Something positive: Alaska's Bristol Bay sockeye run and harvest increased this year, with fish sizes a bit bigger
The commercial salmon harvest in Alaskas Bristol Bay, site of the worlds largest sockeye salmon runs, held a mixture of good news and bad news this year.
The run of sockeye salmon, also known as red salmon, exceeded preseason expectations and totaled 56.7 million fish, the seventh highest since 2005, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game reported in its preliminary summary of the summer harvest. The commercial sockeye harvest was also bigger than expected, totaling 41.2 million fish. That was 18% above the preseason forecast and 23% higher than the recent 20-year average.
The total amount of money paid to fishers delivering their catches totaled $215.3 million, about 7% above the 20-year average of $200.7 million, the department said in its summary.
The bad news is that while Bristol Bay sockeye salmon continued what has been a streak of huge runs and while sockeye dominate the commercial harvest other salmon species there continued to falter. Bristol Bays harvest of Chinook, also known as king salmon, hit a 20-year low this year, totaling only 6,148 fish, compared to the most recent 20-year average of 33,469 Chinook, the department reported.
https://alaskabeacon.com/2025/09/26/alaskas-bristol-bay-sockeye-run-and-harvest-increased-this-year-with-fish-sizes-a-bit-bigger/