Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Comprehensive Amendment to the Fishery Management Plans of the U.S. Caribbean, 53979-54004 [05-17945]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 176 / Tuesday, September 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Key Questions for Consideration
The CAS Board is soliciting
comments on this issue from interested
parties. In particular, the Board is
interested in comments related to the
following issues:
1. Any statute that would require the
CAS Board to retain this exemption. If
any such statute exists, provide the
specific statute and language that
contain this requirement.
2. How this exemption does or does
not promote the CAS Board’s primary
objective of achieving ‘‘(1) an increased
degree of uniformity in cost accounting
practices among Government
contractors in like circumstances, and
(2) consistency in cost accounting
practices in like circumstances by
individual government contractor over
periods of time.’’
3. The significance of the location of
contract execution to CAS applicability.
4. The significance of the location of
contract performance to CAS
applicability.
5. The advantages and disadvantages
of exempting contracts and subcontracts
from CAS that are executed and
performed entirely outside the U.S.
6. Contracting situations in which the
exemption has historically been
utilized.
[FR Doc. 05–17949 Filed 9–12–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3110–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Parts 600 and 622
[Docket No. 050729208–5208–01; I.D.
060805B]
RIN 0648–AP51
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Comprehensive Amendment to the
Fishery Management Plans of the U.S.
Caribbean
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS issues this proposed
rule to implement a comprehensive
amendment prepared by the Caribbean
Fishery Management Council (Council)
to amend its Reef Fish, Spiny Lobster,
Queen Conch, and Coral Fishery
Management Plans (FMPs). The
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comprehensive amendment is designed
to ensure the FMPs are fully compliant
with the provisions of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens
Act). This proposed rule would redefine
the fishery management units for the
FMPs; establish seasonal closures;
impose gear restrictions and
requirements; revise requirements for
marking pots and traps; and prohibit the
filleting of fish at sea. In addition, the
comprehensive amendment would
establish biological reference points and
stock status criteria; establish rebuilding
schedules and strategies to end
overfishing and rebuild overfished
stocks; provide for standardized
collection of bycatch data; minimize
bycatch and bycatch mortality to the
extent practicable; designate essential
fish habitat (EFH) and EFH habitat areas
of particular concern (HAPCs); and
minimize adverse impacts on such
habitat to the extent practicable. The
intended effect of this proposed rule is
to achieve optimum yield in the
fisheries and provide social and
economic benefits associated with
maintaining healthy stocks.
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than 5 p.m., eastern time, on
September 28, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on the proposed rule by any of the
following methods:
• E-mail: 0648–
AP51.Proposed@noaa.gov. Include in
the subject line of the e-mail comment
the following document identifier 0648–
AP51.
• Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Steve Branstetter, NMFS,
Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th
Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701.
• Fax: 727–824–5308, Attention: Steve
Branstetter.
Copies of documents supporting this
action may be obtained by contacting
the NMFS Southeast Regional Office at
the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steve Branstetter, 727–824–5305; fax
727–824–5308; e-mail
Steve.Branstetter@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
fisheries for spiny lobster, queen conch,
reef fish, and corals and reef-associated
invertebrates in the exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) off Puerto Rico and of the
U.S. Virgin Islands are managed under
the respective fishery management
plans prepared by the Council. These
fishery management plans are
implemented under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act by regulations at
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53979
50 CFR part 622. This proposed rule
would implement Amendment 2 to the
FMP for the Spiny Lobster Fishery,
Amendment 1 to the FMP for Queen
Conch Resources, Amendment 3 to the
FMP for the Reef Fish Fishery, and
Amendment 2 to the FMP for the Corals
and Reef Associated Plants and
Invertebrates of Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands, known collectively as
the Comprehensive Amendment to the
FMPs of the Caribbean.
Background
A notice of availability for the
comprehensive amendment was
published in the Federal Register on
June 16, 2005 (70 FR 35053). This
proposed rule and the comprehensive
amendment are intended to address
various requirements set forth in the
Magnuson-Stevens Act: (1) Assess and
specify the present and probable future
condition of, and the maximum
sustainable yield and optimum yield
from, fisheries; (2) specify objective and
measurable criteria for identifying when
a fishery is overfished; (3) end
overfishing and rebuild overfished
stocks, and prevent overfishing in
fisheries that are identified as
approaching an overfished condition;
(4) establish a standardized reporting
methodology to assess the amount and
type of bycatch occurring in the fishery
and implement conservation and
management measures that minimize
bycatch and bycatch mortality to the
extent practicable; and (5) identify,
describe, and designate EFH and EFHHAPCs for managed stocks, minimize to
the extent practicable adverse effects on
such habitat caused by fishing, and
identify other actions to encourage the
conservation and enhancement of such
habitat.
Provisions of This Proposed Rule
Revision of Fishery Management Units
(FMUs)
This proposed rule would redefine
the FMUs in all the Council FMPs.
FMUs define the specific species that
are to be the target of conservation and
management.
The proposed rule would remove
from the respective FMUs, species
found predominantly in the waters of
Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands
(rather than in Federal waters). In
addition, those species for which data
are inadequate to establish a need for
conservation and management,
biological reference points, or stock
status determination criteria would
remain in the FMUs for data collection
purposes but would not be subject to
Federal regulation at this time. When
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sufficient data are available and, if a
need for management is determined,
appropriate regulations would be
implemented through subsequent
rulemaking.
Under the proposed rule, Caribbean
helmet, flame helmet, Caribbean vase,
and whelk (West Indian top shell)
would be removed from the Queen
Conch FMP. All other species in the
Caribbean conch FMU, except queen
conch, and all aquarium trade species in
the Reef Fish and Coral Reef FMPs,
would be retained in the respective
FMUs for data collection purposes only.
Tables 1 and 2 of Appendix A to 50 CFR
Part 622 (Caribbean Coral Reef
Resources and Caribbean Reef Fish,
respectively) would be revised
accordingly; Table 5 of Appendix A to
50 CFR Part 622 (Caribbean Conch
Resources) would be added; and the
definition of ‘‘Caribbean conch
resource’’ would be removed and
replaced by a definition of ‘‘queen
conch.’’
The proposed change would provide
for collection of data on aquarium trade
species and other species retained in the
respective FMUs for data collection
purposes only, but would remove these
species from Federal regulations at this
time. Consequently, existing regulations
at 50 CFR 622.41(b) defining a marine
aquarium fish as ‘‘a Caribbean reef fish
that is smaller than 5.5 inches (14.0 cm)
TL’’ and restricting the harvest of a
marine aquarium fish to hand-held dip
nets or hand-held slurp guns would be
eliminated. The regulation at 50 CFR
622.32(b)(1)(ii) prohibiting the harvest
and possession of butterflyfish and
seahorses from Federal waters of the
U.S. Caribbean also would be
eliminated. There would be no
specification of maximum sustainable
yield (MSY), optimum yield (OY), or
stock status determination criteria for
species retained for data collection
purposes only.
Seasonal Closures
This proposed rule would establish
several seasonal closures to reduce
fishing mortality, provide protection to
key species during peak spawning
seasons, protect EFH, and help to
rebuild overfished fish stocks or keep
healthy stocks from becoming
overfished. For snappers, fishing for or
possessing black, blackfin, vermilion, or
silk snapper, in or from the Caribbean
Point
EEZ would be prohibited from October
1 through December 31 each year. From
April 1 through June 30 each year,
fishing for or possessing lane or mutton
snapper in or from the Caribbean EEZ
would also be prohibited. For grouper,
fishing for or possessing red, black,
tiger, yellowfin, or yellowedge grouper,
in or from the Caribbean EEZ, would be
prohibited from February 1 through
April 30 each year. In addition, fishing
for or possessing red hind in or from the
Caribbean EEZ would be would be
prohibited off the west coast of Puerto
Rico west of 67°10′ W. longitude from
December 1 through February each year.
Further, to help rebuild overfished
grouper species and to protect EFH,
fishing for or possessing any species of
fish, except highly migratory species, in
or from the Grammanik Bank closed
area would be prohibited from February
1 to April 30 each year. Highly
migratory species means bluefin, bigeye,
yellowfin, albacore, and skipjack tunas;
swordfish; sharks (listed in Appendix A
to 50 CFR Part 635); white marlin, blue
marlin, sailfish, and longbill spearfish.
The Grammanik Bank closed area is
bound by rhumb lines connecting, in
order, the following points:
North lat.
West long.
A
18°11.898′
64°56.328′
B
18°11.645′
64°56.225′
C
18°11.058′
64°57.810′
D
18°11.311′
64°57.913′
A
18°11.898′
64°56.328′
To reduce fishing mortality and help
rebuild the overfished stock of
Caribbean queen conch, the proposed
rule would prohibit fishing for or
possessing on board a fishing vessel a
Caribbean queen conch in or from the
Caribbean EEZ, except during October
through June in the area east of 64°34′
W. longitude which includes Lang Bank
east of St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
Restrictions on Gillnets and Trammel
Nets
To help achieve necessary reductions
in fishing mortality and to reduce
bycatch, the use of gillnets or trammel
nets to fish for Caribbean reef fish or
Caribbean spiny lobster would be
prohibited in the Caribbean EEZ.
Possession of a gillnet or trammel net
and any Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean
spiny lobster in or from the Caribbean
EEZ would be prima facie evidence of
a violation of this provision. To further
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minimize bycatch and bycatch
mortality, the proposed rule would
require any gillnet or trammel net used
in the Caribbean EEZ to fish for any
other species, including flying fishes or
needlefishes, to be tended at all times.
Other Gear Restrictions to Minimize
Adverse Effects on EFH
This proposed rule would prohibit all
fishing with pots, traps, gillnets,
trammel nets, or bottom longlines yearround in the proposed Grammanik Bank
closed area and in the existing
seasonally closed mutton snapper
spawning aggregation area off the
southwest coast of St. Croix, U.S. Virgin
Islands and the red hind spawning
aggregation areas east of St. Croix and
west of Puerto Rico (Bajo de Cico,
Tourmaline Bank, and Abrir La Sierra
Bank). See 50 CFR 622.33(a)(1) and (2)
for the coordinates of these existing
seasonally closed areas. The year-round
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prohibition on use of these gear types
within these discrete spawning
aggregation sites would protect EFH and
contribute to needed reductions in
fishing mortality.
To further minimize the adverse
impacts of fishing on EFH in the EEZ,
the proposed rule would establish
several additional regulatory
requirements. For all vessels that fish
for or possess Caribbean spiny lobster or
Caribbean reef fish in or from the EEZ,
the proposed rule would require at least
one buoy that floats at the surface be
attached to all traps or pots fished
individually, and at least one such buoy
be attached at each end of trap lines
linking traps or pots. This is intended to
more readily identify the location of
traps and, thus, preclude the practice of
using a grapnel hook to locate and
retrieve unmarked traps which results
in substantial damage to EFH. It should
also minimize the loss of traps and
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subsequent adverse effects of ghost
fishing.
