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Biologists are forecasting another massive run of sockeye salmon in Bristol Bay this summer, raising questions in commercial fishing circles about whether the industry will be able to keep up. The ...
Tenders tie up at the processor’s docks, where a tube sucks salmon out of the hold and pumps them into a room-sized vat of ...
In the midst of the fishing season, Bristol Bay businesses, fishermen, and Tribes celebrate the Trump Administration’s ...
Salmon fishers, Tribes, and associated businesses in Bristol Bay, Alaska, U.S.A. have welcomed a recent legal filing ...
The most abundant source for sockeye salmon is Bristol Bay. This watershed in southwest Alaska is a salmon hot spot and accounts for over half of the world’s sockey salmon harvest.
The biggest challenge of climate change for Bristol Bay salmon isn’t necessarily warming — a Fish and Game scientist says it's variability.
Thus did the salmon come back last week to Alaska’s Bristol Bay, one of the richest salmon-fishing grounds in the world, in the biggest run in the 49th state in twelve years. Heartening Prediction.
As we write, tens of millions of salmon are swimming their way back to Bristol Bay. And for the second year running, those who work the 15,000 jobs the salmon provide each year can celebrate that ...
Bristol Bay in Alaska will remain protected under the Clean Water Act, according to a recent decision by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Values of Bristol Bay assets collapsed, and many left the fishery, some bankrupt. When I began fishing in Bristol Bay in the early 2010s it was in recovery.
The EPA won a 12-year battle for a cleaner habitat by taking big steps to protect Bristol Bay salmon runs, the most productive in the world.
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADFG) has shut down commercial salmon fishing in the Egegik district of Alaska's Bristol Bay due to "numerous reports of illegal fishing activity in closed ...
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