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New NOAA reports on Alaskaโ€™s oceans highlight disruptive warming trends

December 27, 2021 โ€” The annual Ecosystem Status Reports from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration collect a wide range of data to better assess maritime trends and help steer fisheries management.

Elizabeth Siddon, who edited a report on the eastern Bering Sea, called the annual documents โ€œanthologies of the ecosystems as we know themโ€ โ€” collaborative efforts pulling information from scientists, community members and industry groups, among others. The reports released this week also cover the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands.

If thereโ€™s any theme in this yearโ€™s detailed surveys of Alaskaโ€™s marine systems, itโ€™s heat. The three areas assessed all involve โ€œsustained warm conditionsโ€ that are affecting environment dynamics like sea ice and water columns, as well as the composition of animal stocks thriving and failing in recent years. The assessments factor into harvest policies set by the North Pacific Fisheries Management Council and touch any Alaskans who depend on sea animals, whether for work or food.

Read the full story at the Anchorage Daily News

 

Expedition planned to better understand Gulf of Alaska salmon stocks

November 27, 2018 โ€” Richard Beamish, a scientist recently retired from Canadaโ€™s Department of Fisheries and Oceans, is planning an expedition across the Gulf of Alaska to better understand changes in salmon stocks.

Beamish, who is being financially supported by fish farm operators, said that scientists do not fully comprehend the rising and falling of wild salmon stocks. Beamish said the contract for the expedition had not yet been signed but that funding for his proposal had been recently secured. Beamish declined to specifically name which salmon farmers were backing the project.

โ€œWe still donโ€™t know the mechanisms that allow us to accurately forecast salmon,โ€ Beamish said during an aquaculture industry conference in Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.

Beamish proposes a group of scientist trawl for salmon in the Gulf of Alaska and take and use DNA samples to determine the salmonโ€™s origin, allowing them to estimate their abundance in the region.

โ€œNo one has ever done this in the Gulf of Alaska, where the bulk of our salmon are in the winter,โ€ he said.

Because the study would involve a huge area of ocean which is vital to British Columbia salmon stocks, the project has the support of the Canadian government as well as other governments. Beamish indicated that a teams of scientists from nations including South Korea, Japan, Russia, The United States, and Canada would be involved. A Russian vessel would be used for the survey, at a cost of USD 900,000, (EUR 785,719) he said.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

An Ailing Orca Was Given Medication in the Wild for the First Time Ever

August 13, 2018 โ€” A team of experts injected an ailing orca calf with a dose of antibiotics, in a medical intervention thatโ€™s never been tried before on a wild killer whale.

A team of biologists from NOAA Fisheries, Vancouver Aquarium, and other institutions have been tracking the three-year-old orca, named J50, or Scarlet, for weeks. Theyโ€™re not entirely sure whatโ€™s wrong with her, but sheโ€™s dangerously underweight and often lethargic. Scarlet is a member of the J-Pod, a group of about 76 critically endangered southern resident orcas, or killer whales. Maintaining the life of each pod member, females especially, is crucially important, hence the extraordinary and unprecedented measure to administer medication.

Yesterday, Vancouverโ€™s head veterinarian, Martin Haulena, managed to visually inspect Scarlet from a boat near Washington stateโ€™s San Juan Island. With the help of his team, Haulena administered a dose of antibiotics at close range using a dart, as AP reports. Itโ€™s the first time that a killer whale has been given medication while living in the wild, the CBC reports.

โ€œResponse teams reached J-Pod in Canadian waters and followed them into U.S. waters near San Juan Island. While very skinny and small, J50/Scarlet kept up well with her mother and siblings,โ€ explained NOAA Fisheries in a press release. โ€œVancouver Aquariumโ€™s veterinarian and the team conducted a visual assessment, obtained a breath sample that will help assess any infection, and administered antibiotics through a dart.โ€

Other orcas in Scarletโ€™s pod are not malnourished, so food shortage is not considered the problem.

