
NOAA On Alaska Salmon Declines
NOAA posted this report on some of the concerns about salmon declines in various Alaska river systems, including the Yukon and Kuskokwim drainages, which have both suffered through closures this year.
Here’s the report:
The decline in salmon runs in the Yukon and Kuskokwim river systems over the past few years has caused a tremendous hardship for commercial and recreational fisheries and subsistence communities. Chinook and chum salmon harvests are part of the cultural fabric of subsistence communities and serve as a critical food source. We are working with communities and state and federal partners to provide needed science and management to respond to this complex challenge.
What We Know
Our science indicates that several factors working in combination due to warm water temperatures likely contributed to poor Yukon and Kuskokwim River returns in the past 2 years.
Poor Diet and Changes in Metabolism in Young Salmon
Our collaborative marine ecosystem surveys with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and supporting laboratory studies help us gain critical insights on:
- What salmon and other fish are eating
- Changes in fish metabolism and growth rates (in warm conditions fish typically grow faster and they need more food to survive the winter)
- Changes in maturity (some fish mature at an earlier age, which means they produce fewer eggs)

In the northern Bering Sea, we have been conducting a survey of juvenile Chinook and chum salmon (1–3 years old) for more than two decades. We have observed a steady decline in abundance of Chinook salmon juveniles, but the abundance of juvenile chum has increased in recent years.
For Chinook there is a pretty good relationship between the number of juveniles we see in our survey and the number of adults that return to spawn to the Yukon River in future years.
For chum the story is a little more complicated. Just because we have been seeing higher numbers of juveniles in our recent survey doesn’t necessarily mean we will see more adults in the rivers in the next few years. Environmental conditions in the different places that chum go to feed in the ocean may have something to do with this. We also suspect this is the key reason that 2020 and 2021 adult chum returns to the Yukon River were so low.
To understand what happened to returning adult chum in 2020 and 2021, looking at conditions that young fish experienced in the ocean during the warm years of 2016 and 2019 provides some insight.
In the warm years of 2016 and 2019, we observed thinner, less fit young chum salmon in our survey. We suspect this was due to a combination of increased metabolic rates, reduced prey, and poor prey quality. At the same time, there were also mass seabird die offs, and a gray whale unusual mortality event. Poor prey availability was identified as a potential factor in both of these situations.
By compiling juvenile abundance estimates over the years, we learned that much of the year-to-year variability in survival of Yukon River Chinook salmon occurs during the first few years of life (freshwater and initial marine stages). However, the recent decline in Yukon River chum salmon has occurred during their later marine stages.
These young chum salmon migrate into the Gulf of Alaska in the winter to feed. Scientists suspect that during the warm years, the chum experienced a double whammy. First, there was reduced prey availability and lower quality prey in their Bering Sea feeding grounds. Then they encountered a similar situation when they entered the Gulf of Alaska as older fish. This likely contributed to the lower salmon returns in recent years to the Yukon River.
Surveys like the 2020 and 2021 International Year of the Salmon may provide important insights on conditions in the Gulf of Alaska winter feeding grounds for chum. This may help us better predict adult chum returns so that subsistence communities and fishermen can better prepare.
Immune Function and Disease
NOAA Fisheries and Alaska Department of Fish and Game scientists are also looking at thiamine deficiency in Chinook salmon. Vitamin B1 (thiamine) is an essential molecule in cell function. Thiamine deficiency is often linked to diet and has been identified as a potential factor in Chinook salmon population declines. Thiamine deficiencies have been linked to:
- Early mortality (i.e., death in salmon egg, alevin and fry stages of development)
- Neurological and immune impairment
- Poor swimming behavior
- Inability to avoid predators
What Role Did Bycatch Play in the Declines?
Bycatch Reduction Research
The Center’s Resource Assessment and Conservation Engineering Program also studies fish behavior inside commercial fishing nets. We are working with the commercial pollock fishing industry to develop salmon excluders. Scientists are also collaborating on a study to develop species distribution models to predict Chinook salmon and pollock fleet overlap.

NOAA Fisheries’ social scientists, participating in our ACLIM and GOACLIM efforts, have initiated programs in the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska. We want to learn more about scientific and traditional observations of the impacts of climate change on salmon and other local subsistence and commercial fisheries. By understanding how changes in returns are impacting communities, and if and how people are adapting to these changes, scientists can develop indicators to project climate change impacts on fish stocks and communities. This information will help NOAA Fisheries further understand the effect of federal fisheries on salmon returns and minimize the social and economic impacts on communities.
