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Lawsuit claims fishery managers have failed to adequately protect Alaskaโ€™s coral gardens

August 21, 2024 โ€” Until about 20 years ago, little was known about the abundance of colorful cold-water corals that line sections of the seafloor around Alaska.

Now an environmental group has gone to court to try to compel better protections for those once-secret gardens.

The lawsuit, filed Monday by Oceana in U.S. District Court in Anchorage, accused federal fishery managers of neglecting to safeguard Gulf of Alaska corals, and the sponges that are often found with them, from damages wreaked by bottom trawling.

Bottom trawling is a practice that harvests fish with nets pulled across the seafloor.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s National Marine Fisheries Service โ€œignored important obligationsโ€ to protect the Gulf of Alaskaโ€™s seafloor, under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, the lawsuit said.

Read the full article at the Alaska Beacon

Lobstering ban near coral gardens could cost industry almost $9 million a year, fishermen say

May 26, 2017 โ€” The financial toll of a lobster fishing ban near deep-sea coral gardens in the Gulf of Maine could top $8 million a year, almost double what was originally projected by the regional regulatory group that is considering the ban, a Maine fishing representative said Thursday.

The 50 Maine lobster boats that fish Outer Schoodic Ridge and Mount Desert Rock โ€“ the areas where fragile coral colonies have been found โ€“ drop more traps there for more months of the year than originally estimated, said Pat Keliher, Maineโ€™s top fisheries official.

The New England Fisheries Management Council originally had estimated that Maine fishermen likely landed about $4.2 million worth of lobster from the 49 square miles under consideration for coral protection. Dave Cousens, head of the Maine Lobstermenโ€™s Association, estimates the total is closer to $9 million.

โ€œLobster fishing is the economic backbone of Down East coastal Maine,โ€ Keliher said. โ€œEach of these proposed coral protection areas represents an important fishing ground for over 50 vessels from approximately 15 communities.โ€

About 75 lobstermen attended a meeting in Ellsworth on Thursday, the only Maine public hearing on the councilโ€™s proposed coral protections. Only a handful spoke out, but all raised their hands when a council member asked how many supported lobster fishing in the areas.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

Important Fish Habitat Formed by Slow-growing Corals may Recover More Slowly in Warming Climate

January 13, 2017 โ€” SEAFOOD NEWS โ€” Managing fisheries means more than managing fish. To keep fisheries sustainable, managers need to make sure the ecosystems that support fish production stay healthy. An important part of Alaskaโ€™s marine ecosystems is the corals that create habitat for fish and their prey.

Coral gardens provide refuge for fish, but may be vulnerable to fishing gear and warmer temperatures. How long it takes for coral habitat to recover from injury depends on how fast corals grow and reproduce.

A new study led by Bob Stone of NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ Alaska Fisheries Science Center reveals just how slowly some corals grow, and provides insight on how they might respond to seafloor disturbance and ocean warming.

How the garden grows

Watching coral grow may sound like restful work. Not the way Stone does it.

Every year for five years, Stoneโ€™s team travelled to remote areas of Southeast Alaska and dove into frigid waters to observe corals in their natural environment.

โ€œSeveral of the dive sites were very remote, so just getting there was quite a challenge,โ€ says Stone. โ€œSometimes we enjoyed the comfort of the NOAA ship John N. Cobb, but other times we had to take a small (26 foot) boat over 80 miles to the sites. Occasionally we had to use float planes.โ€

Often the last 25 meters of the trip was the biggest challenge.

โ€œDiving conditions were quite unpredictable,โ€ Stone explains. โ€œWe needed to work during the same time every year, but you never know what you are going to get for weather or dive visibility.โ€

Once they made it to the seafloor, the most exciting part of the work began: โ€œfinding the coral colonies from year to year. Just think, small coral colonies with little tags at the bottom of the ocean in a remote place. You find one and your heart starts beating fast.โ€

To monitor the environmental conditions experienced by the corals, the team deployed temperature loggers and current meters at each study site.

They tagged a total of 93 healthy coral colonies at three locations. Each year they video recorded each of these colonies against a centimeter measuring grid. Later, in the laboratory, they analyzed the video using computer image analysis to measure the length of colony branches to the millimeter.

Coral growth hits a new slow

Stoneโ€™s team found that the corals grew an average of 6 millimeters, less than a quarter of an inch, a year. At that rate it would take 60 years to grow to maximum size. Thatโ€™s important, because fully grown coral makes the best habitat for fish.

โ€œWe were surprised that these particular corals grow so slowly โ€” slower than any other species we have looked at in the north Pacific Ocean,โ€ Stone says.

Injured colonies, especially those chronically injured in areas of frequent disturbance, grew more slowly. Those in warmer ocean conditions also had reduced growth. That double whammy could affect the ability of corals to recover from disturbance if ocean warming continues.

The shallow water populations that Stone observed are not at risk from disturbance by commercial fisheries, but deeper (greater than 80 meters) colonies of the same species are periodically disturbed in some regions. Most Alaska corals are found only in very deep waters. The species Stone studied lives at depths of 15-512 meters in Alaska and Canadian waters. Because its shallower depth range is accessible to scuba divers, it provides a rare opportunity to learn about coral growth rates.

Right now, damage to this species from trawls is low (3 percent) and there is no evidence of damage from long line fishing. Stoneโ€™s study gives fisheries managers information they need to protect this important resource in the future. Stone explains:

โ€œWe know that corals provide important habitat for some species of managed fish and crabs, and we know that in some places in Alaska there are interactions between fishing gears and coral habitat. Better management of both resources is possible by knowing the recovery rates of the coral habitat. This study demonstrated that not all corals in Alaska grow at the same rates, and we need to consider this in our management strategies.โ€

This story originally appeared on Seafoodnews.com, a subscription site. It is reprinted with permission.

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