To enhance compatibility with
regulations in the waters of Puerto Rico
and the U.S. Virgin Islands and, thereby,
enhance enforceability and compliance,
the proposed rule would amend current
requirements for trap construction to
require one degradable escape panel,
which could be the trap door if it is
attached with the required degradable
fasteners and is located on the side of
the trap.
For all commercial and recreational
vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean
reef species in or from the EEZ, the
proposed rule would require an anchor
retrieval system that ensures the anchor
is recovered by its crown in order to
prevent the anchor from dragging along
the bottom during recovery and
damaging EFH. For a grapnel hook, this
could include an incorporated anchor
rode reversal bar that runs parallel along
the shank, which allows the rode to
reverse and slip back toward the crown.
For a fluke or plow-type anchor (e.g.,
Danforth, Delta, Fortress, etc.), a trip
line consisting of a line from the crown
of the anchor to a surface buoy would
be required.
Prohibition on Filleting Fish
Nassau and goliath grouper cannot be
harvested or possessed in or from the
Caribbean EEZ. However, if fish are
filleted, the ability to properly identify
these species and enforce the
prohibition on harvest and possession is
compromised. To enhance
enforceability of this provision and to
help rebuild the overfished stocks of
Nassau and goliath grouper, filleting of
fish, except for highly migratory species,
in or from the Caribbean EEZ would be
prohibited. Fish subject to this
prohibition would have to be landed
with heads and fins intact. The
proposed rule would provide minor
exceptions to this requirement regarding
‘‘bait’’ and ‘‘consumption at sea’’ as
specified in § 622.38(d) of this proposed
rule.
Additional Provisions Contained in the
Comprehensive Amendment
Establishment or Refinement of
Biological Reference Points and Stock
Status Criteria
The comprehensive amendment
would establish or revise estimates for
MSY, OY, minimum stock size
threshold (MSST), and a maximum
fishing mortality threshold (MFMT) for
various fish stocks.
MSY and OY targets would vary
according to FMUs. MSY and OY would
be set to zero for all species in the
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Caribbean coral reef resource FMU,
excluding those species retained for
data collection purposes. For all other
species, MSY would be established from
recent average catch (C) in the
commercial and recreational fisheries
and from estimates of the current
biomass (BCURR/BMSY) and fishing
mortality (FCURR/FMSY) ratios. MSY
would be equal to C/[(FCURR/FMSY) x
(BCURR/BMSY)]. OY would then be
established as the average yield
associated with a fishing mortality (F)
equal to the fishing mortality to achieve
OY (FOY) where FOY = 0.75FMSY.
For each FMU sub-unit for which
biomass and fishing mortality ratios
have not been estimated through a stock
assessment or other scientific exercise
(i.e., stock status is unknown), the
following estimates will be used: (1) For
species that are not believed to be at risk
based on the best available information,
the FCURR/FMSY proxy is estimated as
0.75 and the BCURR/BMSY proxy is
estimated as 1.25; (2) For species for
which no positive or negative
determination can be made on the status
of their condition, the default fishing
mortality ratio and biomass ratio proxies
would be estimated as 1.00; and (3) For
species that are believed to be at risk
based on the best available information,
the fishing mortality ratio would be
estimated at 1.50 and the biomass ratio
would be estimated as 0.75.
MSST would be established as
BMSY(1–c); where c equals the natural
mortality rate (M) or 0.50, whichever is
smaller. This alternative is preferred for
Caribbean spiny lobster, queen conch,
and all species in the reef fish and coral
reef resource FMUs, excluding those
species retained for data collection
purposes.
MFMT would be based on an MSY
control rule. For all species in the Coral
FMP, MFMT would be zero, excluding
those species retained for data
collection purposes. For Caribbean
queen conch, spiny lobster, and reef
fish, excluding those species retained
for data collection purposes, MFMT
would be based on an allowable
biological catch (ABC), which would be
defined as ABC = FMSY(B). For those
species where FMSY estimates are not
available, natural mortality (M) would
be used as a proxy for FMSY. An OY
control rule would define target catch
limits such that they equal FOY(B).
Establishment of Rebuilding Schedules
Based on the establishment or
revision of the biological reference
points and stock status criteria
described above, several species would
be considered overfished. Therefore, in
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens
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53981
Act, the Council is establishing the
following stock rebuilding schedules.
Nassau Grouper would be rebuilt to
BMSY in 25 years, using the formula
TMIN (10 years) + one generation time
(15 years) = 25 years.
Goliath Grouper would be rebuilt to
BMSY in 30 years, using the formula
TMIN (10 years) + one generation time
(20 years) = 30 years.
Queen Conch would be rebuilt to
BMSY in 15 years, using the formula
TMIN (10 years) + one generation time (5
years) = 15 years.
Grouper Unit 4 (including red, black,
tiger, yellowfin, yellowedge and misty
grouper) would be rebuilt to BMSY in 10
years.
Standardized Bycatch Reporting
The comprehensive amendment
would establish a standardized bycatch
reporting methodology throughout the
Council’s area of jurisdiction by using
existing databases in addition to
revising certain other existing databases.
Use of the Marine Recreational Fishery
Statistics Survey database would
provide additional bycatch information
on the recreational and subsistence
sectors. The Council and NMFS would
also consult with Puerto Rico and the
U.S. Virgin Islands in an effort to
modify the state trip ticket systems
currently in place in the U.S. Caribbean
to require standardized collection of
bycatch data.
Designation of EFH and HAPCs
The comprehensive amendment
would describe and identify EFH
according to functional relationships
between life history stages of federally
managed species and Caribbean marine
and estuarine habitats. For spiny
lobster, queen conch and reef fish, EFH
in the U.S. Caribbean would consist of
all waters from mean high water to the
outer boundary of the EEZ, which are
used by eggs and larvae, and seagrass,
benthic algae, mangrove, coral, and live/
hard bottom substrates from mean high
water to 100 fathoms (183 m) depth,
which are used by other life stages. EFH
for the coral fishery in the U.S.
Caribbean consists of all waters from
mean low water to the outer boundary
of the EEZ, which is used by larvae, and
all coral and hard bottom substrates
from mean low water to 100 fathoms (83
m) depth, which are used by other life
stages.
The comprehensive amendment
would designate HAPCs in the Reef Fish
FMP based on confirmed spawning
locations and on areas or sites identified
as having particular ecological
importance to managed species. (See
Section 6.7.1.3 of the comprehensive
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amendment for more detailed
description of the respective HAPCs).
Based on the confirmed occurrence of
spawning in these particular areas,
HAPCs in the Reef Fish FMP would be
designated off of Puerto Rico at
Tourmaline Bank/Buoy 8, Abrir La
Sierra Bank/Buoy 6, Bajo de Cico, and
Vieques, El Seco. Off St. Croix, HAPCs
for reef fish would include the mutton
snapper spawning aggregation area (50
CFR 622.33(a)(1)) and Lang Bank, (50
CFR 622.33(a)(2)(i)). Off St. Thomas,
HAPCs would be designated as Hind
Bank Marine Conservation District (50
CFR 622.33(b)(1)) and Grammanik Bank
(50 CFR 622.33(a)(3)). Based on habitat
areas or sites identified as having
particular ecological importance to
Caribbean reef fish species, HAPCs
would be designated off Puerto Rico at
´
Hacienda la Esperanza, Manitı; Bajuras
and Tiberones, Isabela; Cabezas de San
Juan, Fajardo; JOBANNERR, Jobos Bay;
Bioluminescent Bays, Vieques;
´
Boqueron State Forest; Pantano Cibuco,
´
˜
Vega Baja; Pinones State Forest; Rıo
´
Espiritu Santo, Rıo Grande; Seagrass
beds of Culebra Island (nine sites
designated as Resource Category 1 and
two additional sites); and Northwest
Vieques seagrass west of Mosquito Pier,
Vieques. Off St. Thomas, HAPCs would
be designated off southeastern St.
Thomas, including Cas Key and the
mangrove lagoon in Great St. James Bay;
and Saba Island/Perseverance Bay,
including Flat Key and Black Point Reef.
Off St. Croix, HAPCs would be
designated as Salt River Bay National
Historical Park and Ecological Preserve
and Marine Reserve and Wildlife
Sanctuary; Altona Lagoon; Great Pond;
South Shore Industrial Area; and Sandy
Point National Wildlife Refuge.
For the Coral Reef FMP HAPCs would
be designated as those EFH habitat areas
or sites identified as having particular
ecological importance to Caribbean
coral species. (See Section 6.7.1.3 of the
comprehensive amendment for more
detailed description of the respective
HAPCs). Off Puerto Rico, these include
˜
Luis Pena Channel, Culebra; Mona/
Monito; La Parguera, Lajas; Caja de
Muertos, Ponce; Tourmaline Reef;
´
Guanica state Forest; Punta Petrona,
Santa Isabel; Ceiba state Forest; La
Cordillera, Fajardo; Guayama Reefs;
Steps and Tres Palmas, Rincon; Los
Corchos Reef, Culebra; and Desecheo
Reefs, Desecheo. Off St. Croix, HAPCs
would be designated at the St. Croix
Coral Reef Area of Particular Concern,
including the East End Marine Park;
Buck Island Reef National Monument;
South Shore Industrial Area Patch Reef
and Deep Reef System; Frederiksted
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Reef System; Cane Bay; and Green Cay
Wildlife Refuge.
Memorandums of Understanding
(MOUs)
The comprehensive amendment also
proposes to develop MOUs to achieve
cooperative management and
compatible regulatory regimes. The
comprehensive amendment proposes to
develop a MOU between NMFS and the
U.S. Virgin Islands government leading
to the development of compatible
regulations to achieve the objectives for
Nassau grouper set forth in the
Council’s Reef Fish FMP in U.S. Virgin
Islands and Federal waters of the U.S.
Caribbean. In addition, the amendment
proposes to develop an MOU between
NMFS and the governments of Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands to
develop compatible regulations to
achieve the management objectives set
forth in the Council’s Queen Conch
FMP in state and Federal waters of the
U.S. Caribbean.
Classification
At this time, NMFS has not
determined that the comprehensive
amendment that this proposed rule
would implement is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable laws. NMFS, in making that
determination, will take into account
the data, views, and comments received
during the comment period on this
proposed rule.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared a final supplemental
environmental impact statement for this
amendment; a notice of availability was
published on June 24, 2005 (70 FR
36582).
