News
Conservation & Environment
Biologists plant Atlantic salmon eggs in Winterport’s Cove Brook |
Biologists plant Atlantic salmon eggs in Winterport’s Cove Brook |
|
WINTERPORT, Maine — A team of fisheries biologists and volunteers
tromped along the banks of Cove Brook at the end of January, burdened by
hoses and backpacks, funnels and cones and coolers.
For the past several years, Christman has been been planting eggs in the Sandy River drainage of western Maine, with staggering results. Last week, Christman joined biologists from the Bangor Department of Marine Resources office to kick off a multiyear egg-planting project on one of this region’s most sensitive pieces of water — Cove Brook. Cove Brook, which flows into the Penobscot River in Winterport, was among the first Maine waters where Atlantic salmon were listed by the federal government as “endangered” more than a decade ago. And though salmon can swim freely into the stream upon their return from the ocean, biologists are hoping to jump-start a salmon run by seeded the streambed with eggs provided by Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery in Orland. “This is the first time that we’ve [planted] eggs in the Penobscot drainage,” said biologist Norm Dube, who works out of the Bangor office. Read the complete story from The Bangor Daily News
|
|||
|
|
|
||
Monterey Bay's historic "wetfish" industry is under attack by extremist groups who claim overfishing is occurring. Touting studies with faulty calculations, activists are lobbying federal regulators to massively limit fishing, if not ban these fisheries outright. Apparently the facts don’t matter to groups with an anti-fishing agenda






