The NOAA Fisheries Service – Office for Law Enforcement, the South
Carolina Department of Natural Resources, the Georgia Department of
Natural Resources and the U.S. Coast Guard are teaming up again this year
with commercial fisherman to protect threatened and endangered sea turtles
along the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia.
The commercial shrimp-fishing season will likely open in state waters
along the South Carolina and Georgia coasts in early to mid-June and
fishermen trawling in those areas are likely to encounter female sea
turtles that are returning to their home nesting sites to lay eggs and
juveniles of several species returning to summer foraging grounds. Federal
and state regulations require fishermen to utilize Turtle Excluder Devices
(TEDs) in their nets so the surface-breathing turtles can escape the nets
without being drowned.
Coast Guard boarding officers from Georgia and South Carolina recently
attended TED training at the Coast Guard's Southeast Regional Fisheries
Training Center in Charleston, S.C., in preparation for law enforcement
efforts during the upcoming shrimp season. The National Marine Fisheries
Service -- Pascagoula Lab will also be sending TED gear experts to
locations in South Carolina and Georgia to conduct training for law
enforcement and to assist in dockside courtesy inspections.
"This is an ideal situation for the shrimpers, law enforcement and sea
turtles," said Petty Officer Jason Lind, an instructor at SRFTC. The
ultimate goal of law enforcement is compliance. If we can ensure the
shrimpers' TEDs are in compliance before the season opens, we are all
getting a head start on our job, which is to protect sea turtles along our
coast."
The TED is a grid of bars with an opening either at the top or the bottom.
The grid is fitted into the neck of a shrimp trawl. Small animals like
shrimp slip through the bars and are caught in the bag end of the trawl.
Large animals such as turtles and sharks, when caught at the mouth of the
trawl, strike the grid bars and are ejected through the opening.
NOAA Fisheries Service has been able to show that TEDs are effective at
excluding up to 97% of sea turtles with minimal loss of shrimp.
“We believe that the TEDs, now approved, are efficient at reducing sea
turtle mortality,” said Sally Murphy, a biologist with the S.C. Department
of Natural Resources. “The means to lower mortality is now compliance and
enforcement.”
Data collected aboard research vessels in South Carolina indicates
interaction rates between shrimp boats and sea turtles is relatively high.
“We calculate that hundreds or thousands of interactions take place every
season, so the relatively few sea turtle strandings we see compared to the
interaction rate suggests that TEDs are working pretty well,” said David
Whitaker, a fishery manager of the SCDNR.
"The serious decline in sea turtle nest over the years has caused alarm
for the future of the species," said Col. Terry West, chief of Georgia DNR
Law Enforcement. By conducting courtesy TED checks, we can assure that
commercial shrimp boats are using a legal device before they start to
fish, thereby helping to decrease the number of strandings we have each
year and increasing the sea turtle's chance for survival." ###