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MAINE: Good scallop season may be bound for a change

January 9, 2019 โ€” Maineโ€™s scallop season got off to a good start last month, with supplies plentiful and a strong price, but that may be about to change.

Early on, according to Melissa Smith, the scallop resource manager at the Department of Marine Resources, along most of the coast between Penobscot Bay and Cobscook Bay landings varied were โ€œvariable depending on the location.โ€

Scallop meat sizes also ranged from quite large to relatively small depending on where they were brought up, โ€œas is the norm for any fishing year.โ€

Harvesters were generally able to get their daily limits โ€” three 5-gallon buckets or about 135 pounds of shucked scallop meats โ€” by the early afternoon or even earlier.

Read the full story at The Ellsworth American

As Herring Fishery Closes, Maine Fishermen Turn To Plentiful โ€˜Pogiesโ€™ For Bait

September 18, 2018 โ€” Good news for Maine lobstermen: Just as a scarcity of the herring they use to bait their traps has closed that fishery, state officials are expanding the fishery for another baitfish โ€“ menhaden, or pogies that have shown up in large numbers off Maine for the third year in a row.

Four southern states where pogies have not been abundant this year are transferring some of their federal quotas for the fish to Maine.

Large menhaden populations have been recorded off this state for decades, but only periodically. State Marine Resources Coordinator Melissa Smith says with the Gulf of Maineโ€™s waters warming, and North Atlantic currents changing, the state may see them return more often.

โ€œThose environmental factors might tip the scales of the pogies natural cyclical nature,โ€ Smith says, โ€œso that we do see them in Maine perhaps a little more frequently.โ€

Read the full story at Maine Public

Scallop fishermen near end of season

March 21, 2018 โ€” PEMBROKE, Maine โ€” The Maine scallop fishing season opened during the first week of December and now, with two weeks or less remaining, reports on how good a season it has been are decidedly mixed.

On the good side of the ledger, there seemed to be plenty of scallops, often in places where none have been seen for years, Melissa Smith, who coordinates scallop management for the Department of Marine Resources, said last week.

With the season ending for draggers on March 29 along the Downeast coast (divers get six more days between March 30 and April 14), Smith said, only one of the seven rotational management zones that were open to fishing at the start of the season has been fully closed to fishing. Last year as the season ran down, only two of the seven rotational areas open at the seasonโ€™s start remained fully open at its end.

โ€œWhile emergency closures are still occurring each season,โ€ Smith said in an email, โ€œweโ€™re observing that more harvestable area is remaining open during the season.โ€

The extended openings and โ€œthe expansion of harvestable scallops back to traditional beds,โ€ she said, are indicators of the growth of the growth of the scallop resource in inshore waters.

According to Portland scallop dealer and former resource manager at DMR Togue Brawn, โ€œtheyโ€™re finding some nice pockets of big stuff still, which is a good indicator that the measures we put in place years ago are working.โ€

Without the closures and limits, the little โ€œbumpโ€ in scallop population that occurred naturally โ€œwould have been just that. Guys would have found some nice patches and wiped them out. Now weโ€™ve got something that could last.โ€

If there are more harvestable scallops around, their abundance may not be benefiting the pocketbooks of Maineโ€™s fishermen.

Read the full story at the Ellsworth American

 

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