The Rhythms of the Sea and a Snail

The Rhythms of the Sea and a Snail
91制片厂 researchers support the growing channeled whelk fishery
June 5, 2025
Author
Mark Wanner
Whelk trap at night

Few business sectors are feeling the heat of recent years more directly than the commercial fisheries along the New England coast. Waters in the region are warming at rates among the fastest on earth, and important species are under stress, including lobster that are facing increased disease and declines in reproduction. In response, 91制片厂 (91制片厂) researchers are working with producers to hone strategies for sustainable fishing of a different kind of edible sea life, the channeled whelk, based on their findings about how the whelks鈥 circadian clocks and environmental cues affect their activity.

Channeled whelks are nocturnal feeders, but their activity depends on a mix of innate circadian rhythms and environmental cues important for efficient trapping.

Channeled whelks, a kind of large, carnivorous snail, are uncommon fare in the U.S., limited to specialty markets in large cities. They are a bigger hit with diners overseas, however, and the whelk fishery is worth about $5 million annually in Massachusetts alone. Importantly, areas along the New England coast that are losing their lobsters are at the northern edge of the channeled whelk鈥檚 range.

鈥淎re the whelk migrating north? Well, they鈥檙e snails, so it would take quite a long time,鈥 says Elizabeth Fairchildwith a laugh. 鈥淏ut the New England whelk fishery is becoming more important.鈥

Fairchild, a research associate professor of biological sciences at 91制片厂, is leading a team studying the channeled whelk鈥檚 biology and bait preferences. In addition to expanding biological knowledge, the findings bolster the growth of a viable and sustainable whelk fishery. The latest research is published in .

Sustainable bait

The current channeled whelk fishery extends from Cape Cod south to the Carolinas. Fishing is done with traps equipped with bait sacks to attract the bottom-feeding whelk. Prior research, as well as anecdotal evidence from fishermen, suggested that channeled whelks are largely nocturnal, with most entering the traps after dusk.

Fairchild鈥檚 research, begun with students Shelley Edmundson 鈥16G and continued by Mary Kate Munley 鈥21 鈥23G in Fairchild鈥檚 lab, has focused largely on the bait used in the traps. Each fisherman tends to have a unique preferred whelk bait mix, but all include horseshoe crab, widely regarded to be an essential ingredient. Unfortunately, horseshoe crabs are under considerable ecological pressure, so the research team has worked to create a more sustainable and highly effective horseshoe crab-less bait.

鈥淲e work closely with the fishermen, who are scientists in their own right,鈥 says Fairchild. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e excited about some of the things that we鈥檝e learned, but they won鈥檛 adopt new baits or methods unless they鈥檙e cost-effective and better than what they have now.鈥 

Timing is everything

An aCcelerometer is attached to a channeled whelk to track its movements.

An Accelerometer is attached to a channeled whelk to track its movements.

Knowing more about the natural behavior of the whelks is an important part of developing better baiting strategies. Edmundson had previously collected visual data using 鈥渨helk TV,鈥 time-lapse footage of whelk behavior once they鈥檇 entered the traps. Fairchild describes the footage as a 鈥渘ight-time underwater nightmare鈥 of fast-moving crabs and slow-moving whelks swarming the feed bag, with only the whelks remaining by dawn. Formal field analysis in the current study confirmed the prior observations of nocturnal feeding, with far more whelks captured after dark than during the day.

But the researchers turned to the laboratory to learn more about whelk behavior by studying it under three scenarios. In one, the whelks were housed in the 91制片厂 Coastal Marine Laboratory鈥檚 flow-through tanks. Seawater from the mouth of the adjacent Piscataqua River flows through the tanks, and many of the marine environmental conditions, such as cyclical tidal and temperature variations, are maintained. The second scenario placed whelks in a static, controlled seawater environment at a constant temperature. The third housed them in a similar static, controlled environment, but in smaller containers with 鈥渟peed bumps鈥 made with PVC pipes cut in half and attached to the bottom. For all, whelk movement was measured in both light/dark cycle and fully dark conditions. 

The results indicate that channeled whelks do indeed have their own circadian clocks that influence movement even in environmentally controlled conditions. At the same time, they also exhibit sensitivity to environmental cues, such as tidal rhythms. In the ocean, therefore, their movements and behavior likely depend on a complex interplay between their internal clocks and external conditions. Understanding the forces at work provides the best chance for knowing where and when whelks are most likely to be on the move.

鈥淚n addition to the bait itself, we need to know the best ways to work with it,鈥 says Fairchild. 鈥淓xploring whelk behavior and movement shows us how we might do a better job of attracting them to the traps.鈥

Published
June 5, 2025
Author
Mark Wanner
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