Kenai King Counts
The Kenai River is home to the largest strain of king salmon in the world, including the world record 97-pound trophy. Managing these giants is a complex task. ADF&G uses sonar counters to track both early-run and late-run king salmon, implementing adaptive regulations to ensure these legendary fish survive for future generations.
Large Fish Sonar (>75cm)
Tech filters out smaller species, ensuring counts represent adult spawning king salmon.
Adaptive Regulations
Daily counts determine if bait is allowed, if retention is closed, or if catch-and-release is active.
Dual Run Windows
Tracks the early run in May/June and the massive late run throughout July.
From the River
Live King Salmon Sonar Charts
Compare the current season's early-run and late-run king salmon counts. Use the filters to view historical cumulative and daily charts.
Early Run (May 16 - Jun 30)
Late Run (Jul 1 - Aug 20)
How ADF&G Counts Kenai Kings
Counting king salmon in the glacial waters of the Kenai River presents unique challenges. High turbidity (glacial flour) makes visual counting impossible. Instead, ADF&G operates sonar transducers on both the north and south banks at River Mile 14 (historically RM 9).
To ensure the sonar data isolates adult spawning chinook, the system uses spatial filtering and acoustic size thresholds. Technicians analyze the echo returns to measure the length of passing fish. Only fish exceeding 75 centimeters (mid-eye to tail fork) are counted as large king salmon. This methodology ensures management decisions are backed by the exact spawning cohort that matters most for conservation.
Early Run vs. Late Run
The Kenai hosts two genetically distinct runs of king salmon, each spawning in different habitats and requiring customized management models.
Early Run (May 16 - June 30)
Early-run fish typically head to tributaries like the Killey River or Funny River. These runs are smaller in volume (historical goal of 2,800 to 5,600 fish) but contain iconic, aggressive salmon. Because of lower run sizes, the early run is strictly managed with bait prohibitions and slot limits.
Late Run (July 1 - August 10)
Late-run kings spawn in the mainstem Kenai River. This run is much larger, with an escapement goal of 14,200 to 30,000 large fish. It attracts intense sport fishing interest, but runs are heavily scrutinized by sonar to prevent overharvest, especially during commercial sockeye net openings.
Slot Limits & Conservation Goals
King salmon conservation is the highest priority on the Kenai River. In response to declining counts of giant, multi-ocean fish, ADF&G enforces strict regulations:
- Slot Limit Protection: Mid-season emergency orders often restrict retention to fish under 34 inches, requiring the live release of all large spawners.
- Bait Prohibitions: If sonar projections show a risk of falling below the minimum escapement threshold, bait is prohibited, allowing only artificial, single-hook lures to reduce injury rates.
- Personal Use Closures: If the sport fishery is closed to retention, the Cook Inlet commercial drift gillnet and personal use dipnetting fisheries are adjusted to minimize king salmon catch.
Techniques for Kenai Kings
Angling for Kenai kings requires heavy tackle, precision boat control, and infinite patience. Common methods used by guides include:
Backtrolling Plugs: Drift boats and powerboats backtroll plug lures (like Kwikfish K15, K16, or Flatfish) against the current. The action of the plug drives king salmon to strike out of aggression.
Backbouncing Eggs: When bait is permitted, guides backbounce cured salmon roe along the river bottom, letting the scent trail draw fish out of deep holes.
Tidal Fishing: Fishing the lower river during tide changes targets fresh, sea-run kings entering the river system. These fish are highly energetic and strike readily.
Historical Kenai King Sonar Totals
| Year | Early Run (RM 14) | Late Run (RM 14) | Status | Management Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 2,450 | 13,800 | Restricted | Low runs triggered bait closures and catch-and-release orders. |
| 2023 | 1,980 | 12,100 | Closed | Strict conservation closures implemented to protect spawning biomass. |
| 2024 | 2,200 | 14,500 | Restricted | Slight run improvement, but late run remained restricted to catch-and-release. |
| 2025 | 2,650 | 15,800 | Met Goal | Late run met the lower escapement threshold, allowing sport angling. |