Izzy Ross hosts the Fish Report on July 1, 2021.
A commercial fisherman has died after a vessel sank in the south end of Nushagak Bay on Thursday morning with three people on board. Authorities credit Good Samaritans on the scene with helping in the rescue.
Nushagak fleet hauls in highest single-day harvest ever, as more than 1.9 million sockeye return to the district
Nushagak District fishermen caught the most fish ever in a single day in the history of the district.
Credit Hope McKenney
Josh Crozby owns and operates the tender Icelander. He and his crew were on the south line of the Nushagak River, about 25 miles downriver from Dillingham. Crozby said the huge swell of salmon caught them by surprise.
A surge of sockeye reached the Nushagak District. The Wood River run has barreled past its 100,000-sockeye threshold, and crews in the district had their
Bristol Bay Fisheries Report: June 23, 2021 kdlg.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kdlg.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
KUAC's Dan Bross talks with Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy climate specialist Rick Thoman about what caused the unusually cold weather in
NOAA’s ‘New Normals’ Climate Data Raises Questions About What’s Normal
Does using 30-year weather averages mask rapid global warming?
By Bob Berwyn and Matt deGrood
May 15, 2021
A bicyclist rides along a flooded street as a powerful storm moves across Southern California on Feb. 17, 2017 in Sun Valley, California. Credit: David McNew/Getty Images
Related
Share this article
When climatologists started standardizing global weather data about 100 years ago, they didn’t know that heat-trapping greenhouse gases were already pushing the planet’s climate inexorably in one direction, off the charts of human experience.
But people like to measure things in understandable segments, so, based on the data it had at the time, the World Meteorological Organization created three-decade climate reference periods they called “climate normals” against which they could measure daily temperatures, unusual heat waves, cold snaps or big rainstorms.