Science Inventory

PACIFIC NORTHWEST SALMON: THE MOST LIKELY FUTURE AND SOME ALTERNATIVES

Citation:

LACKEY, R. T. PACIFIC NORTHWEST SALMON: THE MOST LIKELY FUTURE AND SOME ALTERNATIVES. Presented at Seminar presented at Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, October 11, 2006.

Description:

Throughout the Pacific Northwest, all wild salmon runs have declined since 1850 and some have disappeared. A sustainable future for wild salmon remains elusive. Billions of dollars have been spent in a so-far failed attempt to reverse the long-term decline. Each year, hundreds of millions of dollars continue to be spent in various restoration programs. How can nearly everyone be in favor of restoring wild salmon, as opinion surveys indicate, while the long-term prognosis for a sustainable future appears to be so grim? Fisheries biologists and other scientists continue to help craft restoration plans, but technocrats have so far been unable to offer any easy, painless approaches that will actually restore and sustain most runs of wild salmon. In the Pacific Northwest, restoring and sustaining wild salmon runs to anything resembling historical levels would be arduous and would entail substantial economic costs and social disruption. There are restoration options, however, that are likely to be ecologically viable and appreciably less socially disruptive than current strategies, but these options also have more modest restoration objectives.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ ABSTRACT)
Product Published Date:10/11/2006
Record Last Revised:11/13/2006
Record ID: 159406