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VOLUME 20 July 1, 1978-June 30, 1979 FEDERAL AID IN FISH RESTORATtON SW -1 STATEWIDE STUDY By Michae I J. Mi Its HARVEST Alaska Department of Fish and Game Ronald 0. Skoog 1 Commissioner Sport Fish Division Juneau 1 Alaska Volume 20 I , STATE OF ALASKA . Jay S. HaJ77!Tiond_, Governor Annual Performance Report for ALASKA STATEWIDE SPORT FISH HARVEST STUDIES by Michael-J. MiUs ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME Ronal-d 0. Skoog_, Commissioner SPORT FISH DIVISION Rupert E. Andrews_, Director ARLIS Alaska Resources Library & information Services Anchorage, A ... ~:sl , ..... Study SW-1-A SH ( I ·/t7 3 f+<-t v. ()o p+-. B . ) - ~ .. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Abstract • 1 Background 1 RecolDDlendations • • . • . . . • . . . . . • . • . . . . • . . . . 2 Objectives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Techniques Used • . . . . . . • • . . . . • • . • • . . . . . . . . 2 Findings . Appendix A Appendix B Table 1. Table 2. Table 3. Table 4. Table 5. Table 6. Table 7. Table 8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Figures and Tables . • . • . • • . • . • . . • . . . Questionnaire and Reminders . . . . . . . • . . . . . * * * LIST OF TABLES List of ColDDlon Names~ Scientific Names~ and Abbreviations . . . • • • • . . . . • • List of Alaska Sport Fishing Areas and Codes SUlDD1ary of Mailings and Response . Number of Anglers~ Households, and Anglers per Household Sport Fishing in Alaska in 1977 by Area of Residence . • . . Number and Percentage of Licensed and Juvenile Alaska Sport Fishermen by Area of Residence, 1977 Number of Angler-Days Fished in Alaska and Percentage by Region and Area, .1977 .... Alaska Sport Harvests by Region and Species, 1977 Alaska Sport Sea-Run Salmon Harvests by Region, Area, and Species, 1977 •........... 4 7 79 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 List of Tables, Cont. Table 9. Tab.le 10. Table .lL. Table 12. Table 13. Table 14. Table 15. Table 16. Table 17. Table 18. Table 19. Table 20. Table 21. Table 22. Table 23. Table 24. Alaska Sport Landlocked Salmon Harvests by Region, Area, and Species, 1977 •..••• Alaska Sport Steelhead Harvests by Region and area, 1977 . . • . . • • . . . Alaska Sporf Rainbow Trout Harvests by Region and. Area~ .1977 • . • . . . • Alaska Sport Cutthroat Trout Harvests by Region and Area;'.l977.. • • • . • Alaska Sport Brook Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . • . • • • • . . Alaska Sport Lake Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . . • • . . • . . • . . . . Alaska Sport Dolly Varden/Arctic Char Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 • . . • . . • · . . . Alaska Sport Arctic Grayling Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . • . • . . • . . . • . . . . . Alaska Sport Northern Pike Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . • . . . . . . . . . . Alaska Sport Whitefish Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 • . . • • . . . . . • • • . . . Alaska Sport Burbot Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . • . • . . . . . . • • • . Alaska Sport Sheefish Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 . . . • • • • • . . . . • • . Alaska Sport Halibut Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 • • . . • • . . • . . • . . Alaska Sport Smelt Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. . • . . • • • • . • . Alaska Sport Razor Clam Harvests by Region and Area, 1977 • . • • . . . • . Ketchikan Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 • • . . ... Page 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 [ [ . ,~ -( l_; ·-- [ [ r_, L [ [ [ [ [ [ "r L~ [ L L_ • I • • • List of Tables~ Cont. Table 25. Table 26 • Table 27; Table 28. Table 29. Table 30. Table 31. Table 'Z") J"-• Table 33. Table 34. Table 35. Table 36. Table 37. Table 38. Table 39. Table 40. Prince of Wales Island Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 .•. Petersburg-Wrangell Area Sport Fish Harves-ts and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 Sitka Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 .• Juneau_Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 . . . •••• Haines-Skagway Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 . • . •••. Glacier Bay Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 .• -.••••. Yakutat Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species~ 1977 . . . • . • • .· . Glennallen Are·a Sport Fish flarvest by Fisheries and Species, 1977 .. ~~d Effort Prince William Sound Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 Knik Arm Drainage Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 Anchorage Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 .• East Side Susitna River Drainage Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species~ 1977 West Side Cook Inlet-West Side Susitna Drainage Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 • . . . • . . • . ••. Kenai Peninsula Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977 ..... . Kodiak Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species~ 1977 .• Naknek Drainages-Alaska Peninsula Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 Page 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 List of Tables, Cont. Table 41. Table 42. Table 43. Table 44. Table 45. Table 46. Table 47. Table 48. Table 49. Table 50. Table 51. Table 52. Table 53. Table 54. Table 55. Kvichak River Drainages SJ?ort Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 •. Nushagak Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by-Fishery and Species, 1977 ..•.•••• Tanana River Drainages Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishe!Y and Species, 1977 ...• Interior Alaska Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 . . . . . • Seward Peninsula-Norton Sound Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 •..• Northwest Alaska Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 . South Slope Brooks Range Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 . . . North Slope Brooks Range Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977 ... Type of Sport Fishing Preferred by Alaska Anglers by Area of Residence • . . . . . . . . . . . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Alaska Sport Fishermen by Residency . . . . . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Southeast Alaska Regulatory Area • . • . . . . . . . . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Upper Copper- Susitna Rivers Regulatory Area . . . . . . . Order of Effort ~nd Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Prince William Sound Regulatory Area . . . . . • . • . • • . . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Kenai Peninsula Regulatory Area . . . . . . • . . . . . . . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the West Cook Inlet-Upper Susitna Drainage Regulatory Area . . • . . . . . . . . Page 49 50 51 52 52 53 53 54 55 56 57 57 58 58 59 [ [ l~ -~ ~ [~ -. " [ "" . ... . .. ~ - [ [ r' l [ r~ [ [ [ [ ,.r, L~ .. L [ L [ . I - • List of Tables~ Cont. Table 56. Table 57. Table 58. Table 59. Table 60. Table 61. Table 62. Table 63. Figure 1. Figure 2. Figure·3. Figure 4. Figure 5. Figure 6. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Spec~es by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Kodiak Regulatory Area • • • · . • • . • • • • • . • Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Alaska · Peninsula-Bristol Bay-Aleutian Regulatory Area . Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Arctic-Yukon- Kuskokwim Regulatory Area • . . . • . • . • • Percentage of Total Sport Fishing Time Spent Fishing for Salmon by Alaska Anglers by Residence~ 1977 . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . Most Frequent Comments to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey • • • . • • . • • . . • • Comparison of 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey and Creel Census Harvests • • • . Comparison of Two 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys for Selected Major Sport Fisheries •.• Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery • . . . . . . LIST OF FIGURES Map of Alaska Sport Fishing Areas. . . . . . . . . Sport Fish Survey, First Mailing, First Survey. Fi.rst Reminder, First and Second Surveys. • • • Second Reminder, First Survey •. Third Reminder, First Survey .•.. First Mailing of the Second Survey. Page 59 60 60 61 62 63 66 67 8 80 107 108 109 110 [ [ [ f"' -( ' .. . r, -• Lo L [ [ [ C [ [ [ . - [ [ [ [ . I - " .. Volume 20 State: ALASKA Project No.: F-9-11 SW-I Study No.: Job No.: SW-I-A RESEARCH PROJECT SEGMENT Name: Study Title: Job Title: Period Covered: July 1, 1978 to June 30, 1979. ABSTRACT Study No. SW ... I Sport Fish Investigations of Alaska. STATEWIDE SPORT FISH STUDIES Alaska Statewide Sport Fish Harvest·studies. A statewide survey of Alaska sport fishermen indicated that 201,058 anglers fished 1,197,590 days to harvest 2,300,327 fish in 1977. The methodology of the survey, based primarily on mailing questionnaires to a sample of licensees, proved effectual for estimating effort and harvests for sport- caught species by area and fishery. BACKGROUND Meeting public demand for recreational fishing opportunities in Alaska while at the same time maintaining and protecting the fishery resources has become increasingly complex. In the early years of statehood--before rapid population expansion and industrial development--good, uncrowded sport fishing was accessible; large sport fisheries were few and easily monitored; and sport fishing was considered to be a minor factor in management of commercially exploited species. Today, along with increasing tourism and forest, mineral, petroleum, and associated government development has come a mushrooming recreationally oriented population. Accessible sport fisheries have become crowded, new fisheries have developed, and pressure from .a large mobil population is spilling ever farther afield. Native land claims, federally imposed national monuments, impending (d)(2) national interest land legislation, an extended coastal zone, and the issue of subsistence have clouded questions of access, user priorities, and management jurisdiction. The State and private corpora- tions have made substantial committments to aquaculture and hatchery propo- gation. Also, recreational fishing has now become a significant factor in total management of commercially exploited species, especially in Cook Inlet where vociferous sport-commercial user conflicts over king and coho salmon have developed. Against this backdrop, the need has become evident for a statewide data base pr6viding information on where sport fis~ing. occurs, the extent of participation, the preferences of participants, ~nd the species and numbers of major game fishes being harvested. Such a data base is fundamental not only for regulation and management of Alaska's sport fisheries but also for total regulation, management, and allocation of multiple-use fisheries. In addition, this information is needed in establishing priorities, formu- lating policies, planning, and evaluating rehabilitation, enhancement, hatchery, stocking, habitat protection, and access acquisition projects-- to say nothing of its use for stock assessment, forecasting, gauging the economic and social significance of sport fishing, and satisfying requests for information from individuals, special interest groups, government .agencies, and the recreational industry. Because of Alaska's vastness, meeting all these data· requirements statewide by on-site creel censuses would be prohibitively costly, thus an economical supplementary program has become necessary. Described herein is the· be- ginning of that program. Species covered are listed in Table 1, Appendix A. Alaska sport fishing regulatory and management areas are delineated on the map in Figure 1, Appendix A. RECOl\ttiENDATIONS 1. Refine and continue to evaluate the methodology developed to estimate statewide sport fish effort and harvests. 2. Continue to provide statewide estimates of effort and harvest for major Alaskan sport-caught species by area and fishery. OBJECTIVES I. To evaluate and test methods of estimating statewide effort and harvests for major Alaskan sport-caught species by area and fishery. 