Climate Shifts » Blog Archive » Alaskan King salmon fishery collapses
But this year, a total ban on commercial fishing for king salmon on the river in Alaska has strained poor communities and stripped the prized Yukon fish off menus in the lower 48 states. Unprecedented restrictions on subsistence fishing have left freezers and smokehouses half-full and hastened a shift away from a tradition of spending summers at fish camps along the river.
“This year, fishing is not really worth it,” said Aloysius Coffee, a commercial fisherman in Marshall who used to support his family and pay for new boats and snow machines with fishing income.
At a kitchen table cluttered with cigarettes and store-bought food, Mr. Coffee said he fished for the less valuable chum salmon this summer but spent all his earnings on permits and gasoline. “You got to sit there and count your checkbook, how much you’re going to spend each day,” he said.
The cause of the weak runs, which began several years ago, remains unclear. But managers of the small king salmon fishery suspect changes in ocean conditions are mostly to blame, and they warn that it may be years before the salmon return to the Yukon Riverin large numbers.
Salmon are among the most determined of nature’s creatures. Born in fresh water, the fish spend much of their lives in the ocean before fighting their way upriver to spawn and die in the streams of their birth.
While most salmon populations in the lower 48 states have been in trouble for decades, thanks to dam-building and other habitat disruptions, populations in Alaska have generally remained healthy. The state supplies about 40 percent of the world’s wild salmon, and the Marine Stewardship Council has certified Alaska’s salmon fisheries as sustainable. (In the global market, sales of farmed salmon surpassed those of wild salmon in the late 1990s.)
For decades, runs of king, or chinook, salmon — the largest and most valuable of Alaska’s five salmon species — were generally strong and dependable on the Yukon River. But the run crashed in the late 1990s, and the annual migrations upriver have varied widely since then. “You can’t depend on it any more,” said Steve Hayes, who manages the fishery for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
...alaskan king salmon fishing - News
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» Fishing report
ECHL.comAnglers fishing the bay at Bandon last weekend were picking up a nice mixed bag of wild coho and bright king salmon. Anglers fishing the Rocky Point area Denis Peirce: Finding the silver salmonWhere the fish are bitingFish the rivers before they get any higher, but skip coastall 53 news articles »
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David Vann: why king salmon fishing is the ultimate outdoor experience ...
<strong>David Vann: why king salmon fishing is the ultimate outdoor experience David Vann aged three with his father in Ketchikan, the Alaskan town where they lived. Photograph:Courtesy of David Vann The king salmon vanished from the
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ECHL.comAnglers fishing the bay at Bandon last weekend were picking up a nice mixed bag of wild coho and bright king salmon. Anglers fishing the Rocky Point area Denis Peirce: Finding the silver salmonWhere the fish are bitingFish the rivers before they get any higher, but skip coastall 53 news articles »
<strong>David Vann: why king salmon fishing is the ultimate outdoor experience David Vann aged three with his father in Ketchikan, the Alaskan town where they lived. Photograph:Courtesy of David Vann The king salmon vanished from the