12-31-15 Late coho salmon - Klawock, Alaska, USA
11-12-14 Late coho salmon run - Cordova, Alaska, USA
8-12-13 Growth in coho salmon - Hydaburg, Alaska, USA
9-24-14 Coho salmon with parasites - New Stuyahok, Alaska, USA
Dead or dying eggs in a female coho salmon are a possible symptom of environmental stress felt by the fish. In Western Alaska, water levels have been low following a rapid spring snowmelt and low precipitation.
In early July, dead fish were observed floating along Kouwegoki Slough and along Powers Creek, among other locations.
Silver salmon, Brant geese and berries.
The number of salmon returning to Chester Creek has improved since 2008. This year, spawning salmon are lingering in the creek later than usual.
Early snowmelt and low rainfall contributed to low river levels near Nome, affecting the ability of residents to reach usual fishing spots.
Thousands of varied salmon species reported dead at Klawock River.
Commercial and Subsistence Harvest
But at least there is a stream...
"Jakolof Creek is dry almost all the way up to the switchbacks and continues to recede. The early run of red salmon may have made it to the lake, but that is probably the only run that has."
Early snowmelt and low precipitation have led to low river water levels on the southern Seward Peninsula. Low water levels may be a contributing factor in observations of poor fishing, and poor fish health, along the western coast of Alaska.
Silver salmon, caught 10 miles up the Twin Hills River, had small white patches in flesh.
Slow sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) runs in the Aleutians potentially linked to warming ocean temperatures.
Drought and high temperatures have dried the creek and caused thousands of pink salmon and Dolly Varden to die before they could spawn. The event raises questions about vulnerability of area salmon streams to climate change, and for local residents food security.
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