Scientists Receive Signals From The Atlantic Salmon Highway; 'Helps Us Fill In A Big Gap' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 8/19/2008

For years scientists have struggled to understand the decline and slow recovery of Atlantic salmon, a once abundant and highly prized game and food fish native to New England rivers. Biologists agree that poor marine survival is affecting salmon in the U.S. and Canada, but specific causes are difficult to determine in the ocean. Small acoustic tags and associated technology may provide some answers.

Thirty of 150 Atlantic salmon smolts tagged by NOAA's Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) in Maine's Penobscot River and released in Brewer, Maine in mid-May have crossed a line of underwater receivers off Halifax, Nova Scotia, the first fish to be tracked using the new global Ocean Tracking Network. The concept is similar to an EZ pass for highway toll booths, but for fish.
 

"The tracking system is deployed and working, which is great news," said John Kocik, who is leading the tagging project with colleague James Hawkes at the NEFSC's Maine Field Station in Orono, Maine. "We started ultrasonic tagging programs in Maine in 1997 and have learned much about salmon ecology in the estuaries and bays of the Gulf of Maine," Kocik said. "Our team is really excited that fish from our most recent work in the Penobscot River have been detected so far along on their migration northward. The first data provided valuable information about how long it took Atlantic salmon from the Penobscot River to reach Halifax."

The acoustic transmitters or tags, which are about the size of the silver eraser holder on a pencil, were surgically implanted in May in salmon smolts that were each six to seven inches in length. The surgeries, done at the Eddington Salmon Club, take less than seven minutes. After a brief recovery, the smolts were released at the nearby Brewer Boat Ramp.

 
Penobscot River Salmon, Atlantic Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3801Northland man lands giant tuna with his bare hands 2015-08-10NZ
3802Snakehead Fish Found In Upper Potomac River For First Timewamu2015-08-04US
3803NSU Researcher Discovers New Species Of Fishmiami.cbslocal2015-08-05US
3804We projected a fisheries collapse by 2048 — now there is reason for hopethehill2021-06-08CA
3805Lake Erie fish safe to eat despite harmful algal blooms, reports Division of Wildlife - Outdoors Notescleveland2015-07-30US
3806Great Lakes crustacean can survive being eaten by gobyrecord-eagle2015-07-22CA
3807Heat forces Oregon hatchery workers to truck salmon 100 milesoregonlive2015-07-21US
3808Loch Ness hunter: Have we been catfished by Nessie?wfla2015-07-17UK
3809Feds deny petition from environmentalists to ban cod fishingconcord monitor2015-07-16UK
3810Canada, Russia expected to unite for moratorium on High Arctic fishingthe globeand mail2015-07-15CA
3811Huge herring haul worries rival fishermen, environmentalists from Maine to N.J.NJ2015-07-12US
3812Обмеление Дона ведет к экологической катастрофе на Юге Россииtopcor2021-06-23RU
3813Сможет выполнять большой спектр задач»: как подводный беспилотник «Сарма» усилит гражданский флотАлександр Карпов, Алёна Медведева2021-06-23RU
3814Woman sues over getting stuck in fish trap while tubing in Sacramentomercurynews2021-06-08US
3815Fishmonger reveals man-sized fish recently caught in North SeaFox News2021-06-10US
3816N.J. fishing industry to get another $9.5M for COVID reliefNJ Advance Media for NJ.com 2021-06-09US
3817Giant goldfish swarm in Toronto watersthestar2015-06-25CA
3818Why are bluefin tuna going hungry in a sea full of fish?upi2015-06-22US
3819Spectators Flock To Lock Before Carp Force Permanent ClosureMinneapolis News2015-06-09US
3820Many people think women can't fishdailymail2015-06-08NZ
3821Strange fish fall from the sky in AlaskaCNN Wire2015-06-05US
3822Angler Erik Axner celebrates hauling in this enormous 2.1m halibut fishnews2015-06-04AU
3823Florida Angler Hooks Big Blue Catfish, State Record At 69 Poundsunderwatertimes2015-06-04US
3824Why are goldfish in garden ponds threatening frogs?telegraph2015-06-04UK
3825Sturgeon leaps from river, knocks Florida teen unconscioustulsaworld2015-06-03US

219 220 221 152 of [222 - pages.]