NEWS FROM MAINE SEA GRANT | FALL/WINTER 2013

------------------------------


* PROGRAM MANAGEMENT HIGHLIGHTS*

We are pleased to announce that Maine Sea Grant Director, Paul Anderson,
has been appointed by the University of Maine to serve a two-year term as
Director of the UMaine Aquaculture Research Institute, in addition to
continuing his role as Maine Sea Grant Director. There is potential for
significant synergy between the two programs, as well as with the UMaine
Center for Cooperative Aquaculture Research in Franklin, ME, and other
aquaculture-related organizations and research efforts throughout the
state. We believe Paul’s dual appointment, which began December 1st, is an
opportunity to strengthen and advance existing collaborations in this area
of Sea Grant’s work.


*EDUCATION HIGHL IGHTS*

Maine Sea Grant will be accepting applications for three NOAA graduate
student fellowships in January and February 2014. Application eligibility
information and materials will be released by NOAA in the coming weeks, and
we will post it on our website as soon as it is available. Please check the
student opportunities links on our funding page for details:
http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/funding


*EXTENSION HIGHLIGHTS*

Congratulations to Marine Extension Team members, Dana Morse and Keri
Kaczor, for receiving Outstanding Outreach Awards from the Northeast
Regional Sea Grant Consortium in late November.  Morse and representatives
from CT, RI, MA, and NH Sea Grant programs accepted the group award on
behalf of the entire five-state American Lobster Trade Adjustment
Assistance<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/extension/taa> (TAA)
project team for their work throughout the Northeast from 2010-2013. The
Maine TAA team included the Maine Lobstermen’s Association, Maine Farm
Service Agency, Coastal Enterprises, Inc., and many others. Kaczor received
an Individual Outstanding Outreach Achievement Award in recognition of her
work coordinating the statewide Maine Healthy Beaches
Program<http://www.mainehealthybeaches.org/>,
and the Municipal Guide to Clean
Water<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/extension/municipal-guide-to-clean-water>
that
she produced in support of the program.

Maine Sea Grant and NOAA Fisheries (Orono Field Station) are pleased to
announce a new collaborative oral history project exploring fishermen’s
biological and cultural knowledge about river herring and American eel
fisheries in eastern Maine.  The oral histories will be featured in
interpretive and outreach material related to the Downeast Fisheries
Trail<http://www.downeastfisheriestrail.org/>.
With funding from NOAA’s Preserve America Initiative, UMaine dual master’s
degree candidate, Julia Beaty, has been hired to conduct the oral history
interviews and develop outreach materials during the winter and spring of
2014.

Extension Team member, Dana Morse, is working with the Maine Department of
Marine Resources and numerous industry partners to test aquaculture
production methods for sea scallops with the goal of learning how to
safely, sustainably, and profitably cultivate sea scallops in cages. The
Bangor Daily News produced a feature article on the
project<http://bangordailynews.com/slideshow/cages-in-maine-pilot-program-could-be-first-step-toward-farmed-scallops/>
in
November.

In August, Maine Sea Grant organized and hosted a second annual Seaweed
Scene workshop <http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/seaweed/seaweed-scene-2013> in
Belfast, Maine, followed by a three-hour class on kelp farming techniques.
More than 120 attendees listened to presentations from science and industry
experts, and participated in facilitated discussions to help share ideas
and set priorities for future seaweed aquaculture research, culture and
wild harvest industry development, and related outreach and education
initiatives in Maine. The Maine Aquaculture Innovation Center provided
funding for the event.

Extension Team member, Kristen Grant, is working with Southern Maine
municipalities and the Workforce Housing Coalition of the Greater Sea Coast
to organize and lead workforce housing design workshops (“charrettes”) that
engage citizens, architects, planners, realtors, bankers, developers and
others in creating and considering a range of livable development options
for their communities. Designs that
emerged<http://www.seacoastwhc.org/events.html#.UqDJ-41Q3rG> from
two charrettes in the Town of Wells in October are currently under review
by the Wells Board of Selectmen.

Maine, Massachusetts, and South Carolina Sea Grant Programs are partnering
with the Social and Environmental Research Institute, in Greenfield, MA,
and fishing communities in the three states to co-develop climate change
planning and adaptation strategies. Extension Team member, Esperanza
Stancioff, and project partners are conducting interviews with fishermen,
leading modeling workshops, and facilitating a climate change adaptation
planning process with the lobstering community of South Thomaston, ME. The
project goal is to help communities explore local vulnerabilities and
potential consequences and develop best practices for “fishing smarter, not
harder” in the face of climate change.

Maine Sea Grant and UMaine researchers are working with the City of
Ellsworth to develop climate adaptation planning tools related to managing
stormwater infrastructure to cope with changes in the frequency and
seasonal timing of extreme storm events. With funding from the NOAA
National Sea Grant Program, the project team is developing an interactive
process for mapping complex governance structures and event scenarios to
determine infrastructure management priorities, as well as a series of
educational materials for residents. They recently worked with the Maine
Public Broadcasting Network to produce a documentary called Culvert
Operations<http://www.mpbn.net/Television/LocalTelevisionPrograms/SustainableMaine/AllEpisodes/tabid/1480/ctl/ViewItem/mid/5132/ItemId/30083/Default.aspx>
.

*RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS*

A technical review panel met in September to assess proposals for Maine Sea
Grant’s 2014-2016 research program. The following four projects were
selected for funding:

Supporting sea vegetable aquaculture in Maine (*Susan H. Brawley,
University of Maine*)

Evaluating performance of length-structured models for assessment of
northern shrimp and Atlantic herring in the Gulf of Maine (*Yong Chen,
University of Maine*)

Variation in habitat use of juvenile life stages of river herring (*Karen
A. Wilson, University of Southern Maine*)

Coastal flooding and erosion from severe storms in a changing climate
(*Qingping
Zou, University of Maine*)

Maine Sea Grant has also committed $25,000 per year for two years to
support three regional social science research projects selected by the
Northeast Sea Grant Consortium.


*PUBLICATIONS*

Cost-Efficient Climate Change Adaptation in the North
Atlantic<http://seagrant.uconn.edu/CEANA/>,
a new report from a study undertaken by Sea Grant and the NOAA North
Atlantic Regional Team (NART).

American Lobster in a Changing Ecosystem: A US-Canada Science
Symposium<http://nrcresearchpress.com/toc/cjfas/70/11>,
conference proceedings published as a special issue of the Canadian Journal
of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 2013, 70(11): 1571-1575,
10.1139/cjfas-2013-0465

*EVENTS*

Fisheries, Aquaculture and Tourism
Workshops<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/fisheries-tourism> |
11, 12, 13 December 2013 | Belfast, Machias, and Portland, ME

Maine Green Crab Summit <http://seagrant.umaine.edu/green-crab-summit> | 16
December 2013 | Orono, ME (and via webcast!)

Ocean Acidification Webinar Series <http://www.neracoos.org/necan> | Maine
Sea Grant is a member of the steering committee for the Northeast Coastal
Acidification Network (NE-CAN), which will host 10 webinars in December
2013 and January 2014. | Register online at the link above.


* SOCIAL MEDIA*

<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/fisheries-tourism>
Visit us on Facebook!


Maine Sea Grant: www.facebook.com/MESeaGrant

Maine Seaweed Social:  www.facebook.com/MaineSeaweedSocial

Downeast Fisheries Trail: www.facebook.com/DowneastFisheriesTrail


------------------------------


Maine Sea Grant College Program | 5784 York Complex Building 6 | The
University of Maine | Orono, ME 04469
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