Blogs
28/3/2018 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
The Partnership agreement with the Environment Agency is proving to be very beneficial for discussing ideas and for gaining the various permissions etc. that the project requires for the SAMARCH sampling campaign.
7/2/2018 in: Fisheries Blog
GWCT communications officer Joel Holt spent a day on the River Frome with the fisheries team who were tagging fish as part of the newly-launched SAMARCH (SAlmonid MAnagement Round the CHannel) project.
20/9/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
THE team of fisheries scientists, who have been tagging salmon and trout smolts on the River Frome, were interviewed by the media on Monday 11th September.
25/8/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
The low number of juvenile salmon (called smolts) leaving the River Frome in Dorset for their feeding grounds in the North Atlantic in the spring of 2017 (called the smolt run) quantified by the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust in collaboration with Cefas and the Environment Agency is likely to result in a decline in the numbers of adult salmon returning to our rivers in the next few years.
4/7/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
On the 20th and 21st of June 2017 the GWCT fisheries scientists met with some 25 staff from the 9 other SAMARCH partners in Rennes, France for the first project steering group meeting.
31/5/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
The GWCT is proud to be the lead partner on a major EU-funded programme that will provide vital research on rapidly declining salmon and sea trout (salmonid) populations in the Channel area.
9/5/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
Find out more about the adult salmon that are returning to sea after successfully spawning.
5/4/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
Some of the salmon we tagged in 2014 and 2015 have returned to the River Frome...
28/3/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
Last month saw a very impressive specimen pass through our counter on the River Frome at East Stoke in Dorset. Watch this short video clip below to find out what it was...
9/3/2017 in: Fisheries Blog under: Fishing
Our counter on the River Frome at East Stoke, Dorset, uses electrodes to monitor the electrical resistance of the water. When a (less resistive) fish or object large enough to bridge the electrodes passes over them, the system saves a video clip for later analysis. Here are some of the highlights showing the biggest sightings of last year.
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