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  2. Kenai River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenai_River

    The "Lower Kenai" is well known for its run and sizes of its king salmon. In recent years, the king salmon fishery has been closed or heavily restricted due to low returns of fish. [8] The coho salmon runs occur in early August and early October. [9] The September run is favored by local anglers due to the larger size of the silver salmon. The ...

  3. Alaska salmon fishery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_salmon_fishery

    The salmon harvest in Alaska is the largest in North America and represents about 80% of the total wild-caught catch, with harvests from Canada and the Pacific Northwest representing the remainder [1] In 2017 over 200 million salmon were caught in Alaskan waters by commercial fishers, representing $750 million in exvessel value.

  4. Alaska salmon season back on after court halts closure that ...

    www.aol.com/news/king-salmon-season-back-alaska...

    The ruling by a three-judge 9th Circuit Court panel means the summer chinook, or king, salmon season will start as usual next week for an industry that supports some 1,500 fishery workers in ...

  5. Commercial fishing in Alaska - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commercial_fishing_in_Alaska

    Fishing for crabs in the Bering Sea in January 2006. Commercial fishing is a major industry in Alaska, and has been for hundreds of years. Alaska Natives have been harvesting salmon and many other types of fish for millennia Including king crab. Russians came to Alaska to harvest its abundance of sealife, as well as Japanese and other Asian ...

  6. Ketchikan Creek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketchikan_Creek

    Ketichikan Creek and Creek Street View of Ketchikan from Ketchikan Creek, September 1918 Seine fishing on Ketchikan Creek, early 20th century photo by John Nathan Cobb. Ketchikan Creek (alternate, "Fish Creek"; Tlingit, "Kitschkhin") is a salmon spawning stream [1] on Revillagigedo Island in the U.S. state of Alaska.

  7. Copper River (Alaska) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_River_(Alaska)

    The river's commercial salmon season is very brief, beginning in May for chinook salmon, and sockeye salmon for periods lasting mere hours or several days at a time. [22] Sport fishing by contrast is open all year-long, [23] but peak season on the Copper River lasts from August to September, when the coho salmon runs.

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