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Coast Guard rescues 6 from sinking fishing boat off New Bedford

November 21, 2016 โ€“The U.S. Coast Guard and local responders rescued six people Sunday from a 72-foot scallop boat sinking five miles off New Bedford.

A person aboard the Captain Jeff scallop boat used a VHF radio at 9:30 a.m. to alert the Coast Guard in Woods Hole and report their boat was taking on water.

A 47-foot motor life boat crew from Coast Guard Station Menemsha and a helicopter crew from Air Station Cape Cod responded. The Buzzards Bay Task Force also responded to help the six people.

At the scene, a rescue swimmer was deployed from the helicopter onto the Captain Jeff with equipment to control the flooding.

After the Coast Guard rescue swimmer realized the equipment wasnโ€™t working, he assisted all six people off the scallop boat and onto a task force boat.

The crew was taken into New Bedford to be evaluated by awaiting emergency services personnel. There were no reported injuries.

Read the full story at Metro

New Lobster Trap Technology Could Reduce Whale Entanglements

November 14, 2016 โ€” WOODS HOLE, Mass. โ€” More and more whales are becoming snarled in fishing gear, often dying slow, painful deaths.

Two Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) engineers have invented a lobster trap device that they say could help whales avert entanglements and, at the same time, might allow currently restricted waters to be safely reopened for lobster fishing.

In New Englandโ€™s offshore lobster fishery, long vertical ropes or โ€œlinesโ€ connect the traps on the bottom to floats on the waterโ€™s surface, so fishermen can locate their trawls and drag them back up.

The new device is called the โ€œon-callโ€ buoy and floats near the bottom attached to lobster traps.

Read the full story at CapeCod.com

Fisheries science center gets new director

October 28th, 2016 โ€” Some might think it fitting that Jonathan Hare will take the reins as the new science and research director of the Northeast Fisheries Science Research Center in Woods Hole on Halloween. After all, he faces the daunting task of overseeing the research and data at the heart of the rebuilding of fish stocks in a region with the largest numbers of overfished species, in an ocean experiencing one of the fastest warming trends in the world, with fishermen who remain skeptical of the science used to manage fisheries.

โ€œItโ€™s a challenging time,โ€ Hare said. The science center in Woods Hole that Hare will oversee provides scientific research and data on fish stocks from Canada to Cape Hatteras, N.C.

The $1 billion commercial fishery in the Northeast is home to the countryโ€™s No. 1 port, New Bedford, in terms of the value of species landed, but also has the highest number of overfished fish stocks in U.S. waters by far, including the regionโ€™s iconic species like cod and several species of flounder. The South Atlantic region is a distant second with only four overfished species, compared with the Northeastโ€™s 14 species.

The demands placed on fishery managers to rebuild those stocks, some of which have not recovered despite decades of drastic cuts to fishing, are high. Plus, a new management system relies on accurate and timely estimates of fish populations, something increasingly difficult to accomplish given changing environmental conditions and tight federal budgets.

Read the full story at The Cape Cod Times

WHFF Brings โ€˜Sustaining Sea Scallopsโ€™ To Coonamessett Farm

October 3, 2016 โ€” The Woods Hole Film Festival will launch its 2016-2017 โ€œDinner & A Movieโ€ series on Sunday, October 9, with a sea-themed dinner at Coonamessett Farm featuring the film โ€œSustaining Sea Scallops,โ€ a short documentary by Woods Hole filmmakers Elise Hugus and Daniel Cojanu. The dinner will begin at 6 PM.

โ€œSustaining Sea Scallopsโ€ is a 35-minute film featuring the history and resurgence of the Atlantic sea scallop as told through the lens of local fisherman and researchers invested in keeping the scallop industry alive through sustainable fishing. In 1999, facing fisheries closures and bankruptcy, the scallop industry began funding a research program to minimize impacts on the marine environment. Fifteen years later, the Atlantic sea scallop is hailed as one of the most sustainable and lucrative fisheries in the world. From New Bedford to Seaford, Virginia, the film also highlights how cooperative research can serve as a new way to unite not only the fisheries, but also entire communities.

Made with support from the Coonamessett Farm Foundation, โ€œSustaining Sea Scallopsโ€ will screen outdoors at Coonamessett Farm with a question-&-answer session to follow with the filmโ€™s directors and Coonamessett Farm owner Ron Smolowitz, who is featured in the film.

Read the full story at The Enterprise

NOAA ship back after extensive trip

September 6, 2016 โ€” NEWPORT, RI โ€” Research scientists recently had the first confirmed sighting of a Trueโ€™s beaked whale that was combined with a verified recording of the whaleโ€™s sounds.

โ€œThe whales are very far offshore and can spend one to three hours below the surface without coming up,โ€ said Debra Palka, a research biologist with the Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole, Mass. โ€œThe whales are not seen very often.โ€

Palka was among a team of scientists that just completed a 54-day trip at sea aboard the 209-foot National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research vessel Henry B. Bigelow, which was welcomed back home Friday at a ceremony that featured U.S. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I.; Rear Adm. Anita Lopez, deputy director for operations in NOAAโ€™s Office of Marine and Aviation Operations; and Lt. Cmdr. Jeffrey Taylor, Bigelowโ€™s commanding officer, as the speakers.

