The Nome Nugget

Fish Factor

- By Laine Welch

Alaska’s salmon landings have passed the season’s midpoint and by August 7 the statewide catch had topped 116 million fish. State managers are calling for a projected total 2021 harvest of 190 million salmon, a 61 percent increase over 2020.

Most of the salmon being caught now are pinks with Prince William Sound topping 35 million humpies, well over the projection of 25 million. Pink salmon catches at Kodiak remained sluggish at just over three million so far out of a forecast calling for over 22 million. Southeast was seeing a slight uptick with pink catches nearing 14 million out of a projected 28 million. The pink salmon harvest usually peaks in midAugust and the statewide catch was over 57 million out of a projected 124 million humpies for the season.

For chum salmon the harvest remains bleak with Prince William Sound and the Alaska Peninsula the only regions tracking well for catches. The statewide catch had barely topped six million out of a projected 15.3 million fish.

The coho peak is typically in early September and harvests are climbing steadily, but at a pace less than half the five-year average. Just under 700,000 cohos had crossed the Alaska docks – or about 14 percent of the projected catch of 3.8 million silver salmon.

Alaska sockeye salmon catches of nearly 52 million so far have blown past the forecasted 46.6 million. Over 40 million are from Bristol Bay and more than 6 million from the Alaska Peninsula.

The statewide Chinook harvest had reached 173,000, or 64 percent of an expected 269,000 kings.

Salmon slump

No Alaska region has been hit harder by dismal salmon returns this summer than communitie­s on the Yukon River where the summer chum run of just 153,000 is the lowest on record.

“This is really quite scary for everyone. These runs are low enough that no one on the river is subsistenc­e fishing, and so it’s very dismal. Everybody in the communitie­s on the full river drainage, are feeling the hardship,” Serena Fitka, director of the Yukon River Drainage Fisheries

Associatio­n, told KYUK in Bethel.

Nearly 10,000 pounds of chum and king salmon have been donated by Bristol Bay fishermen and processors with logistical assists by SeaShare and Kwik’pak Fisheries in Emmonak to send salmon to 11 villages.

Kwik’pak, typically a top employer each summer, has been able to put only a handful of people to work for a few days helping with the distributi­on said general manager, Jack Schultheis.

Governor Dunleavy also directed an additional $75,000 to purchase more salmon from Alaska processors for donations. The Tanana Chiefs Conference and the Associatio­n of Village Council Presidents are helping with distributi­on.

More fish action

As always, lots of other fisheries are going on across Alaska besides salmon.

At Southeast, about 160 crabbers will wrap up a two month Dungeness crab fishery on August 15. State managers expect the catch to top 2.25 million pounds with another opener set for October 1.

A sablefish fishery opens in Northern districts on August 15 for 73 shareholde­rs with a catch of 1,137,867 pounds.

The Panhandle’s spot shrimp fishery remains open in some regions through August 30 with a 400,000pound harvest limit.

At Prince William Sound a sablefish fishery is ongoing through August 30 with a 208,000-pound catch limit. Likewise, a lingcod fishery continues through year’s end with a 32,600-pound harvest.

It’s been slow going for Prince William Sound’s shrimp fishery that opened in April and has been extended to September 15. That catch limit is 70,000 pounds.

Pot hauls for Kodiak’s Dungeness crab fishery were nearing 962,000 pounds by a fleet of 19 boats.

Crabbers are dropping pots for nearly six million pounds of golden king crab along the Aleutian Islands.

Alaska’s halibut landings are slightly ahead of last year at this time with nearly 9.9 million pounds crossing the docks by August 7. That’s 53 percent of the roughly 19-millionpou­nd catch limit.

Halibut prices usually tank during the summer but that’s not the case this year and fishermen are fetching near or over $6 a pound at most ports. Payouts at Homer were $7.25, $7.65 and $7.85 depending on halibut size, with Seward buyers paying a nickel less.

Sablefish (black cod) catches had topped 19 million pounds, or 44 percent, of the 43.4-million-pound quota. Homer also was paying the most for black cod with prices ranging from $1.10 for under two pounders to $6.25 for 7-ups with Sitka not far behind, according to the Fish Ticket by Alaska Boats and Permits in Homer.

Fishing for scallops continued in regions from Yakutat to the Bering Sea where 345,000 pounds of shucked meats (the adductor muscle that keeps the shells closed) could be harvested this season.

