Grieg Seafood counting wild salmon in Come By Chance River - Action News
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Grieg Seafood counting wild salmon in Come By Chance River

Grieg Seafood, a massive salmon farming company, is gathering information about wild salmon that spawn through Placentia Bay.

Data could help scientists measure the impact of fish farming in Placentia Bay

Grieg says it's spent more than $200,000 in 2021 to construct and operate this fish counting fence in the Come by Chance River. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

Grieg Seafood is gathering information about wild salmon at a fish counting fence in the Come By Chance River, a year beforethe company launches its massive salmon farming operation in Placentia Bay.

Grieg built and now operatesthe fence, and its manager says the data the company iscollecting, which is available to the public, will likelybe valuable in the future.

"We're getting some genetic samples from the fish. Sowe'll actually be able, in years to come, to look back and compare to see if there were any interactions between the farmed salmon and the wild salmon," said Miranda Squires.

"We'll be able to look at the genetics and the numbers to see if they are going down, if they are going up."

The counting fence spans the Come By Chance river, about two kilometres upstream from the ocean. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

The V-shaped fence spans a tranquil pool in the Come By Chance River, about two kilometres upstream from Placentia Bay.

At its centre is an underwater trap where fish are stopped, counted, sampled and then released to continue spawning upstream.

The location was chosen byboth environmental consulting companies and the federal Fisheries Department,based on where Grieg's sea cages will be in Placentia Bay.

Grieg isrequired to build and operate the fencefollowing an environmental assessment of the company's plans. The company says the fence is part of the company's environmental effects monitoring plan.

Miranda Squires, aquaculture environmental technician with Grieg Seafood, manages the day-to-day operations of the fish-counting fence. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

Grieg says the fence it constructed earlier this year willcost $205,000 to build and operatein 2021.

By the end ofAugust, 76salmon were counted atthe fence, but that number is reported by DFOwith an asteriskas a partial count, because the fence was removed during part of the season.

Grieg officials say the fence on the Come By Chance River was knocked over fallowing aheavy rainfall in August. They say many fish were holding in a pool below the fence before the washout, and it's believed thosesalmon may have moved upstream before the fence was reconstructed.

Squires is optimistic the fence, which is expected to operate for a minimum of10 years, will gather good data.

DFO's Atlantic salmon recreational fishery statistics for 2012 to 2016 shows 927 salmon were caught in theCome By Chance River by recreational fishers during that period.

These are two of the wild Atlantic salmon counted at the Come By Chance fence in 2021. (Grieg Seafood)

Grieg's transfer to sea cages delayed

Grieg was scheduled to transferimmature salmon, produced in its land-based facilities, to sea cages in Placentia Bay this summer.

However the company delayed that plan and culled a million fish afterinfectious salmon anemiawas found in one of the fish scheduled to be placed in a sea cage this summer.

A further 295 fishsamples showed no other incidents of ISA, a virus that scientists say can be fatal to both farmed andwild salmon but doesn't harm humans.

"We had a suspected case of ISAbut Grieg Seafood's main focus is sustainability. We could have put the fish out if we wanted to, but we didn't want to take anyrisks," said Squires.

"Ourmandate is to do as little damage to the environment as possible. Sowe thought our best course of action is to put fish out in 2022, when we do more testing and we know that everything is good to go."

Grieg says it'son track to transfer about three million fish to the sea in the summer of 2022. Harvesting is expected to take place in 2023 and 2024.

The company expects to build a second counting fence in the Bay de l'Eau River in 2023, near its expected farming site in Rushoon.

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