Ibstacle said:will they stop wasting there money stocking them at the credit as well?
And here we go again....Ibstacle said:oh nice. I've been waiting for them to do this
Buddy wtf are you even saying.... stop pulling random facts out of your ass. The atlantic salmon stocking program on the credit is a waste of time and money. The river is full of small smolts (and residents) and very few adults returning. Clearly they aren't gonna make a comeback if the river isn't suitable first. I'm just saying they should put an end to this program for now and put the money towards stream rehabilitation for the brook trout and atlantic salmonTacklelogic said:And here we go again....
If it wasn't for the Atlantic Salmon Stocking Program, you would not see this high tech camera on any river. So, which do you want? The Binbrook wine company to not sponsor the majority of funding which actually paid for this camera and numerous other studies and stream rehabilitation. Oh wait a minute.... I am sure you devoted many many countless hours planting trees along shorelines, cleaned up some detrimental log jambs which were impassable, lend a helping hand placing gabion stone and clear stone to improve some spawning habitat.
Ironically, I'm more to believe you are the type of person who complains about ALL projects and complain about why they only lifted 150 fish up over the Mill dam in Cobourg, not 500. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised you are the type of person who would eat their Mcdonalds Big Mac, fries and a big ol fountain pop, burp as you were tossing it on the ground leaving it for the next guy to pick up your mess.
Oh, I almost forgot, you are probably one of those guys who complain about yet another place being closed down due to people littering.
Cheers!
Yeah, here we go again. Instead of resorting to personal attacks and babbling about French fries, why won't you just admit the truth? The atlantic program is a total failure.Tacklelogic said:And here we go again....
If it wasn't for the Atlantic Salmon Stocking Program, you would not see this high tech camera on any river. So, which do you want? The Binbrook wine company to not sponsor the majority of funding which actually paid for this camera and numerous other studies and stream rehabilitation. Oh wait a minute.... I am sure you devoted many many countless hours planting trees along shorelines, cleaned up some detrimental log jambs which were impassable, lend a helping hand placing gabion stone and clear stone to improve some spawning habitat.
Ironically, I'm more to believe you are the type of person who complains about ALL projects and complain about why they only lifted 150 fish up over the Mill dam in Cobourg, not 500. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised you are the type of person who would eat their Mcdonalds Big Mac, fries and a big ol fountain pop, burp as you were tossing it on the ground leaving it for the next guy to pick up your mess.
Oh, I almost forgot, you are probably one of those guys who complain about yet another place being closed down due to people littering.
Cheers!
Considering the results from millions and millions of fish stocked by both Ontario and New York since 1984, I think it's pretty clear that this program is a total failure and is not worth continuing at any cost.Rain-bow said:The Atlantic salmon stocking program is part of the OMNR’s agenda to protect native species; the money that’s allocated for it isn’t to improve Ontario’s sport fishing. Other species of migratory fish can benefit from the stream rehabilitation and other work that’s been done to assist Atlantic salmon, but with the strain that was native to Lake Ontario having gone extinct, and the extremely low return rates for non-native strains, one has to question whether it’s worth continuing
Not true. Returns to the Credit in 2011 were 33 fish. See https://www.spoonpullers.com/forums/index.php/topic,19871.0.htmlRain-bow said:The program’s history shows that they can get more returns with larger amounts of stocking, but even with hundreds of adults returning to a single tributary (e.g. Credit River in Summer of 2011), they’re not able to establish a natural population. Interestingly, their top biologists don’t know what the cause of the low return rate is
This is the biggest point that needs to be understood in this conversation. Anglers need to realize that this program isn't about generating revenue or pleasing any specific angler group, its about attempts to reverse the damage caused by years of pollution and development across the province. The return of Atlantic Salmon would be a huge benefit to the ecosystem in the same way that planting native tree's and wildflowers on your property is better than planting foreign varieties for native wildlife species.Rain-bow said:The Atlantic salmon stocking program is part of the OMNR’s agenda to protect native species; the money that’s allocated for it isn’t to improve Ontario’s sport fishing.