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Despite
a recent up-tick in the harvest, fishery managers are continuing to be cautious
about this year’s Kodiak area commercial salmon season.
Alaska
Department of Fish and Game Area Management Biologist Jeff Wadle says
the department started managing for pink salmon around the beginning of the
month. The most recent 57-hour fishing period for the west and east sides of
the island closed Sunday night. Wadle says there were encouraging
signs, but the runs are still relatively slow.
(Salmon
1 :42s “…we’re just not really sure yet.”)
The
most recent in-season estimate shows an all species catch of just over
one-million, 800-thousand fish. About a million of those were sockeye, with
another half-million pinks, and about 260-thousand chum salmon.
Wadle says the department’s early run sockeye escapement goals were met on
the south end of the island in the Alitak District. However, the Ayakulik and
Karluk Rivers were below average for the first half of the season. Managers are
now focused on making escapement for the late run sockeye and pinks.
The next
island-wide 57-hour opener is scheduled to start Thursday, and Wadle says whether or not it gets extended depends on escapement and harvest numbers.
(Salmon 2 :19s “…seeing some fish in the streams.”)
Effort has been
relatively slow so far this season, with only about 60 seiners taking part in
the fishery. Prices have been averaging just over a dollar a pound for reds and
about 22 cents a pound for pinks.
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