Crabbing and fishing are big businesses in coastal areas around the world. Each year, millions of traps are sunk in the ocean. To help crabbers recover the traps and remove the crabs, the traps have floating buoys attached by rope. Sometimes, boats or storms snap the buoys and drag them away, making the traps hard to find. The same can happen to the nets set by fishers.
For weeks, lost traps can catch and kill animals before they wear down and break. Lost nets and lines, carried by currents, can tangle up turtles. The mess of ghost gear on the seafloor makes it hard for crabbers to lay down new traps.
In 2017, scientists in Australia estimated that about 9 percent of traps, 6 percent of nets, and 29 percent of fishing lines are lost each year. That could add up to thousands of tons of gear polluting the water.
Warren and Karen Unkert have worked as crabbers in New Jersey for 28 years. Each year, they lose about 40 of the 200 traps they set. “That’s a lot of money, a lot of traps in the bay, and a lot of death,” says Karen Unkert. That’s why the Unkerts jumped at the opportunity to help.