Abstract
AbstractPopulations of anadromous alewives Alosa pseudoharengus are declining throughout much of the species' range, particularly in southern New England, where fishery moratoriums have recently been instituted in three states. The alewife run at Bride Brook, a coastal stream in East Lyme, Connecticut, was studied from 2003 to 2006 to assess shifts in demography and life history. Annual censuses of abundance and sampling for size, age, and spawning history structure were conducted. These data were compared with similar data from 1966 to 1967 at this site. Recent alewife runs at Bride Brook featured lower abundance and younger, smaller fish that were less likely to be repeat spawners. The 1966 spawning run was dominated by repeat spawners of ages 5–7, while runs in 2003–2006 were dominated by age‐3 and age‐4 first‐spawn fish. Mean length declined by 10% between 1966 and 2006. Alewives are also recruiting to the spawning run at younger ages and smaller sizes, indicating a shift in life history. The first‐spawn portion of the 1966 spawning run was dominated by age‐5 fish, while recent first‐time spawners were primarily age 3. The shifts in demography and life history observed at Bride Brook are consistent with exploitation or predation concentrated on older, larger individuals in the population. The results of this study suggest recent increases in predatory pressure or bycatch mortality as promising hypotheses that merit further investigation.
Highlights
This case study examines temporal shifts in demography and life history within a population of anadromous alewives Alosa pseudoharengus
Recreational anglers commonly collect river herring for personal consumption and for use as bait (Atlantic States Marine Fishery Council 2007)
River herring are taken as bycatch in some oceanic fisheries (Atlantic States Marine Fishery Council 2007; Kritzer and Black 2007; Cieri et al 2008)
Summary
This case study examines temporal shifts in demography and life history within a population of anadromous alewives Alosa pseudoharengus. In response to population declines, CDEP instituted an FIGURE 2.—Annual river herring (alewife and blueback herring) run size at index sites in Massachusetts (Essex Dam fishlift on the Merrimack River, Holyoke Dam fishlift on the Connecticut [CT] River) and Rhode Island (Nonquit River fishway, Gilbert Stuart Brook fishway). All counts represent both species in aggregate, with the exception of Holyoke Dam (blueback herring only)
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