This obviously sets the stage
for a well-managed fishery. One simply
allocates a checker board square to the fisherman and he uses just this
technology to run a managed harvest on his square. No bait is wasted and the harvesting rate can
be tuned back to maximize delivered weight.
This also naturally encourages refugia on the edges of the squares to
maximize production. The fisherman has
the comfort that sooner or later every lobster is likely to find his way home.
Setting the traps will make
location and compliance obvious and skipping the need for bait means the trap
can be put in place and never moved. Of
course, we have to develop something a lot smarter that makes capture
simple. Dropping a capture frame and
lifting the lid is likely good enough.
From there you could scoop them out with a simple hand net. The capture frame can then be lifted aside
and left there.
It would all have to be brought
in in the case of shallow waters in the event of severe weather but then that
is business as usual.
Building a Better Lobster Trap
So-called casitas, an alternative to
conventional traps, are used throughout Latin America. Although using them in
the U.S. would offer environmental advantages, opposition by traditional fishers
make it unlikely they will be legalized in anytime soon
Lifting
a lobster casita is easier than
it looks. The device is little more than an underwater cement table on stumpy
legs that most people in the Caribbean use in place of lobster traps. To
collect the spiny lobsters native to the area, you simply plant your feet in
the sand, take a breath, duck into the four-foot-deep water, and flip up the trap. “You have to keep
it from falling backwards!” says Mexican fisheries expert Kim Ley Cooper in
exasperation. “Ah, there’s too much sand to see anything.”
A
small ripple had grabbed the platform like a sail, pushed it vertical
and lifted my furiously kicking feet out of the sand like I was a rag doll. In
the moment before my feet lifted, I saw the casita’s inhabitant scuttle past to freedom.
Casitas (or “little houses”) are found in lobster
fisheries throughout Latin America and parts of Australia. The idea is simple: because
spiny lobsters crave shelter, covered structures attract them just as well as
baited traps. They require little maintenance, are easy to monitor and
yield as many if not more lobsters as conventional traps.
Their
effectiveness, however, has led them to become a flash point among Florida
fishing communities. Illegal versions—historically made simply of metallic or
appliance garbage dumped in the shallows—have given the device a bad reputation
in the U.S. A dedicated cadre of dive fishermen, however, are calling for
cleaner versions (like those typically used in Mexico) to be legalized, arguing
they are friendlier to the environment than conventional traps. But fishers are
not convinced and worry that the devices are so effective (pdf)
that they may forever change a marine way of life. All this leaves scientists
to wrestle with the question: What’s the best way to catch a lobster?
Spiny
lobsters, which live in the Caribbean and along the Pacific coast, are very
different from iconic Maine lobsters. The latter American species—with massive
claws that diners struggle to crack in restaurants—live in cold, dark water and
are aggressive toward one another. Spiny lobsters have no claws, forage at
night and happily congregate during the day under whatever they can find—be
it rocks, coral or debris. In fact, spiny lobsters are so friendly that any
piece of cover quickly becomes a magnet for them; they will pack themselves
carapace-to-carapace into a crawl space in a matter of weeks, even though they
could come and go as they please. Fishermen then simply dive to the shelter
and reach in with a sort of metal lasso to snatch them out.
Lobsters
today are unquestionably the biggest fishery in the Caribbean. Thanks to a
hungry Chinese market, the crustacean fetched as much as $18.50 per pound at
one point last year for live spiny lobsters. (The U.S. only eats spiny lobsters
that have been frozen.) Florida fishermen alone catch more than five million
pounds per year, mostly around the Keys.
In
U.S. waters lobsters are caught in conventional traps, cages with one-way
entrances and a long rope for hauling up the catch. With so many traps in the
sea, some get loose from their buoys and become tangled in coral or bump around
aimlessly. As much as 1,600 kilometers of rope is thought to be lost from traps
every year. “Lobsters are the highest value species in the entire Caribbean,”
says Tom Matthews of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. But
“there are far too many traps used in Florida than what would be needed to
harvest all the lobster.”
Matthews
has been looking at casitas as
a potential companion to traps in the U.S. In a recent (unpublished) study he
showed that in one lobster-rich area in the Florida Keys, casitas enabled fishermen to collect
the same volume in one month that trappers could catch in three.
But trap fishermen say that many of these casitas are little more than junk piles. “Car
hoods, PVC pipe, corrugated metal sheets, appliances, bathtubs. God, I’ve even
seen boat trailers out there,” says Bill Kelly, executive director of the
Florida Keys Commercial Fishermen’s Association. “On the Gulf side, roughly
five to six miles off in some areas, we have continuous walls of casitas that extend for miles.”
Casita fishing has been illegal in the U.S. since
the 1980s when illegal fishermen made junk-pile casitas, which during storms can cut coral
reefs to ribbons. That’s the
image that most people have of casitas
but in the past decade improved designs have emerged, and with them a devout
group of U.S. fans of the little houses. “It’s the 21st century, why are
we still using an archaic 1940s box?” says Jim Sharpe, director of pro-casita Environmentally Concerned
Commercial Divers, based in Big Pine Key, Fla. “We’ve got a better mousetrap.”
Sharpe
says the days of junked refrigerator casitas
are long gone and that modern versions are attached to the ocean floor and thus
can’t be blown onto the reef during a storm. Many even have a place to clip a
boat line so that fishermen do not need an anchor, which also could otherwise
damage reefs. Traps require bait (often other lobster), but casitas do not, which means smaller
lobsters that might have been bait can go on to breed or be harvested later.
And lastly, lobsters left in a trap that has separated from its mooring will
eventually die, doing no good for either fisherman or the environment.
For
retrieval, however, free divers must swim to depths as far as nine meters to
retrieve lobsters by hand. That free-diving component, irrelevant with trap lobstering,
is key to why conventional lobstermen see casitas as a threat to their livelihoods. “We have no interest
in a casita fishery,” Kelly
says. “We have a traditional trap fishery that serves the industry well.”
The
conflict has become remarkably heated. The legal standing of casitas in the U.S. may depend on
whether they cause less environmental harm than traps do. Both do some damage:
Scientists have known for awhile that casitas
form a halo of unvegetated sand around them. But careful examination reveals
that traps do as well,
and might even be worse because they can swing 15 meters in a circle, damaging
ocean life.
In
addition to operational traps, Matthews (who doesn’t promote one fishing method
over another) says that based on surveys of professional lobstermen as many as
100,000 traps are lost every year—a fifth of all traps, posing a threat to
reefs and wasting any lobsters caught in them. Kelley says that number is about
five times too high but was not able to provide data. If Matthews is right (he
plans to publish two papers on the matter soon), it could mean that traps are
causing far more damage to the corals than previously thought.
Ley
Cooper, with NGO Razonatura, which works to empower coastal communities
throughout the Yucatan Peninsula, sees casitas
as an easy solution to the problem. As long as fishing grounds are divvied up
fairly and fishermen are forbidden from using scuba, casitas are the most sustainable way (pdf),
he says, to catch lobster. (Mexican divers must free dive and thus do not
harvest breeding lobsters from deeper water, unlike other countries such as Honduras,
where the lobster population has plummeted because scuba divers take
everything.)
Either
way, we in the U.S. won’t see a casita-based
fishery soon. Last summer the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
ended an investigation into their potential, effectively shutting the door on
legal casitas for now
“Managing
lobsters is easy,” Matthews says. “It’s managing people that’s difficult.
Culturally, I would say that casitas
are not compatible with south Florida. However, culture can change.”
No comments:
Post a Comment