85 research outputs found

    Cod Connections with Other Communities - Ames 1995

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    Stonington Fisheries Alliance - Putting Fishermen\u27s Work to Knowledge Ames 2005

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    Atlantic Cod Stock Structure in the Gulf of Maine - Ames 2004

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    Cod and Haddock Spawning Grounds in the Gulf of Maine - Island Institute - 1997

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    Gadids and Alewives: Structure Within Complexity in the Gulf of Maine

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    The collapse of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) along the northern 240 km of New England\u27s historically productive coastal shelf has continued for nearly twenty years. Resident spawning groups and their subpopulations have disappeared and have yet to recover, causing local groundfish fisheries to collapse. Three additional gadid species, haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus), pollock (Pollachius virens), and white hake (Urophyscus tenuis) collapsed along the northern coastal shelf during the same period, raising concerns that their resident coastal groups were part of a metapopulation and may have also been lost. Analysis of their distribution and movements in the 1920s appeared to corroborate this. The four gadids had clusters of resident coastal groups along the coastal shelf that coexisted in the same area. Cod, white hake and pollock appeared to exhibit metapopulation characteristics, having resident and migrating components distributed along the coast in three different areas, with migrating components arriving and leaving along common migration routes fall when alewives left. The groups were centered near rivers with alewife spawning runs and disappeared from the area during the 1950s after alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) declined locally. The results suggest that large, stable concentrations of young-of-the-year alewives were a factor in where resident and migrating gadid groups were located

    Gadids and Alewives: Structure within complexity in the Gulf of Maine 2013

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