Resource Management Efforts to Address Bycatch
Over the years, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council has developed a number of federal management measures to help reduce salmon bycatch, which NOAA Fisheries has implemented.
These efforts must comply with requirements under the Magnuson-Stevens Act to minimize bycatch to the extent practicable while balancing various user needs. We have to make progress in reducing bycatch while accounting for the economic contribution from the pollock fishery.
The pollock fishery, through tax revenues, supports important community services (e.g., education, police, snow plowing etc.). Community Development Quota programs in western Alaska have also invested in these fisheries. These programs provide significant support to local communities through jobs, scholarships and heating fuel support. Reductions in bycatch must be balanced against the reality of other impacts.
Some efforts to date
- The commercial pollock trawl fishery operates under a bycatch cap for Chinook and must cease fishing if the cap is reached. The bycatch cap is adjusted with Western Alaska Chinook salmon abundance and is set lower when there are fewer salmon.
- The pollock industry operates under NOAA Fisheries approved salmon bycatch incentive plan agreements. These plans outline their measures to reduce salmon bycatch. Annual reports on the content and effectiveness of these plans are provided to the North Pacific Fishery Management Council.
- The fishery, through its cooperative structure, has also made ongoing investments in technology and information to improve bycatch avoidance.
- Fisheries observers provide nearly 100 percent coverage of the pollock fishery and collected data and catch reports are provided in near-real time to help inform fishery operational decisions to improve bycatch avoidance efforts.
In 2010, NOAA Fisheries implemented revisions to the federal fishery management plan for the groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area (Amendment 91). Incentive Plan Agreements were developed to help reduce salmon incidental catch at all levels of pollock and salmon abundance. A key component of these Agreements with the commercial fishing industry is the use of near real-time data to inform incidental catch “hot-spot” closures. Through these closures, vessels are prohibited from fishing in areas of known high salmon abundance as they change throughout the season.
In 2016, NOAA Fisheries took an additional step to reduce salmon bycatch in the Bering Sea and Aleutian islands by implementing Amendment 110, which added several important provisions building on the foundation of Amendment 91. First, it added specific requirements to the incentive plan agreements developed by industry to minimize salmon bycatch. These included penalties for vessels that failed to avoid Chinook salmon, rewards for avoiding Chinook salmon, and required reporting about the effectiveness of the plans. Another element reduced the Chinook salmon bycatch limit in years of low Western Alaska Chinook salmon abundance. Additionally, it improved monitoring of salmon bycatch and allowed more pollock to be harvested during times of the year when Chinook salmon bycatch is low.
Recent Management Actions to Focus on Chum Salmon Bycatch
At its June 2022 meeting, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council took several actions aimed at reducing chum bycatch:
- Requested the pollock industry institute immediate measures to reduce chum bycatch during the summer fishery and report back to the Council (the pollock industry has already implemented some changes to their salmon avoidance plans to address chum salmon bycatch including chum salmon bycatch avoidance area closures, restrictions for vessels fishing in known areas of high chum salmon bycatch, and penalties for vessels with chronic poor chum salmon bycatch performance)
- Requested a discussion paper on chum salmon bycatch
- Initiated a Salmon Bycatch Committee comprising Tribal members, scientists, industry representatives, and other experts, which will provide recommendations on: 1) the discussion paper on chum salmon bycatch; 2) the findings and recommendations from the State of Alaska’s Bycatch Task Force and the work of the Western Alaska salmon subcommittee; and 3) current information, including Local, Traditional, and Subsistence knowledge, and needed research to determine what is driving western Alaska salmon declines
Community Listening Session
To hear directly from the communities affected, NOAA Fisheries Alaska Regional Office, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council attended a listening session hosted by Kawerak in Nome in July. Community members shared observations on declines in salmon runs and changing ocean conditions.
Disaster Relief
This year, the Secretary of Commerce directed $6 million in disaster relief to Alaska Norton Sound, Yukon, Kuskokwim, Chignik, Prince William Sound, and Southeast Alaska Salmon Fisheries. This effort will mitigate some of the loss of critical salmon runs due to climate change and associated impacts on commercial and subsistence communities in Alaska.
Climate Change Challenges
Climate Change is posing new challenges for sustainable resource management. In Alaska, NOAA Fisheries and the North Pacific Fishery Management Council have long been engaged in various efforts to advance ecosystem-based fisheries management and, more recently, climate-informed resource management decisions.
Salmon are an important component of Alaska marine ecosystems and vital to coastal communities.
We are committed to doing more to help tackle the many issues affecting salmon survival in Alaska through science and management.