| Alaska Fisheries Sonar |
| Alaska salmon fisheries contribute millions of dollars to the state economy annually and provide Alaskans with a valuable food source. To allow fisheries user groups the greatest possible harvest without jeopardizing long-term sustainability, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game relies on its Fisheries Sonar Program to provide timely information about salmon run strength. |
| Why Sonar |
| Where ADF&G Sonar Sites Operate |
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| We use many tools to gauge salmon run strength, but few of them can provide us with inseason information on the size of a run close to the fisheries that intercept them. Traditional tools such as weirs and counting towers can be used to count salmon in clear, narrow streams or tributaries, but not in wide, turbid rivers. To gauge salmon runs we can’t see, we have taken a lesson from one of Mother Nature’s fish-finding experts. In glacial silt-laden bays and rivers, beluga whales find salmon by emitting high-pitched calls and listening for returning echoes. Similarly, we have adopted sonar as a tool to detect salmon not by sight, but by sound. For more about how sonar
is used to detect fish in rivers works click here. |
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Anchor River
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Aniak River
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Anvik River
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Chilkat River
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Copper River
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Crescent River
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Yukon River (Eagle)
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Kasilof River
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Kenai River RM 8.6
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Kenai River RM 19
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Nushagak River
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Sheenjek River
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Yentna River
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Yukon River (Pilot Station)
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| This project was partially funded under award NA08NMF4380597 from NOAA Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Funds administered by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Alaska Sustainable Salmon Fund. |
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