Orlando Sentinel

Pandemic, predators making clammers’ lives tough to dig

- By Patrick Whittle

PORTLAND, Maine — Chad Coffin has spent the coronaviru­s pandemic much as he has the previous several decades: on the mudflats of Maine, digging for clams that draw tourists to seafood shacks around New England.

But he’s running into a problem: few clams.

“There just isn’t the clams that there used to be,” Coffin said. “I don’t want to be negative, I’m just trying to be realistic.”

It’s a familiar problem experience­d by New England’s clamdigger­s. More New Englanders have dug in the tidal mudflats during the last year, but the clams aren’t cooperatin­g.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has inspired more people in the Northeaste­rn states, particular­ly Maine and Massachuse­tts, to dig for soft-shell clams, which are also called “steamers” and have been used to make chowder and fried clams for generation­s. The era of social distancing during the coronaviru­s pandemic is conducive to the often solitary work, said Coffin, the president of the Maine Clammers Associatio­n, which represents commercial clammers.

But the U.S. haul of clams has dipped in recent years as the industry has contended with clam-eating predators and warming waters, and 2020 and early 2021 have been especially difficult, industry members said.

In Maine, the largest clam producing state, fishermen produced their lowest haul in more than 90 years at a little more than 1.3 million pounds in 2020. Nationwide totals aren’t compiled yet, but Maine’s haul typically accounts for more than half the U.S. total, and hauls in other clamming states such as Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island and New York have been trending downward in recent years.

The lack of clams has contribute­d to higher prices to consumers, said Coffin. It has also sparked fears that future generation­s of clams will be even smaller in number, he said.

“A few of the guys who are clamming are making good money now, but they’re basically selling their future,” Coffin said. “The resource keeps diminishin­g.”

The clamming industry has had to contend with more marine predators of clams such as green crabs and milky ribbon worm in recent years. Scientists have said the predators have been encouraged by the warming waters of key habitats such as the Gulf of Maine, which is one of the fastest-warming bodies of water in the world.

The clam shortfall has coincided with a time of high demand for clams, and that has served to increase prices. Soft-shell clams are often selling for about $7 per pound at retail, which is about 40% more than normal and a surprising­ly high number for spring, Coffin said. Demand for clams is usually highest in summer.

Soft-shell clams were the second-most valuable species, after lobsters, in Maine last year, state records show. The clams were worth about $15.7 million at the docks and $2.39 per pound, which was the second-highest figure in recorded history.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP 2020 ?? Mike Soule hauls bags of clams in Freeport, Maine. More New Englanders have dug in the tidal mudflats during the last year, but they’re finding fewer clams.
ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP 2020 Mike Soule hauls bags of clams in Freeport, Maine. More New Englanders have dug in the tidal mudflats during the last year, but they’re finding fewer clams.

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