Bears eat salmon at a very high rate, so the more salmon available in their environment is an obvious positive for the bears. When there are less salmon available for the bears, they still need to eat around the same amount, so there is less salmon available for other animals downstream. Studies showed that more salmon in the streams would have a direct impact on the growth of salmon in the ocean as well, which leads to larger harvests for the fishermen.
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While I agree that it makes sense that more salmon escaping from fishing nets would help the ecosystems around streams, I am a little doubtful about the increase in harvest for the fishermen. If the only way to increase their harvest in the end is to allow more salmon to escape their nets and decrease their initial harvest, it just seems as if the final result would be about the same.
The more salmon in the streams mean more reproduction which means that every one would benefit as long as fisherman's quotas do not keep growing and hurting populations like the blue fin tuna. This is just another lesson that humans haven't learned from which is do not take more than you need and we need to watch how our choices affect our life's.
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