Welcome to the Massachusetts River Herring NetworkWelcome to the Massachusetts River Herring NetworkWelcome to the Massachusetts River Herring NetworkWelcome to the Massachusetts River Herring Network
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Steering Committee
    • Funders
    • History
    • Join Us
  • Resources
    • Herring Count
    • Local Herring Resources
    • State Herring Resources
    • Federal Herring Resources
    • ASMFC
    • Best Management Practices
    • Grants & Other Funding
    • Advocacy Groups
    • Peer Reviewed & Published Articles
    • Glossary
  • Workshops
  • Meetings
  • Towns
    • Abington
    • Acushnet
    • Aquinnah
    • Barnstable
    • Bourne
    • Braintree
    • Brewster
    • Bridgewater
    • Brockton
    • Carver
    • Chatham
    • Chilmark
    • Cohasset
    • Dartmouth
    • Dennis
    • Duxbury
    • East Bridgewater
    • Eastham
    • Edgartown
    • Fairhaven
    • Falmouth
    • Gosnold
    • Halifax
    • Hanover
    • Hanson
    • Harwich
    • Hingham
    • Hull
    • Kingston
    • Lakeville
    • Marion
    • Marshfield
    • Mashpee
    • Mattapoisett
    • Middleborough
    • Nantucket
    • New Bedford
    • Norwell
    • Oak Bluffs
    • Orleans
    • Pembroke
    • Plymouth
    • Plympton
    • Provincetown
    • Rochester
    • Rockland
    • Sandwich
    • Scituate
    • Tisbury
    • Truro
    • Wareham
    • Wellfleet
    • West Bridgewater
    • West Tisbury
    • Westport
    • Weymouth
    • Yarmouth
  • Contact

Snackdown: River Herring Versus Stripers and Snappers 1-5-22

    Home Latest News Snackdown: River Herring Versus Stripers and Snappers 1-5-22
    NextPrevious

    Snackdown: River Herring Versus Stripers and Snappers 1-5-22

    By Abigail Archer | Latest News | 0 comment | 24 January, 2022 | 0

    The Provincetown Independent
    Snackdown: River Herring Versus Stripers and Snappers
    Studies show that manmade structures funnel herring into predators’ mouths
    BY JASMINE LU JAN 5, 2022

    WELLFLEET — In the summer, alewives and bluebacks — two species of herring that in spring migrate from the coastal marshes here to the Herring River’s kettle ponds — stay in the ponds to forage and feed until fall. As temperatures drop, these juvenile herring swim downstream, leaving their freshwater spawning grounds for the sea. There, they spend several years growing into adults. Each spring, mature herring face a daunting task: pulling a U-turn and pushing their way back up the Herring River to spawn the next generation.

    Their journey back home is perilous, particularly at two chokepoints created by manmade structures. Understanding how these obstacles affect the herring has given scientists an up-close view of changes to come once the river’s natural tidal flow is restored.

    First, at the river’s mouth, looms the Chequessett Neck Road dike, erected in 1908 to dry up the “unsightly swamps” upstream for mosquito control, according to a 1906 proposal by Whitman and Howard Engineers. (As previously reported here, current science shows the effect was the opposite as far as mosquito control goes.) The dike functions as a tide gate, allowing river outflow but blocking inflow from the bay.

    Further up the Herring River, the migrating fish must travel through a culvert — a pipe that shunts the stream beneath Schoolhouse Hill Road.

    Both chokepoints have created what aquatic ecologist Derrick Alcott called “a feeding tube for predators.” Up and down the river, herring casualties result — just outside the dike, where hungry striped bass patrol, and in the culvert, where snapping turtles hunker.

    The Toll at the Tide Gate

    We know this because Alcott tagged and tracked the herring as part of his Ph.D. research at UMass Amherst. Though the research was conducted in the mid-2000s, his conclusions were only recently published in a 2021 article in the Canadian Journal of Fishing and Aquatic Sciences.

    Research by aquatic ecologist Derrick Alcott, here with his snapping turtle trap, reveals how manmade structures are hindering herring survival in the Herring River.
    Alcott said the tagging involved teams of two, working at lightning speed. One person holds down the writhing fish, securing its head and tail. A colleague angles a scalpel toward the fish’s belly. A quick poke between the ribs and pelvis — and in goes the passive integrated transponder (PIT) tag, where it lies loose in the stomach cavity, nestled among internal organs. Surgical glue helps seal the incision, then the herring is released back into the waves. For each fish, the whole process — capture, measurement, tagging, release — happens in under a minute.

