Posts by Tags

Australia

Traveling to Australia

1 minute read

Published:

Today I am traveling to Australia to attend the International Conference and Workshop of Lobster (and Crab) Biology and Management, quite the mouthful.

Monhegan Island

Finishing Up

1 minute read

Published:

The spring survey was a crazy five week field season. Weather held throughout the survey allowing us to complete all 9 of our scheduled sample dates despite the slightly condensed schedule. We saw significantly less lobsters during the fall survey, especially in the landable / legal size class. Additionally, while in the fall survey the test site performed slightly better during the spring we seemd to catch more lobsters in the control site.

First Haul

1 minute read

Published:

Today was our first haul for the spring iteration of the commercial trapping survey. Traps were set in each site on Thursday April 21, (2022) following last week’s gale and hauled after a four night soak.

Storm Force Winds

2 minute read

Published:

The gale arrived last night in full force. While conducting the commercial trapping survey I stay on top of Horn’s Hill in the old weather station (presently the Flying Bridge) on Monhegan Island. This morning sometime between 7:30 and 8:50 AM the anemometer on top of the house recorded our daily maximum wind gust speed at 62 mph, a 10 on the Beaufort Scale. A 10 on the Beaufort Scale is described as ‘Storm’ and is rated one higher than ‘Severe Gale’.

Arriving on Monhegan Island

1 minute read

Published:

Today I caught the 9:30 ferry out of Port Clyde for Monhegan Island, ME. Here as in the fall, I’ll be conducting the spring iteration of a baseline survey examining lobster catch and population dynamics in the Monhegan Island Lobster Conservation Area.

Upcoming Commercial Trapping Survey

less than 1 minute read

Published:

This past fall I spent 6 weeks on Monhegan Island (Oct. 8- Nov. 21) performing a commercial trapping survey with the help of local lobstermen to assess both population dynamics and catch metrics in the local fishery. In the survey 72 lobster traps were fished between two sites, Test and Control, for 36 traps/ site.

commercial trapping survey

Arriving on Monhegan Island

1 minute read

Published:

Today I caught the 9:30 ferry out of Port Clyde for Monhegan Island, ME. Here as in the fall, I’ll be conducting the spring iteration of a baseline survey examining lobster catch and population dynamics in the Monhegan Island Lobster Conservation Area.

Trap Site Selection and Sampling

1 minute read

Published:

Trap locations are selected for the commercial trapping survey through random grid sampling. This method is adapted from the Ventless Trap Survey performed by Vineyard Wind I.

Upcoming Commercial Trapping Survey

less than 1 minute read

Published:

This past fall I spent 6 weeks on Monhegan Island (Oct. 8- Nov. 21) performing a commercial trapping survey with the help of local lobstermen to assess both population dynamics and catch metrics in the local fishery. In the survey 72 lobster traps were fished between two sites, Test and Control, for 36 traps/ site.

fisheries science

AFS 2022, Tomorrow

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Tomorrow I’ll be presenting the preliminary results from the basline commercial trapping survey at the American Fisheries Society annual meeting in Spokane, WA! It was a big push to get the data analysis to a point that it was presentation ready and then to actually create a presentation. The pre-recorded version of the presentation can be viewed here. The session is on Offshore wind and fishery interactions and I’m excited to see what sorts of thoughts people are having on the west coast about devveloping offshore wind energy and whether they are finding that lessons learned from east coast fixed-bottom wnd infrastructure ecological monitoring, siting and leasing problems is applicable to the floating-wind future they expect.

lobster movement

Distributing Tag Reporting Fliers

3 minute read

Published:

This week I spent a couple days driving around midcoast Maine visiting a variety of harbor’s lobster wharfs, co-ops, and pounds to distirbute fliers about reporting caught lobsters tagged by our study. To incentivize tag reports we set up a raffle with 5 tiered prizesz ($750, $500, $250, $125 and $125) and each tiem a tag is reported with useable data the reporter gets a raffle entry. Useable data generally means a valid tag ID, date of capture, and approximate location in latitude and longitude.

lobster survey

Spring 2022 Tags Arrival

2 minute read

Published:

Today I got a chance to pick up this survey’s tags from the Darling Marine Center. For this survey iteration I ordered 8000 tags, 12 needles, and 3 tagging guns.

mark recapture

Distributing Tag Reporting Fliers

3 minute read

Published:

This week I spent a couple days driving around midcoast Maine visiting a variety of harbor’s lobster wharfs, co-ops, and pounds to distirbute fliers about reporting caught lobsters tagged by our study. To incentivize tag reports we set up a raffle with 5 tiered prizesz ($750, $500, $250, $125 and $125) and each tiem a tag is reported with useable data the reporter gets a raffle entry. Useable data generally means a valid tag ID, date of capture, and approximate location in latitude and longitude.

methods

Trap Site Selection and Sampling

1 minute read

Published:

