Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program - Habitat
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The 1996 Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act contained new provisions to identify and conserve essential fish habitat (EFH). To help address this focus on habitat, the Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program began in the late 1990s to include habitat research as a priority. Clicking on the following project titles will take you to detailed information about habitat project results:
- Biotic and Abiotic Factors Influencing Recruitment and Subsequent Mortality of Soft Shell Clams In Eastern and Southwestern Maine
- Control of the European Green Crab in California: Detection of Natural Enemies
- Renovation of Phosphorus and Other Aquacultural Wastes using Constructed Wetlands with Peat and Rockwool
- Investigations of Hawaiian Monk Seal, Monachus schauinslandi, Pelagic Habitat Use: Range and Diving Behavior
- Critical Habitats of Atlantic Sturgeon
- Identification of Continental Shelf Groundfish Nursery Habitats in the New York Bight
- Habitat Management as an Innovative Approach to Fishery Management
- Mapping Fishery Habitat to Support Innovative Fishery Management
- Critical Evaluation of Conservation Success in Restoration of James River and Ocean-Run American Shad
- Characterization of Hawaiian Monk Seal (Monachus schauinslandi) Pelagic Habitat, Home Range, and Diving Behavior
- The Role of Tidal Salt Marsh as Essential Habitat in Production of Juvenile Weakfish (Cynoscion regalis)
- Establishing the Food Web Links between Estuaries and Nearshore Fisheries in New England
- The Effect of Bank-Reef Lagoon Habitat Loss on Post Settlement Juvenile and Sub-Adult Coral Reef
- Recruitment
Limitation in Alaskan Red King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus):
The Importance of Early Life History Stages
