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MASSACHUSETTS: Fear on Cape Cod as Sharks Hunt Again

October 25, 2021 โ€” Over the past decade the waters around Cape Cod have become host to one of the densest seasonal concentrations of adult white sharks in the world. Acoustic tagging data suggest the animals trickle into the region during lengthening days in May, increase in abundance throughout summer, peak in October and mostly depart by the dimming light and plunging temperatures of Thanksgiving. To conservationists, the annual returns are a success story, a welcome sign of ecosystem recovery at a time when many wildlife species are depleted. But the phenomenon carries unusual public-safety implications. Unlike many places where adult white sharks congregate, which tend to be remote islands with large colonies of sea lions or seals, the sharksโ€™ summer residency in New England overlaps with tourist season at one of the Northeastโ€™s most coveted recreational areas. Moreover, the animals are hunting in remarkably shallow water, at times within feet of the beach. This puts large numbers of people in close contact with a fast and efficient megapredator, historically the oceansโ€™ most feared fish.

Among critics of the white-shark status quo, disillusionment runs deep. Other members of the Cape Cod Ocean Community, including Drew Taylor, reject the reliance on nonlethal approaches. Taylor proposes challenging policy and amending federal law to allow communities to set preferred population levels for white sharks and gray seals and permit hunting or fishing to reduce their numbers. Conservation laws, he said, were understandable in intent but lack tools to deal adequately with rebounds of this scale. โ€œHow can you write a law that protects something in perpetuity?โ€ he said. His views, like those heard in human-wildlife conflicts elsewhere, can be summarized like this: Itโ€™s perfectly reasonable to find lions or cobras or white sharks captivating but not want hundreds of them feeding in your neighborhood park. He blames federal policies for fostering biological and social dynamics that force people to yield without question or recourse to dangerous or nuisance animals. Marine mammals, he noted, enjoy protection that terrestrial mammals do not; a sole black bear that roamed Cape Cod in 2012, for example, was promptly tranquilized and removed.

Greg Connors, captain of the 40-foot gillnet vessel Constance Sea, which fishes from Chatham, said environmentalists and bureaucrats have not fully considered the gray seal recoveryโ€™s effect on people who live on the water. Seal advocates and scientists, he said, have not shown convincing evidence that the historic seal population in New England was as large as it is now and operate on assumptions that all increases are good. At some point, he said, other voices and interests should be balanced against those in control. โ€œThey never set a bar on how high they want it to get,โ€ he said of the seal population. โ€œItโ€™s always just more. Thatโ€™s a terrible plan.โ€ Seals, he said, have done more than attract white sharks; they have driven fish farther to sea and steal catches from nets. Nick Muto, the lobster captain, said marine-mammal protections, as designed, defy common sense. Why, he asked, do protections apply equally to North Atlantic right whales, of which perhaps 400 animals remain, and gray seals, which in the western Atlantic number roughly half a million? He was surprised that Mediciโ€™s death didnโ€™t change the official stance. โ€œI thought once somebody died here,โ€ he said, โ€œit would be lights out for the seals.โ€ Connors and Muto acknowledge there is little chance for an amendment, an assessment shared by their industry group. โ€œWeโ€™re under no illusion that there is going to be a cull,โ€ said John Pappalardo, who heads the Cape Cod Commercial Fishermenโ€™s Alliance. โ€œBlood on the beach? People would not tolerate that.โ€ But frustrations capture the degree to which one side feels overtalked and alienated by the other, including many people whose lives center on the water.

Read the full story at the New York Tims Magazine

 

MASSACHUSETTS: Chatham, feds reach truce on disputed fishing rights

March 10, 2021 โ€” With the keystroke of an electronic signature, the Select Board signaled an end Monday night to seven years of bitter wrangling with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service over control of fisheries in the waters off Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge.

The board signed a memorandum of understanding that codified the relationship that exists now between the town and the federal agency in which Chatham continues to manage fisheries for clams, oysters and scallops in the disputed area โ€” and the two parties agree to work together on future changes as new fisheries or fishing technologies emerge.

โ€œThis memorandum of understanding creates a process to ensure the sustainable management of fishery resources that have been so important to our town and ensures our town will continue to manage these fisheries consistent with past practices,โ€ board Chair Shareen Davis said. The agreement does continue a ban on harvesting mussels, which are eaten by migrating waterfowl.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

Fishermen were right: Dogfish are eating cod

November 30, 2020 โ€” When Chatham commercial fisherman Bruce Kaminski took Lt. Gov. Tim Murray and other state officials out fishing in August 2008, he hoped to prove the spiny dogfish were overrunning their fishing grounds and inhibiting the restoration of more valuable species such as cod.

That day, Kaminski and his crew caught 300 dogfish on 300 hooks in a scant 10 minutes. It was a sign that dogfish populations were rebounding from low numbers in the late 1990s. Cape fishermen were asking that their daily catch limit of dogfish be increased from 600 pounds per day to something closer to the 7,000 pounds per day they caught in the early โ€™90s.

