rrenick65 wrote:I agree with the 20" bleeder, but I may have a serious issue with the minimum size. I somewhat have an issue with a 22" size limit. Nelly can you shed a little light on this one? From what I understand those small individuals are essentially blackmouth being kept in the summer time and those small juveniles are what attributes to healthy population. With more smaller fish being kept, could that endanger numbers for the future?
That's the million dollar question right there... Could a smaller minimum size adversely affect future catches?
In my mind the answer is a quite concerning "yes" and here's why:
By keeping 20" chinook (100% mortality) and not releasing them (10% mortality) those fish never get an opportunity to grow up to something approaching adulthood. Remember that the resource is shared by the tribal co-managers and is done so on a numerical basis. In other words, a sport caught 20" counts the same as a tribal 20 pounder. I would rather the sport fishery use It's chinook impacts on larger fish.
Finally and most importantly, we are seeing an average size reduction trend in Puget Sound chinook and harvesting smaller fish is partially to blame for this trend. One answer to this issue is a move to a 24" or larger minimum size limit.
Again, the rational for a reduction of the minimum size seem to be business reasons and the reasons against are biological in nature.
So I ask you: what is the better basis for making fisheries management decisions?