76th PSMFC Annual Meeting (2023)
October 15-18, 2023
Salishan Coastal Resort, Gleneden Beach, OR
The 76th annual meeting of the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission
Documents
Speaker bios
Curt Melcher, Director, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW)
Curt Melcher began his career with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife as a temporary employee in 1985. During his time at the Department, he has represented the State of Oregon in numerous regional management forums, including the Pacific Fishery Management Council, Klamath Fishery Management Council, and Pacific Salmon Commission Southern Panel.
Curt served as the Deputy Director for Fish and Wildlife programs from 2007 through 2014 and was appointed the Interim Director in September 2014. He was hired as permanent Director in February 2015 and is the Past President of the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.
Barry Thom, Executive Director, Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSMFC)
Barry joined PSMFC in April 2022. He was previously the West Coast Regional Administrator for NOAA Fisheries. Barry began his career as a research biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and moved to NOAA Fisheries in 2001.
Jennifer Quan, Regional Administrator, NOAA Fisheries
Jennifer (“Jen”) Quan began service as the Regional Administrator for NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region in April 2023. In over 27 years of working on West Coast natural resources issues, she benefits from diverse perspectives gained during her time with state and federal governments, the U.S. Senate, and from working with Pacific Northwest tribes. Her career includes experience across a broad spectrum of West Coast fisheries issues ranging from dolphin conservation in the Eastern Tropical Pacific, to research on Blue and Humpback Whales in California, the study of tribal harvest on Gray Whales, Pacific fisheries management, salmon recovery, and Endangered Species Act (ESA) regulations.
Prior to working for the U.S. Senate, she worked for NOAA’s Fisheries West Coast Region where she supervised the south Puget Sound Branch of the Oregon/Washington Coastal Office. Before coming to NOAA, she spent 10 years at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) in various roles. Jen is a fellow of the National Conservation Leadership Institute, and holds a Master’s degree in Marine Affairs from University of Washington and a Bachelor of Science from Evergreen State College.
Rachel Baker, Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Rachel works for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and focuses on state-federal fisheries coordination. She represents the State of Alaska’s interests in federal fisheries policy and management issues, including participation on the North Pacific Fishery Management Council on behalf of Commissioner Vincent-Lang. Rachel has 20 years of experience working to develop and implement fisheries policy and management programs for commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries in a variety of positions with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, National Marine Fisheries Service, and New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries.
Jim Fredericks, Director, Idaho Department of Fish and Game
Jim is currently the director of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. He was raised in northern Idaho where he grew up engaged in a range of outdoor pursuits. He attended the University of Idaho for his undergraduate education, earning a B.A. in psychology in 1988. After working in a psychiatric hospital for a year, he changed course and returned to the University of Idaho and earned an M.S. in Fishery Resources in 1994. Since that time, he’s worked for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, serving the agency as a Fishery Biologist, Regional Fishery Manager, Chief of the Fisheries Bureau, Deputy Director. He has served in leadership roles with the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, and the American Fisheries Society.
Nate Pamplin, Director of External Affairs, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Nate Pamplin serves as the Director of External Affairs and manages the Communications and Public Engagement team and positions associated with Southern Resident killer whale recovery, social science, and natural resource economics. He represents the Director on a number of intergovernmental forums and is the lead on marine mammal conservation and tribal hunting policy issues. He has been with the agency since 2006, and previously served for six years as the Program Director of the Wildlife Program as well as worked in policy positions in the Department’s Licensing Division and the Director’s Office. Nate has a bachelor’s degree in Zoology and a master’s degree in Wildlife Science, both from Oregon State University. Prior to joining WDFW, Nate worked as a wildlife biologist for the San Carlos Apache Tribe in Arizona and as a marine mammal biologist for the Makah Tribe.
Craig Shuman, Marine Region Manager, California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Craig Shuman is the Marine Region Manager for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife where he directs the Department’s marine science and policy activities in ocean waters off California’s coast. He earned a doctorate in Environmental Science and Engineering from UCLA and a master’s degree in Biology from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Prior to joining the Department, Dr. Shuman served as the Marine Advisor to the California Fish and Game Commission, worked in the nonprofit sector, and worked as a consultant where he focused on coastal wetland restoration, water quality, citizen monitoring programs, corporate sustainability, and communications.
Sebastian O’Kelly, Consultant, Robertson, Monagle & Eastaugh
Sebastian O’Kelly has over thirty-five years of experience in Washington, DC, serving in both the executive and legislative branches, as well as working in government relations. His background covers a broad range of issues, with a particular expertise in natural resources, appropriations, maritime, fisheries, transportation, energy and space issues.
O’Kelly is partner and co-owner of Robertson, Monagle & Eastaugh LLC, providing advocacy services and counsel to the firm’s maritime, fisheries, and local government clients, with previous service of over twenty years to the firm as a consultant. Previously, he served for two years as ombudsman to the Secretary of Commerce, providing independent views on high profile natural resource and marine fisheries issues.
O’Kelly’s legislative experience spanned nearly a decade as professional staff on the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs serving Senator John Glenn. During the latter part of his tenure, he served as the Senator’s primary advisor on space and technology issues. Early in his Washington career, he was an economic researcher and writer for a trade association and a branch of the Agency for International Development.
