An ocean menace: study finds ghost gear capturing species at risk and lobster
HALIFAX — Lost and discarded fishing gear dumped off the southwestern coast of Nova Scotia — site of Canada’s most lucrative lobster fishery — is trapping species at risk and hurting the lobster industry, a new scientific study says.
Researchers at Dalhousie University in Halifax determined the abandoned traps, ropes, hooks and other equipment are costing the lobster industry nearly $200,000 annually in lost catches.
“When it starts impacting the bottom line of one of the most important industries in Nova Scotia … it becomes apparent that we need to do something about it,” the study’s co-author, associate professor Tony Walker, said in an interview Friday.
“We can actually make more money if we clean up our act.”

