Grant aims to retrieve fishermens' lost crab pots
NEWPORT, Ore. — During his 35 years as a commercial fisherman, Jeff Feldner lost his share of crab pots when storms blew them out of position, a passing boat propeller sheared off the buoy, or a bank of kelp overwhelmed everything and dragged it away.
As a result, thousands of crab pots litter the ocean floor, creating a deadly obstacle course of brightly colored plastic lines waving in the water, waiting to entangle migrating whales, turtles and sea lions, as well as passing boats.
But once the crab season is completed in August, fishermen will have a chance to get some back in what has been billed as the largest effort ever to recover lost crab pots. A federal stimulus grant of $700,000 will go to hiring fishermen to recover about 4,000 pots — squat cylinders made of stainless steel mesh, rubber and iron to help it sink to the bottom.
"This winter I personally had one of my worst gear losses," said Newport crab fishermen Bob Spelbrink. "I'm missing 60 out of 500. Another friend of mine is missing 90 out 500. So there is a lot of gear out there to be found."
Every year, 10 percent of the 150,000 pots Oregon crabbers put out are lost, said Cyreis Schmitt, marine policy project leader at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, who wrote the proposal that won the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration grant.
That amounts to 15,000 newly lost pots every year — and a menacing threat. In the past five years, two whales have washed up dead on the Oregon Coast, entangled in crab pots and lines, said Schmitt.
The federal money will charter 10 boats and hire 48 people — including 31 fishermen who make winning bids — to join in the effort for two seasons.
"This puts to work the people who know the water best," said Jan Lubchenco, the head of NOAA and a former Oregon State University marine ecologist who returned this week to promote the project.
The stimulus project will be a start, but won't eliminate the problem. Thousands more pots will likely remain, continuing to catch crabs in what's called "ghost fishing."
The stimulus money will help crabbers at a time when commercial fishermen have seen their businesses hit hard by unprecedented fishing restrictions, high fuel prices and the national economic downturn.
Dungeness crab is Oregon's most valuable single-species fishery, worth more than $50 million. It's caught mostly during winter, when it commands the best prices around Christmas and New Year's.
Side-scan sonar will be used in the recovery project to spot pots at the mouth of the Columbia River, Schmitt said. Trawlers will then drag a chain rigged with special grappling hooks across the bottom to snag the pots and haul them up.
Recent comments
Now, do I have this straight.
Crabmen lose thousands of traps...
samhill | July 12, 2009 at 8:53 a.m.
Sounds to me like the fishermen are littering - they should be fined...
John | July 11, 2009 at 3:51 p.m.
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