O’Kelly graduated from Duke University with a bachelor’s degree in economics.
Laurie Weitkamp, Research Fisheries Biologist, Northwest Fisheries Science Center
Dr. Laurie Weitkamp has been a Research Fisheries Biologist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center since 1992. In this role, she has been involved in Endangered Species Act listings of Pacific salmon since 1994. Her research focuses on the ecology of salmon in estuarine and marine environments, including participating in recent high seas winter surveys for salmon. On the management side, Laurie serves on the Coho Technical Committee of the Pacific Salmon Commission. She holds three degrees from the University of Washington.
Matt Baker, North Pacific Research Board
Dr. Matthew Baker is the Science Director at the North Pacific Research Board, where he manages staff, coordinates relations with external partners, and provides oversight for all science programs at NPRB. Previously, he worked at the NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center in the resource assessment and resource ecology and fishery management divisions and also the University of Washington Alaska Salmon Program.
Dr. Baker’s research experience and interests include numerous topics related to fish and marine systems, including habitat assessments, surveys and gear selectivity, quantitative methods, groundfish distribution and movement in response to climate, and North Pacific pelagic fishes.
Kym Jacobson, NOAA Fisheries
Dr. Kym Jacobson is a Research Zoologist with NOAAs Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Newport. In the 25+ years in this position she has been a principal investigator on two long term projects that contribute to our understanding of factors that affect early ocean survival of juvenile salmon and the success of other marine species: the Juvenile Salmon and Ocean Ecology project, and the Newport Hydrographic Line, high frequency (every two weeks) monitoring of hydrography and plankton. Kym also serves on the Coastal Pelagic Species Management Team for the Pacific Fisheries Management Council. Her graduate degrees were obtained at Wake Forest University in North Carolina.
Caren Braby, Senior Program Manager, PSMFC
Dr. Caren Braby is a Senior Program Manager at PSMFC, overseeing a broad portfolio of fisheries accountability tools (electronic video monitoring, electronic tickets, electronic logbooks, vessel location monitoring and visualization), fisheries databases and management (PacFIN, AKFIN), spatial representation of fisheries, bycatch reduction research, and Tri-State Dungeness crab coordination. Formerly the Marine Resources Program Manager for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife for 14 years, Caren has direct experience managing West Coast fisheries within state and federal jurisdictions, serving on the Pacific Fisheries Management Council, and providing leadership on climate-ocean change, sustainability of fisheries, improving data flowing into stock assessment and elevating collaboration through personal relationships with industry, managers, subject matter experts and the public. She received her Doctorate from Stanford University’s Hopkins Marine Station and has conducted scientific research from estuaries out to deep sea hydrothermal vents of the Pacific Ocean. Caren’s career began by exploring West Coast tidepools, from the time she could first walk.
Heather Hall, Intergovernmental Ocean Policy Manager, WDFW
Heather Hall is the Intergovernmental Ocean Policy Manager and has worked at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) for 30 years. Heather enjoys working with a diverse group of constituents, other state managers, and tribal co-managers to resolve complex, and often contentious issues related to Pacific Ocean marine resources at both the state and federal level..
Lilah Isé, Senior Policy and Communications Advisor, West Coast Region, NMFS
Bob Ryznar, AKFIN & PacFIN Program Manager, PSMFC
Bob Ryznar works for the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSFMC) as a program manager under the Alaska Fisheries Information Network (AKFIN) and Pacific Fisheries Information Network (PacFIN) programs. Bob has been with PSMFC since 2002 and the program manager since 2006, managing a team of data scientists and database developers. The AKFIN and PacFIN programs maintain separate data warehouse systems built to meet the needs of the Alaska and West Coast council staff, fisheries managers, economists, industry representatives, and scientists. His background includes over eight years with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game as an applications programmer and database administrator working with the coded wire tag lab, southeast region commercial fisheries, and the Bristol Bay/Cook Inlet/Prince William Sound salmon in-season data collection systems. He has also participated in the NOAA Fisheries Information Systems (FIS) quality management and Highly Migratory Species (HMS) professional specialty groups since 2007.
Brett Holycross, GIS, PSMFC
Brett Holycross is a Senior GIS Analyst with the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission under the Alaska Fisheries Information Network (AKFIN) and the Pacific Fishery Information Network (PacFIN) programs. Brett has been with the Commission since 2002, and currently serves as the lead GIS role in multiagency collaborations to integrate and summarize data for marine fishery management challenges including offshore wind energy planning, climate change and marine fisheries interactions. Past projects include working with many of the Commission’s programs and partners to compile, analyze and publish a wide variety of fishery data throughout the West Coast and Alaska.
Leigh Torres, Associate Professor, Dept of Fisheries & Wildlife and Oregon Sea Grant Extension, OSU
Leigh is a marine ecologist interested in understanding how marine animals, including marine mammals, seabirds and sharks, use their environment in the context of behavior, space and time. Leigh’s research explores how marine predators find prey within highly patchy, variable marine ecosystems. Much of this work is directed toward improving conservation management of protected or threatened species. Leigh’s work spans multiple spatial and temporal scales and occurs in many ecosystems including estuaries of Florida, near and offshore waters of the US and Latin America, pelagic regions of the Southern Ocean, and sub-Antarctic islands and coastal waters of New Zealand. She has a Ph.D. in Marine Ecology and Environment and a Masters of Coastal Environmental Management from Duke University.
