I’ll always remember a couple of
days spent fishing for salmon on Alaska’s Kenai River.
It was during July 2004, when my
wife, two friends, and I were enjoying some time at a lodge in
Soldotna. The river was out back, the sockeye run was on, and after dinner we’d take a walk down to the
water and cap off the day’s action catching larger fish by hooking a few sockeye in the unending light of the sub-Arctic summer.
But we hadn’t come to Alaska for
little salmon. We came for halibut, big
lingcod, rockfish and, of course, for that largest of salmon, the Chinook,
which the Alaskans refer to as “kings.”
On our first fishing day, we were on the river, back-trolling plugs draped with skeins of salmon
eggs. We had high hopes, because in
Alaska, where salmon are part of the culture, the fish are intensively managed,
and our first day on the Kenai was on one of those days of the week when it was
illegal to deploy gill nets at the river’s mouth, so the Kenai was flush with fresh-run fish.
We caught a lot of salmon that
day, but were slow to put any in the fish box. In order to limit fishing
mortality, Alaska requires that, once someone keeps a Kenai king salmon, they must immediately note that fish on their license and stop fishing for the rest of the day. We were having
too good of a time, amid some beautiful country that we had never seen before,
to be forced to head in early.
But eventually each of us caught a Chinook worth taking home. Mine went 43
pounds, our largest of the day, but none were particularly small. We then spent a couple of days by running out
of Lighthouse Point for Cook Inlet halibut, and making a 70-mile run from Seward to the
fertile bottom fishing grounds of Montague Island at the edge of Prince William
Sound, but on our last outing of the trip, we returned to the Kenai for one
more shot at the kings.
The gill nets were back in the
river, so we knew that fishing would be slower than it was the first time we
went out, but we still had our hopes. I
was in an unreasonably cocky mood, and backed myself into a corner by
announcing that I wouldn’t kill a fish smaller than the 43 that I had already
put on ice. I started regretting that
comment after an hour or so, when we were yet to hook our first fish, and
regretted it all the more when I landed a fish that might have been in the high
20s or maybe low 30s, and was obliged to return it to the river.
Despite the gill nets, we all
managed to catch something. Theresa, my wife, put
a 42 in the box, and both of our friends also scored with smaller Chinook, leaving me as the only
one in the boat who still had a line in the water. Finally, I hooked a fish good enough that I
worried about losing it, that tore up the river and, as I finally worked it close,
came out in a jump that bounced it off the side of the boat and, as the line
went slack for a moment, made me think that my worries came true.
But the fish was finally netted
and brought aboard. Back at the
launching ramp, when it was finally hung on a scale, it pulled the needle down
to 51 pounds.
Just then, a little local girl
maybe 10 years old walked over and asked what it weighed. When told “51” she gave an almost-grown-up
scoff before loudly declaring “That’s all?
I had a 72 this morning!” and slowly walking away.
Thus can overinflated egos be popped.
But the Kenai was like that just
two decades ago.
In our two days on the river, we
probably landed between 15 and 20 king salmon, keeping our limit of eight and
releasing the rest. There’s no reason to
believe that the other boats on the river—and there were a lot of them—weren’t
enjoying similar success. That doesn’t
count the fish that were caught in the gill nets downstream, by anglers fishing
from shore, and in the subsistence fisheries farther upriver, where Alaskan
Natives depend on the salmon for food. Returning
Chinook filled the Kenai back then.
Since then, Chinook numbers have
crashed.
Some view the Chinook’s situation
as dire, so last
January, one salmon conservation group, the Wild Fish Conservancy, presented
the National Marine Fisheries Service with a petition to list
“all Chinook populations that entered the
marine environment of the Gulf of Alaska”
as either
threatened or endangered pursuant to the federal Endangered Species Act. That is a somewhat ambiguous request, so NMFS
has
“interpret[ed] the
petitioner’s request as asking NMFS to consider populations of Chinook salmon
on the southern side of the Alaska Peninsula, including Kodiak Island, Cook
Inlet, Prince William Sound, and the [Gulf of Alaska] coastline and inside
waters of Southeast Alaska to the United States/Canada border at approximately
54o 45’ N latitude.”
The description
of the area covered by the petition was not the petition’s only flaw. Given the significance of the action
requested, to both the salmon and to the many Alaskans who are
connected to the commercial, recreational, and subsistence salmon fisheries,
the petition was apparently a sloppy and poorly-researched effort. NMFS
has noted that
“We have reviewed the
petition, the literature cited in the petition, and other literature and
information available in our files. We
identified numerous factual errors, omissions, incomplete references, and
unsupported assertions and conclusions within the petition.”
