Article 69NRX How 100,000 baby lobsters could save Whitby’s fishing – if they don’t eat each other first

How 100,000 baby lobsters could save Whitby’s fishing – if they don’t eat each other first

by
Oli Scarff for Agence France-Presse
from Environment | The Guardian on (#69NRX)

An enterprising project in the North Yorkshire port aims to protect the marine environment and safeguard the shellfish population for generations to come

  • Photographs by Oli Scarff

The tiny lobsters are safe from predators - including each other - as they eddy in large plastic tanks, swirling with artificial currents. In a few weeks' time, as part of a conservation project, they will leave their small shed in the North Yorkshire port of Whitby for the open sea.

Whitby is Europe's third-largest lobster port. About 100,000 lobsters are landed there each year, providing jobs for 150 people.

Fishing vessels moored at the quayside in Whitby, Europe's third-largest lobster port

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