Stephen Phillips Senior Program Manager, PSMFC
Stephen Phillips is a senior program manager at the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (located in Portland Oregon) where he has worked for over 30 years. For the last 25 years, his main responsibility has been management of PSMFC’s Aquatic Nuisance Species Program. Mr. Phillips received his Bachelor’s in Biology from Baldwin Wallace College (Berea, Ohio) and a Master’s of Fisheries Science from Oregon State University.
Adam Johnson, USFWS
Bob Pagliuco, Marine Habitat Resource Specialist, NOAA Restoration Center, Office of Habitat Conservation
Bob has a BS in forestry and geology from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. In 2001, he started his career in fisheries in Northern CA with the AmeriCorps Watershed Stewards Program, operating a full channel fish trapping weir and collecting spawning and migration data on salmon and steelhead. For the next decade he continued monitoring salmon populations for the state of CA, Humboldt State University and NGOS in Northern CA when he turned his focus to restoring habitat. Bob began working for the NOAA Restoration Center in 2009 and has developed statewide programmatic permits to increase the efficiency of restoration projects, co-founded the NOAA-CCC Veterans Corps Program, represents NMFS on the CA Fish Passage Forum steering Committee, sits on 12 restoration funding committees and was one of the lead authors of the Klamath Reservoir Reach Restoration Plan that is guiding restoration from Iron Gate Dam to Link River Dam. Bob is a husband, a father of 2 beautiful children and is an avid gardener and fisherman.
Aileen Smith, Project Manager, PSMFC
Aileen has worked at PSMFC for 8 years, first as a data analyst and now as a project manager for several electronic monitoring/reporting projects including Dungeness crab vessel monitoring. Aileen has a background in marine and avian ecology, with special emphasis on data analysis and management. Prior to joining PSMFC, she worked with the City of Portland, NOAA’s Antarctic Ecosystem Research Division, and Point Blue Conservation Science. She has a BA from Swarthmore College and an MS from Portland State University.
Heather Hall, Intergovernmental Ocean Policy Manager, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Heather Hall has worked at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) for close to 30 years and has worked in the Intergovernmental Ocean Policy Division since 2006, currently as the Division Manager. Heather particularly enjoys working with a diverse group of constituents, other state managers, and tribal co-managers to resolve complex, and often contentious issues related to Pacific Ocean marine resources at both the state and federal level.
Joanna Grebel, CDFW
Kelly Corbett, ODFW
Michael Schmidt, Center Director, USGS Western Fisheries Research Center.
Michael is the director of the US Geological Survey’s Western Fisheries Research Center where he leads an interdisciplinary group of scientists focused on providing the research, innovation, and management tools needed to recover, maintain, and sustainably utilize fish and their aquatic ecosystems in the Western United States. Prior to 2021, Michael was the Deputy Director of Long Live the Kings, a science-oriented salmon recovery nonprofit based out of Seattle, Washington.
Brian Bissell, Fisheries Disasters Department Manager, PSMFC
Brian Started at PSMFC in February of 2020, working on federal fishery disasters and CARES Act relief. Prior to that he worked for the USACE at Bonneville dam for about 8 years as a project biologist with a considerable amount of time on lower Columbia lamprey passage. He also worked for the USFWS in northern California for several years snorkeling and kayaking on adult surveys and rotary screw traps and egg mats for juvenile salmonids and Green Sturgeon.
Brian is a Midwesterner who graduated from the original SDSU, South Dakota State University, Go Jacks!
He spends most weekends and free time renovating his house and enjoys fishing, hunting, and crabbing/clam digging on the Oregon and Washington coasts with his wife and nearly 1-year old daughter.
Rick E. Marks, Principal, Robertson, Monagle & Eastaugh.
Rick joined ROMEA in 1997 to handle the Firm’s nationwide natural resource portfolio. Rick has a B.S. in Biology from Lynchburg College, and a M.S. in Marine Environmental Science with emphasis in Coastal Fish Ecology from Stony Brook University. He has authored several peer-reviewed scientific journal articles, worked as a supervisory marine fishery biologist for the State of North Carolina, and as a recreational fishery reporting specialist and benthic field technician for the National Marine Fishery Service. In 1997 Rick was appointed to the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council (MAFMC) by the Secretary of Commerce, and currently serves on four Marine Mammal Protection Act-mandated Take Reduction Teams (TRTs). He has testified before Congress on several occasions regarding national marine resource issues. Rick earned a Udall Certificate in Environmental Collaboration from the U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution in 2012.
