Alaska Seafood

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This page has information on Alaska Seafood. Alaska seafood includes king crabs, snow crabs, cod, halibut and other seafood. Alaska is home to some of the most skilled and respected commercial fishermen in the world. Labor sources claim Alaska's seafood industry provides more jobs than oil and gas, mining, agriculture and forestry combined. Alaskan commercial fishing ports rank among the highest in the USA in both volume and value of annual seafood catches.

Alaska Seafood 

Commercial Fishing
Commercial Fishing is a resource for commercial fishing, aquaculture, online seafood vendors, seafood wholesalers, bait dealers, equipment suppliers, fishermen, commercial boat builders and anyone interested in commercial fishing.
Fresh Seafood
Seafood recipes, information, articles, news, events, links
Alsaka's Finest
Alaska's Finest Seafoods in Atlanta, Georgia supplies fresh Alaskan Salmon, Halibut, King Crab, and other novelties to restaurants in the southeast as well as consumers all across the United States. Our goal is to provide the freshest products available while maintaining the highest standard in customer satisfaction.
National Geographic Guide to America's Outdoors Series
"A superb series of sumptuously illustrated portable guidebooks to the very best natural wonders in every region of the United States and Canada. Author-guided hikes lead readers along favorite trails, pointing out and explaining natural highlights along the way. Each guide includes 25 maps and more than 150 full-color photographs."
AMSEA - Safety at Sea
"According to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), safety-trained fishermen are 1.5 times more likely to survive an accident at sea. When the chips are down, just having the survival equipment without knowing how to get the most out of it in an emergency, always turns out to be a bad decision," said Jerry Dzugan, AMSEA director.

Founded in 1985 and based in Sitka, Alaska, AMSEA collaborates with the U.S. Coast Guard, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Alaska Vocational Technical Center, the Alaska commercial fishing industry, and others to help mariners prevent and survive accidents at sea.
Ken and Julies's Alaska Blog
A nice blog about Alaska life.
Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute
Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute is a resource for consumers and anyone in the business of harvesting, processing or marketing Alaska Seafood.

Featured Alaska Seafood Apparel 

Available at our shop Outdoors USA

Seafood News 

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Types of Alaska Seafood 

Salmon

Alaska is known for it's salmon. The flavor of Alaska Salmon depends upon fat content and the environment in which it matured. Alaska's water quality and the abundance of food sources give the area's salmon it's excellent flavor.

There are five species of wild Alaska salmon -
Sockeye or Red(Oncorhynchus nerka), Chinook or King(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), Coho or Silver(Oncorhynchus kisutch), Keta or Chum (Oncorhynchus keta), and Pink or Humpy (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha).

Wild Alaska Salmon grow in the ocean, and spawn in the rivers. Salmon spawn once and die afterward. Wild Salmon eventually migrate to sea, then return to their stream of birth to spawn.

Alaska's statewide salmon harvest in 2008 was 146 million fish. The catch was a decrease of 31.4% from 2007 - still, it was the 16th largest catch since statehood in 1959. The value of the 2008 catch topped $400 million at the docks. Alaska's salmon catch was 212.6 million fish in 2007.

Alaska Pollock

The Alaska pollock fishery is the largest U.S. fishery, by volume. Annual catches average 2.5 billion pounds. The fishery meets the MSC's environmental standard for a well-managed and sustainable fishery. Because of its quality, abundance and versatility, Alaska pollock is used in more seafood products than any other fish species.

Other Alaska Whitefish

Pollock, Halibut, Sole, Cod, and Black Cod are all grouped as whitefish. These fish have flaky white flesh that is generally mild in flavor.

Crabs

Alaska is famous for it's delicious varieties of crabs. Among them, the king crab, snow crab and dungeness crabs.

King crabs are the largest of all the crabs caught in the world, weighing up to 10 pounds.

Snow Crabs are are another delicious Alaskan Crab. Frozen snow crabs are available worldwide, cleaned and pre-cooked, ready to heat and serve.

Dungeness crabs are known for their high quality meat. The 2-3 lb crabs are steamed and served whole.

Scallops

Alaska Scallops are largest scallops available. The highly prized shellfish have a sweet flavor and firm texture.

Alaska's Recent Seafood Landings 

Commercial fishermen unloaded 612.7 million pounds of fish and shellfish at the port of Dutch Harbor-Unalaska, Alaska, in 2008, mostly pollock, making it the country's top port for the amount of fish landed for the 20th consecutive year according to NOAA's Fisheries Service.

The value of Alaska's 2007 seafood harvest was the second highest in state history, despite a 1.9 percent decrease from 2006.

The overall value of Alaska's exports decreased to $3.9 billion in 2007, down from $4 billion in 2006.

Alaska on eBay 

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NOAA and Partners Install Artificial Reefs in Southeast Alaska 

NOAA, together with State of Alaska and University of Alaska Fairbanks partners cooperated to build two artificial reefs made of stone in the waters of Lynn Canal, in Southeast Alaska just north of Juneau.

The reefs are in 18 to 25 feet of water and are designed to enhance near-shore marine habitat for fish and invertebrates. NOAA Fisheries initiated the project through discussions with the Alaska Department of Transportation, reviewed the research proposal and obtained all required state and federal permits.

The University of Alaska Fairbanks designed the project and study plan and completed extensive surveys of the seafloor and existing local rocky reefs. The Alaska Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration provided engineering expertise, funding, and contracting services for the project as partial mitigation for the planned Juneau Access Improvement Project.

The two structures, each 30 feet wide by 100 feet long, were placed on sandy bottom and incorporate about 30% open space between the rocks to provide habitat for fish and marine invertebrates such as juvenile rockfish, shrimp and eels.

The depth and design are intended to support the settling and growth of kelp and other seaweeds that provide ideal spawning habitat for Pacific herring.

For additional information, please contact Christopher.M.Moore@noaa.gov, phone (301) 713-2379.

Seafood Lenses 

Alaska Commercial Fishing Videos 

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Alaskan King Crab 2009

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Crabbing in Alaska

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Man's Work-Alaskan Crab Fisher...

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Alaska Crab Boat Tour

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alaska crabbing

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Crabbing Through The Ice in No...

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Alaskan Fish and other Seafood Lenses 

Dungeness Crabs 

Dungeness Crabs are caught from Alaska to California. They are prized for their delicate flavor.

The Pacific Dungeness crab stock is quite cyclical, and may be ready for a rebound. New research techniques in development seek to forecast stock size three or four years ahead of time.

Commercial Dungeness crabbing vessels operate in some of the winter's worst weather in hazardous waters and have the highest fatality rate of any West Coast fishery. "Operation Safe Crab" is the United States Coast Guard's continuing initiative to reduce the number of fisherman's lives lost at sea.

Clean Boating for Alaskans Booklet 

Clean Boating for Alaskans
Price: Free
ISBN: 978-1-56612-150-7

This FREE, 28-page, color illustrated booklet provides great tips for Alaska boat operators on how to save fuel, keep boat operation and maintenance green, mitigate marine debris, respect wildlife, and access new boat technology.

You may order single or bulk quantities. Display them on your counter for mariners to take, distribute them to your coworkers, etc. The publication is a collaboration of the Alaska Marine Conservation Council, the National Park Service, and the Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program.

Order your free copies online at AlaskaSeaGrant.org/bookstore

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