|
REPORT: INDUSTRIAL HERRING
TRAWLERS
THREATEN NEW ENGLAND'S OCEANS
New report exposes risk posed by mismanagement
of large-scale fleet,
proposes solutions
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 21, 2008
CONTACTS:
Peter Baker, Herring Alliance, 508.641.4064
Roger Fleming, Earthjustice, 978.846.0612
Pam Lyons Gromen, National Coalition for Marine Conservation, 703.777.1961,
or email Pam.
Portland, Maine -- A report released
today by the Herring
Alliance* exposes a threat to New England's coastal waters that
has gone largely unnoticed in recent decades: the mismanagement
of the commercial Atlantic herring industry.
The report, "Out of Balance: Industrial
Fishing and the Threat to Our Ocean," details the pivotal
role Atlantic herring play in the region's ecosystem and economy,
and charts the growth of the industrial-scale herring fleet that
jeopardizes the health of this key resource. The report can be downloaded
as a PDF or purchased
as a hard copy.
Atlantic herring form the cornerstone of New England's marine ecosystem
with whales, seabirds, striped bass and tuna depending on these
fish for survival. Herring also made possible the development of
the region's commercial fishing industry, providing forage for cod,
haddock and other groundfish, bait for lobstermen and sardines for
human consumption.
Today, the herring resource supports commercial and recreational
fisheries with a value of more than a billion dollars as well as
an ecotourism sector that includes whale watching, birding and boating.
But intense commercial fishing threatens these fish and all that
depend upon them. Since the mid-1990s, industrial-scale midwater
trawlers - ships towing fine-mesh nets as wide as a football field
and five stories tall - have relentlessly fished the region's waters.
Today these industrial ships, which came to New England in the mid
1990s, catch well over 150 million pounds of herring each year,
accounting for more than 80 percent of the region's total herring
catch.
"This report documents just how far the regulation of the
herring fleet is lagging behind the rapid changes this fishery has
undergone," said Peter Baker, director of the Herring Alliance.
"In 1990, there were no mid-water trawlers fishing these waters
and now they catch well over 150 million pounds of herring each
year. Yet the fishery continues to be treated as the small-scale
fleet it once was."
The report finds that in spite of the potential for midwater trawlers
to capture and kill nearly all forms of sea life in their path -
ranging from haddock, seals, seabirds, tuna and severely depleted
river herring - these industrial-scale ships are surprisingly under-monitored.
Among the report's findings:
- Oversight of New England's herring trawl fleet is insufficient.
Government observers have historically monitored just three percent
of the region's trips, compared with Alaska, where observers are
required onboard for 30 to 100 percent of fishing trips.
- Current rules include loopholes allowing herring trawlers to
dump nets loaded with non-target species- a wasteful practice
which obscures the true picture of what these trawls are netting.
- The Gulf of Maine is being overburdened by herring trawlers.
Its inshore waters are home to just 18 percent of the region's
total herring population but are the source of 60 percent of the
herring catch.
- National Marine Fisheries Service does not adequately take into
account the changing needs of predators as depleted fish stocks
rebuild, which could lead to shortage of forage for important
marine species such as whales, seabirds, striped bass, tuna and
cod.
"With little federal oversight and almost no accountability,
mid-water trawlers have operated in the shadows for too long,"
said Earthjustice attorney Roger Fleming, a contributor to today's
report. "The current rules undermine efforts to protect the
New England fish stocks and preserve a livelihood for future generations
of fishermen."
The report recommends such common sense reforms as:
- Ending midwater trawling within 50 miles of shore and in areas
closed to groundfishermen.
- Instituting a shore-based monitoring system with real-time catch
and bycatch monitoring
- Requiring 100 percent observer coverage
- Banning at-sea dumping and requiring on-board sampling of all
catch including discards
- Determining the needs of herring predators and establishing
a set-aside of the resource for predators
"As we work to rebuild depleted populations of ocean predators
such as tuna, haddock and cod, it is imperative that we ask fishery
managers to put forage first by making conservation of prey for
predators the primary objective of managing forage fisheries such
as the Atlantic herring fishery," said Pam Lyons Gromen, Executive
Director of the National Coalition for Marine Conservation. "The
New England Fishery Management Council and the Atlantic States Marine
Fisheries Commission must account for the fact that herring is a
keystone species in the New England ecosystem and of great importance,
not simply as food fish but as fish food, too."
The issue has galvanized New England's fleet of small-scale fishermen,
eco-tourists, and conservationsists. Last fall, the New England
Fisheries Management Council received more than 10,000 public comments
calling for reform of the herring fishery. And represented by the
nonprofit public interest law firm Earthjustice, Maine groundfishermen
are currently in federal court challenging an illegal double standard
which allows midwater trawlers to fish in areas closed to nearly
all other fishermen.
Today's report comes as the New England Fishery Management Council
and the National Marine Fisheries Services is considering public
input on its Atlantic Herring Fishery Management Plan. The
report is meant to educate and empower the public to participate
in this input period, which runs through June 30, 2008. More
information about the scoping process can be found at http://www.nefmc.org/herring/index.html
and at www.herringalliance.org.
The report can be downloaded
as a PDF or purchased
as a hard copy.
*The Herring Alliance includes: The Pew Charitable
Trusts, Conservation Law Foundation, Earthjustice, Greenpeace, National
Environmental Trust, Natural Resources Defense Council, National
Coalition for Marine Conservation, Oceana, Environment America,
Environment Massachusetts and Environment Maine.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Donate
to NCMC's Conserving Marine Ecosystems program to help us protect
herring.
©
1999-2008 National Coalition for Marine Conservation
4 Royal Street SE, Leesburg, VA 20175 USA
All Rights Reserved
|