Native
Americans depended on these migrating fish as a source of food and then
for centuries it was the European settlers. The alewife (Alosa
pseudoharengus) has many common names - branch, blear-eyed, big-eyed,
wall-eyed, freshwater, glut, gray, or spring herring; the golden or green
shad; the bang, ellwife, gaspereau, grayback, kiak, kiack, kyak, mulhaden,
racer, sawbelly, seth, skipjack, and spreau. The fact that it has so many
names attests to its importance to people along the Atlantic coast from
South Carolina to Newfoundland. Seabirds such as gulls, herons, hawks and
cormorants as well as larger fish, especially striped bass and bluefish,
also forage aggressively on alewives.
The alewife is
difficult to distinguish from its close relative the blueback herring (Alosa
aestivalis) when sighted in the water. The alewife, however, arrives
earlier in the spring and migrates much further up river to breed in
headwater ponds while the bluebacks arrive later and breed in the river
current.
They spend
their adult lives at sea and return only to freshwater areas to spawn in
the spring. Both alewife and blueback herring are silvery in color and
have a series of scutes (modified scales that are spiny and keeled) along
their belly; however, the dorsal area of alewife are bronze in color
whereas blueback herring are deep bluish green. Alewife are more strongly
compressed, deep, their body is less elongated and they have a much larger
eye than blueback herring. However, the most distinguishing characteristic
of these species is the color of their peritoneum or the lining of the
abdominal cavity. An alewife's peritoneum is pale with dusky spots,
whereas a blueback herring's is black to dusky in color. Alewife and
blueback herring are so difficult to distinguish from each other, in most
instances, they are collectively termed "river herring".
Alewife spawn
in rivers and tributaries from northeastern Newfoundland to South
Carolina, but are most abundant in the mid-Atlantic and northeastern
states. Blueback herring spawn from Nova Scotia to northern Florida, but
are most numerous in warmer waters from Chesapeake Bay south. In the
mid-Atlantic region, both alewife and blueback herring are found in
Chesapeake Bay and in virtually all its' tributaries. Alewife spawn from
late February through April, whereas blueback herring spawn from late
March through mid-May. Females from both species usually reach 100%
maturity by age 5 and produce from 60,000 - 103,000 eggs, whereas males of
both species generally mature at an earlier age (ages 3-4) and smaller
size than females.
Alewife spawn
in a diversity of habitats that includes large rivers, small streams,
ponds, and large lakes over a wide range of substrates such as gravel,
sand, detritus, and submerged vegetation. In areas where alewife and
blueback herring co-exist, blueback herring will exhibit more of a variety
in their spawning sites including shallow areas covered with vegetation,
in ricefields, in swampy areas, and in small tributaries upstream from the
tidal zone. Mature river herring broadcast their eggs and sperm
simultaneously into the water and over the substrate. Immediately after
spawning, adults migrate rapidly downstream. Juveniles will remain in
freshwater nursery areas in spring and summer, feeding mainly on
zooplankton. As water temperatures decline in the fall, most juveniles
move downstream to more saline waters, eventually to the sea; however,
some will remain in deeper waters of the Bay and its tributaries for their
first winter. Little information is available on the life history of
subadult and adult river herring after they emigrate to the sea as
juveniles, and before they mature and return to freshwater to spawn.
Various studies have determined that river herring are capable of
migrating long distance (over 1200 miles) in ocean waters of the Atlantic
seaboard, and that patterns of river herring migration may be similar to
those of American shad.
Adults
overwinter at sea in the George's Bank, Gulf of Maine or Nantucket Shoals.
Alewives can live at least 10 years.
In 1931, over
25 million pounds of river herring were harvested making ranking them 2nd
in quantity and 5th in value of all Chesapeake finfish, and 1st in
quantity and 4th in value of all finfish landed in Maryland.
Maximum length
of a river herring is approximately 15 inches.
Alewife and
blueback herring, like other alosine species (American shad and hickory
shad) lay down spawning marks on their scales so that the number of times
an individual fish has spawned in its lifetime is recorded on it's scale.
Blueback herring (age 10) have been seen with as many as 5 and/or 6
spawning marks!
Despite
the many thousands of eggs laid by spawning alewife, very few offspring
actually survive. In some populations, as few as three young-of-the-year
fish migrate downstream for each female that spawned.
You’ll find more information
on herring in all my videos. I hope you enjoyed
this class on herring and their relatives…let me know your thoughts on
it - Click Here to email me.
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information on squid in all my videos.
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you enjoyed this class on Cephalopods…let me know your thoughts on it.
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Seize the day. Go Fishing!
Mike Laptew
"The Diving Fisherman"
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