There are two groups. Indian and non-Indian. The Indian includes (should) all Treaty Tribes, commercial (net and troll), subsistence, ceremonial, and recreational. The NI includes WA catch by commercial, recreational, and take-home. For sharing purposes the catch includes salmon produced in the Bolt Case Area, which is Grays Harbor, the Coast, and Puget Sound. I don't know the details of Columbia River sharing.

So, if (by agreed-to stock distributions) a Green River Chinook is taken by in an Area 7A gill net fishery on Fraser Sockeye it counts against the Green River "share". If a Green River Chinook is taken off a charter boat out of Westport its adult equivalent number is counted against Green share.

There are what are referred to as unavoidable impacts. This would mean that fish taken in the Fraser fishery would come off the top as there is no way to avoid them without foregoing the sockeye and pink. This is ameliorated by the time and location of the fishery where few Chinook occur and are further reduced by mesh sizes and release strips.

It is rather obvious that WDFW needs to invest in some serious education.