Drawing a Line in the Mud: North Carolina’s Shrimp Trawling Crisis

Each year, hundreds of millions of fish are killed as collateral damage from large-scale, inshore bottom shrimp trawling in North Carolina’s estuaries. Let that sink in. While other Atlantic and Gulf states have taken action to phase out this kind of outdated gear in their most sensitive nursery areas, North Carolina stands alone in allowing it to continue. Dragging heavy trawl nets through North Carolina’s sounds doesn’t just catch shrimp—it destroys the very building blocks of our coastal ecosystem and puts our fisheries in deeper jeopardy with every pass. Now, natural resource advocates from all walks of life are drawing a “line in the mud”.

This isn’t a niche issue. It’s not about choosing shrimp over sportfish. It’s about the future of North Carolina’s coastal economy, habitat, and way of life. The majority of species killed in shrimp trawl bycatch—Southern Flounder, weakfish, croaker, spot, and blue crab—are already in serious trouble. They’re being scooped up before they can spawn or before anglers can target them. The result is a growing number of collapsed or collapsing fisheries in state waters, drastically impacting angling experiences for NC recreational and commercial fishermen. For every pound of shrimp harvested, more than four pounds of juvenile fish and other marine life are discarded. That’s not just wasteful—it’s unsustainable.

Recreational fishing in North Carolina is a powerhouse, driving billions of dollars in economic activity and supporting local businesses from coastal tackle shops to inland hotels. But that engine runs on one thing: healthy fish populations. And when your nursery grounds are being scraped clean, there’s no fuel left in the tank. What’s worse, many of these trawl boats aren’t even from North Carolina. They come from out of state to take advantage of weak protections, further depleting local resources while leaving the ecological and economic costs behind.

Meanwhile, viable alternatives exist. Offshore shrimping remains a productive, sustainable option that doesn’t come at the expense of juvenile finfish or critical estuarine habitat. Alternative, sustainable shrimp harvesting methods, including skimmer trawls, channel nets, shrimp pounds, and cast nets, exist and can preserve the ecological balance of North Carolina’s estuarine systems while supporting local shrimping industries. The real question is no longer whether we can change—it’s whether we will. Because every year we delay, the damage gets worse. Seagrass beds are smothered, juvenile fish are lost by the millions, and the window to rebuild what’s been broken closes just a little more.

ASGA is proud to amplify the fight being led by North Carolina’s courageous coastal advocates calling for an end to large-scale inshore bottom trawling. This is about common-sense conservation rooted in science and driven by people who care—fishermen, business owners, scientists, and residents who understand that what’s happening now is not sustainable. Protecting our estuaries isn’t a radical idea, even though individuals connected to the commercial shrimp industry have made extreme responses to this campaign. Even in the face of adversity, conservation momentum is building. In a major step forward, the North Carolina State Senate voted overwhelmingly to support new regulations to prohibit large-scale, inshore bottom shrimp trawling. The bill passed its second reading 41–4 and cleared its third reading with a 39–2 vote earlier today. These results show that decision-makers are beginning to listen to the science, to the economic reality, and to the voices who know we can’t keep managing our estuaries like they’re disposable. We commend the NC Senate for taking decisive and resounding action.

But this fight isn’t over. Now, we call on the NC House to follow suit. As this bill moves forward, it’s critical that the chorus of support continues to grow. If you fish, live, work, or care about the health of North Carolina’s coast, now is the time to speak up.

Non-Resident Supporters:

You can contact the North Carolina Speaker of the House’s office and urge the House to take action. Call Speaker Destin Hall at (919) 733‑3451 or email Destin.Hall@ncleg.gov and urge the House to advance the bill.

North Carolina Residents:

Contact your legislator and urge them to advance this Bill! You can utilize this resource from the North Carolina Wildlife Federation for an easy portal to contact your representative.

This decision does not just affect North Carolina residents. Fish do not recognize state lines, and the burden of this industry’s impact is felt north and south of these prolific inshore waters. The future of North Carolina’s fisheries depends on the choices we make right now—let’s choose recovery, resilience, and a coast worth passing down.

7 Responses

  1. My name is Sheila Barbee. I live in Southport NC and I support the bill to prohibit large scale inshore bottom trawling.

  2. I fully support stopping in shore netting. This has gone on way too long. We are the last state in the US that allows this to go on.

  3. This bill has to pass to save what is left of our estuaries. We are running out of time. Please contact you State reps. ASAP.

  4. Your response to ban trawling is way off due to misinformation fed to you by unsupported information.

    1. Our fisheries have been devastated by rules that protect Striped Bass,Red fish which are major predators of blue crabs and small fish

    2.Bycatch reduction devices work providing cleaner tow of shrimp and have minimal impact to the bottom

    3.Areas closed have not been proven to increase fin fish populations and have actually become less productive

    4. Life’s of our coastal communities are at risk

    1. I approved this comment because it puts the absurd claims on full display.
      1) The striped bass population is crumbling. Redfish numbers are dropping. I’d suggest looking at a stock assessment. But, let me guess….scientists don’t know anything? Furthermore, striped bass and redfish have been eating crabs and small fish long before you came along and dragged the bottom for profit. They are the number 1 and number 3 most economically significant fish on the East Coast. Combined, you are looking at an economy that exceeds 10 billion dollars. The shrimp fishery in North Carolina isn’t a bug on a windshield compared to either one of these fisheries. If you think you should kill more of them so you can kill more small fish and crabs, we aren’t the same.
      2) Show me the data. Your bycatch in 2020 for croaker alone was 1.8 billion. I have the science.
      3) Are you suggesting that dragging trawls along the bottom help things?
      4) None of you cared when weakfish, croaker, and spot all but disappeared. That put more pressure on striped bass. Striped bass are in serious trouble. That’s what you did, and that is what you need to own.
      Your thinking lacks logic, accountability, and consideration for how your actions impact others. No one is saying you can’t shrimp. We are saying that NC is the only state in the Atlantic that allows this. You can fish for shrimp in many other ways.

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