Alliance Members

Back Bay Watershed Association
Eel River Watershed Association
Herring Ponds Watershed Association
Jones River Watershed Association
Neponset River Watershed Association
North and South Rivers Watershed Association
Pembroke Watershed Association
Save the Bay: Narragansett Bay
Six Ponds Improvement Association
Taunton River Watershed Association
Weir River Watershed Association
Westport River Watershed Alliance

Friday, May 31, 2013

Herring Once Swam Up Mansfield's Rivers

Our Guest Blogger is: By Harry B. Chase, Jr., lifelong Mansfield resident who served on the town’s first conservation commission and is a founding and charter member of the Natural Resources Trust of Mansfield.
 
Posted May 27, 2013 @ 12:59 PM
 
Henry B Chase Jr WAA
It’s hard to believe that uncounted numbers of herring once swam from the Atlantic into Narragansett Bay and Taunton River and thence up Mansfield’s Wading, Rumford and Canoe rivers to spawn.
Each spring, where the salt tide met the outpouring of fresh river water, herring gathered in vast schools. By some unfathomable intuition they knew in which river they were born, and up that stream they made their way.

The early colonists learned that the herring run, as they called it, usually reached Taunton the first week in April. From there for miles upstream, men with nets crowded at favorite spots to capture their fish dinners.

The myriads of herring that eluded the nets continued their journey. The female, when she came to a warm, shallow pond, laid up to 100,000 eggs and the male fertilized them. Less than 1 percent of the eggs survived.

To learn who first profited from the herring harvest we have to go back 9,000 years, to when the Indians arrived. These early people were hunter-gatherers, nomads who erected temporary camps wherever they found food.

They trapped herring in weirs made of willow sticks driven in the shallow streambeds. Near Rumford River in Mansfield’s South End, 20th century archeologists found a flat rock ledge where the Indians sun-dried their catch for food.

The Quahannock Wampanoag, who came several thousand years later, settled in villages and grew corn, beans, pumpkins and squash. Every spring their men and women gathered along the streams and caught herring by the basketful.

Sometimes the Indians ate herring mixed with tastier fish, but most of the catch they carried to their corn fields and used for fertilizer. Their word “munwharwhateag” could mean either “small fish” or “manure.”

We learned in school how the Indian Squanto taught the Pilgrims to lay two or three herring in the ground and cover them with soil in which they planted corn kernels.
Later settlers kept their dogs tied for three or four weeks until the fish rotted, otherwise the canines would dig the corn hills up.

When white men built Taunton’s first water-powered gristmill in 1650 the town fathers ordered them to construct a gently sloping wooden fish ladder so the herring could bypass the dam and swim upstream as they’d done for thousands of years.

People were amazed to see the plucky foot-long fish fight their way up the ladder against the strong force of the river water.

In 1711, after Norton (which included future Mansfield) split from Taunton, the town chose wardens to enforce the ladder law.

When Mansfield in turn divided from Norton in 1770, voters appointed David Grover and Josiah Pining fish wardens for one-year terms. They were followed by Lieut. Job Hodges and Reuben Titus, and then Ephraim and Jonathan White.

Fishermen would gather in great numbers at our herring runs. House-to-house peddlers knocked on doors hoping to sell strings of herring they carried on long sticks.

The first local obstacle to the passage of fish dated from 1695 when John Wilkinson, to obtain waterpower for his gristmill, dammed Rumford River at Willow Street.

In 1740 Col. Isaac White built a sawmill on the Rumford near South Main Street. His dam was the first on that stream north of Taunton.

The earliest dam on East Mansfield’s Canoe River was erected for the Leonard iron works before 1728. Wading River in West Mansfield got its first dams in 1815.

I’ve seen no record that fish ladders were provided at these obstructions, which probably spelled the end of Mansfield’s herring run.

Even today, people gather at well-known spots in Middleboro and Lakeville, where every spring two-thirds of a million herring come up Nemasket River.

But so many dams were built between Taunton and Mansfield that after about 1800 herring no longer swam upstream to spawn in this old town.

* * *

Lifelong Mansfield resident Harry B. Chase Jr. served on the town’s first conservation commission and is a founding and charter member of the Natural Resources Trust of Mansfield. He can be reached at mansfield@wickedlocal.com

Read more: THIS OLD TOWN: Herring swam up Mansfield’s rivers - Norton, MA - Norton Mirror http://www.wickedlocal.com/norton/topstories/x514111273/THIS-OLD-TOWN-Herring-swam-up-Mansfield-s-rivers#ixzz2UrwEIqJK
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Sunday, May 19, 2013

