Alewives are sea-run, or diadromous, fish that spend most of their lives in the Atlantic Ocean but return as adults to coastal rivers in spring to spawn in freshwater streams and ponds. This article in Maine Boats, Homes, & Harbors magazine discusses the natural and cultural history of Maine\u27s native runs of alewives and other sea-run fish
Populations of anadromous alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) are declining throughout much of their ran...
Until recently, elvers and glass eels were not commercially popular aquatic creatures. However, a ts...
BETWEEN THE HEAD of tide above Bangor to where it widens into the bay at Searsport, the Penobscot Ri...
Feature article on the migratory fish runs on five of Maine\u27s major rivers. Around 800 shad were...
Alewife Brook in Cape Elizabeth, Maine is a small coastal stream, approximately 1.2 miles long, that...
Once abundant, alewives have continued to decline since the 1960s and today regulators list them as ...
A brief pamphlet on salmon fishing and hunting on the Narraguagus River near Cherryfield, Maine, cir...
Article on the return of the alewives to Great Salt Bay in Damariscotta. There are only two people ...
Alewives and blueback herring are two ecologically and economically important species that can be fo...
From 1950 through 1953, 1,403 to 1,793 near-ripe anadromous alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus, were sto...
Alewives are small fishes that are native to the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to Newfoundland....
The collapse of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) along the northern 240 km of New England\u27s historical...
Across Maine, communities and land owners are reconnecting rivers and streams by improving road cros...
River herring, the collective name given to North American populations of Alewife (Alosa pseudoharen...
The United States and Canada have historically struggled to delineate a maritime geographic boundary...
Populations of anadromous alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) are declining throughout much of their ran...
Until recently, elvers and glass eels were not commercially popular aquatic creatures. However, a ts...
BETWEEN THE HEAD of tide above Bangor to where it widens into the bay at Searsport, the Penobscot Ri...
Feature article on the migratory fish runs on five of Maine\u27s major rivers. Around 800 shad were...
Alewife Brook in Cape Elizabeth, Maine is a small coastal stream, approximately 1.2 miles long, that...
Once abundant, alewives have continued to decline since the 1960s and today regulators list them as ...
A brief pamphlet on salmon fishing and hunting on the Narraguagus River near Cherryfield, Maine, cir...
Article on the return of the alewives to Great Salt Bay in Damariscotta. There are only two people ...
Alewives and blueback herring are two ecologically and economically important species that can be fo...
From 1950 through 1953, 1,403 to 1,793 near-ripe anadromous alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus, were sto...
Alewives are small fishes that are native to the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to Newfoundland....
The collapse of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) along the northern 240 km of New England\u27s historical...
Across Maine, communities and land owners are reconnecting rivers and streams by improving road cros...
River herring, the collective name given to North American populations of Alewife (Alosa pseudoharen...
The United States and Canada have historically struggled to delineate a maritime geographic boundary...
Populations of anadromous alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) are declining throughout much of their ran...
Until recently, elvers and glass eels were not commercially popular aquatic creatures. However, a ts...
BETWEEN THE HEAD of tide above Bangor to where it widens into the bay at Searsport, the Penobscot Ri...