logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/22/2024 2:25:55 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
4851British man 'shocked and appalled' by fly fishing technique in The CrownCBC News2020-11-23CA
4852Australia deploys new underwater technology to fight illegal fishingsea food source2020-11-23AU
4853A proposed fish farm in the Gulf of Mexico is making waveswink news2020-11-23MX
4854Climate Change Is Sending Some Species the Wrong Wayhakai magazine2020-11-23US
4855Fish tales: a pandemic adventure across the US brings two anglers to Iowaweare iowa2020-11-18US
4856Long Island man sues PetSmart after dozens of koi fish diesports grind entertainment2020-11-21US
4857Expedition finds record number of fishes in abyssal deep-seahawaii.edu2020-11-23US
4858Some fish are likely to get caught and recaughtfuturity2020-11-18US
4859Study supports theory that fish fins evolved from gill archesnewatlas2020-11-18US
4860Norwegian report confirms viability of Andfjord’s fish sludge as fertilizer...Undercurrent News2020-11-20NO
4861Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sighttheguardian2020-11-17UK
4862'The Greatest Shoal on Earth': Protecting South Africa's sardine runcnn2020-11-18CA
4863Fears for a million livelihoods in Kenya and Tanzania as Mara River fish die outtheguardian2020-11-10UK
4864'Prevent, discourage, confront': South American states tackle Chinese fishing boatstheguardian2020-11-05UK
4865Going for gold: pet firm reports resurgence in fish-keepingtheguardian2020-11-27UK
4866What do fish eat?yoursun2020-11-25US
4867Over 50,000 salmon escape into wild after fish farm fire in TasmaniaAAP2020-11-23NZ
4868RoboCop Sets Sailhakaimagazine2020-11-18US
4869Pittsburgh man charged with fish traffickingncnewsonline2020-11-16US
4870New ‘fish condo’ off East Providence coast bustling with activitywpri2020-12-01US
4871Vancouver Island film maker has a sockeye’s view of salmon spawning groundalberni valley news2020-11-26CA
4872Multi-link catfish skull may hold key to better underwater robotsnewatlas2020-12-01US
4873Transport Canada floats new user fee for pleasure craftCBC News2020-11-09CA
4874Organized crime in the fisheries sector threatens a sustainable ocean economynature2020-11-11US
4875A fish’s fins may be as sensitive to touch as fingertipsscience news2020-11-03CA

214 215 216 194 of [217 - pages.]