The Council in conjunction with
NMFS prepared an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA) as required by
section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act. The IRFA describes the economic
impact this proposed rule, if adopted,
would have on small entities. A
description of the action, why it is being
considered, and the legal basis for this
action are contained at the beginning of
this section in the preamble and in the
SUMMARY section of the preamble. A
summary of the analysis follows. A copy
of this analysis is available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES).
The proposed rule would implement
an integrated FMP amendment that will
bring the Caribbean Council’s FMPs for
spiny lobster, queen conch, reef fish,
corals, and reef associated plants and
invertebrates into full compliance with
requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. The Magnuson-Stevens Act
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provides the statutory basis for the
proposed rule. The objectives of the
proposed rule are to: (1) define FMUs
and FMU sub-units, (2) specify
biological reference points and stock
status determination criteria, (3)
regulate fishing mortality, (4) rebuild
overfished fisheries, (5) conserve and
protect yellowfin grouper, (6) achieve
bycatch mandates, and (7) achieve the
EFH mandates.
The proposed rule would affect
commercial and recreational fishermen
and charter fishing services in Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. In
Puerto Rico, there are approximately
1,758 commercial fishers, of which
1,262 fishers are full-time and 496 are
part-time. The number of commercial
fishers in the U.S. Virgin Islands is
estimated to be 349. Approximately 50
entities offer year-round charter services
in the U.S. Caribbean, with the majority
located in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
NMFS expects that 88 Puerto Rican
commercial fishers, or 5 percent, and 50
U.S. Virgin Islands commercial fishers,
or 10 percent, and 3 of the charter
services, or 5 percent operate in the EEZ
and may be affected by this proposed
rule. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards for
the finfish, shellfish, and other marine
fishing industries are the same; each has
a size standard of $3.5 million in annual
sales. The SBA size standard for the
charter fishing industry is $6.0 million
in annual sales. NMFS assumes that all
of the commercial fishers in Puerto
Rico, all of the commercial fishers in the
U.S. Virgin Islands, and all of the
charter fishing services that operate in
the U.S. Caribbean EEZ are small
businesses. Thus, NMFS expects that a
total of 6.5 percent of small businesses
in commercial fishing and 5 percent of
small businesses in charter fishing
services may be affected by this
proposed rule.
The proposed rule would: (1) prohibit
fishing for or possession of queen conch
in the EEZ, with the exception of Lang
Bank east of St. Croix; (2a) move
aquarium trade species of Caribbean
coral and reef fish from a management
to a data collection only category,
thereby removing existing fishery
management restrictions on these
species; (2b) move all species of
Caribbean conch, with the exception of
queen conch, to a data collection only
category, thereby removing fishery
management restrictions on these
species; (3) close the EEZ to the
possession of red, black, tiger,
yellowfin, and yellowedge grouper from
February 1 through April 30; (4) close
the EEZ off the west coast of Puerto Rico
to the possession of red hind from
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December 1 through February 28; (5)
close the EEZ to the possession of black,
blackfin, vermilion, and silk snapper
from October 1 through December 31;
(6) close the EEZ to the possession of
mutton snapper and lane snapper from
April 1 through June 30; (7a) implement
an immediate prohibition against the
use of gillnets and trammel nets to fish
for Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean
spiny lobster in the EEZ; (7b) require
gillnets used to fish for other species in
the EEZ to be tended at all times; (8)
prohibit the filleting of fish in the EEZ
and require that fish captured or
possessed in the EEZ be landed with
heads and fins intact, with minor
exceptions; (9) close an area of the
Grammanik Bank to fishing for or
possessing any species of fish, except
highly migratory species, from February
1 through April 30 of each year; (10)
amend current requirements for trap
construction such that only one escape
panel is required, which could be the
door; (11a) require at least one buoy that
floats on the surface for all traps/pots
fished individually for all fishing
vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean
spiny lobster or Caribbean reef fish
species in or from the EEZ; (11b) require
at least one buoy at each end of trap
lines linking traps/pots for all fishing
vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean
spiny lobster or Caribbean reef fish
species in or from the EEZ; (11c)
prohibit use of pots/traps, gill/trammel
nets, and bottom longlines on coral or
hard bottom year-round in the existing
seasonally closed areas and Grammanik
Bank in the EEZ; and (11d) require an
anchor retrieval system for all vessels
that fish for or possess Caribbean reef
fish species in or from the EEZ.
Identification, to the extent
practicable, of all relevant federal rules
that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposed rule is incorporated
into the following discussion of
compliance requirements and their
associated economic impacts.
The queen conch fishery occurs
primarily in state waters.
Approximately 92 percent of Puerto
Rican queen conch harvest is reported
to be obtained from state waters of
Puerto Rico, while 60 percent of U.S.
Virgin Islands queen conch harvests is
estimated to be harvested from state
waters. Only 18 fishermen were
observed harvesting queen conch in the
EEZ in the U.S. Caribbean in 1999 (2
from the U.S. Virgin Islands and 16 from
Puerto Rico). These 18 fishers
represented 7 percent of 260 U.S.
Caribbean queen conch fishers (209 in
Puerto Rico and 51 in the U.S. Virgin
Islands), or less than 1 percent of all
small commercial fishing businesses in
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the U.S. Caribbean. The 16 fishers from
Puerto Rico represent 8 percent of queen
conch fishers from that area, while the
2 fishers from the U.S. Virgin Islands
represent 4 percent of U.S. Virgin
Islands queen conch fishers. Because of
water depth in the EEZ, SCUBA is the
primary harvest gear and likely the only
gear used to harvest queen conch in the
EEZ. Consequently, harvests of queen
conch in the EEZ are limited to a great
extent by the amount of time a diver can
safely work underwater. It is likely that
most to all of the 16 fishers from Puerto
Rico that harvest queen conch from the
EEZ generate the bulk of their revenues
and profits from queen conch taken
from shallower state waters.
Furthermore, it is likely that their
revenues and profits from queen conch
harvested from the EEZ represent a
small proportion of their total revenues
and profits, and the proposed
prohibition against fishing for or
possession of queen conch in the EEZ,
with the exception of Lang Bank, is not
expected to have a significant adverse
economic impact on these fishers.
However, revenues and profits from
queen conch fishing in the EEZ
represent a larger proportion of total
revenues and profits from queen conch
for the 2 U.S. Virgin Islands queen
conch fishers, and the prohibition could
have a greater adverse economic impact
on these fishers. Additionally, if Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands were to
further restrict queen conch fishing in
state waters, the combined Federal and
state actions would have a much greater
adverse economic impact on these
fishers.
Any small business that harvests
species of Caribbean conch, other than
queen conch, or aquarium trade species
of Caribbean coral or reef fish in the EEZ
could potentially benefit from the
proposed movement of these species to
a data-collection-only category because
this would eliminate existing Federal
fishing restrictions on these species.
However, any economic benefit that is
obtained by small businesses from this
proposed movement is expected to be
negligible because harvest of these
species occurs predominantly in state
waters.
The U.S. Caribbean reef fish fishery is
essentially a multi-species fishery in
that fishers catch multiple species of
reef fish on any given trip.
Consequently, the harvest of any
particular species likely represents a
small proportion of total revenue and
profit for any given trip. In addition to
the closures contained in the proposed
rule, there is currently a seasonal
closure from December 1 through
February 28 to all fishing in red hind
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53983
spawning areas and a seasonal closure
from March 1 through June 30 to all
fishing in the mutton snapper spawning
aggregation area. To mitigate any
revenue and profit losses that may result
from the proposed closures, commercial
fishers and charter fishing operations
that fish for reef fish in the EEZ may
intensify fishing before and after the
seasonal closures or relocate to state
waters. The mitigating economic effects
of these behavioral changes cannot be
forecast. Nonetheless, the combined
seasonal closures may have a significant
adverse economic impact on up to 6.5
percent of the small commercial fishing
businesses and up to 5 percent of the
small charter fishing businesses.
The prohibition against the use of
gillnets and trammel nets to catch
Caribbean spiny lobster and reef fish
would require the adoption of other
gear, most likely traps/pots, to harvest
these species. NMFS does not believe,
however, that Puerto Rican fishers
significantly use either gillnets or
trammel nets to fish in the EEZ because
of water depth. Consequently, the
prohibition would likely affect a small
number of the small commercial fishing
businesses in Puerto Rico that operate in
the EEZ. In the U.S. Virgin Islands, more
fishable habitat exists that can be
targeted by nets due to the 3 nm (5.6
km) state boundary. Divers commonly
deploy nets in shallower portions of
Lang Bank off St. Croix, where they
place the nets in the migratory pathways
of reef fish. Nets accounted for 33
percent of parrotfish landings and 11
percent of surgeonfish landings in the
U.S. Virgin Islands from 1994 through
2002. Furthermore, the use of gillnets
and trammel nets has increased among
St. Croix fishers because they have
switched from traps due to frequent trap
theft and vandalism. Consequently, the
prohibition against the use of gill and
trammel nets is expected to have a
greater adverse economic impact on the
small commercial fishing businesses in
the U.S. Virgin Islands that operate in
the EEZ.
The prohibition against the use of gill
and trammel nets in the EEZ would not
apply to the harvest of ballyhoo, gar,
and flying fish, which are commonly
found near the surface. When used to
harvest these species, the nets must be
tended at all times. Ballyhoo and gar are
used as bait. At present, there is
insufficient information to determine
the economic impact on any small
businesses that may currently harvest
ballyhoo, gar, or flying fish in the EEZ
by using untended gill and trammel
nets.
Since 1990 and 1993, there have been
prohibitions against the harvest and
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possession of Nassau grouper and
Goliath grouper in the EEZ,
respectively; however, anecdotal
evidence suggests that illegal harvest
and possession may occur. Prohibiting
the filleting of all species of fish in the
U.S. Caribbean EEZ, except highly
migratory species or species caught and
used for bait or the crew’s own
consumption, and requiring that all fish
captured or possessed in the EEZ be
landed with heads and fins intact would
improve enforcement of existing
prohibitions and result in reduced
illegal revenues. At the same time, the
prohibition may reduce legal revenues
for those who fish for other species in
the EEZ and fillet their fish due to
limited storage capacity. Since whole
fish take up more space in a vessel than
fillets, harvest per trip may be reduced.
However, since the typical fishing
vessel in the Caribbean EEZ does not
have fish holds and in many cases does
not use coolers, it is expected that a
substantial number of the small
businesses do not fillet their catches in
the EEZ and would not experience a
significant adverse economic impact.
The proposed rule would prohibit
fishing for or possession of any species
of fish, except highly migratory species,
within a 0.44 nm2 (1.5 km2) area of
Grammanik Bank from February 1
through April 30 of each year. The
proposed seasonal Grammanik Bank
closure is expected to have the greatest
adverse economic impact on fishers
who harvest yellowfin grouper because
the reported spawning aggregation of
yellowfin grouper is centered within the
proposed closed area during this time.