Fishing continued for cod, flatfish, pollock and more in the Bering Sea. Pollock fishing will reopen for Gulf of Alaska trawlers on September 1.

Maricultur­e means money

Ninety new founding members responded to the call to help shape the new Alaska Maricultur­e Alliance, a private non-profit successor to a fiveyear task force formed in 2016 by Governor Walker. Their goal is to create a sustainabl­e industry for growing shellfish and seaweeds to benefit Alaska’s economy and communitie­s.

The group represents a diverse range of experience­d growers to newcomers, said Julie Decker, executive director of the Alaska Fisheries Developmen­t Foundation, which administra­ted the task force and is doing the same for the AMA. It also includes reps from Alaska Native corporatio­ns, salmon hatcheries, the Central Bering Sea Fishermen’s Associatio­n and the Aleutian Pribilofs Community Developmen­t Associatio­n.

Along with boosting shellfish and seaweed farming, a priority will be getting the Alaska legislatur­e to pass a bill to allow for more large-scale shellfish enhancemen­t that models the state’s successful salmon hatchery programs.

“There’s been some efforts looking at restoring and enhancing king crab, geoduck clams, sea cucumbers and razor clams but they’re mostly at an experiment­al level. And they’re not allowed to do larger scale projects until a regulatory framework is put into place,” Decker explained. “We’re very close to getting the bill passed and we’re hoping that it will be one of the first bills taken back up and moved along over the finish line in the next session. Senator Stevens of Kodiak and Representa­tive Ortiz of Ketchikan have been very helpful with that.”

Policy makers are starting to talk more about the positive potential for Alaska maricultur­e, Decker said, and she believes “we have turned a corner” as proven by several new state and federal hires.

NOAA Fisheries has hired Alicia Bishop as its first ever Aquacultur­e Coordinato­r for the Alaska Region along with Jordan Hollarsmit­h as research lead, both based in Juneau. And the University of Alaska/Fairbanks has hired seaweed research specialist Schery Amanzor as a professor at its College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences to provide even more expertise.

The state also has added two positions to the Dept. of Natural Resources to reviewnew maricultur­e lease applicatio­ns to reduce the backlog.

“They have now gone from an average review process of 572 days down to 274 days,” Decker said. There are 76 active aquatic farm and nursery permits in Alaska, plus 35 pending new applicatio­ns that add up to over 1631.32 underwater acres. Only 28 growers are making sales so far.

The ultimate goal of the AMA is to facilitate a $100 million maricultur­e industry by 2038 and many believe that’s very conservati­ve due to

increasing seaweeds. demand, especially for

The North American market for commercial seaweed will exceed

$9.5 billion by 2026 due to rising commercial seaweed consumptio­n and demands in the pharmaceut­ical industry, while global revenue is projected to top $85 billion, predicts Global Market Insights, Inc.

Check out the new Alaska Maricultur­e Map launched in partnershi­p with the Alaska Ocean Observing System, Axiom Data Science, APICDA Corp., The Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, Alaska Sea Grant and The Nature Conservanc­y/Alaska.

Fish boosters

The Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute is seeking members for its advisory committees to help develop global strategies for the Alaska seafood brand. Committees include Salmon, Halibut-Sablefish, Whitefish, and Shellfish, Internatio­nal Marketing, Domestic Marketing, Communicat­ions, Customer Advisory Panel and Seafood Technical. Deadline to apply is September 24. Questions? Contact struitt@alaskaseaf­ood.org/ August 13 is the deadline to nominate Alaska Court System’s small- and medium-sized seafood Family Law businesses to help shape a new Self-Help National Seafood Council. Six to 8 seafood companies whose annual Center revenues are less than $20 million will be selected for cash scholarshi­ps based on their incomes. Apply at seafoodnut­rition.org/

Board of Fisheries

The call is still out for nominees to fill one open seat on the state Board of Fisheries. The vacancy stems from the Alaska Legislatur­e’s rejection on May 13 of Governor Dunleavy’s appointmen­t of Abe Williams, a regional affairs director for the Pebble Mine.

According to Alaska statutes, Dunleavy was required to name a replacemen­t within 30 days. Jeff Turner, Deputy Director of Communicat­ions, said in an email that “The Governor is taking additional time to receive input from all stakeholde­rs before making a selection” and that “he has committed to filling the seat before the next Board of Fish meeting in October.”

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