2. To provide statewide estimates of effort and harvest fo.r major Alaskan sport-caught species by area and fishery. TECHNIQUES USED The 1977 Alaska statewide sport fish harvest program combined postal surveys and creel censuses to obtain estimates of effort and harvest by fishery and by species. The postal surveys consisted of repeated mailings of question- naires to random samples of.Alaska sport fishing license holders. Creel censuses consisted of on-site interviews of random samples of sport fisher- men. The postal surveys provided estimates for all fisheries, while the creel censuses of major selected fisheries provided validity correction and check. Only the postal survey methodology, the basis of the harvest program, and estimation procedures are described her~in. 2 ~[ -" ~ -. [ [ [ r..., L [ r~ [ [ [ [ ~r, L [ [ L . ' . The initial version of the postal survey questionnaire was developed in consultation with ·sport fish managers, ~dministrators; ~d researchers. A mock-up of this version was pretested by asking selected fishery pro- fessionals and others from the target population to complete the questionna- ire for their past season's fishing and to comment on it. Appendix B gives the version of the questionnaire used in the survey. Appendix B also gives copies of reminder letters used • Persons 16 years of age or older must possess a license to sport fish in Alaska. The sampling frame for this survey was the 1977 computer file con- taining information from copies of these licenses. Two independent com- puter generated random samples were drawn from the 16.8,104 license holders represented on this file. One of 12,000 was drawn in mid-October, 1977. The other of 4,500 was drawn in early January, 1978. Names and addresses sorted by zip code were computer printed on self-adhesive, pressure sensitive mailing labels for those sampled. The first survey mailing of 12,000 questionnaires began October 20, 1977, and was followed by reminder mailings at minimum intervals of four weeks to first, second, and third time nonrespondents to initial delivery. The second survey mailing of 4,500 questionnaires began January 11, 1978, and was followed by one reminder mailing seven weeks later. Questionnaires were a different color for each mailing. All outgoing mail was sent bulk rate, except for a random sample of SOO·of the last mailing of the first survey, which was sent by certified mail. All incoming mail was returned first class in pre-addressed business reply·envelopes providedwith each of the questionnaires mailed. Undeliverable mail returned with forwarding addresses was remailed. Undeliverable mail returned without forwarding addresses was computer deleted from the original random sample stored on magnetic tape so . that no reminders would be sent to those addresses. Similarly, respondents were deleted from the sample file so that they would receive no reminders or additional reminders. After coding, key punching, and verification, data from the returned questionnaires were computer edited. Then they were sorted by area and sent to research and management biologists familiar with fisheries in these areas for further editing. These computer and hand editings consisted primarily of deleting records for catches of species not found in the areas in which they were reported, deleting reported catches exceeding the product of angler-days fished and the daily bag limit, and deleting incomplete or inconsistent records (for example, reporting catching but not fishing). Following editing, data tapes were corrected and preliminary estimates were run. These preliminary estimates were returned to area biologists for comment, after which suspicious estimates were rechecked. Final estimates were then run. Harvest and effort totals were estimated by multiplying sample totals by the ratio of the number of households in the target population to the · number in the sample. The number of households in the target population was estimated by dividing the number of licensed fishermen in the population by the mean number of licensed fishermen (those 16 years of age or older) per household in the sample. 3 Estimates were adjusted as follows for nonresponse bias ar~s1ng from differences in participation, ];larvest,.and success between those who did and those who did not return·valid completed.questionnaires. X = N = n = r X = n X n X (N/nd) ( r r + nr -nr) Ntm1ber of households in the population Ntmlber of questionnaires returned Ntm1ber of questionnaires delivered nd -nr Statistic being estimated (harvest or effort) Mean X per household for questionnaires returned Mean X per household for nonrespondents ~r was estimated to be the extrapolated asymptote of the curve fonned by plotting Xr against mailing. For the group of species for which creel census and survey harvest esti- mates differed significantly~ adjusted estimates were calculated statewide by multiplying the ratio of the creel census and corresponding survey means by survey sample totals. In combining the two independent surveys to produce a single estimate, weighted estimates based on respective sample sizes were calculated. · FINDINGS Results The Alaska sport fish harvest survey indicated that an estimated 201,058 anglers fished 1,197,590 days to harvest 2,300,327 fish in 1977. Of the 201,058 anglers 146,161 (73%) were licensed, while 54,897 (27%), those less than 16 years of age, were not. Nonresidents comprised~50,083 (25%) of all anglers of which 11,366 (23%) were from foreign countries. Of the 168,104 persons who purchased 177,734 licenses, 21,943 (13%) did not fish. · Of the 1,197,590 angler-'days fished 827,455 (69%) were expended in the southcentral region of Alaska, 246,974 (21%) were expended in the South- east region, and 123,161 (10%) were expended in the Arctic-Yukon-:-Kuskokwim region. The Kenai Peninsula had 422, 9'58 angler-days or 35% of the State total sport fishing effort. The Kenai River alone had 122';138 angler- days effort, 10% ·of the State total. An estimated ·380,899 angler-days, 4 [ [- L . r·~ ( -" • -·f[ [ L r L [ [ [ [ [ [ -r L [ l [ 32% of all sport fishing, was, in salt water; 816,701 angler-days, 68% of all sport fishing, was· in fresh water. The 2,300,327 fish harvested included 961,695 (42%) razor clams and 390,691 (17%) smelt. Of the remaining 947,941 harvested fish 421,966 (45%) were , salmon, of which 381,051 were sea-run and 40,945 were landlocked; 119;047 were Dolly Varden and Arctic char; 113,691 were Arctic grayling; and 94,310 were rainbow trout; 25,289 were cutthroat trout; 17,469 were lake trout; and 759 were brook trout. There were 23,244 halibut and 31,054 rockfish. There were ll,982 northern pike, 8,425 burbot, and 6,748 whitefish. Also harvestedwere 3,699 steelliead and 1,247 sheefish. Landlocked salmon, char, trout, and Arctic grayling harvests required a common adjustment to 43% of initial estimates. Harvest and effort by region, area, fishery, and species are tabulated in Appendix A. Also included in Appendix A are tables summarizing responses to the general questions asked in the survey. Discussion The harvest survey methodology proved effectual. Response to the first survey was 80% of initial delivery; response to the second survey was 66% of initial delivery (Table 3). Agreement between harvest survey and on- site creel censuses (Table 61) was sufficient to indicate that estimates do satisfy the purposes for which the survey was initiated; in fact, compari- son between survey and creel censuses led to re-evaluation and, in some cases, redesign of creel censuses. Reliability of estimates was sufficient to meet management needs. The two independent surveys gave consistent results (Table 62) and confidence intervals were tight enough (Table 62), sample sizes large enough (Table 63), for estimating effort and harvest for all of Alaska's major sport fisheries. Two independent surveys, one covering the first nine months of 1977 and the other covering all of 1977, were undertaken to (1) permit production of an early report on the majority of sport fisheries, those completed before October; (2) provide a replicate for fisheries completed before October to assess reliability; and (3) to determine whether there are fisheries, or portions of fisheries, occurring in the last three months of the year having effort or harvest large enough to be estimable by subtracting first survey totals from second survey totals. Comparison of the two surveys indicates that sport harv~st and effort in the last three months of the year were not detectable at these sampling levels. Because increased sampling is economically infeasible, because 70% response was achieved after three mailings, and because the certified part of the fourth mailing (though producing a significantly higher response than the noncertified portion, 48% versus 22%) proved cost.ineffective in increasing response, it is planned that only one survey beginning in October and consisting of three regular, bulk rate mailings will be undertaken in 1978. Otherwise, Alaska sport fish harvest survey methods will in 1978 remain the same. 5 Prepared by:, Michael·J~ Mills . Biomet:dcian Approved by: :Rupert · E. Aii.drews , Director Sport Fish Division Mark c. ·warner, J>h. D. Sport Fish Research Chief [ [ [ ~[, -·,_[ [' [ r L [ [ c [ [ b -r LJ [ [ l APPENDIX A FIGURES AND TABLES 7 Figure 1. Alaska S~ort Fishing Areas. ' ' r:J·r~ ~ ALASKA SPORT FISHING AREAS REGION HI REGION I AREA 1 II Table 1. List of common names, scientific names and abbreviations. Common Name Chinook salmon Coho salmon Landlocked coho salmon Sockeye salmon Kokanee salmon Pink salmon Chum salmon Steelhead Rainbow trout Cutthroat trout Brook trout ... Scientific .Name & .. Author Abbreviation Onoorhynohus tshabJytsoha (Walballm) KS Onoorhynohus kisutoh (Walbaum) Onoorhynohus kisutoh (Walbaum) Onoorhynohus nerka (Walbaum) Oitaorhynohus nerka (Walbaum) Onoorhynohus gorbusoha (Walbaum) Onaorhynohus keta {Walbaum) Sa~o gairdneri Richardson Sa~o gairdneri Richardson Sa~o aZarki Richardson SaZveZinus fontinaZis (Mitchell) ss LL RS KO PS cs SH RT CT BT ---bake trout---------------------Sa'l.ve'tinus-namayaush--(Wa-lbaum}-------------b-T----------- Dolly Varden Arctic char Arctic grayling Nortern pike Whitefish Bur bot Inconnu (Sheefish) Halibut Rockfish Smelt Cape lin SaZveZinus ma~a (Walbaum) SaZveZinus aZpinus (Linnaeus) ThymaZZus aratiaus (Pallas) Eso~ Zuaius Linnaeus Coregonus sp. Lota Zota (Linnaeus) Stenodus Zeuaiohthys (Gulden~tadt) HyppogZossus stenoZepis Schmidt .Sebastodes sp. Osmeridae sp. MaZZotuB·ViZZosus 9 DV AC GR NP WF BB SF H RF SM SM 1' I'· Table 2. List of Alaska Sport Fishing Regions, Regulatory Areas, and Subareas • · · Regions I Southeast Alaska II So\ithcentral Alaska II I Arcti c~Y ukon ~ Kus:k:okwilll Regulatory Areas 1. · .. · Sol!theast A}aska. 2 .. Upper Copper-Susitna Rivers. 3 ~ Prince William Sound 4 • · Kenai Peninsula ··.. . . . s. Coqk Inlet and·Low.er Stisitna River Drainage 6. Kodiak 7. Alaska Peninsula-Bristol Bay-Aleutian Islands 8. Arctic-Yukon:-Kuskokwim Subareas A, B, C, D, E; F, G, H (Region I, Regulatory Area 1) I (Region II, Reguiatory Area 2) J (Region II" Regulatory Area 3) P (Region II" Regulatory Area 4) K, L, M, N (Region II, Regulatory Area 5) Q (Region II, Regulatory Area 6) R, S, T (Region II, Regulatory Area 7) U, V, W, X, Y, Z (Region III, Regulatory Area 8) 1 0 [ [ [ [ r L [ [ [ [ [ [ L L Table 3. Summary of Mailings.and Responses. SURVEY ONE Mailing 1 Mailing 2 Mailing 3 Mailing 4 ·Regular Mail Date of Mailing 10/20/77 11/18/77 12/16/77 1/24/78 Number Mailed 12,000 8,327 5,262 3,527 Number Nondeliverable 1,612 578 427 169 Percent Nondeliverable 13.4 6.9 8.1 4.8 Number Delivered 10,388 7,749 4,835 3,358 Percent Delivered 86.6 93.1 91.9 95.2 ~ Responses Number 4,305 2,036. 992 736 Percent .of Mailed 35.9 24.5 18.9 20.9 Percent of Delivered 41.4 26.3 20.5 21.9 Percent of 1st Delivery 41.4 19.6 9.5 7.1 Cumulative Responses Number 4,305 6,341 7,333 8,069 Percent of 1st Delivery 41.4 61.0 70.6 77.7 Mailing 4 Mailing 4 Certified Mail Total Total 1/24/78 1/24/78 500 4,027 ~9,616 12 181 2,798 2.4 4.5 9.4 488 3,846. 26,818 97.6 95.5 90~6 233 969 8,302 46.6 24.1 47.7 25.2 2.3 9.4 79.9 8,302 8,302 8,302 79.9 79.9 79,9 ' ,. Mailing 1 1/11/7.8 4,500 762 1~.9 3,738 83.1 1,563 34.7 41.8 41.8 1,563 41.8 SURVEY TWO Mailing 2 Grand Total Total' 2/27/78 2,920 7,420 37,036 273 1,035 3,833 9.3 13.9 10.3 2,647 6,385 33,203 90.7 86.1 89.7 890 2,453 10,755 30.5 33.6 23.8 65.6 76.1 2,453 2~453 10,755 65.6 65.6 76.1 Table 4. Number of Anglers, HQtisehQlds:, and Anglers per Household Who Spert P:i.shed: in Ala.s'ka i,n 1977 by Area of Residence. Area Southeast Upper copper .. Sus:ltna Rivers Prince William Sound Kenai Peninsula West Cook Inlet-. Lower Susitna Drainage Kodiak Bristol Bay . . Arctic-Yukon-l<usJ<okwim Other United States ·· Foreign Total Number of .. J\riglers. · · 20 387' ·. , -. ' 1,885 2,802 vi, 690 . ., ' .85 062 .. ' .. .2,955 933 22,261 3S,717 ·11,366 201,058 Number of Households 8,139 752 1,095 5,616 33,310 1,1'21 364 9:,387 20,842 5,256 85,882 Anglers Per Household 2.50 2.51 2.56 2.62 2.56 2.64 2.57 2.37 1.86 2.16 2.34 [ [ [ . [' [ f" L [ [ [ [ [ [ [ f' L_j -' -1), Table 5. Number and Percentage of Lic.ensed and Juvenile~ Alaska Sport Fishermen by Area of Residence, 1977. Area of Residence Licensed Anglers Juvenile* Anglers Total Anglers Number Percent Number Percent Numbers Alaska** Southeast 14,208 69.7 6,179 30.3 20,387 Upper Copper- Susitna Rivers 1,278 67.8 607 32.2 1,885 Prince William Sound 1,533 54.7 1,269 45.3 2,802 Kenai Peninsula 10,221 69.~ 4,469 30.4 14,690 Cook Inlet- Lower Susitna Drainage 59 793 ' . 70.3 25,269 29.7 85,062 Kodiak 1,686 57.1 1,269 42.9 2,955 Alaska Peninsula- Bristol Bay- Aleutian Islands 767 82.2 166 17.8 933 Arctic-Yukon- Kuskokwim 14,923 67.0 7,338 33.0. 22,261 Total 104,409 69.2 46,566 30.8 150,975 Other Than Alaska United States 32;758 84.6 5,959 15.4 38,717 Foreign 8,994 79.1 2,372 20 •. 9 11,366 Total 41,752 83.4 8,331 16.6 50,083 Grand Total 146,161 72.7 54,897 27.3 201,058 *Less than 16 years of age. **Alaska areas correspond to regulatory areas. 1 3 Table6. Number of Angler-Days Fished in Alaska and Percentage by Region and Area, 19·77. · .. Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Jurieau Haines.;.Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total .. Southcentral Glennallen Prince William Sound . Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet-West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak_. Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak ·Total Arctic-Yukon.., Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward·PeniriSula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope B_rooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Grand Total Angler-Days 55,;740 12,043 27,212 37,744 92,379 11,602 4,375 5,879 246,974 51,485 48,369 81,949 55,060 56,651 31,946 422,954 41,563 17,007 12,227 8,244 827,455 99,919 7,337 7,828 3,487 2,156 2,434 123,161 1 il97 ,59.0 1 4 Percent 4.7 1.0 2.3 3.2 7.7 1.0 0.4 0.5 20.6 4.3 4.0 6.8 4 .• 6 4.7 2. 7. 35.3 3.5 1.4 1.0 0.7 69.1 8.3 0.6 0.7 0.3 0.2 0.2 10.3 100.0 [ [ -- ' [ r: L [ r [ [ [ [ . -r L [ [ l Table 7. Alaska Sport Harvests by Region artd Sp'ecies, 1977. Arctic-Yukon- Southeast South central Kuskokwim Total -' Chinook salmon 17,449 25,112 499 43,060 ~ Sea-run coho salmon 36,152. 67,866 973 104,991 Land-locked coho salmon 0 31,152 7,151 38,303 Sockeye salmon 5;8b3 97,629 69 103,501 Kokanee salmon 574 2,068 0 2,642 Pink salmon • 34,031 85,543 2,524 122,098 Chum salinon 1,111 5,044 1,246 7,401 Steelhead trout 1,750 1,949 0 3,699 Rainbow trout 7,741 80,354 6,215 94,310 Cutthroat trout 23,377 1,912. 0 25,289 Brook trout 759 0 0 759 Lake trout 0 15,200 2,269 17,469 Dolly Varden/Arctic char 34,734 79,405 4,908 119,047 Arctic grayling 775 45,748 67,168 113,691 Northern Pike 0 321 11,661 11,982 W'nitefish n 2,594 4,154 6,748 v Burbot 0 6,652 1, 773 8,425 Sheefish 0 0 1,247 1,247 Halibut. 