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Welcome to the online home of the Mark, Tag, and Age Laboratory.
The goals of the Mark Tag and Age Lab (MTA) are to provide fisheries managers and researchers with timely, current, and historical biological data to help them manage, preserve, protect, and perpetuate Alaska’s fishery resources. The MTA Lab refines and develops diverse methods and means for providing critical data, develops new applications to address management issues and fosters a broad information exchange.
This mission can be accomplished by recruiting, developing, and retaining a diverse, effectively deployed and well-trained team.
The Mark Lab
tracks Alaska salmon populations by deciphering thermal marks induced in fish
otoliths. We have pioneered many aspects of this low-cost method of mass
marking. The technology we developed has been extended to computer analysis of
salmon scales as well.
The Tag Lab
is the centralized state resource for tracking salmon using microscopic tags.
We maintain a detailed database that is used to quantify survival of fish
groups, timing of runs through commercial fisheries, compliance with Pacific
Salmon Treaty strictures and various biological parameters. The Tag Lab is part
of a coastwide standardized salmon measurement program which also includes
Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and British Columbia.
The Age Determination Unit
is a statewide age reading service which produces data for fish and
invertebrates sampled during commercial, population survey, and research
harvests. Age data help fishery managers set harvest goals by assessing the
ability of a species or a population to sustain harvest. This lab also works
with scientists at similar labs in other states and provinces to standardize
methods and improve techniques, through the Canada-US Groundfish Committee's
Technical Subcommittee - Committee of Age Reading Experts.
The ASL Repository
holds Alaska commercial fisheries historic salmon age-sex-length observations.
The Department is actively reconstructing historic data from many physical
locations as time and funding permits. Results are edited into a standard
format with consistent codes. “Clean” data are archived permanently in the
repository for use by researchers and managers. Visitors may extract data
selected by a number of filters. Small queries may be reported directly in a
browser. Query results that are voluminous may be retrieved as files readable
by Excel, MS Access, and other tools. (It is possible for queries to return
millions of observations, so be aware files could be much beyond Excel capacity
limits.)
This site provides you access to the fisheries data in many of our databases
through various online reports. You can
get a good idea of what we do by surfing through this site. While you're here,
please feel free to contact us
to tell us how to improve our service. If you want to stop in and see us in
person, our lab is located at
10107 Bentwood Place in Juneau, Alaska.
Mailing Address:
State of Alaska
Department of Fish and Game
Mark, Tag and Age Laboratory
PO Box 115526
Juneau, AK 99811-5526
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Shipping Address:
State of Alaska
Department of Fish and Game
Mark, Tag and Age Laboratory
10107 Bentwood Drive
Juneau, AK 99801
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