NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office header - J. Ward, NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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Fish Passage

 

 

Anadromous fish are fish that spend much of their young lives at sea, but return to the freshwater portions of the Chesapeake Bay’s rivers to spawn. Anadromous fish in the Bay include American and hickory shad, blueback and alewife herrings, and striped bass. Throughout the watershed, development has resulted in more 2,500 blockages to anadromous fish. These culverts, dams, and other water-control structures either alter habitat or physically block access to the upstream habitat that is necessary for these species to successfully reproduce. Ultimately, the reductions in available spawning habitat have reduced populations in the Bay of many migratory species of fish. Staff at NOAA’s Chesapeake Bay Office examine these problems from both a habitat-restoration angle and as a fishery-management issue.

NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office habitat staff work with the Chesapeake Bay Program’s Fish Passage Workgroup to provide guidance to Bay watershed states in accomplishing fish passage and fish blockage removals.

Fish Passage


Main Office:
Satellite Offices:
NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office
410 Severn Avenue
Annapolis, MD 21403
Phone: (410) 267-5660
Fax: (410) 267-5666
Cooperative Oxford Lab
904 South Morris Street
Oxford, MD 21654
Phone: (410) 226-5193
Fax: (410) 226-5925
Nauticus
1 Waterside Drive
Norfolk, VA 23510
Phone: (757) 627-3823
Fax: (757) 627-3827
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Route 1208, Greate Road
Gloucester Point, VA 23062
Phone: (804) 684-7382
Fax: (804) 684-7910


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  Page Last Modified: 2/29/2008 1:46:56 PM