J
John Jones
Neither of those sources talks about Alaska or salmon, they mainly focus on squid and south American forage fish. I'm not objecting to saying that China overfishes in general but in relation to salmon and Chinook in particular it does not seem like they do. None of the articles that you link show any kind of trend towards illegal fishing in pursuit of salmon.The article also said this, so no, it wasn't a rogue "one-off." The prevailing species were chum that time (and I can pretty much guarantee you there were other species in that 80 tons), but this isn't an uncommon practice, and we first noticed declining king stocks about the same time these trawlers came under our radar. You can't really blame Alaska commercial fishermen for this when the kings aren't reaching Alaska waters in the first place. Keep in mind that one pass from one of these huge trawlers can equal the amount an average fishing boat catches in a year.
They really weren't meant to do anything more than explain to you that Chinese overfishing is a problem all over the globe and that no place is exempt, let alone the Northwest Pacific; it contains the most productive fishing grounds on the planet, after all. And they don't have to go anywhere near Alaska to trawl for the salmon that would normally return to the Pacific Coast to spawn. The Run Da was detected closer to Japan than to Alaska. The Albacore tuna vessels that saw the Ru Da reported several other similar boats in the immediate vicinity that turned tail and ran when they saw the cutter.Neither of those sources talks about Alaska or salmon, they mainly focus on squid and south American forage fish. I'm not objecting to saying that China overfishes in general but specifically in relation to salmon and Chinook in particular it does not seem like they do. None of the articles that you link show any kind of trend towards illegal fishing in pursuit of salmon.
Results from the operation include the detection of prohibited gear, failure to maintain records of catch, improper vessel markings and illegal retention of salmon.
In the Yamatotai area of the Sea of Japan, continuing from 2020, more than 1,000 large Chinese fishing boats have continued poaching in the area.
“In 2013, Columbia River fish accounted for 53 percent of all chinook salmon caught in Southeast Alaska. Taking in coastal, wild, and Washington-hatched stocks, too, Oregon and Washington chinooks accounted for two-thirds of the southeast Alaska catch.”
Here's how allocation typically works in Alaska: the troll vessels are given the largest share of predicted kings. Then come the sportfishers, and the gillnetters/set netters get the least amount. So it's really kind of in the middle about who does the most damage. If it were my call, I'd close it all except Native subsistence and see if the stocks rebuild.We need to limit the commercial guys first. Sport fishermen do some damage but nothing like commercial.
Yeah, I knew that even as I was posting that you'd say that. But as I already stated, I posted it to provide a historical perspective and to establish that illegal fishing for salmon has indeed been a "trend," as you called it previously, for a number of decades. It hasn't stopped, although evidence suggests that China's emerging aquaculture industry may prove to be a more lucrative and less dangerous option, resulting in a decrease in IUU activity.An article from the 80's is not really relevant in a discussion about today especially considering the changes in technology and monitoring over 35-ish years.
The article about the Operation North Guard doesn't mention the number of ships anywhere just the number of violations so I don't know where you are getting your numbers from.
And as per most studies of salmon movement in the open ocean American salmon don't spend time in the sea of japan
https://www.researchgate.net/public...erannual_changes_and_oceanographic_conditions
I'm not trying to deny that Chinese overfishing is a problem in the world, but for our salmon stocks, it does not seem like it is. None of the articles you have linked have proved that it is in any way.
If you are having trouble finding evidence towards your points on google, it could be that the evidence is not there, not that it's just too hard to find. Especially given that it is fairly easy to find evidence to the contrary.
Since the beginning of September, the team had boarded 15 fishing vessels registered to fish within the Pacific.
Among those 15 vessels, boarding teams identified 32 potential violations of The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Convention and North Pacific Fisheries Commission conservation and management measures, including the use of prohibited gear, failure to maintain records of catch, and improper vessel markings. The Coast Guard said that Sixteen of the violations are considered serious violations.
By trend I mean you would have to demonstrate that the pursuit of salmon has been a sustained and rising effort, considering none of these articles mention salmon it is safe to assume they are not the target fish. I know that bycatch happens but it does not seem like you have evidence it is happening at a high enough level to be more than background mortality.Yeah, I knew that even as I was posting that you'd say that. But as I already stated, I posted it to provide a historical perspective and to establish that illegal fishing for salmon has indeed been a "trend," as you called it previously, for a number of decades. It hasn't stopped, although evidence suggests that China's emerging aquaculture industry may prove to be a more lucrative and less dangerous option, resulting in a decrease in IUU activity.
