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National TRAP Program

Maine fishermen recycled thousands of old lobster traps this winter

Maine Public | Nicole Ogrysko

April 23, 2026

CLICK TO READ – Fishermen have recycled thousands of old lobster traps on Vinalhaven this winter

Tulley Hescock:Maine Public
From left to right, Flinn Robinson, Curt Bryant and Buzz Scott load derelict lobster traps onto a trailer to be hauled away for processing and recycling. Tulley Hescock / Maine Public

Article excerpts:

Buzz Scott’s non-profit, OceansWide, spends more than half the year on the water, training scuba divers to recover derelict, or “ghost gear,” from the seafloor. This past winter, he’s been working on shore, hauling thousands of abandoned traps piled around Vinalhaven.

Since January, OceansWide and the crew have processed and recycled nearly 5,400 traps — more than 170 tons — from Vinalhaven alone. Scott believes they’ve only scratched the surface.

“I think there’s 60,000 to 100,000 traps on this island that need to be processed and removed,” he said.

This is a common scene up and down Maine’s coast — battered wire fishing traps piled high in a front yard, tucked back in the woods, or strewn along the shore after a storm. Wire pots wrapped with polyvinyl plastic replaced wooden, biodegradable traps in the 1980s, and they’ve been piling up since, shedding microplastics and creating hazards for birds and other creatures.

Tulley Hescock : Maine Public
Old lobster traps are stacked high in front yards around Vinalhaven. The non-profit OceansWide estimates there could be as many as 60,000 traps on the island that could be removed and recycled. Tulley Hescock / Maine Public