Cleanup and Retrieval of Derelict Crab Pots in Gastineau Channel
A view of the Sandy Beach area.
The Sandy Beach area, where this project is surveying and removing derelict crab pots. (Photo Credit: Douglas Indian Association)

The Douglas Indian Association has teamed up with the NOAA Marine Debris Program and other partners to survey and remove derelict Dungeness crab pots in a known crab harvest area of Gastineau Channel near Juneau, Alaska.

Type of Project: Community-Based Marine Debris Removal Grant

Region: Alaska

Project Dates: August 2016 – January 2018

Who is involved?
With the support of a NOAA Marine Debris Program Community-based Marine Debris Removal grant, the Douglas Indian Association (DIA) is working with a diverse group of local agencies and stakeholders to cooperatively detect, identify, remove, and dispose of derelict crab pots. This group includes the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Alaska State Troopers, the United States Coast Guard, Sealaska, as well as local fishers and community members who are providing insight and input on crab pot locations and concentrations.

What is the project and why is it important?
This project is working to remove derelict Dungeness crab pots from the Sandy Beach area of Gastineau Channel, near Juneau, Alaska. To quantify and locate derelict crab pots present in the area, sonar surveys are being conducted in partnership with Natural Resources Consultants, who have been involved in removal in the Puget Sound. The DIA has contracted Fenn Enterprises, partnered with Aldrich Offshore Services LLC and Sealaska, to execute these sonar surveys, leveraging local expertise from Sealaska and the sonar experience of Fenn Enterprises and Aldrich Offshore Services. The DIA team is then working with support from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to use grappling devices for removal of the identified derelict crab pots.

Following removal, the project is working with Alaska State Troopers to identify gear for return to owners, auction, or recycling as scrap metal.

For more information on this project, check out the Marine Debris Clearinghouse.