About: Blueback herring is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 220 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3878 citations. The topic is also known as: Alosa aestivalis.
TL;DR: In this paper, historical information on the anadromous river herring was used to determine natural upstream boundaries to migration and establish total potential alewife spawning habitat in nine watersheds with historic populations.
Abstract: The erection of dams alters habitat and longitudinal stream connectivity for migratory diadromous and potamodromous fish species and interrupts much of organismal exchange between freshwater and marine ecosystems. In the US, this disruption began with colonial settlement in the seventeenth century but little quantitative assessment of historical impact on accessible habitat and population size has been conducted. We used published surveys, GIS layers and historical documents to create a database of 1356 dams, which was then analyzed to determine the historical timeline of construction, use and resultant fragmentation of watersheds in Maine, US. Historical information on the anadromous river herring was used to determine natural upstream boundaries to migration and establish total potential alewife spawning habitat in nine watersheds with historic populations. Dams in Maine were constructed beginning in 1634 and by 1850 had reduced accessible lake area to less than 5% of the virgin 892 km2 habitat and 20% of virgin stream habitat. There is a near total loss of accessible habitat by 1860 that followed a west-east pattern of European migration and settlement. Understanding historic trends allows current restoration targets to be assessed and prioritized within an ecosystem-based perspective and may inform expectations for future management of oceanic and freshwater living resources.
TL;DR: In this article, an application of passive integrated transponder (PIT) technology was used to monitor movements of adult American shad (Alosa sapidissima), blueback herring (A. aestivalis) and gizzard shad in two experimental fishways.
TL;DR: In this article, low and high-frequency sounds were tested as a means of repelling blueback herring Alosa aestivalis in confined-area and open-water experiments.
Abstract: Low- and high-frequency sounds were tested as a means of repelling blueback herring Alosa aestivalis in confined-area and open-water experiments. Confined-area tests were performed by analyzing the response of blueback herring in floating net-pens to sounds differing in frequency, sound pressure levels (SPLs, given in decibels [dB] in reference to l.0 μPa), and pulse width. Highfrequency sounds between 110 and 140 kHz, at SPLs above 180 dB (at 1.0 m from the transducer) and at various pulse widths, elicited statistically significant (P < 0.05) avoidance responses by blueback herring. A reduced response was observed at sound frequencies of 100 and 150 kHz. Low-frequency sounds between 0.1 and 1 kHz at SPLs of 160–175 dB (at 1.0 m from the transducer) elicited only short-term startle responses. Field tests were performed at Richard B. Russell Dam (on the Savannah River at the Georgia-South Carolina border) to evaluate candidate transducers and amplifiers. In field evaluations a single high-frequenc...
TL;DR: During 1966 and 1967, the spawning runs of an anadromous population of alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus (Wilson), were studied in Bride Lake, Connecticut and counts of the number of fish entering and leaving the lake indicated that high mortalities occurred.
Abstract: During 1966 and 1967, the spawning runs of an anadromous population of alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus (Wilson), were studied in Bride Lake, Connecticut. Alewives entered the lake from Long Island via Bride Brook from March to June. The number of fish entering the lake each day varied and was not related to water temperature or amount of moonlight. Males predominated among early migrants, whereas a 1:1 sex ratio existed through the later part of the migration. The average size of adults decreased as the migration progressed. Adults spent from several days to 3 months on the spawning grounds, the males outnumbering the females. Counts of the number of fish entering and leaving the lake indicated that high mortalities occurred. Females spawned from 48,000–360,000 eggs. The total number of eggs spawned in the lake was estimated to be 2.0 X 1010. Young alewives migrated seaward from June to October and increased water flow was thought to be a major stimulant. One young alewife migrated seaward for eve...