Derelict Fishing
Gear Removal Project
Derelict fishing gear includes nets,
lines, crab and shrimp traps/pots, and other recreational or commercial harvest
equipment that has been lost or abandoned in the marine environment. Modern
nets and fishing line made of synthetic materials have been in use since the
1940s and take decades, even hundreds of years, to decompose in water. Derelict
fishing gear is long-lasting marine debris that poses many problems to people
and to marine animals, including:
- Entangling divers and swimmers;
- Trapping and wounding or killing
fish, shellfish, birds and marine mammals;
- Degrading marine ecosystems and
sensitive habitats;
- Damaging propellers and rudders
of recreational boats, commercial and military vessels;
- Endangering boat crews and passengers
with vessel capsizing.
Unfortunately, Puget Sound is littered
with derelict fishing gear. It is estimated that hundreds of tons of derelict
gear have collected over time in Puget Sound and the Northwest Straits region
in particular including the Strait of Juan de Fuca and northern Puget Sound
from Everett to the Canadian border.
The Northwest Straits Commission
has initiated a pilot removal program. The Derelict Fishing Gear Removal
Project will develop and test protocols for removing derelict fishing gear
from the cold, deep waters of northwest Washington, starting in the Northwest
Straits.
Four
fundamental steps will build a successful recovery program:
- Locating and Reporting
- A toll-free hotline and a Web site have been established so that divers,
fishermen, boaters, beach-goers and anyone involved with the marine environment
can report sightings of derelict fishing gear in the water or on shore. Recreational
divers are strongly cautioned to avoid the gear because of the inherent dangers
-- divers have died from entanglement in the past.
- Verifying and Prioritizing
- A database of reported gear will help set priorities for removal efforts
based on threats to public safety and marine resources, hazards to navigation
and other criteria.
- Removing - Trained commercial
divers and vessels will follow the protocols developed through this project,
analyze hazards with sidescan sonar/videography to reduce risks, and will
physically remove the gear from several initial locations in the waters of
the Northwest Straits. Derelict gear is often encrusted with marine organisms,
collectively weighing a ton or more when removed from the water. While volunteer
of submerged gear removal is not recommended, organized groups may be authorized
for beach removal participation.
- Reusing, Recycling and Disposing
- Recycling opportunities for recovered nets and crab and shrimp traps are
being investigated. In some cases, recovered nets have been reused for fishing
or recycled into soccer nets. In other cases, however, recovered gear will
need to be disposed.
If
you know where derelict fishing gear is located, report it by calling the WDFW
Derelict Fishing Gear Hotline or by using the reporting
form. When you encounter derelict fishing gear:
- Stay safely away from it!
- Do not attempt removal - you
may actually violate state and/or federal law.
- Record as much information as
you can while you're on-site, including:
- Location - GPS coordinates/chart
location (latitude - longitude), water depth, distance from nearby landmarks
and/or common names for the area;
- Type of Gear - Nets
(monofilament gillnet or twine-like purse seine, trawl or fish farm pens),
Pots/Traps (round or square for crab or shrimp, singular or multiple),
Ropes/Lines, Floats, Trawl Doors or others;
- Details - Date and
time of sighting, your activity during sighting (beach walk, swimming,
diving, boating), type of seabed, size of the gear, number and type of
invertebrates, fish, birds or marine mammals entangled or dead in the
gear, perceived level of threat to humans/passing vessels;
- Contact Name - your
name, phone number, address, and/or Email address will be very helpful
should more information be needed. However, anonymous reports will be
accepted;
- Report what you see
- even if you're not sure the gear is lost or abandoned.
Also, prevent your own gear from becoming lost or abandoned -fish and
boat only in approved areas, know what's below you when fishing to avoid
snagging, properly dispose of all broken lines/gear on shore, and always
use "rot-cord" on traps and pots. Always report lost gear within
48 hours to aid removal efforts.
Use
the Online Report Form
click here
or
call the Reporting Hotline: 1-877-933-9847
New state legislation calls for agency
coordination of derelict fishing gear removal in state marine waters. Agencies
and organizations involved in the project include: Northwest Straits Commission,
the Marine Resources Committees of Whatcom, Skagit, San Juan, Snohomish, Clallam,
Jefferson, and Island counties, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
U.S. Navy, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Washington Department
of Natural Resources, Washington Sea Grant Program, Puget Sound Water Quality
Action Team, Tulalip Tribes, Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group, commercial
fishing and diving companies, and private foundations. Additional
support and participation is welcome!
The focus of the Derelict Fishing
Gear Removal Project is not on assessing blame. The goals are to remove lost
and abandoned gear, to help restore Puget Sound and the Northwest Straits, to
improve public safety, and to assist species recovery. The success of the project
will rely on the collective efforts of citizens, government organizations and
private businesses that all have an interest in healthy marine life.
| |
What
is the Northwest Straits Commission? |
Acting as a board of directors
for the Northwest Straits Marine Conservation Initiative, the Northwest Straits
Commission is made up of citizens representing local, tribal, state and community
interests working together to protect vital marine resources. Citizen-based Marine
Resources Committees, representing the seven counties of northwest Washington,
are full partners in the Initiative.
WDFW Derelict Fishing Gear Hotline
1-877-933-9847 |
Northwest Straits Commission
360-428-1085 |
Find a bug or error in the system? Let us know about it!
© 2003 Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
E-mail <webmaster@dfw.wa.gov>