Reference Materials
Aquaculture
- Science is a strategy: Farming for sablefish – Aquaculture North America (July 2023 – PSMFC Project)
- ARCTIC Act limits offshore aquaculture | National Fisherman (July 2023)
- Rep. Hoyle’s Bill to Support Commercial Fishing Passes U.S. House | Congresswoman Val Hoyle (July 2023)
- NOAA Fisheries Selects Alaska to Begin Aquaculture Opportunity Area Identification | NOAA Fisheries (June 2023)
- Wicker, Schatz Reintroduce AQUAA Act to Advance American Aquaculture (June 2023)
- Mariculture Research and Restoration Consortium: a 10-year project for Alaska | National Fisherman (March 2023)
- D.C. must stand with SoCal fishermen in fight against fish farms (vcstar.com) (February 2023)
- West Coast Region Southern California Aquaculture Opportunity Area | NOAA Fisheries
- Guam Eyes Food-Secure Future with Giant Clam Aquaculture (August 2022 – PSMFC Project)
Aquaculture – Atlantic Salmon/GMO/Lab Grown Salmon
- Minister to delay plan for closure of B.C. salmon farms after pressure from industry, Indigenous chief – The Globe and Mail (June 2023)
- Moving B.C. salmon farms from water to land costly, risky: study – Vancouver Is Awesome (February 2023)
- Pushback: Tribes and Companies Defend Fish Farming in Northwest Waters | Post Alley (December 2022)
- Will lab-grown fish save Alaska’s wild salmon stocks? – KCAW (November 2022)
Arctic, Bering
- Why billions of snow crabs disappeared from the Bering Sea | PBS NewsHour (June 2023)
- Pacific Cod Are Moving North—Will They Be Able to Spawn There? | NOAA Fisheries (June 2023)
- Alaska officials prepare for possible commercial fishing expansion into Arctic waters – Alaska Beacon (March 2023)
- The bottom of the Bering and Chukchi seas could become too warm for some important species – Alaska Beacon (November 2022)
Bycatch
- Warmer ocean temperatures increase risk of salmon bycatch in Pacific hake fishery | Oregon State University (July 2023)
- New review shows bottom trawling is sustainable (when well-managed) – Sustainable Fisheries UW (sustainablefisheries-uw.org) (July 2023)
- Fishery council moves toward more limits on chum salmon bycatch, but no firm caps yet – Alaska Beacon (April 2023)
- B.C.-born salmon increasingly caught by Alaskan fleet – Victoria Times Colonist (April 2023)
- Alaska’s Fisheries Are Collapsing. This Congresswoman Is Taking on the Industry She Says Is to Blame. (March 2023)
- Governor Dunleavy Receives Alaska Bycatch Review Task Force Report – Mike Dunleavy (December 2022)
- Last year’s seabird bycatch toll was lower than average, but so was fishing effort, report says – Alaska Beacon (November 2022)
Climate Change – Marine Heat Waves
- Effects of marine heatwaves on tunas, sharks, and marine mammals vary widely | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- Coastal Fisheries Show Surprising Resilience to Marine Heat Waves | Rutgers University (August 2023)
- Large Marine Heatwave Reaches Oregon and Washington Coasts | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- Coastal fisheries show surprising resilience to marine heat waves (August 2023)
- Bottom marine heatwaves along the continental shelves of North America | Nature Communications (March 2023)
- For First Time NOAA Researchers Able To Document West Coast Marine Heat Waves On Ocean Floor (March 2023)
- Young black rockfish affected by marine heat wave but not always for the worse, research shows (phys.org) (March 2023)
Climate Change and Fisheries
- Climate Change Likely to Reshape West Coast Fisheries by Sending Fish Farther Offshore | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- Ocean Climate Action Plan Information | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov)
- Why sockeye flourish and chinook fail in Alaska’s changing climate – Alaska Public Media (July 2023)
- How Ocean Warming Is Killing a Prime Alaska Crab Fishery | Hakai Magazine (July 2023)
- How Warming Ruined a Crab Fishery and Hurt an Alaskan Town – Yale E360 (June 2023)
- Climate-Driven Shifts in Fish Populations Across International Boundaries | NOAA Fisheries (June 2023)
- Visualizing Shifts of Pollock, Cod in the Northern Bering Sea in Response to Warming Waters | NOAA Fisheries (May 2023)
- Juvenile salmon migration timing responds unpredictably to climate change (May 2023)
- Juvenile salmon migration timing responds unpredictably to climate change – SFU News – Simon Fraser University (May 2023)
- Cold water, diverse survival strategies may be key to Chinook salmon success in a changing climate (phys.org) (April 2023)
- Zooplankton Research Reveals a Glimpse of the Potential Future Northern Bering Sea Ecosystem (April 2023)
- Loss of East Coast tiny organisms hurts ocean, fishing, scientists say | AP News (January 2023)
Climate Change – General
- A warming-induced reduction in snow fraction amplifies rainfall extremes | Nature (June 2023)
- Climate paradox: Emission cuts could ‘unmask’ deadly face of climate change, scientists warn | The Hill (June 2023)
- Ocean-Climate-Action-Plan_Final.pdf (whitehouse.gov) (March 2023)