5,832 17,412 0 23,244 Rockfish 8,962 22,092 0 31,.054 Smelt 55,034 335,657 0 390,691 Razor clams 10,309 951,386 0 961,695 Other fish 11,456 54,311 3,214 68,981 1 5 [ Table 8. Alaska S:Rort Sea-Run SalmonHarvest by Region, Area, and Species, 1977. [ ~ ,. . · .. · . . . [ Chinook Coho Sockeye Pink Chum Total ·[ -Southeast ' Ketchikan 4,672 4,583 459 ll, 709' 280 21,703 -. [ J· Prince of Wales Island ''· 811 1,917 325 1,559 105 4, 717 Petersburg-Wrange-ll 2,671 3~048 108 2,741 38 8,606 [ Sitka 1'7738 3~116 812 8,835 191 ' 14,692 Juneau 6,377 20,068 . 2,384 7,380 321 36,530 Haines-Skagway '471 1,'270 790 1,3ll 176 4,013 [ Glacier Bay 356 744 237 122 0 1,459 Yakutat 353 1,406 688 374 0 2,821 Total 17,449 36,152' 5,803 34,031 1,111 94,546 r~ South central L Glennallen ,. 532 269 3,662 0 0 4,463 [ Prince William Sound 428 8,829 6,512 25,425 740 41,934 Knik Arm Drai11age .· · 207 4,366 1,576 1,661 250 8,060 Anchorage 52 1,127 25 2,953 0 4,157 [ East Susitna Drainage .1,056 5,709 3,594 19,663 1,382 31,404 West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage 3,411 7,131 2,792 8,812 430 22,576 Kenai Peninsula 16,210 33,574 74,376 12,395 225 136,780 C Kodiak 483 4;716 1,255 14;519 1,645 22,618 Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula 1,405 1,368 998 115 226 4,112 [ Kvichak RiverDrainage 243 190 2,266 0 76 2, 775 Nushagak 1,085 587 573 0 70 2,315 Total 25,112 67,866 97,629 85,543 5,044 281,194 [ Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River Drainage 100 94 0 0 300 494 [ Interior Alaska 177 430 69 ll4 241 1,031 Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound 197 449 0 2,402 670 3, 718 -r, Northwest Alaska 16 0 0 8 28 52 South Slope Brooks Range 9 0 0 0 7 16 l~ North Slope Brooks Range 0 0 0 0 0 0 [ Total 499 973 69 2,524 1,246 5,311 Grand Total 43,060 104,991 103,501 122,098 7,401 381,051 [ [ 1 6 [ Table 9. Alaska Sport Landlocked Salmon Harvests by Region, Area, and Species, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage · East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range· North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total Landlocked Coho Salmon 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1, 750 0 26,917 129 512 0 1,615 229 0 0 0 31,152. 7,151 0 () 0 0 .0 7,151 38,303 1 1 Kokanee Salmon 393 0 0 0 181 0 0 0 514 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,068 0 0 0 0 2,068 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,642 Table 10. Alask.a Sport Steelhead Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka · · Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage· East Susi tna Drainage· West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Naknek River Drainage-.·. Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak · Total Arctic-Yukon~ Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total St.eelhead Trout 1 8 7os· 357 41:2 70 67 0 0 136 1,750 187 0 0 0 0 0 1,530 232 0 0 ·o 1,949 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,699 [ L --' --~[ [' L r L [ [ C [ [ L [ [ L [ Table 1.1. Alaska Sport Rainbow Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Rainbow Trout ·-. southeas·t "-tc. Ketchikan 2,751 Prince of Wales Island 1,207 Petersburg-Wrangell ~29 Sitka 2,012 JWleau 704 Haines-Skagway 136 Glacier Bay 14 Yakutat 88 Total 7,741 South central Glennallen 2,808 Prince William SoWld 378 Knik Arm Drainage 18,615 Anchorage 17,733 East Susitna: Drainage 5,225 West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage 8,430 Kenai Peninsula · · 23,101 Kodiak 1,472 Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula 906 Kvichak River Drainage 1,092 Nushagak 594. Total 80,354 Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim - ~ Tanana River.Drainage 5,992 '-Interior Alaska 223 Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound 0 Northwest Alaska 0 South Slope Brooks Range 0 .. North Slope Brooks Range 0 Total 6,215 Alaska Total 94,310 !9 Table 12. Alaska Sport Cutthroat Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. . "j • • • . "'-' . . ~ Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island · Petersburg-Wrangell ·· Sitka · Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince .. William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet-· · West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Naknek River Drainage.., Alaska Peninsula · Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak · Total Arctic-Yukon:-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska · · Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Ra.nge· North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total Cutthroat Trout 2 0 7,908 1,699 5,577 1,896 5,107 667 319 204 23,377 0 1,912 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ·0 0 1,912 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25,289 [ [ [ ·[ [ ·-, --,. _; [ r L [ ,~ c [ L f' L [ L [ Table 13. Alaska Sport Brook Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Bro.ok Trout -~ Southeast "'· Ketchikan 238 Prince of Wales Island 0 Petersburg-Wrangell 0 Sitka 198 Juneau 289 Haines-Skagway 34 Glacier Bay 0 Yakutat 0 Total 759 South central Glennallen 0 Prince William Sound n v Knik Arm Drainage 0 Anchorage 0 East Susitna Drainage 0 West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage 0 Kenai Peninsula 0 Kod.iak 0 Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula 0 Kvichak River Drainage 0 Nushagak 0 Total 0 Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage 0 Interior Alaska 0 '-Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound 0 Northwest Alaska 0 South Slope Brooks Range· 0 North Slope Brooks Range 0 Total 0 Alaska Total 759 2 1 Table 14. Alaska Sport Lake Trout Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska · Seward Peninsul~- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 2 2 Lake Trout 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7,699 0 2,260 0 693 278 3,678 0 368 176 48 15,200 1,471 124 0 90 496 88 2,269 17,469 [ [ -[ ' ~~[ [ [ r L [ " [ [ c [ L L Table 15. Alaska Sport Dolly Varden/Arctic Char Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total · Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northw~st Alaska South Slope Brooks Range· North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total Dolly Varden/Arctic Char 23 3,539 1,345 3,552 6,290 12,014 5,962 917 1,115 34,734 2,251 6 302 ' . 7,541 4,040 2,726 3,098 36,103 14,536 1,542 516 750 79,405 877 1,689 1,621 469 11 241 4,908 119,047 Table 16. Alaska Sport Arctic Grayling Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 24 Arctic Grayling 591 0 0 17 108 59 0 0 775 25,991 0 3,916 187 7,469 4,414 1,587 54 808 826 496 45,748 57,793 4,090 1,607 1,407 1,032 1,239 67,168 113,691 [ [ [ -[ -[ ~' [ [ [ [ [ [ [ E L [ [ l Table 17. Alaska Sport Northern Pike Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished. Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines -Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range· North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total ·:· 2 5 Northern Pike 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 132 0 0 90 46 53 321 9,345 1,652 302 147 215 0 11,661 11,982 Table 18. Alaska Sport Whitefish Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskob.rim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska · Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 2 6 Whitefish ·o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,445 85 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 3 51 2,594 3,378 221 170 385 0 0 4,154 6,748 L ·[ --[ + [ L r~ L [ [ [ [ [ [ l L f' L L -.. Table 19. Alaska Sport Burbot Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished . Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total Southcentral Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage-· Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound North\'lest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total Burbot ·o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5,628 0 290 0 619 115 0 0 0 0 0 6,652 1,547 226 0 0 0 0 1, 773 8,425 ------------------------ 2 7 Table 20. Alaska Sport Sheefish Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Jtmeau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total Southcentral Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 28 Sheefish 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 158 294 0 656 139 0 1,247 1,247 [ [ ·[ -. [ r L [ [ [ [ [ [ ·r L [ [ [ [ Table 21. Alaska Sport Halibut Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total Southcentral Glennallen Prince William Sound Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Intel'ior Alaska Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 2 9 Halibut 1,360 277 447 992 1,976 81 271 428 5,832 0 1,247 0 () 0 0 15,171 994 0 0 0 17,412 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23,244 Table 22. Alaska Sport Smelt Harvests by Regiori and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Jtmeau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total South central Glennallen Prince William So~~d Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna Drainage Kenai Peninsula · Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak · Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska · Seward Peninsula- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 3 0 Smelt 16 0 747 44,931 0 9,340 0 0 55,034 0 6,818 0 201,209 0 0 105,597 5,652 10,751 0 5,630 335,657 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 390,691 [ [ ·[ -. --[~ [ [ r L [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ Table 23. Alaska Sport Razor Clam Harvests by Region and Area, 1977. Area Fished Southeast Ketchikan Prince of Wales Island Petersburg-Wrangell Sitka Juneau Haines-Skagway Glacier Bay Yakutat Total Southcentral Glennallen Prince William Solli~d Knik Arm Drainage Anchorage East Susitna Drainage West Cook Inlet- West Susitna-Drainage Kenai Peninsula - Kodiak Naknek River Drainage- Alaska Peninsula Kvichak River Drainage Nushagak Total Arctic-Yukon-Kuskoblim Tanana River.Drainage Interior Alaska - Se\vard Peninsula·- Norton Sound Northwest Alaska South Slope Brooks Range· North Slope Brooks Range Total Alaska Total 3 1 Razor Clams 0 0 0 10,309 0 0 0 0 10,309 0 28,413 0 0 0 44,252 871,247 7,474 0 0 0 951,386 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 961,695 w N Table 24. Ketchikan* Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977. SALTWATER: Boat-East, West Bchm Canals Boat- Clarence Strait Boat- Rcvilla Channel Boat- Tongass Narrows Boat-Yes Bay Boat-Bell Island Boat-Other Areas Shoreline-Other Areas SALTWATER TOTAL FRESHWATER: Naha River Days Fished· KS 11,894 1,316 6,909 1,050 2,818 338 9, 730 691 286 35 1,272 321 4,598 793 4,3.53 128 41,860 4,672 1,821 0 ss RS 968 44 1,036 31 186 25 771 39 28 0 244 0 786 119 191 38 4,210 296 171 31 KO PS cs H 0 3,373 85 288 0 1,928 36 261 0 633 22 79 0 2,08.7 33 199 0 60 3 3 0 372 9 72 0 1,120 71 390 0 1. 747 9 68 0 11 320 268 1,360 0 101 9 0 SH CT BT RT DV GR RF SM Other 9 136 0 0 22 0 59 0 529. 9 5 0 0 17 0 113 0 263 0 57 0 0 14 0 85 16 572 8 6 0 0 45 0 532 0 1,937 0 0 0 0 23 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 20 49 218 0 0 631 0 26 0 716 11 269 0 0 164 0 19 0 314 86 691 0 0 922 0 834 0 4,351 135 948 0 481 291 68 0 0 0 ~O~th~e~r~S~t~re~a=m=s~---------~5~38~0~----~0 ----~20~2~~1~3~2~---~0----~2~8~8 _____ 3~· ----~0~--3~6~5~~2~5~1~5--~0~--~6~9~3 __ ~1~·~32~1~~3~05~----0--0 0 Other Lakes 6,679 0 0 0 393 o 0 0 122 3,754 238 1,577 1,005 218 0 0 370 --~---: __ _;;_ __ ...::.=.::....._~..:::..:..--=~-.::...!..::..:_:._ __ -=..!.::.::..::._ __________ _ FRESHWATER TOTAL 13,880 0 373 163 393 389 12 0 622 7,217 238 2,751 2,617 591 0 0 370 GRAND TOTAL 55,740 4,672 4 583 459 393 11~709 280 1,360 708 7,908 238 2,751 3,539 591 834 16 4..1.'-L *Ketchikan Area (Area A): All waters from Portland Canal to Ernest Sound, including Duke, Annette, and Gravina Islands and Associated Waters. I~ 'I' • \ ~ _j r-----1 ' ) Table 25. J>rince of Wales Island* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by F'ishery and Species, 1977. Days Fished KS ss RS KO PS cs II SH CT BT RT DV GR RF SM Other SALTWATER: Boat 5,652 802 948 175 0 1·,205 61 271 0 62 0 0 118 0 566 0 42 Shoreline 363 9 100 0 0 li9 0 6 0 5 0 0 172 0 5 0 0 SALTWATER TOTAL 6,015 811 1,048 175 0 1,324 61 277 0 67 0 0 290 0 571 0 42 FRESHI\'ATER: ,, Karta River 459 0 31 6 0 6 0 0 73 150 0 90 133 . 0 0 0 0 (..,) w S1~eetwater- Thorne system (stream, lake~ 758 0 194 125 0 18 0 0 28 404 0 0 193 0 0 0 0 Other streams 4,249 0 644 19 0 211 44 0 . 251 699 0 998 633 0 0 0 0 Other lakes 562 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 379 0 119 96 0 0 0 0 FRESHWATER TOTAL 6,,028 0 869 150 0 235 44 0 357 1,632 0 1,207 1,055 0 0 0 0 GRAND TOTAL 12 043 811 1,917 325 0 1,559 105 277 357 . 1,699 0 1,207 1,345 0 571 0 42 *Prince of Wales Island (Area B): All waters from Cape Chacon northward to Stunner Strait arid from Clarence Strait westward. Table 26. Petersburg-Wrangell* Area Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days CT BT RT DV GR RF SM Other Fished KS ss RS KO PS cs If SH SAL1'WATER: Boat-Blind Slough, Wran~ell Narrows 4! 726 448 685 33 0 1:06 3 108 3 65 0 0 316 0 161 0 351 Boat-Duncan Saltchuck Duncan Canal 636 29 199 0 0 132 0 13 ~ ZQfi Q Q 3Z 0 26 Q 1!1 Boat-Grar Pass 3,549 8!8 1Z3 Q 0 Q 3 50 0 0 0 0 5 0 12 Q 3 -Boat-Other 8,055 1,165 1,281 0 0 1 373 29 225 1Z 8:;! Q Q 59 0 393 HZ !15 Shoreline-Blind Slough 613 .. 0 0 0 216 Q Q !19 0 0 0 14 0 0 19 Q 23 Shoreline- Duncan Saltchuck 81 0 44 0 0 0 Q 0 0 JZ 0 0 Q 0 s 0 0 w Shoreline·Other 1, 718 2ll 169 0 0 100 ~ 51 s 189 0 0 12Z 0 136 0 51 .!:'-SALTWATER TOTAL 19,378 2,671 2,767 33 0 2,060 38 HZ 3!1 SZfi Q 0 623 .a :Z62 Z4Z 4.1.0.- FRESH)VATER: Castle River 190 Q 24 0 0 0 0 Q 6 213 0 0 U3 Q 0 0 0 Anan Creek 946 Q s 0 0 512 0 0 14 113 0 lZ 93 0 0 0 --0-Petersburg Creek 1,172 0 ll8 0 Q Wl 0 0 45 413 0 s 1,086 Q 0 0 0 Kadake Creek 248 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 1Z Q Q 119 0 Q 0 0 Other streams !l,QSfi 0 95 69 0 so 0 D 302 3,051 D 569 1 ' llZ 0 0 0 D Lakes 1,222 0 39 6 0 Q Q 0 0 1 194 Q 238 !101 Q 0 0 0 . FRESIIIVATER TOTAL 7,834 0 281 75 0 681 Q Q 3Z8 5,001 0 829 2 929 0 D 0 0 GRAND TOTAL 27,212 2,671 3,048 108 0 2,741 38 4!17 412 s,5n 0 829 3,552 D Zfi2 HZ 4ZO *Petersburg-Wrangell (Area C): All waters from Ernest Sound to Cape Fanshaw, including Wrangell, Etolin, Zarembo, Mitkof, Kupreanof, and Kuiu Islands. r---1. \.... ....... J r----1 .... [,' _) w Ul Table 27. Sitka Area* Sport Fish· Harvests and Effort by· Fishe:des" and Species, 1977. SALTWATER: Boat Shoreline Days Fished KS ss 24,178 1,716 2,531 6,639 22 324 RS KO PS cs II SH 377 0 5,566 139 976 23 243 0 2,823 2 16 20 ,t." • f ,RT CT BT DV GR RF SM RC · Other 0 178 0 1,245 0 3,567 14,008 0 2,198 0 . 