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California Fishermen Fight to Restore Otter-Free Zone

May 9, 2016 โ€” PASADENA, Calif. โ€” Californiaโ€™s shellfish industry fought the federal governmentโ€™s termination of a โ€œno-otter zoneโ€ along the Southern California coast at a Ninth Circuit hearing on Friday.

Four fishing industry groups sued the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in 2013, claiming its decision to end a long-disputed sea otter translocation program would โ€œseverely compromise if not destroyโ€ shellfish and other marine fisheries on the southern coast.

Nixing the program would lead more than 300 sea otters to occupy a previously โ€œotter-free zoneโ€ within 10 years and prey on the shellfish which fishermen depend on for their livelihood, the plaintiffs claimed in their 2013 complaint.

But environmental groups had long pushed for the government to end the program, claiming it was a disaster from the start and that it bowed to the interests of the oil and fishing industries.

The program relocated 140 sea otters to San Nicholas Island and established an otter-free zone south of Point Conception in Santa Barbara County, where fishermen harvest sea urchin, abalone and lobster.

Under the program, fishermen who accidentally killed otters in the zone could not be federally prosecuted, and the government was to use nonlethal means to capture any otters that wandered into the zone.

Read the full story at Courthouse News Service

Maine lobster suppliers strategize to foil EU ban

May 9, 2016 โ€” Maine lobster suppliers met behind closed doors with dealers from some of Europeโ€™s biggest lobster importing countries in Brussels last week to discuss a pending ban on importing live North American lobsters into Europe.

The six Maine companies joined their Massachusetts and Canadian peers, as well as national trade officials, to discuss the proposed ban with buyers and trade officials from eight European countries, including the three biggest importers of Homarus americanus: France, Italy and Spain. The meeting occurred at the worldโ€™s largest seafood industry trade show, said spokesman Gavin Gibbons of the National Fisheries Institute, an American seafood industry trade group.

About 75 people met for 90 minutes to talk about how to avoid the all-out ban that Sweden asked the European Union to adopt in March after finding North American lobsters in European waters.

โ€œBrussels was productive,โ€ Gibbons said. โ€œUnnecessarily excluding live North American lobsters from that market would have real impacts on both sides of the Atlantic, sales and jobs. So, no one is taking this lightly.โ€

In March, Sweden petitioned the European Union to declare the North American lobster an invasive species, which would ban live imports to the EUโ€™s 28 member states. It based its petition on an 85-page risk assessment that claims the discovery of a small number of North American lobsters in the waters off Great Britain, Norway and Sweden over the last 30 years, including one female lobster carrying hybrid eggs, proved cross-breeding had taken place. The Swedish scientists say a ban would protect the European lobster from cross-breeding and diseases carried by the North American lobster.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

MASSACHUSETTS: Chinese delegation tours Gloucesterโ€™s seafood businesses

April 26, 2016 โ€” GLOUCESTER, Mass. โ€” Zhang Minjing, a consul in Chinaโ€™s consulate generalโ€™s office in New York City, did a little homework before making the journey to Gloucester on Monday as part of a visiting delegation of Chinese government and seafood executives.

And what did he learn from his research on Americaโ€™s Oldest Seaport?

โ€œI know that Gloucester is very famous for its lobster and fishing industry,โ€ Zhang said. โ€œI know that people are very industrious. Theyโ€™re hard working. I found the mayor very enthusiastic and very good at her job at promoting her businesses here.โ€

It appears China has taken notice of Gloucester and its bounty of fresh seafood, especially the lobsters for which the Chinese population seems to have an insatiable โ€” and growing โ€” appetite.

Consider: In 2009, U.S. lobster exports to China totaled a minuscule $2 million. Five years later, it hit about $90 million, with estimates for future annual growth pegged at roughly 15 percent a year.

Read the full story in the Gloucester Daily Times

Fishermen Worry New Rules Wonโ€™t Come in Time to Save N. Atlantic Scallops

April 25, 2016 โ€” A quandary over scallop rules has two groups of fishermen in Maine at odds over the increasingly lucrative shellfish.

Kristan Porter, 46, is an independent fisherman who catches lobsters for most of the year with his boat โ€œBrandon Jay.โ€ But for additional income, for five months each year, he and the two other men on his boat have begun collecting scallops.

But a larger than usual harvest of scallops this year in the northern Gulf of Maine and the competitive price that they demand has brought a larger number of boats than usual. Porterโ€™s boat and others are limited to collect 200 pounds of scallops each trip until the boats reach 70,000 pounds. But other boats that have permits distributed in the 1990s are allowed to haul up to 40 million pounds within the 34 days they are permitted in the area.

The problem is exacerbated as the demand for scallops has evolved from just another mollusk to a delicacy in fine dining.

Read the full story at MyCentralOregon.com

Scientists say ocean warming is driving lobsters northward

March 2, 2016 โ€” Itโ€™s too early to know what Maineโ€™s 2015 lobster landings will look like, but thereโ€™s no doubt that the number will be huge.

