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Alaska Salmon Harvest Forecast Slashed 36% for 2026

National Desk
May 3, 2026
JUNEAU, Alaska (Day.News) — State biologists with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game released their annual salmon forecast on April 25, 2026, projecting a statewide commercial harvest of 125.5 million fish for the year — a 36% plunge from the 197.4 million landed in 2025.[1][2][5] The decline stems largely from expected weak pink salmon returns, forecasted at 56 million compared to 120 million in 2025, alongside modest drops in sockeye (49.7 million vs. 52.7 million), chum (17.2 million vs. 21.7 million) and coho (2.4 million vs. 2.7 million), with Chinook steady at around 197,000 fish.[2][5] Pink salmon, or humpback salmon, dominate Alaska's even-year cycles, but 2026 projections signal the lowest totals since 2000 in most categories, per department records.[1][5] Bristol Bay remains the sockeye powerhouse, though overall runs there and across Central and Westward regions face pressure from warming waters and variable ocean conditions.[2] Southeast Alaska, which saw strong pink harvests in 2025, now contends with distributed but diminished expectations, threatening seine and gillnet fleets that rely on the boom.[4] The forecast, detailed in 'Run Forecasts and Harvest Projections for 2026 Alaska Salmon Fisheries and Review of the 2025 Season,' underscores environmental drivers like poor marine survival rates amid climate shifts.[5] Last year's harvest fell short of preseason estimates by 17.3 million fish, with commercial efforts capturing 81% in common property fisheries.[5] Retail prices for premium sockeye and Chinook hang in limbo, even as global supplies from Russia also weaken.[3] Communities like Kodiak and Petersburg, salmon-dependent hubs, face tightened quotas and potential emergency orders to protect brood stocks.[1] ADF&G Commissioner Doug Vincent-Lang emphasized adaptive management, but harvesters warn of cascading losses to Alaska's $5 billion-plus industry backbone.[2]

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