Thursday, August 13, 2009

King salmon vanishing in Alaska: Human Caused or Nature?


Yukon King Salmon, a staple food of the Alaska natives, are failing to return to their ancestral rivers and streams leaving many without food and without income. Biologists speculate that "the mostly likely cause was a shift in Pacific Ocean currents, but food availability, changing river conditions and predator-prey relationships could be affecting the fish."

But the people know different. Pollock fishing has taken priority over preserving natural habitat and has been killing off King Salmon despite efforts to put caps on bycatch. All those King Salmon caught up in the Pollock fishing trawlers are dying instead of swimming upstream to spawn and perpetuate their lifecycle.

The people are angry. Alaska government officials are not so quick to blame human intervention for the loss. Other possible reasons for the severe decline in King Salmon in the Yukon are: changing ocean currents, plankton blooms and even the carnivorous nature of salmon. River conditions could be changing, too.

Vannishing King Salmon

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