Facebook analytics chart of Shem Creek Fans

May 21, 2009

Commercial shrimp season starts, more turtles are being caught

a Turtle Excluder Device (TED)If it weren’t for such rough winds right now – gale-force winds in Charleston Harbor and 14-foot swells offshore – every shrimp boat captain alive would be pulling out of Shem Creek, McClellanville, etc. right now, especially with the reduced [sic] fuel prices.

Those that do make it out will be rewarded with a nice catch – assuming everything goes according to plan – because SCDNR officials say shrimp have been keeping their own out in the ocean – the question, “is how many boats are gonna be out there to catch them?”

SCDNR also says that the in-water catch rate of immature loggerheads has been increasing, which at first sounds alarming, but then you realize it means management efforts such as nest protection and the required use of Turtle Excluder Devices (TED’s) in commercial shrimp trawl nets may be paying off.

“…in the Charleston shipping channel, catch rates have increased significantly since 1990.” – SCDNR

Although sea turtles were not captured in 75% of the tows, several noteworthy trends were evident for the 25% of tows that did capture sea turtles:

  • * Loggerhead sea turtles accounted for 94 percent of all sea turtle species captured.
  • * There was a strong north/south gradient in catch rates, with highest catch rates off northern Florida and southern Georgia.
  • * A strong north/south gradient in loggerhead size was noted, with the greatest frequency of smaller loggerheads collected off northern Florida and southern Georgia.
  • * Significant increases in catch rates were observed between 2000 and 2008 for two sizes of loggerheads, notably the size representing reproductively mature adults and the next smallest size group.
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Related Post(s)
  1. Shrimp: if you can’t catch’em, grow’em
  2. Saltwater Recreational Fishing License changes
  3. ‘Carolina Caught’ captures S.C. shrimping industry
  4. Loggerhead nesting for 2008 was 7th highest year on record
  5. Lobster-size tiger shrimp caught off S.C.
  6. Mt. Pleasant ‘Blessing of the Fleet’ 2008
  7. Super-Intensive Raceway Shrimp Farming Technology (SIRSFT) is coming our way
  8. Save Our Seas, a SC Aquarium event benefiting wildlife rescue at home and in the Gulf Coast
  9. ‘Bench Mark’, winners of the 2010 MegaDock Tournament
  10. Australian Black Tiger prawn – the newest shrimp on the block




What do you think about that?


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