FEBRUARY
7, 2020
Alaska's
Tongass and Chugach National Forests, which contain some of the world's largest
remaining tracts of intact temperate rainforest, contribute an average of 48
million salmon a year to the state's commercial fishing industry, a new USDA
Forest Service-led study has found. The average value of these "forest
fish" when they are brought back to the dock is estimated at $88 million
per year.
Led by
the Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, the study used Alaska
Department of Fish and Game data and fish estimates from 2007 to 2016
to quantify the number and value of Pacific salmon originating from streams,
rivers, and lakes on the Tongass and Chugach, which are, respectively, the
largest and second-largest national forests in the country. The study focused
on five commercially important salmon species—Chinook, coho, sockeye, pink, and
chum—caught primarily in four commercial salmon management areas adjacent to
these two forests.
"Pacific
salmon fisheries are absolutely central to Alaska's economy and culture,"
said Adelaide Johnson, a Juneau-based hydrologist with the Pacific Northwest
Research Station and the study lead. "We suspected that many of the
ocean-caught Pacific salmon that support the fishing industry likely
began their lives in forest streams that drain the Tongass and Chugach National
Forests."
Johnson
and Forest Service colleagues Ryan Bellmore and Ronald Mendel, and Alaska
Department of Fish and Game's Stormy Haught, used a three-step process to
determine the number of fish originating from the Tongass and Chugach. First,
they calculated the total number of salmon caught in regional commercial
harvest areas. They then subtracted the number of salmon originating from
hatcheries—a process facilitated by the hatchery practice of marking juvenile
fish—and the number of salmon that originated outside national forest boundaries,
such as commercially caught fish that were born in Canadian rivers and rivers
farther south in the contiguous United States.
"Our
findings underscore just how important Alaska's forest rivers and lakes are for
sustaining salmon," said Bellmore, who also is based in Juneau. "At
the same time, this study vastly underestimates the value of salmon because it
does not include subsistence and recreational salmon fisheries, which are
critically important to local communities and the regional economy."
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