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Pacific herring

The Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii) is a species of the herring family associated with the Pacific Ocean environment of North America and northeast Asia. It is a silvery fish with unspined fins and a deeply forked caudal fin. The distribution is widely along the California coast from Baja California north to Alaska and the Bering Sea; in Asia the distribution is south to Japan, Korea, and China. Clupea pallasii is considered a keystone species because of its very high productivity and interactions with many predators and prey. Pacific herring spawn in variable seasons, but often in the early part of the year in intertidal and sub-tidal environments, commonly on eelgrass, seaweed[2] or other submerged vegetation; however, they do not die after spawning, but can breed in successive years. According to government sources, the Pacific herring fishery collapsed in the year 1993, and is slowly recovering to commercial viability in several North American stock areas.[3] The species is named for Peter Simon Pallas, a noted German naturalist and explorer.

Pacific herring
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Clupeiformes
Family: Clupeidae
Genus: Clupea
Species:
C. pallasii
Binomial name
Clupea pallasii
Valenciennes in Cuvier and Valenciennes, 1847

There are disjunct populations of Clupea pallasii in North-East Europe, which are often attributed to separate subspecies Clupea pallasii marisalbi (White Sea herring) and Clupea pallasii suworowi (Chosha herring).

Morphology edit

Pacific herring have a bluish-green back and silver-white sides and bellies; they are otherwise unmarked. The silvery color derives from guanine crystals embedded in their laterals, leading to an effective camouflage phenomenon. There is a single dorsal fin located mid-body and a deeply forked tail-fin. Their bodies are compressed laterally, and ventral scales protrude in a somewhat serrated fashion. Unlike other genus members, they have no scales on heads or gills;[4] moreover, their scales are large and easy to extract. This species of fish may attain a length of 45 centimeters in exceptional cases and weigh up to 550 grams, but a typical adult size is closer to 33 centimeters. The fish interior is quite bony with oily flesh.

This species has no teeth on the jawline, but some are exhibited on the vomer. Pacific herring have an unusual retinal morphology that allows filter feeding in extremely dim lighting environments. This species is capable of rapid vertical motion, due to the existence of a complex nerve receptor system design that connects to the gas bladder.[5]

Life cycle edit

 
Juvenile fish

Pacific herring prefer spawning locations in sheltered bays and estuaries. Along the American Pacific Coast, some of the principal areas are San Francisco Bay, Richardson Bay, Tomales Bay and Humboldt Bay. Adult males and females make their way from the open ocean to bays and coves around November or December, although in the far north of the range, these dates may be somewhat later. Conditions that trigger spawning are not altogether clear, but after spending weeks congregating in the deeper channels, both males and females will begin to enter shallower inter-tidal or sub-tidal waters. Submerged vegetation, especially eelgrass, is a preferred substrate for oviposition. A single female may lay as many as 20,000 eggs in one spawn following ventral contact with submerged substrates. However, the juvenile survival rate is only about one resultant adult per ten thousand eggs, due to high predation by numerous other species.

The precise staging of spawning is not understood, although some researchers suggest the male initiates the process by release of milt, which has a pheromone that stimulates the female to begin oviposition. The behavior seems to be collective so that an entire school may spawn in the period of a few hours, producing an egg density of up to 6,000,000 eggs per square meter.[6] The fertilized spherical eggs, measuring 1.2 to 1.5 millimeters in diameter, incubate for approximately ten days in estuarine waters that are about 10 degrees Celsius. Eggs and juveniles are subject to heavy predation.

Fisheries edit

 
Global capture of Pacific herring in tonnes reported by the FAO, 1950–2009[7]

Pacific herring fisheries (fishing grounds) had been sustainably exploited by indigenous people for millennia, not only in the Pacific Coasts of North America, but in Japan, and Russian Far East, and in all these cases, industrial fishing for herring oil and fertilizer encroached or seized these fishing areas, leading to collapses in the fish stock.[8]

The Ainu of Ezo (now Hokkaido) had caught herring using basic dip nets (hand nets)[a] but Japanese fishermen during the late Edo Period into Meiji Era began to operate increasingly large-scaled capture of herring in these grounds, first using gillnets and later "pound nets" (or traps).[9][10][12] Intensive fishing resulted in the so-called "Million-Ton Era" of the late nineteenth century onward,[14] Herring fishery near Japan (Hokkaido) collapsed in the late 1950s.[9][15]

Much like Japan, commercial herring fisheries in Alaska, US, and British Columbia underwent the phase of § Reduction fishery (for fertilizer and oil), and when Japanese herring fleets suffered scarcity in the late 1950s, North American fisheries began to cater to the Japanese market especially for the herring roe (§ Roe fishery; § Spawn on kelp fishery), known in Japan as § kazunoko. Alaska Department of Fish and Game has managed Alaskan resources and issues quota has released their biomass estimate figures since 1975, but the figures remain highly volatile.[16]

Herring has long been fished by First Nations on the Central Coast of British Columbia, and elsewhere. In 1997 the Supreme Court of Canada rendered its decision in the Gladstone decision (R. v. Gladstone)- recognizing a pre-existing aboriginal right to herring that includes a commercial component to the Heiltsuk Nation.

Due to overfishing,[17] the total North American Pacific herring fishery collapsed in 1993, and is slowly recovering with active management by North American resource managers. In various sub-areas the Pacific herring fishery collapsed at slightly differing times; for example, the Pacific herring fishery in Richardson Bay collapsed in 1983.[18] The species has been re-appearing in harvestable numbers in a number of North American fisheries including San Francisco Bay, Richardson Bay, Tomales Bay, Half Moon Bay, Humboldt Bay all in California, and Sitka Sound, Alaska. In other areas, such as Auke Bay, Alaska, which in the late 1970s was the largest harvestable stock of herring in Alaska, the species remains severely depleted.[19]

Pacific herring are currently harvested commercially for bait and for roe. Past commercial uses included fish oil and fish meal.[19]

Reduction fishery edit

The Alaskan herring industry began in 1880s as "reduction" plants which processed herrings into fish meal and oil, with the meal utilized mostly as animal fodder or fertilizer,[20] and the oil mostly for soap.[21] Since it began the reduction in 1882 until around 1917, the business was a practical monopoly of the North West Trading Company which established its processing plant at Killisnoo, Alaska.[22] The use of "Norwegian method" of catching using oar-propelled seine boats did continue until 1923 here, but was being supplanted by the purse seine (purse seiner [de]) introduced into herring fishery around after 1900.[23]

Concerns had developed regarding this practice as early as the 1900s, regarding localized fish stock depletion, adverse food chain effects on commercially valuable fish types that prey on herring, and the ethics of taking fish for purposes other than human food or bait,[24] But the industry persisted in Alaska until it ceased operations in 1966.[25]

In Canada, the earliest recorded catches were for the purpose of producing dry-salted herring, starting around 1904, peaking around the 1920s,[b] but declining to initial catch tonnages by 1934 due to sagging demand.[26] Reduction (fertilizer) fishing operated in Canada during the years 1935–1967. The end was due to the collapse of the fish population.[26]

Roe fishery edit

Just as the reduction industry was phasing out in Alaska in the 1960s, there emerged an alternate industry to exploit herring in another way, i.e., harvesting only the "roe sacs" ("egg skein") inside the females, to meet the Japanese demand for "kazunoko".[c][25] A similar shift took from the defunct reduction fishing took place in Canada: after the herring population recovered somewhat, a Canadian roe fishery industry sprang up in 1971 to cater to the Japanese market.[30][d]).

