Truro News

All that remains

- By Sara Ericsson Tri-county Vanguard fiShEriES

Thousands of lobster carcasses have been dumped in several Digby County locations

Thousands of lobster carcasses were found freshly dumped in various areas in and around Weymouth Friday as fishermen continued demonstrat­ing outside the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Fishermen confirmed many of the lobsters — whose smell and current infestatio­n with insects and maggots show are newly dumped — are below legal harvesting size, and others are female, in addition to having been fished off-season, all of which is illegal at the commercial level.

David Whorley, DFO manager for southweste­rn Nova Scotia, expressed concern with the findings.

“We’ve been made aware and are following up with these incidents. It’s distressin­g, to be frank, and we are taking this very seriously,” he said.

Lobster carcasses have been found in several locations around Weymouth, including three known piles on Briggs Road, over fifteen on Lombard Road, and around 30 piles along Weymouth River’s west side.

The land along both Briggs and Lombard roads has belonged Digby County resident Ben Robicheau and his family for over 50 years. He heard the night of September 14 that dumps had happened on the land.

While dumping of litter and trash is common, Robicheau says, “we’ve never seen any lobster dumped here before.”

Most of the dumps are located near existing, natural bumps and lumps in the forest. Some no longer smell and are sun-bleached, while others give off a rancid smell, are dark in colour and have bugs swirling around them.

“I’m no expert, but even I can tell these are fresh. Some look like they have meat in them and some don’t. I don’t know why that is, but it’s strange,” said Robicheau.

The dumping of these lobsters coincides with demonstrat­ions that have happened across the region as lobster fishermen have gathered at local DFO offices, including one in Digby, to push for tighter conservati­on enforcemen­t.

The lobsters’ origin, along with who dumped them, is unknown. It is also not known if the dumping is in any way related to ongoing protests in the area.

The fishermen have been adamant their main wish is for proper enforcemen­t of fishing regulation­s to sustain lobster stocks.

“We’re about conservati­on. That’s it,” said Matthew Theriault, a lobster fishermen and acting spokespers­on for the Digby demonstrat­ion.

News of the dumpings has made fishermen participat­ing even more wary of what they see as lacking enforcemen­t.

The group is set to meet with DFO regional managers today to discuss their concerns.

If their concerns aren’t resolved by Monday, the group says it will continue demonstrat­ions and will itself increase efforts to enforce.

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 ?? Sara EriCSSon/Tri-CounTy Vanguard ?? Thousands of lobster carcasses, including ones under legal harvesting size and some females — both of which are illegal to harvest commercial­ly — that were harvested offseason have been found dumped in several locations in and around Weymouth.
Sara EriCSSon/Tri-CounTy Vanguard Thousands of lobster carcasses, including ones under legal harvesting size and some females — both of which are illegal to harvest commercial­ly — that were harvested offseason have been found dumped in several locations in and around Weymouth.

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