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MASSACHUSETTS: Lobster season opens on time after right whales move out of Cape Cod bay

May 1, 2020 โ€” Lobster season for the South Shore will begin as planned after endangered right whales, spotted in Cape Cod Bay, moved out of the area.

The Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies estimated five whales, including two mother-and-calf pairs, were feeding in Cape Cod Bay, following an aerial survey on April 25. On Wednesday, another aerial inspection over the area found the whales had moved out of the bay and adjacent waters, the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries said in an announcement Thursday afternoon.

The Division previously extended the opening of the season to May 8 because the whales were spotted, spokesman Craig Gilvarg said in a statement. North Atlantic right whales are an endangered species and vulnerable to buoy entanglement and getting hit by boats, because they feed near the surface.

โ€œEverybody is anxious to go,โ€ John Haviland, president of the South Shore Lobster Fishermenโ€™s Association, said. โ€œTheyโ€™ve been standing around for three months, basically in quarantine.โ€

Read the full story at The Patriot Ledger

MASSACHUSETTS: Cape Cod Bay fishing gear restriction lifted

May 13, 2019 โ€” The director of the Division of Marine Fisheries has rescinded the Cape Cod Bay gear restriction for fishermen and speed limit restrictions intended to protect endangered North Atlantic right whales, according to a statement released Thursday night.

The restrictions originally were set to end May 14, but a recent aerial survey by the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies showed that right whales have migrated out of state waters adjacent to Cape Cod.

Commercial and recreational fishermen are now allowed to set their trap gear in the waters north and east of Cape Cod, the statement says. Boaters operating vessels smaller than 65 feet in length may now operate at a speed greater than 10 knots.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

Massachusetts: Fisheries lifts ban on bay lobster traps

May 18, 2018 โ€” Set the traps and melt the butter.

The state Department of Marine Fisheries on Tuesday lifted its emergency closure on the setting of lobster traps and the reduced speed limit of 10 knots or less on small vessels in Cape Cod Bay after an aerial survey found no presence of right whales in the region. The marine animals can become entangled in the ropes used to mark lobster traps and haul the catch.

The fisheries department said that Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies had conducted an aerial survey of the bay on Monday as part of the stateโ€™s ongoing right whale conservation efforts.

Read the full story at the Wicked Local Eastham

 

MASSACHUSETTS: Cape Cod boaters asked to use caution due to presence of extremely endangered right whales

April 17, 2017 โ€” Boaters have been urged by officials with the Division of Marine Fisheries (DMF) to use extreme caution when enjoying the waters of Cape Cod.

According to a statement released by the Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game on Friday, an unusually large amount of endangered North Atlantic right whales have been observed in the bay area.

The right whale, which is known to congregate and feed near the bay on an annual basis, is a species of whale so endangered that their entire population is only about 500 animals, the statement says.

An aerial survey conducted on April 12 by the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies showed that roughly 163 of those whales were present in the Cape Cod Bay, meaning that some 30 percent of the known population of the species was sighted in the same bay on a single day.

โ€œAggregations of this magnitude have never been observed in Cape Cod Bay before,โ€ said Gronendyke.

Boat owners have been urged to โ€œproceed with extreme cautionโ€ and to reduce speed to less than 10 knots.

Read the full story at MassLive.com

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