Why a Canadian herring population is dying off 
By Paul Withers CA Source: CBC News 3/23/2020
Paul Withers
Canadian scientists have delivered a calamitous fish stock assessment in the southern Gulf of St Lawrence, predicting the spring spawning herring population is on a trajectory toward extinction in 10 years.

The grim projection was shared earlier this month by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, just days before the spring herring fishery is set to open in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, P.E.I. and Quebec.

Predation is killing six of 10 older fish each year and a warming ocean is knocking down a critical food source for young.
 

Spring spawners, as the population is called, have been in trouble for many years, but data gathered in 2018 and 2019 indicates very high levels of mortality, said Francois Turcotte, a marine biologist with DFO based in Moncton, N.B.

"So many fish are being removed, and not enough are coming in, that the biomass can only decrease," he said in an interview last week.
Seals, tuna and warm water

Scientists believe the high level of natural mortality is the result of predation by grey seals and bluefin tuna, and are discounting other potential causes like disease or unreported fishing.

Warming ocean temperatures in the gulf are also contributing to the downward spiral. Herring larvae feed on a cold-water species of energy-rich microorganisms known as zooplankton. That zooplankton is declining.

Turcotte said fewer young are surviving to spawn, meaning as adults die off they are not being replaced.

The size of a fish population is measured by spawning stock biomass, which is an estimate of the weight of all the fish old enough to spawn. The spring spawner biomass is estimated at 33,000 tonnes, down from 200,000 tonnes in the 1980s and 1990s.

The DFO stock assessment predicts that at current levels, in 10 years the biomass will fall to 100 to 1,000 tonnes, a threshold where a population is so low it can be wiped out by random events, like extreme weather.

 
Lake St. Lawrence Herring, Lake Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4426Female Angler Snags World Record Blue Tilapiaunderwatertimes2011-02-14US
4427Wild salmon sea lice linked to B.C. fish farmsCBC News2011-02-09US
4428Lice-eating wrasse to be put alongside salmon in aquaculture cagesfis2011-01-27NO
4429Global fish consumption hits record highBBC News2011-02-01UK
4430Salmon farmers call for financial compensation for fish lost to seal attacksheraldscotland2021-02-18UK
4431По дну Черного моря течет одна из самых полноводных рек в миреzen.yandex2020-12-28RU
4432Canadian Wins $100K in Bassmaster Elite TournamentFish'n Canada2021-03-01CA
4433It's time to think about hauling ice fishing shacks awayCBC News2021-03-04CA
4434National Chief Bellegarde urges Ottawa to rethink Mi'kmaq fisheries decisionCBC News2021-03-05CA
4435Want to know how fish see the world? Build them a TV…sciencefocus2021-02-18CA
4436Prestigious Journal Validates Asian Carp Researcunderwatertimes2011-01-05US
4437Japan new year tuna sale sets price recordBBC News2011-01-05JP
4438Catfish Study Reveals Importance Of Being 'Similar But Different'underwatertimes2011-01-05BR
4439Thousands of fish washed up dead in Chicago in latest bizarre mass animal deathsmirror2011-01-11UK
4440NOAA To Work With Six Nations To Address Illegal, Unreported, And Unregulated FishingUnderwatertimes2011-01-12CA
4441The freshwater fish fighttheguardian2011-01-17UK
4442Closed-pen salmon farm launches in B.C.CBC News2011-01-17CA
4443Meet the robotic ghost knifefish, the cyberfish who will tame the roiling seasgizmodo2011-01-19US
4444Chef creates meals featuring invasive Asian carpMilwaukee Journal Sentinel2011-01-23CA
4445Bass Angler Christiana Bradley Has Learning Experience In Floridaunderwatertimes2011-01-25US
4446Монстр из Ахтубыyandex2020-09-11RU
4447Young Islander builds ice fishing shack, hopes for winter catchesCBC News2021-02-21CA
4448Monduran monster's a world recordnews-mail2010-12-23AU
4449Wild Salmon Decline Was Not Caused By Sea Lice From Farm Salmonunderwatertimes2010-12-13US
4450Angler's 405.2-pound yellowfin tuna is largest ever caughtpetethomasoutdoors2010-12-06US

215 216 217 177 of [218 - pages.]