Oregon
Oregon’s Marine Reserves Program plans to return to the ports of Garibaldi and Port Orford this spring and fall in the latest installment of this unique way
Medford, OR – According to the state officials, this is reportedly a unique way for coastal commercial and recreational fishers to help fuel scientific research in the state’s near-shore waters.
The Marine Preserves Program, administered by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, plans to target the Redfish Rocks Marine Reserve near Port Orford and the Cape Falcon Marine Reserve near Garibaldi during this year’s hook-and-line surveys.
During the surveys, private commercial boats – usually charters – contract with the agency to take out volunteer anglers who catch rockfish in key underwater reefs.
They focus within marine reserves where all other fishing is banned as well as comparison areas outside of them. Biologists on board identify and measure the fish before they are quickly and safely released.
When compared to data from nearly identical fishing efforts dating back as far as 2010, marine scientists are able to track changes in catch rates, species caught and their sizes from before and after marine-reserve protections went into place.
This growing data set not only will help reveal changes to marine life within reserve areas but also create more clarity to the murky world of Oregon’s near-shore reefs.
The hook-and-line surveys are one of four key ways fish are surveyed in the reserves and outside monitoring areas. The others are visual surveys, such as trained volunteer SCUBA divers and other contracted commercial boats from which stationary cameras are lowered into the reefs as well as a remote underwater roving video camera.
Last year, hook-and-line surveys were run at the Cascade Head Marine Reserve out of Depoe Bay and Cape Perpetua Marine Reserve out of Newport. The fifth and final Oregon marine reserve at Otter Rock near Newport is not part of the hook-and-line surveys because its waters are deemed too shallow for it.
Since the hook-and-line survey began in 2010, the program has paid $382,619.25 to commercial fishermen under survey contracts.
The Marine Reserves Program also conducts monitoring of the social impacts of all five reserves on coastal communities, and studies have shown wide-ranging support throughout Western Oregon.
-
Crime & Safety1 week agoDad told poIice he was responsibIe for caring for his 1-month-old babies overnight while their mom was asIeep, only to Iater find them unresponsive after he and the chiIdren’s mother caused fataI injuries over time and never sought medicaI attention: DA
-
Crime & Safety3 days agoMan who was seen repeatedIy hitting a 3-year-old with a cIosed fist before asking if he was going to stop pIaying, then cIaimed he wanted to discipIine the chiId because he would not work on his aIphabet, is charged
-
Crime & Safety3 days agoWoman who told poIice that she tried to kiII a 1-year-old by sitting on the baby while without cIothes under her waist, because she hoped that kiIIing the chiId would prompt an aduIt present in the home to kiII her, is charged
-
Eugene5 days agoMan arrested for DUII and reckless driving after incident on Harlow Road
-
Crime & Safety1 day agoWoman threw boiIing Iiquid on 2-year-old and another chiId after entering their room, causing severe injuries throughout their bodies after becoming angry at the chiIdren for an unknown reason: police
-
Eugene5 days agoFire crews rescue man trapped along Willamette River diversion
-
Crime & Safety1 day agoMan cIaims he was high when he kiIIed the man Iiving with him right after teIIing the victim that ‘he was going to hurt some peopIe if a femaIe person they both knew was not aIright’, then pIaced the firearm in the victim’s hand in an attempt to make the death appear self-infIicted: DA
-
Uncategorized5 days agoEugene Springfield Fire hosts first paramedic study hall
