Alaska's Pollock Fishery: A Model of Sustainability

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2019
  • Alaska pollock is the second largest fishery in the world and the biggest in the United States by volume. It’s worth an estimated $1.9 billion, supporting nearly 30,000 U.S. jobs. It’s also recognized worldwide for being well-managed and sustainable.
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Комментарии • 53

  • @brendanhoffmann8402
    @brendanhoffmann8402 Год назад +9

    I even eat Alaska pollock here in southern Australia, we get it shipped in. It's very cheap. I love it, a classic mild flavour.

    • @treasuretrails
      @treasuretrails 8 месяцев назад

      Eating some right now here in New Zealand, damn good fish.

  • @jackmolan8198
    @jackmolan8198 4 года назад +9

    A+ over all for your various images, information, it's clear, simple, not easy to do. EXCELLENT...Only one suggestion, I would like to see the video in a new category. Pets and Animals just don't cut it! Thanks!

  • @jeffyoung60
    @jeffyoung60 3 года назад +15

    Ha, ha, ha! A 1973 encyclopedia described Pollack as a weak-fleshed fish of little commercial value. That was when cod and halibut were still in relative plentiful supply. But in the 1980s those fish populations began crashing due to over-fishing. It wasn't a waste. There was just too much demand and not enough survivable populations. Then the ingenious Japanese discovered that Pollack could readily substitute for cod and halibut in traditional fish processing manufacturing industry. The cat was out of the bag quickly. At the time the estimated population of Pollack in the Bering Sea was something around an astronomical 30 billion. It greatly helped that Pollack breed like rabbits. It greatly helped that there's over 700 boat wrecks lying at the bottom of the stormy Bering Sea and surrounding ocean. It makes for wonderful, safe breeding grounds for Pollack.
    Everyone wanted to get in on the new, nearly limitless bounty of Pollack. Pollack was plentiful and cheaper than the declining cod and halibut. The United States is in the best geographical location to exploit the Pollack populations. Russia came in next. But everyone remembers the Passenger Pigeon catastrophe where nothing is really limitless. So wise government fishing restrictions were quickly put into place, helping to preserve Pollack populations at a steady 12 to 15 billion, enough to keep the population going while still freeing up huge quantities of Pollack to make fishing it profitable. Even so, a self-contained fishing, processing, packaging, freezing, and storage large ship like the ALASKA reports that after all overhead and wages are accounted for, the net profit is comparable to the gross sale of Pollack roe (fish eggs) sold in Japan. For some reason the Japanese find Pollack roe a delicacy. But thanks to weak-fleshed Pollack, we still have our fish burgers at the main fast food burger chains and fish and chips at the thousands of restaurants around the nation. I just dined on four, Alaskan Pollack fish fillet burgers this past Friday lunch and dinner. Without Pollack I might be paying top dollar for a traditional cod or halibut processed fish burger or else dining on artificial fish made out of soybeans.

    • @lawson1ification
      @lawson1ification Месяц назад

      I live in the Pacific Northwest and as long as I can stand on two feet there's no reason I would eat a soybean fish.

    • @lawson1ification
      @lawson1ification Месяц назад

      And if you cut both my feet off I'd quit eating fish before I ate a soybean fish

  • @yprainn7788
    @yprainn7788 5 месяцев назад

    I'm watching this whilst eating Alaska Pollock.

  • @connorbryan1655
    @connorbryan1655 3 года назад +3

    Never would of thought so much goes into this. Props for them for caring for the fish and not just fishing them extinct and taking the time to study it good for them I know my community wouldn’t give a fuck they’d freeze the fish 5 times lmao😂

  • @calebradell2511
    @calebradell2511 4 года назад +5

    This is good!

  • @jenniferpurdy-brown8194
    @jenniferpurdy-brown8194 2 года назад +1

    i love polok

  • @f1s2hg3
    @f1s2hg3 Год назад

    How do you price your life support

  • @abrahamkentton3017
    @abrahamkentton3017 2 года назад +5

    I'm going to get a fish sandwich after this video

    • @Dredziowata
      @Dredziowata Год назад

      not KFC thats interesting you ...

