A legal fight is ramping up over who should manage Alaska's dwindling salmon populations—and who gets access to them. By Max Graham/Grist Published Dec 25, 2023 11:00 AM EST This story was originally ...
The Alaska Supreme Court has ruled that a lower court acted correctly in dismissing an Alaska resident’s challenge to the ...
Alaska judges will not hear a lawsuit alleging that the Alaska Department of Fish and Game has mishandled the state’s ...
For Alaska Native communities along the Yukon River, fishing for salmon has always been a central part of life. But climate change is driving a massive collapse in salmon populations. For Alaska ...
Today we're trolling for salmon in Lake Ontario: one lead core line, one planer board, and one jet diver. We're using the American Smelt and a Viper Spoon with an artificial plastic, and running them ...
New research suggests the Salmon River is full of toxic metals that are likely harming fish and other aquatic creatures ...
Allison Little, a middle school assistant principal from Anchorage, has been fishing on the Kasilof River her entire adult life, so she’s used to seeing wormy parasites coiled up in fish on occasion.
Once-pristine Alaska rivers like the Salmon are turning orange as thawing permafrost releases toxic metals, threatening ...
When salmon all but vanished from western Alaska in 2021, thousands of people in the region faced disaster. Rural families lost a critical food source. Commercial fisherfolk found themselves without a ...
Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. When salmon all but vanished from western Alaska in 2021, thousands of people ...