An elegant application of appropriate technology: the Sheep Creek Hatchery |
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Authors: | Lewis F. Carter Ladd Macaulay Catherine M. Coffey |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, Washington State University, 99164 Pullman, Washington, USA;(2) Sheep Creek Fish Hatchery, DIPAC, Inc., 4451 Thane Road, 99802 Juneau, Alaska, USA;(3) Woodward-Clyde and Associates, 100 Pringle Avenue, 94596 Walnut Creek, California, USA |
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Abstract: | Alaska's program for rebuilding salmon stock is calledfishery enhancement. Hatchery technology can produce dramatic increases in numbers of fish homing to selected streams. The Sheep Creek Hatchery is unusually efficient— it increases a fish run by a factor of 3000 and produces salmon at 9–11c/kg by minimizing mechanical energy inputs and human labor. The design harnesses the force of gravity and capitalizes on instinctual behavior of the fish. Since migratory fish collect protein from ocean pasturage, the technology increases the share of this resource collected and concentrated for harvest in a specific country or region. While small seaside hatcheries can solve biological problems of depleted fish stocks, economic and political considerations may preclude efficient utilization of the protein produced. Further, the potential for one state or country to concentrate fish near its shores poses new dilemmas for international regulation of harvests. |
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Keywords: | Migratory fish Salmon Hatcheries Mariculture Aquaculture Fishery enhancement |
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