I don't believe I claimed that most "American salmon spend time in the Sea of Japan," that's just not how salmon migration works, but at least one of the king runs in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta spent their ocean phase in that region, and illegal/overfishing in the Sea of Japan pretty much decimated it. It was simply an example. Multiply that by a thousand or more other areas where "our" salmon are spending their ocean phase and the preponderance of illegal fishing in these areas, and you've got a lot of smoke.
It's really easy to find where I'm getting my numbers from via Google, by the way. Most of the vessels turned and ran, and a few refused to allow boarding, but I'm sure everything was on the up and up, right? The listed violations included shark fins, but they didn't list all of the violations, and who knows what were on the others that ran away or refused to allow officials to board. But the thing is, when you're bottom trawling with 5+ mile nets in the North Pacific, you're going to bring up salmon; there's just no way not to.
And oh look, another unfortunate "one-off." Must have been a silly misunderstanding, right? You do realize that for every one of these that are caught, numerous others very likely exist undetected?
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/art...se-boat-accused-illegal-fishing-north-pacific
Probably not a good idea, though, to think that just because something is tough to find on Google means it doesn't exist, especially where international matters involving remote parts of the planet are concerned. Most of this activity isn't even caught (the usual strategy is to turn off the vessel's transponders to avoid detection, and although satellite surveillance can still catch some of it, it's pretty much a needle-in-a-haystack scenario), and enforcement is typically left to the flag country per international law. You're not going to find much on Google out of China; they've even got their own maritime enforcement ships cruising the North Pacific, but their IUU prosecutions don't make it to Google. Nonetheless, wild salmon is among the
Again, my point remains that whatever's diminishing the king salmon stocks is happening before the fish even reach Alaska waters, and that something is happening in the areas where they live out their ocean stage. All salmon species spend this stage in deep waters, but king salmon go deeper than others, which raises questions about the ocean acidification theory at this point in time, at least. As the oceans continue to heat up, who knows.
But if you want to believe that although China is pillaging the planet's seas, including the North Pacific, they're somehow leaving the salmon in international waters alone, be my guest. But that's not how these mega-trawlers work.
By trend I mean you would have to demonstrate that the pursuit of salmon has been a sustained and rising effort, considering none of these articles mention salmon it is safe to assume they are not the target fish. I know that bycatch happens but it does not seem like you have evidence it is happening at a high enough level to be more than background mortality.
If you have a link demonstrating that a run of Alaskan Kings decided to live in the sea of Japan, where no other salmon stocks live including Asian salmon stocks, I would be happy to read it but you just saying it is not enough.
https://npafc.org/wp-content/uploads/Public-Documents/2020/AR2020.pdf
This document from the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission says this
"The coordinated enforcement efforts of the NPAFC member countries in 2020 covered significant portions of the NPAFC Convention Area with over 390 hours of aircraft patrols and 136 ship-days, to deter and interrupt IUU fishing activity. These combined multilateral efforts identified multiple violations of Conservation and Management Measures established by regional fisheries management organizations in the North Pacific Ocean; however, none involved high-seas driftnet activity or illegal retention of salmon"
Their report from 2019 mentions the Run Da, as well as how much illegal salmon fishing has happened historically.
https://npafc.org/wp-content/uploads/Public-Documents/2019/AR2019.pdf
"The list of apprehended illegal salmon fishing vessels (22 vessels including F/V Run Da) in the NPAFC Convention Area has been updated as of July 3, 2018. From 1993–2019"
Less than 1 vessel Illegally fishing for salmon per year on average is not a significant trend, nor is it likely to have a significant effect on salmon stocks.
I agree there is something happening in the ocean, but the changes are within the ecosystem and likely linked to climate change, reports from high seas research vessels have found that many salmon in the ocean are starving or undernourished, showing a more likely link between poor foraging conditions and low salmon survival.
- Distribution/Range
North America "– Monterey Bay, CA' to the Chukchi Sea. Asia – Hokkaido, Japan to Anadyr River, Siberia
I was enjoying the discussion of conjecture, assumption and anecdotal evidence. Then the real bull#&*% started flying.Golly. Must be midwinter or something.
sea of Japan, where no other salmon stocks live including Asian salmon stocks,,
Yeah, you make a fair point I was wrong, there are Asian salmon stocks in the sea of Japan. It still does not seem like the Sea of Japan is a major growth area, the sea of Japan is on the very very southern and western edge of salmons oceanic range.That was fast. You must be sitting here waiting for me to post so you can pounce. I posted that to refute this ^ statement on your part. And like I already told you, I made no claim that most king salmon migrate to the Sea of Japan, simply that there was an issue at one time with a particular run. We know that most of them spend their ocean phase farther out.
