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Time to save kings is now

I have been fishing the Kenai River for 20 years and over the past years I have noticed…

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Conservation should come first

I have been a Kenai Peninsula resident for more than 10 years and have sport  fished in Alaska…

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Group behind setnet ban initiative files appeal

The Alaska Fisheries Conservation Alliance will appeal the state’s decision to reject its proposed ballot initiative that would…

ASMI fights rumors of tainted Alaska fish

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ASMI fights rumors of tainted Alaska fish

The Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute is waging an informational campaign against persistent rumors online and in social media…

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Groups gear up for fish meetings

With more than 230 regulatory proposals, several pages worth of suggested changes to the Cook Inlet finfish fisheries,…

Kenai kings face long odds, but it’s not too late

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Kenai kings face long odds, but it’s not too late

The Kenai king controversy has connected some dots for me. I was born in Alaska in 1950 and…

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Yesterday was time to act to save Kenai River kings

I have been fishing in Alaska now for over 18 years. My first trip was on the Kenai…

Conserving the Kenai king is a mandate for board, ADFG

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Conserving the Kenai king is a mandate for board, ADFG

Editor’s note: This is the 10th and final part of the Morris Communications series “The case for conserving…

Setnetters in the Kasilof Section of the East Side Setnet Fishery push a boat into shore June 27, 2013. On Monday, Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell rejected a proposed initiative that would have banned the use of setnets in Cook Inlet.

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State rejects setnet initiative

An initiative proposing a ban on setnets in certain parts of the state was rejected Monday as a…

Joe Edwards of Houston, Texas, watches as his king salmon weights in at 16.2 pounds at the Douglas Harbor for the Golden North Salmon Derby in August of 2011. Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Juneau said the 28-inch size limit for chinook salmon, while intended as a conservation measure, may be removing fast-growing fish from the population over time.

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A king without a crown: Chinook vulnerable to ocean forces

Editor’s note: This is the ninth in the Morris Communications series “The case for conserving the Kenai king…

A spawned out sockeye salmon floats in Quartz Creek, an upper tributary to the Kenai River. Making sure the right amount of salmon reach the spawning grounds — known as an escapement goal — is the primary objective for Alaska Department of Fish and Game managers in the summer. That objective is a difficult one to achieve when sockeye are abundant and king salmon are not, as has been the case in the last several years. The way ADFG sets, and achieves, escapement goals is a matter of much debate because of the impacts on sport and commercial users as well as the impact missed goals can have on future returns.

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Fishermen focus on how ADFG sets, achieves escapement goals

Editor’s note: This is the eighth in the Morris Communications series, “The case for conserving the Kenai king…

Kenai Mayor Pat Porter, left, speaks to Alaska Department of Fish and Game Commissioner Cora Campbell following a news conference on July 20, 2012, in Anchorage. Porter attended a news conference led by Campbell and Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell to address actions the state can take in light of the poor king salmon run statewide, affecting both subsistence, sport and commercial fishermen. During the 2013 legislative session, Parnell successfully lobbied for $30 million over five years to research king salmon and possible causes for the decline in productivity seen statewide.-Photo by Mark Thiessen, Associated Press

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Management challenge: Inlet ‘fish wars’ escalate as king productivity ebbs

Editor’s note: This is the seventh in the Morris Communications series, “The case for conserving the Kenai king…

Alaska Department of Fish and Game sonar technician Brandon Key shows off the latest iteration of software and hardware that runs the sonar program on the Kenai River Nov. 1 in Soldotna. Currently there are two sonar sites on the river counting king salmon, one that is used for management and the other a research site which could eventually become the primary sonar on the river. In the weeks since the late run of Kenai River king salmon ended, Key has spent his time analyzing footage from the site that researchers did not have time to watch during the fishing season.

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Questions remain about king counts after ADFG shift to high-tech sonar

Editor’s note: This is the sixth story in the Morris Communications series “The case for conserving the Kenai…