Trap locations are selected for the commercial trapping survey through random grid sampling. This method is adapted from the Ventless Trap Survey performed by Vineyard Wind I.

offshore wind

AFS 2022, Tomorrow

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Tomorrow I’ll be presenting the preliminary results from the basline commercial trapping survey at the American Fisheries Society annual meeting in Spokane, WA! It was a big push to get the data analysis to a point that it was presentation ready and then to actually create a presentation. The pre-recorded version of the presentation can be viewed here. The session is on Offshore wind and fishery interactions and I’m excited to see what sorts of thoughts people are having on the west coast about devveloping offshore wind energy and whether they are finding that lessons learned from east coast fixed-bottom wnd infrastructure ecological monitoring, siting and leasing problems is applicable to the floating-wind future they expect.

presentations

Traveling to Australia

1 minute read

Published:

Today I am traveling to Australia to attend the International Conference and Workshop of Lobster (and Crab) Biology and Management, quite the mouthful.

science communication

AFS 2022, Tomorrow

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Tomorrow I’ll be presenting the preliminary results from the basline commercial trapping survey at the American Fisheries Society annual meeting in Spokane, WA! It was a big push to get the data analysis to a point that it was presentation ready and then to actually create a presentation. The pre-recorded version of the presentation can be viewed here. The session is on Offshore wind and fishery interactions and I’m excited to see what sorts of thoughts people are having on the west coast about devveloping offshore wind energy and whether they are finding that lessons learned from east coast fixed-bottom wnd infrastructure ecological monitoring, siting and leasing problems is applicable to the floating-wind future they expect.

stakeholder engagement

Distributing Tag Reporting Fliers

3 minute read

Published:

This week I spent a couple days driving around midcoast Maine visiting a variety of harbor’s lobster wharfs, co-ops, and pounds to distirbute fliers about reporting caught lobsters tagged by our study. To incentivize tag reports we set up a raffle with 5 tiered prizesz ($750, $500, $250, $125 and $125) and each tiem a tag is reported with useable data the reporter gets a raffle entry. Useable data generally means a valid tag ID, date of capture, and approximate location in latitude and longitude.

survey update

Finishing Up

1 minute read

Published:

The spring survey was a crazy five week field season. Weather held throughout the survey allowing us to complete all 9 of our scheduled sample dates despite the slightly condensed schedule. We saw significantly less lobsters during the fall survey, especially in the landable / legal size class. Additionally, while in the fall survey the test site performed slightly better during the spring we seemd to catch more lobsters in the control site.

First Haul

1 minute read

Published:

Today was our first haul for the spring iteration of the commercial trapping survey. Traps were set in each site on Thursday April 21, (2022) following last week’s gale and hauled after a four night soak.

Storm Force Winds

2 minute read

Published:

The gale arrived last night in full force. While conducting the commercial trapping survey I stay on top of Horn’s Hill in the old weather station (presently the Flying Bridge) on Monhegan Island. This morning sometime between 7:30 and 8:50 AM the anemometer on top of the house recorded our daily maximum wind gust speed at 62 mph, a 10 on the Beaufort Scale. A 10 on the Beaufort Scale is described as ‘Storm’ and is rated one higher than ‘Severe Gale’.

Arriving on Monhegan Island

1 minute read

Published:

Today I caught the 9:30 ferry out of Port Clyde for Monhegan Island, ME. Here as in the fall, I’ll be conducting the spring iteration of a baseline survey examining lobster catch and population dynamics in the Monhegan Island Lobster Conservation Area.

tag reporting

Distributing Tag Reporting Fliers

3 minute read

Published:

This week I spent a couple days driving around midcoast Maine visiting a variety of harbor’s lobster wharfs, co-ops, and pounds to distirbute fliers about reporting caught lobsters tagged by our study. To incentivize tag reports we set up a raffle with 5 tiered prizesz ($750, $500, $250, $125 and $125) and each tiem a tag is reported with useable data the reporter gets a raffle entry. Useable data generally means a valid tag ID, date of capture, and approximate location in latitude and longitude.

tags

Spring 2022 Tags Arrival

2 minute read

Published:

Today I got a chance to pick up this survey’s tags from the Darling Marine Center. For this survey iteration I ordered 8000 tags, 12 needles, and 3 tagging guns.

update

Spring 2022 Tags Arrival

2 minute read

Published:

Today I got a chance to pick up this survey’s tags from the Darling Marine Center. For this survey iteration I ordered 8000 tags, 12 needles, and 3 tagging guns.

wind monitoring

Upcoming Commercial Trapping Survey

less than 1 minute read

Published:

This past fall I spent 6 weeks on Monhegan Island (Oct. 8- Nov. 21) performing a commercial trapping survey with the help of local lobstermen to assess both population dynamics and catch metrics in the local fishery. In the survey 72 lobster traps were fished between two sites, Test and Control, for 36 traps/ site.