Dogfish have since rebounded to relatively healthy levels, and fishermen are now allowed to catch 6,000 pounds per day, but they say the dogfish comeback happened at the expense of cod, which are still mired at all-time low population levels.

There are many reasons for the lack of success reviving the cod population โ€” chronic overfishing, a rapidly warming ocean and insufficient habitat protection, to name a few. But fishermen told scientists for decades they think an imbalance in the ecosystem, brought on by a resurgent dogfish population, shares a good portion of the blame.

Fishermen say they have witnessed dogfish eating cod, but thatโ€™s been hard to quantify. From 1977 to 2017 only 14 cod were found in the stomachs of dogfish caught in NOAAโ€™s annual bottom trawl survey that involves random sampling using a fishing net in waters from Cape Hatteras to the Canadian border.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

MASSACHUSETTS: Study reinforces necessity of dredging for Chatham fishing fleet

March 11, 2019 โ€” Last summerโ€™s fleet departure for the fishing grounds looked like a parade, fisherman John Our said, with 30 vessels leaving and returning at the same time at Aunt Lydiaโ€™s Cove. They were trying to make the most of a diminished tidal window, as shifting channels and sandbars made it hard to find water deep enough at either of the harborโ€™s two inlets for the commercial fishing fleet to get from the municipal fish pier to the Atlantic Ocean fishing grounds.

โ€œItโ€™s not working, and itโ€™s really affecting everybodyโ€™s business,โ€ Our said.

Things arenโ€™t going to get better anytime soon, for fishermen or waterfront property owners, experts told a full house Thursday night at an unveiling of preliminary findings from an ongoing study of coastal resiliency and adaptive management for Chathamโ€™s east-facing shoreline. The nearly $250,000 study, with a $188,122 grant from the stateโ€™s Coastal Zone Management agency, is scheduled to be completed this June. It uses computer modeling combined with site work to assess current conditions and look into the future of Chatham Harbor and Pleasant Bay and what steps the town can take to mitigate impact.

John Ramsey, the principal coastal geologist at Applied Coastal, the Mashpee-based consultants Chatham hired to do the study, said analysis showed that Chatham Harbor is operating as two separate systems.

Read the full story from the Cape Cod Times at the New Bedford Standard-Times

US suppliers in love with โ€˜seafood speed datingโ€™

March 8, 2018 โ€” The meeting Steve Costas had with a South Korean buyer at Food Export-Northeastโ€™s 2017 โ€œseafood speed datingโ€ event, in Boston, Massachusetts, lasted just 20 minutes, scarcely more than a brief flirtation.

But less than a year later Marder Trawling, the New Bedford, Massachusetts-based supplier for which Costas is an account executive, wound up selling the Korean company a container filled with a mix of its wild-caught fish products.

Of course at seafood speed dating, thereโ€™s also the chance that the object of your affection will be swept away by another suitor.

โ€œItโ€™s always a friendly event and I believe there is a camaraderie amongst the suppliers even though you know in 30 minutes your customer or a potential customer will be meeting with a competitor who in most cases will be offering them the same species,โ€ Costas told Undercurrent News.

Costas is back again in Boston, Massachusetts, this week along with representatives for no less than 17 seafood suppliers from the northeastern US, all hoping to move containers of fish and, fingers crossed, establish long-term relationships with one or more of the 15 buyers from no less than 13 countries also there.

South Korea will be represented again, as will China, Japan, Colombia, Spain and the United Arab Emirate to name a few. Almost all of the buyers are looking to acquire scallops and lobsters, though some also come from countries where dogfish, monkfish and skate are in demand, all products sold by Marder Trawling using its recently acquired dock in Chatham, Massachusetts.

Read the full story at Undercurrent News

 

Cape Cod fishermen push for action on habitat protection

October 25, 2017 โ€” CHATHAM, Mass. โ€”  The concept of fish habitat is pretty simple. Fish, like people, need a place where they can find food and shelter to thrive.

Part of managing fisheries is identifying and protecting that habitat. But the ocean is a big place and a difficult environment to do analysis. Politically, itโ€™s also fractious terrain as fishermen worry about the balance between conservation and being shut out of traditional and productive fishing grounds.

And so, it took 14 years for the New England Fishery Management to craft regulations protecting fish habitat, passing Omnibus Habitat Amendment 2 in June of 2015. But after over two years of review by the council and the National Marine Fisheries Service, it still hasnโ€™t been implemented, and Cape scallop fishermen are worried they may lose hundreds of millions of dollars worth of scallops that will perish before they get permission, under the habitat amendment, to enter closed areas and get them.

โ€œItโ€™s a desert with scallops,โ€ said Seth Rolbein, director of the Cape Cod Fisheries Trust, describing what he said is sandy bottom 50 miles east of Cape Cod in an area closed to fishing since 1994. Bottom surveys, including video surveying, have shown it is loaded with scallops that should be harvested before they die within the next year or two.

โ€œThese are older, mature scallops,โ€ Rolbein said. โ€œIf we let them go moribund we will have destroyed an important economic resource.โ€

The New England council estimated fishermen would gain $218 million in income in 2018 and $313 million in the first three years, largely from access to this mother lode of scallops.

