Scientists are using artificial intelligence to count river herring during their annual migration in Rhode Island. The AI program aims to automate the time-consuming process of manually counting fish ...
The town of Harwich has opened a recreational herring fishery for the first time in twenty years. Bradford Chase of the ...
(Gregory Rec/Staff Photographer)) As thousands of river herring begin their upstream migration this month, runners will do ...
Last week we explored how walleye are tagged and released and how you can partner with biologists by reporting your catches ...
The following is the first of a three-part story, featuring the takeaways that were shared – specific to Saginaw Bay – as ...
Volunteers are needed to help the town of Penobscot document their alewife population. In Penobscot, the alewife harvest is co-managed by the town and the Department of Marine Resources. The town is ...
AP file photo River herring, also known as alewives, swim in a stream on May 16, 2021. Thiamine Deficiency Syndrome – the Alewives’ Revenge? Predator fish, especially trout and salmon, suffer from ...
Frankfort/Lake Michigan: Prior to the weekend, chinook salmon were reported out front in 90–120 feet of water. Then the winds pushed in warmer temperatures, pushing the chinook salmon and coho salmon ...
From the Chicago waterfront to the Mackinaw Bridge, the shores of Lake Michigan were taken over last month by dead alewives. The fish,*members of the herring family, washed ashore on every incoming ...
Some fish stay in the same cozy bodies of water all year long. Others, like the alewife, a fish found in the waters of the Northern Atlantic Ocean, migrate between different areas to spawn and live.
WOOLWICH, Maine — Thousands of alewives swim up the Nequasset Stream in Woolwich from the sea each May, thrashing against the swift current, returning to the waters where they were born. The sleek, ...
Jaime Burns, left, and her father Steve Bodge harvest alewives on the Nequasset Stream in Woolwich. Bodge, 78, has been involved in the harvest in the same location since 1958. Photo by Troy R.