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Reminder to Commercial Fishers and Anglers
Four Million Cubic Yards of Dredge Rock Being Deployed at Nine Reefs

August 19, 2011

NOTE: This announcement updates information posted in July, 2010, to alert anglers and commercial fishers of these reef construction activities.

Four million cubic yards of rock generated from New York District, Army Corps of Engineers dredging operations is being deployed on nine New Jersey reefs over the next three years as part of the Artificial Reef Program. The dredge rock, consisting of shale, sandstone and granite ranges in size from baseball-sized pieces to boulders. The rock is being transported from areas along the Kill Van Kull, Arthur Kill and Newark Bay via tugboats and deployed by hopper scows at predetermined locations.
During these reef construction efforts the work will be continuous so boaters must constantly be aware of the reduced maneuverability of the tugs and allow them the right-of-way. Commercial fishers must relocate their gear to other areas not slated for deployment or risk gear damage.

The following nine reefs will be receiving dredge rock:

Shark River, Axel Carlson, Garden State North, Atlantic City, Great Egg, Townsend Inlet, Wildwood, Deepwater and Cape May.
Adding rock to the ocean floor provides much needed hard-structure habitat for fish, lobster and other marine life. The rocky ridges and rock piles will become attachment surfaces for invertebrate marine life, such as mussels, barnacles, sponges and anemones, and will provide hiding places for bottom-dwelling species like sea bass, blackfish, crab and lobster. The rock will create productive fishing grounds for centuries to come.
Barge in tow
A hopper scow of rock being towed to reef site.
Click to enlarge
Rock deployments will commence on August 20, 2011 at the Great Egg, Atlantic City, Garden State North Reef and Axel Carlson reefs. Rock deployments will commence on the remaining five reefs in 2012. The deployment schedule is subject to weather and sea conditions.

For further information on this deployment contact Hugh Carberry at 609-748-2022.

For information on past and planned deployments see the Artificial Reef Deployments page.

Below are maps of reef grids for the four reefs in PDF format. Each grid depicts the deployment locations as well as associated 150-foot buffer areas. These deployment locations and buffers should be avoided by commercial fishers who set unattended gear such as pots and traps. Setting pots or traps in these areas may result in damage or loss of gear.

Atlantic City (pdf, 925kb)
Axel Carlson (pdf, 820kb)
Garden State North (pdf, 645kb)
Great Egg (pdf, 230kb)

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Copyright © State of New Jersey, 1996-2011
Department of Environmental Protection
P. O. Box 402
Trenton, NJ 08625-0402

Last Updated: August 18, 2011