EXTRA...
Searching the web for you every morning.Cod fishermen looking at 82 percent cut, new study demanded
Cape fishermen looking at 82 percent cut
Prospects bleak, limits eased, industry struggles
The New York Times reports today that the cod fishery in the Gulf of Maine has been crucial to our local fishermen since they threw their first hook in the sea.
Only four years ago a NOAA study said cod was one of the region’s strongest species, and it brought in $15.8 million two years ago, second only in revenue to Georges Bank haddock.
Now a new study claims that cod has been so severely over-fished that even if all fishing is stopped immediately, it will rebound to levels required under federal law.
Could destroy cod fishermen from
Provincetown to northern Maine
The Bangor Daily News reports recently that the new data has survived an initial review, and scientists say it likely won’t change much. Several lawmakers, starting with U.S. Sen. John Kerry, are now asking the U.S. Commerce Secretary to order a new assessment of the cod’s health in hopes of getting better data, but prospects are uncertain.
But cod aren’t scarce and anyone who fishes the Gulf of Maine knows it, New Hampshire fishermen David Goethel said. He said the gap between the new estimate and reality demands a complete reworking of the new cod assessment, just as lawmakers have requested.
That includes rethinking the numerous assumptions that go into the various population models, including such complexities as how well the federal boat that catches fish population samples scoops up older cod.
Still, there’s optimism a solution can be found, if only because the alternative is devastating cuts that could sweep away remaining fishermen from Provincetown to northern Maine.
Read the Times story here. Read the News story here.
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