Southern Alberta trout streams threatened despite recovery plan, says survey
by Bob Weber, Calgary Herald/The Canadian Press, July 12, 2015
EDMONTON — Virtually all southern Alberta streams that spawn native trout are threatened by industrial development or overuse, says a survey from a respected fisheries biologist.
That’s even though both bull and rainbow trout are protected under
federal law and are supposed to be benefiting from a recovery plan, says
Lorne Fitch.
“I have watched habitat and fish populations crater,” says Fitch, an adjunct professor at the University of Calgary, who spent 35 years as a leading provincial biologist. “All of our systems are under extreme pressure.”
Fitch studied 54 small rivers and streams that flow into the Oldman River and hold bull and cutthroat trout. He found nearly every one of the waterways face multiple pressures: from logging roads to energy development to off-highway vehicle trails.
Read more here: http://bit.ly/1CCVbU6
#bowriver | #flyfishing | #BullTrout | #CutthroatTrout | #yyc
“I have watched habitat and fish populations crater,” says Fitch, an adjunct professor at the University of Calgary, who spent 35 years as a leading provincial biologist. “All of our systems are under extreme pressure.”
Fitch studied 54 small rivers and streams that flow into the Oldman River and hold bull and cutthroat trout. He found nearly every one of the waterways face multiple pressures: from logging roads to energy development to off-highway vehicle trails.
Read more here: http://bit.ly/1CCVbU6
#bowriver | #flyfishing | #BullTrout | #CutthroatTrout | #yyc
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