  • @viethuynh6808
    @viethuynh6808 10 месяцев назад

    Fish taste so good and it’s healthier than beef. I eat pollock from the Walmart and fish at McDonald’s.

  • @greymooose1000
    @greymooose1000 4 года назад +11

    Yeah, Pollack is sustainable, but what about all the other fishes that get decimated while you're trawling and patting your own back?

    • @getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917
      @getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917 2 года назад

      The FISHERY (not just the fish) is sustainable. Bycatch is considered within the definition....

  • @cliffcampbell8827
    @cliffcampbell8827 3 года назад +4

    I heard "good science" mentioned. I know this might sound snarky but it' not intended that way so, can someone provide an example of "bad science?" Oh, and please remember that there is a difference between "science" and "blatant lies masquerading as science."

    • @Chicken.
      @Chicken. 2 года назад +2

      Bad science is stuff like the miracle cure all things people claim, which have studies funded by the people who make them and are extremely biased and skew the data.

    • @bluesky6985
      @bluesky6985 Месяц назад +1

      $cience

    • @DS-lk3tx
      @DS-lk3tx 15 дней назад

      Good science is typically said by government boots.
      Seems ironic for the company that supports genocide across the world also seems to care a whole lot about what we eat.

  • @sesundew356
    @sesundew356 3 года назад +5

    Well-managed and sustainable, I think not. Subsistence, sport and commercial fishermen up and down the coast are paying for the mismanagement of the trawl fishery. These fish/crab will never spawn and improve the health of fish stocks, they will never provide for a subsistence way of life and they will never support fishing communities or sport and directed sustainable commercial fishing. This needs to stop
    Over just 7 days, they REPORTED wasting:
    1,279 individual King Salmon
    45 metric tons(99,208 lbs) of Halibut
    136 metric tons (299,828 lbs) of herring
    10,770 individual Opilio crab
    25,739 Bairdi crab
    121 individual King crab
    These numbers all come from the most recent week of data collection(March 14 - March 20, 2021) in the Bering Sea / Aleutian Islands(BSAI).

  • @mansharkplays5390
    @mansharkplays5390 2 года назад +1

    🫡 fish sticks, fish sandwiches and fish nuggets.

  • @bradconley5772
    @bradconley5772 2 года назад +5

    Sustainable? Have you looked at the bycatch numbers of the Alaskan trawl fleet.... Its criminal.

  • @akdonlh9924
    @akdonlh9924 4 месяца назад

    This a blowing smoke up your a%% video where have all of our King salmon go?

  • @TheSilentpigs100
    @TheSilentpigs100 3 года назад +5

    Only if china did this and not overfish

  • @travisblount
    @travisblount 4 года назад +5

    What about bycatch???? You’re killing too many juvenile halibut

    • @Doug-xi2ep
      @Doug-xi2ep 3 года назад +3

      And other species...

    • @Chicken.
      @Chicken. 2 года назад +1

      Did you watch the video, they said they keep it 99% Pollack, which is really good for a fishing industry...

    • @FISHH00KS
      @FISHH00KS 2 года назад +2

      @@Chicken. Your boyfriend SAID he's not cheating on you. Your mom SAID you're smart. People say whatever is needed.

    • @benosick8542
      @benosick8542 2 года назад

      @@FISHH00KS You still weren't paying attention. Every single boat has a NOAA observer on board.

    • @FISHH00KS
      @FISHH00KS 2 года назад

      @@benosick8542 People fall overboard far out at sea all the time.

  • @TheBluesmon
    @TheBluesmon 4 года назад +26

    Trawling can never be sustainable, it's an entirely destructive fishing practice. Leave fishing to small boat fishermen who actually care about the resource, not to mega corporations who only care about profits.

  • @dallaswarren4886
    @dallaswarren4886 Год назад

    They do this once a year lol

  • @MichaelJimmy-yt6vr
    @MichaelJimmy-yt6vr 2 месяца назад +1

    The pollock fishing is not helping us by tossing over valuable king salmon and fish over board and also destroying habitat for salmon and other wildlife

  • @WhereAreTheSquarePants
    @WhereAreTheSquarePants 6 месяцев назад

    If you want sustainable is simple: don't eat fish. Let the numbers grow up and ecosystem rebalance itself. Is a stupid simple idea.