In 2014, the last year for which the Department of Marine Resources has figures, Maineโ€™s fishermen landed more than 123 million pounds of lobster โ€” the third year in a row that landings topped 120 pounds โ€” worth a record $457 million.

While last yearโ€™s numbers arenโ€™t in, fishermen and dealers talk about a bonanza fishery, and mild weather saw the fishery stay active into December.

In a sense, the landings are unsurprising.

According to a 2015 Atlantic States Fisheries Management Commission stock assessment, the abundance of lobsters in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank showed a meteoric rise starting in 2008 and is now at an all-time high. In southern New England, though, the story is completely different.

From a peak in 1997, the southern New England stock fell swiftly to a point where, by 2004, it was well below what scientists consider the threshold of sustainability. Things leveled off briefly; then the resource began an ongoing plunge again in 2010.

According to last yearโ€™s assessment, the Gulf of Maine-Georges Bank stock is not depleted and is not being overfished. The estimated lobster population from 2011 to 2013 was 248 million lobsters, which is well above the abundance threshold โ€” a red flag for fisheries managers โ€” of 66 million lobsters.

In contrast, in the years 2011 to 2013, the southern New England stock was depleted at an estimated 10 million lobsters. The โ€œred flagโ€ abundance level is 24 million lobsters.

Read the full story at The Ellsworth American

New Lobster Scientist Hired by Maine Department of Marine Resources

February 18, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Maine Department of Marine Resources:

Katherine Thompson has been hired by the Maine Department of Marine Resources as the lead lobster sampling program scientist. Thompson, a Ph.D. student in Marine Biology at the University of Maine, will be responsible for the coordination, implementation, and participation in the lobster sea sampling program in all seven-lobster management zones as well as the juvenile lobster ventless trap survey.

Thompsonโ€™s responsibilities will include supervision of DMR scientific staff and contractors who participate in the sea sampling and ventless trap survey programs. 

The DMR sea sampling program places trained observers onto commercial lobster boats to gather data on the near shore lobster fishery. The ventless trap survey uses specially modified traps distributed along the coast to help the DMR characterize the juvenile lobster population in Maine waters. 

Thompson will also manage the lobster research program database, oversee data entry compilation and annual summary statistics/reports for publication and will assist in writing grant reports. In addition, she will present survey results at lobster zone council meetings. 

Thompson brings to the position experience both in commercial fishing and fisheries research. Raised in a fishing family in New Harbor, Thompson served as a sternman for a Round Pond lobster fisherman during summers while she pursued a degree in Biology from Smith College. The vessel she worked on participated in DMRโ€™s ventless trap survey, providing her first experience with cooperative research. After graduating, Thompson completed an internship in lobster research through Bigelow Laboratory focusing on the settlement index survey conducted by Dr. Richard Wahle.

In 2013 Thompson received her Masterโ€™s degree in Living Marine Resource Science and Management from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouthโ€™s School for Marine Science and Technology. Her Masterโ€™s thesis project provided the first conclusive evidence of semiannual scallop spawning in U.S. waters on Georges Bank, which has important implications for management of the fishery.

From 2013 to 2014, Thompson served as a Supervisory Research Biologist for Coonamessett Farm Foundation, a scientific research and education foundation based in Falmouth, Massachusetts.

In January 2015 she began her doctoral studies at the University of Maine focusing on northern shrimp reproduction and distribution. 

โ€œIโ€™m excited about working closely with industry, especially here in my home state,โ€ said Thompson.

โ€œKatherineโ€™s experience in scientific research of multiple fisheries provides a strong foundation for her work here at DMR,โ€ said DMRโ€™s Lead Lobster Biologist Kathleen Reardon. โ€œShe has the strong academic and practical experience in marine science and commercial fishing to help move our monitoring programs forward.โ€

 

MAINE: Lobster licensing bill runs into concerns about pressure on the fishery

February 17, 2016 โ€” AUGUSTA โ€” An effort to reduce waiting lists for entry into the $457 million lobster fishery is running into concerns that a proposal to create a new class of license would put more pressure on a lobster population that the industry and regulators agree is already โ€œfully exploited.โ€

The proposal, drafted by the Department of Marine Resources, is designed to reduce the nearly 300-person waiting list, which was established 16 years ago after regulators began limiting entry into a fishery with a long tradition of local control and industry-led conservation efforts. The bill would create a new, limited lobster and crab fishing license for a reduced number of traps; increase the age from 18 to 23 before someone who has gone through the industryโ€™s apprenticeship program is put on a waiting list; and remove special fees for applicants age 70 or older, among other provisions.

