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
5351Loughborough Lake stocked with 15,000 lake troutGlobal News2019-05-21CA
5352Lacombe residents attempt to reel in world record for oversized fishing lureCBC News2019-05-21CA
5353Alberta Fish and Wildlife looking for illegal pet turtles that pose ‘potential public health hazard’globalnews2019-05-19CA
5354Two tiny turtles targeted in Alberta Fish and Wildlife searchCBC News2019-05-21CA
5355When—and when not—to match the hatch The secret is imitating the food that fish preferoutdoorcanada2019-05-13CA
5356Deadline to remove ice fishing shacks from Sask. lakes approachingGlobal News2019-05-20CA
5357Man faces animal cruelty charges 'for abandoning pet fish'independent2019-04-04US
5358Deformed fish hatched in bitumen-rich water can grow out of some defects: studyCBC News2019-05-17CA
5359Fish with HUMAN teeth found by stunned mum on US beach – 'never seen anything like it'dailystar2019-05-17UK
5360Stoddard County angler state record for black buffalooutdoornewsdaily2019-05-16CA
5361Young Huntsville angler catches first state-record yellow perchFishing News2019-05-16CA
5362One Reply to “Long Mountain Lake, British Columbia”Fish'n Canada2019-05-17CA
5363Swing-jig walleyeoodmag2019-03-14CA
5364National Lifejacket Day – Is It Time for Change?Fish'n Canada2019-05-16CA
53657 Reasons Why Size Matters for Halibutnoaa2019-03-14CA
5366Ancient fish ponds in the Bolivian savanna supported human settlementPLOS2019-05-15BR
5367Walleye, sauger in danger of disappearing from Lake Winnipeg, says Manitoba Wildlife Federationglobalnews2018-10-29CA
5368Fishing changes coming to Lake Winnipeg to help restore fish populationglobalnews2019-05-07CA
5369The mysterious case of the Kamloops Lake monsterCBC News2019-05-13CA
5370'Like a bad dream': Parks Canada fights back against invasive species in KejiCBC News 2019-05-13CA
5371Paddlefish Snagging Harvest Season to Close May 11outdoornewsdaily2019-05-09US
5372Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-02US
5373Ontario Extending its Partnership with Nipissing First Nation to Support Walleye RecoveryOntario's official news source2019-03-12CA
5374Redfish rebound in Gulf of St. Lawrence show no signs of slowdownCBC News2019-05-12CA
5375Lunar Activity Increases Fish CaughtCanadian Angling.com 2019-05-10CA

214 215 216 214 of [217 - pages.]