New NOAA and ADF&G reports show Alaska salmon runs at crisis point; trawlers catching and discarding more Chinook and chum than subsistence and direct fishers allowed to harvest in the Yukon and Kuskokwim. A number of salmon runs throughout Alaska are at unprecedented lows. Catastrophic failures and fisheries closures threaten fisheries-dependent communities, food security, culture and way of life as council governing bycatch prepares to meet in Sitka. |
The ADF&G stock status report released at the end of May determined:
ADF&G has announced subsistence and sportfish closures in these regions due to poor returns.
NOAA’s genetics studies of 2020 and 2021 trawl salmon bycatch released at the end of May determined:
“NOAA and the trawl fleet love to focus on the percentage of the salmon bycatch that originates in Alaska because it hides the actual massive number of wasted individual fish, which dwarfs the number allowed to be harvested by traditional users on the Yukon and Kuskokwim,” said Lindsey Bloom, a commercial fisherman and campaign strategist at SalmonState. “Local people who depend on these fish for physical, spiritual, and cultural survival are restricted again this year from taking a single salmon, while factory trawlers are allowed to kill tens of thousands from those same rivers. The federal and state management bodies are obligated to sustain the continued existence of salmon and our salmon fisheries, and we are begging them to act.”
“Right now, NOAA Fisheries Administrator Janet Coit is preparing to head to Sitka for a meeting of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, an entity that has been largely deaf to Alaskans’ repeated pleas for reductions in trawl bycatch,” said Tim Bristol, executive director of SalmonState. “The burden of conservation is falling on subsistence and commercial salmon fishermen, while factory trawlers continue to bycatch and discard tens of thousands of Chinook and chum salmon originating in those same river systems. The message from these reports to Assistant Administrator Coit and the council should be clear: the time for action is now, and the very future of our wild Chinook and chum salmon is at stake.”
The NPFMC meeting begins Monday, June 6, with salmon items planned for discussion June 12 and 13. The full meeting schedule is here.
Edited By: Mary Kauffman, SitNews
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SalmonState
www.salmonstate.org
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