San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Salmon collapse pushing state’s tribes to brink

- By Nathan Howard and Gillian Flaccus Nathan Howard and Gillian Flaccus are Associated Press writers.

STEVENS VILLAGE, Alaska — In a normal year, the smokehouse­s and drying racks that Alaska Natives use to prepare salmon to tide them through the winter would be heavy with fish meat, the fruits of a summer spent fishing on the Yukon River like generation­s before them.

This year, there are no fish. For the first time in memory, both king and chum salmon have dwindled to almost nothing and the state has banned salmon fishing on the Yukon, even the subsistenc­e harvests that Alaska Natives rely on to fill their freezers and pantries for winter. The remote communitie­s that dot the river and live off its bounty — far from road systems and easy, affordable shopping — are desperate and doubling down on moose and caribou hunts in the waning days of fall.

“Nobody has fish in their freezer right now. Nobody,” said Giovanna Stevens, 38, a member of the Stevens Village tribe who grew up harvesting salmon at her family’s fish camp. “We have to fill that void quickly before winter gets here.”

Opinions on what led to the catastroph­e vary, but those studying it generally agree human-caused climate change is playing a role as the river and the Bering Sea warm, altering the food chain in ways that aren’t yet fully understood. Many believe commercial trawling operations that scoop up wild salmon along with their intended catch, as well as competitio­n from hatcheryra­ised

Tribal elder Harold Simon, 81, walks past an unused fish storage house (left) and smokehouse, where he’ll store meat given to him by a hunting party near Stevens Village, Alaska.

salmon in the ocean, have compounded global warming’s effects on one of North America’s longest rivers.

King, or chinook, salmon have been in decline for more than a decade, but chum salmon were more plentiful until last year. This year, summer chum numbers plummeted and numbers of fall chum — which travel farther upriver — are dangerousl­y low.

Many Alaska Native communitie­s are outraged they are paying the price for generation­s of practices beyond their control that have caused climate change — and many feel state and federal authoritie­s aren’t doing enough to bring Indigenous voices to the table.

“In the tribal villages, our people are livid. They’re extremely angry that we are getting penalized for what others

are doing,“said P.J. Simon, chairman and chief of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, a consortium of 42 tribal villages in the Alaska interior. “As Alaska Natives, we have a right to this resource. We have a right to have a say in how things are drawn up and divvied up.”

 ?? Nathan Howard / Associated Press ??
Nathan Howard / Associated Press

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