Read the full story at Gizmodo

Opinion: Conservation and training vital to keep Alaska fisheries strong

December 20, 2017 โ€” I wasnโ€™t ready to have kids until my husband and I started hand trolling together. Watching the other families on deck running gear or anchored in the evening and playing on a beach broke something loose inside of me. This is what I wanted. I wanted a boat, kids, a life out on the water. So that winter we bought a fixer-upper steel boat and a power troll permit. We jumped.

We jumped knowing the basics of trolling and seamanship. There was so much to learn, especially as someone who didnโ€™t grow up fishing โ€” supervising crew, keeping up with technological updates, and running the business end of things. Putting hooks in the water was the easy part.

Fishing has always required knowledge thatโ€™s tough to get as a newcomer, but getting started now is a lot more complicated than it was even a few decades ago. Fishing permits are tens of thousands of dollars at the least, and enough fishing quota to get started now costs more than a college education. Fishing regulations are increasingly complicated, and keeping up with policy decisions can be daunting.

But help is on the way. This fall, Alaskaโ€™s congressional delegation introduced the Young Fishermenโ€™s Development Act to the House and the Senate. This act would establish a Young Fishermenโ€™s Development Fund to support education and training opportunities for young fishermen throughout the country. The program is modeled after the Department of Agricultureโ€™s successful Beginning Farmer and Rancher program, which has helped hundreds of young people start their own businesses. Currently no comparable program exists for young fishermen. If passed, funding will come from NOAAโ€™s asset forfeiture fund: Fines paid for breaking fishing regulations will assist new operations with getting started on the right foot. I applaud our delegation for providing this essential support to our young fishermenโ€™s future.

Of course, the most important ingredient to a healthy fishing business is access to productive fish stocks. We depend on those managing our fisheries to commit to conservation first. The Magnuson-Stevens Act, which is the primary law governing fisheries around the country, is currently undergoing reauthorization by Congress. Unfortunately, a very vocal segment of the recreational fishing sector is pushing for exemptions to conservation requirements.

Read the full editorial at the Anchorage Daily News

 

Alaska: A Tough Break for Alaska Fishermen: Pacific Halibut Catches Likely to Drop Next Year

December 5, 2017 โ€” SEAFOOD NEWS โ€” Itโ€™s going to be a tough year for many Alaska fishermen.

After announcements of a massive drop in cod stocks, the industry learned last week that Pacific halibut catches are likely to drop by 20 percent next year, and the declines could continue for several years.

That could bring the coastwide catch for 2018, meaning from Oregon to British Columbia to the Bering Sea, to about 31 million pounds.

Scientists at the International Pacific Halibut Commission interim meeting in Seattle revealed that survey results showed halibut numbers were down 23 percent from last summer, and the total biomass (weight) dropped 10 percent. The surveys are done each year from May through September at nearly 1,500 stations from Oregon to the far reaches of the Bering Sea.

The biggest drop stems from a lack of younger fish entering the halibut fishery. Stewart said the 9- to 18-year-old year classes that have been sustaining the recent halibut fishery are not being followed up by younger fish.

โ€œIn 2018, and especially projecting out to 2019, we are moving out of a fishery that is dominated by those relatively good recruitments starting in 1999 and extending to 2005. We see an increasing number of relatively poor recruitments stemming from at least 2009 and 2010,โ€ he said.

Although they are not factoring them into their halibut catch computations, scientists for the first time are looking closely at environmental and habitat conditions, as well as trends in other fisheries.

Stewart said warmer waters starting in 2007 appear to correspond to the lower halibut year classes. Most relevant to the drop in halibut recruitment in recent years, as with Pacific cod, are the effects of โ€œthe blob.โ€

โ€œEspecially through 2015 to 2016 we saw that warmer water extending even to deeper shelf waters in the Gulf of Alaska,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™ve seen a big increase the last several years in pyrosomes, which are these nasty gelatinous zooplankton, well documented sea bird die offs and whale strandings. So some abnormal things are going on in the Gulf.โ€

The IPHC does not always follow the recommendations of its scientists. Final decisions will be made at the annual meeting Jan. 22-26 in Portland, Oregon.

