James Connaughton, chairman of
the White House Council on Environmental Quality, announced the new policy
Wednesday at a meeting of salmon scientists, many of whom have concluded that
wild Pacific salmon will become extinct this century without big changes in
how the harvest is managed.
"Our goal is to minimize
and, where possible, eliminate the harvest of naturally spawning fish that
provide the foundation for recovery," Connaughton said in an interview
with The Associated Press before his speech.
Scientists have long criticized
hatcheries as producers of salmon that dilute the gene pool, spread disease
and compete with wild fish for food and habitat, while being less able to
survive in the wild.
Connaughton did not say how
much the administration wants to reduce the wild salmon harvest or how many of
the 180 federal, state, tribal and private salmon hatcheries in the
"We cannot improperly hatch and we
cannot carelessly catch the wild salmon back to recovery," Connaughton
said.
Salmon, an
enormous part of the
Since 1991, 26 populations of
salmon have been listed as threatened or endangered. None has been judged
healthy enough to be delisted. Restoration efforts and technological fixes to
dams have run up a bill of $6 billion over the past 10 years.
Connaughton, President Bush's
top environmental adviser, outlined the new policy at the Salmon 2100
Conference, where scientists gathered to consider new ways to prevent the
extinction of wild salmon.
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On the Net:
Salmon 2100: http://www.epa.gov/wed/pages/projects/salmon2100.htm
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Source: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1155AP_Salmon_Policy.html