Yet, notwithstanding
such flaws, on
May 24, 2024, NMFS issued a so-called “90-day finding” which stated that
“the petition, viewed in
the context of information readily available in our files, presents substantial
scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned action may
be warranted.”
More
particularly, NMFS
stated in the 90-day finding that
“we find that some of
the information in the petition, in particular the missed escapement goals in
recent years for many stocks in the petitioned area, and evidence of decreasing
size and age at maturity, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the
petitioned action may be warranted.”
Now, NMFS is
soliciting scientific and commercial information from any interested party,
which it will consider when making its final decision on whether to list Gulf
of Alaska chinook.
It is far from
certain that such listing will occur. In
its 90-day finding, NMFS seemingly expressed some skepticism that information
justifying a listing would be received, noting that it made its recent decision
“In light of this
uncertainty [about the number and structure of sub-populations of Chinook in
the area covered by the petition] and the low statutory standard at the 90-day
stage,”
thus implying real doubt that the same information leading to the finding would be adequate to meet the more rigorous
standards that govern the final decision.
“the listing could severely
curb fisheries directed toward Alaska’s other four species: sockeyes, chums,
cohos, and pinks. This would be an
endangering blow to the commercial fishing industry.
“In regimes to protect
weaker stocks such as the chinooks, which return en masse with other species,
the listing could force managers to close fisheries directed for the harvest of
lucrative sockeyes and plentiful pinks at Kodiak, Cook Inlet, the Alaska Peninsula,
and Prince William Sound.”
It’s also possible that the impact could spread well beyond the Gulf of Alaska salmon fisheries.
There
has been a long and ongoing debate about the number of Chinook salmon taken as
bycatch in mid-water pollock trawls.
Currently, the
North Pacific Fishery Management Council has set a hard bycatch cap of 60,000
Chinook salmon each year, which is divided among different sectors; the pollock
fleet is effectively governed by a smaller, 47,591 Chinook maximum. But not all, and probably a minority, of the
the Chinook caught by the trawlers come from the Gulf of Alaska, so there are smaller, region-specific caps in
effect there, with pollock trawlers limited to a total 24,999 Chinook limit,
which is broken down between the Central and Western parts of the Gulf, while
trawlers seeking other groundfish may kill another 7,600 Chinook, distributed across three sectors of the fleet.
Should Gulf of
Alaska Chinook be listed, some or all of such bycatch would be considered an
illegal take, and the relevant fisheries shut down unless and until they could
obtain permits that allowed a limited number of Chinook to be taken
incidentally.
“The petition was
clearly drafted by people with little knowledge of Alaska and Alaska salmon
stocks. It was rife with significant
factual errors, omits important data that are widely available, and does not
accurately describe the status of chinook salmon in Alaska. It is mind boggling that NMFS could make a
positive finding based on cherry-picked data to support a pre-determined
viewpoint.”
Alaska
argues that the escapement numbers are a poor criteria to use when considering
a threatened or engangered listing.
“Simply failing to meet
an escapement goal that is calculated to meet maximum sustainable yield does
not mean a stock is at risk of extinction,”
an argument
that might well be justified provided that fishing mortality can
be effectively eliminated, and only the survival of the Chinook is a
consideration when determining how many returning fish may be sufficient.
Of course, in
March of this year, despite the plight of the Kenai’s Chinook, Alaska’s Board
of Fisheries voted to reduce the escapement goals for late-run fish in the
river, in order to create more commercial fishing opportunities for other
salmon species. Thus, the state’s
views on Chinook escapement probably ought to be read with a big grain of salt.
“It is highly probable that, in the Kenai, the spawning escapement goals are being achieved and
possibly exceeded when all age classes of chinook are enumerated.”
Whether that’s
true, or whether it is just an argument based on hope, is something that NMFS
will ultimately need to figure out.
In the meantime, it’s clear that if at least one run of Chinook in the Gulf of Alaska is found to be either endangered or threatened, however unlikely that finding might appear right now, that decision will have a big impact on people and resources outside of the Chinook fishery.
Thus, it’s probably appropriate to ask how and why a fishery that seemed
to be thriving just twenty years ago has gotten to the point where an
endangered species listing is, if not probable, then at least a real
possibility. And it's also appropriate to
look back and ask whether there is anything that fishery managers might have
done to keep the fishery--and the Chinook population--from falling so far downhill.
For while it is
not at all certain that NMFS will list the Chinook under the ESA, the
one thing that is certain, beyond any reasonable doubt, is that the Chinook
will not be the last species of fish to be subject to a listing
position. For that reason alone, we should try to
learn from the Chinook's situation, to better understand how things go wrong, and how mistakes may be averted, to perhaps prevent other species of fish from sharing the Chinook's fate.
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