Gulf of Maine lobstermen are casting around far and wide for new kinds of bait now that federal regulators have cut herring quotas by 70 percent. Possible solutions range from the mass importation of a nuisance fish from the Midwest, to manufactured baits, to pig hides.
Fisheries managers estimate a 50-million pound “herring gap” in Maine over the next year. To help close it, they are turning to colleagues in Illinois.
On a rainy fishing day in the Illinois River, state invasive species coordinator Kevin Irons oversees the capture of dozens of fish — all freshwater carp, which were introduced to the Mississippi Basin decades ago. They have proliferated at an epic scale, crowding out native fish and damaging ecosystems.
“The big-head, the silvers and the grass carp, you also see some of the common carp — I like to call them Grampa’s carp, they’ve been around a long time,” Irons said. “You’ve got four different species of invasive fish here.”
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But one person’s invasive species, it turns out, could be another’s bait. Irons is working with counterparts in Maine to test the fish and the water they come from to make sure that, should they be trucked east for lobster bait, they do not bring exotic diseases to the Gulf of Maine.
The primary concern is a virus that can cause massive die-offs among freshwater and marine species — including herring — called viral hemorrhagic septicemia.
“Viral hemorrhagic septicemia,” Irons said. “We’ve never seen it in the Illinois River. We’ve done a lot of work. We’re right on the forefront of surveillance since 2005, so we have confidence that these are very healthy fish. They don’t threaten other places. They’re very good for humans to eat and other things.”
Patrick Keliher, Maine’s commissioner of Marine Resources, said “For me it’s all still about safety. There may be 50 million pounds that could come here tomorrow. If it’s not safe, I’m not allowing it.”
Keliher’s staffers have been back and forth to Illinois, as they try to determine whether the carp, once killed and frozen, would pose a biosecurity threat to the Gulf.
Keliher said that before giving his stamp of approval, he wants to see that systems are in place to ensure that no fish or water come from anywhere near Lake Michigan, where viral hemorrhagic septicemia has been found.
“It’s really about chain of custody,” he said. “Because, for instance, there could be mixing, they could be ‘yes that facility could be getting them from the Illinois,’ but they might be getting them from somewhere else that we don’t want them from.”
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Initial samples tested by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are good so far, and some Maine lobstermen are showing interest.
Loren Faulkingham docks his lobster boat Downeast in Jonesboro. He said that back before Maine became the first — and, still, the only — Atlantic state to institute bait biosecurity rules more than a decade ago he had good luck with carp.
“It seemed to work all right,” he said.
Faulkingham and other lobstermen are also considering a number of other bait sources: Menhaden from the Gulf of Mexico — known as pogies here — were just added to the state’s approved bait list. And some scientists are trying to engineer manufactured lobster baits from fishmeal.
And Faulkingham is one of a growing number of other lobstermen who have been experimenting with pig hides as bait. He said pig hide lasts longer in the water than other baits and that lobster seem to like it.
“I actually believe that we could probably bait exclusively on pig hides and, in the long run, probably bait our traps cheaper than we could have exclusively on herring.”
But while lobsters may enjoy a bit of bacon, will humans like pork-fed lobsters? Matt McDonald, proprietor of First Rate Bait in Alton, said he joined forces with a University of Maine researcher to do a taste test.
“We force-fed lobster traditional fish bait, and we force-fed lobster this bait,” McDonald said. “Then we purged them for like three days, cooked them and they basically did a blindfold test with 40 people, and 39 chose lobsters that were eating pig skins.”
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Since he started selling pig-hides for bait 11 years ago, McDonald said, there have been other concerns to overcome. Two years ago, the Legislature required that all hair be removed from animal-hide bait to avert potential harm to lobster health, or the chance of a hairball turning up in a diner’s fresh-cooked lobster tail. Lawmakers, in addition, required that fat content be minimized.
McDonald said he has also had to fend off an old maritime superstition that swine on deck bring bad luck.
“Ham sandwiches, you shouldn’t eat bacon in the morning before you’re jumping on board,” he said.
Acceptance has grown over time, he said. This winter McDonald invested in a processing and packaging plant that will amp up capacity from last year’s 2 million pounds of pig-hide, to 10 million pounds this year.
Just as the herring shortage begins to hit.
McDonald said that with the retail price of herring projected to approach his pig-hide price this summer, around $50 a bucket, he is feeling some pressure.
“I stay up at night, I’m a little worried that 250,000 cans isn’t going to be enough,” he said. “But we’re going to do everything in our power to knock out as much bait as we can, and fill that void.”
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Back on the rainy Illinois River, where millions of dollars are spent every year on carp-control, fisherman Shawn Price said Maine could find an affordable solution to its bait problem, including some fish from Illinois that cost next to nothing.
“You can honestly get these fish for free if you can supply the means to transport them,” Price said. “[I] hope and pray that all this works out, and Maine gets their fish. I think it would be great for everybody.”
Keliher said his ultimate hope is a rebound in the local herring fishery. But for now he is waiting on the latest sample results from the Illinois waterways, and he could make a decision on the new bait as soon as this week.
Maine Public’s Jennifer Mitchell and Harvest Public Media’s Madelyn Beck contributed to this report.
This article appears through a media partnership with Maine Public.
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