breeding with wild and the rise in sea lice infection picked up by wild fish when they pass farms. Director of Scottish Salmon Watch,

Don Staniford, observes, “Peer-reviewed science has reported how lice-infested feedlots are killing off wild fish. Genetic pollution via escapees also precipitat­e an ‘extinction vortex’ in wild salmon.”

Andrew Graham-Stewart, director of Salmon and Trout Conservati­on Scotland, recalls that he started voicing his concerns over the impact of salmon farming on wild salmon population­s over 20 years ago. He says, “successive Scottish government­s have prevaricat­ed and procrastin­ated.” Last week, the Salmon and Trout Conservati­on Trust, along with other NGOs, declared that given Scottish Ministers’ “lamentable failure to regulate salmon farming to protect wild fish”, their next step would be to call for a boycott of Scottish farmed salmon.

Graham-Stewart observes that the curve of decline of salmon population has been far greater in the west coast rivers than those in the east – and that this is where the salmon farms are located. “Numbers have declined drasticall­y in the west,” he says. “In particular most of the smaller West Highland and island rivers have seen their salmon population­s severely depleted, if not wiped out .” The long term solution for salmon farming, he believes, is entirely separating farmed and wild fish by farming in “closed-containmen­t systems, whether tanks in the sea or tanks on the land.”

He learnt to fish, he says, at the age of four and has been salmon fishing for over 50 years. “I can remember tremendous runs of wild salmon and sea trout in the West Highlands and islands in the early 1980s. Then salmon farming took off from the late eighties, and the decline coincided with that.”

The fish farming industry, which contribute­d £620 million to the Scottish economy last year, and supports thousands of jobs, denies being at the root of the problem.

Like many who love the fish, GrahamStew­art waxes lyrical. “Salmon are an incredibly important part of the ecosystem of rivers. These are astonishin­g creatures, travelling thousands of miles, coming back to spawn within a few yards of where they were born. Few creatures can match their natural history.”

He notes that the rivers where he lives, in Sutherland, in the far north of Scotland, are bucking the trend towards rapid decline. “We haven’t seen the same level of collapse that has been seen elsewhere. There are several possibilit­ies. One is that human population­s here are minimal compared to further south. If you look at the northern rivers, from the Findhorn round to Cape Wrath, any towns or villages are all concentrat­ed in the lower reaches if not right on the coast where the river goes into the sea. Once you get inland, there’s just no population, no pollution, very little agricultur­e.”

ON the Tay, however, where Robert White has been ghillie on a series of four beats since 2001, the population­s have been in freefall. On average, he recalls, the catch there used to be around 450 in a good year, and over 300 in a more regular year, but last year, saw them catch only 89 salmon. “To qualify that though,” he says, “there aren’t as many people fishing because there are less salmon, so people aren’t coming.”

Of course, you can still catch a salmon on the Tay, but you need to be in the right place, on the right day, with the right guide, like White, to take you to the perfect spot. That wasn’t how it used to be, he observes, “In the past there would be salmon jumping all over the place. People knew where to go because they saw the fish jumping.”

I’ve seen salmon jump before but I’ve never even tried to catch one. We stand on White’s rowing boat, floating in the calm just upstream of a series of white-frothed torrents, secured by a rope to the river’s edge. White explains why this a good time to fish. “The salmon coming into the river are moving very slowly because they haven’t got much energy because of the cold and they’ll only go in short stages up the river. They’ll climb up into these rapids and they’ll come to a quieter bit of the water for a rest.”

He coaches me on using the spinner and I flick the rod through the air. I cast erraticall­y, sometimes dropping too short, others arching the line out far and wide.

We found that large numbers of fish went missing in freshwater. That’s worrying because it’s telling us about the state of our rivers

 ??  ?? Salmon ghillie Robert White with Vicky Allan on the River Tay by Stanley in Perthshire
Salmon ghillie Robert White with Vicky Allan on the River Tay by Stanley in Perthshire
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 ??  ?? Ghillie Robert White with a 16lb salmon
Ghillie Robert White with a 16lb salmon

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