Bobcat catches salmon in temperate rainforest of Washington State
I went looking for spawning salmon and found a fishing bobcat. Standing
on the bridge watching the fish struggle upstream, I just happened to
catch this Hoh inhabitant catching breakfast. You never know what you
might come across even on a quiet snowy morning. (Ranger Lee)
Once again, profit and globalization over the interests of the local industry (local fishing of wild Pacific salmon off the coast of British Columbia) and the environment (dying wild Pacific salmon, which the upward cascade effect on the predators of those salmon, mostly orca).
Excerpt:
In the 1970s, Norsk Hydro in Norway began farming salmon in pens in the ocean and today a farmed salmon is worth more to Norwegians than a barrel of oil. The industry has become as rapacious as the oil industry. With more than 900 farms dotting their coast, they have now spread across temperate coastlines worldwide and unfortunately they took their prize livestock with them, the Atlantic salmon.
Biologists, fishermen, indigenous leaders and senior Fisheries and Oceans Canada bureaucrats warned that allowing Atlantic salmon into BC was a dangerous game of “Russian Roulette.” Every farm fish carried the potential for a disease that could spread among Pacific salmon. Importing exotic species is one of the greatest causes of the global loss of biodiversity.
However, caution was tossed aside and three Norwegian companies now use the coast of BC to farm millions of Atlantic salmon, with most of the attending environmental damages attributed to the industry at home sea lice, disease, drugs, pollution. As a biologist studying whales as the industry moved in, I have witnessed the crushing impact of this industry first hand; unprecedented toxic algae blooms, the whales were displaced by high-amplitude “seal scarers,” escaped Atlantics in Pacific rivers, sea lice eating the majority of wild salmon to the point of death and today I am tracking salmon farm viruses plaguing the industry worldwide. The industry had become the dominant “user group” of the BC coast. There was no touching them. The Norwegian scientists I turned to for help suggested I look the other way, they said the industry and the Canadian government would make life difficult for me.