NOAA Study Shows Seafloor Recovery from Fishing Gear Impacts in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary Slow, Unstable
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University of Connecticut and California State University researchers
have found that seafloor communities in a restricted fishing area in
NOAA's Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary show evidence of
recovery from chronic fishing gear impacts. The finding is significant
because bottom trawlers, dredges and certain gillnets, for example, can
alter the ocean floor and benthic ecosystems that provide food and
shelter for fish and other marine species.
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NOAA Science Center: No Overfishing Occurring in any of Seven Skate Species
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In a letter dated January 13, 2011, Science and Research Director Nancy B. Thompson, Ph.D. advised NOAA Fisheries Regional Director Pat Kurkul that "[b]ased on new survey data collected through 2010 ... overfishing was not occurring in any of the seven skate species." Dr. Thompson noted that only "one skate species remains overfished (thorny)."
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The Northeast Consortium calls for proposals for collaborative research programs
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The Northeast Consortium invites proposals for collaborative research programs that address issues in fisheries and marine science focused within the Georges Bank and Gulf of Maine ecosystem. Proposals are invited for Project Development awards only.
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Winter storms don't undermine global warming science, climate experts say
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Democratic pollster Douglas Schoen opined in The Washington Post after last winter's big snowstorms in Washington that "the weather ... makes it more difficult to argue that global warming is an imminent danger."
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Research Proposals Sought under the 2012 Mid-Atlantic Research Set-Aside (RSA) Program
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NOAA Fisheries Service in cooperation with the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, is soliciting proposals under the 2012 Mid-Atlantic Research Set-Aside (RSA) Program that address research priorities for the summer flounder, scup, black sea bass, Loligo squid, Illex squid, Atlantic mackerel, butterfish, and bluefish, and tilefish fisheries.
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