Claim: global warming driven extreme weather will increasingly disrupt striped bass fishing holes

From the UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE and the department of fish stories, comes this:

Researchers study impact of extreme weather events on striped bass

Abrupt changes in habitat could impact fish populations

A large striped bass caught at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Image: Wikimedia
A large striped bass caught at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Image: Wikimedia

SOLOMONS, MD (August 2, 2016) — Striped bass are known to have favorite summer swimming spots to which they return every year. They are creatures of habit. However, when a hurricane hits, everything can change very quickly. The water level rises rapidly. Runoff floods the river with sediment and chokes off the oxygen. Heavy rains create rushing currents and a sudden drop in water temperature. And the fish leave the area in a hurry. Scientists call it “evacuating” to better conditions.

Researchers from the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science wanted to know the impact of severe storms on fish populations that have to make sudden and unexpected trips downstream, away from their preferred habitat, to more hospitable waters. Thanks to global warming, waterways that make up important habitat for fish are likely to experience an increased frequency of such extreme conditions.

“These events happen naturally, but having them occur more frequently may have a bigger impact on the fish,” said the study’s lead author Helen Bailey. “If you get more frequent storms during the year, it is possible you could interrupt their breeding and feeding in ways that impact their population.”

Bailey and Dave Secor tracked 22 striped bass in the Hudson River Estuary (which hosts one of the largest populations of this species) and New York Harbor during the Tropical Storms Irene and Lee in 2011. Occurring about a week apart, the significant weather events caused heavy rainfall, major flooding, and sudden influxes of fresh, cold water into the waterways.

The year before, during normal conditions, researchers had tagged the fish that lived there with small electronic transmitters that regularly pinged their every move. After the storms, they were able to compare the data to examine how their behavior was impacted by the extreme storm events.

“There are very few studies on this because it so hard to sample during these storm events. You can’t predict when they will happen and these can be hazardous conditions to work in,” said Bailey. “Telemetry data gave us the opportunity to do it.”

The researchers discovered that when the storms hit, most of the fish rapidly left the Hudson River and New York Harbor, moving south along the coast. A few remained in the harbor and were able to avoid being displaced. Others did a few exploratory trips later back to the harbor to check on conditions over the next few months and eventually returned up the river.

“It’s not unusual for fish to be leaving this area at this time of year,” said Bailey. “What was very unusual was that so many of them did it, they went so far south, and they did it so quickly.”

There were several changes to the behavior that the researchers didn’t expect. Most concerning, depending on when the storm events occurred, some of the striped bass that evacuated the areas did not immediately return, adopting new migration behaviors.

“The responses of fish species to extreme weather events will need to be considered when planning management strategies to ensure efforts are appropriately targeted to maintain key population segments and critical evacuation routes,” said Dave Secor, the study’s co-author at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science’s Chesapeake Biological Laboratory.

Located where the Patuxent River meets the Chesapeake Bay, the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory is the oldest publicly supported marine laboratory on the East Coast. Founded in 1925, it has long been a national leader in fisheries, environmental chemistry and toxicology, and ecosystem science and restoration ecology with a focus on whole ecosystem management and restoration. From developing successful fisheries management plans and breaking new ground in understanding how chemicals move between the atmosphere, sediments, and water to renowned work on nutrient dynamics and the food web, the lab is developing new scientific approaches to solving environmental management problems that face our world.

“Coastal evacuations by fish during extreme weather events” by Helen Bailey and David Secor of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science’s Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, was published online in Scientific Reports on July 26.

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Walter Sobchak
August 2, 2016 7:04 pm

Fish got fins and they can move. Who knew?

August 2, 2016 7:33 pm

““Coastal evacuations by fish during extreme weather events” by Helen Bailey and David Secor of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science’s Chesapeake Biological Laboratory”

What was actually discovered?
That striped bass watch the weather channel?
No.
That striped bass, and oddly, a great majority of fish species are perfectly capable of getting the h*ll out of Dodge when conditions degrade.
The fish simply migrate to more suitable conditions. What a surprise!?
Basically, some biological station was caught without any publications to their credit; and possibly very little research of value. They dashed off a smoke and mirrors compilation that sounded good to the bosses.
Junk science.

August 2, 2016 10:10 pm

Since there haven’t been any hurricanes to hit the New York Harbor (since Sandy which wasn’t a hurricane when it hit there) Can I now fish there and get some of those big striped bass since there have been no hurricanes for over 10 years?

Ray Boorman
August 3, 2016 12:00 am

This research paper, or at least the comments attributed to the researchers involved, are over the top. First, they say that because of the dangerous conditions during hurricanes, no-one has done any research previously on what happens to fish during severe storms. Then they say that 22 fish were tagged in 2010. And finally, after the data from the storms in 2011, they now claim that it it is “unprecedented” that so many fish migrated out of the Hudson so quickly when the storms arrived. Truth be told, they have nowhere near enough data after just 1 year to say anything more than exactly where the fish travelled in that ONE year!

jarthuroriginal
August 3, 2016 3:08 am

Here is a quote from Anglers Chesapeake Fishing Report 07/14/2016:

Well guys and gals it’s been another exciting week here on the old Chesapeake Bay. With plenty of
big stripers hanging around and some bluefish starting to show up its bound to be
a July for the record books. The general theory of fish above the bridge from the
Bay Bridge to seven-foot knoll is still holding true in regards to big stripers
in the upper 30” range..

Looks like the fish and fishermen have weathered climate change.

dukesilver
August 6, 2016 7:32 am

In a related story SBLM (striped bass lives matter) leadership has called for reparations as a result of being temporarily displaced from their home due to WASP driven climate change.