Marcy Lucas
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Marcy Lucas
Photo by Steve Renner
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In the marine world, Marcy Lucas is
the equivalent of a law enforcement profiler. She is studying the modus
operandi of the most wily, slippery predators known to Maine's Atlantic
salmon industry — harbor seals.
"Seals have individual personalities," says Lucas. "Some are very
aggressive and others will let you scratch them under the chin. I
actually have a lot of respect for them."
In January 1999, Marcy Lucas began work in the aquaculture section of
the Maine Department of Marine Resources (DMR), based in Boothbay
Harbor. That fall, she enrolled as a part-time graduate student in
wildlife ecology to pursue research directly related to her work in
marine resources.
Lucas is capturing and radio tagging harbor seals found near aquaculture
pens. In her research, Lucas seeks to understand whether the same or
different harbor seals are showing up at the fish farms to prey on
stock. She also is studying the proximity of these seals' favorite
haul-out spots to the aquaculture sites.
In Maine, more than 60 percent of farm-raised fish that escape from
aquaculture facilities are the result of harbor seal predation. Such
releases cost the industry thousands of dollars and threaten Maine's
wild Atlantic salmon, which were recently put on the endangered species
list.
Along the coast, there are 44 aquaculture sites leased through the state
Department of Marine Resources. As part of her research, Lucas is
surveying 35 of the farms about seal predation problems and the
preventative measures employed at the sites. She follows up the mailed
questionnaires with site visits.
Lucas' research will help determine the effectiveness of predation
prevention methods now in use. She also will look for site
characteristics and management practices that make some farms less
vulnerable than others.
"To help them protect their investment, the (Atlantic salmon) industry
needs a better understanding of the nature and frequency of predation.
The Department of Marine Resources is interested in reducing escapes.
Understanding the nature of the interaction between seals and
farm-raised fish will allow us to mitigate the problems in the long
run," Lucas says.