A commercially viable product demands the eggs to be "ripe", or swollen to the right size, which only occurs within a few days of spawning, and there is a narrow window for the catch.[30][34] Accordingly, the season is very short, a matter of days: it lasted all of 90 minutes in the April 1975 season.[34][35]

These egg skeins need to retain perfection of shape to fetch highest value, and to that end, the fish are frozen or brine-frozen then rethawed in freshwater before extracting the egg skeins.[35]

Spawn on kelp fishery edit

Shoals of herring during the reproductive season lay clusters of eggs on kelp and other seaweed,[e][f] and the seasonal collection has been a time-honored traditional practice among the natives of Pacific Coast of Alaska and Canada,[39][40] witnessed and recorded in the 18th and 19th centuries,[44] and has been traded [39] and a trade item.[42] The natives traditionally foraged wild-grown eggs on various seaweed, or laid on introduced hemlock branches,[43][45].

The Japanese market for kazunoko kombu (数の子コンブ, 'herring roe kelp') or (子持ちコンブ, 'child holding kelp') is best served, so it has been claimed, by preferably using products laid on giant kelp (Macrocystis pyrifera), which only grew in Southeast Alaska [46][g] or down in Canada.[h][i]

[j] commercial harvest of wild-caught roe began in that region at Craig/ Craig/ Klawock [k], in 1959[l][52] Export to Japan began 1962.[m] So that in wild foraging surged at Craig/Klawock 1963, burgeoned in Sitka in 1964, and at a third site at Hydaburg in 1966 were harvesting in southeast Alaska:[53] overfilling their 250 tons quota in 1966.[55] The season had to be drastically shortened or canceled due to depletion from the following year.[56]

Transplanting and impounding kelp edit

In 1960 and 1961 "open-pounds", stocked with kelp to lure herring egg-laying, were operated in the town of Craig, on Prince of Wales Island, probably for the first time in Alaska.[53] But afterwards, intensified harvest led to closure of season, and it was not until 1992 that harvest of semi-farmed eggs on kelp in closed-pounds resumed.[57]

The shortage of spawn led to seeking new harvesting grounds in areas where giant kelp do not naturally grow, and demand and harvest developed for eggs on alternate seaweeds, such as Desmarestia sp. or "hair seaweed".[e][57] Amidst the 1968 shortage, commercial collection of spawn of Fucus began,[f] in Bristol Bay, east of Togiak.[58] And in 1959 spawn from various algae began to be commercially collect from Prince William Sound, peaking in 1975, ending with the depletion of the "kelp".[58][i]

During the shortage, an enterprising operator experimented with transplanting "unused" kelp from remoter areas into kelp-depleted spawning grounds, or into eelgrass territory. He sometimes attached kelp cut elsewhere to barges he owned.[54]

In Canada, "impoundments" began to be used, whereby floating enclosures at sea are stocked with kelp, mature herring are introduced, and the egg-deposited kelp to be later harvest. Canada issued their first licenses in 1975, initially about half to indigenous operators, in Northern British Columbia.[30] The enclosure ("closed pounds") technique was subsequently copied by Alaskans.[59] The "impoundments" or "closed ponds" consisted of a square (wooden) frame holding a pocket of "suspended webbing" as enclosure space. Inside, rows of kelp are hung on strings. [30][59][61]

Decline edit

Alaska's principal areas for roe fishery, according to the 2022 season allotted tonnage were: Sitka Sound (late March) 45,164 short tons (90,000,000 lb), Kodiak Island (April 1) 8,075 short tons (16,000,000 lb), and Togiak[n] (May) 65,107 short tons (130,000,000 lb). However the allowed quotas were hardly expected to be filled, given the drastic downturn in Japanese demand. During the heydays of the 1990s, the pre-spawn herring commanded $1000 per ton, yielding a gross $60 million to fisherman, but by 2020 the tally fell to a $5 million figure.[63] In 2023, the last roe processing plant in Togiak indicated it would not be purchasing herring, and the season was cancelled.[64]

Conservation edit

On April 2, 2007, the Juneau group of the Sierra Club submitted a petition to list Pacific herring in the Lynn Canal, Alaska, area as a threatened or endangered distinct population segment under the criteria of the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA).[65] On April 11, 2008, that petition was denied because the Lynn Canal population was not found to qualify as a distinct population segment. However, the National Marine Fisheries Service did announce would be initiating a status review for a wider Southeast Alaska distinct population segment of Pacific herring that includes the Lynn Canal population.[66] The Southeast Alaska DPS of Pacific herring extends from Dixon Entrance northward to Cape Fairweather and Icy Point and includes all Pacific herring stocks in Southeast Alaska.

On February 5, 2018, researchers at Western Washington University began researching causes for the decline in Pacific herring populations in the Puget Sound; a prominent speculated reason is the loss of eelgrass, an important spawning substrate for the herring.[67]

Kazunoko edit

The herring egg roe or "egg skein", called kazunoko had traditionally commanded a good price in Japanese markets, and the herring roe fishery and processing industry (especially in Alaska), geared towards export to that country, has been described above under § Roe fishery.

As for the culinary aspects, the kazunoko merchandized in Japan primarily fall into either hoshi kazunoko (塩数の子, 'dried kazunko') or shio kazunoko (干し数の子, 'dried kazunko').[68] There is also a lower-grade substitute[71] called shio kazunoko (味付け数の子, 'dried kazunko'),[32] made from Atlantic herring roe (which is considered a softer or "less crunchy" in texture).[32][33][69][o]

The roe is eaten mostly as the New Year's fare,[72] called osechi, consisting of an assortment of symbolically propitious foods, with herring representing fertility (production of many children).[73][74]

