Alewife
by Ethan Nedeau
In the recreational anglers'
hierarchy of fishes, the alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus,
is situated somewhere between the white sucker and creek chub.
Bait. Sure, you can eat them during lean times, and maybe the old
hands will wax poetic about smoked and salted alewife, but nowadays
the fish are likely to be used for pet food, fertilizer or lobster
bait. Yet their importance may be far greater than most of our
other native fishes. Alewives bring an enormous influx of marine-derived
nutrients to freshwater ecosystems. They are a forage fish for
many predators and they are the only known host for the freshwater
mussel Anodonta implicata, the alewife floater.
Alewives were once a prominent-albeit
seasonal-member of the native fish community in Atlantic coastal
watersheds. They traversed streams from South Carolina to Newfoundland,
seeking spawning areas in lakes, ponds and slow-moving portions
of rivers. Small coastal ponds might have supported a few thousand
fish, whereas a large watershed such as the Penobscot River could
have supported tens of millions. Today, some rivers still support
abundant populations of spawning alewives, yet man-made obstructions
and pollution confine alewives to a small percentage of their
ancestral spawning areas. In the St. Croix River watershed, alewives
historically swam into Spednic Lake. Scientists estimate that
the watershed might have supported 14 to 38 million spawning
alewives and their anadromous look-alike, the blueback herring,
Alosa aestivalis. Collectively, these two species are called
river herring, or gaspereau. After closure of the Vanceboro dam
in 1987, the Grand Falls Dam in 1991 and the Woodland Dam in
1995, nearly the entire watershed was inaccessible to these fish,
and in 2002 only 900 river herring returned from the sea to spawn.
Spawning alewives present nutrients
to freshwater ecosystems in the form of eggs,
excreted materials and their dead and decaying bodies. Each
female produces 60,000 to 467,000 eggs annually and may spawn
up to seven or eight years in her lifetime. In a single lake,
billions or trillions of eggs, as well as a huge volume of
sperm, may be released into the water each spring-essentially "protein
packets" for aquatic animals such as zooplankton, bryozoans,
clams and insect larvae. The alewives that die before returning
to the sea, which may be 25 percent of the spawning population
in the Northeast U.S., but greater than 75 percent of the
population in mid-Atlantic watersheds, are eaten by scavengers
such as crayfish, turtles, eels, raccoons, gulls and bald
eagles.
Ospreys, bald eagles, cormorants and
great blue herons prey heavily on migrating alewives
each spring, at a time when some of these birds are nesting
and rearing their chicks. In polluted rivers, organic chemicals
and heavy metals (such as PCBs, dioxin and mercury) bioaccumulate
in the tissues of resident fish, and these toxins are then
passed to birds that consume them. Alewives are a healthier
prey item for fish-eating birds than resident freshwater
fish because they have not accrued these toxins in their
bodies. Thus, a large alewife run will help to curtail the
harmful effects of biomagnification on fish-eating birds.
Some
anglers worry that anadromous alewives might have
a detrimental effect on sport fisheries, but nothing could
be further from the truth. Adult anadromous alewives do not
compete with freshwater fish because they essentially stop
feeding during the migration and spawning period, and do
not resume feeding until they reach brackish water on their
way back to sea. Since alewives are planktivores, the vast
majority of their food is zooplankton, small crustaceans
and insect larvae. Even at sea, fish comprise a miniscule
proportion of an alewife's diet. One 1994 study published
in the Fishery Bulletin, examined 1,215 alewife stomachs
and found that larval fish represented only 1.4 percent by
volume of total prey items.
Migratory alewives
and their offspring are key forage for fish predators. Striped
bass, northern pike, pickerel and lake trout are among
the fish that consume adult alewives in freshwater or estuaries,
in addition to the large number of predators in the marine
environment. Striped bass will follow migrating alewives
for many miles up estuaries and rivers, providing a recreational
fishery in May and June. Some scientists have speculated
that damming of coastal rivers contributed to the collapse
of the cod fishery in the Gulf of Maine by reducing the
abundance of alewives, one of the cod's principal prey
items. Restoration of pelagic and groundfish stocks in
the Gulf of Maine would likely benefit from restoration
of alewife populations.
