Daily Archives: September 12, 2013

Pink salmon reaching Fraser River in massive numbers, has raised questions about the possible role of controversial Haida experiment

Jonn Matsen, co-ordinator of the Squamish Streamkeepers said the number of fish in the river is astonishing. “There’s a ridiculous number of pinks,” he said. “It’s a thousand times more than there should be.” Dr. Matsen said he wondered if the Haida experiment, which saw 100 tonnes of iron sulphate dumped north of Haida Gwaii, could have caused the huge returns. The Haida experiment is under investigation by Environment Canada because ocean fertilization is not allowed under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act. more@globeandmail 22:20

Never Ever Start a Trip on a Friday! – Friday the 13th – Supersitions at Sea – This is Fish Radio. I’m Laine Welch

FISH-With-Mic-Logo-GRAPHIC-303-x-400-e1360148757522Friday is the worst day to set out to sea, while Sunday is best.  A life of danger and uncertainty has seafarers observing a strict set of rules steeped in myth and superstition. more@fishradio  20:38

Michigan men charged with federal wildlife crimes – Aquarium owner accused of collecting Keys fish, selling them

The owner of Michigan aquarium-supply firm made two business trips the Florida Keys in 2011, towing a boat behind a specially equipped van, to collect live saltwater fish and corals for sale, a federal indictment says. The charges were latest in a series of cases involving several defendants accused of knowingly collecting or buying fish harvested in waters within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. more@keysnet  20:17

Massive Molasses Spill Devastates Honolulu Marine Life – “Everything down there is dead.”

That’s one stunning quote from Hawaii News Now’s latest report about the devastating damage that’s been done to the marine life off Honolulu’s Sand Island by 233,000 gallons of molasses that were spilled into Honolulu harbor on Monday. more@npr  16:48

NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo declares federal fishing limits on flounder absurd – Will Sue Government if Necessary -Video

MONTAUK –  Gov. Andrew Cuomo visited the commercial fishing fleet in Montauk today to declare that federal fishing limits on flounder were absurd. He added that if Congress does not listen, he will consider suing in federal court. [email protected] 16:22

Movement of marine life follows speed and direction of climate change

The researchers report in the journal Science the first evidence that sea creatures consistently keep pace with “climate velocity,” or the speed and direction in which changes such as ocean temperature move. They compiled 43 years of data related to the movement of 128 million animals from 360 species living around North America, including commercial staples such as lobster, shrimp and cod. They found that 70 percent of shifts in animals’ depth and 74 percent of changes in latitude correlated with regional-scale fluctuations in ocean temperature. [email protected]  16:12

The Study Paper Marine Taxa Track Local Climate Velocities  here

Concerned in British Columbia: Is salmon food being threatened?

Harvesting of — could have unintended consequences for local marine life. Of particular concern, she said, is the sand lance, a small, slim fish that she said lays its eggs in the washed up seaweed at high tide, right at the same time as the annual harvest takes place. The sand lance is an important food for salmon. more@pqbnews  16:03

Second meeting set in U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Services sea turtle habitat proposal

The critical habitat designation is a reaction to lawsuits from special interest environmental groups and more research is needed before any such action is taken. The Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to designate 739 miles of oceanfront beaches along the coast of six states as critical habitat for nesting loggerheads. It includes 96 miles in North Carolina, including all of Bogue Banks, Onslow Beach and Topsail Island. [email protected] 15:52

With fish stocks rebounding, Congress mulls steps to ease catch limits

“At a time when fisheries jobs and the economic activity they create are critical to keeping our coastal communities alive, it is important that we ensure the laws and regulations that govern these activities are not unnecessarily rigid,” he said during a Wednesday hearing on renewing the Magnuson-Stevens Act. more@montomeryadvisor  13:47

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There hasn’t been a haddock fishery in this province in decades, but that might be about to change.

863a4ac9dc_64635696_o2Things are changing as rapidly off the Canadian coast of the Atlantic as they are off the New England coast, and the more I listen, the more I realize, our NOAA/NMFS ENGO driven government agencies are becoming climate denialists. more@thefisheriesbroadcast  11:08

Coast Guard rescues three people from a 15-foot commercial fishing vessel in the vicinity of Egg Bank, St. Helena Sound, S.C.

uscg-logoCoast Guard watchstanders in Sector Charleston command center were notified of the incident by Beaufort County Dispatch that a 15-foot commercial fishing vessel had capsized. more@uscgnews  10:03

New Report Supports Pallone Position on Flexibility in Fisheries Management

Today’s hearing supported Pallone’s long-time call for revisions to the Magnuson Stevens Act that will take into account more socioeconomic concerns to ensure that the livelihood of fishermen and fishing communities are not unnecessarily hurt because of arbitrary guidelines. [email protected]  09:50

The Canadian Cod Crisis: “There’s millions of cod. The cod is back, and it’s killing the crab and shrimp species,”

Atlantic-Cod-Dieter-CraasmannLiberal leadership candidate Danny Duma­resque says fishermen need to catch a lot more cod very quickly or run the risk of a fisheries collapse that will be “10 times what it was in 1992.” But fisheries scientist George Rose says the kind of thinking coming from Dumaresque and other people in the fishing industry is total hubris and recklessly irresponsible. Essentially, Dumaresque is worried that as cod stocks rebound, they’ll eat too much crab and shrimp — species that form the backbone of the modern Newfoundland and Labrador fishery. more@the telegram 09:42

Bizarre mass die-off of starfish in the waters around Vancouver, British Columbia baffles experts

Jonathan Martin, a research associate at Simon Fraser University, has observed the mass die-off of both Sunflower seastars (Pycnopodia helianthoides) and morning sun stars (Solaster dawsoni) and has published photos and videos of the event on Flickr and YouTube. more@redorbit   09:25

Michigan Department of Natural Resources prepares for possible Asian carp invasion

Silver and bighead carp, more commonly referred to as species of the infamous Asian Carp, haven’t been found recently in Michigan’s waters, according to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. That doesn’t mean they won’t eventually swim their way into Michigan’s lakes or rivers, like the St. Joseph River. [email protected] 09:09

Pacific Fishery Management Council Meeting – September 12-17, 2013 – will be streamed live in “listen-only mode” (audio) on the internet.

The live audio will be broadcast starting on Thursday, September 12 at 8 a.m. Mountain time.  Get the September meeting agendaWebinar Registration here  Webinar ID is: 626-030-015  08:56

Red King Crab Serial Killers – This is Fish Radio. I’m Stephanie Mangini.

Dive into Womens Bay, an inlet located on the island of Kodiak and you will find a graveyard of lost or abandoned crab pots or as NOAA’s diving biologist Pete Cummiskey likes to call “Ghost Pots more@fishradio  08:28

My View: Nancy’s farewell to Richard Gaines by Nancy Gaines

As I get ready to lock the door behind me and drive down the gravel lane away from Quarry Street, I carry a profound gratitude for the 14 years Richard and I had here, and the people who helped him make these the best years of his life.

Richard lived his hopes and dreams and, yes, battles (he loved them, too) right here. Gloucester was where he found his earliest pleasures, a child at his family summer home on the corner of Atlantic and Moorland in the post-war 1940s.

He frolicked in the ocean, fished from the rocks, hustled hot dogs at Bob’s Clam Shack. He came back in the ‘80s with his babies, the fourth generation of Gaineses’ here, who waddled in the Good Harbor tidal pools and Pebble Beach. He would bring his granddaughter, Anna, here in 2011 to make the fifth.

We had our first “date” on Bass Rocks. His children scattered his ashes there.

Read more here  01:46