As previously discussed, the proposed
rule would close the U.S. EEZ to the
possession of red, black, tiger,
yellowfin, and yellowedge grouper from
February 1 through April 30. The
combined impact of the Grammanik
Bank closure and the February through
April prohibition on yellowfin grouper
fishers in the EEZ would be a
prohibition on fishing for yellowfin
grouper or any other fish in an area of
Grammanik Bank for 3 months and a
ban on the possession of yellowfin
grouper in the EEZ for the same 3
months. To mitigate losses due to the
prohibitions, commercial fishers may
intensify fishing for yellowfin grouper
and other species before and after the
seasonal bans and/or move their fishing
activities to state waters. The 1994
through 2002 average annual landings of
all grouper species caught in both state
and Federal waters in both St. Thomas
and St. John is 22,368 lb (10,146 kg).
The proportion of the grouper species
caught in the EEZ during February
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15:33 Sep 12, 2005
Jkt 205001
through April within this average is
expected to be comparatively small, and
the proportion of the average that
represents yellowfin grouper caught in
the EEZ during those months even
smaller. Average annual landings of
yellowfin grouper in Puerto Rico from
1997 though 2002 is approximately
4,400 lb (1,996 kg). NMFS expects that
the proportion of yellowfin grouper
within this average caught in the EEZ
from February 1 through April 30 is
comparatively small, as well.
Nonetheless, the adverse economic
impact could be significant for some of
the small commercial fishers that
operate in the EEZ.
The proposed rule would require only
one escape panel for traps and pots.
Anecdotal information and the
experience of local fishery management
officials indicate that Caribbean fishers
would be more likely to comply with
such a requirement rather than the
current requirement of two escape
panels. Since the proposed rule would
relax an existing restriction, no adverse
economic impact associated with this
measure is anticipated.
Although the current data collection
system in place in the U.S. Caribbean,
partially funded through Federal grants,
does not require commercial fishers or
charter fishing operations to report
bycatch data, Puerto Rico has agreed to
require that this information be
reported, and the U.S. Virgin Islands has
already incorporated bycatch data into
its reporting requirement. The proposed
rule would require consultation with
Puerto Rico in an effort to add data
fields to its existing mandatory landings
reports in order to include consistent
and standardized bycatch data.
Consequently, the proposed rule does
not directly impose any new reporting
or recordkeeping requirements.
However, the indirect economic impact
of requiring additional reporting
information will accrue to commercial
fishing and charter fishing businesses in
Puerto Rico through additional time to
report bycatch information. At present,
there is insufficient information to
quantify the amount of time necessary
to report such information and how this
might affect business operation;
however, the individual burden is not
expected to be substantial and not
impose a significant adverse impact.
The use of traps and pots in the EEZ
is expected to be infrequent because of
water depth. Nevertheless, for those
who use traps and pots in the EEZ, the
requirement to have at least one buoy
that floats on the surface of all traps or
pots fished individually and have at
least one buoy at each end of trap lines
linking traps/pots is not expected to
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
impose a significant adverse economic
impact since the additional gear
expenses should be minor.
The proposed prohibition against the
use of traps and pots, gill and trammel
nets, and bottom longlines in currently
existing, seasonally closed areas and the
proposed Grammanik Bank seasonal
closure represents a ban against the use
of traditional gear types in these areas.
This prohibition could be especially
burdensome to U.S. Virgin Islands
commercial fishers from St. Croix
because they have already lost fishing
areas in state waters due to U.S. Virgin
Islands closures. The majority of
fishable habitat off St. Croix is primarily
isolated to Lang Bank and, currently, the
head of Lang Bank is closed to all
fishing from December 1 through
February 28 each year. The proposed
prohibition would ban the use of
traditional gear in an area that
encompasses approximately the
easternmost half of the Bank.
Consequently, NMFS expects that the
ban will have a significant adverse
economic impact on those St. Croix
commercial fishers that currently use
traps and pots, gills and trammel nets,
and/or bottom longlines in the eastern
half of the Bank.
The owner or operator of any fishing
vessel, recreational or commercial, that
fishes for or possesses Caribbean reef
fish in or from the Caribbean EEZ must
ensure that the vessel uses only an
anchor retrieval system that recovers the
anchor by its crown, thereby preventing
the anchor from dragging along the
bottom during recovery and damaging
habitat. NMFS assumes that most
commercial and charter fishing vessels
that operate in the EEZ do not currently
have an anchor retrieval system that
meets the proposed requirement. For
those fishers that have a grapnel hook,
this would require incorporating an
anchor rode reversal bar that runs
parallel along the shank, and for those
that have a fluke or plow-type anchor,
a trip line consisting of a line from the
crown of the anchor to a surface buoy
would be required. There is currently
insufficient information to quantify the
number of fishing vessels that use the
different types of anchors and the costs
of making necessary modifications.
However, NMFS expects the cost will
not represent a significant adverse
economic impact on these small
businesses.
Significant alternatives to the
proposed actions that were considered
would have increased the significant
adverse economic impact on small
businesses. One alternative would have
banned fishing for or possession of
queen conch in the entire EEZ, which
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could have had a greater adverse
economic impact on the 7 percent of
small businesses that harvest queen
conch in the EEZ. Although sufficient
data are not available to determine the
impact of this rejected alternative on the
relatively few individual vessel
operators that harvest queen conch in
the EEZ, it is expected that few, if any,
such operators have a total dependence
on harvest from the EEZ because the
majority of queen conch are harvested
from state waters. Regardless, the
opportunity to shift fishing effort from
the EEZ to state waters would tend to
mitigate any adverse impacts.
Alternatives to the preferred seasonal
bans on the possession of mutton
snapper and lane snapper, red hind, and
the respective snapper and grouper
species would have banned the
possession of all species managed by the
Caribbean Council for 3 months, 6
months, or a year. Such bans would
have had greater adverse economic
impacts than the proposed rule.
Alternatives to the proposed prohibition
on the use of gillnets and trammel nets
in the EEZ considered closing various
areas of the EEZ to fishing for or
possession of all species or eliminating
the use of fish traps in the EEZ, which
would have had greater adverse
economic impacts. Alternatives to the
proposed ban on filleting of fish in the
EEZ would have established seasonal or
area closures to protect spawning stocks
of Nassau and Goliath grouper, which
would have had greater adverse
economic impact on fishers, especially
St. Croix fishers. One alternative to the
proposed seasonal ban on fishing for or
possession of all fish in the Grammanik
Bank, except highly migratory species,
would have increased the size and
length of the ban and the second
alternative would have added a yearround ban on fishing for or possession
of yellowfin grouper in the EEZ. Both of
these alternatives would have increased
the adverse economic impact. Finally,
an alternative to the proposed
modification of the trip ticket system to
include bycatch information would
have implemented a Federal permit
system for commercial and charter
fishing businesses that operate in the
EEZ, with a mandatory monthly
reporting requirement, and would have
had a greater adverse impact than the
proposed action.
List of Subjects
50 CFR Part 600
Administrative practice and
procedure, Confidential business
information, Fisheries, Fishing, Fishing
vessels, Foreign relations,
Intergovernmental relations, Penalties,
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15:33 Sep 12, 2005
Jkt 205001
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Statistics.
50 CFR Part 622
Fisheries, Fishing, Puerto Rico,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Virgin Islands.
Dated: September 2, 2005.
John Oliver,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Operations, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR parts 600 and 622 are
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 600—MAGNUSON-STEVENS
ACT PROVISIONS
1. The authority citation for part 600,
Subpart H continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 561 and 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq.
§ 600.725
[Amended]
2. In § 600.725, amend the table in
paragraph (v), section V., as follows:
a. Under the heading ‘‘1. Caribbean
Spiny Lobster Fishery (FMP)’’, remove
entry ‘‘C’’ from the first and second
columns; redesignate entries ‘‘D’’ and
‘‘E’’ as ‘‘C’’ and ‘‘D’’, respectively, in the
first and second columns; and remove
the words ‘‘gillnet, trammel net’’ from
the second column in the newly
redesignated entry ‘‘D’’; and
b. Under the heading ‘‘2. Caribbean
Shallow Water Reef Fish Fishery
(FMP)’’, remove entry ‘‘C’’ from the first
and second columns; and redesignate
entry ‘‘D’’ as ‘‘C’’ in the first and second
columns.
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
3. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
4. In § 622.2, the definition of
‘‘Caribbean conch resource’’ is removed,
and a definition of ‘‘Caribbean queen
conch’’ is added in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
§ 622.2
Definitions and acronyms.
*
*
*
*
*
Caribbean queen conch means the
species, Strombus gigus, or a part
thereof.
*
*
*
*
*
5. In § 622.6, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.6
*
Vessel and gear identification.
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
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*
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*
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53985
(A) Caribbean EEZ. Traps or pots used
in the Caribbean spiny lobster or
Caribbean reef fish fisheries that are
fished individually, rather than tied
together in a trap line, must have at least
one buoy attached that floats on the
surface. Traps or pots used in the
Caribbean spiny lobster or Caribbean
reef fish fisheries that are tied together
in a trap line must have at least one
buoy that floats at the surface attached
at each end of the trap line. Each buoy
must display the official number and
color code assigned to the vessel by
Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands,
whichever is applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
6. In § 622.31, paragraph (l) is added
to read as follows:
§ 622.31
Prohibited gear and methods.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Gillnets and trammel nets in the
Caribbean EEZ. A gillnet or trammel net
may not be used in the Caribbean EEZ
to fish for Caribbean reef fish or
Caribbean spiny lobster. Possession of a
gillnet or trammel net and any
Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean spiny
lobster in or from the Caribbean EEZ is
prima facie evidence of violation of this
paragraph (l). A gillnet or trammel net
used in the Caribbean EEZ to fish for
any other species, including species in
the family Exocoetidae, flyingfishes, or
the family Belonidae, needlefishes, must
be tended at all times.
7. In § 622.32, paragraph (b)(1)(ii) is
revised, and paragraph (b)(1)(iv) is
added to read as follows:
§ 622.32 Prohibited and limited-harvest
species.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) No person may fish for or possess
goliath grouper and Nassau grouper in
or from the Caribbean EEZ. Such fish
caught in the Caribbean EEZ must be
released immediately with a minimum
of harm.
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) No person may fish for, or possess
on board a fishing vessel, a Caribbean
queen conch in or from the Caribbean
EEZ, except during October through
June in the area east of 64°34′ W.
longitude which includes Lang Bank
east of St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
*
*
*
*
*
8. In § 622.33, paragraph (a)
introductory text and paragraph (a)(3)
are revised, and paragraphs (a)(4)
through (a)(7) are added to read as
follows:
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§ 622.33 Caribbean EEZ seasonal and/or
area closures.