Provincetown fisherman Beau Gribbin said many of these scallops are 8 years old, they die off at 10, and the meat becomes less desirable after eight years.

Gribbin employs six people to run two boats out of Provincetown. He scallops from December to July and then goes lobstering for the rest of the year. He owns a portion of the overall scallop quota and has to stop scalloping when it is caught. Although it would take him 12-14 hours each way to travel 84 miles to the closed area, he could catch his daily quota of 600 pounds in just a couple of hours because they are so plentiful. It can take 12 hours to do that in other areas and cause more damage to the bottom habitat used by fish and other species.

Plus, it helps him market and plan his fishing year if he knows he will be able to catch his daily quota each day.

โ€œThe time is now to harvest them,โ€ said Andrew Minkiewicz, an attorney for the Fisheries Survival Fund, which represents many of the large New Bedford scallop vessels. These large vessels, known as limited access scallopers, have much higher catch limits, in the tens of thousands of pounds per trip, while the smaller boats in the 40- to 50-foot range and known as general category scallop vessels are limited to 600 pounds per day.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times 

 

 

MASSACHUSETTS: You can see the seal population in Chatham from space

August 29, 2017 โ€” There are so many seals on the coast of Massachusetts that you can see them from space.

Literally. If you zoom in on Cape Cod using the satellite photo feature on Google Maps, you wonโ€™t miss the herds of seals scattered along the coast.

Start at the southern tip of Monomoy Island near Monomoy Point and move north on the ocean side of Monomoy Island.

Kimberly Murray, a research coordinator for the seal program at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s Northeast Fisheries Science Center, said officials this year observed up to 25,000 seals off Massachusetts in a single day.

The number of seals currently residing in the waters off the stateโ€™s coast is likely as high as 50,000, based on recent research that also factored in the number of seals in the water.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

MASSACHUSETTS: Omar the shark back in Chatham

June 27, 2017 โ€” An 11-foot great white shark known to researchers as Omar has returned to Cape Cod just in time for the summer season, according to local shark watchers.

Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries scientist Gregory Skomal and his team of researchers tracked the tagged shark from their boat off the coast of Chatham early yesterday morning.

โ€œItโ€™s exciting,โ€ Skomal said. โ€œItโ€™s like seeing somewhat of an old friend.โ€

As the Herald reported yesterday, 147 great white sharks were confirmed in Cape Cod waters last summer, and Skomal predicts at least that many will return this season. The sharks are largely drawn to the abundant grey seal population that lives off the Capeโ€™s eastern seaboard.

Omar has a history in Cape waters. According to the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, biologist John Chisholm first identified the great white in 2015. Skomal tagged the animal when he returned last summer, allowing his team to detect when Omar swims near one of their research receivers.

Read the full story at the Boston Herald

Cape fishermen push dogfish, skate at expo

March 21, 2017 โ€” Chatham fishermen Charlie Dodge, Jamie Eldredge, and Greg Connors walked the crowded aisles of the Seafood Expo North America Monday, one of the largest seafood shows in the world, drawing more than 21,000 attendees and exhibitors over three days.

The men were there to meet wholesale fish buyers and distributors looking to market their catch: skates โ€” a kite-shaped fish related to sharks โ€” and dogfish, a small coastal shark.

Dogfish and skates may not be ready to join heavyweights like salmon and shrimp, but with help from the Cape Cod Commercial Fishermenโ€™s Alliance, as well as federal and state grants to assist with marketing, they are slowly gaining a foothold in domestic markets.

โ€œIt would be way better if it stays within the country,โ€ Dodge said of dogfish, which, like skates is largely exported to Europe and Asia, and fetch relatively low prices, with skates at 23 cents per pound on average in 2015 and dogfish fluctuating between 11 cents and 22 cents per pound. In 2015, cod, by comparison, averaged $1.90 per pound.

Not long ago Chatham was one of the top cod ports in the country, but that stock is considered to be at historically low levels and landings state-wide collapsed from 27.5 million pounds in 2001 to 2.9 million pounds in 2015. Both skates and dogfish are plentiful and considered sustainably managed by organizations like the Gulf of Maine Research Institute, the Marine Stewardship Council and Seafood Watch. That message โ€” a local, sustainable and affordable fish โ€” has helped convince institutional clients like the University of Massachusetts in Amherst.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

Coast Guard escorts boat that took on water off Chatham

February 27, 2017 โ€” The Coast Guard was escorting an 83-foot fishing vessel Friday after it took on water 50 miles off Chatham.

Coast Guard Sector Southeastern New England received a call from the crew of the Krystle James at around 11:30 a.m. saying water was entering the ship, reportedly through a hole in the hull, according to a statement from the Coast Guard. Six people were on board.

Coast Guard Air Station Cape Cod sent a MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter to deploy a dewatering pump, and Coast Guard Station Chatham sent a lifeboat crew. The 42-foot lifeboat began escorting the vessel to land after the pump brought the flooding under control, according to the statement.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

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