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A new trend has surfaced among sharks in Cape Cod waters. Here’s what one expert says

September 26, 2025 — Researchers have been studying white sharks on Cape Cod for nearly two decades, and they’ve been noticing some changing habits over the last couple of years following what seems like an explosion of sightings.

Greg Skomal and his team of researchers at the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife are in the thick of white shark research — on the water, studying and tagging several days a week — but they’ve been noticing a trend.

“The number of sharks would increase fairly dramatically through the month of July. And we have noticed that is not happening anymore. Our big months now, it starts in late August, but it’s September, October,” Skomal, of MassWildlife, said. “These animals are migrating past us and getting up to Canada, getting up into the Gulf of Maine a lot faster than they used to.”

Read the full article at NBC Boston

A Fish’s-Eye View Of The New England Drought

October 11, 2016 — Just as they do every fall, Massachusetts Fisheries and Wildlife workers are stocking dozens of rivers and ponds with rainbow trout, raised in hatcheries, for anglers to catch.

But this year, because of the drought, a few places won’t get fish. And  some anglers are choosing not to go after wild fish—to give them a break.

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, most of western Massachusetts is in a severe or even extreme drought.  Stream flows are “much below normal” in most of the state, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. That’s tough on fish.

Brian Keleher, a fisheries manager with the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, took me to the eastern bank of Dufresne Pond in Granby, where lily pads are splayed out over mud flats.

“I really don’t think there would be anything of any size at least over here,” Keleher said.

There are small pools, but they’re not a great place for fish trying to hide from predators, like birds.

“Fish can be trapped and exposed,” explained Keleher. “They have no where to go, no where to escape. They can’t escape to the depths.”

Read and listen to the full story at New England Public Radio

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