A previous version of this article misspelled the name of the Juneau gillnetter quoted in the story. His name is “Stangeland” not “Strangeland.” This article ...
This is the final story in a three-part series about a place known as Area M where subsistence and commercial interests collide. For years, subsistence users along the Yukon and Kuskokwim Rivers have ...
Federal fishery managers took a step over the weekend toward applying a firm cap on the accidental catches of chum salmon by large vessels trawling for pollock in the Bering Sea, a subject that has ...
The salmon season is open from the yellow marker approximately 0.65 miles upstream of Slater Road to the FFA high school barn ...
Last in a three-part series. These stories were made possible in part with a grant from the Pulitzer Center’s Connected Coastlines initiative. Read parts one and two. EMMONAK — A single slick silver ...
“It’s hard to comprehend that this is happening in my lifetime. It makes me sad just thinking about it,” said Bill Alstrom of St. Mary’s. (Olivia Ebertz/KYUK) Bill Alstrom lives in St. Mary’s on the ...
BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) — Fishing in the part of Whatcom Creek that flows through downtown Bellingham will end more than five weeks early this year because chum salmon are returning in low numbers. The ...
American: There are some yellow perch being caught. Jigs tipped with perch meat has been a good setup to use. One online report said schools were found north of Beard Island in 40 feet of water.
BETHEL — Only qualified subsistence users will be able to harvest chum and king salmon from the Kuskokwim River. The Federal Subsistence Board has closed federal waters from Aniak to the mouth of the ...
Scientists have made some intriguing parasite discoveries in an accidental back-of-the-pantry natural history museum. Canned ...
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are predicting a poor return of chinook and chum salmon to the Yukon area this summer. Like last year, both the federal ...