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Default King salmon vanishing in Alaska as Sarah Palin exits the building



"Too_Many_Tools" wrote in message
...
Republicans always seem to be leaving when the problems they created
demand a solution.

If Palin was such a great governor, why wasn't this problem fixed?

TMT


King salmon vanishing in Alaska, smokehouses empty
By MARY PEMBERTON, Associated Press Writer Mary Pemberton, Associated
Press Writer Sun Aug 2, 9:22 pm ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Yukon River smokehouses should be filled this
summer with oil-rich strips of king salmon — long used by Alaska
Natives as a high-energy food to get through the long Alaska winters.
But they're mostly empty.

The kings failed to show up, and not just in the Yukon.

One Alaska river after another has been closed to king fishing this
summer because significant numbers of fish failed to return to spawn.
The dismally weak return follows weak runs last summer and poor runs
in 2007, which also resulted in emergency fishing closures.

"It is going to be a tough winter, no two ways about it," said Leslie
Hunter, a 67-year-old store owner and commercial fisherman from the
Yup'ik Eskimo village of Marshall in western Alaska.

Federal and state fisheries biologists are looking into the mystery.

King salmon spend years in the Bering Sea before returning as adults
to rivers where they were born to spawn and die. Biologists speculate
that the mostly likely cause was a shift in Pacific Ocean currents,
but food availability, changing river conditions and predator-prey
relationships could be affecting the fish.

People living along the Yukon River think they know what is to blame —
pollock fishery. The fishery — the nation's largest — removes about 1
million metric tons of pollock each year from the eastern Bering Sea.
Its wholesale value is nearly $1 billion.

King salmon get caught in the huge pollock trawl nets, and the dead
kings are counted and most are thrown back into the ocean. Some are
donated to the needy.

"We do know for a fact that the pollock fishery is slaughtering
wholesale and wiping out the king salmon stocks out there that are
coming into all the major tributaries," said Nick Andrew Jr.,
executive director of the Ohagamuit Traditional Council. "The pollock
fishery is taking away our way of living."

Since 2000, the incidental number of king salmon caught has
skyrocketed, reaching over 120,000 kings in 2007. A substantial
portion of those fish were bound for western Alaska rivers. If those
fish had lived, an estimated 78,000 adult fish would have returned to
rivers from the Pacific Northwest to Western Alaska.

Efforts to reduce bycatch are not new. In 2006, bycatch rules were
adopted allowing the pollock fleet to move from areas where lots of
kings were being inadvertently caught, thereby avoiding large-scale
fishing closures. Then, 2007 happaned, and it was back to the drawing
board.

Last April, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, the
organization that manages ocean fish, passed a hard cap on the pollock
fishery. Beginning in 2011, the portion of the fleet that participates
in the program is allowed 60,000 kings a year. If the cap is reached,
the fishery shuts down. Those who don't participate have a lower cap —
47,591 fish.

The loss of the kings is devastating village economies. These are the
same Yukon River villages where spring floods swept away homes, as
well as boats, nets and smokehouses. There's no money to buy anything,
Andrew said.

"It is crippling the economy in all of the rivers where we depend on
commercial fishing for income," he said.

Bycatch plays a role but is not the only reason for the vanishing
kings, said Diana Stram, a fishery management plan coordinator at the
council.

Herman Savikko, an Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologist,
agreed. He pointed to changing ocean currents, plankton blooms and
even the carnivorous nature of salmon. River conditions could be
changing, too, he said.

A lot isn't known about what happens to king salmon in the ocean,
Savikko said. "Once the fish enter the marine environment it just is a
big black box," he said.

In a good year, Kwik'pak Fisheries L.L.C. in Emmonak on the lower
Yukon employs between 200 and 300 people. This summer, only about 30
people have been hired. Kwik'pak is the largest employer in the
region.

General manager Jack Schultheis said when the king fishery was shut
down, the summer chum salmon run was curtailed as well, even though a
good number of chums were returning to the river.

The lower Yukon villages are economically devastated, he said.

Fishermen used to get between $5 million and $10 million from the
fishery. Last year, it was $1.1 million.

That means instead of making between $20,000 and $30,000 in the 1970s,
fishermen are making just a few thousand dollars now, and that in
villages where fuel costs $8 a gallon, milk is $15 a gallon and a T-
bone steak costs $25, he said.

It's hard to see the villages in such economic hardship but the Yukon
should be managed conservatively until the problem of the disappearing
kings is better understood, Schultheis said.

"For 50 years, it was an extremely stable fishery," he said.



spillover. ask the fishwife Pelosi

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