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ASMI, for information used on this
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Wild Alaskan salmon is healthy, sustainable and is
a Pacific tradition year around. Only wild salmon can guarantee
you are getting the health values of Omega 3 oils, the diet for a
healthy heart and long life.
World famous, the Alaska wild salmon run is truly a
natural wonder. Robust, renewable and dynamic, the wild salmon
supply is carefully managed and has the benefits of many years of
scientific advances. Lucky for you, the consumer, the
Alaskan wild salmon market
is an industry we can count on to feed us and continue to astonish
us with it's beauty and mystery far into the future. Recent
discoveries of the health benefits confirm what many have known
for years ... Alaska wild salmon is a healthy way to enjoy gourmet
food. See our Wild Salmon diet information. Order
Wild Salmon Online at our Alaskan Salmon market.
Every aspect
of Alaska’s salmon fisheries is strictly regulated, closely
monitored, and rigidly enforced. The State of Alaska’s statutes
and regulations control such factors as:
Fishing
areas, which prohibit harvests too far offshore where the
incidental catch of salmon bound for other rivers would be too
high, or too close inshore where the salmon are crowded, and too
vulnerable. In managing the fisheries on an in-season, day-to-day
basis, Alaska’s fishery managers can open and close certain areas
to fishing, in response to fish behavior, water levels, and other
conditions. This allows a reasonable separation of salmon, so that
each fishery targets a specific run of fish.
• Fishing
vessel licenses are rigidly limited by a system known as “limited
entry”. This means that anyone wishing to fish for salmon must buy
an existing license from another fisher, because new licenses are
not issued. This allows for rational management of the fishery
without undue impacts to the long-term health of the salmon
stocks.
• Fishing
gear such as purse seines and gillnets must be constructed of
multi-filament mesh, rather than the less-visible monofilament.
They must float at the surface, where their catch can be observed.
All nets are limited in their length, depth, and periods of
operation, as are the gear and operation of troll (hook) gear.
Trawl nets are not allowed for salmon. The fishing gear itself,
and the way it is fished, virtually eliminates incidental catch of
marine mammals or birds.
Alaska’s
fisheries management system is well-crafted and has served
well
for almost four decades, as demonstrated by the sustainability of
Alaska’s salmon harvests. The Alaska Board of Fisheries sets
harvest policies, regulations, and allocations, and the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game (ADFG) conducts biological research,
and enforces the board’s decisions. The dominant goal is the
harvest policy known as “fixed escapement”. This means that
management’s first priority is to ensure that sufficient numbers
of adult spawning salmon escape capture in the fishery in the
ocean and are allowed to spawn in the rivers, thus maintaining the
long-term health of the stocks. Escapement goals can be reliably
achieved for each species, each stock, every year. All human uses
of salmon, especially commercial fishing, are subordinate to this
guiding principle. Because of the natural variability of
environmental conditions such as El Niņo, the total number of
adult fish returning to spawn may vary. In order to maintain
escapement, it is the commercial harvest that fluctuates from year
to year.
The salmon
fisheries are tactically managed while they are actually taking
place. Alaska has led the way with its in-season salmon management
approach, which has become recognized among fisheries management
agencies around the world. In addition, the in-season management
decisions are made from a local office, by the biologists most
knowledgeable in that fishery, rather than in some distant
headquarters. This allows ADFG to account for the natural
variability of the runs. ADFG manages over 15,000 salmon streams
throughout the state.

Alaska’s abundant, well-managed commercial salmon fisheries
support a thriving commercial fishing and seafood processing
industry; by far the largest employment sector in the state. The
overwhelming majority of Alaska’s salmon are landed and processed
at seafood plants in scores of small coastal communities all along
Alaska’s 47,300 miles of coastline. These long-established
villages and towns depend on salmon as their economic base, and
therefore have a strong incentive to support long-term,
sustainable management of the fisheries.
Alaska’s
management of its fisheries is ecologically sound, in other
important ways:
• All Alaska
salmon live in their natural habitat in the cold, clean waters of
the North Pacific Ocean. Here they grow to adulthood at their
natural pace, eating only their natural foods like shrimp,
herring, squid, zooplankton, and other marine life. They swim free
on the high seas and then return to their natal streams on their
own schedule (see salmon migration map below). This is why
Alaska’s
salmon fisheries are seasonal, rather than year-round. Alaska
salmon are wild; there are no salmon farms in Alaska. In order to
protect Alaska’s wild fisheries from potential problems, salmon
farming was prohibited by the Alaska legislature in 1990 (Alaska
Statute 16.40.210).
• Alaska
salmon helps to support robust populations of bears, eagles, and a
host of other species of birds and mammals. The abundance of these
predator and scavenger salmon-eating species is testament to the
success of Alaska’s salmon management. Alaska salmon are an
important and integral part of their natural ecosystem. Unlike
stocks in other parts of the world, no Alaska salmon stocks are
threatened or endangered.
