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Author Topic: Scientists Level New Critiques of Fisheries and Oceans Canada's Scientific Rigor  (Read 1729 times)

IronNoggin

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Scientists Level New Critiques of Fisheries and Oceans Canada's Scientific Rigor

Twenty-five  years ago, after the collapse of the Atlantic cod fishery, Jeffrey   Hutchings, a preeminent fisheries scientist and professor at Dalhousie   University in Nova Scotia, sounded the alarm that Canada’s federal   fisheries department was allowing “nonscience influences” in critical   decision-making. Writing at the time, he said, “There is a clear and   immediate need for Canadians to examine very seriously the role of   bureaucrats and politicians in the management of Canada’s natural   resources.”

Today, a new  crop of researchers is once again imploring Fisheries and Oceans Canada  (DFO) to change its ways. At the core of their concerns is a number of  systemic and structural ways in which DFO gathers, parses, and handles  scientific information, and how that advice is passed on to  decision-makers.

“DFO has a  legal duty to protect and conserve fish for Canada,” says Gideon  Mordecai, a researcher at the University of British Columbia who  specializes in fish viruses. “We’re saying that legal duty is not being  met.”

In a new paper, Mordecai and his colleagues lay out their critiques of how DFO handles—or mishandles—scientific advice.

https://hakaimagazine.com/news/scientists-level-new-critiques-of-fisheries-and-oceans-canadas-scientific-rigor/
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Kever

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Great article.  For those interested in hearing the perspective of a muzzled fisheries scientist, read "Not on My Watch" by Alexandra Morton.  Aquaculture presents a significant impediment to success for salmon migrating past the pens and needs to be stopped.  Governments should be funneling money into river and estuary habitat restoration, that's the best way to improve salmon stocks. 
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