Reed announced in April that Bigelowโ€™s new home port would be Newport, moving here permanently from Woods Hole. He lobbied for several years to have the ship here because the waterfront at Naval Station Newport is an integral part of operations for both NOAA and Coast Guard vessels, he said.

Read the full story at The Westerly Sun

Bottom trawlers sought for NOAA surveys

September 2, 2016 โ€” NOAA Fisheries is looking for a few good boats.

The federal fishing regulatorโ€™s Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole seeks one to three commercial fishing boats to participate in the agencyโ€™s bottom trawl survey in the waters of the mid-Atlantic and New England regions of the Atlantic Ocean.

The use of the commercial vessels to help supplement โ€” or in some cases, supplant โ€” the work of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s survey vessel, the FSV Henry B. Bigelow, is one of the first steps in NOAAโ€™s recently announced plan to incorporate more commercial boats in the trawl survey.

NOAA announced on Aug. 3 that it plans to shift โ€œpart or allโ€ of its spring and fall trawl surveys to fishing industry boats over the next five years in an attempt to get more consistent and expansive coverage and to bridge the current gap between what fishermen say they are seeing on the water and what NOAA is reporting from its trawl surveys.

โ€œThe goal is to build trust in the best science through cooperative and collaborative research and improving both the communication and transparency with the fishing industry,โ€ Bill Karp, the director of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, said at the announcement.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

Coast Guard responds to grounded fishing vessel off Woods Hole

July 19, 2016 โ€” WOODS HOLE, Mass. โ€” The Coast Guard responded to a grounded fishing vessel in Woods Hole Pass near Woods Hole on Monday.

At approximately 11:45 a.m., Coast Guard Sector Southeastern New England received a VHF-FM Channel 16 radio call from the 67-foot stern trawler fishing vessel, Hope & Sydney, that they were hard aground in Woods Hole Pass. 

Minutes after receiving the call, a 45-foot Coast Guard rescue boat from Station Woods Hole was launched and members of the Buzzards Bay Marine Task Force were notified.

Read the full story at CapeCod.com

MASSACHUSETTS: Scientists to meet with public about overfished flounder

July 11, 2016 โ€” FALMOUTH, Mass. โ€” Scientists will meet with fishermen and the public about the future of a flounder species that regulators say suffers from overfishing.

The Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole will hold the meeting at 10 a.m. July 26 to talk about witch flounder, a popular food fish caught off New England. Federal regulators say the witch flounder is overfished.

The scientists will answer questions relating to an upcoming assessment of the witch flounder stock. They will also take comments from the public.

The catch of witch flounder has fallen from more than 6.4 million pounds in 2004 to a little more than 1.2 million pounds in 2014. Scientists say thatโ€™s still too much because the fishโ€™s reproductive rates have been lower than expected.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

Upcoming Witch Flounder Outreach Meeting

July 5, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Northeast Fisheries Science Center:

NEFSC will be hosting a Witch Flounder outreach session prior to the SARC 62 meeting scheduled later this year.

Outreach topics will include a summary of the 2015 Update, the ABC, and the plan to transition from VPA to ASAP.  Witch Flounder assessment scientists will respond to questions, comments or feedback from interested parties.

Date/Time: Tuesday, July 26th, 2016 from 10:00 a.m. โ€” 12:00 p.m.

Location: S.H. Clark Conference Room, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA

Call-In Details: 877-653-6612 (toll-free) or 517-600-4840 (toll charges apply; for international callers)

Participant Code: 8116908

Webinar URL

More information is available here

NOAA fisheries center wonโ€™t relocate to New Bedford

May 31, 2016 โ€” NEW BEDFORD, Mass. โ€” NOAA wonโ€™t be relocating its Northeast Fisheries Science Center from Woods Hole to New Bedford or anywhere off Cape Cod, the agency decided this week.

After 50 years in its location, the Science Center is bursting at the seams, and NOAA is seriously considering rebuilding it at another location.

Mayor Jon Mitchell and about 50 other community leaders wrote to NOAA earlier this year, stating that moving the researchers closer to the fishing fleet that relies on their work would go a long way toward repairing the damaged relationship that the fishermen have with their regulators.

Drew Minkiewicz, attorney for The Fisheries Survival Fund, a nonprofit scallop industry group, said, โ€œThey should have looked harder. It doesnโ€™t seem like they thought about it too much.โ€ He said that the city offers โ€œsynergies with places like SMAST (The UMass Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology).

Bob Vanasse of the industry group Saving Seafood said, โ€œI do think the mayor was correct in moving the science center to a major seaport with the most economic value. It would have been a good move. It would have been good to have scientists in close proximity to the fishermen who rely on them.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not surprised, though. I thought it was a long shot,โ€ he said.

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

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