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Alaska bans king salmon fishing on prime rivers

Some of Alaska's largest and best rivers have been closed to king salmon fishing because the largest of the salmon species, also called Chinook, aren't showing up in enough numbers to ensure sustainable future runs.

Fishery managers predict run will be worse than 2011

Commercial fisherman who usually fish Alaska's rivers for king salmon are having to turn to less desirable species of salmon this year. The Yukon River, pictured above with a salmon fisherman in 2001, is one of several rivers closed to king salmon fishing this season. (Sam Harrell/Fairbanks Daily News-Miner/File/Associated Press)

Alaskans again this summer are wondering: where are the king salmon?

Some of Alaska's largest and best rivers are closed to king fishing because state and federal fisheries managers have determined that the largest of the salmon species, also called Chinook, aren't showing up in enough numbers to ensure sustainable future runs.

In western Alaska, people living in dozens of villages along the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers are turning to less desirable salmon species fish with lower oil and fat content to fill their freezers for winter in what one official described as a summer of "food insecurity."

"It is pretty scary," said Timothy Andrew, director of natural resources with the Association of Village Council Presidents in Bethel. "Chinook salmon is probably the biggest species that people depend on for drying, salting and putting away in the freezer to feed the family throughout the winter."

2011 king salmon run worst in 30 years

Fishery managers predict that this year's Yukon River king salmon run will be worse than last year, and that was the worst showing for Chinook in 30 years.

Usually in mid-July, Alaska's Kenai River is crowded with sport fishing guides like Jason McMurrian, right, and tourists like Steve Peterson, left, of New York who caught a 33-kg king salmon on the river in July 2008. This year, a ban on king salmon fishing will make for a much quieter season. (Joseph Robertia/Peninsula Clarion/File/Associated Press)

Commercial fishermen on the Yukon and Kuskokwim are turning to less desirable but more plentiful species of salmon that sell for under $1 US a pound. King salmon sells for more than $5 a pound. With gas costing $6.70 a gallon (around $1.78 Cdn a litre) in Bethel, many fishing boats are sitting idle, he said.

People living in the region's 56 villages are devastated, Andrew said.

"It is an incredibly stressful time," he said.

In mid-July, the Kenai River considered by many to be Alaska's premier river for salmon fishing is normally crowded and chaotic with fishing guides steering their boats to give their clients the best opportunity to catch a trophy king.

But a ban on king fishing on the Kenai and Kasilof rivers went into effect Thursday.

Robert Begich, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game's area management biologist, said the Kenai king run looks to be the lowest on record going back to the 1980s.

While the cause of thecontinued downward trend in kings isn't clear, Begich suspects a combination of factors, with researchers looking more closely at changes in the ocean environment. King salmon usually spend several years in the ocean before returning to rivers to spawn.

Changing ocean currents could be to blame

Ray Beamesderfer, a consultant with Cramer Fish Sciences in Gresham, Ore., also suspects changes in the marine environment. He thought he and his family would be fishing for king salmon on the Kenai River on Thursday. Instead, they were casting for rainbow trout or smaller sockeye salmon.

Beamesderfer said in the late 1970s, there was a change in ocean currents that favored Alaska salmon but contributed to poor salmon runs in the Pacific Northwest.

That situation appears to be reversing, with a change in ocean currents, he said.

"We have seen some better runs in recent years," Beamesderfer said.

But he said the persistent downturn in king salmon can't be fully explained by a change in ocean currents, especially when other salmon species in Alaska are thriving.

"It doesn't seem to be that simple," Beamesderfer said.

Jeff Regnert, director of the commercial fisheries division for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, also said something different in the marine environment likely holds the answer to the downturn in kings.

"That is probably where we will see the change," he said.