
How are those highly touted "Yosemites of the Sea" on the North Coast, created under California’s privately-funded Marine Life Protection Act Initiative, working out?
Not very well, if you look at the recent vote by state regulators to close the recreational abalone fishery in 2018, due to the dramatic decline of the red abalone populations by a collapse in kelp growth along the coast and the explosion of the purple urchin population.
The California Fish and Game Commission on December 7 voted to close the 2018 northern California recreational abalone fishery due to ongoing environmental conditions that have significantly impacted the abalone resource, according to a press release from Jordan Traverso of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
The closure affects next year’s recreational abalone season that was scheduled to open on April 1, 2018. Abalone diving has been a tradition for many generations, while California Indian Tribes have been harvesting abalone and other shellfish for thousands of years.
While the latest press release from CDFW didn’t specify what the ongoing environmental conditions are, a previous release reported how the growth of kelp — a major food source for red abalone – has declined significantly over the past three years. Dramatic increases in purple sea urchin populations have further reduced the food available for abalone.
At the latest meeting, CDFW staff advised the Commission to close the recreational abalone season in 2018 after six diver-scientists analyzed 10 seafloor sites along California’s coast and reported that 37 percent of all recorded abalone were dead.
Divers and the Nature Conservancy tried to find a way to save the season, but to no avail.
We’ve never seen a decline like this over a short period of time, said Sonke Mastrup, the Environmental Program Manager for the CDFW’s Invertebrate Program.
Traverso said the Commission’s