48 0 1,330 0 68 30,923 10,309 1,143 ~SA~J~;J~·w~AT~E~'R~T~01~~~L~----~3~0L,8~1~7--~1~,~7~38~~2~,8~5~5--~6~2~0--~0--~8~,~38~9--~1~4~1~-9-9_2 ___ 4_3 ______ o ____ ._2_2~6 _____ o __ ~2~,5~7~5~--~0 ___ 3~,6~3~5---4~4~,~93~1~~10~,~3~0~9---~ FRESHWATER: Plotnikof- Rezanof System (Lake, Stream) 580 0 84 0 0 26 2 0 8 555 0 0 77 0 0. 0 0 0 ~Go~u~l~d~i~n~g~R~i~v~e~r __________ ~6~o~----~o----~-~o~,-____ o _____ o_. _____ o _____ o ______ o ____ o ______ 2_3 __ ~_1_9 _____ o _______ o ____ ~o ______ o ________ o~ _____ o _______ o_ Pavlov.Harbor System (Lake, Stream) 372 0 30 0 0 30 7 0 0 0 65 0 246 0 0 0 0 0 t-1ud Bay Creek 107 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 5 0 156 0 0 0 0 0 ~o~tl~tc~r~S~tr~c~a~n~Js~---------2~,6~5~7 _______ o ______ 1_13 ____ 1_92 _____ o_-____ 1_89 ____ ~4~1 _____ o_. __ l_9 ____ ~1~89~---s~6~3~ __ -o __ ~2~,6~8~1~--~o~--~o~----~o~----~o ____ ---Ll Lake Eva ~(=La=k~e~st~r~e~a~m)~ __________ 2_8_4 ______ o ______ ~o ____ o~--~o ____ ~o ____ -_o _____ o ____ o ____ ~o~--~2~2~3 _____ o ____ ~2~4~4 ____ ~o--~~o ______ ~o~--~o~ ______ o Goulding Lakes 230 0 0 0 FRESHWATER TOTAL 6' 927 0 261 192 GRAND TOTAL 37,744 1,738 3,116 812 0 0 0 0 0 0 226 0 0 0 0 --------------------------~- o ____ o ______ o ----~17 0 446 50 0 27 2,012 1,670 . 198 3,715 0 8,835 191 992 70 2,012 1,896 198 6,290 17 3,635 44,931 10,309 3,358 *Sitka (Area D): Baranof and Chichagof Islands and associated water~. Table 28. Juneau. Area* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. SALTWATER: Boat -Dotys Cove to Berners Bay and West to Point Retreat Boat-Other Shoreline-Dupont to Echo Cove & Douglas Island Sho.rc line-Other SAL'11~ATER TOTAL JlRESIIWATilR: Dupont to Echci Cove & Douglas Island Days Fished KS ss RS 59,089 5,066 15,950 1,205 4,619 484 1,427 144 14,998 749 1,753 791 2.597 78 602 182 KO PS cs II SH 0 4,059 138 1,651 19 ,o 346 9 131 6 0 1,150 115 127 5 239 3 6Z 3 81,303 6,377 19,732 2,322 .0 5,794 265 1,976 33 2,083 0 100 6 0 729 37 0 17 RT CT BT DV GR SM Rfl Other 0 110 0 1,878 0 0 2.490 253 0 9 0 292 0 0 144 212 0 178 0 3,290 0 0 305 362 0 99 0 509 0 0 57 57 0 396 0 5.969 0 0 2,996 1,884 71 113 0 -1,118 0 0 0 0 ~S~tr~c~a~m~s~------------~4~.17~6£2 __ ~~0L_ __ ~I~4~0 ____ ~3LZ ___ uo~~B~SL7 __ ~1~9----_uo~J~Z~~3u2~B----~l~.~03~2~--~o~~3~,8~7w7~--~o~~o ____ ~J0L-----~3 Lake Jllorence 835 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. 0 708 0 65 0 Turner Lake 878 0 0 0 99 0 0 0 0 0 518 0 351 0 Other Lakes 2,518 0 96 19 8.2 0 0 . 0 0 305 2,340 289 634 108 JlRESIII~ATER TOTAL 11,076 0 336 62 181 1,586 56 0 34 704 4,711 289 6,045 108 GRAND TOTAL 92,379 6,377 20,068 2,384 181 7,380 321 1,976 67 704 5,107· 289 12.014 108 *Juneau Area (Area E): All waters from Cape-Fanshaw to Point Sherman, including Berners Bay and all of Admiralty Island. r---: ' ) ""-l ,. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 0 15 2,996 1,899 r---1 l J •• 11_<1 Table 29. Haines-Skagway* Sport Fish ·Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days Fished KS ss RS KO PS cs H SH RT CT BT DV GR SM RF Other SALTWATER: Boat 4,211 462 130 0 0 258 7 70 0 0 59 0 546 0 0 116 108 Shoreline 1,383 9 153 123 0 251 48 11 0 0 3 0 348 0 0 14 797 SALTWATER TOTAL 5,594 471 283 123. 0 509 55 81 0 0 62 0 894 0 0 130 905 FRESHWATER: w Chilkoot River 1,797 0 198 355 0 505 0 0 0 0 0 0 899 0 2,782 0 0 -.....:1 Other.Streams 1,964 0 671 153 0 176 121 0 0 0 240 0 2 075 0 6 558 0 0 Chilkoot Lake 1,342 0 88 159 0 121 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 451 0 0 ·O 0 Other Lakes 905 0 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 136 365 34 643 59 0 0 3 FRESHWATER TOTAL 6,008 0 987 667 0 802 121 0 0 136 605 34 5,068 59 9,340 0 3 GRAND TOTAL 11,602 471 1,270 790 0 1,311 176 81 0 136 667 34 5,962 59 9,340 130 908 *Haines-Skagway (Area F): All waters from Point Sherman to the Canadian Border (.4} (X) ~ l ) Table 30. Glacier Bay* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days Fished KS SALTWATER: Boat 2,614 356 Shoreline 399 0 SALTWATER TOTAL 3,013 356 FRESHWATER: Streams 332 0 Lakes 1,030 0 FRESHWATER TOTAL 1 362 0 GRAND TOTAL 4,375 356 *Glacier Bay (Area G): All waters r-- !. J ss RS KO PS 644 231 0 71 100 0 0 51 744 231 0 122 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 744 237 0 122 from Cape Fairweather to r: '· J cs H SH RT CT BT DV 0 256 0 0 0 0 28 0 ,15 0 0 12 0 ~zg 0 271 0 0 12 0 ~Q2 ·" 0 0 0 8 2Zl Q 190 0 0 0 6 36 Q 425 0 0 0 14 ~QZ Q filS 0 271 0 14 319 0 917 Icy Strait and eastward to Point Couverden. GR 0 Q Q 0 Q 0 0 SM 0 Q 0 0 0 Q 0 " . . ~\ I . RF Other 34 6 0 Q 34 Q Q 12 Q 0 Q 12 34 18 Table 31. Yakutat Area* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days Fished KS ss RS KO PS cs H SH RT CT BT DV GR SM RF Other SALTWATER: Boat 350 79 83 0 0 0 0 428 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4Q_ Shoreline 492 9 100 §2 Q 20. Q ' Q 0 0 0 0 :ZJ Q Q Q 0 SALTWATER TOTAL 842 . 88 183 62 0 20 0 428 0 0 0 0 74 0 Q Q 40 FRESHWATER: "'' tc; Situk River 3,571 244 853 497 Q 31~ Q Q J 36 88 28 0 ZlO 0 ·o Q 0 Other Streams 1,380 21 370 123 0 39 5 0 .0 0 lZ2 Q 331 Q 0 0 0 Lakes 86 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0 0 Q Q FRESHWATER TOTAL 5,037 265 1,223 626 0 354 5 0 136 88 204 0 1 041 0 0 0 0 GRAND TOTAL 5,879 353 1,406 .688 0 374 5 428 136 88 204 Q 1.115 Q 0 0 40 *Yakutat Area (Area H): All waters from Cape Suckling to Cape Fairweather. :-. 0 Table 32. Glennallen Area* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days AC Fished KS ss · LL RS PS cs RT LT SH WF DV GR BB Other Gu1kana River 4,165 421 0 0 1,180 0 0 447 15 0 189 0 3 355 4 57 Lake Louise, Lake Susitna, 3,157 37 Tyone Lake 14,899 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,838 0 1,035 0 3,557 Van (Silver Lake) 1,160 0 0 716 0 0 0 348 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Paxson Lake Summit Lake 6,429 0 0 0 0 0 0 305 1,420 0 . 169 0 2,169 212 12 Strelna Lake 548 0 0 353 0 0 0 218. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SculEin Lake 68 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cross1~ind Lake 1,852 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 252 0 351 0 405 291 0 Hudson Lake 234 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Q Q Q 461 __o_ Other Waters 22,130 111 269 681 2,482 0 0 1,465 3,174 187 701 2,251 16!505 1!497 130 TOTAL 51,485 532 269 1,750 3,662 0 0 2,808 7,699 187 2,445 2,251 25,991 5,628 236 *Glennallen Area (Area I): All waters and drainages of the Oshetna River and the Copper River upstream from a line between the south bank of Haley Creek and the south bank confluence with the Oshetna River. r-J' [j of Canyon Creek in Woods Canyon, and including the Upper Susitna River drainage from its r-- L.. J ~ l Tab1e.33; Prince William Sound* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort ~Y Fisheries and Species, 1977. Days DV Fished BCS ss RS PS cs H RT CT AC WF SM RF RC Other Valdez Bal 19,423 247 5,277 557 12,020 219 528 0 0 594 0 905 1,895 0 1,236 Eyak River 3,544 0 1,229 209 0 0 0 0 93 854 3 0 0 0 373 Eshamy Lake and Lagoon ~ Coghill River and Lake 5,842 0 0 2 898 4 213 158 0 0 305 56 0 0 0 0 57 Lake Shrode, Long Bal 1,209 0 0 319 658 25 0 0 0 34 0 0 0 0 42 Pigot River 1,325 0 61 0 1,565 114 0 Q 0 91 0 0 0 .0 0 Others 17!026 181 2,262 2!529 6,969 224 719 378 1!514 41673 82 5,913 2!506 28,413 6!133 TOTAL 48,369 428 8,829. 6,512 25,425 740 1,247 378 1,912 6,302 85 6!818 41401 28,413 7,841. *Prince William Sound (Area J): All waters and drainages from Cape Suckling through Prince William Sound to Cape Puget, including that portion of the Copper River Drainage downstream of a line between the south bank of Haley Creek and the south bank of Canyon Creek .in Woods Canyon. ~ lv Table 34. Knik Arm Drainage* Spert Fish l'farvests and Effort by Fisherie.s and ·species,. 1977. Less than Days 2o.rnches DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS .CS RT AC .LT. BB Little Susitna River 11,063 191 31415 0 888 1,208 . 131 843 645 0 19Q §. Wasilla Creek ' (Rabbit Slough). 2,805 0 472 0 274 217 17 252 . 328 0 0 0 Finger Lake 14,86.4 0 0 14,739 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 KeEler Lake ComElex 7,962 0 0 528 0 0 0 1,822 0 0 72 0 Lucille Lake 7,440 0 0 8,952 0 0 0 0 ,; 0 0 0 0 Big Lake 11,869 0 0 721. 37 0 0 31906 4,953 665 0 73 Nancy Lake Recreation Area, Including :\ancy Lake 7,259 0 56 76 56 0 0 2,642 277 336 .0 148 Others 18,687 16 423 1,901 321 236 102 9,150 1,338 63 TOTAL 81,949 207 4,366 26,917 1,576 1,661 250 18,615 7,541 2 260 3 916 290 *Knik Arm Drainage (Area K) : All waters inside the area bounded by the Little Susitna River on the north and west and the Knik Arm on the south, r-:, r--:i including all drainages of the Matanuska and Knik Rivers. (Boundary Streams included in the area). r--. l [~ L.J ~ l. (' ~ \ '.------, :-----: I I l______ J Li Other zz 0 0 0 0 17 57 229 380 Table 35. Anchorage Area* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. Less 111an Days 20 Inches DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS. cs RT AC GR SM Other Jewel Lake 5 1 908 0. o• 0 0 0 0 1,542 0 0 0 0 Cam~bell Point Lake. 3!099 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,483 0 Q 0 0 Sand Lake 2,099 0 0 0 0 0 0 653 0 0 0 0 Lower Fire Lake 3,132 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,618 0 0 0 0 Mirror Lake 1,8o& 0 0 0 0 0 0 176 0 187 0 0 Otter Lake 5,197 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,250 0 0 0 0 Clunie Lake 21 977 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,915 0 Q 0 0 ,:-.. Gwen Lake 837 0 0 0 0 0 0 512 .0 0 0 25 w Sixmile Lake 1,473 0 0 19 0 0 0 470 0 0 0 0 Green Lake 3,278 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,418 0 0 0 0 Hillberg Lake 2,487 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,194 0 0 0 0 Ship Creek 1,156 52 125 0 0 93 0 257 249-0 0 34 Eagle River 1,328 0 6 0 0 0 0 292 868 0 0 0 Bird Creek 7,389 0 0 0 0 2 797 0 0 676 0 0 113 1'wentymile RiveF 6,403 0 996 0 0 ~--· ---·-·-0 0 0 945 0 189,077 1,191. Others 6,489 0 0 110 25 63 0 2,948 1,302 0 12,132 158 ---·--~ Total 55,060 52 1,127 129 25 2,953 0 17,733 4,040 187 201,209 1,521 *Anchorage Area (Area L): All waters inside the are<J. bounde.d by the Ekil1tna River on the north; Knik Arm on the west; Turnagain Arm, to and including,Portage Creek at Portage on the south; and the Chugach Mountains on the east. (Boundary streams are included in the area.) .t:-- .1:"- " " Table 36. East Side Su5itna River Drainage* Sport .Fhh Harvests and Eff~rt lby Fis~eries an~ Specie~, 1977. Days. Fished Willow. Creek 14,024 . Montana Creek 14,268 Clear (Chunilnal Creek 3,163 SheeE Creek 8,112 Little IHllow Creek 4,583 Others 12,501 TOTAL 56,651 *East Side susitna River.Drainage ~: ~II r--, l . Less Than 20 Inches DV. KS ss LL RS PS cs !lT AC 137 679 0 831 .7, 140 1,055 863 415 1,415 0 978 3;568 326 727 300 25 1;070 0 334 1,314 146 450· 379 259 438 0 450 4,291 202 368 94 16 225 o· 305 1,261 175 224 139 204 1·,882 512 696 2,089 190 2,401 951 1,056 5,709 512 3,594 19,66,3 1,382 5,225 ~. 726 (Area M): All east side drainages of the Susitna River below its confluence with. the while fishing from the east bank of the Susitna River are included in this ,..--.... L ) LT GR BB Other 0 1,483 26 "218 0 379 110 133 0 486 0 23 0 317 45 0 0 934 0 57 693 3,870 438 195. .693 7,469 619 626 Oshetna River. Fish taken area. L ' I .it ' L " ' 'j l' Table 37. West Side Cook Inlet-West Side Susitna River Drainages* Sport Fish Harvest and Effort .br Fisheries and Species, 1977. Less Than Days 20 ·rnches DV Fished KS . ss RS PS cs RT AC LT GR NP DB '· Other Deshka River · (Kroto. Creek) . 3,852 . 1,017 559 0 391 0 1,556 0 0 631 0 3 68 Lake .Creek 6,946 464 11203 . 658 4,927 162 1,853 122 116 1.599 42 42 14 Alexander Creek 5,991 820 . 1 1 562 349 1 1 263 30 1,251 53 0 280 0 0 59 Ta1achulitna River 1,342 .224 346 457. 539 37 0 252 0 832 0 0 0 Chuit River 1,355 227 316 6 245 7 509 671 0 0 0 .o 12 Theodore River 1 037 237 113 0. 363 0 415 181 0 0 0 0 0 :-- <.T1 Lewis River 343 9 103 0 62 0 34 0 0 0 0 0 0 Other rivers . 7,.269 413 2,929 842 1,022 194 1,677 1,279 23 619 0 51 342 Shell Lake 566 0. 0 52 0 0. 1.24 0 23 0 0 0 0 Whiskez Lake 287 0 0 99 0 0 45 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hewitt Lake 436 0 0 43 0 0 128 0 0 0 0 0 0 Judd Lake 317 0 0 24 0 0 68 195 8 45 0 0 0 Other 1akes 2 205 0 0 262 0 0 770 345 108 408 90 19 68 ----- TOTAL 31,946 3,411 7,131 2,792 8,812 430 8,430 3,098 278 4,414 132 115 563 Razor clains Total Digging: Days: 896 Total Clams· Tiiken: 44,25.2 *West Side Cook Inlet-West Side Susitna· Drainages (Area N) : All west side Susitna River drainages and all west side Cook Inlet waters southward to Cape Douglas. Fish taken while fishing from the west bank of the Susitna River are included in this area. Table 38. Kenai Peninsula* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fisheries and Species, 1977. DV Fished KS ss LL RS KO PS cs H SH RT AC LT GR SM RF Other SALTWATER: DeeJ2 Cree~ 32,218 4,470 557 0 1,133 0 305 0 3,609 5 0 603 .o 0 0 .0 286 Resurrection Bar 41,797 515 14,528 0 6 0 l.S~S 63 1,!iH Q 1,720 0 0 19,486 12,783 6,548 Kacheinak Bay 3·8,498. 614 3.623 0 122 0 6,921 126 9,291 . 3,676 0 0 16 1; 117 16 086 J Others 8,329 356 1,126 0 294 0 1,395 0 597 461 0 0 ]4,573 981 13 804 . SALTWATER TOTAL 120,842 5,955 19,834 0 1,5.55 0 10,216 189 151171 6,460 0 0 34,075 14,881 36,724 FRESHWATER: Kenai River 122,138 7,585 91537 0 231196 0 163 0 0 0 4,438 7,123. 252 187 5§,5SQ Q 1Z9 Anchor River 31,515 1,077 1,339 0 0 0 Z7 Q !l 1 !lZ2 l,Q2Z 9 222 Q Q Q Q ] 16 Ninilchik River 11,350 1,168 122 ,o 0 0 0 Q Q 6Q lZO 424 Q Q Q 0 19 .r--Dee12·creek 11,399' 425 306 0 0 0· 109 Q !l 262 . 3!l!l 1.330 Q 0 Q 0 12 m Star.iski .Creek 1,442 0 133 0 0 0 26 0 0 121 lZO •. 