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2015 Narraguagus River Ice Out Time Lapse Photography
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Time Lapse Photography of Ice out on the Narraguagus below the Ice Control Dam.
The USFWS Maine Fishery Resources Office monitored ice out on the Narraguagus River near Cherryfield, Maine from March 31 to April 28, 2015. Photos were taken every 5 minutes from 6AM to 7PM. File is quite large at 80 mb for 4 locations- from Ice Control Dam to Veterans Park in Cherryfield.
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Does the cutting edge of sea-run fish restoration interest you?
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Employment opportunity
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Announcements
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CMS meeting presentations and minutes are now available for review and comment
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Reports and Minutes
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Announcements
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Proceedings of the first virtual CMS Public Meeting
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The proceedings, slides, minutes, and Q&A session from the 5/28/2020 meeting are now available for public viewing and comment
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News
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Penobscot SHRU Annual Report of 2019 Activities
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Annual report of 2019 Atlantic salmon recovery activities in the Penobscot SHRU
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Penobscot SHRU Team
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Atlantic Salmon 5-Year Review
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PROTECTED RESOURCES REGULATIONS AND ACTIONS
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Maine Audubon: Stream Smart Workshop
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Training opportunity
Restoration
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News
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NOAA Fisheries designate critical habitat for Atlantic sturgeon
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The critical habitat designation will require federal agencies to consult NOAA Fisheries if they operate or fund activities that may affect designated critical habitat in more than 3,968 miles of important coastal river habitat from Maine to Florida. Atlantic sturgeon was listed under the Endangered Species Act in 2012 and is comprised of the threatened Gulf of Maine distinct population segment and the endangered New York Bight, Chesapeake Bay, Carolina, and South Atlantic distinct population segments.
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News
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Rapid Assessment Protocol for Aquatic Passability of Tidally Influenced Road-Stream Crossings
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There is growing interest among conservation practitioners to have a method to assess tidally influenced crossings for their potential as barriers to aquatic organism passage. Protocols designed for freshwater streams will not adequately address the passage challenges of bi-directional flow and widely variable depth and velocity of tidally influenced systems. Diadromous fish must be able to overcome the enhanced water velocities associated with tidal restrictions to reach upstream spawning habitat. This project will build on the existing North Atlantic Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative's protocol, database and scoring procedures to extend the applicability of this region-wide program to road-stream crossings in tidally influenced settings.
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Aquatic Connectivity
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Review of Atlantic Salmon Hatchery Protocols, Production, and Product Assessment
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Hatchery protocol, production, and product assessment
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Documents