Notes edit

  1. ^ And possibly, seine nets.
  2. ^ The initial catch tonnage was at around 30,000t per year. Introduction purse seine to Canadian herring fishing occurred in 1913, but the catch tonnage remained flat for some years until it rose to 85,000 tons in 1919–1927.
  3. ^ Small-scale roe fishery about 1 ton operated in Alaska in 1961 and 1963 at Resurrection Bay and lower Cook Inlet, but more serious operations commenced in 1964 in Sitka at Sitka Sound, Spiridon Bay on Kodiak Island, and Unalakleet (Norton Sound),[27] In Togiak, roe fishery began experimentally in 1967 but greatly expanded 1977 onward to become the major site of the roe fishery haul.[28][29]
  4. ^ After Alaska, various other regions began competing for the market: California, British Columbia (Canada), eastern Canada, Russia, South Korea, China, Scotland (UK), Ireland, Netherlands.[31] Eastern Canadian and European fisheries of course harvest Atlantic herring roe, which is considered a softer (less crunchy), and are processed as "flavored kazunoko (ajitsuke kazunoko)" which are surrogates for standard "salted kazunoko.[32][33] (More details under § Kazunoko below
  5. ^ a b Even if not strictly "kelp" (large members of order Laminariales), the seaweed may still be called a type of "kelp" by locals or the local industry, thus Desmarestia aka "hair kelp" according to Mackviak[36] and some Alaska DFS writers,[37] though a paper form other researchers of the Department dated later refer use "hair seaweed" identified as Desmarestia viridis,[38] though in the local vocabulary list they gloss Tlingit ne} as "hair kelp" [38]
  6. ^ a b Another egg host algae, Fucus sp., is called "rockweed",[36][37] and is not strictly "kelp" either (also different ordo), but the collectors are still called "kelpers" an the product "roe on kelp", even if Fucus is mainly targeted in Bristol Bay.[37]
  7. ^ e.g. Hydaburg,[43] Prince Wales Island and Sitka described below.
  8. ^ However, the premium kombu kelp of Japanese cuisine derives from makombu, now listed as Saccharina latissima but formerly known as Laminaria saccharina, common name "sugar wrack", surveyed as growing in Prince William Sound.[47]
  9. ^ a b The statement that at Prince William Sound "ribbon kelp (Laminaria sp.) was the most desirable native species"[43] is problematic, since Laminaria could conceivably refer to the aforementioned Japanese true kombu or "sugar wrack", whereas "ribbon kelp" is a common name for two other alga, namely Nereocystis luetkeana aka "bull kelp" and Alaria marginata,[48] but herring do not lay egg on "bull kelp"[49] while the latter was explained by Charles F. Newcombe (1901) as occasionally harvested with spawn and eaten by the Haida.[50]
  10. ^ After Japanese expressed interest in Alaskan herring roe and egg on kelp in 1958 as alternate sourcing.[51]
  11. ^ On Prince of Wales Island, neighboring Canada.
  12. ^ 107,900 pounds (48,942.617 kg) were collected using grappling hooks.
  13. ^ According to federal statistics at the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries. The Japanese presumably approached Alaskans in 1958 seeking herring roe. As to who the buyers were in the meanwhile before 1962, there is an anecdote of a Japanese-American Harry Yoshimura's family proprietorship making a purchase.[46]
  14. ^ Both purse seiners and gillnetting are involved.[62][29]
  15. ^ Atlantic roe is otherwise made into processed foods[33] or sōzai (惣菜, 'side dishes')[70]