4!'il Q 0 Q Q 6 Russian River 54,220 0 1,472 0-48,263 0 3Z 0 !l !l Z!'i9 914 Q 3Z Q 0 20 ·Other Rivers 11,822 0 732 0 1,272 0 1,817 36 Q Q 2,483 3,754 537 317 14.972 Q B4 Hidden Lake· 7,462 0 0 0 0 1,256 0 0 0 0 8§§ 2lW l.S42 · Q Q Q 9 Canoe.Lake srstem 8,183 0 10 226 37 0 0 0 0 0 5,861 1,086 0 0 0 0 0 Other lakes 17,188 !l !!2 1,3!!9 53 812 Q Q 0 0 2,012 4,249 I J 342 I . 046 Q Q zss FRESHWATER TOTAL 276,719 10,255 131740 1,615 72,821 2,068 ·2,179 36 0 1,525 23,101 29,643 3,678 1,587 71,522 !l 1.2!iS Razor clams Between Kasilof Total Digging Days: 25,393 Total Clams Taken: 871,247 and Anchor Point 25,393 GRAND TOTAL 422,954 16,210 33,574 1,615 74,376 2,068 12,395 22·5 15,171 1,530 23,101 36,103 3,678 1,587 105,597 14,881 37,!189 *Kenai Peninsula (Area P) : All waters and drainages including Kalgin Island. of the Kenai Peninsula from Cape Puget around to, but excluding Portage Creek at Portage, and r--r--. l ••• j, -' r----; l ····-' •• Table 39. Kodiak Area* Sport Fish Harves1;s and Effort by Fisheries and Spe"ies, 1977. Days DV ,Capelin Fished KS 55 u RS PS SH RT AC GR RF RC (SM) Other SALTWATER: Boat 9• 440 0 20 510 ll.58 !lM .0 0 371 0' 2,36~ 0 Q '1,685 Shoreline 8,813 25 732 0 82 41564 475 30 3 .o 713 0 441 z.~H· 332 3,~39 SALTWATER TOTAL 14,957 34 1,172 0 102 5 1074 633 994 3. 0 1,Q84 Q ~.!UQ z.~H 332 s ,12!1 t-· ~ FRESHWATER: Buskin River 12,681 0 890 0 228 3,868 0 0 0 0 10,353 0 0 0 0 5 Pasagshak.River 4!712 0 1,169 0 176 1,423. 42 0 0 Q f!lZ Q Q Q 0 3 Other aters 9!213 449 11485 229 749 4,154 970 0 229 1,472 2,482 54 Q Q 5,320 lZ FRESHWATER TOTAL ' 26,606 449 3,544 22.9 1,153 9,445 1.012 0 229 1,472 13,452 54 Q 0 '5,320 zs GRAND TOTAL 41,563 483 4, 716 229 1,255 14,519 1,645 994 232 .1,472 ~4,536 54 2,810 7,474 5,652 5,149 *Kodiak Area (Area Q): All waters and drainages of the Kodiak and Afognak Island groups. :-; q> r-:: .. · . . .· . . •' ·. ' . Tabl~ 40. Naknek Dta:i;nages-Alash Peninsula* SJIOl't Fish Harv~st~ and Effort by Fi,~herr' and Species, 1977 .• Days Fished · KS ss RS PS cs R'f . Other ·Naknek River 4 675 1 005 297 78 0 78 586 195 34 4.84 is 5 .. 0 . 61434 0 Naknek Lake 872 0 0 165 0 0 37 9 23 17. 12. 0 Brooks River 1,195 0 0 135 0 0 173 71 li 50 o· 0 0 0 Usashik S>;:stem 707 0 26 213 0 0 0 51 . 14 141 0 .. 0 0 0 0 Becharof S>;:stem 403 4 138 144 0 0 0 76 0 59 0 0 0 0 0 Others 9,155 396 907 263 us 148 110 57 63 5 0 4,317 6 TOTAL 17,007 1,405 1,368 998 us 226 906 1,542 368 808 90 10 0 .10,751 6 ~Naknek Drainages-Alaska Peninsula (Area R): All waters and drainages between Cape Douglas and the community of Naknek including the Naknek River drainage and the Aleutian Island Chain. ' ,----. I ' l j ,-------, J Table 41, Kvichak River Drainages* Sport Fish Harvests an<l.EffQrt by Fishery and Species, 1977. Days· DV Fished KS ss RS PS cs RT Ac LT GR NP · .. WF BB SM Other Kvichak River 1,509 9 86 583 0 o. 6i2 165 361 0 0 0 0 0 Lower Talarik Creek 749 0 5 58 0 0 57. 6 0 6Q Q Q Q 0 0 Co~per River .1,686 0 0 62 0 0 . 14 6 0 .o 0 0 0 0 {) ~ Gibraltar w River· 423 0 0 8 0 0 62 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Newhalen River 1,686 0 0 805 0 0 122 85 0 88 . Q Q Q Q Q Lake Clark Area 3-,748 0 0 420 0 0 0 25 122 275 43 3 0 0 0 Others 2,426 234 99 330 0 76 165 224 54 42 3 0 0 0 0 TOTAL 12,227 243 190 2,2(16 0 76 1,092 516 176 826 46 3 0 0 0 *Kvichak River Drainages (AreaS): All lakes and trioutaries of the Kvichak River drainage 1 including Nonvianuk Lake, Kukalek Lake, Kulik Lake, Lake Iliamna, and Lake Clark. Table 42. Nushagak Area* Sport. Fish Harvests and Effort,by Fishery and Species, 1977. Days DV Fished KS ss RS .PS cs RT AC LT' GR NP WF BB SM Other Nlishagak River 1,380 94 S;t:stem 402 65 0 24 31 23 0 34 5 0 0 5,630 0 Mulchatna River S:t:stem 1,296 521 90 280 0 46 116 102 . 0 59 25 0 0. 0 0 Wood River (T1 Lakes System 3,549 0 61 129 0 0 252 435 0 201 3 0 0 0 0 C> Tikchik-Nuyakuk Lake S;t:stem 9.59. 0 93 16 0 0 62 34 28 108 8 0 0 0 0 Togiak River 675 62 114 14 " 0 0 102 . 133 0 26 12 0 0 0 iJ srstem Others 385 100 164 40 0 . 0 31 23 20 68 0 51 9 0 0 TOTAL 8,244 1,085 587 573 0 70 594 750 48 496 53 . 51 0 5,630 0 *Nushagak Area (Area T): All lakes and tributaries of the Nushagak River drainage, including the Mulchatna River Drainage, the Wood River and Tikchik Lake Systems, and waters westward to Cape Ne1~enham. r-r -· . ...J ......-----, L J Table 43. Tanana.River Drainages* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort bY. Fishery and Species, 1977. Days DV Fished KS ss LL RS l'S cs RT AC LT GR Nl' WF BB SF Other Chena River, Badger Slough 30,002 29 0 0 0 0 43 0 0 0 21,723 871 538 642 37 65 Chatanika River 9,925 9 0 0 0 0 34 0 Q Q §,7~Z 121 1,635 34 l!l lA_ Salcha River 8,167 62 0 0 0 0 27 0 0 0 6,387 0 45 0 .0 (j (.1'1 Delta Clearwater River 6,881 0 31 0 0 0 19 0 0 0 6 118 0 28 0 0 0 Birch Lake 8,118 0 0 5,697 0 0 0 1,850 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 158 Quartz Lake 6,317 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,634 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 George Lake 854 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,227 12 5 0 0 Minto Flats 3,886 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 243 3,615 31 37 68. 0 Others 25,769 0 63 1,454 0 0 177 1,508 877 1,471 16 585 3,511 1,089 829 39 M)5 TOTAL 99,919 100 94 7,151 0 0 300 5,992 877 1,471 57,793 9,345 3 378 1,547 158 732 *Tanana River Drainages (Area U) : All water within the watershed of the Tanana River upstream from its confluence with the Yukol} River. Table 44. Interior Alaska.* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977, Days DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS cs RT AC LT GR NP WF BB SF Other TOTAL 7,337 177 430 0 69 114 241 223 1,689 124 4,090 1,652 221 226 294 317 *Interior Alaska* (Area V): All waters of the Yukon and Kuskokwim Drainages south of the Arctic Circle and excluding the Tanana Drainages. Also to include water flowing into Kuskokwim Bay. Table 45. Seward Peninsula-Norton Sound* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977, Days DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS cs RT AC LT TOTAL 7,828 197 449 0 0 2,402 670 0 1,621 0 *Seward Peninsula-Norton Sound (Area W): The area north of the Yukon River Drainage and south of the include the Koyukuk River. GR NP WF 1,607 302 170 Selawick River-Kotzebue Sound BB SF Other . ·------ 0 0 2,165 -··---~-~ __ .. ___ area, not·to ..--..., J ....______, J U'1 w Table 46. Northwest Alaska* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977. Days DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS cs RT AC LT Noatak River 935 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 133 0 Kobuk River 950 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 14 0 Wulik River 648 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 184 0 Others 954 16. 0 0 0 8 19 0 138 90 TOTAL 3,487 16 0 0 0 .8 28 0 469 90 *Northwest Alaska (Area X): Kotzebue area, to include drainages of Selawick, Kobuk, Noatak, Wulik, Table 47. South Slope Brooks Range* Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977. Days DV Fished KS ss LL RS PS cs RT AC LT TOTAL 2,156 9 0 0 0 0 7 0 11 496 *South Slope Brooks Range (Area Y): All drainages from, and including, the Alatna River on the west Brooks Range south to the Arctic Circle. '· GR NP WI' 1313 SF Other 413 11 17 0 0 0 297 65 85 0 625 0 118 0 0 0 0 0 579 71 283 0 31 0 1,407 147 385 0 656 0 and Kivalina Rivers. GR NP WF BI3 sr Other 1,032 215 0 0 139 0 to the Canadian Border on the east and from the Table 48. North Slope Brooks .Range* .Sport Fish Harvests and Effort by Fishery and Species, 1977. Days Fished KS ss TOTAL 2,434 0 0 *North Slope Brooks Range (Area Z): LL 0 All waters excluding, :----1 l j RS PS 0 0 north of the Point Hope. DV cs RT AC LT GR NP WF BB 0 0 241 88 1,239 0 0 0 Brooks Range and flowing into the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas and ending at, but ---' I '··· .J SF Other 0 0 Table 49. Type of Sport Fishing Preferred by Alaska Anglers by Area of Residence. Area of Residence Alaska* Southeast Upper Copper-Susitna Rivers Prince William Sound Kenai Peninsula Cook Inlet- Lower Susitna Drainage Kodiak Alaska Peninsula-Bristol Bay- Aleutian Islands Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Statewide Other than Alaska United States Foreign Total Overall Sport Fishing Preferred Saltwater Stream Lake Percent Percent Percent 70 9 58 25 17 40 7 8 26 30 26 29 27 21 61 32 66 65 55 79 67 58 54 62 56 57 9 30 10 9 18 5 14 25 16 16 12 15 16 * Alaska areas correspond to regulatory areas. 5 5 Table so. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Alaska Sport Fishermen by Residency. Alaska Residents Nonresidents Total Rank Effort Preference Effort Preference Effort Preference 1 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon Chinook salmon Chinook salmon Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 2 Coho salmon Coho salmon Dolly Varden Coho salmon Coho salmon Coho salmon 3 Arctic grayling Rainbow trout Arctic grayling Rainbow trout Arctic grayling Rainbow trout 4 Rainbow trout Arctic grayling Coho salmon Arctic grayling Rainbow trout Arctic grayling 5 Dolly Varden Halibut Rainbow trout Dolly V~rden Dolly Varden Halibut 6 Sockeye salmon Dolly Varden Halibut Halibut Sockeye salmon Dolly Varden 7 Halibut Sockeye salmon Sockeye salmon Sockeye salmon Halibut Sockeye salmon 8 Pink salmon Steelhead trout Pink salmon Steelhead trout Lake trout Steelhead trout 9 Lake trout Lake trout Lake trout Lake trout Pink salmon Lake trout 10 Northern pike Northern pike Northern pike Northern pike Northern pike Northern pike ll Stee1head trout Pink salmon· Steelhead trout Pink salmon Steelhead trout Pink salmon 12 Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout rr-:-: ~ I I , J ' - "· ~· - Table 51. Order of :gffort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Southeast Regulatory Area. Southeast Rank Effort Preference 1 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 2 Coho salmon Coho salmon 3 Halibut Halibut·· 4 Dolly Varden Dolly Varden 5 Cutthroat trout Cutthroat trout 6 Pink salmon Steelhead trout 7 Rainbow trout Rainbow trout 8 Steelhead trout Pink salmon 9 Sockeye salmon Sockeye salmon 10 Arc·tic grayling Arctic grayling 11 Rockfish Brook Trout 12 Chum salmon Rockfish Table 52. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Upper Copper-Susitna Rivers Regulatory Area. Upper Copper-Susitna Rivers Rank Effort Preference 1 Arctic grayling Arctic grayl:lng 2 Lake trout Rainbow trout 3 Burbot Lake trout 4 Dolly Varden Bur bot 5 Rainbow trout Dolly Varden 6 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 7 Sockeye salmon Coho salmon 8 Northern pike Northern pike 9 Whitefish Steelhead trout 10 Landlocked coho salmon Whitefish 11 Coho salmon. Sockeye salmon 12 Halibut Cutthroat trout 5 7 Table 53. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Prince William Sound Regulatory Area. Prince William Sound Rank Effort Preferehce · 1 Coho salmon Coho salmon 2 Dolly Varden ·Halibut 3 Halibut Dolly Varden 4 Pink salmon Rainbow trout 5 Cutthroat trout Arctic grayling 6 Rainbow trout Pink salmon 7 Arctic grayling Cutthroat trout 8 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 9 Sockeye salmon Razor clams 10 Rockfish Sockeye salmon 11 Razor clams Steelhead trout 12 Smelt Lake trout Table 54. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Kenai Peninsula Regulatory Area. Kenai Peninsula Rank Effort Preference 1 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 2 Coho salmon Coho salmon 3 Dolly Varden Rainbow trout 4 Rainbow trout Halibut 5 Halibut Dolly Varden 6 Sockeye salmon Sockeye salmon 7 Steelhead trout Steelhead trout 8 Pink salmon Arctic grayling 9 Arctic grayling Pink salmon 10 Razor clams Lake trout 11 Smelt Northern pike 12 Kokanee salmon Razor clams 58 [ [ . ·[ ~J, [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ L [ [ [ . - Table 55. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the West Cook Inlet-Susitna Drainage Regulatory Area. Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 West Cook Inlet-Upper Susitna Drainage Effort Preference Chinook salmon Coho salmon Rainbow trout Sockeye salmon Arctic grayling Do 11 y Varden Halibut Lake trout Pink salmon Steelhead trout Landlocked coho salmon Bur bot Chinook salmon Coho salmon Rainbow trout Arctic grayling Sockeye salmon Halibut · Dolly Varden Steelhead trout Lake trout Pink salmon Northern pike Bur bot Table 56. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Kodiak Regulatory Area. Kodiak Rank Effort Preference 1 Coho salmon Coho salmon 2 Dolly Varden Dolly Varden 3 Pink salmon Halibut 4 Halibut Rainbow trout 5 Rainbow trout Pink salmon 6 Sockeye salmon Chinook salmon 7 Chinook salmon Steelhead trout 8 Arctic grayling Sockeye salmon 9 Steelhead trout Arctic grayling 10 C:hum salmon Kokanee salmon 11 Rockfish Chum salmon 12 Razor clams Lake trout s 9 ._., Table 57. Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Alaska Peninsula-Bristol Bay- Aleutian Regulatory Area. Table 58. Alaska Peninsula-Bristol Bay-Aleutian Islands Rank Effort Preference 1 Rainbow trout Rainbow trout 2 Dolly Varden Coho salmon 3 Arctic grayling Arctic grayling 4 Chinook salmon Chinook salmon 5 Coho salmon Dolly Varden 6 Sockeye salmon Northern pike 7 Smelt Smelt 8 Northern pike Lake trout 9 Lake trout Steelhead trout 10 Chum salmon Halibut 11 Whitefish Chum salmon 12 Halibut Whitefish Order of Effort and Preference for Fish Species by Sport Fishermen Residing in the Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Regulatory Area. Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Effort Preference Arctic grayling Northern pike Coho salmon Rainbow trout Lake trout Dolly Varden Chinook salmon Whitefish Bur bot Sockeye salmon Sheefish Pink salmon 6 0 Arctic grayling Northern pike Rainbow trout Lake trout Coho salmon Dolly Varden Chinook salmon Sheefish Burbot Sockeye salmon Halibut Whitefish [ ·[ ~ -·~[ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ [ E [ [ L ' - Table 59. · Percentage of Total Sport Fishing Time Spent Fisbing for Salmon by Alas.ka Anglers by Area of. Residence~ 1971: · ----------------------------------------------------------~-----------·· Area of Residence Alaska* Southeast Upper Copper-Susitna Rivers Prince William Sound Kenai Peninsula Cook Inlet-Lower Susitna Drainage Kodiak Alaska Peninsula-Bristol Bay-Aleutian·Islands Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Total Other Than Alaska United States Foreign Total Grand Total * Alaska areas correspond to regulatory areas. 