News

Maine Shrimp Industry Struggling, With Fishermen Catching Few in 2025

In this Friday, Jan. 6, 2012 photo, shrimp are shoveled into a holding chamber aboard a trawler in the Gulf of Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)


By PATRICK WHITTLE Associated Press

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — There’s an effort underway to bring New England shrimp back to seafood customers — but fishermen have found few of the crustaceans, and the fishing industry that harvests them may face an even longer shutdown.

Fishermen have been under a moratorium on catching shrimp for more than a decade because of low population levels that scientists have attributed to climate change and warming oceans. The harvesters were allowed to catch a small number of shrimp this past winter as part of an industry-funded sampling and data collection program.

The fishermen didn’t catch much though, and recent changes allow regulators to extend the moratorium for five years at a time instead of just one, Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission officials said Monday.

Regulators will meet in December to determine whether to extend the moratorium, said Chelsea Tuohy, a fishery management plan coordinator with the commission. Tuohy said it’s possible regulators will “consider another winter sampling program.”

However, the “continued poor condition of the northern shrimp stock has resulted in uncertainties in the future status of” the seafood, the commission said in documents earlier this year.

“Environmental conditions continue to be unfavorable for northern shrimp in the Gulf of Maine,” the commission said.

Prior to the fishing moratorium, the New England shrimp fishing industry was based largely in Maine. Fishermen from Massachusetts and New Hampshire caught them as well. The delicate, pink crustaceans were a winter delicacy in the Northeast and elsewhere and they were one of the region’s iconic kinds of seafood along with lobsters, cod and scallops.

Maine fishermen sometimes caught more than 10 million pounds (4,536 kilograms) of the shrimp per year as recently as the early 2010s, but the catch cratered in 2013.

The regulatory commission approved new rules for the fishery this past spring that “recognize the influence of environmental conditions on stock productivity,” the commission said in a May statement. The commission said it made the changes “in response to the continued poor condition of the northern shrimp stock.”

Latest Headlines

15 hours ago in Local

ICE in Maine: What you need to know.

With immigration enforcement ramping up operations in the Pine Tree State this past week, a flurry of information on arrests, protests, and reactions have come out. We here at WGAN want to break it down so far.

1 day ago in Local

Maine DHHS found to have overpaid millions for childhood autism services

A federal audit has revealed that Maine made more than $45 million in overpayments to groups that offer support services for children with autism from 2019 to 2023.

1 day ago in Local

York County confirms arrest of corrections officer by ICE agents

The York County Sheriff says a corrections officer with no criminal record is now in ICE detention.

1 day ago in Entertainment, Trending

TikTok finalizes a deal to form a new American entity

TikTok has finalized a deal to create a new American entity, avoiding the looming threat of a ban in the United States that has been in discussion for years on the platform now used by more than 200 million Americans.

1 day ago in National, Trending

Former Olympic snowboarder on FBI’s most-wanted list is arrested in Mexico, faces drug charges

Former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding, a top FBI fugitive, was arrested in Mexico and on Friday was flown to the U.S. to face charges related to running a multinational drug trafficking ring and the killing of a federal witness.