Two species of scallops, spiny Chlamys hastata (to 80 mm) and pink
Chlamys rubida (to 71 mm) are harvested in in-shore waters by divers and
by small trawls.
The Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Canada
discontinued the commercial scallop fisheries following the 1999 fishing
season because the fisheries were data limited with few management
controls. In 2000, Fisheries and Oceans Canada initiated a limited
experimental fishery for scallops by trawl under scientific licence to
obtain important information to develop a biologically-based management
plan and a sustainable fishery. In 2000, a
Framework for Pink and Spiny
Scallop Fisheries off the West Coast of Canada was written (Lauzier et
al. 2000) and protocols for scallop dive and trawl surveys were
developed. In 2005, a subsequent paper analysed data from 2000 – 2002
experimental scallop fisheries and provided some preliminary biological
reference points as well as
recommendations for the continued assessment
and management of the fisheries (Lauzier et al. 2005).
Since then, the Department has licensed the scallop by trawl harvest using scientific and non-transferable exploratory fishing licences. As part of the exploratory fishery, collaborative surveys with the commercial industry have been conducted for several fishing locations. Biological information is also collected to provide information on appropriate harvest rates and to refine biological parameters.
The size of the trawl net is limited to a maximum width of two metres. A minimum size limit measured through the longest diameter of the shell perpendicular to the hinge is in effect for both species of commercially harvested scallops. Some area closures exist.
Departmental contacts for more information (click name to email):
Juanita Rogers 250-756-7268
| Regional Shellfish Co-ordinator | Vancouver | Jeff Johansen | 604-666-3869 |
| Resource Management, Scallop by Dive | South Coast | Mike Kattilakoski | 250-756-7315 |
| Resource Management, Scallop by Trawl | South Coast | David Fogtmann | 250-339-3799 |
| Resource Management Biologist | North Coast | Pauline Ridings | 250-756-7118 |