News from Maine Sea Grant | Summer & Fall 2017



*EDUCATION HIGHLIGHTS*

*Congratulations to the recipients *of the Maine Sea Grant Undergraduate
Scholarship in Marine Sciences
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/funding/msg-undergraduate-scholarship> for
the 2017-18 academic year: Brittany Bills, UMaine Machias; Rachel Borisko
at Maine Maritime Academy; Andrew Davidsohn, Michelle Dufault, and Jessica
Stumper at University of New England; Kaitlyn Clark at College of the
Atlantic, and Mimi Edmondson, Laura E. Paye, and Ashley Sarra at the
University of Maine. Each will receive $500 from Maine Sea Grant, matched
with a $500 award from the student’s home institution.


*OUTREACH & EXTENSION HIGHLIGHTS*

*Maine Sea Grant* is one of many partners contributing to a restoration
project on Pierce Pond in the Town of Penobscot. On August 17 construction
crews broke ground
<http://www.ellsworthamerican.com/maine-news/waterfront/construction-way-improve-historic-alewife-runs-penobscot/>
on a new fishway that will all alewives and other sea-run fish to pass into
the lake, which connects into Northern Bay on the Bagaduce River.


*Keri Kaczor, who coordinates* the Maine Healthy Beaches Program
<http://mainehealthybeaches.org/>, reports that the dry summer weather
lended to a great season for beach water quality: 97.3% of water quality
samples were in compliance with EPA water quality standards, the best
performance in the program's history. Ongoing efforts to identify sources
of pollution by program staff and local partners were successful at finding
and fixing two wastewater malfunctions in 2017.


*Marine Extension Associate *Kristen Grant recently helped to facilitate
public forums in Sanford to to explore opportunities to create housing for
people who work in the local area. Grant has been working with the
Workforce Housing Coalition of the Greater Seacoast to help towns plan and
design affordable residential developments for the last ten years. To date,
the communities of York, Kittery, Berwick, Wells, and Portsmouth, New
Hampshire have made progress developing workforce housing.


*Natalie Springuel contributed* to the Salts & Water Podcast Series
<https://experiencemaritimemaine.org/salts-water-podcast-series/> by
award-winning producer Rob Rosenthal. These audio stories feature
fishermen, sailers, boatbuilders, and more from Eastport, Stonington,
Searsport, Rockland, Bath, and Portland. Salts and Water is a project of
Experience Maritime Maine, funded in part by the Elmina B. Sewall
Foundation, Hamilton Marine, Maine’s MidCoast & Islands, and sponsored by
Maine Boats, Homes, and Harbors.

*Maine Fishermen’s Forum* has issued their Call for Presentation Proposals
<http://mainefishermensforum.org/> for the 2018 Forum, scheduled for March
1-3 at the Samoset Resort in Rockport. Founded in 1976 as part of a Maine
Sea Grant project, the mission of the Maine Fishermen’s Forum is to provide
continuing opportunities to educate the public and the fishing industry
about fisheries and marine resource issues, and to provide a neutral
platform for constructive discussion and decision making. Proposal
submission *deadline is November 1, 2017**.*


*RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS*

*In August, as *part of the Maine Sea Grant-funded research project, Lost
to the Sea
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/research/projects/lost-to-the-sea>,
researcher Alice Kelley hosted a workshop to bring together residents of
coastal communities, tribal representatives, resource managers, and
conservation groups to address issues of shell midden site access,
monitoring, and preservation. The two-day workshop, which included a field
trip to the Whaleback Midden State Historic site and discussions at the
Darling Marine Center, addressed the question, How can stakeholders help to
monitor, rescue, and protect shell middens in Maine? A summary
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/sites/default/files/LostToTheSea_Summary.pdf>
of the workshop is available, along with additional stories:

*Gather and feast, past and present*
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/blog/shell-middens>, Maine Sea Grant

*10 x10 Midden* <http://outsideinradio.org/shows/ep40>, from Outside/In on
New Hampshire Public Radio, May 2017

*Preserving Maine's ancient coastal heritage* <http://Preserving Maine's
ancient coastal heritage>, University of Maine

*The NASA Earth Observatory
<https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=90777> *featured an
image produced by UMaine researcher as its image of the day: “Oyster
Prospecting With Landsat 8
<https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/oyster-prospecting-with-landsat-8/>.” The
research, led by Jordan Snyder, a graduate research assistant in marine
sciences, and Emmanuel Boss, professor of marine sciences, uses satellite
data to identify areas along the Maine coast ideal for oyster aquaculture.
With remotely collected data from the NASA Landsat 8 satellite, the
researchers were able to derive sea temperature, chlorophyll concentrations
and water turbidity along the coast of Maine and rank the each area’s
suitability for successful oyster cultivation. Their work was published in
the journal *Frontiers in Marine Science*
<http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00190/full>.