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ Gustafson, R.; Sandell, T.; Cleary, J. (2019). "Clupea pallasii". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T98471199A98845541. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-2.RLTS.T98471199A98845541.en. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  2. ^ Herring Spawn on Kelp Photo 2014-04-26 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Alaska Fisheries 1998 study 2006-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Roger A. Barnhart, Species Profile: Life Histories and Environmental Requirements of Coastal Fishes and Invertebrates (Pacific Southwest): Pacific Herring, pp. 1–8, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, February, 1988
  5. ^ J.H.S. Blaxter, The Herring: a Successful Fish?, Journal of Canadian Journal of Fish. Aquatic Sci.(suppl. 1) 42:21-30 (1985)
  6. ^ J.D. Spratt, The Pacific herring resource of San Francisco and Tomales Bays: Its size and structure, California Department of Fish and Game Marine Research Tech. 33, 44p (1976)
  7. ^ Clupea pallasii (Valenciennes, 1847) FAO, Species Fact Sheet. Retrieved April 2012.
  8. ^ Thornton & Moss (2021), p. 30.
  9. ^ a b Thornton & Moss (2021), p. 19.
  10. ^ a b c Yokoyama, Satoshi [in Japanese] (2013). Seaweeds: Edible, Available, and Sustainable 資源と生業の地理学. Kaiseisha press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 9784860992743.} (in Japanese)
  11. ^ "Japanese Fishery". The Japan Magazine. 2 (3): 147. July 1911., cont. August 1911,Fishery (II)", pp. 228–232
  12. ^ Yokoyama provides illustrated comparison of Fig. 4b sashiami or gillnets with two types of pound nets, 4c Yukitsuna ami introduced 1847/c. 1850 (almost End of Edo) and 4d kaku ami c. 1885/1890 (mid-Meiji).[10][11]
  13. ^ Cf. Imada, Mitsuo (1991) Nishin gyoka retsuden: hyakumangoku jidai no ninaite tachi ニシン漁家列伝-百万石時代の担い手たち, cited by Yokoyama (2013), p. 133
  14. ^ Referred to as "Million koku era" in Japanese literature,[13] measuring the catch by traditional volume measure.
  15. ^ Or decade of the "Showa 30s" (1955~).[10]
  16. ^ Hebert, KP (2011). "Scuba Diving Surveys Used to Estimate Pacific Herring Egg Deposition in Southeastern Alaska". In: Pollock NW, ed. Diving for Science 2011. Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences 30th Symposium. Dauphin Island, AL: AAUS; 2011. Archived from the original on April 15, 2013. Retrieved 2013-04-02.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ Dean, Cornelia (3 November 2006). "Study Sees 'Global Collapse' of Fish Species". New York Times. Retrieved 9 February 2010.
  18. ^ Patrick Sullivan, Gary Deghi and C. Michael Hogan, Harbor Seal Study for Strawberry Spit, Marin County, California, Earth Metrics file reference 10323, BCDC and County of Marin, January 23, 1989
  19. ^ a b O'Clair, Rita M. and O'Clair, Charles E., "Pacific herring," Southeast Alaska's Rocky Shores: Animals. pg. 343-346. Plant Press: Auke Bay, Alaska (1998). ISBN 0-9664245-0-6
  20. ^ Mackovjak (2022), p. 19.
  21. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 19, 25.
  22. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 21–24.
  23. ^ Rounsefell (1935), p. 19.
  24. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 19–20.
  25. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 20.
  26. ^ a b Hourston & Haegele (1980), pp. 6.
  27. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 146, 153.
  28. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 224, 229.
  29. ^ a b Wright & Chythlook (1985), p. 1.
  30. ^ a b c d Hourston & Haegele (1980), pp. 6–7.
  31. ^ Mackovjak (2022), p. 144.
  32. ^ a b c d Alaska Sea Grant College Program (2001). Funk, Fritz (ed.). Herring: Expectations for a New Millennium : Proceedings of the Symposium Herring 2000, Expectations for a New Millennium, Anchorage, Alaska, USA, February 23-26, 2000. University of Alaska Sea Grant College Program. p. 725. Atlantic herring roe, which is generally smaller and softer than Pacific herring roe, has never been considered suitable for salted kazunoko. But seeking a substitute for high-priced Pacific roe in the 1980s, processors tried Atlantic roe for flavored kazunoko, and found it acceptable.
  33. ^ a b c Tomoko, Furukawa (2005). "kazunoko" 数の子 [Pacific herring ovary]. Shokuzai kenkō daijiten 食材健康大事典 (in Japanese). Gomyō, Toshiharu (supervising editor). Tübingen: [[[Jiji Press]]. p. 345. ISBN 9784788705616.
  34. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 148.
  35. ^ a b Bledsoe, Gleyn; Rasco, Barbara (2006). "Ch. 161. Caviar and Fish Roe". In Hui, Yiu H. (ed.). Handbook of Food Science, Technology, and Engineering. CRC Press. p. 161-11. ISBN 978-0-8493-9849-0.
  36. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 273.
  37. ^ a b c Blackburn, James E.; Jackson, Peter B. (April 1982), Seasonal Composition and Abundance of Juvenile and Adult Marine Finfish and Crab Species in the Nearshore Zone of Kodiak Island's Eastside during April 1978 through March 1979, p. 412 in Outer Continental Shelf Environmental Assessment Program, Final Report of Principal Investigators, Vol. 54, February 1987, Anchorage, Alaska: US Dept. Comm.
  38. ^ a b Schroeder & Kookesh (1990), pp. 2, 7.
  39. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 15–17.
  40. ^ Hourston & Haegele (1980), p. 7.
  41. ^ Schroeder & Kookesh (1990), p. 4.
  42. ^ a b c Schroeder & Kookesh (1990), p. 6.
  43. ^ a b c d Mackovjak (2022), p. 15.
  44. ^ Quoted from Étienne Marchand, the Solide expedition of 1790–92;[41] from Aurel Krause visit on April 25, 1882 (1881–82 expedition);[42] and Jefferson Franklin Moser[42][43]
  45. ^ Schroeder & Kookesh (1990), pp. 6–7, 18–22.
  46. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 275.
  47. ^ Exxon (1991). "Sugar Wrack (Laminaria saccharina)". A Field Guide to Prince William Sound. Exxon Company U.S.A., Arctic Environmental Information and Data Center (Alaska). pp. 6, 7.
  48. ^ Mouritsen, Ole G. [in Danish] (2013). Seaweeds: Edible, Available, and Sustainable. Translated by Johansen, Mariela. photography by Jonas Drotner Mouritsen. University of Chicago Press. p. 250. ISBN 9780226044538.}
  49. ^ Springer, Yuri; Hays, Cynthia; Carr, Mark; Mackey, Megan (1 March 2007), Ecology and Management of the Bull Kelp Nereocystis luetkeana: A Synthesis with Recommendations for Future Research (PDF), With assistance from Ms. Jennifer Bloeser, Ecological Management of Kelp Forests in Oregon and Washington, p. 30, citing Dr. Michael S. Stekoll, persona communication, 2006
  50. ^ Turner (2004), p. 199.
  51. ^ Mackovjak (2022), p. 274.
  52. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 273–275.
  53. ^ a b c Mackovjak (2022), p. 276.
  54. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), pp. 277–279.
  55. ^ Alaska Department of Fish and Game set quotas of 100 and 75t each for the others, respectively,[53] and total 274 tons (trimmed weight) was reported for 1966, valued at $600,000, for an open season the lasted only an hour or hour-and-a-half.[54]
  56. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 279–280.
  57. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 279.
  58. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), p. 280.
  59. ^ a b Mackovjak (2022), pp. 281.
  60. ^ Woodford, Riley (May 2020). "Record Herring Event Highlights Roe on Kelp Fishery". Alaska Fish & Wildlife News. Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
  61. ^ Cf. Alaska DFG article with photographs.[60]
  62. ^ Mackovjak (2022), pp. 219–237.
  63. ^ Welch, Laine (28 March 2022). "As demand for Alaska herring roe plummets, industry seeks markets for the wasted fish". Alaska Dispatch News.
  64. ^ Ross, Izzy Ross (26 March 2023). "No commercial Togiak sac roe herring fishery this spring, after years of a shrinking market". KDLG. Dillingham.
  65. ^ "Endangered Species Act". 16 January 2023.
  66. ^ Announcement of initiation of status review for Southeast Alaska Pacific herring
  67. ^ "New Puget Sound herring research". Puget Sound Institute. 2018-02-05. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  68. ^ OECD: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2009). "Kazunoko". Multilingual Dictionary of Fish and Fish Products. John Wiley & Sons. p. 532. ISBN 9781444319422.
  69. ^ a b "Herring". Seafood Leader. 9 (4): 142. April 1989. The Japanese used to purchase only roe from Pacific.. insurgence of the European herring stocks has led to a secondary market in Atlantic roe.. Atlantic herring roe is generally less crunchy and tangy than Pacific herring roe and so sells for less
  70. ^ a b JETRO (1991). Nōrin suisanbutsu no bōeki: shuyō 100 hinmoku no kokunai・kaigai jijyō 農林水産物の貿昜: 主要 100品目の国内・海外事情 (in Japanese). Japan External Trade Organization. pp. 480, 567. 主として味付けかずのこの原料として利用されるにしんの卵は大西洋産、正月の贈答用などに用いられるにしん卵等は太平洋産である
  71. ^ lower grade, as per "substitute",[32] "secondary market",[69] and the remark that only the Pacific herring roe is considered suitable for New Year's gift-giving in Japan.[70]
  72. ^ Emami, Ali; Queirolob, Lewis E.; Johnston, Richard (1994), "Monopsony, Trade Restrictions and International Markets for Intermediate Seafood Products. The U.S.-Canada Herring Dispute", in Antona, Martine; Cantanzano, Joseph; Sutinen, John G. (eds.), Proceedings of the Sixth Conference of the International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade (PDF), vol. 2, Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer, p. 590 n1
  73. ^ Andreasen, Esben; Rasco, Barbara (1998). Popular Buddhism in Japan: Shin Buddhist Religion and Culture. University of Hawaii Press. p. 170. ISBN 9780824820282. Citing Hazama, D. O.; Komeiji, J. O. (1986) Okage sama De", pp. 263–5
  74. ^ Mouritsen, Ole G. [in Danish]; Styrbæk, Klavs (2023). Rogn: Meget mere end rogn. Gyldendal A/S. § Frugtbarhed og mange børn. ISBN 9788702392029. (in Danish)
Bibliography
  • Hourston, A. S.; Haegele, C. W. (1980), Herring on Canada's Pacific Coast (PDF), Ottawa: Canadian Special Publications of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, Department of Fisheries and Oceans
  • Mackovjak, James (2022). "Chapter 1. Alaska Herring, The Basics; Chapter 9. Genesis and Management of Alaska's Ro-Herring Fishery". Alaska Herring History: The Story of Alaska’s Herring Fisheries and Industry. University of Alaska Press. ISBN 9781646423439.
  • Rounsefell, George A. (1935). "Fluctuation in the Supply of Herring (Culpea pallasii) in Southeastern Alaska". Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries. 47: 15–56.

