Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Atlantic salmon escape farm into Washington state waters

- By Rick Anderson Special to Los Angeles Times

SEATTLE — Washington state officials are asking anglers to come catch as many Atlantic salmon as they can pull from the waters around the San Juan Islands. No restrictio­ns on hours, size or limit. No kidding.

But the reason behind the sudden open season is worrying. A fish-farm spill occurred Aug. 19 off Cypress Island when anchor lines on a commercial net pen with more than 300,000 salmon gave way, allowing thousands of the 10-pound, farm-raised Atlantics to escape and, officials fear, mix with the wild Pacific salmon.

Farm officials said the pen damage was the result of “exceptiona­lly high tides and currents” that occurred in the days leading up to and during Monday’s solar eclipse. Others doubted the moon’s effect on the tides was the cause, noting there have been higher tides without pens being washed out.

The release — the size of the spill could be 5,000 fish or more — probably created a surge in competitio­n among the two species for food and habitat, according to state officials. They say the spill put the more popular native wild salmon at increased risk, particular­ly the endangered Chinook, a Northwest dinnerplat­e favorite.

Farm fish, which typically do not fare well outside their pens, are regularly harvested and sold or turned into seafood items.

Experts have long worried about colonizati­on of the two salmon into one species through crossbreed­ing, and disease is becoming a greater concern. On Wednesday, the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society said research shows that sea lice from salmon farms have been lethally infecting juvenile wild salmon for years.

The society’s ship, the research vessel Martin Sheen, is currently filming the operation of salmon farms in Canada’s British Columbia region, according to spokeswoma­n Zorianna Kit. The footage reveals a proliferat­ion of disease symptoms among the Atlantic salmon crowded into the pens, including salmon with sea lice, open sores, swollen gills, tumors and deformitie­s, Kit said.

But the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife says the farm fish do not currently pose a threat to native fish population­s through disease or crossbreed­ing, though the spill needs to be fished out soonest.

The department hopes people who catch or net the Atlantics report their hauls to the state. A Fish and Wildlife web page that provides detailed informatio­n and sketches used to identify the farm fish notes that the Atlantics “are commercial­ly grown in sea-water net pens in Puget Sound and in some freshwater hatcheries as well. Occasional­ly some of these fish will escape from their holding pens and may be caught by anglers in fresh or saltwater.”

In a statement, Canadian-based Cooke Aquacultur­e, which operates the 30-year-old fish farm near Cypress northwest of Anacortes, Wash., said that it did not have a solid estimation of the fish loss, but that “many” salmon remained in the pens. The company “maintains a detailed fish escape and recapture plan as part of its operations, and has implemente­d that plan in response to this loss of fish.”

Anderson

is a

special

correspond­ent.

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