Federal fishery managers took steps on Feb. 11 to impose new rules to prevent Alaska chum salmon from being scooped into nets that go after Bering Sea pollock, an industrial-scale fishery that produces the nation’s largest single-species commercial seafood harvest.
The North Pacific Fishery Management Council advanced a suite of new protections intended to combat the pollock trawlers’ salmon bycatch, the term for the incidental catch of unintended species.
Proposed steps in the package include numeric caps on total chum salmon bycatch, with varying allocations for different sectors of the pollock fleet; protective limits in corridors known to be used by salmon migrating through the ocean back to Western Alaska spawning areas; and provisions that would link new limits in the ocean to real-time salmon counts and conditions in the rivers.
The action followed years of complaints about ocean bycatch of chum salmon at a time when runs in Western Alaska rivers have dwindled, becoming so low at times that no fishing was allowed.
Although the specifics have been months in the making, the council’s vote on Feb. 11 was in some ways an early part of the process.
The vote does not put any specific new protections into place. Rather, it launches a detailed evaluation of the numerous bycatch-reduction tools proposed in the different alternatives and how they could work in combination. Once its staff completes that evaluation, the council is expected to vote as early as December on what members deem to be the best blend of new protections for Western Alaska chum salmon.
If the council gives its approval in the coming months, the new bycatch-reduction rules would go into effect in 2027, though parts of the fishing industry might follow some of those rules voluntarily in 2026.
“It’s a long process and it’s a bit of a grind, but I think we’ll get through it and come out with something that is meaningful in the end,” said council member Anne Vanderhoeven.
The council’s meeting in Anchorage, which started on Feb. 3 and wrapped up with the vote on Feb. 11, was devoted almost exclusively to the problem of bycatch and its effects of chum salmon runs in the Yukon and Kuskokwim river systems.
The vote to advance the protective package followed days of sometimes-emotional testimony from residents of rural Western and Interior Alaska villages who have long depended on chum salmon as a food staple.
Residents who testified described the anemic salmon runs as a crisis threatening family well-being, local economies and Indigenous cultures and identities.
In some of the testimony at the meeting, representatives of the Association of Village Council Presidents, a Bethel-based consortium of Western Alaska tribes, were among those who described the impacts of the salmon crashes on the lives of Indigenous people.
Nels Alexie, a traditional chief for the association, phrased the issue succinctly. He was at the meeting “because of my traditional stomach,” he told the council on Feb. 8. “Quickly, would you please give me back my chums and my king salmon?”
Vivian Korthuis, chief executive officer of the organization, made similar comments.
“We are not separate from our rivers or the ocean. We are salmon people. It is our cultural identity and our way of life,” she said in her testimony on Feb. 8.
The long-running debate over bycatch has pitted the interests of Indigenous residents along the river systems against those of the companies and Alaska coastal communities dependent on the Bering Sea pollock harvest.
Advocates of the Indigenous communities dependent on Western Alaska chum salmon said the council action was a victory, despite the wait for any specific new rules to take effect in the ocean.
“Sometimes small steps are a win,” Michael Williams Sr., a Yup’ik leader from the village of Akiak, said just after the meeting adjourned.
Since 1991, the amount of chum salmon netted annually as bycatch in the Bering Sea pollock fishery has ranged from a few thousand to a high of about 700,000 in 2005, according to the council’s analysis.
Bycatch was reduced substantially in the following years and was recorded at 35,125 fish last year, according to the analysis.
Genetic analysis consistently shows that most chum salmon netted as bycatch in the Bering Sea pollock harvest are not Alaska-origin but produced by Asian hatcheries, though Alaska-origin fish tend to cluster in particular locations.
Additionally, the salmon crashes in Western Alaska river systems have been blamed by scientists primarily on climate change and related factors rather than bycatch, including successive marine heatwaves.
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