- AR6 Synthesis Report: Climate Change 2023 — IPCC (March 2023)
- Climate Change seen as the key factor in 2020 and 2021 salmon run declines on the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers. | NOAA Fisheries (August 2022)
Columbia River
Crab – Alaska
- Southeast Alaska king crab seasons closed; better prospects seen for 2024-25 | National Fisherman (September 2023)
- The snow crab are missing. Can a remote Alaskan village survive? | Grist (July 2023)
- Why billions of snow crabs disappeared from the Bering Sea | PBS NewsHour (June 2023)
- Crab crisis in Bering Sea a sign of ‘borealization’ and big changes in the future, scientists warn – Alaska Beacon (February 2023)
- 2022-2023 Crab Disaster Declaration LOS.pdf (senate.gov) (November 2022)
- Alaska shuts down crab seasons after dismal survey results (October 2022)
- Governor Dunleavy Requests Federal Fishery Disaster for Bristol Bay Red King Crab and Bering Sea Snow Crab Fisheries – Mike Dunleavy (alaska.gov) (October 2022)
Crab – Dungeness
Dam Removal: Snake
Dam Removal: Klamath
- Podcast on restoring the Klamath River Basin | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- An ’emotional’ moment: Demolition of first Klamath River dam begins – Times-Standard (June 2023)
- New restoration and monitoring plan will help imperiled fish in Klamath Basin | U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (fws.gov) (February 2023)
- The Largest-Ever Dam Demolition Will Restore Salmon Habitat | Smart News| Smithsonian Magazine (December 2022)
- As Dam Removals Move Forward, NOAA Explores Next Steps for Habitat Restoration in Klamath Watershed | NOAA Fisheries (December 2022)
- Murray and Inslee conclude breaching Snake River dams ‘not an option right now,’ while calling status quo unsustainable for salmon | The Spokesman-Review (August 2022)
Dam Removal, Other (Elwha, etc.)
Dams – Recolonization of Salmon
- Biden deal with tribes promises $200M for Columbia River salmon reintroduction (September 2023)
- KUOW – Getting fish passage over Skagit dams will take decades (June 2023)
- Pilot System Could Return Endangered Salmon to Their Historic Habitat | NOAA Fisheries (November 2022)
- CDFW News | Testing Underway for Pilot Project to Return Endangered Salmon to Their Historic Habitat (ca.gov) (September 2022)
Disaster Relief/CARES Act
- Commerce Secretary Announces Fishery Disaster Determinations for Yurok Chinook Salmon (September 2023)
- U.S. Department of Commerce allocates $220M in fishery disaster funding to AK and WA | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov) (May 2023)
- Facing Dismal Salmon Population Forecast, Fishermen’s Groups Call for Immediate Closure of Season, Request Disaster Assistance | Lost Coast Outpost | Humboldt County News (March 2023)
- Secretary of Commerce approves disaster declarations in AK and WA | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov) (December 2022)
- Disaster requests for Bering Sea crabbers highlight the lengthy process of getting financial relief to fishermen – KMXT 100.1 FM (November 2022)
Electronic Monitoring
Fish Contamination
Fish Habitat – Freshwater
- KUOW – Tribes call for national ban on salmon-killing chemical in car tires (August 2023)
- Group To Sue Oregon, California Transportation Agencies For Failing To Consider Fatal Impacts To Salmon From Tire Chemical – Columbia Basin Bulletin (June 2023)
- Supreme Court WOTUS Decision Puts Fisheries, Water Quality, and Human Health at Risk | American Fisheries Society (May 2023)
- CDFW News | Joint News Release: Agreement reopens Yuba River to salmon and sturgeon, launching ambitious river restoration (ca.gov) (May 2023)
- EPA pulls the plug on Pebble Mine | National Fisherman (January 2023)
- With New Technology ‘Virtual Fences’ Getting More Attention; Can Be Used To Manage Cattle For Fuel Breaks, Keep Livestock Out Of Salmon Habitat – Columbia Basin Bulletin (cbbulletin.com) (September 2022)
Fish Habitat – Marine – Kelp
- As an Obscure United Nations Gathering Deliberates the Fate of Deep-Sea Mining, the Tuna Industry Calls for a Halt – Inside Climate News (July 2023)
- California’s underwater kelp forests might be saved using bricks (June 2023)
- The Vanishing Kelp Forest (nature.org) (May 2023)
- Why are many kelp forests disappearing? – Vox (May 2023)
- A California Deep Ocean DDT Research Needs Assessment (arcgis.com) (January 2023)
- Group seeks endangered species protection for West Coast bull kelp – OPB (September 2022)
Fish Management
- First-Ever A.I. Algorithm Correctly Estimates Fish Stocks > Newsroom (wcs.org) (May 2023)
- The slow death and uncertain future of California’s swordfish fishery | National Fisherman (April 2023)
- A fresh look at China’s seafood sustainability in 2022 – Sustainable Fisheries UW (sustainablefisheries-uw.org) (October 2022)
- GAO-23-105172 Highlights, FEDERAL FISHERIES MANAGEMENT: Overfishing Determinations Vary Across Regions, and Data Challenges Complicate Management Efforts (October 2022)
Fraser River
