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'Ghost' Lobster Traps: A New Hazard?

CLARKE CANFIELD   11/26/09 02:39 PM ET   AP

Lobster

PORTLAND, Maine — Beneath the cold ocean waters off the coast of Maine, the nation's lobster breadbasket, lie hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of old wire lobster "ghost traps." Lost over the years to storms, boats – even the knives of fishermen who've cut them from their buoys to settle scores – many of the traps continue catching lobsters.

Marine biologists say lost and abandoned lobster, crab and other fish traps plague coastal waters around the globe, putting pressure on a number of already-stressed fish populations. In U.S. waters alone, millions of dollars' worth of marketable seafood is lost each year.

Lobstermen this winter will grapple up gear from selected spots in the first large-scale study of ghost traps along the Maine coast. Nationwide, other studies are focusing on lost traps off the Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coasts.

"It would be very interesting if we could drain the ocean and look at what's down there," said Holly Bamford, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Marine Debris Program. "We might be surprised."

The extent of Maine's ghost-trap problem isn't fully known, but lobstermen say they sometimes recover traps that contain skinny lobsters – ones that appear to have not eaten – or shells from lobsters that have starved and withered away to nothing or been eaten by other lobsters.

Most lobstermen feel it'll get worse with a new federal regulation requiring them to use a certain type of rope on their gear. The rope, they say, is prone to breaking and will result in even more lost traps.

Fishermen have been losing and discarding equipment for as long as they've plied the world's seas. But the range and impact of that refuse has grown in the past 50 years as fishing has increased, especially with more durable, non-biodegradable equipment.

The ability of lost lobster traps to continue fishing diminishes as the bait – herring or some other oily fish – dissipates. Still, scientists believe the traps continue catching lobsters, attracting creatures in search of shelter. And while the traps are required to have escape vents that break free over time, not all vents break free as intended.

"Ghost fishing" studies are under way or recently completed along all U.S. coasts. They include looks at Dungeness crab traps in Alaska, Washington, Oregon and California; blue crab and sea bass traps off North Carolina; blue crab traps in the Chesapeake Bay and the Gulf of Mexico; spiny lobster traps in Florida; and fish traps in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Other studies have looked at the impact of lost fishing nets found in Puget Sound in Washington and off the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, where more than 600 tons of nets were collected.

In Maine, the Gulf of Maine Lobster Foundation has received a $200,000 grant to look at the issue. The foundation plans to recruit 10 lobstermen in each of seven Maine harbors to grapple for lost traps late this winter or early spring, said Laura Ludwig, who is heading the project.

The findings will be recorded and assessed in hopes of determining how effective the traps are at fishing after they've been lost in the deep. Depending on their condition, the recovered traps will be returned to their rightful owners, recycled or disposed of.

In Maine, where lobstermen actively fish more than 2 million traps, it's estimated that 5 to 10 percent – 100,000 to 200,000 – are lost in any given year. In a decade, that could be 1 or 2 million lost traps; if that's the case, there could be as many abandoned and lost traps off the Maine coast as ones currently in use.

Ben Crocker Jr., a lobsterman from Roque Bluffs in eastern Maine, says most lobstermen feel the lost traps aren't actively catching lobsters because they're so mangled and don't have bait in them.

"It's mostly just garbage on the bottom," he said.

Two winters ago, Ian Lussier of Owls Head grappled for lost traps with another lobsterman in Penobscot Bay and recovered several hundred traps in depths of 100 to 400 feet, he said. Some had tags showing they were owned by lobstermen who hadn't fished in more than a decade. Some traps were wooden, which haven't been used for the most part for 25 years.

How much lobster the traps are catching is almost a "non-issue" for Lussier because he believes so few are caught.

The bigger issue, he says, is a new federal regulation that aims to protect endangered North Atlantic right whales by outlawing use of floating rope that connects lobster traps on the ocean bottom and sometimes entangles the whales.

Lobstermen say the sinking rope sits on the rocky bottom, where it easily abrades and breaks free, resulting in more lost gear. Lussier said he lost 87 traps out of his 800 between April 5, when the rope law went into effect, and the middle of June, because the rope deteriorated on the rocky bottom.

"What's going to happen is more traps are going to build up on the bottom in areas where we have to use sinking line," Lussier said.

Worldwide, concerns about lost gear are growing.

Besides continuing to catch fish and shellfish, lost nets and traps have been known to snag whales, seabirds, turtles and other animals, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations reported this year. They can also hurt the benthic, or ocean-bottom, environment and create navigational hazards.

Frank Chopin, a senior fisheries officer with FAO in Rome, said more people are taking part in programs and campaigns to recover the gear. But there hasn't been a systematic approach to removing it.