Sport halibut hike

While commercial halibut catches are set to drop, charter operators will see an increase.

A Recreational Quota Entity program was approved by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council that will allow halibut catch shares to be purchased and held in a common pool for charter operators to draw from as needed.

Under the plan, the RQE can hold 10 percent of the total commercial quota pool in Southeast Alaska and 12 percent from the Southcentral region, making it the single largest halibut-holding entity in the North Pacific.

The program would be phased in over 10 years with transfers of 1 percent and 1.2 percent from each region, respectively.

It is unclear where the RQE will get the estimated $25 million needed to buy halibut shares. Some have suggested a self-funding option such as a halibut stamp, similar to king salmon, or a voluntary tax.

The RQE program is strongly opposed by commercial fishermen. In written comments, the Halibut Coalitionโ€™s Tom Gemmell stated that the RQE โ€œundermines the goal of maintaining an owner operated fleet, and will force fishermen to compete for quota against a subsidized entity.โ€

Linda Behnken, director of the Alaska Longline Fishermenโ€™s Association, said charter effort has remained relatively constant or increased despite catch conservation measures.

โ€œCharter operators claim their clients need more harvesting opportunity despite low abundance, ignoring the obvious need for all sectors to conserve during times of low abundance,โ€ Behnken said.

Longtime fisheries advocate Clem Tillion called RQEs the โ€œdeath of a small boat, owner operated fisheryโ€ adding โ€œHolland America and Carnival Cruise lines will buy the quota and hired hands will fish it, and the small boat fleet out of villages is gone.โ€

The RQE plan is set to begin next year.

Gender on the agenda

Recognizing the roles of women in the seafood industry and making them more visible is the goal of the new group International Association for Women in the Seafood Industry (WSI) and input is being gathered from around the world.

The nonprofit, launched a year ago, was created by seafood and gender issues specialists to highlight imbalances in the industry, to shed light on womenโ€™s real participation and to promote greater diversity and inclusiveness.

One in two seafood workers is a woman, WSI claims, yet they are over-represented in low-skilled, low-paying positions and account for less than 10 percent of company directors and a mere 1 percent of CEOs.

โ€œThere is a gender imbalance,โ€ said Marie Catherine Monfort, WSI president and co-founder.

Monfort, who is based in Paris, has been working in the seafood industry for several decades, both as an economist and a seafood marketing analyst.

โ€œI noticed that in most meetings I was surrounded by men, and I could only see men speaking in most conversations. Women were very numerous in this industry, but not very visible. They are not taken into account by the policy makers and by employers as well. That was the main motivation,โ€ she said in a phone conversation.

To gather more perceptions on womenโ€™s roles in the industry, WSI launched a first of its kind survey in September at a World Seafood Congress in Iceland.

It went so well, she said, that WSI decided to translate the survey into French, English and Spanish and expand it to the entire world.

โ€œThe questions center around what is the position of women in your company, and what is your opinion of the situation of women in the industry. Are there areas where things could be improved, or maybe some feel there is no need for any improvement,โ€ Monfort said, adding that responses by both sexes are welcomed.

โ€œIt is very important to also collect menโ€™s opinions, and it will be interesting to see if men and women have the same or differing opinions,โ€ she said. โ€œThe results will help us cultivate a better future with equal opportunities and increase awareness of womenโ€™s roles in the seafood industry. The more we are, the stronger we will be.โ€

The โ€œGender on the Agendaโ€ survey is open through December, and results will be available by early March. Contact Monfort at contact@wsi-asso.org with questions.

Crab wrap

The Bristol Bay red king crab season wrapped up after about five weeks, and by all accounts, it was uneventful.