Schroeder, Robert F.; Kookesh, Matthew (January 1990), The Subsistence Harvest of Herring Eggs in Sitka Sound, 1989 (PDF), Technical Paper No. 173, Alaska Department of Fish and Game

  • Thornton, Thomas F.; Moss, Madonna L. (2021), Herring and People of the North Pacific: Sustaining a Keystone Species, University of Washington Press, ISBN 9780295748306
  • Wright, John M.; Chythlook, Molly B. (March 1985), Subsistence harvest of herring spawn-on-kelp in the Togiak District of Bristol Bay (PDF), Technical Paper No. 116, Juneau, Alaska: Alaska Department of Fish and Game

External links edit

  • The Hakai Herring School website
  • Alaska Fish and Game species writeup
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service species profile: Pacific herring
  • Abundance, age, sex, and size statistics for Pacific herring in the Togiak district of Bristol Bay, 2004 by Chuck Brazil. Hosted by the .
  • Kodiak management area herring sac roe fishery harvest strategy for the 2007 season / by Jeff Wadle, Geoff Spalinger, and Joe Dinnocenzo. Hosted by the .

pacific, herring, clupea, pallasii, species, herring, family, associated, with, pacific, ocean, environment, north, america, northeast, asia, silvery, fish, with, unspined, fins, deeply, forked, caudal, distribution, widely, along, california, coast, from, baj. The Pacific herring Clupea pallasii is a species of the herring family associated with the Pacific Ocean environment of North America and northeast Asia It is a silvery fish with unspined fins and a deeply forked caudal fin The distribution is widely along the California coast from Baja California north to Alaska and the Bering Sea in Asia the distribution is south to Japan Korea and China Clupea pallasii is considered a keystone species because of its very high productivity and interactions with many predators and prey Pacific herring spawn in variable seasons but often in the early part of the year in intertidal and sub tidal environments commonly on eelgrass seaweed 2 or other submerged vegetation however they do not die after spawning but can breed in successive years According to government sources the Pacific herring fishery collapsed in the year 1993 and is slowly recovering to commercial viability in several North American stock areas 3 The species is named for Peter Simon Pallas a noted German naturalist and explorer Pacific herringConservation statusData Deficient IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder ClupeiformesFamily ClupeidaeGenus ClupeaSpecies C pallasiiBinomial nameClupea pallasiiValenciennes in Cuvier and Valenciennes 1847There are disjunct populations of Clupea pallasii in North East Europe which are often attributed to separate subspecies Clupea pallasii marisalbi White Sea herring and Clupea pallasii suworowi Chosha herring Contents 1 Morphology 2 Life cycle 3 Fisheries 3 1 Reduction fishery 3 2 Roe fishery 3 2 1 Spawn on kelp fishery 3 2 2 Transplanting and impounding kelp 3 2 3 Decline 3 3 Conservation 4 Kazunoko 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksMorphology editPacific herring have a bluish green back and silver white sides and bellies they are otherwise unmarked The silvery color derives from guanine crystals embedded in their laterals leading to an effective camouflage phenomenon There is a single dorsal fin located mid body and a deeply forked tail fin Their bodies are compressed laterally and ventral scales protrude in a somewhat serrated fashion Unlike other genus members they have no scales on heads or gills 4 moreover their scales are large and easy to extract This species of fish may attain a length of 45 centimeters in exceptional cases and weigh up to 550 grams but a typical adult size is closer to 33 centimeters The fish interior is quite bony with oily flesh This species has no teeth on the jawline but some are exhibited on the vomer Pacific herring have an unusual retinal morphology that allows filter feeding in extremely dim lighting environments This species is capable of rapid vertical motion due to the existence of a complex nerve receptor system design that connects to the gas bladder 5 Life cycle edit nbsp Juvenile fishPacific herring prefer spawning locations in sheltered bays and estuaries Along the American Pacific Coast some of the principal areas are San Francisco Bay Richardson Bay Tomales Bay and Humboldt Bay Adult males and females make their way from the open ocean to bays and coves around November or December although in the far north of the range these dates may be somewhat later Conditions that trigger spawning are not altogether clear but after spending weeks congregating in the deeper channels both males and females will begin to enter shallower inter tidal or sub tidal waters Submerged vegetation especially eelgrass is a preferred substrate for oviposition A single female may lay as many as 20 000 eggs in one spawn following ventral contact with submerged substrates However the juvenile survival rate is only about one resultant adult per ten thousand eggs due to high predation by numerous other species The precise staging of spawning is not understood although some researchers suggest the male initiates the process by release of milt which has a pheromone that stimulates the female to begin oviposition The behavior seems to be collective so that an entire school may spawn in the period of a few hours producing an egg density of up to 6 000 000 eggs per square meter 6 The fertilized spherical eggs measuring 1 2 to 1 5 millimeters in diameter incubate for approximately ten days in estuarine waters that are about 10 degrees Celsius Eggs and juveniles are subject to heavy predation Fisheries edit nbsp Global capture of Pacific herring in tonnes reported by the FAO 1950 2009 7 Pacific herring fisheries fishing grounds had been sustainably exploited by indigenous people for millennia not only in the Pacific Coasts of North America but in Japan and Russian Far East and in all these cases industrial fishing for herring oil and fertilizer encroached or seized these fishing areas leading to collapses in the fish stock 8 The Ainu of Ezo now Hokkaido had caught herring using basic dip nets hand nets a but Japanese fishermen during the late Edo Period into Meiji Era began to operate increasingly large scaled capture of herring in these grounds first using gillnets and later pound nets or traps 9 10 12 Intensive fishing resulted in the so called Million Ton Era of the late nineteenth century onward 14 Herring fishery near Japan Hokkaido collapsed in the late 1950s 9 15 Much like Japan commercial herring fisheries in Alaska US and British Columbia underwent the phase of Reduction fishery for fertilizer and oil and when Japanese herring fleets suffered scarcity in the late 1950s North American fisheries began to cater to the Japanese market especially for the herring roe Roe fishery Spawn on kelp fishery known in Japan as kazunoko Alaska Department of Fish and Game has managed Alaskan resources and issues quota has released their biomass estimate figures since 1975 but the figures remain highly volatile 16 Herring has long been fished by First Nations on the Central Coast of British Columbia and elsewhere In 1997 the Supreme Court of Canada rendered its decision in the Gladstone decision R v Gladstone recognizing a pre existing aboriginal right to