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Free divers stumble upon illegal crab traps off Vancouver beach

DFO has recovered more than 250 illegal crab traps in English Bay near Kitsilano. One line had as many as 30 traps attached, officials say.

DFO has recovered more than 250 illegal crab traps in English Bay near Kitsilano

Chris Samson followed a mysterious line in the water near Jericho Beach in Vancouver and found several illegal crab traps. (Jon Hernande/CBC)

Chris Samson andKian Zhaospend many of their days holding their breath and scouring the ocean floor. Harvesting crab has long been a hobbyof theirs, but they say thecrustaceans have beenharder to come by lately along the B.C. coast.

On Monday, they saw first-hand what has beenthreatening local crab populations.

The pair was free diving witha small groupnear Jericho Beach inVancouver when they came across a mysterious line in the water.

"Towards the end of the dive, I decided to pull on it to see where it led me, and it led me to one trap, which led me to another trap, and so on," said Samson. "I knew immediately what I was looking at."

The traps didn't have thelegally required identifiers orlocator floats. Right away, Samson reported the finding to Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO).

These illegal crab traps were seized earlier this year during a five-day, joint operation in Boundary Bay involving the Canadian Coast Guard and DFO. (DFO)

Over the next few days, fisheriesofficers dragged the sea floorand seized more than 250 illegal crab traps.

"That's a lot," said ArthurDemsky, a DFOdetachment commander. "The gear is all illegal. It's not marked. There's no floats attached."

WATCH |Chris Samson uncovers illegal traps:

Free divers uncover illegal crab traps near Vancouver beach

3 years ago
Duration 1:06
Chris Samson followed a mysterious line on the ocean floor that led to a series of unmarked crab traps

Illegal crab fishing is a widespread problem along the B.C. coastline, where poachers set long lines of unmarked traps, often retrieving them at night using GPS coordinates. The crabs are then sold on the black market, or laundered into the commercial marketplace.

As many as 30 traps were attached to one of the lines crews recovered in English Bay.

Demsky says the traps appeared to be commercial grade, and did not include rot chord a legally required cable that will degrade over time, allowing crabs to escape should a trap become lost.

"It's not only crabs that go into these traps, it's all sorts of fish that go into these traps," said Demsky. "I'm sure they get killed, and are captured and sold with the crab."

Kian Zhao and Chris Samson are free divers and hobby crab harvesters. (Jon Hernandez/CBC)

"Over the long term, that can be devastating to [the ecosystem]," he said.

Poacherspose a major conservation concern by taking undersized crab, or femalesthat haven't had a chance to reproduce.

An investigation is ongoing, but officials admit it can be a challenge to find the perpetrators.

Full extentof issue unknown

Earlier this year, DFOpulled 337 illegal crab traps from Boundary Bay in a five-day operation with the Canadian Coast Guard.

The annual blitz has yielded more than 1,000 illegal traps over the past few years, but the full extent of the issue along the coast is unknown.

For hobby harvesters like Samson, uncovering an illegal trap is infuriating.

"Anger, disgust, frustration we're out in the ocean all the time looking for crab and we can't find legally sized ones, and it's no wonder because these illegal operations are poaching them all," he said.

A five day, joint operation in Boundary Bay saw officials seize 337 illegally set commercial crab traps.
This illegal crab trap was seized earlier this year during a five-day, joint operation in Boundary Bay involving the Canadian Coast Guard and DFO. (DFO)

The finding was a first for Samson, who dives regularlyacross the region. He says he's thankful crews were able to uncover such a large network of traps.

"It hurts the commercial guys doing it legally, it hurts us who go out into the ocean trying to bring some food home. These people are hurting our economy and destroying our ocean," he said.

As for poachers, he has some words of warning.

"There's people out there like me, watching."

Poachers can face jail time and fines up to $100,000. Anyone who witnesses the illegal activity or has any information is asked to contact the DFO'sObserve, Record, Report line.