The lobster catch in St. Marys Bay is down, but there's little consensus on why - Action News
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Nova Scotia

The lobster catch in St. Marys Bay is down, but there's little consensus on why

A group representing non-Indigenous commercial fishermen is pointing the finger squarely at the Mi'kmaw fishery. But the Mi'kmaq and the federal government say the numbers reflect a wider ebb and flow of the lobster stocks.

Is it part of a natural cycle? Or the result of out-of-season fishing?

Boats are seen tied up at a wharf
Sipekne'katik First Nation fishing boats tied up at Saulnierville wharf on Sept. 22, 2020. (Robert Short/CBC)

The federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans has released data showing a decreasein the amount oflobster caught between 2016 and 2018 in St.Marys Bay, the body of water at the centre of adisputed Mi'kmawfishery in southwest Nova Scotia.

Lobster landings in St.Marys Bay were 1,691 metric tonnes in the 2016-2017 seasonwith a record high value of $25 million, according to data released to CBC News by the department.

Two years later, landings were down 46per cent by weight and 32 per cent by value.

Some non-Indigenous commercial fishermen blame the reduced landings on an increase in fishing in the area by Mi'kmaw fishermen when the commercial season is closed.

Chief Mike Sack of Sipekne'katik First Nation says there is no evidencethat Mi'kmawfishing is responsible for the decrease.

"We are very conservative and we want to preserve the lobster and make sure it's there for our seven generations to come," he told CBC News.

"That includes our people, the commercial, whoever is on the water. But lobster also do have that seven-year life cycle. Stocks are up, they are down."

Sack says a quota system could be put in place on all commercial licences if there is concern about conservation of lobster stocks in St. Marys Bay.

Decreases vary in wider fishing area

In a statement, the departmentsaid the rate of change "is not dissimilar to that observed in others areas of Lobster Fishing Area 34 during the same period."

LFA 34,as it is known, is the largest lobster fishing area in Canada with more than900 licensed commercial fishermen harvesting from the southern tip of Nova Scotia up to Digby in the Bay of Fundy.

The average decrease in LFA 34 over the period was 6 per cent by weight and 17 per centby value.

The department says landings varied overall within LFA 34 with "some being higher and some being lower," than St.Marys Bay.

Fishing effort dropped

The data also shows the number of licensed boats fishing in St.Marys Bay dropped by 16per cent over the two-year period.

Colin Sproul of the Bay of Fundy Inshore Fishermen's Association says increased out-of-season fishing by the members of the Sipekne'katik First Nation is why the commercial effort went down.

"There's no lobster there to fish for, so they had to leave. Normally they'd fish every day there for the first three weeks [of the season]. Now the [lobsters]are gone in four or five days because they were already caught by Shubie," Sproul said.

Waiting on official 2019-2020 data

Sproul says he received data forlandings for St.Marys Bay from the 2019-2020 season from the federal government. He says they showa continued decline to below 600 metric tonnes,making the three-year decrease 68 per cent.

The department declined to provide 2019-2020 landings from St. Marys Bay to CBC News, saying it has not received all the log books back from commercial fishermen.

Sproul says the department is hedging.

"They're deliberately working the data by refusing to analyze the entire three years that we were talking about," he said.

Landings have ebbed and flowed since 2002

The department provided CBC News with lobster landing data from 2018 back to 2002.

It shows a decrease in landings in both LFA 34 overall and St.Marys Bay starting in 2016.

However landings have not yetgone down to their lowest point in St.MarysBay. In2006-2007,landings were 900 metric tonnes, similar to the landings in 2018-2019.

After 2007, the landingsrose for several years before peaking at 1,855 metric tonnes in 2012-2013, followed by a two year dip.

Why St. Marys Bay is disputed

Since 2017, commercial fishermen have repeatedly complained about an increasing Mi'kmawlobster fishery in St. Marys Bay in summer months when the commercial season is closed.

The Sipekne'katikFirst Nationhas insisted their fishing in St. Marys Bay has been too small to impact stock health. At the end of September,the Mi'kmaw-run lobster fisheryhad10 boats, with a total capacity of 500 traps.

In the 2018-2019 fishing season,there were 965boats licensedto fish LFA 34, with most permitting 375 to 400 traps per licence.