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 Author Name: Joseph E. Taylor III
Title: Making Salmon: An Environmental History Of The Northwest Fisheries Crisis
Binding: Hardcover Type: BOOK Publisher: UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS ISBN Number: 0295978406 / 9780295978406
Seller ID: 1027852
A book of critical importance for everyone interested in understanding the origins of & finding a solution for the current environmental crisis in the Pacific Northwest. Exhaustively researched & written in clear & graceful prose. 8 drawings, 20 maps, tables, notes, index, bibliog., 25 B/w photos; 6x9 inches, 488 pgs.
'In the past twenty years the Pacific Northwest has invested billions of dollars to save salmon runs, and the only thing everyone can agree upon is that the effort has largely failed. Scientists, historians, politicians, and journalists have offered many explanations for this "salmon crisis, " but few have looked very far into the past or plumbed primary documents necessary to understand the nineteenth-century roots of salmon management. The purpose of Making Salmon is to subvert the way people have thought about salmon management for the last 125 years. It examines primary documents from the National Archives, the Smithsonian Institution, and regional archives to illuminate the social, cultural, economic, and environmental context of the decline of salmon from the aboriginal fisheries through the advent of industrial fishing and the rise of salmon hatcheries all the way down to the current crisis of the salmon fisheries as they face the threat of collapse today.
As recent scientific research suggests that hatcheries may have contributed to the decline of salmon runs, Taylor relates in detail how and why fish culture emerged as the primary tool of salmon management. The Oregon experience with fish culture serves as a long-term case study of the intersection of federal, state, and private management strategies and interpretations and misinterpretations of salmon biology.
The essence of the salmon crisis is the struggle to define and solve a complicated environmental and social problem, but resolution has been elusive because participants have little in common except the propensity to deflect blame onto other groups or activities. Commercial and sport fishers, fish culturalists, environmentalists, smelters, irrigators, bargers, and dam agencies have all responded to declining runs in different ways. The preferred political and technological strategies have perpetuated, rather than resolved, problems. The detailed history of those efforts offered in Making Salmon should remind readers of the complexity of the forces driving decline. It should also caution readers against uncritical faith in technology and temper the tendency to moralize and scapegoat.
Making Salmon is of critical importance for everyone interested in understanding the origins of and finding a solution for the current environmental crisis in the Pacific Northwest.
Series: Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books
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