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Get Ready to Take LEAPS for Atlantic Salmon and Journey to the Rivers and Coasts of New England – with Agents of Discovery!

June 28, 2019 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

To celebrate the International Year of the Salmon, NOAA Fisheries has collaborated with the educational tech app, Agents of Discovery, to launch Sea-Run, GO!, a game that teaches youth and the young at heart about wild Atlantic salmon and other migratory fish that inhabit the rivers and coasts of New England.

Become a Special Agent

Similar to the popular Pokémon GO app, Agents of Discovery provides educational “missions” with unique geo-triggered “challenges,” where players learn on the go. On our Sea-Run, GO! “mission” players become special agents who investigate the world of wild Atlantic salmon and migratory fish.

Get Moving

Using a specially adapted curriculum, teachers and informal educators can use this educational app to bring Sea-Run, Go! to their classroom setting. Similar to other mobile games, Sea-Run, Go! gets students moving and learning. They discover facts about endangered fish, fish life cycles, local ecosystems, and learn how they can become active participants in endangered species conservation as they move around the classroom completing each challenge. To find out more about how to incorporate Sea-Run, Go! into your educational setting, check out the lesson plan.

Read the full release here

Salmon studies: North Pacific project trawls for data, funding

May 24, 2019 — “I like to say to people that after 100 years of research, we know a lot about salmon. But what we need to know most, we mostly don’t know,” said fisheries scientist Richard Beamish following the first International Year of the Salmon expedition this year. “We can’t forecast how a changing ocean ecosystem is going to affect salmon.”

Beamish, who organized the expedition and is an emeritus scientist at Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s Pacific Biological Station in Nanaimo, British Columbia, is seeking $1.5 million from governments, the private sector and nonprofit organizations for a 2020 expansion. The program’s researchers would like to carry the program into 2021 to continue their work on North Pacific salmon stocks and climate change.

The 2019 expedition, which was a signature project of the program, kicked off in February with an international winter salmon study in the deepest regions of the Gulf of Alaska. The 2020 expedition would put two Russian trawlers on the water to expand the work of a pilot 25-day single-vessel survey that ran early this year in the Gulf of Alaska.

A bigger survey is in the works for 2021. It would involve five ships surveying the entire North Pacific Ocean. The cost of that project is estimated at $10 million.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

International study to shed light on the mysterious lives of salmon at sea

March 29, 2019 — Scientists know surprisingly little about a salmon’s life outside of their freshwater and nearshore habitats, but an ambitious study is attempting to change that. The International Year of the Salmon put together an expedition with 21 international scientists in the Gulf of Alaska, all in the hopes of understanding more about the mysterious lives salmon lead in the open ocean.

The International Year of the Salmon is a quasi-international organization aimed at bringing attention to all five species of Pacific salmon as warming ocean temperatures affect their survival at sea.

“We will set the conditions that we need for salmon and people to be resilient as we’re dealing with this change in climate,” Mark Saunders explained.

Saunders works for the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission and he helped establish the International Year of the Salmon initiative. The project is brining scientists, fishery managers and policy makers together from Japan, Russia, the U.S. and Canada in the hopes of making salmon management in the Pacific Ocean an international effort.

“We’re looking for those projects that we believe are transformational and then going after the funding to do it,” Saunders added.

One of the projects was a five-week expedition that acted as a first-of-its-kind stock survey for salmon in the Gulf of Alaska.

Read the full story at Alaska Public Media

Happy International Year of the Salmon!

February 4, 2019 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

While 2019 is the year of the pig in the Chinese zodiac, here at NOAA Fisheries we’re celebrating the International Year of the Salmon with our global conservation partners!

We want to thank all of our partners for their hard work and continued support. We would also like to acknowledge the importance of all salmon leaders and the work you are doing to aid salmon.

The International Year of the Salmon (aka IYS) celebrates how salmon connects scientists, Indigenous Peoples, fishermen, policy makers, resource managers, and people across the globe. During this year we will be focusing on the connections that these remarkable fish have to our culture and environment and we’ll be asking people to become partners in keeping our oceans and rivers healthy to support salmon and people in a changing world.

Please check out the growing number of International Year of the Salmon activities and events. From festivals to scientific symposia, we’ll be celebrating salmon conservation and research all across the northern hemisphere in 2019.

One of the first events in our region will be a Maine Science Festival Pop-up Event: Salmon in Maine on February 28, 2019 at the Maine Discovery Museum in Bangor, Maine.

Did you know that each winter from mid-February to early March, biologists “plant” Atlantic salmon eggs into gravel-bottomed Maine rivers and streams? The egg-planting technique has been used in Maine’s salmon rivers for the past decade to help restore and conserve this endangered species. Read the blog and watch the video!

Read the full release here

The Cultural and Historical Importance of Atlantic Salmon in New England

October 29, 2018 — For thousands of years, Atlantic salmon – known as the King of Fish – ran almost every river northeast of the Hudson. And for decades, the first fish caught in Maine’s Penobscot River was actually presented to the president of the United States in a “first fish” ritual.

But overfishing and dams brought populations to their knees and the commercial fishery for Atlantic salmon closed seventy years ago in 1948. For most of us, the closest we’ve ever gotten to an Atlantic salmon is the farm-raised variety in the fish market.

But, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is celebrating the international year of the salmon, and the New England Aquarium is marking the occasion with a public lecture by Catherine Schmitt, author of The President’s Salmon: Restoring the King of Fish and its Home Waters; and Madonna Soctomah, former Passamaquoddy Tribal Representative with the Maine State Legislature and St. Croix International Waterway Commissioner. That’s the St. Croix River in Maine and New Brunswick, not the Caribbean island.

The Presidential “first fish” ritual started in 1912 with angler Carl Anderson. He decided that he wanted to give his fish – which was the first fish caught on opening day April 1st – to the president of the United States.

Read and listen to the full story at WCAI

 

NOAA Fisheries Announces Funding Opportunity for Atlantic Salmon and Their Ecosystems

April 21, 2017 — The following was released by NOAA:

NOAA Fisheries announces a federal funding opportunity  to promote recovery actions and support engagement activities for critically endangered Atlantic salmon and their ecosystems.The typical funding awards will range from $50,000 to $300,000.

The application deadline is Friday, May 19, 2017.

We are seeking project proposals that will support:

  • Species in the Spotlight: Survive to Thrive, including efforts to address any of the four priority actions identified in the Atlantic Salmon Five-Year Action Plan to stabilize the species and prevent their extinction.
  • International Year of the Salmon, including the development and implementation of new education/outreach and engagement tools such as interactive displays, exhibits, kiosks, etc., or activities highlighting the biology, status, and threats faced by Atlantic salmon and their ecosystems.

We anticipate that the funding would not exceed $600,000 and is contingent on FY 2017 Federal appropriations. There is no match requirement.

Questions? Contact Julie Crocker at julie.crocker@noaa.gov or 978-282-8480.

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