- Final Weekly Report for Fraser River Panel – PDF Download (September 15, 2023)
- An abysmal year for Fraser River sockeye salmon (August 2023)
- Excitement in B.C. Indigenous communities as salmon get past Fraser slide zone | Vancouver Sun (August 2022)
Harmful Algal Blooms, Domoic Acid, Dead Zone
- Toxic Algal Bloom Suspected in Dolphin and Sea Lion Deaths in Southern California | NOAA Fisheries (June 2023)
- Scientist warns of heightened PSP toxins’ impact on Yukon salmon – Alaska Public Media (June 2023)
- Ross Island algae bloom lawsuit against Oregon DEQ | kgw.com (April 2023)
- Will Harmful Algal Blooms Finish Off White Sturgeon? | UC Davis (November 2022)
Hatcheries
- NOAA Begins Court-Ordered Work On EIS Analyzing Increase Of Hatchery Salmon Production To Feed Imperiled Killer Whales (August 2023)
- More black cod could threaten salmon hatcheries – KFSK (August 2023)
- Study Demonstrates Hatchery Fish Can Successfully Contribute to Reintroduction and Restoration Efforts (July 2023)
- A global synthesis of peer-reviewed research on the effects of hatchery salmonids on wild salmonids (July 2023)
- Federal leaders finally increase money for hatcheries, but tribes say it’s nowhere near enough – OPB (March 2023)
- Changing salmon hatchery release practices can improve survival rates: B.C. study – Resources & Agriculture | Business in Vancouver (biv.com) (March 2023)
Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated Fishing
- The Chinese fishing industry: a global threat to fishing resources that must be contained (September 2023)
- NOAA identifies seven nations and entities engaged in illegal, unreported and unregulated(IUU) (August 2023)
- Eye in the sky – IUU (July 2023)
- Open Ocean Project: AI and satellite data to help end illegal fishing | National Fisherman (July 2023)
- GAO-23-105643, COMBATING ILLEGAL FISHING: Better Information Sharing Could Enhance U.S. Efforts to Target Seafood Imports for Investigation (May 2023)
- Oceana: U.S. dollars drive IUU fishing by China, Russia | National Fisherman (April 2023)
Invasive Species – Freshwater
- ISDA confirms quagga mussel larvae in the Snake River (September 2023)
- IDFG: Walleye are spreading into Idaho (August 2023)
- Northern Pike remains top invasive species in Columbia River system (August 2023)
- Idaho Fish And Game Reports Increasing Numbers Of Invasive, Salmon-Eating Walleye Passing Lower Granite Dam – Columbia Basin Bulletin (cbbulletin.com) (September 2022)
Invasive Species – Marine
- Italy’s clam industry under threat from blue crab ‘invasion’ | Reuters (August 2023)
- Unalaska readies to deploy traps for invasive European Green Crab | KUCB (June 2023)
- “We have declared a war on Pink salmon” Norway fights the invasive species in the Arctic. | The Independent Barents Observer (June 2023)
- Pink salmon on Canada’s East Coast friend or foe? (May 2023)
- WA Fish and Wildlife: European green crab continues to cause issues (April 2023)
- Moore Seeks Disaster Aid for Chesapeake Bay Invasive Fish (March 2023)
- Green Crab Detected in Alaska for the First Time (August 2022)
Legal
- Alaska Asks District Court to Confirm State’s Control of Fishery Management (September 2023)
- Will the Supreme Court Trim Chevron’s Sails? (September 2023)
- WCSPA: Oregon’s Sustainable Seafood Industry in Jeopardy Amid Unachievable DEQ Permit Limits (August 2023)
- Federal appeals court rules for Maine lobstermen on right whales (June 2023)
- Crabbers Sue Pacific Seafood for Illegally Suppressing Prices Paid to Crabbers for Dungeness Crab in the Pacific NW Area (March 2023)
Marine Debris/Microplastics
- Cleaning up ocean ‘garbage patches’ could destroy delicate ecosystems | Science | AAAS (May 2023)
- Scary Numbers: Oregon Gray Whale Poop-Prey Research Shows Extent Microplastics Polluting Our Waters, Marine Life (Fish) – Columbia Basin Bulletin (June 2023)
- Great Pacific Garbage Patch in open ocean hosts coastal life from far away (April 2023)
- Pollution: Over 170 trillion plastic particles in the world’s oceans (cnbc.com) (March 2023)
- Ocean Cleanup study states Pacific Garbage Patch is mostly fishing gear (September 2022)
Marine Mammal Entanglements/Fishing Gear/MMPA
- MMPA List of Fisheries for 2024 | NOAA Fisheries (September 2023)
- NOAA Fisheries Supports West Coast States’ and Pacific Fishery Management Council’s Fishing Gear Marking Efforts (September 2023)
- Without a rope: Atlantic Canada putting whale-safe gear to the test (September 2023)
- Oregon extends crab fishing restrictions to protect whales from getting caught in trap ropes (August 2023)
- Feds Agree to Take Steps to Prevent Humpback Whales from Entanglements Off Pacific Coast (July 2023)
- Study estimates on-demand gear would have resulted in a $40 million decline in lobster fishery revenue (July 2023)
- How ‘pop-up’ fishing gear could save whales and fishermen: NPR (June 2023)
- Restricted waters test of on-demand lobster gear in southern New England | National Fisherman (May 2023)