    Researchers working with other animals would typically administer anesthesia for this surgery, but herring, being “ram ventilators,” need to keep swimming forward in order to move dissolved oxygen over their gills. Anesthesia would halt the fish’s movement — which, in turn, would rob them of air. “We determined the safest method for these fish is to not anesthetize, go super fast, and get them back into the water, swimming and breathing,” said Alcott.

    After placing a detection antenna at the dike, Alcott and his colleagues watched the run for two spring seasons in 2014 and 2015. The setup functioned like an EZ-pass system. Each time a PIT-tagged fish swam through, the device recorded the date and time along with a code unique to each specimen.

    Their findings were troubling. Many herring, despite multiple attempts, failed to pass through the tide gate at the dike, which “acted as an obstacle to upstream migration,” Alcott and his colleagues reported. Their work confirmed “long-held local suspicions,” according to John Portnoy, a retired National Seashore ecologist.

    For decades, local observers had worried that the tidal restriction at the dike was harming the herring run. Portnoy voiced his own concerns over the dike in a 1997 article published in Environment Cape Cod. Wellfleet’s river herring fishery was “once one of the largest in the state,” he told the Independent. Before the dike was built, the town annually collected $1,000 from the herring auction, which was “enough to pay all the town’s elected officials,” Portnoy wrote after reviewing old town meeting records. But after the dike was constructed, earnings plunged, along with Wellfleet’s herring run.

    While Alcott’s study anchored these observations, the PIT-tag data surfaced new questions.

    Herring in a Pickle

    Early in the spawning run season, 78 percent of tagged herring passed through the dike, but near the end of the period, the success rate sank to 16 percent.

    Alcott then co-authored a new Wellfleet-based study, this one with Christopher Rillahan at the UMass Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology, that zeroed in on a likely culprit: striped bass — which, thanks to conditions created by the dike, can feast on a fish-in-a-barrel buffet when these later herring waves come.

    This time, Rillahan deployed a new technology — the ARIS Explorer 3000 — to visualize the action churning just seaward of the dike. With ARIS, he was spared the rigors of performing dozens of 60-second surgeries. His device allowed him to monitor fish noninvasively by emitting a series of sonar beams underwater. ARIS then converts these sonar readings into fine-scale videos, which showed the silhouette images of herring milling around, migrating, and, when stripers arrived, scattering.

    Snapping turtles take advantage of culverts to ambush migrating river herring. Here, one turtle faces the camera, while another is stationed at the opposite end of the culvert.
    The stripers caught on the ARIS videos look like larger shadows, swimming solo or in loose aggregations. The smaller herring, by contrast, stay in tight schools.

    The dike channels large volumes of water through a narrow opening — a setup akin to partially blocking a garden hose with your thumb. So, it “dumps out water in a huge jet of turbulent, high-velocity water,” said Alcott.

    The herring can ride an incoming tide up the river, but when the tide recedes, billowing back towards the harbor, “those conditions are just too powerful for a fish to swim against,” Alcott said. For slightly more than half of the day, the dike is completely impassable.

    Meanwhile, the water jets have carved out deep scour pools on both sides of the dike. During the impenetrable outflow periods, herring gather in those pools, waiting for the water to change direction. The problem for the herring, said Alcott, is that “predators may be there, waiting.”

    And, in fact, the ARIS Explorer 3000 caught footage of large numbers of striped bass joining the herring there, particularly during the ebbing tide. This dike, the researchers proposed, spared predators the chase, where “prey win the race a bunch of times and get away,” Alcott said. Instead, the striped bass “can just hang” and get an easy shot at the herring.

    “It’s no surprise that the area seaward of the dike is a great fishing spot,” said Barbara Brennessel, a Wellfleet biologist not involved in the research. “Every time you drive there, except at low tide, you will see fishermen parked on the dike, poles in the water.

    “The river herring are captives, having to wait for ideal conditions to pass the tide gates,” she added, “and when the stripers and bluefish arrive, they are toast.”

