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MAINE: Sea urchins not making a comeback

January 13, 2021 โ€” Some Maine fishermen are asking themselves whether it is still worth it to endure bitter-cold winds and heavy seas to harvest sea urchins for their prized roe at this point in the 2020-21 season that began Sept. 1.

At the Atlantic Coast Inn, where some out-of-town sea urchin harvesters stay several nights a week while working out of various Hancock County harbors, multiple harvesters reported that the Maine fisheryโ€™s further restricted daily catch, fewer allotted fishing days, declining dealer prices, warmer ocean temps and the coronavirus-driven drop in demand for the sea urchinsโ€™ gonads โ€” called uni in Japanese โ€” are taking a toll on their livelihood. Working in high winds and frigid temps, incurring fuel costs driving to ports and back home, the experienced divers said it was becoming increasingly less profitable.

At the High Street hotel last week, after workdays beginning before dawn, pickup trucks swung into the parking lot to unload totes packed with green urchins. Hailing from Woolwich to Harrington, the crews trickled in and backed up to East Atlantic Seafood Tradingโ€™s truck to sell their dayโ€™s catch to Sinuon Chau. Chau is the second generation in his family to run the Scarborough-based company founded by his father, John Chau, in the early 1990s.

Standing in the truck bed, Sinuon Chau surveyed diver Fred Grayโ€™s catch. He cracked open some urchins to eyeball the uni โ€” the reproductive glands โ€” which produce eggs or sperm depending on the gender. Inside the shells, urchins contain two to five gonads. The lobes, ranging in color from pale yellow to dark orange, resemble small tongues in shape and texture. Top-grade uni is plump, firm and a bright golden or yellow-orange hue. That is the quality sought by chefs in the United States and the worldโ€™s top consumer, Japan. The delicacy is served raw atop sushi, sashimi or, say, a quailโ€™s egg yolk.

Read the full story at The Ellsworth American

Fall fishing: Alaskaโ€™s commercial fleets load up on pollock, Dungeness, king crabs and more

October 9, 2020 โ€” As always, there is a lot of fishing action going on after summer salmon.

At Southeast Alaska, beam trawlers are back on the water targeting 650,000 pounds of pink and sidestripe shrimp in a third opener.

Southeastโ€™s Dungeness season reopened on Oct. 1, and a few million pounds are likely to come out of that fishery. There will again be no opener for red or blue king crab because of low abundances.

On Oct. 5, a hundred or more divers also could be heading down for more than 1.7 million pounds of red sea cucumbers. A catch of just under 3 million pounds of sea urchins also is up for grabs, but there may be a lack of buyers. Southeast divers also are targeting giant geoduck clams.

At Prince William Sound, a 15,000-pound test fishery just wrapped up for golden king crabs; likewise, a nearly 7 million pound golden king crab fishery is ongoing along the Aleutian Islands.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Crowds removing sea creatures from San Pedro tide pools put delicate ecosystem at risk

July 20, 2020 โ€” It was against the backdrop of a pounding surf one recent morning that almost 30 people had gathered on the cragged and slippery folds of White Point tidal pools in San Pedro and set to work with gardening spades, buckets and bags.

As ocean water rippled about their knees, they collected mussels, black turban snails, purple sea urchins and even a lobster. Then, as the tide began to rise, they trundled back to their cars hauling sacks, backpacks and five-gallon buckets filled with intertidal creatures.

โ€œItโ€™s a fun way to spend the day and grab a free dinner,โ€ said Lisa Yan, 55, an unemployed casino card dealer. โ€œEspecially for those of us who lost jobs because of the coronavirus pandemicโ€ฆ. All you need is a fishing license.โ€

Area residents and officials say that ever since beach restrictions were lifted at this popular Palos Verdes Peninsula spot, an unprecedented number of people have been harvesting edible sea creatures โ€” animals that had, up until recently, enjoyed relative solitude during the coronavirus lockdown.

In prior years, animal harvesting was far less common, and tidal pool etiquette held that creatures should not be disturbed.

Read the full story at the Los Angeles Times

Changes To Maineโ€™s Sea Urchin Harvest Approved For 2019-20

July 26, 2019 โ€” Maine fishing regulators say theyโ€™ve approved a host of small tweaks to the rules about the stateโ€™s fishery for sea urchins.

Fishermen harvest sea urchins so their roe can be used as food. Itโ€™s especially popular in Asia. The Maine Department of Marine Resources says an advisory council has approved a package of changes to the number of days when fishermen can harvest the urchins and how many can be taken.

The rules apply to the 2019-20 fishing season, which begins in September.

