History | Membership | Officers | Profiles | Meetings & Events | Newsletters | Education | Links
Chapter Awards & Scholarships | View the VCAFS Brochure | Teachers & Students |
Calendar
Home


WHAT'S NEW?

The 2013 Spring Meeting Final Program Schedule and Abstracts

The 2013 Virginia Chapter of the American Fisheries Society Supporters

Meeting Registration Form  (Excel)

            Marcellus Shale in Virginia

"Teachers & Students" Page including
The Shenandoah Valley Landowners Guide

"Calendar" Page

The "Winter" 2012 Newsletter (pdf)

 


The Virginia Chapter of the American Fisheries Society (VCAFS) is a subunit of the American Fisheries Society (AFS), the world's oldest and largest organization promoting the scientific management of aquatic resources for the optimum use and enjoyment by the people of North America. VCAFS was established in 1990 to provide fisheries professionals in Virginia with increased access to AFS; encourage the exchange of information among fisheries and other aquatic resource professionals; provide a forum for the discussion, debate, and resolution of aquatic resource issues within Virginia; and serve the Commonwealth by providing expert scientific knowledge to allow for informed decisions concerning the use and development of the state's natural resources. The Virginia Chapter membership includes many of the professional fisheries scientists of the Commonwealth.

Virginia's abundant waters support a great diversity of aquatic organisms, including 220 species of self-sustaining fishes. Some waters, such as the Clinch and Holston Rivers in southwest Virginia, possess some of the greatest concentrations of uncommon non-game fishes and mollusks in the world.

Biologists survey the Lake Orange fishery using trap nets

However, the integrity of many Virginia waters are jeopardized by the state's growing human population. Despite improvements in wastewater treatment technology, the capacities of some waters to dilute waste are overburdened. Still others exhibit reduced oxygen inputs or are heavily silted due to poor land use practices.

The degradation of aquatic habitats in the Commonwealth has adversely affected our living resources: state and federal authorities have now listed 20 fishes and 40 aquatic invertebrates as threatened or endangered species in Virginia.


Copyright © 2009-13 Virginia Chapter of the American Fisheries Society - All rights reserved
VCAFS site designed by S. Matthews; maintained by WebCurrents
Contact Webmaster  |  Last updated on Feb. 20, 2013