"It's a complicated issue," he said. "And it's not going to go away."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

PORTLAND, Maine — Beneath the cold ocean waters off the coast of Maine, the nation's lobster breadbasket, lie hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of old wire lobster "ghost traps." Lost ove...
PORTLAND, Maine — Beneath the cold ocean waters off the coast of Maine, the nation's lobster breadbasket, lie hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of old wire lobster "ghost traps." Lost ove...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:02 AM on 12/01/2009
Note that it doesn't say in the story that lobster populations are in decline, low, or in danger. From visiting Maine many times and speaking to lobstermen (admittedly not a scientific study), I'm given to understand that the inefficiencies of lobster fishing result in a strong lobster popultion. There is definitely a problem with garbage and lost catch, but lobsters are not about to go extinct because of this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just4theHalibut
10:40 PM on 11/30/2009
A solution is requiring degradable escape panels AND enforcing this requirement!
See article on Alaska crab pots at http://seagrant.uaf.edu/news/00ASJ/05.17.00_GhostPots.html
03:10 PM on 11/30/2009
Same problem with crab pots. Huge number of entanglements and entrapments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
06:29 PM on 11/28/2009
I hope at least some of the grapples have cameras on the lines to get more information about the traps and the effects of the grapples on anything else that's down there.
10:30 AM on 11/28/2009
New ropes are suggested? That is typical of someone who knows nothing of the job.
The rope breaks only when it fouls on something truly substantial.
Sometimes they can get run over but that is why they are made of sinking, not floating line.
It is 1/4 inch nylon, strong enough to lift a car. It simply ain't gonna break for nothing.
They foul on giant boulders and cracks in ledges, that would sink the boat.
10:07 AM on 11/28/2009
All they need a thin wood escape vent. It costs pennies.
Usually, they are plastic held in place with zip ties or wire clamps.
It's a small panel on the side of the trap with a slit to allow small creatures to escape.
All traps have them in New England.
If the panel is wood or tied on with cotton line, it will eventually rot and leave a good size escape vent hole.
As a diver I see traps broken off their lines.. If it looks abandoned and there is a line attached, I follow it to see where it fouled and broke. I'll open the trap and loop the tie so the lid stays open.(illeagle to touch a trap) but it lets the creatures go.
Sometimes I can tie the broken line to another string of traps. (illeagle).
It's illeagle to poessess a trap that does not have your numbers on it. I like to hope it may actually belong to the same guy. It's illeagle to touch a trap at all.
I observed a lobster war. Someone pulled anothe's traps, coiling the line and bouy inside. I assumed it fell off the deck but found plenty over the course of a month. Mostly al the same bouy. I sent the bouy up. Illeagle to touch..The offender pulled and emptied the traps and wanted no evidence floating in the bay.
04:27 AM on 12/01/2009
So, if "all traps have them in New England" this article doesn't matter, because Portland is in New England...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Organic-Guy
Organic Gardener, Carpenter, Philosopher, Agitator
09:54 AM on 11/28/2009
This is a vexing problem. a solution for one species turns out to be a problem for the others.. floating rope.
I never liked the floating rope because it had a tendency to float all the way to the surface sometimes and fowl your propeller. I used to like the oak traps but they were really heavy and needed constant maintenance. The rope that sank used to get algae all over it and rot too.
Maybe a blended rope would work and then maybe they could design a trap so the inlet area would be made of wood that rots over time. There has to be a middle ground here.
09:36 AM on 11/28/2009
guess im not republican enough today hp wont post my comments
09:17 AM on 11/28/2009
Great, now my girl friend will be watching this on Ghost Hunters.
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09:29 PM on 11/27/2009
UNH has done some interesting studies on lobsters. It seems they can enter and exit a trap as they please. Watch the video on this site:

http://www.lobsters.unh.edu/lobster_tv/observations/observations.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ChangeNow
Information over indignation
07:48 AM on 11/28/2009
Very cool link. Thanks!
10:35 AM on 11/28/2009
I'm sure they can if they are small enough but most are not bright enough.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StopGlobalWarmingBeVegan
★ Abolish Animal Slavery in Factory Farms ★
09:26 PM on 11/27/2009
Leave the ocean species alone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marco01
09:28 PM on 11/27/2009
Good luck on that one.

We need to promote real solutions.
05:43 AM on 11/28/2009
Plants have feelings too...
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07:43 PM on 11/27/2009
These traps CERTAINLY DO have bait in them. A lobster who wandered in .........

Then the next one ...........then the next one to eat that one ...........then the next one............
10:38 AM on 11/28/2009
This is the pattern I have observed for sure, and not just lobsters go in and stay.
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07:40 PM on 11/27/2009
Instead of simply griping, maybe Lussier could suggest some ideas of how to tackle these problems CAUSED BY HIS INDUSTRY.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
07:00 PM on 11/27/2009
This is what comes from electing stupid and lazy people as senators and representatives. The lobbyists decide what will be passed and those elected never even bother to read the bill, yet alone any pertinent information.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
05:21 PM on 11/27/2009
Pay divers $5 per trap to bring them up.
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07:40 PM on 11/27/2009
Most are too deep.
10:20 AM on 11/28/2009
Leads to speculation about theft.
Deep? depends where...perhaps too far off shore to be seen but one would never bother to lift it, only mark it for a boat on the surface to pull. Not many divers browsing on Gerorges' bank.
Attach a stout loop then loop thin line through it to send up.
The issue is how much stuff the diver has to drag while looking.
It's easy to carry a marker and couple hundred feet of cord.