News

Nearly three decades into his research on how aquatic systems are responding climate change in Bristol Bay, University of ...
According to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, fishermen in the Shumagin Islands and South Unimak areas harvested about 720,000 salmon through the end of June — the second-lowest June on record ...
Well, the July 9 trade deadline set by US president Donald Trump has arrived … but pump the brakes! It's not exactly tariff time. Reporter Jacob Resneck checks in from Alaska, where he's been ...
Allegations of foreign control have repeatedly been debunked, said Ben Landry, vice president of public affairs for Ocean ...
Tenders tie up at the processor’s docks, where a tube sucks salmon out of the hold and pumps them into a room-sized vat of ...
The new season will feature the likes of Jake Anderson and Keith Colburn, along with their iconic vessels, as they travel the ...
Clark Pederson, deckhand aboard the F/V Northwestern, sorts crab on the vessel’s sorting table. Discovery Channel photo.
Without stronger laws, Bristol Bay remains under threat from mining claims that endanger salmon and local communities.
Troopers rescue fishermen in Bristol Bay, Juneau Symphony names Brad Hogarth as director, McGrath gets a meaningful new mural ...
Bristol Bay, Alaska — Communities in this rural fishing region, site of the world’s largest sockeye salmon run that draws thousands of workers each year, are defined, in part, by their isolation.
Experience world-class fishing and unforgettable wildlife at this mythical lake in Alaska, which is the largest freshwater body of water in the state.
School is winding down, but for Gibbon-Fairfax-Winthrop teacher Roger Rogotzke, summer brings another gig — commercial fishing. Rogotzke has been making the trip to Bristol Bay to catch wild ...