Re: NANFA-- Blanket Bans & Mussel Culture?

Michael Canady (canady1538_at_msn.com)
Sat, 5 Apr 2003 20:23:03 -0800

Hi jay
Yea, i know that sqaw fish are native, but
there are so many because people do not keep them
that they have become invasive species due to little or
no predation. On the snake river they offer bounties on the
sqawfish. they are a sort of native invasive species in certain
areas. If you have ever fished out here in the eastern part of the
state you might just side with me on that. Plus there bellies are
often full with young trout.
-luke

----- Original Message -----
From: Jay DeLong
Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2003 6:19 PM
To: nanfa_at_aquaria.net
Subject: Re: NANFA-- Blanket Bans & Mussel Culture?

At 05:17 PM 4/5/2003 -0800, you wrote:
>well, If i catch an invasive species
>like the zebra mussels on the mississippi, or
>the sqaw fish here in WA, I like to hide them
>in rocks, or drop them in between slats on the dock.
>I dont mind the smell and it scares off the competition
>fisherman. Saving the good fish.
>-luke

Squawfish aren't an invasive species. They've taken on some unfair
sinister role because they eat more "desireable" species like salmon
fry. This is something along the lines of your "good fish"
concept. Personally, that makes no sense to me, but I'm not going to say
you're an idiot or call you some other name. Salmon aren't endangered
because of squawfish eating them. They're in trouble from the habitat
destruction that makes them susceptible to squawfish predation in the first
place. I'm talking about habitat destruction from the Columbia and Snake
River dams. Every time you turn on your lights you're using electricity
generated by those dams and personally contributing to the habitat
destruction that is driving these fish to extinction.

Walleyes in the Columbia River are a serious threat to outmigrant salmon
smolts-- so are smallmouth bass-- but they don't get the negative reactions
because they are a desireable game fish-- and all introduced!

Think about getting the book Inland Fishes of Washington and read about all
these fish.

--
Jay DeLong
Olympia, WA
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/"Unless stated otherwise, comments made on this list do not necessarily
/ reflect the beliefs or goals of the North American Native Fishes
/ Association"
/ This is the discussion list of the North American Native Fishes Association
/ nanfa_at_aquaria.net. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or get help, send the word
/ subscribe, unsubscribe, or help in the body (not subject) of an email to
/ nanfa-request_at_aquaria.net. For a digest version, send the command to
/ nanfa-digest-request_at_aquaria.net instead.
/ For more information about NANFA, visit our web page, http://www.nanfa.org