- Oregon State researchers begin to unravel whale entanglement risk factors off Oregon Coast | Oregon State University (March 2023)
- CDFW News | CDFW Restricts Recreational Crab Traps and Delays the Commercial Dungeness Crab Fishery to Protect Whales from Entanglement (ca.gov) (October 2022)
Marine Protected Areas
- Biden-Harris Administration proposes new Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary off California coast (September 2023)
- Study on Benefits of MPAs called into question (September 2023)
- IMO Welcomes Adoption Of New Oceans Treaty (marineinsight.com) (June 2023)
- Co-benefits of marine protected areas for nature and people | Nature Sustainability (June 2023)
- U.S. Fishery Management Council Report Finds More than 72% of Federal Waters Classified as “Conservation Areas” – Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (gulfcouncil.org) (June 2023)
- Protecting Large Ocean Areas Doesn’t Curb Fishing Catches (May 2023)
- Cultural Practices in Monument Area Move Council to Allow Sale of Fish (April 2023)
- Marine protected areas don’t help tuna, new paper shows – Sustainable Fisheries UW (sustainablefisheries-uw.org) (February 2023)
- ‘A Major Achievement’: Vision for Vast West Coast Marine Protected Area Network Unveiled at Last | The Canadian News (September 2022)
NOAA Update
- Inflation Reduction Act | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov)
- Status of Stocks 2022 | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- NOAA Fisheries releases its final National Seafood Strategy | NOAA Fisheries (August 2023)
- NOAA Fisheries Releases 2022 Status of Stocks | NOAA Fisheries (April 2023)
- NOAA Fisheries Strategic Plan for 2022–2025 | NOAA Fisheries (December 2022)
Orca
- Opportunistic orcas have developed a new feeding behavior that appears to be killing them (September 2023)
- ADFG Press Release – Fishing Season is On in Southeast Alaska (June 2023)
- To protect orcas, federal judge orders closure of iconic Southeast Alaska troll fishery (May 2023)
- Oregon Commission Accepts Petition To Consider Listing Killer Whales Under State ESA; Orcas Forage Off Coast, Columbia River Mouth (April 2023)
- The big problem for endangered orcas at center of Southeast Alaska salmon suit? Inbreeding – Alaska Public Media (March 2023)
Ocean Acidification
Ocean Conditions
Otters
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announces southern sea otters will retain Endangered Species Act protections (September 2023)
- Could sea otters be reintroduced to Oregon? – OPB (July 2023)
- Petition Seeks Sea Otter Reintroduction Along Broader West Coast – Center for Biological Diversity (January 2023)
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: delisting the southern sea otter may be warranted. (August 2022)
Pebble Mine
Predators (Birds, Pike Minnow)
- Invasive pike can use Cook Inlet to travel between freshwater systems, research finds (kdll.org) (June 2023)
- Skilled anglers reel in thousands of pikeminnow from the Columbia | kgw.com (June 2023)
- Cormorants – Letter from ODOT and WSDOT to NW Power and Conservation Council (March 2023)
- How to Make Money Catching Invasive Fish | Field & Stream (fieldandstream.com) (Jan 2023)
- Cormorant relocation not working out as planned | Wildlife, Fishing and Outdoors | chinookobserver.com (November 2022)
Recreational Fishing
Salmon Management – Alaska
- From diatoms to killer whales: impacts of pink salmon on North Pacific ecosystems (September 2023)
- Why are chinook runs declining in Bristol Bay, while sockeye runs are shattering records? (kdlg.org) (July 2023)
- Salmon are disappearing on the Yukon and Kuskokwim. Here’s what to know about the crisis this summer. – Alaska Public Media (June 2023)
- New study proposes to uncover where chinook salmon could be dying en route to Yukon | CBC News (December 2022)
Salmon Management – West Coast
- What Happened to California’s Salmon Season This Year? | KQED (July 2023)
- Press Release: Can genetic rescue be used as a tool to save endangered species? | Russian River Coho (ucsd.edu) (May 2023)
- Sacramento River Pulse Flow Expected To Increase Survival of Juvenile Salmon Traveling to the Ocean | NOAA Fisheries (April 2023)
- Cold water, diverse survival strategies may be key to Chinook salmon success in a changing climate (phys.org) (April 2023)
- Trends in Chinook salmon spawner abundance and total run size highlight linkages between life history, geography and decline (wiley.com) (March 2023)
- Can thermal refuges save salmonids? Simulation of cold‐pool benefits to salmonid populations (wiley.com) (March 2023)
- 90-Day Finding on the Petitions to List Oregon Coast Chinook Salmon and Southern Oregon and Northern California Coastal Chinook Salmon as Threatened or Endangered (January 2023)
Sea Lions
Steelhead
- Clearwater steelhead return off to surprising start (August 2023)
- 90-Day Finding on the Petition to List Olympic Peninsula Steelhead as a Threatened or Endangered Distinct Population Segment | NOAA Fisheries (February 2023)
- Olympic Peninsula Steelhead Considered for ESA – Fly Fisherman (September 2022)
