News from Maine Sea Grant | Winter 2018


*Save the date!* The biennial Maine Sea Grant Research Symposium
<https://umaine.edu/research/event/sea-grant-research-symposium/> will take
place on Friday, April 20, 2018, from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on the University of
Maine campus in Orono. The symposium takes place during UMaine Impact Week.
An agenda and R.S.V.P. link will be posted in early March.
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EDUCATION HIGHLIGHTS

*The National Sea Grant College Program* has awarded prestigious Dean John
A. Knauss Marine Policy Fellowships to three University of Maine graduates
<https://umaine.edu/news/blog/2018/01/31/umaine-graduates-explore-marine-policy-washington-d-c/>
who
will spend the next year working in the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee, NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, and NOAA’s
Coral Reef Conservation Program. <https://coralreef.noaa.gov/>
------------------------------
OUTREACH & EXTENSION HIGHLIGHTS

*Keri Kaczor has been selected
<http://seagrant.umaine.edu/staff/keri-kaczor>* for the position of the
<http://seagrant.umaine.edu/staff/keri-kaczor>Alliance for Maine's Marine
Economy <https://umaine.edu/alliance/> coordinator. The Alliance is a
network of more than 20 Maine-based organizations dedicated to ensuring
that Maine seafood, fishing and aquaculture industries, and the natural and
innovation ecosystems on which they depend, are healthy and benefit Maine
people. Kaczor, who previously coordinated Maine Healthy Beaches, will
remain a member of the Sea Grant and UMaine Extension Marine Extension
Team, based at the Knox-Lincoln County Extension Office in Waldoboro.

*The Marine Extension Team welcomed* Meagan Sims, the newly appointed
coordinator of Maine Healthy Beaches <http://maineheatlhybeaches.org/>, the
state's only unified, quality-assured program to monitor water quality and
protect public health on Maine's valued coastal beaches. Sims has been with
the program since 2013, and will continue to work with diverse partners to
identify and remove pollution sources in coastal watersheds.

*Elisabeth Maxwell has joined* the Signs of the Seasons New England
Phenology Program <https://extension.umaine.edu/signs-of-the-seasons/> as
assistant coordinator.

*The Aquaculture in Shared Waters
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/aquaculture/aquaculture-in-shared-waters>*
training
and education program for fishing families is continuing this winter, with
two courses running simultaneously, in Georgetown and Machias. Since the
program began in 2013, more than 30 people have started or joined
aquaculture businesses in Maine.

*Have you ever gone* into a meeting not knowing exactly why you’re there or
what you’re supposed to accomplish? Then you left the meeting feeling the
same way? If so, you may not have been terribly enthusiastic to go back
again. Most of us have had an experience like this because it’s fairly
common that people running meetings don’t really have the skills they need
to do it very effectively. These skills are known as facilitation, and
although they don’t come naturally and are rarely taught, having them can
help in your professional and community work. With assistance from Kristen
Grant, UMaine Cooperative Extension is offering facilitation skills training
<https://extension.umaine.edu/community/strengthening-your-facilitation-skills/>
 in southern Maine, with a course currently underway in Sanford.

*First person stories* about Winter Harbor’s fisheries heritage are now
part of the Winter Harbor Historical Society’s audio collection! A
multimedia story map about these interviews can be viewed at the Winter
Harbor Fisheries Oral History Project
<http://bit.ly/winterharbororalhistory2017>. Conducted in the Fall of 2017,
with leadership from Natalie Springuel and in partnership with College of
the Atlantic and Island Institute, the project captured the stories,
memories, and perspectives of local fishermen and their families, local
marine businesses and fellow community members. The focus of the interviews
was on the community’s connections to the waters surrounding the Schoodic
Peninsula and the larger context of fisheries in Maine. Topics ranged from
fishing past and present, getting product to market, changes in the
industry and changes in the Winter Harbor region.

*Do you have a fishing story to tell? Are you going to this year's Maine
Fishermen's Forum, March 1-3, at the Samoset in Rockland, Maine? Then look
for the Airstream parked out front and plan to step aboard and be
interviewed! Every Forum attendee is welcome to hop on The First Coast
<http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/blog/voices-of-the-maine-fishermens-forum>
mobile
recording studio to participate in oral history interviews conducted by
students and professionals.*
------------------------------
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS

*Maine Sea Grant has* awarded funds to faculty at UMaine and other research
institutions statewide for four new research projects representing nearly
$1,000,000 in research investment from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and matching sources.

*Sea Grant researchers* Richard Wahle, Maura Niemisto, and Skylar Bayer
will be presenting their work at the 2018 Ocean Sciences Meeting
<https://osm.agu.org/2018/> in Portland, Oregon. Sea Grant Communications
Director Catherine Schmitt is also presenting in a session on innovative
communication strategies, co-hosted by friends from Minnesota Sea Grant.
<http://www.seagrant.umn.edu/>
------------------------------
EVENTS

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

*5 March* | Lessons Learned From Efforts to Rebuild Anadromous Alewife
Populations in Downeast Maine
<https://nsfa.umaine.edu/event/lessons-learned-efforts-rebuild-anadromous-alewife-populations-downeast-maine/>
 | *Orono, ME*

*29 March* | Maine Sustainability & Water Conference
<https://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2018-conference/> | *Augusta, ME*

*20 April* | Maine Sea Grant Research Symposium
<https://umaine.edu/research/event/sea-grant-research-symposium/> | *Orono,
ME*

*14-17 May* | National Working Waterfronts and Waterways Symposium
<http://www.nationalworkingwaterfronts.com/> | *Grand Rapids, MI*

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

Reading the genetic signature of the sea scallop
<https://umaine.edu/news/blog/2017/10/11/reading-genetic-signature-sea-scallop/>
, *UMaine News*

Native American secrets lie buried in huge shell mounds
<https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/19/science/native-americans-shell-middens-maine.html>
, *The New York Times*

Lost to the Sea
<https://umainetoday.umaine.edu/stories/2017/lost-to-the-sea/> Alice and
Joseph Kelley survey Maine’s fragile shell middens to preserve the ancient
history of the archaeological sites, *UMaine Today*

Sea Run Fishes of Maine posters, featuring artwork by Karen Talbot. Stop by
our office or give us a call if you’d like one.



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