Author: Fishermen's News

Relief Coming for 2018 P-Cod Fishery Disaster
News

Relief Coming for 2018 P-Cod Fishery Disaster

Federal officials have allocated $65 million for communities in six states for fishery disasters that occurred between 2017 and 2019, including the 2018 Pacific cod and sockeye salmon losses in Alaska in 2018. Word of the allocation came in late February from Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who said these funds would help the communities recover from a disaster beyond their control and make them more resilient to challenges in the future. The package includes $24.4 million for the 2018 economic disasters created in Alaska for loss of Pacific cod in the Gulf of Alaska and $10.3 million for the sockeye salmon failures at Chignik. The allocated funds will be administered by the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, in Portland Oregon, which works collaboratively with National Mar...
UFA Takes Issue with BOF Allocative Decisions
News

UFA Takes Issue with BOF Allocative Decisions

State of Alaska officials are siding strongly with recreational and subsistence fish harvesters in allocation issues, drawing sharp criticism from United Fishermen of Alaska, the statewide umbrella group representing the state’s commercial fishing industry. Alaska Department of Fish and Game Commissioner Doug Vincent-Lang made clear, in a video posted on the social media website Facebook that the Alaska Board of Fisheries had an allocative preference for sport and personal use harvesters over commercial fishermen during its February meeting on Upper Cook Inlet finfish issues. “The board took a couple of key actions that really are of significance to Alaskans and people who are trying to put fish in their freezer to feed their families,” Vincent-Lang said. “All and all it was a win...
Bullwhip Hot Sauce is a Triple Winner  at Alaska Symphony of Seafood
News

Bullwhip Hot Sauce is a Triple Winner at Alaska Symphony of Seafood

Bullwhip Hot Sauce, featuring Alaska bull kelp as its number one ingredient, swept top honors in the 2020 Alaska Symphony of Seafoods, to take home the grand prize, first place in retail competition and the Juneau People’s Choice award. “We have been amazed by people’s response since its release, owners of the Juneau-based company said after winning the awards. “When kelp is paired with piri pepper, tomatoes and fresh garlic, the delicious flavor makes you want to put this sauce on everything. The Alaska kelp industry is on an exciting trajectory and these awards showcase that we can make really delicious foods out of kelp.” The sauce itself is described as imparting a deep umami flavor, a savory or meaty taste. Four of the 20 products entered in the 2020 symphony competition, in ...
News

Ocean Bottom Temperatures are Key to Pacific Cod Numbers

A federal fisheries study focused on the influence of water temperature on egg hatching success concludes that the dramatic loss of Pacific cod in the Gulf of Alaska in 2019 was due to lack of optimal spawning habitat on the ocean bottom. The NOAA Fisheries study, led by biologist Benjamin Laurel, connected low numbers of Pacific cod larvae, juveniles and adults to loss of spawning habitat in the 2013 – 2016 marine heatwave, known as “the Blob” – the largest warm anomaly ever recorded in the North Pacific. Loss of optimal habitat for the Pacific cod eggs occurred during and immediately following the heat wave, causing a significant ecological as well as a significant economic impact on the second most valuable commercial fishery in Alaska. Also worth noting, researchers said, is t...
News

Millions of Tons of Unreported Harvest are Traded Illicitly

A new report by an international team of marine scientists says 7.7 to 14 million metric tons of fish caught each year are potentially contributing to an illicit trade system that threatens food and economic systems worldwide and exacerbates overfishing issues. The findings of University of British Columbia researchers Daniel Pauly, Lincoln Hood, Ussif Rashid Sumaila and others in British Columbia and Australia was reported in February in an article entitled “Illicit trade in marine fish catch and its effects on ecosystems and people worldwide,” in the Science Advances, a publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Their study suggests that these illicit harvests gross between $8.9 billion and $17.2 billion each year, with Asia, Africa and South America hard...
News

GAPP Sets 2020 Annual Meeting for Oct. 12

Market promotion will be the drawing card for the second annual meeting of the Association of Genuine Alaska Pollock Producers, set for Oct. 12 at Seattle’s Bell Harbor International Conference Center. The intent will be the same as the first annual meeting, to bring the industry together to collaborate on how to better promote its fish and celebrate their successes together, said Craig Morris, chief executive officer of GAPP. The event date was chosen largely because it coincides with the International Groundfish Forum. “We look forward to welcoming guests from all over the world who are connected to the wild Alaska Pollock industry as we recognize that many of our biggest challenges and greatest opportunities are global ones,” said Morris. Companies interested in sponsoring the ...
News

Fish Migrating to Cooler Waters Will Affect Economies

A new international study published in Nature Sustainability concludes that nations in the tropics, especially Northwest African nations, are vulnerable to potential species loss due to climate change. Not only are tropical countries at risk of loss of fish stocks, as fish migrate to cooler waters to maintain their preferred thermal environment, but there are not currently any adequate policy interventions to help mitigate affected countries’ potential losses. Researchers from the Universities of Delaware, California Santa Barbara and Hokkaido collaborated on the study, which was reported at EurekAlert, the online publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. When researchers looked at international agreements, including the UN Convention on the Law of the ...
Norton Sound Winter Crabbers Challenged to Find Buyers
News

Norton Sound Winter Crabbers Challenged to Find Buyers

A major buyer of Norton Sound winter commercial red king crab opted for conservation reasons to abstain from purchases for the fishery opening on Feb. 29, leaving harvesters to find their own markets for their catch. The decision of the Norton Sound Economic Development Corp. prompted the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to require all commercial harvesters to find their own markets through other legal means like a catcher-seller permit or other direct marketing programs. ADF&G advised the commercial harvesters two weeks in advance of the opener that they must contact the Nome Fish & Game office to register for catcher-seller or other direct marketing permits before selling crab to the public. The North Pacific Fishery Management Council in early February set the prelimi...
News

2020 IPHC Setline Survey Will Cover 1,300 Stations

The International Pacific Halibut Commission’s 2020 fisheries-independent setline survey, from May 23 through Aug. 31, will include a grid of 1,300 stations from Oregon to the northern Bering Sea, including the Aleutian Islands. The setline survey is conducted using 10 to 14 fishing vessels whose bids were accepted to do the sampling of 28 charter regions within the PIHC convention area. All regions are open annually for single-year bids. The survey, one of the largest in the world, costs about $5 million to $6 million, and is paid for by the sale of halibut caught to processors located where the charter vessels land, through a bidding system conducted by the IPHC, said Stephen Keith, assistant director of the IPHC. The survey is conducted to collect standardized data for use in t...
Sitka Sound Sac Roe Herring Fishery Unlikely in 2020
News

Sitka Sound Sac Roe Herring Fishery Unlikely in 2020

Odds for a Sitka Sound sac roe fishery in 2020 are slim, due to a forecast indicating most of the herring this year won’t meet current market requirements for size. Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologists in Sitka said in late February that current market conditions require herring with an average weight of 110 or more and roe recovery of 11 percent or better, but that the forecast was comprised primarily of (83 percent) age-4 herring with an anticipated average weight of 92 grams. The situation is similar to 2019 when herring were available to the fishery, but no fishery occurred because their size did not meet market demands, ADFG biologists said. An average weight of 110 grams is more typical of age-6 Sitka Sound herring. Still the department planned to continue issuing upd...