Young-of-the-year alewives present
a spring, summer and fall picnic for our important
game fish. They live in freshwater for three to seven months
and grow two to five inches before descending the watershed
and entering the ocean. They are eaten by many fish such
as perch, bass, salmon and trout. In studying both blueback
herring and alewife in Massachusetts coastal lakes, scientists
determined that Alosa was the most important fish prey consumed
by largemouth bass (based on number in individuals consumed),
and that Alosa are an energy-rich prey that provide a high
growth potential for largemouth bass. The scientists concluded
that "Our simulations show that the presence of 'trophy'
largemouth bass found in southeastern, coastal Massachusetts
was not solely related to water temperature across the state
but rather was related to predator diet and, specifically,
to the presence of anadromous herring in largemouth bass
diets."
The freshwater mussel connection
Freshwater mussels are large bivalved
molluscs, superficially resembling a marine quahog,
which inhabit large permanent waterbodies throughout North
America. They are one of the most endangered groups of animals
on Earth. In North America alone, nearly 75 percent of the
297 native species are listed officially as Special Concern,
Threatened or Endangered in all or parts of their range,
including eight of the thirteen species native to coastal
New England and the Canadian Maritime provinces.
The larvae of freshwater mussels are
obligate fish parasites. Female mussels release
larvae into the water, where they must find a suitable host
fish and attach to its fins or gills. Mussels are often specific
about the fish they can parasitize, and if environmental
factors change the abundance or availability of the host
fish, then mussel reproduction is compromised. The alewife
is the only known vertebrate host for the freshwater mussel
Anodonta implicata (alewife floater), though the blueback
herring and American shad, Alosa sapidissima, are also suspected
hosts.
The alewife floater is often abundant
in Atlantic coastal rivers and lakes, and its
distribution is closely tied to, and dependent upon, the
alewife. If a dam blocks alewives from reaching historical
spawning grounds, then the alewife floater will go extinct
in upstream areas. Some evidence suggests that the alewife
floater was extirpated in several coastal watersheds in the
last four centuries. For example, it is noticeably absent
in rivers and lakes of southern coastal Maine, where dams
were built as early as 1634. Anadromous fish migrations were
halted decades and even centuries before scientists could
document fish or mussel populations in some watersheds. A
quotation from the 1867 Fish Commissioner's Report, referring
to salmon in the Saco River, is particularly telling: "We
could obtain no estimate of their numbers in former times,
as they had ceased to be plenty beyond the recollection in
the present generation."
Freshwater mussels are filter feeders that
remove large amounts of algae, zooplankton, bacteria and sediments
from the water. Scientists have estimated that freshwater mussels
in the tidal Hudson River filtered 5.3 million gallons of water
per day! Mussels store enormous amounts of nutrients and minerals
in their tissues and shells, such as carbon, nitrogen, potassium
and calcium. Freshwater mussels usually comprise the greatest
proportion of animal biomass in aquatic systems, far outweighing
all other animals combined, including fish. They are a food item
for suckers, sturgeon and catfish, as well as mammals such as
otters, muskrats and raccoons. Mussels are sensitive to environmental
changes and pollution, and are ideal biomonitors for assessing
the health and recovery of aquatic ecosystems. Elimination of
alewives will eliminate these many services that the alewife
floater provides.
The productivity, diversity and health
of coastal freshwater habitats depend in part
on an unimpeded spring migration of alewives, and in the
same way, the Gulf of Maine depends on an unimpeded summer
and fall migration of alewives back to the ocean to fuel
marine food webs. By blocking and degrading the conduits
that connect headwaters to the sea, we have severed the two-way
flow of energy between the ocean and its watershed. It is
difficult to imagine how any creatures-from mussels living
in our lake and river bottoms, to striped bass that follow
alewives from sea to rivers, to eagles and cormorants that
gather at spawning rivers each spring in hungry anticipation
of Alosa-have not been affected by the disruption of alewife
reproduction in the Gulf of Maine. Restoration of alewives
will involve removing dams or installing better-designed
fishways that allow both upstream and downstream passage,
dealing with pollution problems and maintaining adequate
stream flow.
This article was reprinted with permission from the summer 2003
issue of the Gulf of Maine Times (find at: www.gulfofmaine.org)
Ethan Nedeau is a science translator for the Gulf of Maine Council
on the Marine Environment. He can be reached at ejnedeau@attbi.com.
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