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  • Bait Extensions or Bait Bags
  • Artificial Bait
  • Population Estimates

Fisheries

Bait Extensions or Bait Bags

Bait Bags
Bait bag with horseshoe crab bait

Developed by Frank Eicherly, a commercial waterman from Bowers Beach, Delaware, and formerly marketed by the Ecological Research and Development Group (ERDG), this polyethylene mesh bag protects horseshoe crab bait from scavengers, extending the number of tidal cycles that the horseshoe crab bait can be fished. In a Sea Grant study with Virginia conch fishermen, researchers found that overall bait needs can be reduced by 50% when bait bags are used. In 2000, Virginia fishermen adopted the bait bags for their pots.

Image of Dr. Nancy Targett
Dr. Nancy Targett is leading a Sea Grant research project to reduce the use of the horseshoe crab as eel and conch bait by developing an artificial bait based on the chemical attractant found in the crab.

Artificial Bait

Why are horseshoe crabs such an excellent bait for eels and whelk? Eel fishermen refer to egg-laden females as a "superior bait," even though eels prefer other types of food in the wild. Is it possible that a specific odor or chemical cue attracts eels to female horseshoe crabs? A few years ago, Dr. Nancy Targett and her research team at the University of Delaware College of Marine Studies isolated the active compound in female horseshoe crabs that makes them so attractive to eels and conch. The scientists originally thought the compound was in the tissue of female crabs, but they found that the attractant, a protein, is concentrated in the eggs. Dr. Targett now is collaborating with colleague Dr. Pam Green at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute to produce a protein that can be incorporated into an artificial bait. To find out more, Click Here.

Population Estimates

For decades, the horseshoe crab was not considered an important enough fishery issue to warrant population studies of any kind. Records of catch years go back to the mid-1800s, but overall catch data is sporadic, with many years of data missing or incomplete over the last 150 years. Shell middens confirm that horseshoe crabs were fished by the American Indian, and coast-wide, farmers and watermen used horseshoe crabs for fertilizer, eel bait, and chicken and hog food for at least 150 years. Records from the mid- to late 1800s in the Delaware Bay estimate harvests of up to 2 million or more horseshoe crabs for use in the local fertilizer industry. Farmers and watermen harvested the animals by hand from the beaches or from fishing pounds. These harvests for fertilizer ended by 1970, but pressure was renewed by the late 1970s and continues today by the bait industry.

Click here to see an overview of the research being conducted.Studies confirm that the Delaware Bay and the adjoining coastal waters hold the largest population of horseshoe crabs. Population estimates by Dr. James Berkson from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 2002 estimate the Mid-Atlantic population to be at least 13 million juvenile and adult animals. The census population of spawning adults on Delaware Bay beaches peaked in about 1990 with over 900,000 but has been declining ever since. During the recent five-year period from 1999–2003, estimates of spawning adults in the Delaware Bay indicate a stable or slight decline (for more information, please see Horseshoe Crab Census Data). Because of this documented population decline within the Delaware Bay, the states of New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland, have a harvest limit of 150,000 horseshoe crabs for 2004.

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