Sturgeon
- Sturgeon numbers sinking in Columbia River – The Columbian (February 2023)
Rick Marks — Legislation/Policy Update (****Last***)
- NOAA Organic Act: Senate, discussion draft Senator Cantwell (August 2023)
- H.R. 5103, the “Fishery Improvement to Streamline untimely regulatory Hurdles post Emergency Situation Act” (FISHES Act) (August 2023)
- Murkowski Introduces “Improving ARCTIC Act” to Secure Wins for Alaska in Farm Bill (July 2023)
- Rep. Hoyle Introduces the Supporting Commercial Fishing in Port Infrastructure Projects Act | Congresswoman Val Hoyle (house.gov) (July 2023)
- Biden-Harris Administration announces $2.6 billion to protect coastal communities and restore marine resources (June 2023)
- Wicker, Schatz Reintroduce AQUAA Act to Advance American Aquaculture – U.S. Sena… (senate.gov) (June 2023)
- Federal Register: Request for Information; National Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean Economy (June 2023)
- S. 1756 Murkowski, King Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Support Rural Fishing Communities (June 2023)
- H.R. 3980 introduced, “National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration Act of 2023” (June 2023)
- H.R. 3951; “Sustaining Healthy Ecosystems, Livelihoods and Local Seafood Act” (June 2023)
- S. 2182 Wild USA Seafood: Murkowski Bill Would Label American-Caught Seafood, Support American Fishermen (senate.gov) (June 2023)
- Permitting Reform Hitches a Ride on Debt Ceiling Legislation | Marten Law Leading environmental and energy lawyers (May 2023)
- H.R. 2950, Coastal Habitat Conservation Act of 2023” (April 2023)
- Huffman, Peltola Introduce Bill to Support Alternative, Sustainable Agriculture | U.S. (March 2023)
- Senator Markey, Rep. Moulton Announce Bicameral Efforts on National Offshore Wind and Fisheries Compensation (senate.gov) (December 2022)
- Shark fin ban passes in Congress, attached to defense bill | National Fisherman (December 2022)
Wind/Ocean Energy
- Work on an OSU-led wave energy test facility will be visible from shore – OPB (August 2023)
- Study proposes a scoring method for evaluating risk to protected species with offshore wind development projects | NOAA Fisheries (July 2023)
- Oregon Leaders to BOEM: Friction with Stakeholders Necessitates Pause in Offshore Wind Process (seafoodnews.com) (June 2023)
- NC joins pact to cover offshore wind-related fisheries losses | Coastal Review (June 2023)
- PFMC calls to rescind Oregon offshore wind areas | Oregon | capitalpress.com (April 2023)
- New Jersey offshore wind project won’t threaten whales’ survival, NOAA says | National Fisherman (April 2023)
- Turbines and brine: Washington offshore wind proposals present complex threats, challenges | The Aberdeen Daily World (April 2023)
- RODA, federal agencies issue ‘synthesis’ report on fisheries and offshore wind | National Fisherman (March 2023)
- East Coast congressmen seek NOAA response on scientists’ offshore wind advice | National Fisherman (March 2023)
- National Congress of American Indians calls for offshore wind moratorium – The Verge (February 2023)
- Feds: Offshore wind not to blame for East Coast whale deaths | AP News (January 2023)
- Lots of Whales Spotted Around Offshore Wind Farm Zones; Possible Impacts on Marine Wildlife (seafoodnews.com) (December 2022)
- Study of North Sea Offshore Wind Farms Shows Change in Marine Ecosystems (seafoodnews.com) (November 2022)
- BOEM Completes Environmental Review of Offshore Wind Leasing in Central California | Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (October 2022)
Wind – Economics/Permitting
- BOEM Identifies Draft Wind Energy Areas Offshore Oregon for Public Review and Comment (August 2023)
- Orsted delays 1st New Jersey wind farm until 2026; not ready to ‘walk away’ from project (August 2023)
- US offshore wind pushes ahead despite industry Demand/Financial turmoil (August 2023)
- Vineyard Winds Starts Construction As Other Developer Hits Snag (June 2023)
- Supply chain to support Biden’s offshore wind goals will cost at least $22.4B: report | The Hill (January 2023)
- Pacific Offshore Wind Lease Auction Results in Five Leases for $757.1 Million (December 2022)
Wind – Impact to Fisheries Surveys
- Offshore wind requires funding boost for NOAA surveys, science centers, advocates say | National Fisherman (March 2023)
- Fishermen offshore wind letter to congress on Surveys Research.pdf (March 2023)
- Efforts to Mitigate Impacts of Offshore Wind Energy Development on NOAA Fisheries’ Surveys | NOAA Fisheries (December 2022)
Other Articles of Interest
- Remembering 1985 Highliner Mike McCorkle (September 2023)
- Trident says chum market ‘collapsed;’ will stop buying most Alaska salmon Sept. 2 | National Fisherman (August 2023)
- New West Coast Fishery Increases Access for U.S. Vessels to Swordfish | NOAA Fisheries (May 2023)
- Nordic swaps from salmon to kingfish in California (fishfarmingexpert.com) (April 2023)
- U.S. underfishing drives up imports (cnbc.com) (October 2022)