Earlier this year, in “On California’s Coast, Farewell to the King Salmon,” Abigail Tucker immersed herself and us in the lives of chinook salmon
For Salmon Fishermen, It’s Fall Chum to the Rescue
For the Yup’ik people of Alaska, fall chum is the answer to a troubled fishing season and a link to the outside world
On California’s Coast, Farewell to the King Salmon
For the first time there’s no fishing for chinook salmon on the California coast. The search is on for why the prize catch is so scarce.
How mercury gets into tuna and other fish in the ocean has scientists searching from the coast to the floor
The problems with fishery management are mounting—and time may be running out
A sea life lover’s guide to seafood
Can fisheries eliminate their debts to nature?
Native Trout Are Returning to America’s Rivers
Native trout are returning to America’s rivers and streams, thanks to new thinking by scientists and conservationists
Curtains for the Pallid Sturgeon
Can biologists breed the “Dinosaurs of the Missouri” fast enough to stave off their extinction?
A coastal community struggles to preserve the North Carolina “mullet blow”
You may not want them on your pizza, but along the Mediterranean they’re a prized delicacy and a cultural treasure
The voracious “Frankenfish” has turned up in the Potomac River, Lake Michigan and a California lake, sparking fears of an ecological Armageddon
In the Iraq war, highly trained cetaceans helped U.S. forces clear mines in Umm Qasr’s harbor
What’s killing the great Atlantic salmon?
Scientists are trying to fathom why Hawaii’s fish population is declining
The Biggest One That Didn’t Get Away
A real fish tale hangs on a monster marlin caught nearly a half-century ago
Never mind its savage reputation. The piranha is a pussycat most of the time
Thanks to 300 volunteers, steelhead are back again, despite highways, offices and a campus
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