Understanding Squibnocket鈥檚 Overwintering Striped Bass | Martha's Vineyard Times

Tagging a striped bass at the 美女直播做爱. Credit: Emily Greenhalgh

The program at MBLis headed up by Steve Zottoli and Scott Bennett.

Following a up-Island last season, scientists were at the Squibnocket Pond again this week tagging more bass to further their research.

On Thursday, researchers from Striped Bass Magic at University of Chicago鈥檚 Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole and the Natural Resources Department of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) tagged eight new fish, and intend to tag another dozen in early November. That鈥檚 on top of the roughly 20 bass tagged last year.

Part of the project鈥檚 focus is on understanding how the bass鈥 behavior patterns compare to migratory fish and whether their choices鈥攕uch as remaining in Squibnocket Pond during the winter鈥攔eflect specific environmental conditions. 

The research could also help establish how to better understand the habitat of the Island鈥檚 , whose numbers have rapidly dropped to 11,000 from 40,000 in 2018, according to the River Herring Monitoring Program. 

Although bass are predators to herring, local wildlife officials say stripers are not to blame for the herring鈥檚 decline in population and instead offshore trawlers are more likely the cause.

Source: Understanding Squibnocket鈥檚 Overwintering Striped Bass | Martha's Vineyard Times