PAT NEAL’S WILDLIFE: Genetically altering fish monkeys with Nature

IT WAS ANOTHER tough week in the news.

A front-page article that appeared Monday in the Peninsula Daily News revealed that the Food and Drug Administration was likely to approve a genetically engineered salmon.

This new and improved salmon would combine the growth hormones of a chinook with a genetic on/off switch of the ocean pout in a farmed Atlantic salmon that will grow twice as fast in half the time to market size.

Genetic engineering changes the DNA in an organism.

DNA is like a blueprint for life. Genes are the building blocks of DNA.

Inserting foreign genes into the DNA can give the organism more desirable qualities — or not.

As with most progress, there is a danger of unintended consequences.

Any negative side effects to genetic engineering would be irreversible once the mutated organism was loose in the environment.

We could find ourselves allergic to our poisonous food or even create a new superbacteria that was resistant to our antibiotics.

Either way, genetic engineering could threaten the very survival of humans as a species.

Mitochondrial DNA and fossil evidence indicates that modern humans originated in Africa about 200,000 years ago.

Their increasing population soon led to widespread environmental devastation.

While climate change played a role, the latest theories suggest that early humans’ discovery of the North American continent led to the extinction of the mammoths, mastodons and giant sloths about 11,000 years ago.

These Pleistocene Mega-fauna are among an estimated 135 species of mammals that went extinct shortly after being discovered by the roving bands of Stone Age hunter-gatherers.

Those were the good old days, the most stable period in human history. It was too good to last.

Around 10,000 years ago, humans began planting grain.

There was a surplus.

Men gathered in walled cities to make beer. Early man needed a decent steak with his beer.

This lead to the domestication of animals and even more environmental destruction as man sought pasture for his herds.

Overgrazing by pastoralists created deserts by eroding the topsoil.

The rediscovery of the New World by the Europeans repeated the environmental devastation of earlier millennium with much more drastic results.

The American bison was hunted into endangered species status, replaced by cattle and amber waves of grain.

The ocean became man’s last frontier.

The Pacific salmon — a fish once so plentiful they were called “the poor man’s tuna” — was fished into economic extinction throughout much of their range in fewer than 100 years.

This increased both the demand and price for salmon.

It was inevitable that man would start farming the ocean.

The first Atlantic salmon farms began in Norway in the 1960s.

They were popular until the pollution from fish waste, disease, parasites and the inevitable escape of thousands of salmon sent the fish farmers to fresh sea pastures in the New World.

Once at home in the Pacific Northwest, the fish were blamed for polluting the sea bed and giving diseases and parasites to passing native fish. They also escaped from their pens.

Now the multinational fish farmers want to start raising genetically engineered Atlantic salmon in North America because they won’t allow that sort of thing in Europe.

When these fish escape — and some probably will — they could breed with Pacific salmon and steelhead and endanger our native runs.

Our current management strategies have already made the Pacific salmon rare, threatened and endangered.

But on second thought, getting rid of any escaped Franken-fish should be no problem.

We’ll let the experts at the state Department of Fish and Wildlife study them to death — thus guaranteeing that those pesky, genetically engineered salmon will disappear in no time.

________

Pat Neal is an Olympic Peninsula fishing guide and “wilderness gossip columnist.”

He can be reached at 360-683-9867 or e-mail at patnealwildlife@yahoo.com.

Pat’s column appears every Wednesday.

More in News

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend, volunteer at the Martin Luther King Day of Service beach restoration on Monday at Fort Worden State Park. The activity took place on Knapp Circle near the Point Wilson Lighthouse. Sixty-four volunteers participated in the removal of non-native beach grasses. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Work party

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend,… Continue reading

Portion of bridge to be replaced

Tribe: Wooden truss at railroad park deteriorating

Kingsya Omega, left, and Ben Wilson settle into a hand-holding exercise. (Aliko Weste)
Process undermines ‘Black brute’ narrative

Port Townsend company’s second film shot in Hawaii

Jefferson PUD to replace water main in Coyle

Jefferson PUD commissioners awarded a $1.3 million construction contract… Continue reading

Scott Mauk.
Chimacum superintendent receives national award

Chimacum School District Superintendent Scott Mauk has received the National… Continue reading

Hood Canal Coordinating Council meeting canceled

The annual meeting of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council, scheduled… Continue reading

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the rotunda of the old Clallam County Courthouse on Friday in Port Angeles. The North Olympic History Center exhibit tells the story of the post office past and present across Clallam County. The display will be open until early February, when it will be relocated to the Sequim City Hall followed by stops on the West End. The project was made possible due to a grant from the Clallam County Heritage Advisory Board. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Post office past and present

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the… Continue reading

This agave grew from the size of a baseball in the 1990s to the height of Isobel Johnston’s roof in 2020. She saw it bloom in 2023. Following her death last year, Clallam County Fire District 3 commissioners, who purchased the property on Fifth Avenue in 2015, agreed to sell it to support the building of a new Carlsborg fire station. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Fire district to sell property known for its Sequim agave plant

Sale proceeds may support new Carlsborg station project

As part of Olympic Theatre Arts’ energy renovation upgrade project, new lighting has been installed, including on the Elaine and Robert Caldwell Main Stage that allows for new and improved effects. (Olympic Theatre Arts)
Olympic Theatre Arts remodels its building

New roof, LED lights, HVAC throughout

Weekly flight operations scheduled

Field carrier landing practice operations will be conducted for aircraft… Continue reading

Workers from Van Ness Construction in Port Hadlock, one holding a grade rod with a laser pointer, left, and another driving the backhoe, scrape dirt for a new sidewalk of civic improvements at Walker and Washington streets in Port Townsend on Thursday. The sidewalks will be poured in early February and extend down the hill on Washington Street and along Walker Street next to the pickle ball courts. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Sidewalk setup

Workers from Van Ness Construction in Port Hadlock, one holding a grade… Continue reading