logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/23/2024 8:24:49 AM     
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
4476A fish was caught on camera attacking and eating a baby birdCBC Radio 2021-02-15CA
4477Gender-Bending Fish Problem In Colorado Creek Mitigated By Treatment Plant Upgrade; 'A Canary In A Mine Shaft'Underwatertimes2010-06-21US
4478Sturgeon: On the edge of extinctionindependent2011-10-23UK
4479Scottish salmon scheme nets nature awardBBC News2010-06-04UK
4480Angler lands monster catfish weighing in at a massive 250lbDaily Mail2010-06-04UK
4481Wyoming man earns rare ‘Ultimate Angler’ distinction after catching tenth trophy class fishoilcity news2021-02-10US
4482Gigantic freshwater fish from Amazon found in Caloosahatchee RiverFort Myers News-Press2021-02-11US
4483Fish Swallows Eel In Bizarre Video - But There's More To It Than Meets The Eyendtv2021-02-11US
4484Humans push a hulking fish with a chainsaw nose towards oblivionNature2021-02-12US
4485Disabled fish gets special life jacket made to help him swimnypost2021-02-15UK
4486Scientists Set Sail To Study Bluefin Tuna Spawning Grounds In The Oil-Tainted GulfUnderwatertimes2010-05-19CA
4487First As Oregon Man Sentenced For 'In Stream Work', Habitat Alteration; 'Coho Salmon Are A Gift'Underwatertimes2010-04-20US
4488Salmon may have been too tired to navigate Whitehorse fish ladder, research suggestsCBC News2021-02-16CA
4489Asian carp may be in Lake MichiganCBC News2010-03-24CA
4490Fish die as Ukrainian authorities empty reservoirkyiv post2010-03-16UA
4491'Chemical cocktail' caused fish mutations: reportThe Sunshine Coast Daily2010-03-15AU
4492Do fish have feelings too? It's a slippery question for sciencedaily mail2010-03-08CA
4493Canada border now has its own exhibit at the Aquarium of NiagaraWGRZ2021-02-22US
4494Charleston angler lands monster trout from wheelchairwvgazettemail2021-02-06US
4495Fish Use 'Secret' Ultraviolet Vision To Distinguish Between Speciesunderwatertimes2010-02-28AU
4496Canal search locates no Asian carpupi2010-02-18US
4497Amid carp threat, a call to unhookwsj2010-02-17CA
4498UN Turns To Forensic Science To Help Combat Illegal Fishing; 'We Need To Push The Envelope'Underwatertimes2010-02-01IT
4499A nature walk on the Oyster River and some non-retention fishingcampbell river mirror2019-10-11CA
4500Catching Pink Salmonislandfishermanmagazine2020-08-05CA

214 215 216 179 of [217 - pages.]