Your imaginary world of "target fish" when 5-mile nets are part of the picture and "if it's not on a U.S.-centric search engine, it doesn't happen" just shows that you don't know how certain things work. There are no "target fish" in these cases; they throw down huge nets and take whatever comes up. Near the bottom of the North Pacific, that's very likely to include a sizeable number of juvenile kings.
I don't think you understand that when I said that Google can't tell you about China's enforcement efforts, I was referencing individual instances; the kind of thing that might be on their state media, not the fact that they have patrols. We don't know specifics about when/if they've boarded boats and what punitive measures they've taken. You won't find that info on Google.
And I made no claims that there's some huge fleet marauding the oceans and sucking up all the salmon; what I said was I think that IUU is a contributory factor in declining king stocks. Even leading experts don't know exactly what's going but agree that there's more than one factor; there's even a train of thought that says that overproduction of hatchery fish in your Columbia River is contributing to the demise of wild kings. Personally, I think that ocean acidification is more of a long-term threat to the existence of all salmon species, but I also think it's likely that IUU is taking a toll on ocean phase kings. The vessels have a long, established history of being out there; the North Pacific Guard obviously thinks ample evidence exists that IUU is still an issue or they wouldn't be spending all this time and money trying to stop it.
But my main point is that the kings aren't reaching Alaska, so anyway, Oregon, I guess Alaska makes a good scapegoat for your disappearing kings, but since you can't even manage to keep your word with Washington or stop yourself from trashing your own salmon habitat, you might do better to point your finger at the mirror.
Especially given that ships that are specifically pursuing salmon are having trouble finding them
2020 had the lowest commercial catch of salmon on record
Can you please cite anything? Everything you say comes off like an opinion, at the very least link to the articles/reports/studies you mention.That was fast.
I've said repeatedly throughout this thread that my opinion is based on a lot of smoke throughout the years; an established history and enough sightings during the past decade or so to indicate that the IUU fire that first came to light during the 1980s is still burning. Their distant fleet has been increasing for the past five years or so, which is concerning as well. It's an opinion many share, some don't because it's not well-represented on surface Google searches, while some on the climate change denial camp elevate it to conspiracy theory level. Somewhere in the middle, probably. It's nice to think that it's not occurring because enforcement efforts would be catching them right and left, but detection is really difficult for reasons I've mentioned.
Nonetheless, according to a 2019 report by the International Trade Commission, which you won't find on Google without some deep digging, IUU Pacific king catch makes up an estimated 8.4% of overall import value, which is less than some species but nonetheless significant enough to make a dent. Edited to add that I need to clarify that this is only specific to what's entered the U.S. supply chain; there's really no way of knowing how much was sold in other countries, but because the demand for it in Asia is substantial, it's reasonable to surmise that this only tells a partial story.
This isn't really how it works. The low catch rates for kings are caused by constant restrictions and closures, which I'm all for, by the way. To make it as clear as I can, catches are only going to be as big as the allowable harvest. Commercial fishing openings/closures are closely regulated by Alaska Fish & Game; you likely won't know until hours before a scheduled opening if you'll be allowed to catch kings, so nobody's really specifically pursuing them except for SE Alaska trollers. They're also specific to individual districts rather than statewide. The commercial guys make their money on pinks and reds; sometimes chums and coho. If they're allowed to catch kings, it's just a temporary bonus. One exception might be out in Copper River, but if escapement goals aren't met, they'll close down kings just like that.
Kings are mostly a specialty fishery anymore, as I stated previously, with the majority of kings in Alaska being allocated to vessels that use old-school hook-and-line trolling and catch one fish at a time. I'm pretty sure all of our troll vessels met their allocations this year. I should make it clear that these vessels are different than the ones up in Copper River/Bristol Bay/Prince William Sound. They're generally small, one-two person outfits that are primarily used in SE Alaska.
BTW, these gigantic trawlers use a vastly different method than legal commercial fishing; it makes it much easier to catch large amounts of salmon or anything of any type. Because juvenile kings are a high-money fish in Asia, I doubt they're acting like boy scouts and avoiding them, especially since the crab fishery out there is pretty much gone. Salmon bring far higher prices than groundfish whether it's a legit or illegitimate market, so I have a lot of trouble buying that they're "targeting" pollock or cod.
The lowest since 1982. 2021 was yet another record year for Alaska reds, though. Next year won't be so great; salmon runs are cyclical. But you won't see anything but low commercial catches for kings in coming years except for maybe in Oregon where they've chosen to violate the salmon pact with Washington; kings have been restricted throughout Alaska and allowable harvests are very likely to continue to be low. ETA I really should have included freshwater factors; I guess I thought that was a given, as well as the elephant in the room known as British Columbia's salmon farming industry.