An invasion of European green crabs, encouraged by rising ocean temperatures, is eating its way north through Maine’s clam flats, threatening the state’s third-largest fishery and an iconic summer treat for tourists.
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“If something isn’t done soon, it will mean the death of the clam fishery,” said Chad Coffin, president of the Maine Clammers Association. “I don’t think people understand just how big a problem this is.”
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The invasive crabs likely reached U.S. shores in the early 1800s after hitching a ride across the Atlantic on ships, according to scientists. Once here, the crustaceans gradually worked their way to Maine, where they have been present for at least a century.
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What has changed the picture, according to clammers, is that warmer water temperatures have created a crab boom, and those crabs are now consuming clam beds like never before.
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The state’s soft-shell clams or “steamers” have long been popular with vacationers looking for a “taste of Maine.” The steamers are the state’s third-largest fishing industry, behind lobsters and elvers, worth an estimated $15 million last year.
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The green crab is listed among the “worst 100″ invaders on the Global Invasive Species Database and is known for its propensity for clams, oysters, mussels, quahogs, and scallops — ocean delicacies long relished by New Englanders.
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But climate change has added a new and unpredictable dynamic to the problem of invasive species, say scientists.
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A 2010 World Bank report estimated damages from the global warming-fueled spread of invasive species at more than $1.4 trillion annually, or nearly five percent of the global economy.
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Already, warming temperatures on land and at sea have facilitated the spread of such high-profile invasive species as lionfish in the Caribbean Sea and forest pests like the Asian hemlock woolly adelgid — a tree parasite — in the Eastern United States, both of which have caused extensive economic and ecological damage, say scientists.
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“Our own impacts are making these historic and existing invasions even worse,” said Ted Grosholz, a scientist at the University of California at Davis who has studied the spread of green crabs and other invasive species on both coasts.
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Green crabs, he says, filled a niche in Maine largely vacant before their arrival — the mucky, formerly crab-less intertidal zone favored by soft-shell clams. “Soft shell clams were sitting ducks,” said Grosholz.
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Call to action
On Thursday morning in Maine’s island-speckled Casco Bay, low tide and a lifting fog unveiled a vast mud flat as Chad Coffin and Connor O’Neil, both of Freeport, made their way to the clamming grounds.
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“We’re realizing that in a single lifetime clams and mussels have disappeared from most of our flats,” said Coffin, who has spent nearly 40 years fishing on the Maine coast.
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A Maine clammer might typically earn an annual income of around $30,000.
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Coffin said his group had recently begun researching the impact of rising sea levels on the intertidal flats frequented by clams and mussels, but quickly realized there was a more immediate problem.
“If there’s nothing left but green crabs, then we’re done, no matter what happens with the ocean,” he said.
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Clammers in Freeport lobbied the town, which last year committed $100,000 to efforts at monitoring and controlling crab populations, including trapping, fencing, research and education efforts, said Town Manager Peter Joseph.
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In the first “haul” of the season, Coffin said clammers pulled nearly 400 pounds of green crabs from a small area. Already, he said, composters, seafood exporters and even a pet food company have contacted the town seeking to use the crab remains, though he notes few are willing to pay.
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Climate-induced disruptions are not new to the Gulf of Maine.
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Last year, the state’s hallmark $350 million lobster industry was rocked by drastically warmer spring water temperatures that threw off the timing of the annual harvest, leading to a glut of early-season lobster and plummeting prices.
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Coffin said he recognizes the need for further study before cause and effect can be established, but says clammers do not have the luxury of time.
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“We used to take and expect Mother Nature to replenish, but that’s a thing of the past,” he said, turning over a clump of mud to expose hundreds of scurrying crabs. “Things are changing fast and it’s getting out of control.” [Read More]
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Source: VOA News: War and Conflict
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