Italians urged to tuck in to halt invasion of blue crabs
The Guardian|August 23, 2023
Italian fishing communities in the north of the country are fighting an invasion of predatory blue crabs that risks jeopardising the economies of whole regions, authorities have said.
Lorenzo Tondo
Italians urged to tuck in to halt invasion of blue crabs

The crab, originally from coastal areas of North and South America, has spread across several lagoon-like locations in Italy over the past year, preying on local shellfish and posing a threat to the country's role as one of the world's leading clam producers.

"We need people in Rome to understand that this disaster is putting at risk the livelihoods of thousands of families and businesses," said the governor of Emilia-Romagna, Stefano Bonaccini, after a summit on Monday. "This invasion risks destroying an economy that not only provides a livelihood for a community, but which is an Italian and European delicacy, together with other unique products of this region like Parma ham or parmigiano."

Fishing communities in the affected regions have been advised to capture as many blue crabs as they can to control their population. In the Po River delta, however, such efforts have proved largely ineffective. About 326 tonnes of the aggressively invasive species have been caught in Veneto this year, including 84 tonnes in Scardovari and 29 tonnes in Pila just in August.

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