Kuskokwim Management Area, Alaska Department of Fish and Game 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Kuskokwim Management Area form in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your Company Name and FEIN at the top of the form. This information is essential for identification purposes.
  3. Fill in your Contact Name, Title, Telephone Number, and Email Address. Ensure these details are accurate for any follow-up communications.
  4. Select the appropriate Production Areas from the provided options (A through I). Each area corresponds to specific regions in Alaska, so choose carefully based on your operations.
  5. In the Tot. Net Wt. (lbs) fields, input the total weight of salmon produced during the reporting period for each production area selected.
  6. Complete the Product Form Codes section by indicating which types of products you are reporting (e.g., fresh fillet products).
  7. Finally, review all entries for accuracy before signing and dating the form at the bottom. This ensures compliance with reporting requirements.

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The Division of Commercial Fisheries manages commercial, subsistence, and personal use fisheries within the jurisdiction of the State of Alaska.
Alaskas fisheries, vital to the states economy and culture, are facing an unprecedented crisis. Collapsing fish prices, processor bankruptcies, and community-wide financial struggles are compounded by climate change, rising costs, and global competition.
Sport anglers commonly fish for Chinook (king), coho (silver) salmon, pink (humpy) salmon, sockeye (red) salmon, chum (dog) salmon, Arctic grayling, rainbow trout, lake, trout, Arctic char, Dolly Varden, sheefish (inconnu), Northern pike, and burbot.
A permitting system designed in the 1970s was supposed to make Alaskas commercial fishing industry more sustainable and more profitable. But over the past 50 years, it has hollowed out many Indigenous coastal villages where residents no longer can earn a living by harvesting salmon.
The 2025 commercial salmon harvest forecast is 138.4 million pink, 52.9 million sockeye, 20.8 million chum, and 2.4 million coho salmon. If realized, the forecasted 2025 total Alaska commercial salmon harvest will be approximately 214.6 million fish.

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Commercial fishing is a major industry in Alaska, and has been for hundreds of years. Alaska Natives have been harvesting salmon and many other types of fish for millennia Including king crab. Russians came to Alaska to harvest its abundance of sealife, as well as Japanese and other Asian cultures.
Cohos paid out at $1.17 per pound to fishermen, up from $1.03. The Chinook salmon harvest was estimated at under 229,000 fish with a value of $11.8 million to fishermen (4% of total exvessel value). Chinook fetched $5.11 per pound dockside, down from $5.80 in 2023.

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