    Out of the Frying Pan

    For the herring that manage to dodge the stripers, wriggle through the dike, and continue up their namesake river, it’s far from smooth sailing.

    In the upper reaches of the river, Patience Brook splinters off from the main trunk, flowing as a narrow, ankle-deep stream that feeds into the ponds. At Schoolhouse Hill Road, the water enters a culvert — a ribbed-steel pipe about two feet in diameter — which shunts the brook underneath the road to emerge on the other side. Putting in a culvert is cheaper than building a bridge to take the road over the river.

    Seen from above the Herring River at Schoolhouse Hill Road in Wellfleet, a school of herring approach from the left while a snapping turtle, not yet stationed inside the culvert, lurks upstream. (Photos courtesy Derrick Alcott)
    Come springtime, herring migrate through Patience Brook and into the culvert, where they are met with a snapping turtle ambush.

    Once again, local observers already had an idea what was happening. On several occasions, volunteer herring counters had witnessed snapping turtles crawling into that culvert. “People sat there and waited for them to come out on the other side,” Alcott said, “but they didn’t.” Instead, folks told him they’ve heard popping sounds from below — the snap of a turtle’s jaws, perhaps, clamping down on a herring snack.

    To follow up on these reports, Alcott set up further research using underwater cameras. Sure enough, snappers were posting up in the culvert, taking up the full width and lunging at incoming herring. Alcott logged further evidence by drawing blood samples from the turtles. “You are what you eat,” Alcott said, “so your blood will contain the carbon atoms of the things you’re eating.”

    Turtles that ventured into the culvert exhibited high levels of marine-derived carbon isotopes in their blood, while those who stayed away showed no signs of these atoms.

    “As for the herring, they often swim through the culvert, right through the center — whether there’s a turtle or not,” Alcott said. “They don’t seem to recognize the snapping turtle as a threat.”

    By contrast, bass, perch, and sunfish swerve out of the snapper’s way. Alcott is not sure why this is so. It could be, he guesses, a lack of familiarity with the trap. Or it could be the herring’s “deep, innate urge to move upstream in order to spawn and produce the next generation.”

    Alcott imagines a herring’s risk analysis, if there were such a thing, unfolding differently at the culvert than it would at the tide gate. “Think about the costs and benefits,” Alcott said. “Once you’ve migrated all the way up the river, it’s like, ‘Well, I have no choice now. I’ve invested so much in this.’ ”

    At the tide gate, by comparison, Alcott continued, “If it looks like a nightmare with the stripers and you’re running a predator gauntlet, then it’s like, ‘Eh, maybe we’ll check out a different river.’ ”

    The good news at the culvert: turtles consume less than one percent of the herring population, according to Alcott.

    “The tide gate is the bigger problem,” he said. Of the fish trying to clear the Chequessett Neck dike, only 50 percent make it through, enter the river, and migrate upstream to spawn.

    When the Herring River Restoration Project opens up the dike, Alcott predicts, herring will have passable conditions all day every day. The stripers, at that point, will presumably have to sing for their supper.

    No tags.

    Abigail Archer

    More posts by Abigail Archer

    Related Post

    • River Herring Network Secures 2012 Funding

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      I’ve got some good news to share with you all.  The Massachusetts Bays Program has granted the River Herring Network another small grant for 2012 to continue building the website as a resource, providing technicalRead more

    • It’s Time to Speak Up for River Herring – Hearings about Bycatch in March

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      After years of wondering and worrying about river herring being caught as bycatch in the Atlantic herring fishery, we finally have the opportunity to DO something about it. Due in large part to the effortsRead more

    • A Report from the Atlantic Herring Fishery Management Plan Amendment 5 Hearing in Fairhaven

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      On Monday, March 19 I attended the New England Marine Fisheries Management Council hearing on Amendment 5 in Fairhaven. I hitched a ride with the Cape Cod Commercial Hook Fishermen’s Association. About 100-120 people attended.Read more

    • Our vision

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      Throughout Massachusetts nearly every coastal town has at least one river or stream that is, or has been a river herring run. Alewife and blueback herring (River Herring) have always been an important food source  forRead more

    • HELP THE HERRING RUN

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      The annual herring migration is a natural wonder. For centuries, people have watched in awe as hundreds of thousands of herring journeyed from the ocean upstream to spawn in freshwater ponds, drawn by some unseenRead more

    • Workshop!

