Near MacDonald Spit, southern end of the Kenai Peninsula.
Sablefish an unusual catch
9-2-14 Caterpillar with reddish tail - Tyonek, Alaska, USA
7-10-14 Stranded sea otter - McDonald Spit, Alaska, USA
Early blueberries in Jakolof Bay, Alaska
This sea lion was seen for over an hour floating along the shore and holding one front and one back flipper in the air.
5-25-14 High spruce pollen McDonald Spit, Alaska, USA
7-11-13 Red phytoplankton bloom - Jakolof Bay, Alaska, USA
7-3-12 Barnacle decline - McDonald Spit, Alaska, USA
An unusual skeleton of a fish was found on the tide line in Kasitsna Bay.
A winter storm lashed the sandy beaches at the mouth of the Ninilchik River with ferocious waves, powerful enough to uproot thousands of razor clams.
STERLING, Alaska — Spent today tramping around the boggy depths of the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, which is about a three-hour drive south of Anchorage. Berg The group went there to see h…
Of all of the aquatic animals that could be collected in a gillnet on the Kenai River, crawfish are some of the least likely. Why? Because they do not naturally occur in the Kenai River or any other river in Alaska. Unfortunately, crawfish have been collected from the lower Kenai River twice in the last four years, and both times they were leftovers from someone’s dinner.
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game found an unexpectedly low number of clams during final surveying, but the agency still plans to monitor them in support of perhaps opening the fishery in years to come.
Alaska does not have opossums, but as of last month Homer had at least one. The mammal, considered an invasive species in Alaska, turned up in a shipping container from Washington state. It later escaped ingniting a flurry of opinions on the fate of this unusual visitor.
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply