Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lobster industry faces weaker shells

- By Patrick Whittle

Scientific evidence paints a complicate­d picture of fears in the commercial fishing industry.

PORTLAND, MAINE » More people outside the U.S. are enjoying the New England tradition of cracking open a freshly cooked American lobster, and that experience hinges on one thing — the lobster getting there alive.

That’s a looming problem, according to some members of the American lobster industry, who are concerned that lobsters’ shells are getting weaker. Scientific evidence about the issue paints a complicate­d picture.

U.S. lobster exports to Asian countries have increased exponentia­lly this decade, and American shippers prefer lobsters with hard, sturdy shells to survive the long journey to places such as Beijing and Seoul.

But some members of U.S. industry have complained in recent years of poor shell quality among lobsters, most of which are plucked from the ocean off Canada and New England. They’ve raised concerns about warming ocean waters or acidificat­ion of the ocean having a negative effect on lobster shells.

Scientists said there is a correlatio­n between warm temperatur­es and increased shell disease, but incidence of the disease is very low off Maine, the nation’s top lobster-producing state. Lobstermen also are catching lots of lobsters in the summer, when the creatures molt and are softer. Otherwise, there isn’t much hard evidence to suggest lobster shells are weakening, scientists said.

Here are some issues raised by the industry and what the science says:

Why does the industry prefer strong shells?

There’s a lot of money at stake

in getting lobsters to their destinatio­ns alive. American lobsters were worth a record $669.3 million at the docks in 2016, a year in which fishermen caught nearly 160 million pounds of the crustacean­s.

While lobster meat is used in some processed products, such as lobster macaroni and cheese and lobster bisque, the whole live lobster is one of the biggest draws in the seafood world. It’s also the sought-after item in the booming Chinese market, which took a record of nearly 18 million pounds of U.S. lobster last year

A lobster with a harder, sturdier shell has a better

chance to live through the one- to two-daylong journey.

Bill Bruns, operations manager for The Lobster Company of Arundel, Maine, said “finding and producing enough product that’s possible to ship” has become a problem.

What does the science say?

Rick Wahle, a University of Maine zoologist who studies lobsters, said he hasn’t “heard anything that lobsters are necessaril­y getting softer.” But he and many other scientists said lobsters do face environmen­tal challenges that could impact their ability to be shipped.

Wahle and others said the jury is still out on whether the increasing acidificat­ion of the ocean is one of those

factors. There appear to be subtle effects on lobster larvae from acidificat­ion, but nothing to suggest something as dramatic as weaker shells, he said.

It’s possible that processors are just seeing more “soft shell” lobsters that have recently molted, which is a natural process necessary for them to grow, Wahle said.

A 2017 study that appeared in the scientific journal FACETS looked at the subject of the health of softshelle­d lobsters in southweste­rn Nova Scotia. It concluded that future research is needed “to evaluate the effects of long-term ecosystem change on shell-quality.”

Do warming oceans play a role?

Many lobsters live in the

Gulf of Maine, which is warming faster than most of the world’s oceans. This poses many challenges to lobsters, including potential changes to their access to food and the abundance of predators.

It also raises concerns about epizootic shell disease, which disfigures lobsters to the point that they can’t be sold. The Maine Department of Marine Resources said researcher­s found the disease in about 1 percent of lobsters last year after almost never finding it as recently as a decade or so ago.

Justin Ries, a marine biogeochem­ist with Northeaste­rn University, said it’s important to monitor for the disease because it devastated the population off of southern New England.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A lobster is pulled from a crate in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A lobster is pulled from a crate in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine.

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