6 : Percentage of Time Spent Sport.Fishing for Salmon 55 20 47 49 48 4'9 27 15 . '•44' 43 45 44 44 Table 60. t-fost ~r;r~q1.1ent* Comments t,o the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey •. ,' · .·· 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 •. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17 0 18. 19. .' : ~ •• • .• ! Stock ~ore ... ~ ......... -....................................... . Make sport ·fishing regulations less restrictive; ••••••••••• Publish sport :fish survey results •• · ••••••••••••••••••• o •••• Enforce regulations more and better ••••• o. o ••••• o •••.••••••• Buil:d more hatcheries ....................................... Q • Restrict commercial fishing more •••••••••••••.••.•.••••••• ~ •• ~ Provide more aCcess ••••••••••••••••••••••.•••• -~ • .' • •••• _. ... '• •• Make sport fishing regulations more restrictive ••••••• ~~ ••• Manage fisheries better ........ ~--· .. ··~····.· ... • ......... •:• .. ;~ .. Provide more public recreational, sanitary" facilit'ies •••••• Control litter ..... ··~• .. ····· ..................... o •••••• ~ •••••••••• Rehabilitate-enhance more •• .'.· •• ~ ••••••••••• · •••••.••••••.•••• ~ Allocate more salmon to sport fishermen ••••••• ~ •••••••••• · •• Provide more and better information and education •••••••••• ImProve regulat i~n b.ook .............••.....• o •••••••••••••• Restrict sport fishing more •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Increase nonresident license fees •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Increase fisheries research •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• Implement punch card or permit system •••••••••••••••••••••• *Occurring 100 or more times. Number 1,260 993 893 '787 749 729 514 426 2'93 288 248 238 200 179 i'65 134 131 130 106 [ r~ [ ·[ ·" ~ ·~[ [ [ I' L [ [ [ [ [ L [ [ [ ., Table 61~ Comparison of ·1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey and Creel Census Harvests. Fishery Ketchikan Saltwater Chinook salmon Coho salmon Pink salmon Yes Bay Chinook salmon Coho salmon Pink salmon Bell Island Chinook salmon Coho salmon Pink salmon Wrangell Saltwater Chinook salmon Juneau Saltwater Chinook salmon Coho salmon Sockeye salmon Pink salmon Chum salmon Gulkana River Chinook salmon Sockeye salmon Kepler Lakes Complex Landlocked coho salmon Rainbow trout Arctic grayling Twentymile River Smelt Cre~l Census 1, 712 1,459 11,904 120 30 167 474 101 447 478 4,845 13,084 1,748 2,402 138 332 998 543 1,557 36 170,349 63 Harvest Survey 3,395 2,961 8,021 35' 28 60 321 .· 244 372 818 5,0~6 15,950 i,205 4,059 138 . 421 1,180 528 1,822 92 189,077 Table ,6L. (qoilt.r Gomparis,on of 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey and Creel Census Harvests·. · FisheFy Deshka River Coho salmon Deep Creek Saltwater Chinook salmon Resurrection Bay Coho salmon Kenai River Chinook salmon Coho·salmon Russian. River Sockeye salmon Cook Inlet Beach betwe~n · · Kasilof and ·.Anchor Point Razor clams Buskin R~ver Coho salmon Pink salmon Dolly Varden Delta Clearwater River Arctic grayling Chatanika River Whitefish Salcha River Chinook salmon Chum $almon 527 4,983 7,321 (8, 783) * 10,056 47,840 889~960 750 4,503 10,477. 6,634. 986 so 25: 64 Harvest Survey 559 4,470. 14;,528 7,585 9,537 48,263 871,247. 890 3,868 10;353 6,118 1,635 62 27 , ... L l L~ [ [ [ [ r· [ [ [ L Table 61. (cont.) Comparison of 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Survey and Creel Census Harvests. Fishery Birch Lake Landlocked coho salmon Rainbow trout Quartz Lake Rainbow trout *Includes jacks. Creel Census ·s, 753 2,387 2,239 65 Harvest Survey 5,697 1,850' 2,634 ' m m Table 62. Comparison of Two 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys for Selected Major Sport Fisheries. .. .. Survey One survtiy Two ';. .. : Fishery, Harvest/Effort 95% Confidence 95% Confidence Variable Estimate Interval Estimate Interval Behm Canal boat, chinook salmon 1,362 1' 115-1,609 1,154 789..; 1,519 Sitka ina;rine boat, days fished 24,533 20,778-, 28,288 22,928 15,731_; 30,125 Juneau marine boat, days fished 58,122 51,209-64,135 62,496 48,058..: 76,934 Juneau marine boat, coho salmon 16,002 14,347-17,657 15,768 12' 125_; 19,441 Valdez Bay, days fished 20,29-6 17,650-22,942 16,345 12,243-20,447 Willow Creek, pink salmon 6, 722 6,047-7,397 ·•r 8,612 7,004..: 10,220 Deshka River, coho salmon 512 427-615 724 416..: 1,032 Resurrection Bay, coho salmon 14,028 12,862-15,194 '16,292 13 573..: . ' 1&,981 Kenai River, days fished 122,451 115,990-128,912 121,036 108,736-133,336 Kenai River, chinook salmon 7,595 7,194-7,996 7,548 6,782..:. 8,314 Russian River, sockeye salmon 47,870 44,611-51,129 49,651 43,628-55,67.4 East Side Cook Inlet, razor clams 878,640 874,947-882,333 845,186 807,126-883,246 Buskin River, Dolly Varden 10,526 8;190-12,862 9,743 '~ 6' 064..: 13,422 ... Naknek River, chinook salmon 843 294-1:,392 1,576 945-2, 207 .. Chena River, days fished 30,499 27,295-33,703 28,252 22,512...: 33,992 Chena River, Arctic grayling 22,441 20,083-24,799 19,192 15' 292.., 32,152 Chatanika River, whitefish 1,546 1,331-1,761 1,949 1,439-2,459 Quartz Lake, rainbow trout 2,821 2,420-3,222 1,974 1' 369..; 2,579 ... .. ~:-.. ,. ~ ' - Table 63. Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Area A. Ketchikan SALTWATER: Boat -East, West Behm Canals 117 38 Boat -Clarence Strait 94' 15 Boat -Revilla Channel 42 9 Boat -Tongass Narrows 114 36 Boat -Yes Bay 11 4 Boat -Bell Island 35; 14 Boat -Other Areas 58 11 Shoreline -Other Areas 63 . 8 FRESHWATER: Naha River 48 13 Other Streams 75 13 Other Lakes 78 21 Area B. Prince of Wales Island SALTWATER: Boat 63 12 Shoreline 16 1 FRESHWATER: Karta River 17 5 Sweetwater -Thorne System (Stream, Lake) 20 1 Other Streams (Specify) 39 6 67 : ;...-: Table 63. (cont .• ) Ntimber of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish .Ha-rvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Other Lakes {Specify) Area c. Kake~ Petersb~rg~ Wra.ng~ll~ Stikine Area · ,- SALTWATER: Boat -Blind Slou,gh, wrangell Narrows · · ·· Boat -Dune~ Sa,ltchuck buncan Canal Boat -Gray Pass Boat ·"" Other Shoreline -Blind Slough · .. · ·· Shoreline -Dum~a:n Saltchuck Shoreline '"" Other FRESHWATER: Castle River Anan Creek Petersburg Creek Kadake Creek Other Streams (Specify) Lakes (Specify) Area D. Sitka SALTWATER: Boat Survey One Survey Two 17 4 56 13 20 1 50 4 70 13 13 3 3 1 29 2 8 1 15 3 25 5 5 1 42 3 30 5 164 39 6 8 [ [ -F [ [ [ [ [ [ [ l l [ ._ Table 63. (cont.) NWJlber of Househ,olds Responding.-eothe 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Shoreline FRESHWATER: .Plotnikof -Rezanof System (Lake, Stream) Goulding River Pavlov Harbor System (Lake, Stream) Mud Bay Creek Other Streams (Specify) Lake Eva (Lake, Stream) Goulding Lakes Other Lakes (Specify) E. Juneau Area SALTWATER: Boat -Dotys Cove to Berners Bay And West to Point Retreat Boat -Other Shoreline -Dupont to Echo Cove And Douglas Island Shoreline -Other FRESHWATER: Dupont to Echo Cove and Douglas Island Streams (Specify) Survey one Survey Two 63 24 14 4 0 12 ·' 2 3 0 38 10 9 ·3 5 2 39 9 359 72 62 13 194 42 38 11 48 7 81 11 6 9 Table 63. Jcon.t.) Number of Ho~eho1ds Re_sponding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Survey~ by Fishery. Fishery. Survey One Survey Two Lake Florence 15 5 Turner Lake· 19 3 Other Lakes (Specify) 58 17 Area F. Haines-Skagway Area SALTWATER Boat 46 9 Shoreline 18 15 FRESHWATER Chilkoot River 32 18 Other Streams (Specify) 21 9 Chilkoot Lake 25 13 Other Lakes (Specify) 21 7 Area G. Glacier Bay SALTWATER: Boat 31 11 Shoreline 8 1 FRESHWATER: Streams (Specify) 2 Lakes (Specify) 2 16 70 [ -[ -. [' . - [ [ r L [ [ [ [ E ~,-: L.J [ [ [ ·- ! ~ Table,63. (cont.) Numberof Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Area H. Yakutat SALTWATER: Boat 9 1 Shoreline 4 1 FRESHWATER: Situk River 32 5 Other Streams (Specify) 10 8 Lakes (Specify) 2 0 Area I. Glennallen Gulkana River 291 80 Lake Louise, Lake Susitna, Tyone Lake 283 77 Van (Silver) Lake 30 5 Paxson Lake, Summit Lake 187 48 Strelna Lake 13 4 Sculpin Lake 3 1 Crosswind Lake 22 11 {iudson Lake 11 0 Other Waters (Specify) 341 88 Area J. Prince William Sound Valdez Bay 226 61 7 1 Table 63. (cont.) Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by: Fishery. Fishery Survey One .. Survey Two Eyak River 41 10 Eshamy Lake and Lagoon, Coghill River and Lake 74 36 Lake Shrode, Long Bay 31 8 Pigot River 16 7 Others (Specify) . 218 48 Area K. Knik Arm Drainage Little Susitna River 310 8.1 Wasilla Creek (Rabbit Slough) 107 15 Finger Lake 409 83 Kepler Lake Complex 203 41 Lucille Lake 201 44 Big Lake 282 71 Nancy Lake Recreation Area, Including Nancy Lake 213 53 Others (Specify) 303 57 Area L. Anchorage Jewel Lake 185 45. Campbell Point Lake 51 15 Sand Lake 55 11 •. Lower Fire Lake 97 14 7 2 [ [ . -[ -_[ [ [ r L [ [ [ [ [ [ .L L [ L ,_ ' - Table 63. (cont.) Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Mirror Lake . 78 19 Otter Lake 120 25 Clunie Lake 72 22 Gwen Lake 26 5 Sixmile Lake 43 19 Green Lake 71 21 Hillberg Lake 58 15 Ship Creek 36 15 Eagle River 43 17 Bird Creek 236 64 Twentymi1e River 229 46 Others (Specify) 124 40 Area M. East Side Susitna Drainage Willow Creek 380 110 Montana Creek 493 113 Clear (Chunilna) Creek 58 11 Sheep Creek 255 57 Little Willow Creek 164 39 Others (Specify) 223 43 73 Table 63. (cont.) Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. .. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Area N. West Side Cook Inlet West Side Susitna River Drainages Deshka River (Kroto Creek) 116 21 Lake Creek 176 39 Alexander Creek 127 39 Talachuli tna River 36 15 Chuit River 34 8 Theodore River 30 7 Lewis River 9 4 Other Rivers (Specify) 146 32 Shell Lake 17 5 Whiskey Lake 8 0 Hewitt Lake 10 5 Judd Lake 17 8 Other Lakes (Specify) 55 15 Area P. Kenai Peninsula SALTWATER: Deep Creek 713 129 Resurrection Bay 556 141 Kachemak Bay 621 168 Others (Specify) 128 30 74 [ -[ -_[ [ r - L_ r L [ [ [ [ [ L . f' L~ [ L L '.. ·- Table 63. (cont.) Number of.Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Survey One Survey Two FRESHWATER: Kenai River 1,380 372 Anchor River 766 155 Ninilchik River 412 81 Deep Creek 417 94 Stariski Creek 62 16 Russian River 829 261 Others Rivers (Specify) 228 58 Hidden Lake 229 . 47 Canoe Lake System 188 49 Other Lakes (Specify) 317 72 Razor Clams between Kasilof and Anchor Point 747 163 Area Q. Kodiak SALTWATER: Boat 59 11 Shoreline 69 29 FRESHWATER Buskin River 78 27 Pasagshak River 48 25 Other Waters (Specify) 86 38 7 5 Table 63. (cont.) Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport FishHarvest Surveys by Fishery. Fishery Area R. Naknek Drainages - Alaska Peni~sula Naknek River Naknek Lake Brooks River Ugashik System Becharof System Others (Specify) Area S. Kvichak River Drainages Kvichak River Lower Talarik Creek Copper River Gibraltar River Newhalen River Lake Clark Area Others (Specify) Area T. Nushagak Area Nushagak River System Mulchatna River System Wood River Lakes System Tikchik-Nuyakuk Lake System 7 ~ I 0 Survey One Survey Two 66 24 22 7 23 8 15 6 6 5 66 28 39 10 21 6 33 12 15 8 47 16 35 14 49 13 29 10 21 9 42 ll 14 9 r-: r~ [ 'l-, .: ·[ . - r L l r-· L [ [ [ L [ [ "[ [ [ L [ -. ·- Table 63. (cont.) Number of HousehcN.ds Responding to the· 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surveys by Fisherr. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Togiak River System 10 2 Others (Specify) 18 6 Area U. Tanana River Drainages Chena River, Badger Slough 348 93 Chatanika River 199 56 Salcha River 137 38 Delta Clearwater River 105 25 Birch Lake 169 32 Quartz Lake 190 41 George Lake 31 3 Minto Flats 99 25 Others (Specify) 331 95 Area V. Interior Alaska Respondents Speci.fied 171 41 Area W. Seward Peninsula -Norton Sound Respondents Specified 83 26 Area X. Northwest Alaska Noatak River 12 5 Kobuk River 13 3 Wulik River 8 1 Others (Specify) 21 6 77 Table 63. (cont.) Number of Households Responding to the 1977 Alaska Sport Fish Harvest Surteys by Fishery. Fishery Survey One Survey Two Area Y. South Slope Brooks Range Respondents Specified 50 13 Area z .. North Slope Brooks Range Respondents Specified 45 10 ( 7 8 . ·_[ [ L L ~~ L . r~ L __ ~ [ ._ APPENDIX B QUESTIONNAIRE. AND REMINDERS 7 3 t-n 1-'• 1-j Ul rt s Ill 1-'• ...... 1-'• ;::! .-. - (X) ()q . 0 .. AlASKA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME •' .· ......... ......... . . ····· ...... .. {/ !;i> . : ·sPORT FISH SURVEY ::· ..... >_" .. :,·~.· . '•, i .... ···/ ... d ············• ... ( ': .. ····· :·.:· . _C::j/./ -........ . ' . . J ) • I r~ ~ L1 ~ · ~ r11 ~ r-1 rJ L:"J CJ r---:1 r---: r--""1 '~ \ r------\1 r---1 ~. ~ l ; l I ~ I, ...o •' 00 ,.. _.i .lAYS. IIAIIMOIIIJ, IJOVERMOR DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME · OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER SUBPORT BU/LDIMS-Jt/MEAU ,_,. Dear Alaska Sport Fisherman: Sport fishing is becoming an increasingly important part of the Alaska scene. As the State grows in population, pressure on its fishery re- sources is increasing rapidly.· If we are to maintain and improve the quality of sport fishing, it is vital that we have the best possible information for making responsive resource management decisions. I would very much appreciate your taking a few minutes to answer the questions attached to this letter. Although there are quite a number of pages, the questions are straightforward and you need only respond to those pertaining to the areas where you sport fished. Be assured that your responses will be considered confidential. It is my hope that you recognize this survey as a means by which you can participate in decisions concerning this State's fishery resources. We need your input. Only when we know what your needs are can we respond to them. ~Y·~,N~ Ronald 0. Skoo:~ Commissioner Attachment -l -; INSTRUCTIONS: 1. Questions apply to all members of your household. 