Chattanooga Times Free Press

Puffin stuff: Herring rules could boost funny-looking bird

- BY PATRICK WHITTLE

BATH, Maine — The commercial fishery for herring has suffered in recent years due to new restrictio­ns, but those same rules could benefit some of Maine’s most beloved birds — puffins.

Atlantic puffins, known for their colorful beaks and waddling walks, were once nearly gone from Maine, the only U.S. state where they nest. Decades of conservati­on work have brought Maine’s population of the birds to about 1,300 pairs that nest on small islands off the coast.

Those same Gulf of Maine waters are an important area for the U.S. herring fishery. The fishery has had to contend with quota cuts in recent years because of federal efforts to protect the fish’s population, and more restrictio­ns are on the way.

The U.S. catch of herring, based mostly in Maine and Massachuse­tts, fell from more than 200 million pounds in 2014 to less than 25 million pounds in 2019.

Puffins are dependent on small fish to survive, and new protection­s to the herring population could help them do that, said Don Lyons, director of conservati­on science for the National Audubon Society’s Seabird Institute in Bremen, Maine.

“Herring are certainly a key food source for puffins. The kind of fish they do best on, that they best raise chicks feeding,” Lyons said. “The declines of herring over the last decade or longer have not been good for puffins.”

The herring fishery is facing a new set of restrictio­ns from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion starting Feb. 10. The restrictio­ns include a prohibitio­n on the use of certain fishing gear in inshore waters. They also include new rules that account for herring’s role in the ecosystem, federal documents state.

That’s good news for puffins, because small fish close to shore are vitally important for puffin parents to be able to feed chicks, Lyons said. But it’s going to challenge herring fishermen, said Mary Beth Tooley, director of government affairs for O’Hara Corp., a large Rockland, Mainebased bait dealer and herring harvester.

Herring are economical­ly important because lobster fishermen have used them to bait traps for generation­s.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/ROBERT F. BUKATY ?? An Atlantic puffin carries bait fish it will feed its chick on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine.
AP FILE PHOTO/ROBERT F. BUKATY An Atlantic puffin carries bait fish it will feed its chick on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine.

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