The lower numbers — the catch is predicted to drop by more than a third — are driven by an off-year for pink salmon.
Morning Overview on MSN
Pike across the Northern Hemisphere are eating 60% more fish than a decade ago and ecologists don’t know why
“When we ran the numbers a second time, we thought there had to be an error,” one member of the research team told colleagues ...
Alaska fishermen are grizzly bears–hibernating throughout the winter, only to arrive on the Bristol Bay watershed during the short summer sockeye season, relying on those salmon to build resilience ...
A University of Alaska Fairbanks study focusing on the Deshka River found that the predators have become even more voracious ...
The Metlakatla Indian Community (MIC), located on the Annette Islands 20 miles south of Ketchikan, Alaska U.S.A., is the only ...
As Alaska’s rivers warm, invasive northern pike are becoming noticeably more voracious. Scientists discovered that pike of ...
A decade-long comparison of northern pike diets in Southcentral Alaska shows they now consume about 60% more fish by mass than before, increasing pressure on already struggling Chinook salmon ...
Editor's note: USA TODAY, with support from the Pulitzer Center, traveled to Alaska, Southern California, Florida and Maine to document climate change's effects on oceans and the people who fish in ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results