DNR Announces
Estimated 2007 Blue Crab Harvest Numbers
Governor O’Malley Expresses Concern,
Directs DNR to Develop Management Options in Consultation with
Stakeholders
ANNAPOLIS, MD — The Maryland Department of Natural Resources
(DNR) Fisheries Service today presented the estimated 2007 blue crab
harvest numbers from Maryland’s portion of the Chesapeake Bay. The
estimated 2007 harvest is 21.8 million pounds, approximately 6 million
pounds below last year’s harvest and slightly above Maryland’s lowest
recorded harvest of 20.2 million pounds in 2000. [See chart below.]
“The low 2007 blue crab harvest is the result of many factors including:
low abundance due to poor reproduction of young blue crabs in late 2006;
reduced fishing effort; and unusual climatic conditions that caused blue
crabs to move further north up the Bay’s tributaries, making them less
accessible to large crab pot fishing operations,” explained DNR
Fisheries Biologist Lynn Fegley.
Expressing concern over the numbers, Governor Martin O’Malley directed
DNR to begin developing a series of management options in consultation
with stakeholders. Maryland has already initiated discussions with
Virginia and the Potomac River Fisheries Commission to ensure
coordination of possible management actions.
“Since 70 percent of the Bay’s female blue crabs are harvested from
Virginia waters,
we must work together to coordinate action toward a solution,” said DNR
Secretary John Griffin, “and both states must enforce their fair share
of any necessary restrictions if we are to ensure the future of our blue
crab population.”
Maryland will rely on scientists’ feedback and assessment of the
relative effects of management options on the blue crab population
numbers prior to implementing any restrictions, which could occur as
early as April 2008.
The Bay-wide blue crab winter dredge survey, currently underway in a
cooperative effort by DNR and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science,
will offer a more complete picture of blue crab population numbers once
completed later this spring. Since 1990, the survey has employed dredges
to sample blue crabs at 1,500 sites throughout the Chesapeake Bay from
December through March. By sampling during winter when blue crabs are
buried in the mud and stationary, scientists can precisely estimate the
number of crabs in the Bay. Results of the 2008 blue crab winter dredge
survey will provide the basis for potential management actions in 2008
and beyond.
“Recently, the blue crab has been in the headlines because of reduced
catches by commercial and recreational crabbers in the Bay,” said DNR
Assistant Secretary for Aquatic Resources, Frank Dawson. ” While
harvesting is a major factor in affecting the crab population, impaired
habitat -- particularly the loss of bay grasses due to poor water
quality -- has also significantly contributed to the problems facing our
state’s treasured blue crabs.”
“Every Maryland citizen and business has a role in helping to protect
our blue crabs and restore the Chesapeake,” added Secretary Griffin,
“and we all need to start taking actions in our daily lives to live more
sustainably, to ensure a healthy future for our blue crabs, our children
and our beloved Bay.”
For more information on what citizens and business can do to help
protect blue crabs and the Chesapeake Bay visit
http://www.dnr.state.md.us/bay/tribstrat/index.html.
