Just the stats—Lobster by the numbers

Maine's place in fishing industry revealed in stats

June 14, 2017

A lobster boat from the early 20th century.

COURTESY PENOBSCOT MARINE MUSEUM

A lobster boat in an early 20th century image.

Posted June 14, 2017

Last modified June 14, 2017

 

  • The American lobster is the single most valuable species of fish landed in the United States. Over 80 percent of the catch comes from Maine (source: NOAA fisheries reports from 2014 and 2015).
  • Thirty percent of all commercial fishing trips on the East Coast are taken by Maine fishermen—469,000 trips per year. (source: Maine Department of Marine Resources.)
  • Maine lobstermen take about 270,000 commercial fishing trips each year. No other state comes close to this number of commercial fishing trips across all commercial fisheries. Florida is the next closest with 206,000. (source: Maine Department of Marine Resources.)
  • This means about 17 percent of all commercial fishing trips taken on the East Coast are taken by Maine lobstermen.
  • Three Maine communities—Stonington, Vinalhaven and Rockland— land $114 million worth of lobster each year, nearly as much as the $123 million total value of commercial fisheries landings in Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire combined.

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