Our Survival on the Line

Small photo on cover by Terese Schomogyi/KRITFC

by Serena Fitka, Jennifer Hooper, Mellisa Maktuayaq Johnson, Kevin Whitworth, and Dr. Michael Williams Sr.

If we were a school of chum salmon heading home to Western Alaska to spawn this summer, we would be amazed at our own survival.

To survive and spawn, we would have overcome alarming heat waves in 2019 as we left our freshwater redds and started rearing in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska. We would have searched long and hard for nutrition to provide the energy we needed to start our migration homeward, and we would have competed against hatchery fish from Japan, Russia, and other countries to find the best food to fill our stomachs.

And, of course, we would have dodged net after net that was drifted and trawled along our migratory pathway through the Alaska Peninsula and Eastern Bering Sea before returning to our natal streams.

But we are not chum salmon; we are Tribal citizens appointed to represent Western Alaska subsistence communities on the Salmon Bycatch Committee, created and overseen by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council.

Concerned for the survival of chum salmon and all salmon species that nourish our bodies, souls, and communities in the wake of unprecedented climate and ecosystem changes, we are asking that we focus on what we can control to foster Western Alaska salmons’ survival: those of our fisheries.

Readers of this paper know that subsistence and commercial fisheries throughout Western Alaska have been shuttered in recent years. With record-low escapements and few, if any, opportunities for our Indigenous and rural fishing families to harvest salmon, there is nothing more that our communities can sacrifice to protect these vulnerable fish.

Meanwhile, in 2022, the chum salmon bycatch in the Eastern Bering Sea pollock fishery––meaning chums unintentionally harvested while targeting pollock–– topped 242,000 fish. Preliminary genetic analyses of this bycatch suggest that, despite the rise in Asian origin hatchery fish in the North Pacific, roughly 21% of these chums (or about 50,000 fish) were from, and could have eventually spawned, in Western Alaska. This mirrors genetic analyses conducted between 2011 and 2020, showing that Western Alaska chum consistently compose a significant amount of chum salmon bycatch over time.

Twenty-one percent is about 1 in 5 fish. At a time when our Yukon, Kuskokwim, and other Western Alaska chum stocks and harvests are at all-time lows, 1 in 5 chum salmon is awfully high.

From April 3-11, the Council and its Advisory Panel will be meeting in Anchorage and online to discuss salmon bycatch, among other topics about North Pacific fisheries. This is the time when the Council could choose to push forward regulatory measures, especially a cap, to limit chum salmon bycatch by the pollock fleet, instead of leaving it to the fleet itself to determine non-regulatory (and often voluntary) chum avoidance actions, as has been the policy thus far.

At this and every meeting, the AP and Council take public testimony. We encourage all readers to call in or join the meeting in Anchorage to tell these decision-makers about your experiences in our Western Alaska salmon crisis, and to urge them to take regulatory action now to protect chum salmon.

More information about the meeting can be found at https://meetings.npfmc.org/Meeting/Details/2983, and information to testify can be found at www.kuskosalmon.org/news.

There is much more that could and must be done to reduce this waste of Western Alaska chum stocks and meet our communities’ food security and cultural needs. The Council and industry must recognize their responsibility to protect subsistence salmon and salmon fisheries by limiting Western Alaska chum bycatch, and act now to do so. We need to focus on what we can do now to protect, restore, and sustain our salmon and our communities; it’s our survival on the line.

Serena Fitka grew up in Saint Mary’s and is the executive director of the Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association.

Jennifer Hooper lives in Bethel and is the natural resources manager for the Association of Village Council Presidents.

Mellisa Maktuayaq Johnson is a Tribal citizen of Nome Eskimo Community and works with the AYK Tribal Consortium.

Kevin Whitworth is a Tribal citizen of McGrath Native Village and is the executive director of the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.

Dr. Michael Williams Sr. is a Tribal citizen and the chief of the Akiak Native Community.