Conservation group threatens suit over Atlantic salmon fish-farms in Puget Sound area

  • By The Associated Press
  • Wednesday, August 26, 2015 12:01am
  • News
Atlantic salmon in a net-pen. The Associated Press

Atlantic salmon in a net-pen. The Associated Press

By The Associated Press

SEATTLE — A conservation group says it intends to sue the federal government for allowing farm-raised salmon in Puget Sound.

Wild Fish Conservancy sent a letter Tuesday to the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Environmental Protection Agency, giving them a required 60-day notice of intent to sue.

The organization says the agencies failed to fully assess the danger of floating pens of non-native Atlantic salmon to protected wild salmon runs, including chinook and Hood Canal chum salmon as well as steelhead.

The Wild Fish Conservancy said that violates the Endangered Species Act.

The organization said there are eight net-pens operating in Puget Sound that annually raise 
10 million pounds of Atlantic salmon, but those fish can and have spread disease to wild salmon.

A spokesman for the EPA said it does not comment on pending litigation, and the fisheries service did not immediately return a call seeking

All the Atlantic salmon fish farms in Puget Sound are owned by American Gold Seafoods.

They include pens off Ediz Hook in Port Angeles Harbor — considered to be an extension of Puget Sound — as well as off Bainbridge, Cypress and Hope islands.

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