SITE INFORMATION
The Niagara River is approximately 36 miles long and flows north from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario.
The following agency representatives are conducting lake sturgeon activities in the Niagara River:
Christie Deloria-Sheffield U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service East Lansing Ecological Services Office - Upper Peninsula Sub-Office (Marquette, MI) New Lisa Holst NY State Department of Environmental Conservation Bureau of Fisheries (Albany, NY) Cheryl Kaye U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Marquette Biological Station (Marquette, MI) Darin Simpkins U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Green Bay Ecological Services Office (New Franken, WI) Betsy Trometer U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Lower Great Lakes Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office (Basom, NY)
Christie Deloria-Sheffield U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service East Lansing Ecological Services Office - Upper Peninsula Sub-Office (Marquette, MI)
New Lisa Holst NY State Department of Environmental Conservation Bureau of Fisheries (Albany, NY)
Cheryl Kaye U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Marquette Biological Station (Marquette, MI)
Darin Simpkins U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Green Bay Ecological Services Office (New Franken, WI)
Betsy Trometer U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Lower Great Lakes Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office (Basom, NY)
Selected Resources: New 2012 Great Lakes Lake Sturgeon Coordination Meeting Poster - Population dynamics of lake sturgeon in the lower Niagara River: revisiting and reassessing a recovering population 10 years later - Dimitry Gorsky, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service New 2012 Great Lakes Lake Sturgeon Coordination Meeting Poster - Sex, maturity, and changing spawner demographics of lake sturgeon in the lower Niagara River - Gregory Jacobs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Molly Webb, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Dimitry Gorsky, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and John Sweka, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - see abstract
New 2012 Great Lakes Lake Sturgeon Coordination Meeting Poster - Population dynamics of lake sturgeon in the lower Niagara River: revisiting and reassessing a recovering population 10 years later - Dimitry Gorsky, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
New 2012 Great Lakes Lake Sturgeon Coordination Meeting Poster - Sex, maturity, and changing spawner demographics of lake sturgeon in the lower Niagara River - Gregory Jacobs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Molly Webb, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Dimitry Gorsky, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and John Sweka, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - see abstract