But several members of the Legislatureโ€™s Committee on Marine Resources are skeptical of the proposal because of its relatively modest impact on reducing the waiting list and the unforeseen consequences it could have on a fishery that has posted record landings for reasons that are not fully understood. The wariness is shared by the Maine Lobstermenโ€™s Association, the leading trade group representing the industry, as well as the Maine Lobstering Union, a recently formed labor union. Roughly 123 million pounds of lobster were landed in 2014, with the value of the catch at nearly $457 million, a record. Regulators and the industry do not believe that those landings will continue.

Carl Wilson, director of the Bureau of Marine Science and the stateโ€™s leading lobster biologist, told legislators Wednesday that the proposal likely wouldnโ€™t have a โ€œhuge negative impactโ€ on the fishery. He said the effect would probably be the equivalent of the unreported landings of lobster that are cash sales.

However, Wilson also acknowledged that there are some โ€œtroublingโ€ indicators that the industry could be headed for a downturn. The indicators are different from the ones that appeared before the collapse of the fishery in southern New England.

Read the full story at Portland Press Herald

Maine to pay for research in effort to keep lobster fishery healthy

February 4, 2016 โ€” Maineโ€™s lobsters are about to get new scrutiny.

The Department of Marine Resources has put out a call for proposals to gauge the impact of warming Gulf of Maine waters on lobster biology, populations and susceptibility to disease. A separate study will attempt to measure the economic impact of Maineโ€™s most valuable fishery beyond what lobstermen are paid for their catch.

The department has earmarked up to $700,000 to pay for the studies, with the money coming out of the Lobster Research, Education and Development Fund. The money in that fund comes from sales of the lobster license plate.

Research proposals are due Thursday. The departmentโ€™s request for proposals suggests the contracts will be awarded by early March, but department spokesman Jeff Nichols said the timing depends on how many proposals are received and how quickly a panel is formed to review them.

The department said it needs the research to determine how to help maintain the industryโ€™s remarkable health over the past 20 or 30 years. Lobster landed in Maine was valued at a record $465.9 million in 2014, up more than fourfold in the past two decades. The catch by 5,818 commercial license holders made up 78 percent of the value of commercial fishery landings in the state.

Carl Wilson, director of the departmentโ€™s Bureau of Marine Science, said โ€œthere are sufficient questionsโ€ about whatโ€™s happening with climate change and its impact on the Gulf of Maine to warrant more study.

Read the full story at Portland Press Herald

 

MASSACHUSETTS: Sale of shell-on lobster claws bound for Senate floor

January 14, 2016 โ€” BOSTON โ€” Massachusetts lobstermen could get a leg-up if a Senate bill set for consideration next Thursday becomes law.

Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr, a Gloucester Republican who sponsored the bill (S 469), said it would allow for shell-on lobster claws to be processed and sold in Massachusetts.

In contrast to the groundfishery, hampered by lowered federal catch limits on cod and other stock, the Bay Stateโ€™s lobster fishery is โ€œdoing fairly well,โ€ according to Tarr, who said there are concerns about the prices lobsters fetch at the market and competition from Canada.

Read the full story at Saugus Advertiser

How Probiotics Can Save the East Coast Shellfish Industry

January 12, 2016 โ€” Bob Rheault was having an open house at his young shellfish hatchery, so he arrived early in the morning with bottles of wine and plates of cheese. Thatโ€™s when he noticed he had a problem.

โ€œThere was an odd substance floating on the surface of the tanks,โ€ Rheault says. He looked through a microscope, โ€œand there were no bodies to be seen โ€ฆ just empty shells with bacteria climbing all over them.โ€

In oyster and clam hatcheries, a bacterial infection can cause the population to drop from 10 million to 1,000 larvae overnight. Thatโ€™s what happened to Rheault, who had no larvae to show his open house guests. Antibiotics arenโ€™t approved for use in U.S. shellfish hatcheries (though they are worldwide)โ€”and, by the time an infection sets in, all the larvae are dead anywayโ€”so the only thing for a hatchery owner to do when confronted with an infection is dump everything out, clean the tanks, and start over.

Or that used to be the only approach. Now, researchers at two labs seem to have found a solution.

The problem of bacterial infections in hatcheries has been worsening over the past decade as the waters of the Northeast warm. Rheault, who is now the president of the East Coast Shellfish Growers Association, says that thanks to climate change, bacterial infections now kill off 10 to 20 percent of the Northeastโ€™s shellfish larvae each year. And because the bacteria, Vibrio, gets into the tanks via seawater, it affects not only shellfish but also lobsters, by turning their shells black and making them impossible to sell. (Some lobstermen eat the animals themselves or send them to be cooked and processed, since the meat is still good.)

Researchers have now found a tool to fight the Vibrio bacteria: probiotics. Teams at both NOAAโ€™s Milford Laboratory in Connecticut and the University of Rhode Island (URI) have harvested beneficial bacteria from healthy adult oysters that can help oyster larvae fight off bacterial infections. And the URI researchers are exploring the possibility that a similar concoction could help treat lobster shell disease as well.

Read the full story at Civil Eats

 

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