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To make his fertilizer, Sam Cheeney hauls green crab traps, feeds the crabs through a grinder, lays them out to dry on homemade screens, and then grinds them into smaller pieces before bagging them for distribution. Courtesy Sam Cheeney/Green Kraken.

What to do about Maine’s green crab problem? Some see opportunity.


The first time Sam Cheeney saw a green crab was in the early 2000s, as part of an ecology class at the University of Maine at Machias. He and his classmates ventured out across the mud flats and rocky shoreline in search of the invasive species, one that research suggests has been present on Maine’s coast since the mid-1800s, when it was carried to North America in the ballast waters of a European ship. Today, green crabs prey on soft-shell clams and mussels and have been found to harm salt marshes


“We would find pockets of just hundreds of them,” Cheeney said. The experience made an impression. In 2023, after stints as a farmer and carpenter, and more than two decades after his first glimpse of the green crab, Cheeney founded Green Kraken, a small business based in Milbridge that makes fertilizer from crushed green crabs. The nutrients in the green crab act as a stimulant for vegetables and other crops. 


For Cheeney, using crab meal as a fertilizer is about more than mitigating the invasive species’ impact on the Gulf of Maine’s ecosystem, though that’s a part of it. The other part of Cheeney’s mission goes back to his days as a farmer. While addressing fertility issues with his crops, Cheeney said he spent a lot of time thinking through the sustainability of his farm inputs. 


“A lot of nutrients are mined, or they’re made from petroleum,” he said. Green crab emerged as a more sustainable, low-carbon alternative that was also local. He now sells his fertilizer in retail stores from Rockland to Machias and distributes it across New England. 


Cheeney is not alone in his efforts to curb the green crab by transforming it into something new. 


In South Portland, Marpheen Chann is taking a different approach: he’s working with the Fork Food Lab to find ways to add green crab to seafood dishes across Maine. Chann is the executive director of Khmer Maine, a nonprofit that works with Maine’s Cambodian community. In Cambodia, there’s a species of crab that burrows into rice paddies, creating a nuisance for farmers. There, Chann said people have begun incorporating the crabs into their diets, taking the form of crab paste, minced crab and salted crab. 


“If you think about it, it's not anything really new that our community here is taking a look at green crabs and sort of seeing the same problems,” said Chann.

Khmer Maine’s food and farm manager ChanBunly Uy preps a garlic and fish sauce bath for fermenting green crabs at South Portland’s Fork Food Lab. Courtesy Marpheen Chann/Khmer Maine.

This year, Khmer Maine’s food incubator program is doing a test run to see if there’s a market for green crabs among Maine’s Southeast Asian communities. Chann is at the helm: when we spoke last week, he told me he was “elbow-deep in green crabs.” 


That work includes processing hundreds of crabs sourced from the Quahog Bay Conservancy, putting them in buckets with garlic, sugar and fermented fish sauce, and then packaging them to be flash frozen and stored for consumption later this fall.


Despite losing out on some USDA funding because of federal cuts, Chann said he’s hopeful that Khmer Maine can eventually expand its market for green crabs into Massachusetts. 


These business efforts are ramping up as green crabs are becoming more and more abundant as a result of warming waters. 


“They’re really thriving under climate change conditions,” said Marissa McMahan, senior director of fisheries at Manomet Conservation Sciences, explaining that warmer winters mean that more green crabs can survive and continue to grow all year long, leading them to reproduce sooner than in the past. “We’re just kind of seeing this population explosion at this particular point in time.”


Manomet established monitoring sites to track green crab population trends in 2018. Over the last seven years, McMahan said, there’s been a significant increase. 


Taking a break from the fermentation buckets, Chann told me he sees an opportunity there, not only in helping to mitigate a threat to Maine’s ecosystem but in promoting cultural exchange.


“We're educating people, not only about Cambodian culture and what Cambodian cuisine and the diet is like, but also saying, ‘hey, we're here to help,’” Chann said. “This is an issue in Maine, and fortunately enough, it happens to be a cultural fit with our community.”

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Scientists have found new tools for measuring carbon that accumulates on the ocean floor underneath kelp farms.


Last month, researchers at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences published research testing methods that use environmental DNA to measure the deposition rates of organic carbon, derived from commercially farmed kelp, into marine sediments.


The tools, which were tested under farms in the Gulf of Maine, could have big implications for the state’s growing kelp aquaculture industry and tracking so-called blue carbon sequestration.

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While The Maine Monitor does not place its content behind paywalls, some newsrooms we link to in this newsletter may. 

Extreme drought conditions hold steady in seven Maine counties | News Center Maine


Maine climate lawsuit to remain in state court | Maine Public


Maine's heating oil use hits new low | Maine Public


Here’s the latest on the Kennebec River dams sale announced last week | Kennebec Journal


"They're feeding America," Aroostook students learn work ethic on annual harvest break | Maine Public


Maine offers EV rebates as federal incentives lapse | Maine Public


How Maine’s environment is being reshaped by longer, hotter summers | Portland Press Herald


Outraged CMP customers demand Maine regulators reject utility rate proposal | Maine Public


As temperatures rise, Maine schools need solutions for shoulder seasons | Maine Public


Food shortage may trigger winter bird influx in Maine | Bangor Daily News


Flood-prone Scarborough street removal project still needs final votes | Portland Press Herald


UMaine cancels floating wind power conference | Maine Public


Acadia National Park to remain partially open during shutdown | Spectrum News Maine


Fishery Management Council delays action on use of alternative fishing gear in restricted waters | Maine Public


In Sipayik, the Passamaquoddy are finding resilience in a half-acre of clams | Portland Press Herald


Over 67,000 Mainers eligible for electricity bill credits | WGME


Crow in Buxton tests positive for West Nile virus | News Center Maine

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