herring that includes a commercial component to the Heiltsuk Nation Due to overfishing 17 the total North American Pacific herring fishery collapsed in 1993 and is slowly recovering with active management by North American resource managers In various sub areas the Pacific herring fishery collapsed at slightly differing times for example the Pacific herring fishery in Richardson Bay collapsed in 1983 18 The species has been re appearing in harvestable numbers in a number of North American fisheries including San Francisco Bay Richardson Bay Tomales Bay Half Moon Bay Humboldt Bay all in California and Sitka Sound Alaska In other areas such as Auke Bay Alaska which in the late 1970s was the largest harvestable stock of herring in Alaska the species remains severely depleted 19 Pacific herring are currently harvested commercially for bait and for roe Past commercial uses included fish oil and fish meal 19 Reduction fishery edit The Alaskan herring industry began in 1880s as reduction plants which processed herrings into fish meal and oil with the meal utilized mostly as animal fodder or fertilizer 20 and the oil mostly for soap 21 Since it began the reduction in 1882 until around 1917 the business was a practical monopoly of the North West Trading Company which established its processing plant at Killisnoo Alaska 22 The use of Norwegian method of catching using oar propelled seine boats did continue until 1923 here but was being supplanted by the purse seine purse seiner de introduced into herring fishery around after 1900 23 Concerns had developed regarding this practice as early as the 1900s regarding localized fish stock depletion adverse food chain effects on commercially valuable fish types that prey on herring and the ethics of taking fish for purposes other than human food or bait 24 But the industry persisted in Alaska until it ceased operations in 1966 25 In Canada the earliest recorded catches were for the purpose of producing dry salted herring starting around 1904 peaking around the 1920s b but declining to initial catch tonnages by 1934 due to sagging demand 26 Reduction fertilizer fishing operated in Canada during the years 1935 1967 The end was due to the collapse of the fish population 26 Roe fishery edit Just as the reduction industry was phasing out in Alaska in the 1960s there emerged an alternate industry to exploit herring in another way i e harvesting only the roe sacs egg skein inside the females to meet the Japanese demand for kazunoko c 25 A similar shift took from the defunct reduction fishing took place in Canada after the herring population recovered somewhat a Canadian roe fishery industry sprang up in 1971 to cater to the Japanese market 30 d A commercially viable product demands the eggs to be ripe or swollen to the right size which only occurs within a few days of spawning and there is a narrow window for the catch 30 34 Accordingly the season is very short a matter of days it lasted all of 90 minutes in the April 1975 season 34 35 These egg skeins need to retain perfection of shape to fetch highest value and to that end the fish are frozen or brine frozen then rethawed in freshwater before extracting the egg skeins 35 Spawn on kelp fishery edit Shoals of herring during the reproductive season lay clusters of eggs on kelp and other seaweed e f and the seasonal collection has been a time honored traditional practice among the natives of Pacific Coast of Alaska and Canada 39 40 witnessed and recorded in the 18th and 19th centuries 44 and has been traded 39 and a trade item 42 The natives traditionally foraged wild grown eggs on various seaweed or laid on introduced hemlock branches 43 45 The Japanese market for kazunoko kombu 数の子コンブ herring roe kelp or 子持ちコンブ child holding kelp is best served so it has been claimed by preferably using products laid on giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera which only grew in Southeast Alaska 46 g or down in Canada h i j commercial harvest of wild caught roe began in that region at Craig Craig Klawock k in 1959 l 52 Export to Japan began 1962 m So that in wild foraging surged at Craig Klawock 1963 burgeoned in Sitka in 1964 and at a third site at Hydaburg in 1966 were harvesting in southeast Alaska 53 overfilling their 250 tons quota in 1966 55 The season had to be drastically shortened or canceled due to depletion from the following year 56 Transplanting and impounding kelp edit In 1960 and 1961 open pounds stocked with kelp to lure herring egg laying were operated in the town of Craig on Prince of Wales Island probably for the first time in Alaska 53 But afterwards intensified harvest led to closure of season and it was not until 1992 that harvest of semi farmed eggs on kelp in closed pounds resumed 57 The shortage of spawn led to seeking new harvesting grounds in areas where giant kelp do not naturally grow and demand and harvest developed for eggs on alternate seaweeds such as Desmarestia sp or hair seaweed e 57 Amidst the 1968 shortage commercial collection of spawn of Fucus began f in Bristol Bay east of Togiak 58 And in 1959 spawn from various algae began to be commercially collect from Prince William Sound peaking in 1975 ending with the depletion of the kelp 58 i During the shortage an enterprising operator experimented with transplanting unused kelp from remoter areas into kelp depleted spawning grounds or into eelgrass territory He sometimes attached kelp cut elsewhere to barges he owned 54 In Canada impoundments began to be used whereby floating enclosures at sea are stocked with kelp mature herring are introduced and the egg deposited kelp to be later harvest Canada issued their first licenses in 1975 initially about half to indigenous operators in Northern British Columbia 30 The enclosure closed pounds technique was subsequently copied by Alaskans 59 The impoundments or closed ponds consisted of a square wooden frame holding a pocket of suspended webbing as enclosure space Inside rows of kelp are hung on strings 30 59 61 Decline edit Alaska s principal areas for roe fishery according to the 2022 season allotted tonnage were Sitka Sound late March 45 164 short tons 90 000 000 lb Kodiak Island April 1 8 075 short tons 16 000 000 lb and Togiak n May 65 107 short tons 130 000 000 lb However the allowed quotas were hardly expected to be filled given the drastic downturn in Japanese demand During the heydays of the 1990s the pre spawn herring commanded 1000 per ton yielding a gross 60 million to fisherman but by 2020 the tally fell to a 5 million figure 63 In 2023 the last roe processing plant in Togiak indicated it would not be purchasing herring and the season was cancelled 64 Conservation edit On April 2 2007 the Juneau group of the Sierra Club submitted a petition to list Pacific herring in the Lynn Canal Alaska area as a threatened or endangered distinct population segment under the criteria of the U S Endangered Species Act ESA 65 On April 11 2008 that petition was denied because the Lynn Canal population was not found to qualify as a distinct population segment However the National Marine Fisheries Service did announce would be initiating a status review for a wider Southeast Alaska distinct population segment of Pacific herring that includes the Lynn Canal population 66 The Southeast Alaska DPS of Pacific herring extends from Dixon Entrance