Emergency Burn Ban In Effect 10/26/24 - An emergency burn ban is now in effect for all Connecticut State Parks, Forests, and Wildlife Management areas, prohibiting the use of all outdoor grills, firepits, and campfires, and the kindling and use of flame outdoors. DEEP and local agencies are working to contain several active fires across the state. Please avoid all affected State Parks and Forests, as well as the blue-blazed Mattabesett Trail. The Enduro Trail in Voluntown and portions of North Stonington within the Pachaug State Forest are closed at this time. Please note that today's forest fire danger report remains at an 'extreme' level. More information about the current fire danger, burn ban and recommended safety measures can be found here

The Plan to Restore Diadromous Fishes to the Naugatuck River Watershed

The Naugatuck River is the largest tributary of the Housatonic River with a watershed encompassing 311 square miles. Diadromous fish species, including Alewife, Blueback Herring, American Shad, American Eel, and Sea Lamprey, were once common and seasonally abundant in the watershed. Spawning runs of these migratory species were extirpated from the upper mainstem and virtually all tributaries by the mid-1800s due to the construction of dams and industrial pollution. With the backing of many state and federal agencies and the hard work and dedication of a multitude of partners throughout the watershed over the last 50 years, the Naugatuck River is better positioned now than it has been in centuries to stage a return of large annual runs of native diadromous fish.  Success in diadromous fish restoration has been achieved in a number of river watersheds in Connecticut and elsewhere. In order to provide a framework for restoring runs of selected diadromous fishes to the watershed, the CT DEEP Fisheries Division has produced the Plan to Restore Diadromous Fishes to the Naugatuck River Watershed

Tingue Dam

The current plan, originally written as the “Plan for the Restoration of Anadromous Fish to the Naugatuck River, Connecticut” in 1994, has been revised in three critical respects: first, the physical landscape of the Naugatuck River has changed with the removal of five mainstem dams and the construction of fishways on the lowermost two dams (Kinneytown and Tingue Dams); secondly sea-run Brown Trout has been removed and American Eel has been added to the list of fish species targeted for restoration; and, finally, the plan now includes recommended options to restore fish passage, including dam removal and fish passage efficiency standards (both upstream and downstream) for the targeted fish species at the Kinneytown Dam.

Alewife

The Fisheries Division released the Draft Plan to Restore Diadromous Fishes to the Naugatuck River Watershed on July 20, 2022.  It was distributed by email to the CT Fisheries Advisory Council, posted on the Fisheries Division Website, and shared via the CT Fish and Wildlife Facebook page. The Fisheries Division received feedback from various partner organizations and the public on the draft plan through a feedback form, emails, and discussions during a public webinar.

View the Plan to Restore Diadromous Fishes to the Naugatuck River Watershed

Please contact the Fisheries Division with any questions. 

Phone: 860-424-FISH (3474)
E-mail: deep.inland.fisheries@ct.gov

Content last updated October 2022