“…Six previously published studies used data from the NMFS trawl survey, but augmented sampling of certain species across seasonal periods including red ( U. chuss , Phycidae), offshore, silver and white hakes (Garrison & Link, 2000; Link, Lucey, & Melgey, 2012), little ( L. erinacea , Rajidae) and winter skates (Smith, Collie, & Lengyel, 2014), scup and black sea bass ( Centropristis striata , Serranidae) (Byron & Link, 2010), Atlantic mackerel and Atlantic herring (Suca et al, 2018), as well as summer flounder, bluefish, goosefish (Staudinger, 2004) and longfin inshore squid (Hunsicker & Essington, 2006). The remaining studies represented predator diets from inshore and estuarine habitats (Gelsleichter, Musick, & Nichols, 1999; Novak, Carlson, Wheeler, Wippelhauser, & Sulikowski, 2017; Wuenschel, Able, Vasslides, & Byrne, 2013), offshore areas of the continental slope and pelagic waters (Chase, 2002; Logan, Golet, & Lutcavage, 2015; Logan et al, 2011; Teffer, Staudinger, & Juanes, 2015), as well as Canadian waters (Carruthers, Neilson, Waters, & Perley, 2005; Dawe, Dalley, & Lidster, 1997; Hanson & Chouinard, 2002; Kelly & Hanson, 2013; Zamarro, 1992). A few notable areas where predation on NWA Ammodytes was extremely high included the Saco River Estuary in the Gulf of Maine, where the diets of juvenile and adult Atlantic sturgeon between 2013 and 2014 contained 85%–96% (Index of Relative Importance, IRI) of A. americanus (Novak et al, 2017).…”