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
4551Banned snakehead fish Rocky dies a year after being targeted by state officialsThe Post-Standard 2009-03-23US
4552Carp battle not over yetJournal Sentinel2009-11-27US
4553Biologists save fish after landslideusatoday2009-11-10US
4554It’s Official, Bass Season is Open Now in Ontario’s Zone 20fishncanada2021-02-19CA
4555Gigantic Black Crappie Sets New State Recordfishncanada2021-02-19US
4556Despite pandemic challenges, B.C. lakes stocked with millions of fishvancouversun2021-02-08CA
4557Lillooet River project a major undertaking, says new reportpiquenewsmagazine2019-04-29CA
4558The odd Hawaiianfish that Climb CliffsBBC News2021-02-10US
4559Taranaki workmates land massive fish on tiny 'undersize' boatstuff2021-02-10NZ
4560Fish Kill: Nanosilver Mutates Fish Embryosscientificamerican2009-11-17US
456195-pound catfish caught in OhioOdd News2009-11-11US
4562Farming Fish in the Skyhakaimagazine2021-02-08SG
4563Missouri man fined more than $6,000 for possessing fish over the legal limittbnewswatch2021-02-05US
4564Ask Dr. Universe: How can you tell if a fish is female or male?spokesman2021-02-07US
4565Biologist calls for judicial inquiry on salmon declinectvbc2009-10-03CA
4566How do you train a fish?BBC News 2009-10-02US
4567A New Chemical Method For Distinguishing Between Farmed And Wild Salmonunderwatertimes2009-09-30UK
4568Something fishy happening at Centennial Parksmh2009-09-21AU
4569Fishing for prehistoric quarrybbc2009-08-19US
4570Robotic Applications Eyed As Scientists Decode Mathematics Behind Fish's Lateral-line Systemunderwatertimes2009-08-28CA
4571Seafood surprise: could rebranding this ugly fish as ‘Cornish sole’ make Brits eat it?the guardian2021-02-09UK
4572Florida fishermen catch a Warsaw Grouper that was bigger than a man: ‘It was a monster’Fox News2021-02-17US
4573Four-year study suggests only a third of tagged fish made it through Whitehorse fish ladderyukon news2021-02-09CA
4574Orchid Islanders face charges for catching endangered fish in TaiwanTaiwan News2021-02-10TW
4575Invasive Asian carp is getting a new name and a public makeover to draw more eatersusatoday2009-02-08US

215 216 217 182 of [218 - pages.]