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Fish tales : salmon stories, 1945-1980

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Title Fish tales : salmon stories, 1945-1980
Names Finley, Carmel (creator)
Robbins, William G. (advisor)
Date Issued 2000-06-06 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2001
Abstract Approximately $1 billion a year is spent on salmon in the Pacific
Northwest. Spending has escalated, yet the number of wild runs
placed under the protection of the Endangered Species Act has
increased, creating social and political controversy. For more than 100
years, salmon management in the Pacific Northwest has evolved
around a fundamental concept, that hatcheries could replace the
numbers of salmon lost as the region underwent industrialization.
Spending on hatcheries makes up approximately 40 percent of
expenditures on Northwest salmon issues. Four new studies have
identified hatcheries as one of the reasons for the decline of some wild
salmon stocks. Yet hatcheries are also considered one of the most
important tools for saving wild runs. This thesis examines some of the
national and international forces that shaped the modern hatchery
program in the Pacific Northwest. After World War II, scientists and
policy makers worldwide were motivated by idealistic dreams of using
science and technology to end world hunger. With the creation of factory processing ships, and the discovery of such strategically
important minerals such as manganese, there was growing political
pressure to protect national resources through the creation of 200-
mile limits. As part of this worldwide interest in increasing the marine
harvest, hatchery programs for salmon were expanded in Japan, the
U.S.S.R., Canada and the United States. At the same time, human
activities, including logging, mining, agriculture and urbanization,
contributed to the decline of salmon in the Northwest. This thesis
examines some of the national and international forces that
contributed to the expansion of the hatchery system in the Pacific
Northwest.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Fish hatcheries -- Northwest, Pacific
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20901

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