Massachusetts moves to protect horseshoe crabs during spawning
BOSTON (AP) — Wildlife protection advocates are welcoming a decision by the Massachusetts Marine Fisheries Advisory Commission to approve protections for horseshoe crabs during spawning, which is when the creatures are at their most vulnerable.
The move comes as interstate regulators are limiting the harvest of the primordial species of invertebrate to try to help rebuild its population and aid a threatened species of bird.
Horseshoe crabs pre-date the dinosaurs, having inhabited ocean environments for more than 400 years, but their populations have been depleted for decades due to harvest in part for bait to catch eels and whelk, a species of sea snail, supporters of the move by state regulators.
Their blood is also used to test for potentially dangerous impurities by drug and medical device makers.
David O’Neill, President of Mass Audubon, said he was ecstatic with the new regulations.
“Protecting horseshoe crabs during spawning season is incredibly important to getting this keystone species back to historic population levels that are critical to the health of coastal ecosystems, including the migratory birds that rely on them,” O’Neill said in a written statement.
He said Massachusetts had been lagging behind other East Coast state that have strengthened protections for horseshoe crab populations including New Jersey, Delaware, and South Carolina.
The animals have been declining in some of their range, and they’re critically important as a food source for the red knot, a migratory shorebird listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
The regulatory Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission said it will allow no harvest of female horseshoe crabs that originate in the Delaware Bay during the 2024 fishing season, but would allow more harvest of male horseshoe crabs in the mid-Atlantic to help make up for the lost harvest of females.
Despite their names, horseshoe crabs are not really crustaceans but are more closely related to spiders and scorpions, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
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