Stikine sockeye run is the best return in a decade

The Stikine River Delta, as seen from the air. The chinook subsistence fishery on the river has been closed. Photo by Ed Schoenfeld, CoastAlaska News.
The Stikine River Delta, as seen from the air. The sockeye fishery on the river is larger than expected this year. (Photo by Ed Schoenfeld/CoastAlaska News)

The sockeye salmon run returning to the Stikine River near Petersburg and Wrangell was predicted to be good, but it’s turning out to be even better than expected.

While the king salmon run for gillnetters turned out to be worse than preseason estimates, the opposite holds true for sockeye. The state-managed sockeye fishery began June 13. Biologists predicted a strong run but were cautious for the first few weeks to let more king salmon into the Stikine River. They limited openings to two days a week and prohibited fishing near the river’s opening.

After most of the Stikine kings passed, managers saw that the sockeye run was coming in strong.

Troy Thynes is the area management biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, based in Petersburg.

“Sockeyes are looking pretty good this year, at least locally,” Thynes said. “We’re fairly certain that we’re going to exceed preseason expectations. Especially with the Taltan River component of the run that came in really, really strong.”

The state predicted a run size of 223,000 sockeye. That’s well above the 10-year average of 172,000.

“I’m expecting it to be maybe 250,000 or greater,” Thynes said.

That would make it the best sockeye return since the strong runs of 2005-06.

The Tahltan is a tributary of the Stikine River and a major spawning area for sockeye. A weir project at Tahltan Lake counts sockeye coming in and shows numbers now that are way above average.

Managers were expecting at least a good return because of the counting projects at Tahltan Lake. Besides a weir that counts arriving salmon, there is a weir which counts smolt heading out of the lake to become adult fish elsewhere. There is also an enhancement project at the lake where eggs are collected, grown at a nearby hatchery and then released back into the lake as fry.

Thynes said the Tahltan sockeye historically make up close to half of the overall Stikine run.

“And based on our catches this year, both the Canadian catches in river and gillnet catches in District 8, it certainly appears that the Tahltan component of the run is going to be even stronger than what was forecast,” he said.

Because numbers were looking so good this season, managers liberalized commercial openings and allowed for five days of fishing per week. There were as many as 130 boats fishing in Districts 6 and 8, more than in recent years. Their harvests are estimated to be about 120,000.

Stikine sockeye are shared equally between the U.S. and Canada because the river runs through both countries. It’s part of the Pacific Salmon Treaty. Canada has taken about 69,000 sockeye and U.S. fishermen 66,000.

“Very good harvests for both countries,” Thynes said.

“So you’re in constant contact with Canada?” I asked, “so that everybody is kind of getting about the same amount? That’s the goal, 50-50?”

“The goal’s 50-50,” he said. “I mean, the ultimate goal is to ensure that we meet escapement to the river and after that the harvest sharing is 50-50.”

The size of individual sockeye has been about average this year. Gillnetters have been getting about $1.35 a pound from local processors.

Now that it’s the tail end of the sockeye season, local managers will soon be turning their attention to the pink salmon fishery, the largest salmon fishery in Southeast. The Wrangell-Petersburg area will transition towards pink salmon directed management August 1.

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