2. If more than one member of your household received a copy of this questionnaire, you need fill out only one questionnaire, but to avoid repeated mailings, please return all. 3. Please answer the general questions on page 2. 4. If members of you\· household sport fished between January 1 and September 30 this year, please fill out the remaining pages which cover the areas you sport fished. The maps on pages 3, 11, and 21 will help you find the pages which deal with those areas. If no members of your household sport fished between January 1 and September 30, please return your questionna1re in the enclosed postage-paid envelope after answering the questions on page 2. 5. If you cannot remember exactly how much time you sport fished or how many fish you caught, please estimate as closely as you can. Do not count commercially- caught or subsistence-caught fish. 6. Please r.eturn your completed questionnaire in the enclosed postage-paid envelope. Thanks for helping us help you. 00 (,.> GENERAL QUESTIONS: 1 .. How many members of your household under the age of 16 sport fished between January. 1 and September 30 this year? 2; How many members of your household 16 years of age or older sport fished between January 1 and September 30 this year? 3. What kind of sport fishing do you prefer? (Check only one) Saltwater Stream Fishing _ Lake Fishing _ 4. Please list the fish species you primarily sport fished for by order of effort: l. 2. 3. 4. 5. 5. Please list the fish species you prefer to sport fish for by order of preference: 6. 7. l. 2. 3. 4. 5. Please.estiinate the percentage of your total sport fishing time spent fishing for salmon. What would you 1 ike to see done to improve sport fishing in Alaska? S)(Q)TIJlf1HIJEAS)ilJETI«W AJL&S)~& A-H Cp.Suckllnt ' \ ' \ ' .. \. , N ' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I i I , I I I I Ya~u:at I I I I I I I I I I · Cape Fairwfather ..... I N lOOmiles r-:1 r-1 ;-----., J 00 Ul j. •'" A. KETCHIKAN AREA: All WATERS FROM PORTLAND CANAL TO ERNEST SOUND, INCLUDING DUKE, ANNETTE, AN'D GRAVINA ISLANDS AND ASSOCIATED WATERS. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as one whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= hooligan, eulachon; king= chinook; coho= silver; red = sockeye; pink = humpback; chum =dog.) Cut- Days Kokanee throat Brook Rainbow Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Steel head Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Example ~ ).. I SALTWATER: Boat-East, West Behm Canals Boat- Clarence Strait Boat- Revilla Channel Boat- T ongass Narrows Boat-Yes Bay Boat -Bell Island Boat -Other areas Shoreline -Other areas FRESHWATER: Naha River Other streams: Other lakes: L_L~-L_L_[ l_~_l_LJ 1---------·------ Other Arctic Rockfish Smelt - I _J_ . ______ _J_ __ ·---I .I B Example I SALTWATER: B. PRINCE OF WALES ISLAND: ALL WATERS FROM CAPE CHACON NORTHWARD TO SUMNER STRAIT AND FROM CLARENCE STRAIT WESTWARD. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as one whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king. and 1 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= hooligan, eulachon; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum= dog.) Cut· Other Days Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Steelhead Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Smelt Rockfish I I :::::""" I J-1--+_j--+--l ,--+-1---+--1 --+---1- ~~F~R~.~ES~,~~v~VA~-~T=t~R=:==~======~~. I K"" R;,., l __ + __ ll_J__j_j___l--. ~~·---t----t--~--+----+--------1 I ~~~~~:~~~~~~m tl 11 ++I I I i (stream, lake) l~t-h-er_s_t;-ea_m_s_: ______ l _____ ·--·. I --·t------r-----r-----+~--~----~~----t-----+-----~----~-----+-----+------~ I (specify) I I I I I I I ! I I I I I I 1 -~~~~,':F;-----~---rl-r-t---n- , I I I ________ .. .1. --·-· __ .. I I ______ .!... _____ _I _____ _L ______ ... L _____ j ____ ...... _l __________ __L ______ I ______ ._ ... ______ ..J _________ ---·--------' ----1--+-------+--~---+----+----- t1 •• r-J c-J c-J -: -"l .....---. ' _l r" ) , C. KAKE, PETERSBURG, WRANGELL, STIKINE AREA: ALL WATERS FROM !ERNEST SOUND TO CAPE FANSHAW, INCLUDING WRANGELL, ETOLIN, ZAREMBO, MITKOF,. KUPREANOF, AND KUIU ISLANDS. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the exrmple, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as one whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 coho were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many are called by different names: smelt = hooligan, eulachon; king = chin~ok; coho = silver; red = sockeye; pink= humpback; chum= dog.) Cut- Days Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Steel head Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Example <l 2 I SALTWATER: Boat-Blind Slought, Wrangell Narrows Boat -Duncan Saltchud Duncan Canal Boat -Gray Pass Boat -Other: Shoreline-Blind Slough Shoreline- Duncan Saltchuck Shoreline -Other: ' ' ' ' I ' FRESHWATER: Castle River Anan Creek Petersburg Creek Kadake Creek Other streams: {specify) -----Lakes: (specify) c Other Smelt Rockfish ----··-- ' ' ·-----·---~------- 1----···--I I I ·I I I I I I I ., ---1----------1--_J -·-_J___ ___ __J___ -·-------.l .. -· _J _________ J ____ , ___ _L_ ____ j________J___l_ ----~---__J-. ---L. ------.. L __ J 0 0 D Example SALTWATER: Boat: Shoreline: FRESHWATER: Plotnikof · Rezanof system (lake, stream) Goulding River Pavlov Harbor system (lake, stream) Mud Bay Creek Other streams: (specify) Lake Eva (lake, stream) Goulding Lakes Other lakes: (specify) r--' I Days_ Fished ~ D. SITKA AREA: BARANOF AND CHICAGOF ISLANDS AND ASSOCIATED WATERS. 1. Mark the number of day spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day ?~-~~e whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. . -•· 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 coho were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= hooligan, eulachon; king= chino~k; coho= silver; red =c= · sockeye; pink = humpback; chum = dog.) Cut-Other Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Rock-Razor King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut ~teelhead Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Smelt Fish Clams ?-. I ··-··- .....---.. L. J . ' ·,. ·- ro (D E. JUNEAU AREA: ALL WATERS FROM CAPE FANSHAW TO POINT SHERMAN, INCLUDING BERNERS BAY AND ALL OF ADMIRALTY ISLAND. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as one whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 coho were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= eulachon, hooligan; king= chinook; coho = silver; red = sockeye, pink= humpback; chum= dog.) · Cut· Days Kokanee ~teelh.ead Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Example '1> ;z ( SALTWATER:· Other I Smelt Rockfish ~ · Boat · Dotys Cove to -~~ Berners Bay and west to Point Retreat Boat· Other: Shoreline · Dupont to I Echo Cove & Douglas Island Shoreline· Other: +-I FRESHWATER: Dupont to Echo Cove & Douglas Island Streams: (specify) I I· I I I I ·- Lake Florence Turner Lake Other lakes: (specify) I I I -.I I I I I I I I L_ I Ll I I __ U __ l __ j ___ l ______ l ___ --I .1 . ---· L ______ __j F Example SALTWATER: Boat: Shoreline: ' FRESHWATER: · Chilkoot River Other streams: (specify) (0 0 Chilkoot Lake Other lakes: (specify) F. HAINES-SKAGWAY AREA: ALL WATERS FROM POINT SHERMAN TO THE CANADIAN BORDERS. Days Fished ~ 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 coho were caught and .kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by differenfnames: smelt= hooligan, eulachon; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink = humpback; chum =dog.) Cut· Other Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum . Halibut Steel head Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Smelt Rockfish 2.. \ I I I I I '• r---1 '·-l ..... J t 1 r----l. .J - .. ~--------.. G. GLACIER BAY: ALL WATERS' FROM CAPE FAIRWEATHER TO ICY STRAIT AND EASTWARD TO POINT COUVERDE,N: 1. Mark the number of days spent sportfishing: *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 coho were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= eulachon, hooligan; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink = humpback; chum =dog.) Cut· Days Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Steel head Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling Example ~ ~ ) SALTWATER: Boat: Shoreline: FRESHWATER: Streams: .(specify) I Lakes: (specify) ! ! .- H. YAKUTAT AREA: ALL WATERS FROM CAPE SUCKLING TO CAPE FAIRWEATHI;R. Cut- Days Kokanee Rainbow throat Brook Dolly Arctic Fished King Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut Steel head Trout Trout Trout Varden Grayling SALTWATER: Boat: Shoreline: --·- FRESHWATER: -·-· ---Situk River Other streams: (specify) • .. ~ijf~L ---~~--...... .. ~ ~#·~-~~ .. -.. "' .. -~~-~·-· .... -.... ,.' --... .,;,•· ,.., -· .. oc-:;oc~::: . .. '· ··---... I I I Lakes: (specify} I I ·- I I I \ I I I l . G Other Smelt Rockfish I I I I _j H Other Smelt Rockfish ------------'- ·-·-- --·---- ----- --.. '· <.O N r---" l I-T i,. ~CQXQlullii~~~1!IR?.G1IL G1ILG1~IK\G1 + 0 100mlles N I. GLENNALLEN: ALL WATERS AND DRAINAGES OF THE OSHETNA RIVER AND THE COPPER RIVER UPSTREAM FROM A LINE BETWEEN THE SOUTH BANK OF HALEY CREEK AND THE SOUTH BANK OF CANYON CREEK IN WOODS CANYON, AND INCLUDING THE UPPER SUSITNA RIVER DRAINAGE FROM ITS CONFLUENCE WITH THE OSHETNA RIVER. 1. Mark the number .of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 burbot and 2 lake trout were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: king = chinook; coho = silver; red = sockeye; pink = humpback; chum= dog.) Land· Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Lake polly Varden Arctic . Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Trout Steel head Arctic Char Grayling Example ~ ;2.. Gulkana River Lake Louise, Lake Susitna, Tyone Lake Van (Silver) Lake Paxson Lake Summit Lake Strelna Lake ; Sculpin Lake Crosswind Lake Hudson Lake Other waters: {specify) I Other Whitefish Burbot 2_ --- Example Valdez Bay Eyak River Eshamy Lake and lagoon Coghill River and lake Lake Shrode, Long Bay Pigot River Others: (specify) J. PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND: ALL WATERS AND DRAINAGES FROM CAPE SUCKLING THROUGH PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND TO CAPE PUGET, INCLUDING THAT PORTION OF THE COPPER RIVER DRAINAGE DOWNSTREAM OF A LINE BETWEEI\l THE SOUTH BANK OF HALEY CREEK AND THE SOUTH BANK OF CANYON CREEK IN WOODS CANYON Days Fished ~ 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. ·•In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 smelt and 2 whitefish were caught and kept by the household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= eulachon, hooligan; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback.) Cut-Other Rainbow throat Dolly Varden Razor King Coho Red Pink Chum Halibut Trout Trout Arctic Char Whitefish Smelt Rockfish Clams 2_ 2. .. ·-··--·- '. l ... LJ K. KNIK ARM DRAINAGE: ALL WATERS INSIDE THE AREA BOUNDED BY THE LITTLE SUSITNA.RIVER ON THE NORTH AND WEST AND THE KNIK ARM ON THE SOUTH, INCLUDING ALL DRAINAGES OF THE MATANUSKA AND KNIK RIVERS. (BOUNDARY STREAMS INCLUDED IN THE AREA.) 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. . 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 burbot and 2 lake trout were caught and kept by that household (Please note that many fish are called by different names: king = chinook; coho = silver; red = sockeye; pink = humpback; chum= dog.) Land· Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Example <g :2. !-ittle Susitna River Wasilla Creek (Rabbit Slough) Finger Lake Kepler Lake Complex Lucille Lake - Big Lake Nancy Lake Recreation area, including Nancy Lake Others: (specify) L --· --'------ K Other Burbot ;z_ L Example Jewel Lake Campbell Point Lake Sand Lake Lower Fire Lake Mirror Lake Otter Lake Clunie Lake 0 Gwen Lake :n Sixmile Lake Green Lake Hillberg Lake Ship Creek Eagle River - Bird Creek Twentymile River Others: (specify) ~------- L. ANCHORAGE AREA: ALL WATERS INSIDE THE AREA BOUNDED BY THE EKLUTNA RIVER ON THE NORTH, KNIK ARM ON THE WEST, TURNAGAIN ARM TO-AND INCLUDING-PORTAGE CREEK AT PORTAGE ON THE SOUTH, AND THE CHUGACH MOUNTAINS ON THE EAST. (BOUNDARY STREAMS ARE INCLUDED IN THE AREA.) 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the e>cample, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example 2 char and 2 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that coho salmon can also be called silver salmon.) -- Dolly Varden Other Days Fished Sea-run Coho Land-locked Coho Rainbow Trout Arctic Char Arctic Grayling ct :2.. 2_ ~ - .. -. .. ·- - ----.. -- --··· . ! _____ .,!_~----~·-·····-·-----'-· ··-·-···h"--· . • . ---.. ··---------r___, ~. . ..J --·-- . . .. '--··----.---------· ------------ ::--:J <.0 -...:! "' . ' M. EAST SIDE SUSITNA DRAINAGE: ALL EAST SIDE DRAINAGES OF THE SUSITNA RIVER BELOW ITS CONFLUENCE WITH THE OSHETNA RIVER. FISH TAKEN WHILE FISHING FROM THE EAST BANK OF THE SUSITNA RIVER ARE INCLUDED IN THIS AREA. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of .fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 burbot and 2 lake trout were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: king = chinook; coho = silver; red = sockeye; pink = humpback; chum = dog.) Land- Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Example c:t: 2. Willow Creek Montana Creek . Clear (Chunilna) Creek Sheep Creek Little Willow Creek Others: (specify) I I M Other Burbot .2_ ·-·- ·----·-· _,_. ·----·- N ' . l . .. Example Deshka River (Kroto Creek) Lake Creek Alexander Creek Talachulitna River Chuit River Theodore River u:lewis River rn Other rivers: (specify) Shell Lake Whiskey Lake Hewitt Lake Judd Lake Other lakes: (specify) -------· N. WEST SIDE COOK INLET-WEST SIDE SUSITNA RIVER DRAINAGES: ALL WEST SIDE SUSITNA RIVER DRAINAGES AND ALL WEST SIDE COOK INLET WATERS SOUTHWARD TO CAPE DOUGLAS. FISH TAKEN WHILE FISHING FROM THE WEST BANK OF THE SUSITNA RIVER ARE IN- CLUDED IN THIS AREA. Days Fished <=6 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. Since Talachulitna rainbow cannot be kept, mark the number you caught and released. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum= dog.) Kings less Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Razor Other than 20" Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Burbot Clams 52-I ' •.. -· ·--- --f-.