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MASSACHUSETTS: Count finds more elvers visiting Rockport

July 12, 2021 โ€” The numbers, brought to you by Eric Hutchins and his volunteers from their annual census of eel movement along the Mill Brook, have been down for several years.

Not in 2021. This summer, the mighty Mill Brook has exploded into the eel-formational super highway.

The year began promisingly, with 350 eels counted from April 1 to the second week of June. But no sooner had the first wave abated than another began and the Mill Brook was en fuego.

Hutchins, a NOAA Fisheries biologist and Gulf of Maine restoration coordinator, said the streak included several hundred-eel days. As of June 29, the total count was 985 โ€” including a jump of 402 eels in a single week.

Eel-lectrifying!

Now the really important stuff: The Eel Raffle fundraiser, where ticket buyers tried to get closest to the pin on the final number of eels counted between April 1 and Columbus Day.

โ€œOf the original 58 raffle tickets sold, only 14 are left viable with total count guesses over 1,000,โ€ Hutchins wrote in a June 29 email. โ€œThe next closet โ€˜guessโ€™ is 1,033. But that might fall later today. Things are fast and furious this year at the eel trap.โ€

Where they always respect their elvers

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Count of elvers visiting Rockport high

June 9, 2021 โ€” Consider the full life of the American eel and what it takes for the wee critters to find their way from their birthing grounds in the Sargasso Sea to the townโ€™s historic Mill Brook.

Once born, eel eggs float to the surface of the salt water spawning grounds northeast of the Bahamas and southwest of Bermuda. They hatch into transparent larvae. If they had thumbs, this is when they would stick them out. No appendages mean no thumbs. Still, they manage to hitch a ride.

Largely left to the whims of wind and currents, the larvae begin a year-long journey to fresh water portals. Some land as far south as the north coast of South America. Others travel as far north as Greenland.

And some hit the sweet spot, crossing the Atlantic Ocean to the Mill Brook and from there up into Rockportโ€™s Mill Pond and Loop Pond, and perhaps as far away as Briar Swamp in Dogtown. In all, they swim more than 1,000 miles.

Waiting for them is Eric Hutchins and his merry band of volunteers, natureโ€™s own census takers for the eels that have by now matured from larvae into translucent elver stretching roughly 2 to 4 inches.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Herring skip fish count opening day

April 2, 2019 โ€” Apparently river herring are just like humans: Theyโ€™re not too crazy about the cold, either.

Monday was the annual opening day for counting river herring at the cityโ€™s alewife fishway in West Gloucester and the cold, blustery weather tossed a shutout to the disappointment of about a dozen fish counters, including Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken.

No fish for you.

Unlike last year, when a few river herring returning to the fishway from the Atlantic Ocean by way of the Little River actually showed up on opening day, the fish apparently are operating at a more measured pace this season.

The water was a bracing 7 degrees Celsius, or 44.6 degrees Fahrenheit. That was about the same as last year. But the air temperature of 11 degrees Celsius, or about 52 degrees Fahrenheit, and the whipping wind with gusts up to 30 mph provided their own chilling effects.

โ€œThis is colder than they like,โ€ said Eric Hutchins, the Gulf of Maine restoration coordinator for NOAA Fisheries. โ€œBut we know theyโ€™re on their way because the fish are migrating down in southeastern Massachusetts. Itโ€™s just a matter of getting the water a few degrees warmer. A few days of 60-degree temperatures and weโ€™ll have fish.โ€

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

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