*Catherine Frederick, Damian Brady,* and Ian Bricknell published their
paper, Landing strips: Model development for estimating body surface area
of farmed Atlantic salmon (*Salmo salar*). *Aquaculture*
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0044848616306810>
473:299-302.

*In July, the **Maine Sunday Telegram*
<http://www.pressherald.com/2017/07/23/green-plate-special-green-crabs-have-invaded-and-if-you-cant-beat-em-eat-em/>
 featured efforts to develop a culinary use for the invasive European green
crab. The research, led by Marissa McMahan of Northeastern University and
supported by the University of Maine Sea Grant Program, is identifying the
timing and process of the molt in order to take advantage of the
“soft-shell” stage which is a food item in some parts of Europe. McMahan
worked with Chef Tim O’ Brien of Enoteca Athena
<http://www.enotecaathena.com/menu.html> restaurant in Brunswick to test
out some green crab recipes on Tuesday evening.

*Why was graduate student* Nicole Ramberg-Pihl in the Kenduskeag Stream in
Exeter and Garland in search of smallmouth bass
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/blog/bass-trout-salmon-1> on a hot July day?


*PUBLICATIONS & SEA GRANT IN THE NEWS*

Maine Sea Grant *Annual Report* <http://seagrant.umaine.edu/node/1026> 2016



*Estuary Beat* is a new monthly briefing on estuary and coastal news in *The
Working Waterfront *by Communications Director Catherine Schmitt. Read past
beats here (June
<http://www.islandinstitute.org/working-waterfront/estuary-beat-cleaning-medomak-beach-conference-and-fish-passage-bagaduce>,
July
<http://www.islandinstitute.org/working-waterfront/estuary-beat-casco-bay-and-oil-hydro-acoustic-penbay>,
August
<http://www.islandinstitute.org/working-waterfront/estuary-beat-storm-surge-stripers-and-oyster-trail>
).



*Why we love the ocean* <http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/blog/ocean-love>:
the psychology and physiology behind our attraction to the water. *Maine
Boats, Homes & Harbors* September/October 30th Anniversary issue.


*Downeast Fisheries Trail Five-Year Report*
<http://seagrant.umaine.edu/node/1046>


*Oral history in Winter Harbor*
<http://www.ellsworthamerican.com/maine-news/students-converge-winter-harbor-oral-history-project/>



Check out the new *Oyster Trail of Maine* <http://oystertrailmaine.org/>!



Remember to tune in to *WERU-FM* for *Coastal Conversations* on the fourth
Friday of the month:



*October 27:* Traffic and Crowding at Acadia National Park
* November 24:* Marine Mammals



And check out the archives of previous *Coastal Conversations:*

* September 22:*

*Salts & Water, Stories from the Maine Coast
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/coastalconversations/salts-and-water>*

*August 25:* *Fisheries History at Penobscot Marine Museum*
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/coastalconversations/fisheries-at-penobscot-marine-museum>


*July 28:* *The Beaches Conference*
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/coastalconversations/the-beaches-conference>


*June 23:* *Alewife Restoration & Monitoring*
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/coastalconversations/alewives>


*May 26:* *Downeast Fisheries Partnership*
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/node/1019>


*EVENTS*


*5-9 November* | Coastal & Estuarine Research Federation Biennial
Conference | Providence, RI



*17-18 January* | Atlantic Salmon Ecosystems Forum
<http://atlanticsalmonforum.org/> | Orono, ME



*2-4 March* | Maine Fishermen’s Forum <http://mainefishermensforum.org/> |
Rockport, ME



*Ongoing* | Lobstering & The Maine Coast
<http://www.mainemaritimemuseum.org/new-lobstering-maine-coast-exhibit/> |
Maine Maritime Museum


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


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