โ€œFishermen were seeing about what we expected from the survey, with a little bit slower fishing and pockets of crab without real wide distribution,โ€ said Miranda Westphal, area management biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Dutch Harbor.

The red king crab catch quota this year of 6.6 million pounds was down 22 percent from last season, and the lowest catch since 1996.

The crab was โ€œbig and nice,โ€ said Jake Jacobsen, director of the Inter-Cooperative Exchange, a harvester group that catches 70 percent of the Bering Sea crab quota.

Thereโ€™s no word yet on price, and Jacobsen said negotiations will likely continue into January. Red king crab averaged $10.89 per pound to fishermen last year, the highest price ever. Jacobsen said the price is likely to be lower this year.

This story originally appeared on Seafoodnews.com, a subscription site. It is reprinted with permission.

 

Alaska: As council looks to public for Cook Inlet salmon plan, UCIDA stays wary

November 30, 2017 โ€” The North Pacific Fishery Management Council is looking for input from Cook Inlet fishermen on how it should develop a management plan for the areaโ€™s salmon fisheries.

The federal council, which regulates fisheries in the federal waters between 3 and 200 nautical miles offshore, is currently working on an amendment to the fishery management plan for Cook Inletโ€™s salmon fisheries. The process is likely to take multiple years of meetings and the council members decided to form a Salmon Committee that includes stakeholders in the fishery to keep the public in the loop on it.

Specifically, the council members are looking for ideas from the public on how the committee will work, according an announcement sent out Tuesday. That can include any fishermen on the salmon stocks of Cook Inlet.

โ€œTo develop a scope of work for the Salmon Committee, the council is soliciting written proposals from the public to help the council identify specific, required, conservation and management measures for the Salmon Committee to evaluate relevant to the development of options for a fishery management plan amendment,โ€ the announcement states.

Read the full story at the Peninsula Clarion

 

Bristol Bay red king crab quota caught

November 24, 2017 โ€” The Bristol Bay red king crab season finished up last week when the entire allowable catch was harvested.

โ€œThe Bristol Bay Red King Crab fishery went fairly well,โ€ said Miranda Westphal, the area management biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Dutch Harbor. โ€œA little slower than we would like to have seen, but they wrapped up with a total catch of 6.59 million pounds. So they caught all of the catch that was available for the season.โ€

Before the season opened on October 15, ADF&G and the National Marine Fisheries Service completed an analysis of the 2017 NMFS trawl survey results for Bristol Bay red king crab.

Read the full story at KDLG

 

Groups Praise Oliver as likely NMFS assistant administrator

May 19, 2017 โ€” Pacific Seafood, fishing organizations and other groups, praised the likely appointment of Chris Oliver, executive director of the North Pacific Fisheries Management Council, as the next assistant administrator for Fisheries at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the United States.

Oliver, who was championed for the position by major U.S. seafood processors and organizations, confirmed the appointment in an email to SeafoodSource, which was also sent to his staff members.

โ€œI have been contacted by the Department of Commerce, offered the position, and have accepted the position, with a tentative start date of June 19,โ€ Oliver wrote.

However, Oliver stressed that the appointment is not final yet, since it is still subject to the White House vetting and approval process.

โ€œI, and Commerce, would have preferred to keep this information close hold until the full appointment process is indeed finalized; but, given the timing involved, and the necessary transitional aspects involved, I feel it is incumbent upon me to let everyone know the status of this,โ€ he said.

Oliver has served as the executive director of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council for the past 16 years. Prior to serving as executive director, Oliver also worked as the deputy director of the council and as Gulf of Alaska Fishery Management Plan Coordinator.

Since January, Pacific Seafoods, American Seafoods Company, other processors, and several fishing groups, have pushed for Oliverโ€™s appointment. Other candidates for the job included LaDon Swann with the Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium and Robert Barham, who previously served as wildlife and fisheries secretary in Louisiana.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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