The Telegram (St. John's)

Missing in Maine

State’s historic cod fishery had worst year in history in 2017

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One of the most historic fisheries in the U.S. hit an all-time low last year as cod fishermen continued to struggle with choking quotas and low abundance of fish.

Maine’s cod fishery has existed since the early 17th century, and it was once one of the strongest in the U.S. The fishery peaked at more than 21 million pounds of cod, a fish often used with the fish and chips dish, in 1991.

But fishermen only brought 79,816 pounds of cod to land in Maine in 2017, mirroring a downward trend around New England, where cod fishermen have also struggled in New Hampshire and Massachuse­tts, state data said. Maine’s total was less than half the 2016 haul and by far the lowest on record, according to state data that go back to 1950.

One reason for the collapse is that federal quotas for cod are so low many fishermen are just avoiding them altogether, said Terry Alexander, a veteran fisherman out of Portland and Boston.

Cod fishermen typically also seek other species, such as haddock and flounder, and they must stop fishing altogether once they reach quota for cod, per the rules.

“Cod are in maybe 10 spots in the Gulf of Maine,” Alexander said. “Nobody fishes them. Everybody avoids them.”

Commercial cod fishing in the U.S. remains based in New England, especially Massachuse­tts, but the fishermen who participat­e in it are struggling. The U.S. cod fishery as a whole also hit an all-time low in 2016.

Scientists have attributed the collapse to factors such as years of overfishin­g in the past and the impact of warming oceans on the cold-water fish.

Regulators have approved a series of cutbacks to the coast-wide quota for cod over the past several years, and the United States’ catch of the fish has fallen from more than 100 million pounds per year in the early 1980s to about 3.2 million pounds in 2016, the most recent year for which statistics are available for all states.

It’s possible fishermen might catch slightly more in 2018, because regulators approved a bump in quota for the Gulf of Maine and Georges Bank, the two areas where cod are harvested. That went into effect on May 1.

But the commercial quota for the two areas remains below 4 million pounds, a fraction of the average haul in the 1990s. That means fishermen will likely still avoid cod rather than seek them.

“Cod can be a limiting stock,” said Janice Plante, a spokeswoma­n for the regulatory New England Fishery Management Council.

Atlantic cod is still readily available to diners and shoppers in the U.S. because of imported fish from countries such as Russia, Norway and Iceland.

But finding local cod in Maine and elsewhere in New England has become increasing­ly difficult in the past several years, and it’s likely to stay that way.

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