A few years ago I posted a pictorial here on this site of a gil-net being taken out of the water and all the dead fish that weren't the targeted specie (salmon). This net was owned by one of the tribes and I watched them throw dead sturgeon, dead steelhead, dead walleye, dead bass, and other specie back into the water. I also posted a picture of the damage done to some of the fish that lived and were thrown on the bank to some sport fishermen.
Don't get me wrong as I like to fish right along with the next guy, but I deplore gil nets of any kind as there are better methods that allow fish to be released unharmed. The problem with the tribal nets which measure 81 has no impact on is that the Indians will set their nets, go on a drinking binge and don't check their nets every day (you're lucky if the net gets pulled once a week) which causes many fish deaths and then because of the time the fish is in the net they start to decay and become inedible.
I have no problem with Native Americans (Indians) having hunting and fishing rights outside of the seasons the rest of us observe if we want to stay legal, I do have a problem with them not using Native Methods to harvest their game and fish. If they are going to gil net then let them take a row boat and not a motorized craft to place their nets and retrieve their nets, also the net and float for the net need to be hand made with traditional material and not commercially made with modern materials.
Dave