- . ----··--·--·------·--·----------I ------· ·-···· ·---·-··· -------. ------··· --------------. --------··· ~ ·-. ) -~ : I ···- . ' P. KENAI PENINSULA: ALL ·wATERS AND DRAINAGES OF THE KENAI PENINSULA FROM CAPE PUGET AROUND TO, BUT EXCLUDING PORTAGE CREEK AT PORTAGE, INCLUDING KALGIN ISLAND. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 2 halibut were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt= eulachon, hooligan; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum = dog.) Land- Days Sea-run locked Kokanee _Rainbow polly Varden Lake Arctic Fished King Coho Coho Red Salmon Pink Chum Halibut ~teelhead Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Smelt Example <:6 ;2... :J.... SALTWATER: Deep Creek Resurrection Bay Kachemak Bay Others: (specify) I FRESHWATER: Kenai River Anchor River --· Ninilchik River Deep Creek Stariski Creek Russian River Other rivers: (specify) ---·· --··--·--··· --·-·-----. ... Hidden Lake --,----··---··-···-·---1--. ----r------···- Canoe Lake system -------·--·-· --·---.-f-.·---------·---· ---------1----------------··-·-·----- Other lakes: (specify) Rock· fish ·- -·----- ------·--------.. . -·--· -----------~ TJ~-~ ___ L_ ___ ------'------'-----· '---------~~---1 _______ ·-- Razor clams between Kasilof and Anchor Total digging days Total clams taken Point ------ p Other Razor Clams - ------- ···------- -· .. ~ ·-;- ··- -- --·-·· -------- . --------- --·-··-·-------- Q • ' Example SALTWATER: 0. KODIAK AREA: ALL WATERS AND DRAINAGES OF THE KODIAK AND AFOGNAK ISLAND GROUPS. Days Fished 'i> 1. Mark the number of days spent S!Jort fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space . 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 2 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names:_ smelt = ca!Jelin, hooligan; king = chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink = humpback; chum = dog.) land-Other Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Arctic Razor Capel in King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Halibut Steel head Trout Arctic Char Grayling Rockfish Clams (smelt) ;;.. :2. Boat: t ----+-~-+----+--+--+--------+--'---f----l--+----l---+--1-~' --+------! Shoreline: FRESHWATER: Buskin River --· Pasagshak River Other waters: (specify) I __,R ., ~ ··.!' ~· Example Naknek River Naknek Lake Brooks River Ugashik system Becharof system Others: (specify) ··--·-···-----·--- . R. NAKNEK DRAINAGES-ALASKA PENINSULA: ALL WATERS AND DRAINAGES B'ETWEEN CAPE DOU9LAS AND THE COMMUNITY OF NAKNEK INCLUDING THE NAKNEK _RIVER DRAINAGE AND THE ALEUTIAN ISLAND CHAIN. )!{Note: Instructions for sections R, S, and Tare slightly different. Days Fished <h --- For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and the number kept. In the example, 4 king were caught and 2 were kept, and 6 rain- bow yvere caught and only 2 kept. Rainbow Dolly Varden lake Arctic Northern Other King Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Burbot Smelt ~ /:;_ r; 12.. ., ------- -- --·------- I l_J I l j j l ' ---.--, L.!_ ___ .J ---------' . -' ···----·-------------'--" --(·----~ ' -------l' ----' --.--- 0 S. KVICHAK RIVER DRAINAGES: ALL LAKES AND TRIBUTARIES OF THE KVICHAK RIVER DRAINAGE, INCLUDING NONVIANUK LAKE, KUKAKLEK LAKE, KULIK LAKE, LAKE ILIAMNA, AND LAKE CLARK. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. , 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and number kept. In the example, 4 king were caught and 3 were kept, and 6 rainbow were caught and only 2 were kept. (Please note that many fish are called by many different names: smelt = hooligan, eulachon; king= chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum= dog.) -------·--------·-----'-- Days Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Example <iS Lf/2. '-1:2.. Kvichak River Lower Talarik Creek Copper River Gibraltar River Newhalen River -- Lake Clark Area Others: (specify) T. NUSHAGAK AREA: ALL LAKES AND TRIBUTARIES OF THE NUSHAGAK RIVER DRAINAGE, INCLUDING THE MULCHATNA RIVER DRAINAGE, THE WOOD RIVER AND TIKCHIK LAKE SYSTEMS, AND WATERS WESTWARD TO CAPE NEWENHAM. Please use the same instructions as in S. Days Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Nushagak River system Mulchatna River system Wood River Lakes system Tikchik-Nuyakuk Lake system Togiak River system Others: (specify) , -----~--------- s Other Burbot Smelt --- T Other Burbot Smelt -- --· --------- 1---- u-z ~~©uD© 0 WUJJ~@~ o ~UJJ@~@~WO[M] '[:-J' CHUKCHI SEA Norton Sound [ ....... (;· ri .··:: ··~ SEA 0 100miles .__ _ __...L __ ....J .=· • .:r· ·:: ................. . t N .• ·.::: ...... ,,:::f) '( .. . •, :· -~!. , .... ·. .. .. ..... . .. :;,·:· '• 0 • '. ,-----, l J .... •,•': · ... ···· ... ... ·: . l> z l> 0 l> 0 w U. TANANA RIVER DRAINAGES: ALL WATER WITHIN THE WATERSHED OF THE TANANA RIVER UPSTREAM FROM ITS CONFLUENCE WITH THE YUKON RIVER. 1. Mark the number of days spent sportfishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as one whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of .fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 1 land-locked coho were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt = hooligan, eulachon; king = chinook; coho = silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum= dog.) Land- Days Sea-run locked Rainbow bolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char . Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Example <6 2 I Chena River, Badger Slough Chatanika River Salcha River Delta Clearwater River Birch Lake Quartz Lake George Lake Minto Flats Others: (specify) - u Other Burbot Sheefish v Example Please specify: , Example Please specify: I V. INTERIOR ALASKA: ALL WATERS OF THE YUKON AND KUSKOKWIM DRAINAGES SOUTH OF THE ARCTIC CIRCLE AND EXCLUDING THE TANANA DRAINAGES, ALSO TO INCLUDE WATER FLOWING INTO KUSKOKWIM BAY. Days Fished '8 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 2 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt = cape(in, hooligan; king = chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum =dog.) Land-Other Sea-run locked Rainbow bolly Varden Lake Arctic Norther.n King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Burbot Sheefish 7. ~ .. W. SEWARD PENINSULA-NORTON SOUND: THE AREA NORTH OF THE YUKON ·RIVER DRAINAGE AND SOUTH OF THE SELAWICK RIVER-KOTZEBUE SOUND AREA, NOT TO INCLUDE THE KOYUKUK RIVER. Land-Other Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Polly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling ·Pike Whitefish Burbot Sheefish <=t, A. A. --- ' . - • . \ . -. I •• >;. ' --~'---l .. _ --., [ l r-r-1 lJ r-l r:-l [' . l l ] [' J J L J L I l ' b I I j I. ~ l J X. NORTHWEST ALASKA: KOTZEBUE AREA, TO INCLUDE DRAINAGES OF SELAWICK, KOBUK, NOATAK, WULIK, AND KIVALINA. RIVERS. 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. . 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 2 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt = capelin, hooligan; king = chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink= humpback; chum =dog.) Land- Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char. Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Example '1, '?-2- Noatak River Kobuk River Wulik River Others: (specify) X Other Burbot Sheefish y Example Please specify: Example Please specify: Y. SOUTH SLOPE BROOKS RANGE: ALL DRAINAGES FROM, AND INCLUDING, THE ALATNA RIVER ON THE WEST, TO THE CANADIAN BORDER ON THE EAST, AND FROM THE BROOKS RANGE SOUTH TO THE ARCTIC CIRCLE. Days Fished c:t 1. Mark the number of days spent sport fishing. *In the example, a man fished 5 days (count any part of a day as the whole day) and his son fished with him 3 of those days. "8" (5+3) is entered in the space. 2. For each variety of fish, mark the number caught and kept. In the example, 2 king and 2 rainbow were caught and kept by that household. (Please note that many fish are called by different names: smelt = capelin, hooligan; king = chinook; coho= silver; red= sockeye; pink = humpback; chum =dog.) Land-Other Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Burbot Sheefish 2.. 2 ' Z. NORTH SLOPE BROOKS RANGE: ALL WATERS NORTH OF THE BROOKS RANGE AND FLOWING INTO THE BEAUFORT AND CHUKCHI SEAS AND ENDING AT, BUT EXCLUDING, POINT HOPE. Land-Other Days Sea-run locked Rainbow Dolly Varden Lake Arctic Northern Fished King Coho Coho Red Pink Chum Trout Arctic Char Trout Grayling Pike Whitefish Burbot Sheefish . - ··-·· --- ---- • r--. rr--: !~ --. ·----- r--, ' I -- 'T.i .... OQ ~ (I) ti-l . 'T.I .... ~ M 1-j (I) ~. ::s p.. (I) t; .. 1:2 1-j Ill M ~ p.. _. Ill (I) 0 0 ~ ·0 ::s p.. Ill ~ (I) ~ . ') ~ DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME I' .. (" • .lAY$. HAMMOND,. GOVERNOR OFRCE OF THE COMM/SSIOIIER SUBPORTBUILD/NfJ-JUNEAU,., Dea'r A 1 as ka Sport Fi she nnan: We have not yet received your completed 1977 Alaska Sport Fishing Survey form. If you have not yet returned it to us, please complete the enclosed fonn and return it in the postage-paid envelope that is provided for your use. Please do not underestimate the importance of your fishing activities. You have been chosen as part of a representative sample of Alaskan sport fishermen· and the information that you can provide is vital to the success of this study, and may have a significant impact on the future management of Alaska•s sport fish resources. If you have already returned your questi.onnaire, please disregard this letter and accept our sincere thanks. ' Sincerely, ~~~ Sport Fish Divis.ion C> CXl r__,..., i. J ; . 'Tj ..... OQ ~ <D .j::o. (/) <D 0 0 ::l A- 1-i <D fj. ::l c:l-<D 1-i ,. 1-t) ..... 1-i Ul rt Ul s:: 1-i < <D '< . . DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER Dear A 1 a·ska Sport Fisherman: .. JAYS. HAMMOND, GOVERNQ/1 . SUBPORTBU/LOING-JUNEAU,_, Some time has passed since we first requested information about your fishing act:ivities in Alaska in 1977. We still have not received your reply. You were selected as part of a representative sample of Alaskan fishermen and, as such, we urgently need your reply at the earliest possible date. If you did not fish in Alaska in 1977, we need your reply anyway. Simply answer the applicable questions and return the survey form in the enclosed postage-paid envelope. Won't you give a few minutes of your time now to help insure future fishing enjoyment in Alaska for yourself and others? If you have already returned your completed questionnaire, please disregard this letter and accept our sincere thanks. Sincerely. ~r.~ Rupert E. Andrews, Director Sport Fish Division =· ~ I I I 'J .. ~< ' if r • WE NEED YOUR HELP! Please answer the questionnaire, as we need your answer5 to assess sport fishing in Alaska (regardless of how often you fished or how many fish you caught). Please complete the survey and return it to us in the stamped envelope we have enclosed. Thank you for your cooperation. If you have already returned your ques ti onnai re, please disregard this reminder. 'T.1 ...... OQ ~ CD 0\ . 'T.1 1-'• t; IJl rt a Pl ...... 1-' 1-'• ::s OQ 0 H, rt ::r CD IJl CD 0 0 ::s c;l..o IJl s:: t; 0 < CD '< . JAYS. /IAIIMOMD, &IWERMOR DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME OFRCE OF THE COMMISSIONER SUBPORTBIIIUIIMS-JUMEAU,., Dear Alaska Sport Fisherman: Sport fishing is becoming an increasingly important part of the Alaska scene. As the State grows in population, pressure on its fishery re- sources is increasing rapidly. If we are to maintain and improve the quality of sport fishing, it is vital that we have the best possible information for making responsive resource management decisions. I would very much appreciate your taking a few minutes to answer the questions attached to this letter. Although there are quite a number of pages, the questions are straightforward and you need only respond to those pertaining to the areas where you sport fished. Be assured that your responses will be considered confidential. It is my hope that you recognize this survey as a means by which you can participate in decisions concerning this State's fishery resources. We need your input. Only when we know what your needs are can we respond to them. §~,~~~ Commissioner Attachment ,. --.J -' ·-... ,~ I! .. INSTRUCTIONS: 1. Questions apply to all members of your household. 2. If more than one member of your household received a copy of this questionnaire, you need fill out only one questionnaire, but to avoid repeated mailings, please return all~ 3. Please answer the general questions 6n page 2. 4. If members of your household _sport .fished between_ January 1 and Decembe~ 31, 1977, please fill out the remaining pages which cover the areas you sport fished. The maps on pages 3, 11, and 21 will help you find the pages which deal with those areas. If no members of your household sport fished bewteen January 1 and December 31, 1977, please return your questionnaire in the enclosed postage-paid envelope after answering the questions.on page 2. 5. If you cannot remember exactly how much time you sport fished or how many fish you caught, please estimate as closely as you can. Do not count commercially-caught or subsistence~caught fish. · 6. Please return your completed questionnaire in the _enclosed postage-paid envelope. Thanks for helping us help you. GENERAL QUESTIONS: 1. How many members of your household under the age of 16 sport fished between January 1 and December 31, 1977? 2. How many members of your household 16 years of age or older sport fished between January 1 and December 31, 1977? 3. What kind of sport fishing do you prefer? (Check only one) Saltwater Stream Fishing __ Lake Fishing __ 4. Please list the fish species you primarily ~ort fished for by order of effort: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 5. Please list the fish species you prefer to ~ort fish for by order of preference: 1. 2. N 3. 4. 5. 6. Please estimate the percentage of your total sport fishing time spent fishing for salmon. 7. What would you like to see done to improve sport fishing in Alaska? " "------, J ARLIS Alaska Resources Library & infoi"mation Services "'1C''t ·~··v;c. i· >.s\(~ t 2J. ,, ..... ,.~.\. ~ ... t--\...l . u:..:..~... c.:=.