northward to Cape Fairweather and Icy Point and includes all Pacific herring stocks in Southeast Alaska On February 5 2018 researchers at Western Washington University began researching causes for the decline in Pacific herring populations in the Puget Sound a prominent speculated reason is the loss of eelgrass an important spawning substrate for the herring 67 Kazunoko editMain article Kazunoko The herring egg roe or egg skein called kazunoko had traditionally commanded a good price in Japanese markets and the herring roe fishery and processing industry especially in Alaska geared towards export to that country has been described above under Roe fishery As for the culinary aspects the kazunoko merchandized in Japan primarily fall into either hoshi kazunoko 塩数の子 dried kazunko or shio kazunoko 干し数の子 dried kazunko 68 There is also a lower grade substitute 71 called shio kazunoko 味付け数の子 dried kazunko 32 made from Atlantic herring roe which is considered a softer or less crunchy in texture 32 33 69 o The roe is eaten mostly as the New Year s fare 72 called osechi consisting of an assortment of symbolically propitious foods with herring representing fertility production of many children 73 74 Notes edit And possibly seine nets The initial catch tonnage was at around 30 000t per year Introduction purse seine to Canadian herring fishing occurred in 1913 but the catch tonnage remained flat for some years until it rose to 85 000 tons in 1919 1927 Small scale roe fishery about 1 ton operated in Alaska in 1961 and 1963 at Resurrection Bay and lower Cook Inlet but more serious operations commenced in 1964 in Sitka at Sitka Sound Spiridon Bay on Kodiak Island and Unalakleet Norton Sound 27 In Togiak roe fishery began experimentally in 1967 but greatly expanded 1977 onward to become the major site of the roe fishery haul 28 29 After Alaska various other regions began competing for the market California British Columbia Canada eastern Canada Russia South Korea China Scotland UK Ireland Netherlands 31 Eastern Canadian and European fisheries of course harvest Atlantic herring roe which is considered a softer less crunchy and are processed as flavored kazunoko ajitsuke kazunoko which are surrogates for standard salted kazunoko 32 33 More details under Kazunoko below a b Even if not strictly kelp large members of order Laminariales the seaweed may still be called a type of kelp by locals or the local industry thus Desmarestia aka hair kelp according to Mackviak 36 and some Alaska DFS writers 37 though a paper form other researchers of the Department dated later refer use hair seaweed identified as Desmarestia viridis 38 though in the local vocabulary list they gloss Tlingit ne as hair kelp 38 a b Another egg host algae Fucus sp is called rockweed 36 37 and is not strictly kelp either also different ordo but the collectors are still called kelpers an the product roe on kelp even if Fucus is mainly targeted in Bristol Bay 37 e g Hydaburg 43 Prince Wales Island and Sitka described below However the premium kombu kelp of Japanese cuisine derives from makombu now listed as Saccharina latissima but formerly known as Laminaria saccharina common name sugar wrack surveyed as growing in Prince William Sound 47 a b The statement that at Prince William Sound ribbon kelp Laminaria sp was the most desirable native species 43 is problematic since Laminaria could conceivably refer to the aforementioned Japanese true kombu or sugar wrack whereas ribbon kelp is a common name for two other alga namely Nereocystis luetkeana aka bull kelp and Alaria marginata 48 but herring do not lay egg on bull kelp 49 while the latter was explained by Charles F Newcombe 1901 as occasionally harvested with spawn and eaten by the Haida 50 After Japanese expressed interest in Alaskan herring roe and egg on kelp in 1958 as alternate sourcing 51 On Prince of Wales Island neighboring Canada 107 900 pounds 48 942 617 kg were collected using grappling hooks According to federal statistics at the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries The Japanese presumably approached Alaskans in 1958 seeking herring roe As to who the buyers were in the meanwhile before 1962 there is an anecdote of a Japanese American Harry Yoshimura s family proprietorship making a purchase 46 Both purse seiners and gillnetting are involved 62 29 Atlantic roe is otherwise made into processed foods 33 or sōzai 惣菜 side dishes 70 References editCitations Gustafson R Sandell T Cleary J 2019 Clupea pallasii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T98471199A98845541 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 2 RLTS T98471199A98845541 en Retrieved 25 March 2024 Herring Spawn on Kelp Photo Archived 2014 04 26 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Fisheries 1998 study Archived 2006 10 14 at the Wayback Machine Roger A Barnhart Species Profile Life Histories and Environmental Requirements of Coastal Fishes and Invertebrates Pacific Southwest Pacific Herring pp 1 8 U S Fish and Wildlife Service February 1988 J H S Blaxter The Herring a Successful Fish Journal of Canadian Journal of Fish Aquatic Sci suppl 1 42 21 30 1985 J D Spratt The Pacific herring resource of San Francisco and Tomales Bays Its size and structure California Department of Fish and Game Marine Research Tech 33 44p 1976 Clupea pallasii Valenciennes 1847 FAO Species Fact Sheet Retrieved April 2012 Thornton amp Moss 2021 p 30 a b Thornton amp Moss 2021 p 19 a b c Yokoyama Satoshi in Japanese 2013 Seaweeds Edible Available and Sustainable 資源と生業の地理学 Kaiseisha press pp 111 112 ISBN 9784860992743 in Japanese Japanese Fishery The Japan Magazine 2 3 147 July 1911 cont August 1911 Fishery II pp 228 232 Yokoyama provides illustrated comparison of Fig 4b sashiami or gillnets with two types of pound nets 4c Yukitsuna ami introduced 1847 c 1850 almost End of Edo and 4d kaku ami c 1885 1890 mid Meiji 10 11 Cf Imada Mitsuo 1991 Nishin gyoka retsuden hyakumangoku jidai no ninaite tachi ニシン漁家列伝 百万石時代の担い手たち cited by Yokoyama 2013 p 133 Referred to as Million koku era in Japanese literature 13 measuring the catch by traditional volume measure Or decade of the Showa 30s 1955 10 Hebert KP 2011 Scuba Diving Surveys Used to Estimate Pacific Herring Egg Deposition in Southeastern Alaska In Pollock NW ed Diving for Science 2011 Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences 30th Symposium Dauphin Island AL AAUS 2011 Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved 2013 04 02 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Dean Cornelia 3 November 2006 Study Sees Global Collapse of Fish Species New York Times Retrieved 9 February 2010 Patrick Sullivan Gary Deghi and C Michael Hogan Harbor Seal Study for Strawberry Spit Marin County California Earth Metrics file reference 10323 BCDC and County of Marin January 23 1989 a b O Clair Rita M and O Clair Charles E Pacific herring Southeast Alaska s Rocky Shores Animals pg 343 346 Plant Press Auke Bay Alaska 1998 ISBN 0 9664245 0 6 Mackovjak 2022 p 19 Mackovjak 2022 pp 19 25 Mackovjak 2022 pp 21 24 Rounsefell 1935 p 19 Mackovjak 2022 pp 19 20 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 20 a b Hourston amp Haegele 1980 pp 6 Mackovjak 2022 pp 146 153 Mackovjak 2022 pp 224 229 a b Wright amp Chythlook 1985 p 1 a b c d Hourston amp Haegele 1980 pp 6 7 Mackovjak 2022 p 144 a b c d