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UMaine teams with fishermen to study affects of trawling on seafloor ecologyWorking in cooperation with Maine trawler captain Cameron
McLellan and the Gulf of Maine Research Institute, UMaine
graduate student Emily Knight and UMaine Marine Science professor
Les Watling recently completed a long-term study that examines
the effects of groundfish trawling on the complex ecology
of the sea floor in the Gulf of Maine. "I am pretty firmly convinced that if the groundfishing industry doesn't soon begin to undertake measures to conserve complex bottom habitat, there will be little chance that fishery will ever recover to levels seen 50 or 100 years ago. Small, bottom fish need complex habitat and it is clear that rock hopper gear reduces habitat complexity," said Watling. "No good habitat, hardly any fish." The good news is that recently protected habitats are recovering. While anything resembling a "natural" condition would certainly be far in the future, Knight found that significant gains had been made in the short term. "Scientists were predicting it would take decades
for recovery, but didn't have an opportunity to look at it,"
said Knight. "This is the first project that has been
able to look at areas closed for six years. We're already
seeing signs of recovery after a significant amount of time.
We're not seeing a huge trajectory change, but we can say
it is recovering toward stability." |