Alewives Thriving Downeast...

Roccus7

Moderator
Staff member
Alewives doing great in Maine!! Our town just completed a new, $750K fish ladder that the alewives are enjoying. Sure beats volunteer bucket brigades over the dam of previous years...

Alewives, once eyed for endangered list, make a comeback in Maine​

pressherald.com/2021/05/28/alewives-once-eyed-for-endangered-list-make-a-comeback-in-maine/

By PATRICK WHITTLEMay 28, 2021
PORTLAND — A small fish that has been the subject of conservation efforts for years appears to be growing in number in the rivers of the East Coast.

River herring are critically important to coastal ecosystems because they serve as food for birds and larger fish. Regulators have described the fishes’ population as nearing historic lows because of dams, pollution, warming waters and other factors.

Tommy Keister fills a crate of alewives from the skiff used to net the silver fish below the Benton Falls Dam in Benton on May 21, 2021. Michael G. Seamans/Morning Sentinel

But years of effort to save them appear to be paying off. Preliminary counts of the fish from Maine to South Carolina in 2019 showed 2.7 million more fish than in 2015, according to documents provided by the regulatory Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. The 2019 counts found more than 6.5 million fish.

The river herrings include two species of schooling fish, alewives and blueback herring, that have been fished in East Coast rivers for millennia. Harvesters of the fish said conservative management of the fishery in recent years, coupled with conservation efforts such as dam removal, have helped the fish spawn and grow in number.

“You’ve got to get the parents in the bedroom so the kids can go to school,” said Jeff Pierce, a longtime alewife fisherman and the president of Alewife Harvesters of Maine.

Herring have been used as a source of protein since long before British colonists first arrived on American shores, and the fish have still been harvested commercially in a handful of states in recent years. They’re used as bait and sometimes as food. Herring are often used as bait in big-money commercial fisheries such as the lobster industry.

Commercial catch of the fish has increased as the population has slowly recovered. Fishermen brought about 2.4 million pounds of the fish to docks in 2018 and increased that total to more than 3.2 million pounds in 2019, according to preliminary data from the Atlantic States commission.

They remain a species of concern in many states, including in New Hampshire, which prohibited the harvest of the species in April. The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department said it triggered the closure because of the decline of spawning runs over the past two years.

But Maine, which is home to the largest commercial fishery for river herring, has seen positive trends in the fishes’ population, said Michael Brown, a scientist with the Maine Department of Marine Resources. He said the recovery of river herring stems back to the removal of the Edwards Dam in Augusta in 1999. That was the first large-scale restoration project, he said.

“Since that time, restoration projects on the Penobscot River and many smaller rivers now allow river herring to access traditional spawning habitat,” Brown said. “A result of the restoration activities is the expanding river herring resources we are seeing in Maine today. ”

Some environmental activists called for the fish to be listed under the Endangered Species Act as populations dwindled, but the federal government decided not to list the species in 2019.

Environmentalists said more dam removals will be needed to ensure that the fish continue to recover. River herring are a “critically important fish” because of their place in the food chain, said Nick Bennett, staff scientist with the Natural Resources Council of Maine.

“The fish have made a substantial comeback,” Bennett said.
 
Interesting article and sounds like good news, Roccus, for the folks in ME.

As we have all noted in many other discussions about the ebb and flow of certain species, I was wondering if, in addition to changes in water temperature, is your Striped Bass bite in ME is at all tied to herring.

When I was a much younger man the Bass bite on the North Fork of LI was always much better in the fall than the spring. Somewhere around 10-12 years ago it turned completely around and now our spring to early summer fishery is clearly superior to the fall. In fact over the last decade the fall run for us at Orient is almost non existent. One of the things I and others have observed is the obvious disappearance of Herring in the area which, during the peak years, would keep the Bass active until early December.

I am curious to hear your take.
 
@captmike28 : Primary bass forage fish here is actually juvenile or "Brit Herring" which are small, 1-2" herring fry, which become abundant in the late spring, since the ocean herring spawn in the fall. Add the fact that we're the "Last Stop" on the migration, the bass arrive in my area, the Midcoast, just after the alewives start running, with the larger fish lagging behind the alewife migration by a couple of weeks. As far as the fall is concerned, since we're the first stop on the southbound migration, the fish start disappearing during the last week of September. The latest I've caught a fish has been October 7.

From a historical perspective, "in the old days", the locals talk of a consistent run of larger fish attached to the alewife run. In my river, the larger, and we're talking just into the slot and maybe just over, fish seem to show up when the alewives have spawned and are returning to the sea, in later June. These two observations are also bolstered by a bunch of folks soaking pogie chunks below the head of tide falls in later June. Here's hoping that the impact of the new fish ladder will bring in larger fish in the coming years.

On the other herring family baitfish, we're seeing large pogie (bunker) schools up here for the first time in more than 12 years, so that variable will be an interesting factor to evaluate. They show up in numbers around July 4 and depart early September. Since the majority of our bass are too small to be sucking down bunker, and my yearly live-lining expeditions are routinely ignored, I have no other data to report on bass or blues, something I've yet to see in 11 seasons up here. I do enjoy sitting over a pod of bunker watching seals tear into them and seeing BFT doing the same from a distance. Seems every time I close that distance, the tuna have taken off...
 
Interesting article and sounds like good news, Roccus, for the folks in ME.

As we have all noted in many other discussions about the ebb and flow of certain species, I was wondering if, in addition to changes in water temperature, is your Striped Bass bite in ME is at all tied to herring.

When I was a much younger man the Bass bite on the North Fork of LI was always much better in the fall than the spring. Somewhere around 10-12 years ago it turned completely around and now our spring to early summer fishery is clearly superior to the fall. In fact over the last decade the fall run for us at Orient is almost non existent. One of the things I and others have observed is the obvious disappearance of Herring in the area which, during the peak years, would keep the Bass active until early December.

I am curious to hear your take.
The herring you get in Orient in the fall are Atlantic herring a completely different species than the alewives and blueback herring the article was referring to.
 
Thanks for the feedback guys. I realizer there are several different fish in the herring family but in general they do seem to be important forage for Bass. Hence my question and curiosity on whether there might be a correlation.
 

Fishing Reports

Latest articles

Back
Top