(a) Seasonal closures. In addition to
the other restrictions specified in this
paragraph (a), fishing with pots, traps,
(3) Grammanik Bank closed area. (i)
The Grammanik Bank closed area is
bounded by rhumb lines connecting, in
order, the following points:
bottom longlines, gillnets or trammel
nets is prohibited year-round in the
closed areas specified in paragraphs
(a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(3) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
Point
North lat.
West long.
A
18°11.898′
64°56.328′
B
18°11.645′
64°56.225′
C
18°11.058′
64°57.810′
D
18°11.311′
64°57.913′
A
18°11.898′
64°56.328′
(ii) From February through April,
each year, no person may fish for or
possess any species of fish, except
highly migratory species, in or from the
Grammanik Bank closed area. This
prohibition on possession does not
apply to such fish harvested and landed
ashore prior to the closure. For the
purpose of paragraph (a)(4) of this
section, ‘‘fish’’ means finfish, mollusks,
crustaceans, and all other forms of
marine animal and plant life other than
marine mammals and birds. ‘‘Highly
migratory species’’ means bluefin,
bigeye, yellowfin, albacore, and skipjack
tunas; swordfish; sharks (listed in
Appendix A to Part 635 of this title);
white marlin, blue marlin, sailfish, and
longbill spearfish.
(4) Red, black, tiger, yellowfin, or
yellowedge grouper. From February
through April, each year, no person may
fish for or possess red, black, tiger,
yellowfin, or yellowedge grouper in or
from the Caribbean EEZ. This
prohibition on possession does not
apply to such grouper harvested and
landed ashore prior to the closure.
(5) Additional red hind closure. From
December through February, each year,
no person may fish for or possess red
hind in or from the Caribbean EEZ west
of 67°10′ W. longitude. This prohibition
on possession does not apply to red
hind harvested and landed ashore prior
to the closure.
(6) Vermilion, black, silk, or blackfin
snapper. From October through
December, each year, no person may
fish for or possess vermilion, black, silk,
or blackfin snapper in or from the
Caribbean EEZ. This prohibition on
possession does not apply to such
snapper harvested and landed ashore
prior to the closure.
(7) Lane or mutton snapper. From
April through June, each year, no person
may fish for or possess lane or mutton
snapper in or from the Caribbean EEZ.
This prohibition on possession does not
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15:33 Sep 12, 2005
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apply to such snapper harvested and
landed ashore prior to the closure.
*
*
*
*
*
9. In § 622.38, paragraphs (a), (d), and
(f) are revised to read as follows:
§ 622.38
Landing fish intact.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) The following must be maintained
with head and fins intact: cobia, king
mackerel, and Spanish mackerel in or
from the Gulf, Mid-Atlantic, or South
Atlantic EEZ, except as specified for
king mackerel in paragraph (g) of this
section; dolphin and wahoo in or from
the Atlantic EEZ; South Atlantic
snapper-grouper in or from the South
Atlantic EEZ, except as specified in
paragraph (h) of this section; finfish in
or from the Caribbean EEZ, except as
specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section; and finfish in or from the
Gulf EEZ, except as specified in
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
Such fish may be eviscerated, gilled,
and scaled, but must otherwise be
maintained in a whole condition.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) In the Gulf EEZ or Caribbean EEZ:
(1) Bait is exempt from the
requirement to be maintained with head
and fins intact.
(i) For the purpose of this paragraph
(d)(1), ‘‘bait’’ means—
(A) Packaged, headless fish fillets that
have the skin attached and are frozen or
refrigerated;
(B) Headless fish fillets that have the
skin attached and are held in brine; or
(C) Small pieces no larger than 3 in3
(7.6 cm3) or strips no larger than 3
inches by 9 inches (7.6 cm by 22.9 cm)
that have the skin attached and are
frozen, refrigerated, or held in brine.
(ii) Paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section
notwithstanding, a finfish or part
thereof possessed in or landed from the
Gulf EEZ or Caribbean EEZ that is
subsequently sold or purchased as a
finfish species, rather than as bait, is not
bait.
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(2) Legal-sized finfish possessed for
consumption at sea on the harvesting
vessel are exempt from the requirement
to have head and fins intact, provided—
(i) Such finfish do not exceed any
applicable bag limit;
(ii) Such finfish do not exceed 1.5 lb
(680 g) of finfish parts per person
aboard; and
(iii) The vessel is equipped to cook
such finfish on board.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Queen conch in or from the
Caribbean EEZ must be maintained with
meat and shell intact.
*
*
*
*
*
10. In § 622.40, paragraph (b)(1)(i) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.40
Limitations on traps and pots.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) A fish trap used or possessed in the
Caribbean EEZ must have a panel
located on one side of the trap,
excluding the top, bottom, and side
containing the trap entrance. The
opening covered by the panel must
measure not less than 8 by 8 inches
(20.3 by 20.3 cm). The mesh size of the
panel may not be smaller than the mesh
size of the trap. The panel must be
attached to the trap with untreated jute
twine with a diameter not exceeding 1/
8 inch (3.2 mm). An access door may
serve as the panel, provided it is on an
appropriate side, it is hinged only at its
bottom, its only other fastening is
untreated jute twine with a diameter not
exceeding 1/8 inch (3.2 mm), and such
fastening is at the top of the door so that
the door will fall open when such twine
degrades. Jute twine used to secure a
panel may not be wrapped or
overlapped.
*
*
*
*
*
11. In § 622.41, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
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Species specific limitations.
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(b) Caribbean reef fish anchoring
restriction. The owner or operator of any
fishing vessel, recreational or
commercial, that fishes for or possesses
Caribbean reef fish in or from the
Caribbean EEZ must ensure that the
vessel uses only an anchor retrieval
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system that recovers the anchor by its
crown, thereby preventing the anchor
from dragging along the bottom during
recovery. For a grapnel hook, this could
include an incorporated anchor rode
reversal bar that runs parallel along the
shank, which allows the rode to reverse
and slip back towards the crown. For a
fluke- or plow-type anchor, a trip line
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consisting of a line from the crown of
the anchor to a surface buoy would be
required.
*
*
*
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*
12. In Appendix A to Part 622, Tables
1 and 2 are revised, and Table 5 is
added to read as follows:
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Atlantic triton’s trumpet, Charonia
variegata
Table 5 of Appendix A to Part 622—
Caribbean Conch Resources
Queen conch, Strombus gigas
The following species are included for
data collection purposes only:
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Cameo helmet, Cassis
madagascarensis
Green star shell, Astrea tuber
Hawkwing conch, Strombus raninus
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Milk conch, Strombus costatus
Roostertail conch, Strombus gallus
West Indian fighting conch, Strombus
pugilis
True tulip, Fasciolaria tulipa
[FR Doc. 05–17945 Filed 9–12–05; 8:45 am]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 176 / Tuesday, September 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 176 (Tuesday, September 13, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53979-54004]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-17945]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Parts 600 and 622
[Docket No. 050729208-5208-01; I.D. 060805B]
RIN 0648-AP51
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Comprehensive Amendment to the Fishery Management Plans of the U.S.
Caribbean
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues this proposed rule to implement a comprehensive
amendment prepared by the Caribbean Fishery Management Council
(Council) to amend its Reef Fish, Spiny Lobster, Queen Conch, and Coral
Fishery Management Plans (FMPs). The comprehensive amendment is
designed to ensure the FMPs are fully compliant with the provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act). This proposed rule would redefine the fishery management
units for the FMPs; establish seasonal closures; impose gear
restrictions and requirements; revise requirements for marking pots and
traps; and prohibit the filleting of fish at sea. In addition, the
comprehensive amendment would establish biological reference points and
stock status criteria; establish rebuilding schedules and strategies to
end overfishing and rebuild overfished stocks; provide for standardized
collection of bycatch data; minimize bycatch and bycatch mortality to
the extent practicable; designate essential fish habitat (EFH) and EFH
habitat areas of particular concern (HAPCs); and minimize adverse
impacts on such habitat to the extent practicable. The intended effect
of this proposed rule is to achieve optimum yield in the fisheries and
provide social and economic benefits associated with maintaining
healthy stocks.
DATES: Comments must be received no later than 5 p.m., eastern time, on
September 28, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on the proposed rule by any of the
following methods:
E-mail: 0648-AP51.Proposed@noaa.gov. Include in the
subject line of the e-mail comment the following document identifier
0648-AP51.
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Steve Branstetter, NMFS, Southeast Regional Office,
263 13\th\ Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701.
Fax: 727-824-5308, Attention: Steve Branstetter.
Copies of documents supporting this action may be obtained by
contacting the NMFS Southeast Regional Office at the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steve Branstetter, 727-824-5305; fax
727-824-5308; e-mail Steve.Branstetter@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The fisheries for spiny lobster, queen
conch, reef fish, and corals and reef-associated invertebrates in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off Puerto Rico and of the U.S. Virgin
Islands are managed under the respective fishery management plans
prepared by the Council. These fishery management plans are implemented
under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act by regulations at 50
CFR part 622. This proposed rule would implement Amendment 2 to the FMP
for the Spiny Lobster Fishery, Amendment 1 to the FMP for Queen Conch
Resources, Amendment 3 to the FMP for the Reef Fish Fishery, and
Amendment 2 to the FMP for the Corals and Reef Associated Plants and
Invertebrates of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, known
collectively as the Comprehensive Amendment to the FMPs of the
Caribbean.
Background
A notice of availability for the comprehensive amendment was
published in the Federal Register on June 16, 2005 (70 FR 35053). This
proposed rule and the comprehensive amendment are intended to address
various requirements set forth in the Magnuson-Stevens Act: (1) Assess
and specify the present and probable future condition of, and the
maximum sustainable yield and optimum yield from, fisheries; (2)
specify objective and measurable criteria for identifying when a
fishery is overfished; (3) end overfishing and rebuild overfished
stocks, and prevent overfishing in fisheries that are identified as
approaching an overfished condition; (4) establish a standardized
reporting methodology to assess the amount and type of bycatch
occurring in the fishery and implement conservation and management
measures that minimize bycatch and bycatch mortality to the extent
practicable; and (5) identify, describe, and designate EFH and EFH-
HAPCs for managed stocks, minimize to the extent practicable adverse
effects on such habitat caused by fishing, and identify other actions
to encourage the conservation and enhancement of such habitat.
Provisions of This Proposed Rule
Revision of Fishery Management Units (FMUs)
This proposed rule would redefine the FMUs in all the Council FMPs.
FMUs define the specific species that are to be the target of
conservation and management.
