PORTLAND, Maine—Federal fishing regulators last Tuesday approved a compromise they said would expand the amount of coral habitat preserved in the Atlantic Ocean while also protecting fishing interests.
The New England Fishery Management Council voted on coral protections in an area south of Georges Bank, one of the most important commercial fishing areas in the northeast. The decision came about seven months after the council approved protections in another key New England fishing area, the Gulf of Maine, last June.
Environmentalists, regulators and harvesters of species, including squid, scallops and lobster, have debated the proposal for years. The new protections mean 100,000 square miles (259,000 square kilometers) of deep-sea coral habitat would be protected from the Canadian border to Florida, pro-conservation Pew Charitable Trusts said. The council had a chance to approve a broader coral protection plan but backed off after numerous fishing groups said it was unfairly punitive to the industry.
Peter Auster, marine science research professor emeritus at the University of Connecticut, said the council “took action where none was required” but may have missed a chance at more dramatic protection for corals.
“In all these kind of things, getting some is better than getting none,” he said. “Future actions could still take place.”
Preservation of New England’s slow-growing, canyon-dwelling corals has long been a subject of debate, and interest in it accelerated a few years ago when then-President Barack Obama planned a national marine monument dedicated to saving corals and preserving ocean biodiversity.
Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, created in 2016, protected about 5,000 square miles (13,000 square kilometers) off New England, but its future is uncertain because of legal challenges and a review by President Donald J. Trump’s administration. Obama is a Democrat; Trump a Republican.