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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
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Value
Of 2006 West Coast Salmon Season Down 62 Percent
Northwest
Fishletter
February 20, 2007
A
new
report from the Pacific Fishery Management
Council on the economic impacts of last year's West Coast salmon
season shows just how devastating the harvest cutbacks were to
fishermen's pocketbooks. The harvest reductions were put in place to
allow more Klamath River chinook to spawn.
Despite the best prices for chinook in 25 years, the
value of the West Coast fishery was down 62 percent from 2005
coastwide, with only $9 million in chinook landed by the troll fleets.
Recreational angling was down on the ocean as well, nearly 30 percent
in vessel-based trips. Adding both commercial and recreational
segments, the report said the 2006 income impact amounted to more than
$37 million, down nearly 50 percent from 2005, and nearly 90 percent
less than glory years like 1979.
Coastal fishers may get more harvest time this year,
due more to political pressure than any biological reason, since last
year's drastic cuts allowed about 50 percent more natural spawners to
return to the Klamath than managers had expected. About 30,000
actually showed up. This year's return is a mixed bag of news, with
the returning 4-year-old component estimated from an all-time low
abundance level of 26,100, and the 5's at 4,700 fish. Last year, the
pre-season forecast included 64,000 4-year-olds and 2,200 5-year-olds.
But the Klamath may soon turn around in a big way.
The good news is that the 3-ocean component is forecast to be the
largest on record--515,000. Last year's age-3 component was estimated
at only 44,000 fish.
The value of Columbia River fisheries was more than
half that of the coastal fisheries, with commercial gillnetters
hauling in nearly $3 million worth of chinook, coho and chum, up about
40 percent.
Tribal fisheries upriver of Bonneville Dam took
advantage of the high prices as well, with about $2 million worth of
salmon sold to commercial buyers, with an unknown amount sold
"over the bank" to the public, up nearly 90 percent in value
from the year before. The report said the tribes caught more than
900,000 pounds of fall chinook, down from 2005's 1.4 million pounds.
But they caught 180,000 pounds of spring chinook as well, way up from
last year's 67,000 pounds.
Washington tribal fisheries off the state's coast
accounted for about $1.2 million, after harvesting 30,000 chinook and
32, 000 coho.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any
copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to
those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information
for non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information
go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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