The proposed rule would remove from the respective FMUs, species
found predominantly in the waters of Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin
Islands (rather than in Federal waters). In addition, those species for
which data are inadequate to establish a need for conservation and
management, biological reference points, or stock status determination
criteria would remain in the FMUs for data collection purposes but
would not be subject to Federal regulation at this time. When
[[Page 53980]]
sufficient data are available and, if a need for management is
determined, appropriate regulations would be implemented through
subsequent rulemaking.
Under the proposed rule, Caribbean helmet, flame helmet, Caribbean
vase, and whelk (West Indian top shell) would be removed from the Queen
Conch FMP. All other species in the Caribbean conch FMU, except queen
conch, and all aquarium trade species in the Reef Fish and Coral Reef
FMPs, would be retained in the respective FMUs for data collection
purposes only. Tables 1 and 2 of Appendix A to 50 CFR Part 622
(Caribbean Coral Reef Resources and Caribbean Reef Fish, respectively)
would be revised accordingly; Table 5 of Appendix A to 50 CFR Part 622
(Caribbean Conch Resources) would be added; and the definition of
``Caribbean conch resource'' would be removed and replaced by a
definition of ``queen conch.''
The proposed change would provide for collection of data on
aquarium trade species and other species retained in the respective
FMUs for data collection purposes only, but would remove these species
from Federal regulations at this time. Consequently, existing
regulations at 50 CFR 622.41(b) defining a marine aquarium fish as ``a
Caribbean reef fish that is smaller than 5.5 inches (14.0 cm) TL'' and
restricting the harvest of a marine aquarium fish to hand-held dip nets
or hand-held slurp guns would be eliminated. The regulation at 50 CFR
622.32(b)(1)(ii) prohibiting the harvest and possession of
butterflyfish and seahorses from Federal waters of the U.S. Caribbean
also would be eliminated. There would be no specification of maximum
sustainable yield (MSY), optimum yield (OY), or stock status
determination criteria for species retained for data collection
purposes only.
Seasonal Closures
This proposed rule would establish several seasonal closures to
reduce fishing mortality, provide protection to key species during peak
spawning seasons, protect EFH, and help to rebuild overfished fish
stocks or keep healthy stocks from becoming overfished. For snappers,
fishing for or possessing black, blackfin, vermilion, or silk snapper,
in or from the Caribbean EEZ would be prohibited from October 1 through
December 31 each year. From April 1 through June 30 each year, fishing
for or possessing lane or mutton snapper in or from the Caribbean EEZ
would also be prohibited. For grouper, fishing for or possessing red,
black, tiger, yellowfin, or yellowedge grouper, in or from the
Caribbean EEZ, would be prohibited from February 1 through April 30
each year. In addition, fishing for or possessing red hind in or from
the Caribbean EEZ would be would be prohibited off the west coast of
Puerto Rico west of 67[deg]10' W. longitude from December 1 through
February each year. Further, to help rebuild overfished grouper species
and to protect EFH, fishing for or possessing any species of fish,
except highly migratory species, in or from the Grammanik Bank closed
area would be prohibited from February 1 to April 30 each year. Highly
migratory species means bluefin, bigeye, yellowfin, albacore, and
skipjack tunas; swordfish; sharks (listed in Appendix A to 50 CFR Part
635); white marlin, blue marlin, sailfish, and longbill spearfish. The
Grammanik Bank closed area is bound by rhumb lines connecting, in
order, the following points:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Point North lat. West long.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A 18[deg]11.898' 64[deg]56.328'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B 18[deg]11.645' 64[deg]56.225'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C 18[deg]11.058' 64[deg]57.810'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D 18[deg]11.311' 64[deg]57.913'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A 18[deg]11.898' 64[deg]56.328'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To reduce fishing mortality and help rebuild the overfished stock
of Caribbean queen conch, the proposed rule would prohibit fishing for
or possessing on board a fishing vessel a Caribbean queen conch in or
from the Caribbean EEZ, except during October through June in the area
east of 64[deg]34' W. longitude which includes Lang Bank east of St.
Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
Restrictions on Gillnets and Trammel Nets
To help achieve necessary reductions in fishing mortality and to
reduce bycatch, the use of gillnets or trammel nets to fish for
Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean spiny lobster would be prohibited in
the Caribbean EEZ. Possession of a gillnet or trammel net and any
Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean spiny lobster in or from the Caribbean
EEZ would be prima facie evidence of a violation of this provision. To
further minimize bycatch and bycatch mortality, the proposed rule would
require any gillnet or trammel net used in the Caribbean EEZ to fish
for any other species, including flying fishes or needlefishes, to be
tended at all times.
Other Gear Restrictions to Minimize Adverse Effects on EFH
This proposed rule would prohibit all fishing with pots, traps,
gillnets, trammel nets, or bottom longlines year-round in the proposed
Grammanik Bank closed area and in the existing seasonally closed mutton
snapper spawning aggregation area off the southwest coast of St. Croix,
U.S. Virgin Islands and the red hind spawning aggregation areas east of
St. Croix and west of Puerto Rico (Bajo de Cico, Tourmaline Bank, and
Abrir La Sierra Bank). See 50 CFR 622.33(a)(1) and (2) for the
coordinates of these existing seasonally closed areas. The year-round
prohibition on use of these gear types within these discrete spawning
aggregation sites would protect EFH and contribute to needed reductions
in fishing mortality.
To further minimize the adverse impacts of fishing on EFH in the
EEZ, the proposed rule would establish several additional regulatory
requirements. For all vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean spiny
lobster or Caribbean reef fish in or from the EEZ, the proposed rule
would require at least one buoy that floats at the surface be attached
to all traps or pots fished individually, and at least one such buoy be
attached at each end of trap lines linking traps or pots. This is
intended to more readily identify the location of traps and, thus,
preclude the practice of using a grapnel hook to locate and retrieve
unmarked traps which results in substantial damage to EFH. It should
also minimize the loss of traps and
[[Page 53981]]
subsequent adverse effects of ghost fishing.
To enhance compatibility with regulations in the waters of Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands and, thereby, enhance enforceability
and compliance, the proposed rule would amend current requirements for
trap construction to require one degradable escape panel, which could
be the trap door if it is attached with the required degradable
fasteners and is located on the side of the trap.
For all commercial and recreational vessels that fish for or
possess Caribbean reef species in or from the EEZ, the proposed rule
would require an anchor retrieval system that ensures the anchor is
recovered by its crown in order to prevent the anchor from dragging
along the bottom during recovery and damaging EFH. For a grapnel hook,
this could include an incorporated anchor rode reversal bar that runs
parallel along the shank, which allows the rode to reverse and slip
back toward the crown. For a fluke or plow-type anchor (e.g., Danforth,
Delta, Fortress, etc.), a trip line consisting of a line from the crown
of the anchor to a surface buoy would be required.
Prohibition on Filleting Fish
Nassau and goliath grouper cannot be harvested or possessed in or
from the Caribbean EEZ. However, if fish are filleted, the ability to
properly identify these species and enforce the prohibition on harvest
and possession is compromised. To enhance enforceability of this
provision and to help rebuild the overfished stocks of Nassau and
goliath grouper, filleting of fish, except for highly migratory
species, in or from the Caribbean EEZ would be prohibited. Fish subject
to this prohibition would have to be landed with heads and fins intact.
The proposed rule would provide minor exceptions to this requirement
regarding ``bait'' and ``consumption at sea'' as specified in Sec.
622.38(d) of this proposed rule.
Additional Provisions Contained in the Comprehensive Amendment
Establishment or Refinement of Biological Reference Points and Stock
Status Criteria
The comprehensive amendment would establish or revise estimates for
MSY, OY, minimum stock size threshold (MSST), and a maximum fishing
mortality threshold (MFMT) for various fish stocks.
MSY and OY targets would vary according to FMUs. MSY and OY would
be set to zero for all species in the Caribbean coral reef resource
FMU, excluding those species retained for data collection purposes. For
all other species, MSY would be established from recent average catch
(C) in the commercial and recreational fisheries and from estimates of
the current biomass (BCURR/BMSY) and fishing
mortality (FCURR/FMSY) ratios. MSY would be equal
to C/[(FCURR/FMSY) x (BCURR/
BMSY)]. OY would then be established as the average yield
associated with a fishing mortality (F) equal to the fishing mortality
to achieve OY (FOY) where FOY =
0.75FMSY.
For each FMU sub-unit for which biomass and fishing mortality
ratios have not been estimated through a stock assessment or other
scientific exercise (i.e., stock status is unknown), the following
estimates will be used: (1) For species that are not believed to be at
risk based on the best available information, the FCURR/
FMSY proxy is estimated as 0.75 and the BCURR/
BMSY proxy is estimated as 1.25; (2) For species for which
no positive or negative determination can be made on the status of
their condition, the default fishing mortality ratio and biomass ratio
proxies would be estimated as 1.00; and (3) For species that are
believed to be at risk based on the best available information, the
fishing mortality ratio would be estimated at 1.50 and the biomass
ratio would be estimated as 0.75.
MSST would be established as BMSY(1-c); where c equals
the natural mortality rate (M) or 0.50, whichever is smaller. This
alternative is preferred for Caribbean spiny lobster, queen conch, and
all species in the reef fish and coral reef resource FMUs, excluding
those species retained for data collection purposes.
MFMT would be based on an MSY control rule. For all species in the
Coral FMP, MFMT would be zero, excluding those species retained for
data collection purposes. For Caribbean queen conch, spiny lobster, and
reef fish, excluding those species retained for data collection
purposes, MFMT would be based on an allowable biological catch (ABC),
which would be defined as ABC = FMSY(B). For those species
where FMSY estimates are not available, natural mortality
(M) would be used as a proxy for FMSY. An OY control rule
would define target catch limits such that they equal
FOY(B).
Establishment of Rebuilding Schedules
Based on the establishment or revision of the biological reference
points and stock status criteria described above, several species would
be considered overfished. Therefore, in accordance with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, the Council is establishing the following stock rebuilding
schedules.
Nassau Grouper would be rebuilt to BMSY in 25 years,
using the formula TMIN (10 years) + one generation time (15
years) = 25 years.
Goliath Grouper would be rebuilt to BMSY in 30 years,
using the formula TMIN (10 years) + one generation time (20
years) = 30 years.
Queen Conch would be rebuilt to BMSY in 15 years, using
the formula TMIN (10 years) + one generation time (5 years)
= 15 years.
Grouper Unit 4 (including red, black, tiger, yellowfin, yellowedge
and misty grouper) would be rebuilt to BMSY in 10 years.
Standardized Bycatch Reporting
The comprehensive amendment would establish a standardized bycatch
reporting methodology throughout the Council's area of jurisdiction by
using existing databases in addition to revising certain other existing
databases. Use of the Marine Recreational Fishery Statistics Survey
database would provide additional bycatch information on the
recreational and subsistence sectors. The Council and NMFS would also
consult with Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands in an effort to
modify the state trip ticket systems currently in place in the U.S.