Alaska’s
salmon have been abundant for millennia, and they are managed to
ensure their future abundance. In Alaska, the fish come first!
Information provided by ASMI
 |
Alaskan
Wild Salmon
World famous, the Alaska wild salmon run is truly a
natural wonder. Robust, renewable and dynamic, the wild salmon
supply is carefully managed and has the benefits of many years of
scientific advances. Lucky for you, the consumer, the
Alaskan wild salmon market
is an industry we can count on to feed us and continue to astonish
us with it's beauty and mystery far into the future. Recent
discoveries of the health benefits confirm what many have known
for years ... Alaska wild salmon is a healthy way to enjoy gourmet
food.
The five
species of Alaska salmon are members of a large family of fish
known as salmonidae which are abundant throughout the temperate
zones of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Salmon and their
salmonidae relatives, which include Atlantic salmon, are active
and aggressive predators who demand the high levels of oxygen most
commonly found in cold, rushing streams, estuaries, and the upper
levels of the ocean.
Pacific
salmon occur from California north along the Pacific coast
throughout the Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and Arctic Ocean waters
adjacent to Alaska. Alaska’s wild salmon resource is the greatest
in the world. |
Alaska salmon belong to the genus Oncorhynchus, a name formed by
combining two Greek words, “onco” meaning hook or barb, and “rhyno”,
meaning nose. The scientific names for each of the five species were
given during the exploration of Siberia, and reflect the native
vernacular names for the fish. Thus, we have:
|
Scientific
name |
Common name |
Other names |
|
Oncorhynchus
gorbusha |
Pink |
Humpy, Humpback |
|
Oncorhynchus
keta |
Chum |
Keta |
|
Oncorhynchus
kisutch |
Coho |
Silver |
|
Oncorhynchus
nerka |
Sockeye |
Red |
|
Oncorhynchus
tschawytscha |
King |
Chinook |
Alaska salmon
are anadromous, that is, they spawn in fresh water and the young
migrate to the sea where they mature. The timing of spawning and
migration varies among the five species, but they all need abundant,
pure, fresh water for spawning. The fresh water that attracts the
maturing salmon from the ocean vastness to the interior of the
continent to spawn also draws the salmon to man’s doorstep.
Although the
spawning characteristics of each of the five species of Alaskan
Wild Salmon differ, each maintains the same timing year after
year, and, with few exceptions, the mature adults return to the stream
of their birth.
Salmon which
will spawn in the headwaters of a river or lake system (king, coho and
sockeye), arrive earlier than do the pink and chum which spawn closer
to tidewater. Because salmon do not eat after they have entered fresh
water, they leave the ocean heavy with the fats and nutrients on which
they will subsist during their freshwater phase. The longer and more
rigorous the freshwater trip, the more fat the fish will carry as he
leaves the ocean. A Yukon River king headed for spawning grounds 2,400
miles (4,000 kilometers) away and 2,200 feet (670 meters) above sea
level near Lake Teslin will enter the river an unusually rich,
vigorous fish.
How salmon
return so unerringly from mid-ocean to a stream which may be only a
trickle hundreds of miles from tidewater is not fully understood by
biologists. Except where humans have interfered, however, the salmon
returning to the various river systems and streams of Alaska are
unique species which may mingle in the ocean and even in the estuary,
but return faithfully to the gravel from which they emerged two to six
years earlier. Fish that enter fresh water early in the season are
more brightly colored than those that arrive later, but all salmon
turn darker as the time to spawn approaches. Pronounced morphological
changes take place, particularly in the spawning male. The female
selects a suitable patch of gravel, and excavates the nest. When she
is ready, she allows the male to fertilize her eggs as she deposits
them in the gravel.
Five to seven
months after spawning, the young salmon fry emerge from the gravel
where the spawning pair deposited and fertilized the eggs the fall
before. Some of the fry will go to sea almost immediately, while
others, such as sockeye, king and coho will remain in streams and
lakes for a year or more. When the fry migrate toward the sea, they
undergo certain changes which prepare them for life in salt water;
during this stage of life they are called smolts. In the estuary,
where salt and fresh water mix and food is abundant, a smolt may
double or even triple its weight before venturing westward into the
Gulf of Alaska or Bering Sea. Depending on the species, the salmon may
go within a few miles of the Kamchatka Peninsula which extends
southward from Siberia toward the western tip of the Aleutian Islands.
Growth rates in
the ocean are no less astonishing than those in the estuary. A
two-inch pink salmon which leaves the estuary and moves offshore in
early-to-mid summer can return slightly more than a year later as a
two-foot, five-pound adult. Pink salmon spend a year in ocean waters;
other species may spend four, five or even six years in the ocean
pastures growing to prodigious size. Any "125 pound plus" king salmon landed in
Southeastern Alaska is thought to have spent seven years in the ocean.
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