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Maine: Lobstermen alarmed at prospect of sharing their secrets with regulators

January 8, 2018 โ€” For generations, Maine lobstermen have fiercely guarded their fishing secrets, telling almost no one how and where they fish or how much they haul up in their traps.

But under a new proposal, these independent operators would have to share all the nitty-gritty details with regulators, like where they fish, how long they let their traps soak, the kind of gear they use and how deep they set it, and how much lobster they land.

Fisheries managers want to use this data to assess the health of the Gulf of Maine lobster stock and understand the economic impact of other projects, such as deep-sea coral protections or wind farms, on the valuable lobster fishery.

The proposal is triggering alarm among lobstermen who donโ€™t like the idea of sharing their fishing secrets with anyone. They consider them hard-earned trade secrets, like a businessman might consider the manufacturing technique for a new product or a chef would regard an award-winning recipe.

They are afraid the information will fall into a rivalโ€™s hands or, in this case, be used against them by regulators to implement a lobster fishing quota or gear restrictions in right whale habitats.

โ€œOpposition towards increased mandatory reporting stems from a fear of further federal micromanagement of what is already one of the most sustainable fisheries in the world,โ€ said 21-year-old Troy Plummer, who fishes the Odyssey out of Boothbay Harbor. โ€œWhy does the federal government need to know my every move on the water when they already know through dealer reporting whatโ€™s been caught?โ€

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

 

NOAA: Fishing gear killed endangered right whale

October 3, 2016 โ€” ELLSWORTH, Maine โ€” Entanglement in a morass of fishing gear killed an endangered right whale spotted off Boothbay Harbor last week and brought ashore in Portland last weekend for a necropsy, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Speaking on Monday, Jennifer Goebel, a spokeswoman for NOAAโ€™s Greater Atlantic Region in Gloucester, Mass., said scientists from the fisheries service had determined that โ€œchronic entanglement was the cause of deathโ€ of the 45-ton, 43-foot-long animal.

Goebel also said that the New England Aquarium had identified the whale as No. 3694 in its North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog. According to Goebel, the whale was a female, believed to be about 11 years old, with no known calves.

The whale was first sited by researchers in 2006. Since then, the whale has been sited along the Atlantic Coast 26 times, most recently off Florida in February of this year.

According to Goebel, passengers on a Boothbay Harbor-based whale watching boat spotted the dead whale on Friday floating about 12 to 13 miles off Portland wrapped in fishing gear. Rope was reportedly wrapped around the whaleโ€™s head, in its mouth and around its flippers and its tail.

Read the full story at the Ellsworth American

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