Caribbean to require standardized collection of bycatch data.
Designation of EFH and HAPCs
The comprehensive amendment would describe and identify EFH
according to functional relationships between life history stages of
federally managed species and Caribbean marine and estuarine habitats.
For spiny lobster, queen conch and reef fish, EFH in the U.S. Caribbean
would consist of all waters from mean high water to the outer boundary
of the EEZ, which are used by eggs and larvae, and seagrass, benthic
algae, mangrove, coral, and live/hard bottom substrates from mean high
water to 100 fathoms (183 m) depth, which are used by other life
stages. EFH for the coral fishery in the U.S. Caribbean consists of all
waters from mean low water to the outer boundary of the EEZ, which is
used by larvae, and all coral and hard bottom substrates from mean low
water to 100 fathoms (83 m) depth, which are used by other life stages.
The comprehensive amendment would designate HAPCs in the Reef Fish
FMP based on confirmed spawning locations and on areas or sites
identified as having particular ecological importance to managed
species. (See Section 6.7.1.3 of the comprehensive
[[Page 53982]]
amendment for more detailed description of the respective HAPCs). Based
on the confirmed occurrence of spawning in these particular areas,
HAPCs in the Reef Fish FMP would be designated off of Puerto Rico at
Tourmaline Bank/Buoy 8, Abrir La Sierra Bank/Buoy 6, Bajo de Cico, and
Vieques, El Seco. Off St. Croix, HAPCs for reef fish would include the
mutton snapper spawning aggregation area (50 CFR 622.33(a)(1)) and Lang
Bank, (50 CFR 622.33(a)(2)(i)). Off St. Thomas, HAPCs would be
designated as Hind Bank Marine Conservation District (50 CFR
622.33(b)(1)) and Grammanik Bank (50 CFR 622.33(a)(3)). Based on
habitat areas or sites identified as having particular ecological
importance to Caribbean reef fish species, HAPCs would be designated
off Puerto Rico at Hacienda la Esperanza, Manit[iacute]; Bajuras and
Tiberones, Isabela; Cabezas de San Juan, Fajardo; JOBANNERR, Jobos Bay;
Bioluminescent Bays, Vieques; Boquer[oacute]n State Forest; Pantano
Cibuco, Vega Baja; Pi[ntilde]ones State Forest; R[iacute]o Espiritu
Santo, R[iacute]o Grande; Seagrass beds of Culebra Island (nine sites
designated as Resource Category 1 and two additional sites); and
Northwest Vieques seagrass west of Mosquito Pier, Vieques. Off St.
Thomas, HAPCs would be designated off southeastern St. Thomas,
including Cas Key and the mangrove lagoon in Great St. James Bay; and
Saba Island/Perseverance Bay, including Flat Key and Black Point Reef.
Off St. Croix, HAPCs would be designated as Salt River Bay National
Historical Park and Ecological Preserve and Marine Reserve and Wildlife
Sanctuary; Altona Lagoon; Great Pond; South Shore Industrial Area; and
Sandy Point National Wildlife Refuge.
For the Coral Reef FMP HAPCs would be designated as those EFH
habitat areas or sites identified as having particular ecological
importance to Caribbean coral species. (See Section 6.7.1.3 of the
comprehensive amendment for more detailed description of the respective
HAPCs). Off Puerto Rico, these include Luis Pe[ntilde]a Channel,
Culebra; Mona/Monito; La Parguera, Lajas; Caja de Muertos, Ponce;
Tourmaline Reef; Gu[aacute]nica state Forest; Punta Petrona, Santa
Isabel; Ceiba state Forest; La Cordillera, Fajardo; Guayama Reefs;
Steps and Tres Palmas, Rincon; Los Corchos Reef, Culebra; and Desecheo
Reefs, Desecheo. Off St. Croix, HAPCs would be designated at the St.
Croix Coral Reef Area of Particular Concern, including the East End
Marine Park; Buck Island Reef National Monument; South Shore Industrial
Area Patch Reef and Deep Reef System; Frederiksted Reef System; Cane
Bay; and Green Cay Wildlife Refuge.
Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs)
The comprehensive amendment also proposes to develop MOUs to
achieve cooperative management and compatible regulatory regimes. The
comprehensive amendment proposes to develop a MOU between NMFS and the
U.S. Virgin Islands government leading to the development of compatible
regulations to achieve the objectives for Nassau grouper set forth in
the Council's Reef Fish FMP in U.S. Virgin Islands and Federal waters
of the U.S. Caribbean. In addition, the amendment proposes to develop
an MOU between NMFS and the governments of Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands to develop compatible regulations to achieve the
management objectives set forth in the Council's Queen Conch FMP in
state and Federal waters of the U.S. Caribbean.
Classification
At this time, NMFS has not determined that the comprehensive
amendment that this proposed rule would implement is consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable laws. NMFS, in making
that determination, will take into account the data, views, and
comments received during the comment period on this proposed rule.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared a final supplemental environmental impact statement
for this amendment; a notice of availability was published on June 24,
2005 (70 FR 36582).
The Council in conjunction with NMFS prepared an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA) as required by section 603 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. The IRFA describes the economic impact this
proposed rule, if adopted, would have on small entities. A description
of the action, why it is being considered, and the legal basis for this
action are contained at the beginning of this section in the preamble
and in the SUMMARY section of the preamble. A summary of the analysis
follows. A copy of this analysis is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
The proposed rule would implement an integrated FMP amendment that
will bring the Caribbean Council's FMPs for spiny lobster, queen conch,
reef fish, corals, and reef associated plants and invertebrates into
full compliance with requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The
Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the statutory basis for the proposed
rule. The objectives of the proposed rule are to: (1) define FMUs and
FMU sub-units, (2) specify biological reference points and stock status
determination criteria, (3) regulate fishing mortality, (4) rebuild
overfished fisheries, (5) conserve and protect yellowfin grouper, (6)
achieve bycatch mandates, and (7) achieve the EFH mandates.
The proposed rule would affect commercial and recreational
fishermen and charter fishing services in Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands. In Puerto Rico, there are approximately 1,758
commercial fishers, of which 1,262 fishers are full-time and 496 are
part-time. The number of commercial fishers in the U.S. Virgin Islands
is estimated to be 349. Approximately 50 entities offer year-round
charter services in the U.S. Caribbean, with the majority located in
the U.S. Virgin Islands. NMFS expects that 88 Puerto Rican commercial
fishers, or 5 percent, and 50 U.S. Virgin Islands commercial fishers,
or 10 percent, and 3 of the charter services, or 5 percent operate in
the EEZ and may be affected by this proposed rule. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards for the finfish, shellfish, and
other marine fishing industries are the same; each has a size standard
of $3.5 million in annual sales. The SBA size standard for the charter
fishing industry is $6.0 million in annual sales. NMFS assumes that all
of the commercial fishers in Puerto Rico, all of the commercial fishers
in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and all of the charter fishing services
that operate in the U.S. Caribbean EEZ are small businesses. Thus, NMFS
expects that a total of 6.5 percent of small businesses in commercial
fishing and 5 percent of small businesses in charter fishing services
may be affected by this proposed rule.
The proposed rule would: (1) prohibit fishing for or possession of
queen conch in the EEZ, with the exception of Lang Bank east of St.
Croix; (2a) move aquarium trade species of Caribbean coral and reef
fish from a management to a data collection only category, thereby
removing existing fishery management restrictions on these species;
(2b) move all species of Caribbean conch, with the exception of queen
conch, to a data collection only category, thereby removing fishery
management restrictions on these species; (3) close the EEZ to the
possession of red, black, tiger, yellowfin, and yellowedge grouper from
February 1 through April 30; (4) close the EEZ off the west coast of
Puerto Rico to the possession of red hind from
[[Page 53983]]
December 1 through February 28; (5) close the EEZ to the possession of
black, blackfin, vermilion, and silk snapper from October 1 through
December 31; (6) close the EEZ to the possession of mutton snapper and
lane snapper from April 1 through June 30; (7a) implement an immediate
prohibition against the use of gillnets and trammel nets to fish for
Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean spiny lobster in the EEZ; (7b) require
gillnets used to fish for other species in the EEZ to be tended at all
times; (8) prohibit the filleting of fish in the EEZ and require that
fish captured or possessed in the EEZ be landed with heads and fins
intact, with minor exceptions; (9) close an area of the Grammanik Bank
to fishing for or possessing any species of fish, except highly
migratory species, from February 1 through April 30 of each year; (10)
amend current requirements for trap construction such that only one
escape panel is required, which could be the door; (11a) require at
least one buoy that floats on the surface for all traps/pots fished
individually for all fishing vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean
spiny lobster or Caribbean reef fish species in or from the EEZ; (11b)
require at least one buoy at each end of trap lines linking traps/pots
for all fishing vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean spiny
lobster or Caribbean reef fish species in or from the EEZ; (11c)
prohibit use of pots/traps, gill/trammel nets, and bottom longlines on
coral or hard bottom year-round in the existing seasonally closed areas
and Grammanik Bank in the EEZ; and (11d) require an anchor retrieval
system for all vessels that fish for or possess Caribbean reef fish
species in or from the EEZ.
Identification, to the extent practicable, of all relevant federal
rules that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the proposed rule
is incorporated into the following discussion of compliance
requirements and their associated economic impacts.
The queen conch fishery occurs primarily in state waters.
Approximately 92 percent of Puerto Rican queen conch harvest is
reported to be obtained from state waters of Puerto Rico, while 60
percent of U.S. Virgin Islands queen conch harvests is estimated to be
harvested from state waters. Only 18 fishermen were observed harvesting
queen conch in the EEZ in the U.S. Caribbean in 1999 (2 from the U.S.
Virgin Islands and 16 from Puerto Rico). These 18 fishers represented 7
percent of 260 U.S. Caribbean queen conch fishers (209 in Puerto Rico
and 51 in the U.S. Virgin Islands), or less than 1 percent of all small
commercial fishing businesses in the U.S. Caribbean. The 16 fishers
from Puerto Rico represent 8 percent of queen conch fishers from that
area, while the 2 fishers from the U.S. Virgin Islands represent 4
percent of U.S. Virgin Islands queen conch fishers. Because of water
depth in the EEZ, SCUBA is the primary harvest gear and likely the only
gear used to harvest queen conch in the EEZ. Consequently, harvests of
queen conch in the EEZ are limited to a great extent by the amount of
time a diver can safely work underwater. It is likely that most to all
of the 16 fishers from Puerto Rico that harvest queen conch from the
EEZ generate the bulk of their revenues and profits from queen conch
taken from shallower state waters. Furthermore, it is likely that their
revenues and profits from queen conch harvested from the EEZ represent
a small proportion of their total revenues and profits, and the
proposed prohibition against fishing for or possession of queen conch
in the EEZ, with the exception of Lang Bank, is not expected to have a
significant adverse economic impact on these fishers. However, revenues
and profits from queen conch fishing in the EEZ represent a larger
proportion of total revenues and profits from queen conch for the 2
U.S. Virgin Islands queen conch fishers, and the prohibition could have
a greater adverse economic impact on these fishers. Additionally, if
Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands were to further restrict queen
conch fishing in state waters, the combined Federal and state actions
would have a much greater adverse economic impact on these fishers.
