Study seeks origins of ghost nets that haunt Hawaii’s shores

Hawaii Pacific University graduate student Drew McWhirter, left, and Raquel Corniuk, a research technician at the university’s Center for Marine Debris Research, pull apart a massive entanglement of ghost nets on May 12 in Kaneohe, Oahu. The two are part of a study that is attempting to trace derelict fishing gear that washes ashore in Hawaii back to the manufacturers and fisheries that it came from.

Ghost nets and other debris sit in a shed at Hawaii Pacific University’s Center for Marine Debris Research on May 12 in Kaneohe, Oahu. (AP Photos/Caleb Jones)

Jennifer Lynch, a research scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the co-director of Hawaii Pacific University's Center for Marine Debris Research, catalogs pieces of ghost nets on May 12 in Kaneohe, Oahu. Researchers are conducting a study that will attempt to trace derelict fishing gear that washes ashore in Hawaii back to the manufacturers and fisheries that it came from. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones)

Raquel Corniuk, a research technician at Hawaii Pacific University’s Center for Marine Debris Research, pulls apart a massive entanglement of ghost nets on May 12 in Kaneohe, Oahu. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones)

Pieces of net and other fishing gear are numbered before being cataloged at Hawaii Pacific University’s Center for Marine Debris Research on May 12 in Kaneohe, Oahu.

HONOLULU — “Ghost nets” from unknown origins drift among the Pacific’s currents, threatening sea creatures and littering shorelines with the entangled remains of what they kill.