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  DURHAM — Winter flounder populations off the coast of Massachusetts are  getting a helping hand from University of New Hampshire researchers.
Winter  flounder populations in southern New England waters — also called the  Mid-Atlantic Bight — have been steadily declining since the early 2000s,  primarily due to overfishing, according to the National Marine  Fisheries Service. UNH researchers have spent the last decade conducting  research on establishing methods to effectively restore and enhance  winter flounder populations. One community in the Mid-Atlantic Bight —  Martha's Vineyard, Mass. — recently sought advice from UNH researchers,  who have developed an enhancement project aimed at improving winter  flounder stocks.
"Winter flounder stocks are in dire need of  help," according to Elizabeth Fairchild, UNH associate professor of  zoology and the project's principal investigator. "Cutting back on  fishing alone will not restore these populations in a timely manner. All  responsible management tools, including restocking, should be  considered."
With funding from the National Sea Grant College  Program and the Science Consortium for Ocean Replenishment, volunteers  on Martha's Vineyard have literally plunged into the project. Following a  recent training session at the UNH Judd Gregg Marine Research Complex  in New Castle, volunteers began collecting data in the icy waters of  Lagoon Pond and Menemsha Pond on Martha's Vineyard. Two times a month,  they take core samples to determine food availability for flounder,  monitor water quality and pull seine nets through the shallow waters to  determine what species of fish and macroinvertebrates are present. The  core samples are sent back to UNH where Fairchild's lab assistants  analyze the results.
Project participants will continue  collecting data through November in order to determine the most  appropriate winter flounder stocking strategies. If these sites show  promise as enhancement locations, researchers and volunteers will stock  the ponds with as many as 50,000 hatchery-reared winter flounder and  monitor their populations to determine the stocking effectiveness.
"This  study is a demonstration project, and this community is a testing  ground to show how to start and implement winter flounder restocking  programs," Fairchild said. "If this project is successful, it will serve  as a model applicable to other New England fishing communities seeking  to recover winter flounder populations."
On Martha's Vineyard,  interest in and support for this project comes from residents of the  island, fishermen and bay scallopers as well as from members of the  Wampanoag Reservation, says UNH Ph.D. student Shelley Edmundson, who  works closely with the volunteers on the island. "The public has been  extremely supportive and excited about the project, particularly  long-time residents who remember decades ago when the flounder fishery  was successful," she says. "It's great to see people working together  across the island to try to help the winter flounder and bring back the  fishery."
To find out more information about the project, please visit Fairchild's winter flounder enhancement blog at http://winterflounderenhancement.blogspot.com/ or contact her at elizabeth.fairchild@unh.edu.   
Photo by Curtis Chandler Volunteer Andrew Jacobs prepares to take a core sample of the sediment in Menemsha Pond on Martha's Vineyard, Mass., as part of the UNH Winter Flounder Enhancement Project.
http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110309/GJNEWS_01/703099886&template=GreatBayRegion
 
 
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