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StriperTalk! All things Striper |
10-19-2000, 03:56 PM
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#1
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Certifiable Intertidal Anguiologist
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Somewhere between OOB & west of Watch Hill
Posts: 35,270
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A toast to the New England Aquarium for a fine display of brilliance!!!
After the heads-up from Slipnot, I went to SOL and the article Bob found and Flyfishsaltwaters reported to read up on this wonderfull display of brilliance...
[3]
Quote:
Fishing Report Posted 10/16/00
Jerry Vovcsko
When you write columns for readers who like to fish you can count on
finding the e-mailbox full come Monday morning. Here's one that turned
up last week from an irate fisherman:
* Torture at the New England Aquarium ?*
As an avid sportsman who has enjoyed fishing all my life, I was appalled
at what I saw in the outside tank at the New England Aquarium
yesterday. The tank which usually houses the Harbor Seals has been
occupied for several
months instead, by a school of about forty Striped Bass. As I walked
near the tank I saw them with their heads crammed into the corner
swimming feverishly into the glass. As I approached I soon saw the
reason why.
Someone, probably with a PhD in Marine Biology, made the decision to
put the seals back into the tank with the fish. I, as well as other
spectators with children, watched as the seals picked fish as easily as
grapes off the vine. They then played a cruel game of cat and mouse
with their injured
prey. On the tank floor were the bodies of two unlucky fish with their
heads chewed off, while several others were trying to remain swimming,
with slashed tails and fins. I questioned an aquarium employee about it.
She said that the seals were raised in captivity and that they didn't think
they would attack the fish. I guess they didn't ask the fish how they'd
like to be trapped in a tank with one of their most feared mortal
predators. Maybe they could have asked some of grade school children
who go their on field trips, they'd have probably given the right answer.
Striped Bass are a protected species and are recovering thanks to
tremendous efforts made by government agencies and sportsmen alike.
There is a size limit and only one fish per day can be taken by
fishermen. The fish killed by the foolish decision to put the seals in the
tank were definitely undersized. There is a substantial fine for taking
such fish,
maybe the Aquarium should pay this fine and be forced to send
whoever's bright idea it was back to school to learn some common
sense. Or, simply put the fish out of their misery and take them across
the street to Legal Seafood, but again, they are illegal fish! *
Now I found that e-mail very disturbing, so I called the aquarium folks to
see what it was all about and soon received a call back from a cheerfull
young lady in the Press Relations department. Fully expecting to hear
an indignant denial that no one the least bit familiar with the marine
environment would do such a stupid thing, I asked if it was true that
there had been a tank full of striped bass on exhibit and that somebody
on staff had decided to put seals in with the fish. But no! Instead, the
spokesperson cheerily explained that the fish had been caught by staff
from the pier behind the aquarium and, yes, they had been put on exhibit
in a large tank. She went on to say that the seals were introduced into
the tank because aquarium staff reasoned that "...as the seals had been
raised in captivity and fed only dead fish they should be able to co-exist
with the striped bass."
She further informed me that after the slaughter the stripers were
released back into Boston Harbor, the ones that survived, that is. She
went on to point out that in the aquarium's view the exhibit had been a
good forum for a conservation display, that is to say, "Look how well the
stripers have recovered from the problems of the 1980s."
With my brain reeling from that lesson in PR-speak I conducted an
informal poll with my two children, ages 11 and 13. Iasked what would
happen if seals raised in captivity and fed only dead fish were put into a
tank with striped bass. My 13 year old son said, "They'd kill every one
and eat them." My daughter rolled her eyes at me for asking such a
stupid question and said, "Duhhh, dad, the same thing as if you threw a
live chicken into a cage full of tigers."
Of course, neither child has a PhD in marine biology but, judging from
the decisions made by the sages at the New England Aquarium, I think I
trust the kids' judgement a bit better. With friends like the folks up there
in Boston the fish don't need enemies.
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[/3]
This is ridiculous. I'm not terribly upset that the fish were eaten as that is nature fulfilling the food chain. What irks me is that these boneheads at the aquarium didn't think they'd get eaten!!! Or its just the excuse they gave!!! Morons >(
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