Boston Herald

Fishermen eager to see cod quotas increase in spring

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PORTLAND, Maine — America’s catch of cod is at an all-time low, but the industry might finally experience a rebound in the coming fishing year.

Atlantic cod were once the backbone of New England’s commercial fishing fleet, but catch has plummeted in the wake of overfishin­g and environmen­tal changes. The 2016 catch, which is the most recent to be fully tabulated, was the lowest in recorded history, according to statistics from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

But NOAA officials said there are some positive signs for the cod stock, and quotas are set to increase slightly this spring after years of heavy cutbacks. Fishermen seek cod in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank, and both areas are scheduled for quota bumps on May 1.

“The quotas are so constraini­ng that there’s not a lot of opportunit­y and interest in targeting cod,” said Ben Martens, executive director of the Maine Coast Fishermen’s Associatio­n. “But we’re headed in the right direction.”

The U.S. cod fishery, based mostly in Massachuse­tts and Maine, brought in more than 100 million pounds of fish per year in the early 1980s and bottomed out at 3.2 million pounds in 2016. Scientists have blamed factors including years of heavy harvest and warming oceans for the collapse of the stock.

Recent analysis, though, shows more abundance of cod in the Gulf of Maine and Georges Bank, said Jamie Cournane, groundfish plan coordinato­r with the New England Fishery Management Council, an arm of NOAA.

The council has proposed about doubling the commercial cod quota for the two areas to nearly 3.9 million pounds, she said. The move is still pending approval by the federal Department of Commerce.

Cournane cautioned that ocean managers have seen the cod stock waffle before, and the reprieve could be brief.

“It appears that federal informatio­n suggests there have been some recent increases, but we’re not sure how long that’s going to last,” she said.

American markets and restaurant­s have become reliant on cod imported from countries such as Iceland and Russia since the stock dried up here. The fish, which is closely associated with fish and chips, is still readily available to U.S. consumers for that reason.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? CATCHING UP: The region’s cod catch has plummeted in recent years after overfishin­g and environmen­tal changes.
AP FILE PHOTO CATCHING UP: The region’s cod catch has plummeted in recent years after overfishin­g and environmen­tal changes.

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