Boston Herald

N.E. shrimp fishing shutdown extended

Moratorium to include research facility

- AP FILE

PORTLAND, Maine — A small amount of New England shrimp has been available to the public despite a fishing shutdown in recent years, but that will not be the case this winter.

The next few years of a shutdown of the New England shrimp industry will extend to a limited, research-based fishery that has helped provide a small amount of the shrimp to retailers in the past, interstate fishing regulators have said. The managers recently decided to extend a moratorium on Northern shrimp fishing until 2021.

In some previous years of the moratorium, New England's shrimp trawlers and trappers have been able to bring some of the popular winter seafood item to market via a program called the “research set aside.” The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission has ruled that the population of the shrimp, which is jeopardize­d by a warming ocean, is so low that even the research program isn't going to be implemente­d this time around.

Canadian fishermen harvest the same species, but their product is difficult to find in the United States, rendering the shrimp essentiall­y off the market for U.S. consumers.

The shutdown has been a pain for consumers and fishermen, said Joe Leask, a shrimper out of Portland who previously participat­ed in the research fishery. Many fishermen harvest different species during different times of the year, and the loss of shrimp has hurt them economical­ly, he said.

“It’s a shame to lose the infrastruc­ture they’ve built up,” Leask said. "There are a lot of fishermen who depend on each season."

The shrimp population has fallen as the Gulf of Maine has warmed, and the fishery was first shut down in 2013. Scientists have said the Gulf of Maine is warming faster than most of the world's oceans. The Atlantic States commission said in a statement earlier this month that “long-term trends in environmen­tal conditions have not been favorable for” the shrimp.

Fishermen from Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire and especially Maine formerly harvested the shrimp. Maine declined to participat­e in the research fishery last winter.

The Atlantic States commission has said annual surveys will continue to be used to provide data about the status of the shrimp stock.

 ??  ?? CRUSTACEAN CRISIS: The New England shrimping moratorium will have a worse effect on retailers and consumers with the end of the ‘research set aside’ program that enabled a limited number of shrimp to reach the public.
CRUSTACEAN CRISIS: The New England shrimping moratorium will have a worse effect on retailers and consumers with the end of the ‘research set aside’ program that enabled a limited number of shrimp to reach the public.

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