Green Crab Summit
On December 16, 2013 a green crab summit was held in Orono, Maine to discuss the impacts that invasive European green crabs are having along the Maine shoreline. Maine Seagrant hosted the meeting with the purpose of exchanging information on the crabs and their impacts. Participants included scientists, resource managers and policy makers, clam harvesters, educators and students, coastal resource consultants, and representatives of local, state, and national conservation organizations. Oral presentations focused on distribution, abundance, and impacts of green crabs in Maine; potential commercial uses of green crabs; and possibilities of green crab control (see presentations by Cynthia McKenzie and Chris McCarthy).A particular ESIP concern is the loss of eelgrass and damage to salt marsh (see presentations by Hilary Neckles and Dan Belknap, respectively). Green crab effects on these two vital habitats were discussed in both poster and oral format. Anyone who wasn’t able to make Orono due to the snowstorm can listen to the presentations and view the slides at: http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/green-crab-summit. Posters are also available at: http://www.seagrant.umaine.edu/green-crab-summit/posters. A written report summarizing the information from the meeting is forthcoming and will be available on the web site.
Febuary 2015 — ESIP releases new smartphone app connecting people in the Gulf of Maine and watershed to the science happening all around them.
November 2015 — The launch of a marine debris program in the Bay of Fundy.
September 2015 — Climate Change Products for Atlantic Canada.
July 2015 — An update from the April 2015 State of the Bays Symposium in Massachusetts.
June 2015 — Learn about NH Department of Environmental Services' work with 65 volunteers to improve beach grass coverage at Hampton Beach State Park.
May 2015 — Nova Scotia recently released risk ratings for storm serge and sea level rise for all portions of the Province - this journal summarizes the findings
April 2015 — Learn about an exciting project between ESIP and EPA that seeks to unravel upstream pressures on downstream estuaries
February 2015 — Meet the new Project Leader for the Gulf of Maine Coastal Program in Falmouth, Maine - Jed Wright.
January 2015 — New Smart Tour of Great Marsh - largest continuous stretch of salt marsh in New England, extending from Cape Ann in Massachusetts to New Hampshire
December 2014 — The American Lobster Settlement Index is an important project that assesses current lobster fishery condition in both Canada and the US. The dataset is current and available through the ESIP Indicator Reporting Tool
Click here for all past ESIP journals