Read the full story at Maine Public

Alaska fishermen: Sea otter comeback is eating into profits

May 18, 2018 โ€” ANCHORAGE, Alaska โ€”  Northern sea otters, once hunted to the brink of extinction along Alaskaโ€™s Panhandle, have made a spectacular comeback by gobbling some of the stateโ€™s finest seafood โ€“ and fishermen are not happy about the competition.

Sea otters dive for red sea urchins, geoduck clams, sea cucumbers โ€“ delicacies in Asia markets โ€“ plus prized Dungeness crab. They then carry their meals to the surface and float on their backs as they eat, sometimes using rocks to crack open clams and crab. The furry marine mammals, which grow as large as 100 pounds (45 kilograms), eat the equivalent of a quarter of their weight each day.

Phil Doherty, head of the Southeast Alaska Regional Dive Fisheries Association, is working to save the livelihood of 200 southeast Alaska fishermen and a $10 million industry but faces an uphill struggle against an opponent that looks like a cuddly plush toy.

Fishermen have watched their harvest shrink as sea otters spread and colonize, Doherty said. Divers once annually harvested 6 million pounds (2.7 million kilograms) of red sea urchins. The recent quota has been less than 1 million pounds (454,000 kilograms).

โ€œWeโ€™ve seen a multimillion-dollar fishery in sea urchins pretty much go away,โ€ he said.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at WPXI

 

MAINE: Scallop fishery to open through lottery, new legislation

September 1, 2017 โ€” New legislation intended to open up scallop fishing, called An Act to Implement an Owner-Operator Requirement in the Scallop and Sea Urchin Fisheries, passed House and Senate votes in the 128th Legislature and was signed into law in July.

โ€œThat was a huge win for the scallop industry,โ€ Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries Communications Director Caroline Goddard said.

New scallop dragging licenses could be issued, at the earliest, for the 2018-19 season. How they will be issued is currently under discussion by the Department of Marine Resources.

โ€œItโ€™s not a foregone conclusion that there will be new licenses,โ€ said DMR Scallop Advisory Council member Carla Guenther, who is a scientist with Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries.

Read the full story at Penobscot Bay Press

MAINE: State hopes new card system can help revive struggling urchin fishery

September 26, 2016 โ€” State officials are hoping what is good for elvers will be good for urchins, too.

Having implemented an electronic โ€œswipeโ€ card system in the elver fishery in 2014, the Maine Department of Marine Resources now is requiring urchin fishermen and wholesale dealers to use such cards to register every transaction. The requirement, which will give the department up-to-the-minute statewide harvest data, went into effect when the urchin season got underway on Sept. 1.

The goal, according to DMR officials, is to better manage the struggling fishery, which has seen far better times. Just over 20 years ago, Maineโ€™s annual urchin landings briefly exceeded $40 million, noted Patrick Keliher, head of DMR. Only lobstering, which in the mid-1990s first passed the $100 million-a-year mark, was more valuable.

With only $4.3 million in total statewide landings in Maine in 2015, urchins now are the stateโ€™s seventh-most lucrative commercially fished species. The vast majority of all the urchins harvested in Maine are shipped to the Far East for the regionโ€™s voracious seafood market.

Read the full story at the Bangor Daily News

Maine scientist seeks keys to how sea urchins avoid aging process

June 1, 2016 โ€” Sea urchins donโ€™t appear to age, and researchers from Maine and Bermuda are trying to find out why.

The answer might help unlock the secrets of how to slow the aging process in humans, scientists say.

โ€œWe donโ€™t really know how (long) sea urchins can live,โ€ James Coffman, a scientist at the MDI Biological Laboratory in Bar Harbor, said of the spiky ocean floor dwellers. โ€œThey may be living hundreds of years.โ€

But when they do die, itโ€™s not of old age, according to Coffmanโ€™s research.

Thatโ€™s because sea urchin cells do not degrade, like the cells in humans or most other creatures.

โ€œA lot of things can kill you. Old age is just one of them,โ€ Coffman said.

He and Andrea Bodnar, a scientist from the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Studies, recently published an article on their research, โ€œMaintenance of Somatic Tissue Regeneration with Age in Short- and Long-lived Species of Sea Urchins,โ€ in Aging Cell, a scholarly journal. The research was funded by a two-year, $275,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health.

Coffman and Bodnar studied the differences between red sea urchins, which can live to be more than 100 years old; the purple sea urchin, with a lifespan of about 50 years; and the green sea urchin, which dies after four to five years of life. Bodnar said the sea urchin lifespans are based on observations by fishermen.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

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