International Pacific Halibut Commission

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File:John & Bob on Arthur H.jpg
Engineer and Biological Aide on chartered trawler, MV Arthur H., Alaska, 1962.

The International Pacific Halibut Commission is an International Fisheries Organization, having Canada and the United States of America as its members, responsible for the management of stocks of Pacific halibut or Hippoglossus stenolepis within the Pacific waters of its member states. It was founded in 1923 by an international treaty.

It has carried out many activities including the use of chartered commercial fishing vessels to undertake bottom trawls and long-lining for sampling fish stocks, banding fish, recording water temperatures using bathythermographs, etc., in the North Pacific and Bering Sea for many years. Also, staff have been stationed at on-shore fish processing plants to sample catches, remove otoliths to determine the age of the fish, and many other research activities.

Its offices were located on the campus of the University of Washington until November, 2010. The IPHC has since moved its offices to Interbay in Seattle.

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