January 11, 2018 — The Alaska Board of Fisheries will meet for the next two weeks to decide on fishing regulations for the Southeast and Yakutat regions.
Unlike most years, the Alaska Board of Fisheries is joining both the shellfish and finfish hearings together for a two-week-long meeting in Sitka.
While finfish, such as king salmon, account for a majority of the meeting, the board will start with proposals on shellfish.
The board will consider a proposal regarding Dungeness crab seasons in Southeast.
Proposal 235 would repeal a management plan that’s been in place since 2000. The current plan sets the summer and fall seasons based on catch from the first two weeks of each season.
Last year, that meant the seasons were reduced by half. The proposal would set both seasons at two-months each.
“This seems like a good plan to update the fishery due to the loss of are due to sea otters,” said Joel Randrup, vice chair of Petersburg’s Fish and Game Advisory committee.
Committee chair Max Worhatch recommended the proposal to the Board of Fisheries.
The Petersburg committee voted in support of this proposal, as did Wrangell’s Advisory committee.
“If you have a two-month season, and if you only take the males and only 6-and-a-half inches you still leave enough breeding males on the ground to replenish the population,” said Wrangell chair Chris Guggenbickler.
Guggenbickler said sea mammals, mostly otters, are eating the crabs, reducing the stock. And regulations have responded by limiting areas to crabbers.
Read the full story at KTOO Public Media