Scientists: Big changes coming for 1 of most important fish

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - Conservationists and fishing groups say big changes potentially coming to the management of a tiny fish could have huge implications for the ocean ecosystem and marine industries on the East Coast.

Interstate regulators are considering altering the way they manage menhaden, including reducing the amount of the fish that can be caught by commercial fishermen.

The schooling fish are used in products such as fish oil supplements. U.S. fishermen catch more than a billion pounds of menhaden each year.

FILE - In this June 20, 2014 file photo, a load of menhaden is dumped onto a conveyer belt to be salted and packaged for lobster bait in Port Clyde, Maine. Interstate regulators are considering altering the way they manage menhaden to better account for its role in the environment, with a key vote planned in November 2017. The fish, known also as pogies, are important for supplements and bait, and are vital for the ocean's food web. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

FILE - In this June 20, 2014 file photo, a load of menhaden is dumped onto a conveyer belt to be salted and packaged for lobster bait in Port Clyde, Maine. Interstate regulators are considering altering the way they manage menhaden to better account for its role in the environment, with a key vote planned in November 2017. The fish, known also as pogies, are important for supplements and bait, and are vital for the ocean's food web. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

An Atlantic fishery is looking to rework management of menhaden with an eye toward the fact that scientists say it is one of the most important fish in the sea because of its role in the ocean food chain.

The subject's up for a key vote on Nov. 13 in Linthicum, Maryland.

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