One of the best books I’ve read in any category this year is
Salmon, People, and Place: A Biologist’s
Search for Salmon Recovery (http://osupress.oregonstate.edu/book/salmon-people-and-place)
by Jim Lichatowich. In the book, Lichatowich convincingly argues for a new way
of thinking about salmon recovery but also about how human beings relate to the
natural world—what people of faith refer to as “creation.” In an interview with
OPB’s Ashley Ahern (http://earthfix.opb.org/flora-and-fauna/article/earthfix-conversation-author-calls-for-philosophic/),
he talks about two major ideas that lie at the heart of his argument.
The first is what naturalist John Livingston refers to as
the environmental iceberg, i.e., all
environmental problems are like icebergs which have a visible part above the
water—in the case of salmon the symptoms are dams, poor logging practices,
overharvest, misuse of hatcheries, etc. But as with icebergs, there is much
greater part that’s under the water and is invisible. It is made up of the
myths, beliefs, and assumptions that we bring to any problem. Again, in the
case of salmon, this includes our misguided efforts to use hatcheries—literally
“fish factories” as they were first called—to have “salmon without rivers” (the
title of another book by Lichatowich; http://islandpress.org/ip/books/book/islandpress/S/bo3560726.html).
In ignoring these myths and beliefs that make up our “salmon story” we risk the
future of not only salmon but the other 140+ species that salmon have created
and support in the salmon ecosystem. We will remain largely powerless to
address the problem of vanishing wild salmon in an effective way until we
examine the part of the iceberg that’s underwater.
The second idea comes from writer Gary Nabhan who believes
that species go extinct not because we destroy the last one but because the web
of relationships that sustains them unravels. In the case of salmon, their
demise is a result of our attempts to manage them and while ignoring the highly
complex ecosystem in which they live out their life history and of which they
are the keystone species.
Lichatowich believes that in order to “save the salmon” (who
may, in turn “save” us) we need a new salmon story, one in which not
only salmon numbers are important but in which the entire life history of
salmon and the multiple habitats in which that history is lived out are taken
into account. You might think of it as an ecological
approach to salmon recovery.
Being in the “myth, belief, and assumption” business myself,
I find Lichatowich’s ideas to be both a challenge and an invitation. For
example, anyone who’s ever worked in a church or other institution knows the
power of invisible underlying myths and beliefs because we run up against them
every day. He adds new meaning to a perspective that many of us have held for a
long time: caring for creation is a profoundly spiritual undertaking and the
place to start is with our most basic beliefs about creation and our place in
it as human beings. I hope to follow up some of these ideas in future blogposts and I invite you to join the conversation. In the meantime, I highly recommend
Jim’s book. jpr
John: I finally got around to listening to the interview and enjoyed the author's perception of the salmon problem. I struggle with the notion of not having any steelhead to go after (a selfish thought) and it is not clear to me how we can rehab existing lowland streams to a point that can sustain wild fish. It seems that the last enclave for wild sh is the Peninsula and a few lowland streams. What a pity. I am not sure how hatcheries can be improved to increase spawning. The damage is already done
ReplyDeleteWith that bit of optimism, I'll say, thanks for the reference, I need to read the book.