An Example of What a Watershed Alliance Does: Westport River

Matt Patrick
A watershed alliance or association has many projects going on at the same time. Here's a sampling in the form of an update from the Westport River Watershed Alliance, in the words of its executive director, Matt Patrick.
  • The second phase of the Middle School rain garden/storm water run-off project will begin in July
  • The Horsley Witten modeling study of the sources of fecal coliform that close much of the upper West Branch to shell fishing has been completed. We need to confirm the predictions of the computer model with actual testing, meet with the community to give them our findings, get their feedback and then come up with specific remedies that we all can agree upon. We have collaborated with the Town to write a proposal to fund the testing and are awaiting word from the Commonwealth.
  • It seems like there is always a new threat to the watershed. This new one is the proposed capping of the Cecil Smith Landfill which happens to be in the very northern portion of our watershed in Dartmouth at the head of the Shingle island River. You would normally think capping a landfill is a good thing but they want to increase the height of it with low-level contaminated fill to a point where it is 65 feet high over 23 acres. We are joining with residents of both towns to fight this capping project. and get DEP to require monitoring wells not only to protect the head waters of the Westport River but also the municipal wells in the area.
  • The new culvert connecting the river to Cockeast Pond is working well with more herring going through it than in recent years. Thanks to Westport Fish Commissioners: David Bates, Peter Kastner, George Yeomans for organizing volunteers to count fish going through the runs. Tara Martin, our Conservation Commission Agent, put on her waders and bravely walked through it to ensure it was clear of debris. That's going above and beyond the call.
  • We are getting things in place for the Hix Bridge rubble removal project. Retired EPA scientist Ken Perez, has designed an experiment that will bolster our case for State funding. One of Westport's knowledgeable shell fishermen, Crab Manchester, is ably assisting in the effort.
  • In early February there were 7 applications for the new Community Septic Management Program low interest loans administered by the Board of Health. We are hoping to get the BOH to recognize that this program can be used to encourage denitrifying septic systems and composting toilets. 
To read more about the Westport River Watershed Alliance, click here to visit their website.
 

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Did You Know? River Herring in Massachusetts

Our blogger today is Dorie Stolley, Watershed Action Alliance Coordinator and Outreach Manager.

River herring swimming upstream to spawn
River herring swimming upstream to spawn
Do you ever wonder why there are many water bodies called Herring Pond, Herring River or Herring Brook in southeastern Massachusetts? Not so long ago streams and natural pools came alive in the spring with alewives and blueback herring, collectively known as river herring. They were so plentiful that Native Americans and European colonists caught them in nets and weirs for food and fertilizer for their crops.

As recently as a few decades ago locals caught them in huge amounts to pan-fry, pickle or use as the best bait for striped bass. That’s why they have the nickname “Striper Candy.” Up until a few years ago lots of towns held Herring Festivals to celebrate the spring appearance of the fish as they swam upstream from the ocean to freshwater to spawn.  Gradually, the numbers of herring have diminished due to dams, stream degradation, and overfishing. Now, there is a ban on catching any river herring whatsoever in Massachusetts and seven other states on the Atlantic coast because there are so few left. Fishermen are left without any chance to catch a few for dinner or to put on the fishhook in hope of catching a striper.


Herring hero lifting fish over a dam so they can continue upstream to spawn
Herring hero lifting fish over a dam
But there is hope for the recovery of the river herring. Because dams block most coastal Massachusetts waterways—herring’s travel corridors to spawning grounds-- they cannot breed. But, behold the herring heroes, volunteers who stand for hours at dams lifting net loads of migrating herring up and over dams so they can continue their runs to spawning grounds. Better yet, groups such as the nine member associations of the Watershed Action Alliance (www.watershedaction.org) are removing outdated and dangerous dams or placing fish ladders around them so the herring can more easily circumvent the obstacle.


The Watershed Action Alliance (WAA) also fights for clean water for fish, other wildlife, and people. By keeping streams free of pollution and sedimentation, and maintaining shade trees and riparian corridors, stream water stays cool enough for herring, siltation is reduced and people can swim and recreate without fear of contamination. For instance, one of WAA’s members, the Jones River Watershed Association, removed the Wapping Road Dam on the Jones River in 2011, which allowed herring and eels, among other creatures, to move along the river as they have for thousands of years.


And there’s more. While fishermen forego using even one river herring as striper bait, huge offshore trawlers fishing in Federal waters catch tens of thousands of them. The Atlantic herring is their target, but because the river herring will school with them, they are also netted and legally sold as bycatch. A trawler can catch hundreds of thousands of river herring... in just one tow of the net! Fortunately, WAA members have teamed up with the Herring Alliance to change this, too, so that together we can bring back the herring, a sign of spring and symbol of plenty to Massachusetts residents.

Would you like to see rivers teem with herring, canoe on scenic waterways, and ensure that your children have clean water? Contact your local watershed association to join the effort. Find out more at: www.watershedaction.org
Taking good care of our waterways will help the return of the herring.
 
Photo by Ellen Piaskoski