Subsistence and personal use harvest of salmon in Alaska, 1960-2012

Subsistence fishing is important for the economies and cultures of many families and communities in Alaska. Subsistence uses of wild resources exist alongside other important uses of fish and game in Alaska and are especially important for many rural families who depend on subsistence use for nutrit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alaska Department of Fish and Game Subsistence Division
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:a7d46a96-2bbf-4131-a291-339b950b334e
Description
Summary:Subsistence fishing is important for the economies and cultures of many families and communities in Alaska. Subsistence uses of wild resources exist alongside other important uses of fish and game in Alaska and are especially important for many rural families who depend on subsistence use for nutrition and traditional cultural practices. Subsistence use is defined as the noncommercial, customary harvest and processing of wild resources for food, raw materials, and other traditional uses. These customs have been a central part of the traditions of many cultural and tribal groups in Alaska for centuries. Today, subsistence and personal use fisheries are open only to Alaska residents that have been living in the state for at least one year. The Board of Fisheries (BOF) has the authority to adopt regulations governing the use of fish resources in Alaska. In order to regulate subsistence fisheries and ensure sustainability, the BOF is directed by Alaskan state law to identify fish stocks that are customarily and traditionally used for subsistence in Alaska. After customary and traditional use has been determined for a stock, the amount reasonably necessary for subsistence is set. Subsistence and personal use fisheries are managed under different regulations and thus regulations vary by fishery and location across the state. For example, only some fisheries require a permit issued by ADFG and some waters are closed to subsistence fishing, other fisheries have season, gear, and/or bag limit restrictions. Finfish other than salmon, rainbow trout, and steelhead trout may be taken for subsistence purposes at any time in any area of the state by any method unless restricted by the subsistence fishing regulations in the Alaska Admin Code. Salmon are more strictly regulated and the fisheries require permits, only allow certain gear types, and are restricted to certain waters in the state. This dataset includes information on subsistence salmon harvest from 1960-2012 across the entire state of Alaska. The csv files "FullExtract_ASFDB.csv" and "PersonalUseFisheries_ASFDB.csv" have been reformatted from the original excel files ("Full.Extract.ASFDB.xlsx" and "Personal.Use.Fisheries.xlsx"). This processing was done using the R Markdown file, "subsistence_harvest_processing.Rmd". ADFG provided the personal use fisheries dataset as a subset of the full extracted dataset, and this file includes only the data from personal use. Each entry is a report from a specific fishery and community in Alaska including permit type, gear type, resource type, year, and harvest (both reported and estimated). For each species, harvest data include both the number of fish and the edible weight in lbs (dressed, head off). 1996 Cook Inlet data are not currently available for personal use fisheries by community, but an overall total for 1996 has been added.