The 70 year old lady next to me watching this scene was from Germany.
The Atlantic Alewife herring [1] were running up the river to spawn - and to feed the Great Blue heron [2] and the terns.
Very dramatic life and death stuff going on here.
The German lady, her eyes wide and glistening, said to me "really blows your mind, doesn't it?"
My answer?
Absolutely!
Here is a link to the University of Massachusetts study of anadromous fish including a census of fish that are video recorded at fish ladders.
Here is a selection of text from the report in which the data for 10 minute periods of video recording is produced.
Attachment | Size |
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Great-Blue-Herron-eye-to-eye-with-alewife.jpg [4] | 101.39 KB |
Links:
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alewife
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Blue_Heron
[3] http://eco.umass.edu/research-outreach/featured-research/river-herring-video-project/
[4] http://66.228.45.157/system/files/Great-Blue-Herron-eye-to-eye-with-alewife.jpg