Undoubtedly climate change has affected the way we eat. Droughts and flood have brought prices up on many fruit and vegetables . Now the disaster is spreading to our oceans. Not only will our seas be filled with algae blooms, certain species will be disappearing.
Julia O'Malley, a famed freelance writer who writes primarily about Alaska covered this in today's New York Times Food section. The red salmon is disappearing thanks to the waters heating up in one of the coldest rivers on the planet.It wasn't that long ago that fishermen would reel in seventy or eighty salmon during one fishing trip.Neighbors and friends would benefit from these, with fridges being filled with ZipLoc bags full of the fish. Grills worked overtime, with filet after filet being served at cookouts. Not anymore.Now hours pass before anyone catches even just one.The Copper River which yields the popular red salmon has had its' smallest salmon run in thirty-eight years according to Garrett Evridge, an economist with McDowell Group. This Anchorage research and consulting group has been following fishing trends. They also found that other rivers have had the same problem.State wildlife managers have closed rivers to sportsmen so enough salmon could reach their spawning grounds.
How has this affected the state's economy? Tremendously. In one rural Aleut fishing town, Chignik on the Aleutian Peninsula,the fishing fleet has sat idle as have locals who freeze and smoke the fish caught. Lack of fish means they'll have to buy super expensive groceries instead of eating the fish along with needing food aid during the colder months.Home cooks , such as Christine Taylor of Anchorage, will have to calculate the cost of buying ingredients and wonder if they can afford them, instead of relying on weekend fishing.Also most recipes center around the red salmon, a fish with raspberry colored flesh and a taste saltier than the regular kind. There's also the experience of catching them, and the whole process of unloading their four wheelers and setting up the fishing poles. Concerned scientists, like Bill Templin, the state's chief scientist for the state's commercial salmon fisheries know that it comes from the ocean warming which creates a toxic algae. This can create starvation and illness in not just salmon but other species such as whales and shellfish.
Luckily locals are hopeful that the salmon will return. That depends on how we treat the oceans ans work furiously and non-stop to halt climate change. Then the rivers' bounties will be plentiful.
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
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