Alaska Sea Grant College Program 2001 Funk Fritz ed Herring Expectations for a New Millennium Proceedings of the Symposium Herring 2000 Expectations for a New Millennium Anchorage Alaska USA February 23 26 2000 University of Alaska Sea Grant College Program p 725 Atlantic herring roe which is generally smaller and softer than Pacific herring roe has never been considered suitable for salted kazunoko But seeking a substitute for high priced Pacific roe in the 1980s processors tried Atlantic roe for flavored kazunoko and found it acceptable a b c Tomoko Furukawa 2005 kazunoko 数の子 Pacific herring ovary Shokuzai kenkō daijiten 食材健康大事典 in Japanese Gomyō Toshiharu supervising editor Tubingen Jiji Press p 345 ISBN 9784788705616 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 148 a b Bledsoe Gleyn Rasco Barbara 2006 Ch 161 Caviar and Fish Roe In Hui Yiu H ed Handbook of Food Science Technology and Engineering CRC Press p 161 11 ISBN 978 0 8493 9849 0 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 273 a b c Blackburn James E Jackson Peter B April 1982 Seasonal Composition and Abundance of Juvenile and Adult Marine Finfish and Crab Species in the Nearshore Zone of Kodiak Island s Eastside during April 1978 through March 1979 p 412 in Outer Continental Shelf Environmental Assessment Program Final Report of Principal Investigators Vol 54 February 1987 Anchorage Alaska US Dept Comm a b Schroeder amp Kookesh 1990 pp 2 7 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 15 17 Hourston amp Haegele 1980 p 7 Schroeder amp Kookesh 1990 p 4 a b c Schroeder amp Kookesh 1990 p 6 a b c d Mackovjak 2022 p 15 Quoted from Etienne Marchand the Solide expedition of 1790 92 41 from Aurel Krause visit on April 25 1882 1881 82 expedition 42 and Jefferson Franklin Moser 42 43 Schroeder amp Kookesh 1990 pp 6 7 18 22 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 275 Exxon 1991 Sugar Wrack Laminaria saccharina A Field Guide to Prince William Sound Exxon Company U S A Arctic Environmental Information and Data Center Alaska pp 6 7 Mouritsen Ole G in Danish 2013 Seaweeds Edible Available and Sustainable Translated by Johansen Mariela photography by Jonas Drotner Mouritsen University of Chicago Press p 250 ISBN 9780226044538 Springer Yuri Hays Cynthia Carr Mark Mackey Megan 1 March 2007 Ecology and Management of the Bull KelpNereocystis luetkeana A Synthesis with Recommendations for Future Research PDF With assistance from Ms Jennifer Bloeser Ecological Management of Kelp Forests in Oregon and Washington p 30 citing Dr Michael S Stekoll persona communication 2006 Turner 2004 p 199 Mackovjak 2022 p 274 Mackovjak 2022 pp 273 275 a b c Mackovjak 2022 p 276 a b Mackovjak 2022 pp 277 279 Alaska Department of Fish and Game set quotas of 100 and 75t each for the others respectively 53 and total 274 tons trimmed weight was reported for 1966 valued at 600 000 for an open season the lasted only an hour or hour and a half 54 Mackovjak 2022 pp 279 280 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 279 a b Mackovjak 2022 p 280 a b Mackovjak 2022 pp 281 Woodford Riley May 2020 Record Herring Event Highlights Roe on Kelp Fishery Alaska Fish amp Wildlife News Alaska Department of Fish and Game Cf Alaska DFG article with photographs 60 Mackovjak 2022 pp 219 237 Welch Laine 28 March 2022 As demand for Alaska herring roe plummets industry seeks markets for the wasted fish Alaska Dispatch News Ross Izzy Ross 26 March 2023 No commercial Togiak sac roe herring fishery this spring after years of a shrinking market KDLG Dillingham Endangered Species Act 16 January 2023 Announcement of initiation of status review for Southeast Alaska Pacific herring New Puget Sound herring research Puget Sound Institute 2018 02 05 Retrieved 2019 09 01 OECD Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development 2009 Kazunoko Multilingual Dictionary of Fish and Fish Products John Wiley amp Sons p 532 ISBN 9781444319422 a b Herring Seafood Leader 9 4 142 April 1989 The Japanese used to purchase only roe from Pacific insurgence of the European herring stocks has led to a secondary market in Atlantic roe Atlantic herring roe is generally less crunchy and tangy than Pacific herring roe and so sells for less a b JETRO 1991 Nōrin suisanbutsu no bōeki shuyō 100 hinmoku no kokunai kaigai jijyō 農林水産物の貿昜 主要 100品目の国内 海外事情 in Japanese Japan External Trade Organization pp 480 567 主として味付けかずのこの原料として利用されるにしんの卵は大西洋産 正月の贈答用などに用いられるにしん卵等は太平洋産である lower grade as per substitute 32 secondary market 69 and the remark that only the Pacific herring roe is considered suitable for New Year s gift giving in Japan 70 Emami Ali Queirolob Lewis E Johnston Richard 1994 Monopsony Trade Restrictions and International Markets for Intermediate Seafood Products The U S Canada Herring Dispute in Antona Martine Cantanzano Joseph Sutinen John G eds Proceedings of the Sixth Conference of the International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade PDF vol 2 Institut francais de recherche pour l exploitation de la mer p 590 n1 Andreasen Esben Rasco Barbara 1998 Popular Buddhism in Japan Shin Buddhist Religion and Culture University of Hawaii Press p 170 ISBN 9780824820282 Citing Hazama D O Komeiji J O 1986 Okage sama De pp 263 5 Mouritsen Ole G in Danish Styrbaek Klavs 2023 Rogn Meget mere end rogn Gyldendal A S Frugtbarhed og mange born ISBN 9788702392029 in Danish BibliographyHourston A S Haegele C W 1980 Herring on Canada s Pacific Coast PDF Ottawa Canadian Special Publications of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Department of Fisheries and OceansMackovjak James 2022 Chapter 1 Alaska Herring The Basics Chapter 9 Genesis and Management of Alaska s Ro Herring Fishery Alaska Herring History The Story of Alaska s Herring Fisheries and Industry University of Alaska Press ISBN 9781646423439 Rounsefell George A 1935 Fluctuation in the Supply of Herring Culpea pallasii in Southeastern Alaska Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries 47 15 56 Schroeder Robert F Kookesh Matthew January 1990 The Subsistence Harvest of Herring Eggs in Sitka Sound 1989 PDF Technical Paper No 173 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Thornton Thomas F Moss Madonna L 2021 Herring and People of the North Pacific Sustaining a Keystone Species University of Washington Press ISBN 9780295748306Turner Nancy J 2004 Plants of Haida Gwaii Illustrated by Florence Edenshaw Davidson Winlaw B C Sono Nis Press ISBN 1 55039 144 5Wright John M Chythlook Molly B March 1985 Subsistence harvest of herring spawn on kelp in the Togiak District of Bristol Bay PDF Technical Paper No 116 Juneau Alaska Alaska Department of Fish and GameExternal links editThe Hakai Herring School website Alaska Fish and Game species writeup U S Fish and Wildlife Service species profile Pacific herring Abundance age sex and size statistics for Pacific herring in the Togiak district of Bristol Bay 2004 by Chuck Brazil Hosted by the Alaska State Publications Program Kodiak management area herring sac roe fishery harvest strategy for the 2007 season by Jeff Wadle Geoff Spalinger and Joe Dinnocenzo Hosted by the Alaska State Publications Program Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacific herring amp oldid 1215518488, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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