Massachusetts Project
Closing the loop: characterizing habitat requirements, movements, and life stage linkages of river herring in Massachusetts watersheds
May 2020 - December 2022
Personnel
- Allison Roy, Co-Principal Investigator
- Adrian Jordaan, Principal Investigator
- Michelle Staudinger, Co-Principal Investigator
- Douglas Bishop, Student / Post Doc
- James Schultze, Student / Post Doc
- Julian Burgoff, Student / Post Doc
- Matthew Devine, Student / Post Doc
- Jacob Dorothy, Student / Post Doc
- Calviin Fisher, Student / Post Doc
- Malvika Someshwar, Student / Post Doc
- Sandanayaka, Student / Post Doc
- Tyler Pina, Student / Post Doc
- Amelia Ducey, Student / Post Doc
- Ben Thomas, Student / Post Doc
- Mac Johnson, Student / Post Doc
- Emma Tobin, Student / Post Doc
- Julian Burgoff, Student / Post Doc
Participating Agencies
- U.S. Geological Survey
- Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries
- Woods Hole Sea Grant
- The Nature Conservancy
In this study, we aim to “close the loop” in our understanding of river herring life stages and limits to productivity by collecting novel data on juvenile river herring density, growth, and survival in estuaries and information on river herring emigrating from lakes. Specifically, our objectives are to: 1)characterize density, growth, and mortality of juvenile river herring in estuaries and upstream lakes, 2) assess age, size, and timing of juvenile river herring during emigration from freshwater to estuarine habitats, and 3) evaluate relationships between spawning adults, juvenile abundance and timing of movements to identify conditions that promote growth and survival. We hypothesize that the timing of juvenile emigration from lakes, size at emigration, and growth in lakes and estuaries will vary among systems and will depend on river herring densities, habitat characteristics, and food resources. The new data collected will be incorporated into a full life-cycle model developed by our collaborators at MADMF to inform the run dynamics and migration timing that leads to the best growth and maintenance of densities, and to inform our work linking life-stages in collaboration with project partners and a population model produced as part of that work. Modeling of factors controlling juvenile size and number during egress, combined with estimates of estuarine-marine survival and growth, will help close current gaps in knowledge of the river herring life cycle and allow for improved understanding of stock-recruitment relationships and population modeling efforts.
Theses and Dissertations | Publication Date |
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Burgoff, J.D. 2019. In the weeds: A comparison of juvenile river herring diets in pelagic and littoral habitat. B.S. Honor's Thesis. University of Massachusetts Amherst. |
May 2021 |
Burgoff, J.D. 2019. In the weeds: A comparison of juvenile river herring diets in pelagic and littoral habitat. B.S. Honor's Thesis. University of Massachusetts Amherst. | May 2021 |