November 3, 2016 โ For fishing communities, NOAA Fisheriesโ annual publication about commercial landings makes great reading. As weโve observed in the past, โFisheries of the United Statesโ is interesting here in much the same way crop reports are a topic of fascination for farmers.
Analysis of multi-year trends points out some concerning news about the strength of commercial fisheries on the Lower Columbia. The 2015 edition of the annual fisheries compendium from the National Marine Fisheries Service (tinyurl.com/2015FishReport) finds Lower Columbia River landings at something of a low ebb.
With crabbing delayed into 2016 due to a marine toxin bloom, Ilwaco/Chinook landings dipped to their lowest level in at least half a dozen years. It remains to be seen whether the same problem recurs this December โ a possibility, considering the ongoing toxin-related delay in razor clam season.
With about 92 million pounds of landings, Astoria area ports were in 13th place nationwide in terms of volume in 2015. Reflecting the relatively low price of some local harvests โ such as hake and sardines โ the south shore ports were in 27th place nationwide in the value of landings โ about $38 million. South-side ports were far behind Westport in terms of value of the 2015 catch โ Westport was 12th in the U.S. with a 2015 total of $65 million. Ilwaco/Chinook fell off the top-50 list.
More important than annual โhorse raceโ statistics between ports is how well fishing fleets succeed over time. Current trends are worrisome.
The largest worry in terms of fishing trends are the ways in which the northeast Pacific Oceanโs productivity was hammered from 2013 to 2015 by the ocean heatwave called the Blob, along with an associated surge in toxic algae. The Blog showed some initial signs of coming back to life this fall, but thankfully has now faded again. Scientists have little doubt it will return, adding to problems in a generally warmer and more acidic ocean in coming decades. These changes will be a permanent damper on a long-vital economic sector.