All the latest research news from the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust's fisheries team including the MorFish salmon project.
Thursday, 17 October 2013
VIDEO: 84cm Atlantic Salmon swimming through counter
Side view of an 84cm Atlantic Salmon swimming through the fish counter at the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust's Salmon and Trout Research Centre on the River Frome at East Stoke, Dorset.
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
First MorFish newsletter published
The first MorFish newsletter has been published by the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust.
The newsletter details the work our scientists are conducting in partnership with fisheries scientists at INRA, a French government research agency.
Click here to download newsletter >
The newsletter details the work our scientists are conducting in partnership with fisheries scientists at INRA, a French government research agency.
Click here to download newsletter >
Introducing the MorFish Project
Atlantic salmon populations have declined considerably across much of North America and Europe since the 1990s, some by over 70%.
We’ve joined forces with a team of French scientists at Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), and will be monitoring Atlantic salmon populations over the next three years.
The aim of the project, entitled MorFish, is to harmonise and therefore improve the way salmon data is collected and analysed across three rivers – the Frome, the Scorff and the Oir.
This will provide us with a better understanding of the causes of salmon population decline and inform us on how we can help the management of that decline.
Click here to learn more >
We’ve joined forces with a team of French scientists at Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), and will be monitoring Atlantic salmon populations over the next three years.
The aim of the project, entitled MorFish, is to harmonise and therefore improve the way salmon data is collected and analysed across three rivers – the Frome, the Scorff and the Oir.
This will provide us with a better understanding of the causes of salmon population decline and inform us on how we can help the management of that decline.
Click here to learn more >
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