You are here: Home

Search results

118 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Fish & Chips: TNC's fish habitat restoration on a local potato farm
The Nature Conservancy helps fish, people, and potato chips
Located in News and Announcements / News
First genetically engineered salmon sold in Canada
US firm AquaBounty Technologies says that its farmed, transgenic salmon has hit the market after a 25-year wait.
Located in News and Announcements / News
File Troff document Atlantic Salmon Research Joint Venture (ASRJV) Annual Report
Annual report
Located in News and Announcements / News
Veazie Dam Removal will help four sea-run fish to reach historic spawning and nursery areas on Penobscot River system.
Located in Resources / Historical Archives
Summary of accomplishments for calendar year 2012
Located in Resources / Historical Archives
A Vulnerability Assessment of Fish and Invertebrates to Climate Change on the Northeast U.S. Continental Shelf
Atlantic salmon tops the list of species most vulnerable to climate change in Northeast
Located in News and Announcements / News
Ellsworth clears way for removal of old dam on Branch Lake Stream
Fish passage improvement
Located in News and Announcements / News
File $900,000 in Funding Allocated for Atlantic Salmon Habitat Restoration
Funding for four partnerships will help restore habitat for endangered Atlantic salmon in Maine.
Located in News and Announcements / Announcements
The Atlantic Salmon Federation is celebrating the removal of Veazie Dam and the one year anniversary of the removal of Great Works Dam, both on Maine's Penobscot River.
Located in Resources / Historical Archives
Today, a local contractor (Sargent Corporation, Old Town) will begin to remove the Veazie Dam, re-opening the Penobscot River from Old Town, Maine to the sea for the first time in nearly 200 years. The removal of the 830-foot long, 30 foot high buttress-style Veazie Dam, built in 1913, is a monumental step in the Penobscot River Restoration Project, among the largest river restoration efforts in the nation's history. Just last week, another local contractor (R.F. Jordan & Sons Construction, Inc., Ellsworth) completed advance demolition work on the facility's smaller "Plant-B" powerhouse to prepare for the removal of the main dam.
Located in Resources / Historical Archives