photo from VT DEC: http://www.vtwaterquality.org/lakes/htm/ans/lp_alewife.htm
A
member of the Herring or “shad” family, the alewife is native to the Atlantic
Ocean but migrates and spawns in freshwater rivers and lakes. Through its spawning habitat, alewives
have been able to adapt to freshwater and have done so in the Great Lakes
causing many ecological disturbances.
How to Identify Alewife
-3 to 10 inches in length.
-Has a silvery, blue-green metallic luster to its scales
-Large black spot behind its gills
-Its lower jaw extends beyond upper jaw.
-Underside of its belly has a distinct serrated edge where
scales from each side of the body meet and overlap.
Often used as bait by anglers, alewife were introduced to Lake
Erie 1931, Lake Huron in 1933, Lake Michigan in 1949, and Lake Superior in 1954.
Alewives are thought to have spread to the Great Lakes through surrounding
canals, lakes, and streams between the lakes. In 1997, the first alewife was
found in Vermont. After the initial spotting in southern Vermont, they were
also found in Missisquoi Bay in 2003 and eventually in the main lake in 2005.
Alewife threaten the native species of Lake Champlain by
altering zooplankton communities, competing with other fish for food, and
feeding on native fish eggs and larvae. They also pose a threat to native fish populations
such as Lake Trout and Atlantic salmon as the alewife do not provide them with
vitamin B like their native prey does, resulting in reproductive failure.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute: http://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/Home/Topics/FishandFisheries/Details.aspx?PostID=362
Norah Carlos
Lake Champlain Basin Program. Aquatic Nuisance Species in Lake Champlain & the Basin. 2011.
http://www.lcbp.org/nuissum.htm#alewife
Marsden, Ellen. "Lake Champlain Alewife Impacts; February 16, 2006 Workshop Summary."
Marsden, Ellen. "Lake Champlain Alewife Impacts; February 16, 2006 Workshop Summary."
http://www.lcbp.org/PDFs/Alewife_Impacts_2006workshopsummary.pdf
Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Watershed Management Division. "Alewife." 2003.
Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Watershed Management Division. "Alewife." 2003.
http://www.anr.state.vt.us/dec/waterq/lakes/htm/ans/lp_alewife.htm
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute. "What causes alewives to die off in great numbers at certain times of the year?" 2011.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute. "What causes alewives to die off in great numbers at certain times of the year?" 2011.
http://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/Home/Topics/FishandFisheries/Details.aspx?PostID=362
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