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      The River Herring Network invites herring wardens, herring counters, and herring enthusiasts to an evening workshop on Tuesday, June 12, 5:30-7pm  at the Bourne Veteran’s Memorial Community Center on 239 Main St in Buzzards Bay.Read more

    • Free Bus to Council Meeting June 20th

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      We’ve all heard people say: “There’s plenty of other fish in the sea”, but while it may apply to the dating pool, we’ve found that it doesn’t tend to apply to actual fish. Take riverRead more

    • Summary of June 12 Workshop

      By Abigail Archer | 0 comment

      On June 12 the River Herring Network held its first evening workshop from 5:30-7:00PM at the Bourne Veterans Memorial Community Center in Buzzards Bay. The intent was to find a time when volunteer wardens whoRead more

    NextPrevious

    Recent Posts

    • Environmentalists celebrate historic herring run in Woburn 11-25-22
    • Mystic River `22 herring run put at 425,000 plus – 11-15-22
    • Alewives Anonymous 2022 Herring Counts – 10-31-22
    • Construction work to begin for Herring River restoration, Wellfleet project decades in the making 10-21-22
    • The Travails of an Alewife: Dams, Drought, and Climate Change 10-18-22

    Recent Comments

    • GAtfxCFIBNljc on Rex Hardwork
    • edforWDActlFIBQ on Rex Hardwork
    • ZbvTuPnk on Rex Hardwork
    • mdOwoEbGsjicrHIT on Rex Hardwork
    • cFJhWxXm on Rex Hardwork

    Archives

    • December 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • May 2021
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    • December 2016
    • November 2016
    • October 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • May 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • February 2016
    • January 2016
    • December 2015
    • November 2015
    • October 2015
    • September 2015
    • August 2015
    • July 2015
    • June 2015
    • May 2015
    • April 2015
    • March 2015
    • February 2015
    • January 2015
    • December 2014
    • November 2014
    • October 2014
    • September 2014
    • August 2014
    • July 2014
    • June 2014
    • April 2014
    • February 2014
    • December 2013
    • October 2013
    • September 2013
    • July 2013
    • May 2013
    • April 2013
    • March 2013
    • January 2013
    • December 2012
    • September 2012
    • August 2012
    • June 2012
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012

    Categories

    • Latest News
    • River Herring Blog

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    Copyright 2019 River Herring Network | All Rights Reserved
    • A River Herring
    • A River Herring OLD 2
    • About Us
      • Funders
      • History
      • Join Us
      • Meetings
      • Mission
      • Steering Committee
    • Contact Us
    • Meetings
    • News
      • Masonry 3 columns
      • Masonry Full Width
    • Our Team
    • Portfolio
    • Resources
      • Advocacy Groups
      • ASMFC
      • Best Management Practices
      • Federal Herring Resources
      • Glossary
      • Grants & Other Funding
      • Herring Count
      • Local Herring Resources
      • Peer Reviewed & Published Articles
      • State Herring Resources
    • Staff
    • Tables
    • Testimonials
    • Towns
      • Abington
      • Acushnet
      • Aquinnah
      • Barnstable
      • Bourne
      • Braintree
      • Brewster
      • Bridgewater
      • Brockton
      • Carver
      • Chatham
      • Chilmark
      • Cohasset
      • Dartmouth
      • Dennis
      • Duxbury
      • East Bridgewater
      • Eastham
      • Edgartown
      • Fairhaven
      • Falmouth
      • Gosnold
      • Halifax
      • Hanover
      • Hanson
      • Harwich
      • Hingham
      • Hull
      • Kingston
      • Lakeville
      • Marion
      • Marshfield
      • Mashpee
      • Mattapoisett
      • Middleborough
      • Nantucket
      • New Bedford
      • Norwell
      • Oak Bluffs
      • Orleans
      • Pembroke
      • Plymouth
      • Plympton
      • Provincetown
      • Rochester
      • Rockland
      • Sandwich
      • Scituate
      • Tisbury
      • Truro
      • Wareham
      • Wellfleet
      • West Bridgewater
      • West Tisbury
      • Westport
      • Weymouth
      • Yarmouth
    • Workshops
    Welcome to the Massachusetts River Herring Network