Divers to retrieve lost fishing gear near sunken destroyer off San Pedro Thursday, April 28

A team of volunteer divers will descend 45 meters into the ocean off San Pedro on Thursday, April 28, to retrieve lost commercial fishing gear near a sunken pre-WWII destroyer as part of an international effort to clean the world’s oceans and protect marine life.

The dive represents the first effort undertaken in the United States by the nonprofit Healthy Seas, partnering with the newly established U.S. chapter of Ghost Diving, which is providing a team of six volunteer technical divers who specialize in removing lost fishing gear and other marine debris.

The crew will stage off the San Pedro harbor at 7:30 a.m. Thursday before heading out.

The site was chosen for the presence of the USS Moody, which was split into two pieces and sunk as part of the 1933 movie “Hell Below,” a World War I submarine thriller from MGM starring Robert Montgomery and Walter Huston.

“Since the local fishermen may not know about the wreck, it is a huge obstacle that catches ghost nets from time to time,” said Christina Wiegers, project manager for Health Seas.

“The wreck is home to a few species of rockfish,” she added, “as they like rocky reef habitats and it provides a valuable nursery for them.”

Healthy Seas estimates that 640,000 tons of fishing gear is lost or abandoned in the seas and oceans annually, potentially remaining in the environment for hundreds of years while losing tiny particles called microplastics that end up in the food chain.

The phenomenon has been dubbed “ghost fishing” because nets that are made to appear invisible underwater trap and kill all manner of marine animals, including turtles, fish, mammals and birds.

The group already works in 12 countries, including New Zealand; the others are in Europe and North Africa.

Once removed, the nets will be handled by Healthy Seas personnel and their manufacturing partners, and recycled into textile products, such as socks, swimwear, sportswear and carpets.

Since its founding in 2013, Healthy Seas has collected more than 73 tons of fishing nets and other marine litter with the help of volunteer divers and fishers.

“The Ghost Diving USA team sees (Thursday’s dive) as a kick-off for many upcoming clean-up missions in Southern California,” Wiegers added. “Potential sites could be the UB88, which is a German submarine from WWI. There is also Farnsworth Bank (near Catalina), a beautiful reef, which is populated by the very rare purple hydrocoral.”

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