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Category: Climate Change

The Grindle Point Lighthouse on Islesboro.

Working Waterfront

Grindle Point Lighthouse: A beacon still shining

From the top deck of the Margaret Chase Smith ferry, the first thing that can be seen approaching Islesboro is the Grindle Point Lighthouse. Standing at the northern edge of Gilkey Harbor and next to the ferry pen, the lighthouse greets residents and visitors alike to the island. [caption id="attachment_36164"… SEE MORE
  • Climate Change
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Working Waterfront

Ocean acidification threatens blue economy

In a state renowned for its lobster and shellfish, Mainers understand the importance of a healthy ocean. But you don’t have to spend your mornings on a fishing boat hauling in the day’s catch or even live near the coast to be affected by our changing and warming seas. Ocean… SEE MORE
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Maine State House

Working Waterfront

How a bill becomes law, Maine edition

The other day, I found myself in Augusta attending a legislative committee hearing and conversing about how a bill becomes a law with somebody who was at the legislature for the first time. So here is the short story: Bill ideas, or really just bill titles, need to be submitted… SEE MORE
  • Climate Change
  • Columns
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  • Fathoming
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On-demand gear explanatory graphic.

Working Waterfront

‘On-demand’ gear tested off Massachusetts

This spring, researchers were given an expanded opportunity to test lobster trap gear that eliminates the need for vertical buoy lines in waters traversed by critically endangered North Atlantic right whales. Under the direction of NOAA and with permission from the Massachusetts Department of Marine Fisheries, a fleet of ten… SEE MORE
  • Business
  • Climate Change
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Reading newspapers on a train.

Working Waterfront

Letters to the editor—’A distinct voice,’ and ‘perception’

A distinct voice To the editor: Phil Crossman and his skin color and the adjectives used to describe it in his Observer column apparently rubbed at least one person in the wrong way (“Unacceptable,” letters to the editor, December/January issue). My spouse and I lived two wonderful years in Maine… SEE MORE
  • Business
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The Cadillac Mountain summit.

Working Waterfront

Untangling Acadia’s ‘bad air’ days

What happens when Acadia has a "bad air” day? The prevailing winds responsible for giving Downeast Maine its nickname have led some to grant the state a less than flattering moniker: “The tailpipe of the United States.” Like exhaust flowing through a tailpipe, clouds of emissions from industrial areas or… SEE MORE
  • Climate Change
  • Columns
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  • Fathoming
  • Marine
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Heather Leslie

Working Waterfront

Darling Marine’s Heather Leslie honored

Heather Leslie, professor of marine science and director of the Darling Marine Center at the University of Maine, has been named a 2022 American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow, one of the highest honors in the scientific community. AAAS Fellows are a group of scientists, engineers, and… SEE MORE
  • Climate Change
  • Community
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  • Marine
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Eelgrass grows in submerged waters in Casco Bay. PHOTO: STEVE KARPIAK

Working Waterfront

‘Staggering’ eelgrass decline in Casco Bay

Eelgrass meadows in Casco Bay have declined in size by 54 percent over the past four years, a loss described as “staggering” in a new report from the Maine Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). This decline of the federally protected marine habitat places eelgrass meadows in Casco Bay at their… SEE MORE
  • Business
  • Climate Change
  • Environment
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What's in a cod?

Working Waterfront

Cod survey shows promising numbers

It's hard to overstate the importance of cod in New England and Maritime Canada history. The fish has sustained those living here before and after the arrival of Europeans, and even fed those back on the continent. Stonington’s fish pier was built in the late 1980s in anticipation of increased… SEE MORE
  • Business
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From left, the Island Institute's Eastport Island Fellow Paige Atkinson; Institute staff Alex Zipparo; Mount Desert Island Fellow Brianna Cunliffe; and Institute staffer Abby Roche.

Working Waterfront

Resilience is the response

I was on Great Cranberry Island for a community event recently and encountered a sight that will not be easily forgotten. As I stood on the dock awaiting the mailboat back to mainland, I looked to the west and saw several gravestones on a grassy enclave that were dangerously close… SEE MORE
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