-
'Ah, freedom': Historic Penobscot dam removal begins (slideshow)
-
The river restoration project will allow fish access to spawn deep in the heart of Maine.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
A river in the balance (editorial)
-
On Monday, crews began demolishing the Penobscot River’s Veazie Dam. It marked an important moment for sea-run fish, efforts to restore a complex habitat and unlikely partnerships. The day was notable not only for the state but also for the nation: The dam breaching is part of one of the largest river restoration projects in the country’s history.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Alewives Will Help Smallmouth Bass
-
Letting alewives up the St. Croix River will not hurt smallmouth bass, says Maine’s Commissioner of Marine Resources Patrick Keliher. “No, except getting fatter,” he said in a telephone interview Thursday, meaning that the smallmouth bass introduced to the St. Croix in 1877 feed on the native anadromous alewife – also called river herring and gaspereau.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Atlantic Salmon Numbers Dropping
-
Top researchers with the Atlantic Salmon Federation (ASF) are trying to figure out why wild Atlantic salmon numbers are dropping dramatically once they leave their home rivers and head into saltwater.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Atlantic Salmon Released into Aroostook River (video)
-
Volunteers in Sheridan have been working for years to preserve a fish species here in Aroostook County. This week – as they do every year – they released thousands of Atlantic salmon into the river, after raising them for months. News Source 8′s Katie Zarrilli has more.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Bad News for Atlantic Salmon
-
The Atlantic Salmon Federation (ASF) is extremely disappointed that the North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization (NASCO) has been unable to stop factory sales of wild Atlantic salmon in Greenland and has also failed to put a limit on Greenland’s subsistence fishery. The salmon harvested in Greenland originate from rivers across eastern North America, where the vast majority of salmon populations are protected under federal species at risk legislation in Canada and the US.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Breaching Veazie Dam begins as part of Penobscot River Restoration
-
Hundreds of onlookers stood on the banks of the Penobscot River on Monday morning, watching as demolition crews breached the Veazie Dam, continuing the process of opening the river to sea-run fish for the first time in almost 200 years.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Ceremony - and Eagles - Mark Beginning of Veazie Dam Removal
-
The restoration of the Penobscot River in Maine has taken a monumental step forward with the breaching of the Veazie Dam, which will open up the river from Indian Island at Old Town to the Atlantic Ocean for the first time in more than 150 years.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Connecticut scales back salmon stocking program
-
...after more than 40 years of stocking millions upon millions of baby salmon hatchlings, or "fry," in rivers throughout Connecticut and the other states -- and after floods during Hurricane Irene wrecked the federal hatchery in Vermont -- the U.S. government and Connecticut's three salmon restoration partners have called it quits.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage
-
Conservation: Restoring salmon rivers with liming
-
The Nova Scotia Salmon Association is maximizing the benefits of the U.S. Clean Air Act by giving a river that is home to endangered wild Atlantic salmon in southern Nova Scotia continuous doses of lime.
Located in
News and Announcements
/
Media Coverage