Any small business that harvests species of Caribbean conch, other
than queen conch, or aquarium trade species of Caribbean coral or reef
fish in the EEZ could potentially benefit from the proposed movement of
these species to a data-collection-only category because this would
eliminate existing Federal fishing restrictions on these species.
However, any economic benefit that is obtained by small businesses from
this proposed movement is expected to be negligible because harvest of
these species occurs predominantly in state waters.
The U.S. Caribbean reef fish fishery is essentially a multi-species
fishery in that fishers catch multiple species of reef fish on any
given trip. Consequently, the harvest of any particular species likely
represents a small proportion of total revenue and profit for any given
trip. In addition to the closures contained in the proposed rule, there
is currently a seasonal closure from December 1 through February 28 to
all fishing in red hind spawning areas and a seasonal closure from
March 1 through June 30 to all fishing in the mutton snapper spawning
aggregation area. To mitigate any revenue and profit losses that may
result from the proposed closures, commercial fishers and charter
fishing operations that fish for reef fish in the EEZ may intensify
fishing before and after the seasonal closures or relocate to state
waters. The mitigating economic effects of these behavioral changes
cannot be forecast. Nonetheless, the combined seasonal closures may
have a significant adverse economic impact on up to 6.5 percent of the
small commercial fishing businesses and up to 5 percent of the small
charter fishing businesses.
The prohibition against the use of gillnets and trammel nets to
catch Caribbean spiny lobster and reef fish would require the adoption
of other gear, most likely traps/pots, to harvest these species. NMFS
does not believe, however, that Puerto Rican fishers significantly use
either gillnets or trammel nets to fish in the EEZ because of water
depth. Consequently, the prohibition would likely affect a small number
of the small commercial fishing businesses in Puerto Rico that operate
in the EEZ. In the U.S. Virgin Islands, more fishable habitat exists
that can be targeted by nets due to the 3 nm (5.6 km) state boundary.
Divers commonly deploy nets in shallower portions of Lang Bank off St.
Croix, where they place the nets in the migratory pathways of reef
fish. Nets accounted for 33 percent of parrotfish landings and 11
percent of surgeonfish landings in the U.S. Virgin Islands from 1994
through 2002. Furthermore, the use of gillnets and trammel nets has
increased among St. Croix fishers because they have switched from traps
due to frequent trap theft and vandalism. Consequently, the prohibition
against the use of gill and trammel nets is expected to have a greater
adverse economic impact on the small commercial fishing businesses in
the U.S. Virgin Islands that operate in the EEZ.
The prohibition against the use of gill and trammel nets in the EEZ
would not apply to the harvest of ballyhoo, gar, and flying fish, which
are commonly found near the surface. When used to harvest these
species, the nets must be tended at all times. Ballyhoo and gar are
used as bait. At present, there is insufficient information to
determine the economic impact on any small businesses that may
currently harvest ballyhoo, gar, or flying fish in the EEZ by using
untended gill and trammel nets.
Since 1990 and 1993, there have been prohibitions against the
harvest and
[[Page 53984]]
possession of Nassau grouper and Goliath grouper in the EEZ,
respectively; however, anecdotal evidence suggests that illegal harvest
and possession may occur. Prohibiting the filleting of all species of
fish in the U.S. Caribbean EEZ, except highly migratory species or
species caught and used for bait or the crew's own consumption, and
requiring that all fish captured or possessed in the EEZ be landed with
heads and fins intact would improve enforcement of existing
prohibitions and result in reduced illegal revenues. At the same time,
the prohibition may reduce legal revenues for those who fish for other
species in the EEZ and fillet their fish due to limited storage
capacity. Since whole fish take up more space in a vessel than fillets,
harvest per trip may be reduced. However, since the typical fishing
vessel in the Caribbean EEZ does not have fish holds and in many cases
does not use coolers, it is expected that a substantial number of the
small businesses do not fillet their catches in the EEZ and would not
experience a significant adverse economic impact.
The proposed rule would prohibit fishing for or possession of any
species of fish, except highly migratory species, within a 0.44 nm\2\
(1.5 km\2\) area of Grammanik Bank from February 1 through April 30 of
each year. The proposed seasonal Grammanik Bank closure is expected to
have the greatest adverse economic impact on fishers who harvest
yellowfin grouper because the reported spawning aggregation of
yellowfin grouper is centered within the proposed closed area during
this time. As previously discussed, the proposed rule would close the
U.S. EEZ to the possession of red, black, tiger, yellowfin, and
yellowedge grouper from February 1 through April 30. The combined
impact of the Grammanik Bank closure and the February through April
prohibition on yellowfin grouper fishers in the EEZ would be a
prohibition on fishing for yellowfin grouper or any other fish in an
area of Grammanik Bank for 3 months and a ban on the possession of
yellowfin grouper in the EEZ for the same 3 months. To mitigate losses
due to the prohibitions, commercial fishers may intensify fishing for
yellowfin grouper and other species before and after the seasonal bans
and/or move their fishing activities to state waters. The 1994 through
2002 average annual landings of all grouper species caught in both
state and Federal waters in both St. Thomas and St. John is 22,368 lb
(10,146 kg). The proportion of the grouper species caught in the EEZ
during February through April within this average is expected to be
comparatively small, and the proportion of the average that represents
yellowfin grouper caught in the EEZ during those months even smaller.
Average annual landings of yellowfin grouper in Puerto Rico from 1997
though 2002 is approximately 4,400 lb (1,996 kg). NMFS expects that the
proportion of yellowfin grouper within this average caught in the EEZ
from February 1 through April 30 is comparatively small, as well.
Nonetheless, the adverse economic impact could be significant for some
of the small commercial fishers that operate in the EEZ.
The proposed rule would require only one escape panel for traps and
pots. Anecdotal information and the experience of local fishery
management officials indicate that Caribbean fishers would be more
likely to comply with such a requirement rather than the current
requirement of two escape panels. Since the proposed rule would relax
an existing restriction, no adverse economic impact associated with
this measure is anticipated.
Although the current data collection system in place in the U.S.
Caribbean, partially funded through Federal grants, does not require
commercial fishers or charter fishing operations to report bycatch
data, Puerto Rico has agreed to require that this information be
reported, and the U.S. Virgin Islands has already incorporated bycatch
data into its reporting requirement. The proposed rule would require
consultation with Puerto Rico in an effort to add data fields to its
existing mandatory landings reports in order to include consistent and
standardized bycatch data. Consequently, the proposed rule does not
directly impose any new reporting or recordkeeping requirements.
However, the indirect economic impact of requiring additional reporting
information will accrue to commercial fishing and charter fishing
businesses in Puerto Rico through additional time to report bycatch
information. At present, there is insufficient information to quantify
the amount of time necessary to report such information and how this
might affect business operation; however, the individual burden is not
expected to be substantial and not impose a significant adverse impact.
The use of traps and pots in the EEZ is expected to be infrequent
because of water depth. Nevertheless, for those who use traps and pots
in the EEZ, the requirement to have at least one buoy that floats on
the surface of all traps or pots fished individually and have at least
one buoy at each end of trap lines linking traps/pots is not expected
to impose a significant adverse economic impact since the additional
gear expenses should be minor.
The proposed prohibition against the use of traps and pots, gill
and trammel nets, and bottom longlines in currently existing,
seasonally closed areas and the proposed Grammanik Bank seasonal
closure represents a ban against the use of traditional gear types in
these areas. This prohibition could be especially burdensome to U.S.
Virgin Islands commercial fishers from St. Croix because they have
already lost fishing areas in state waters due to U.S. Virgin Islands
closures. The majority of fishable habitat off St. Croix is primarily
isolated to Lang Bank and, currently, the head of Lang Bank is closed
to all fishing from December 1 through February 28 each year. The
proposed prohibition would ban the use of traditional gear in an area
that encompasses approximately the easternmost half of the Bank.
Consequently, NMFS expects that the ban will have a significant adverse
economic impact on those St. Croix commercial fishers that currently
use traps and pots, gills and trammel nets, and/or bottom longlines in
the eastern half of the Bank.
The owner or operator of any fishing vessel, recreational or
commercial, that fishes for or possesses Caribbean reef fish in or from
the Caribbean EEZ must ensure that the vessel uses only an anchor
retrieval system that recovers the anchor by its crown, thereby
preventing the anchor from dragging along the bottom during recovery
and damaging habitat. NMFS assumes that most commercial and charter
fishing vessels that operate in the EEZ do not currently have an anchor
retrieval system that meets the proposed requirement. For those fishers
that have a grapnel hook, this would require incorporating an anchor
rode reversal bar that runs parallel along the shank, and for those
that have a fluke or plow-type anchor, a trip line consisting of a line
from the crown of the anchor to a surface buoy would be required. There
is currently insufficient information to quantify the number of fishing
vessels that use the different types of anchors and the costs of making
necessary modifications. However, NMFS expects the cost will not
represent a significant adverse economic impact on these small
businesses.
Significant alternatives to the proposed actions that were
considered would have increased the significant adverse economic impact
on small businesses. One alternative would have banned fishing for or
possession of queen conch in the entire EEZ, which
[[Page 53985]]
could have had a greater adverse economic impact on the 7 percent of
small businesses that harvest queen conch in the EEZ. Although
sufficient data are not available to determine the impact of this
rejected alternative on the relatively few individual vessel operators
that harvest queen conch in the EEZ, it is expected that few, if any,
such operators have a total dependence on harvest from the EEZ because
the majority of queen conch are harvested from state waters.
Regardless, the opportunity to shift fishing effort from the EEZ to
state waters would tend to mitigate any adverse impacts. Alternatives
to the preferred seasonal bans on the possession of mutton snapper and
lane snapper, red hind, and the respective snapper and grouper species
would have banned the possession of all species managed by the
Caribbean Council for 3 months, 6 months, or a year. Such bans would
have had greater adverse economic impacts than the proposed rule.
Alternatives to the proposed prohibition on the use of gillnets and
trammel nets in the EEZ considered closing various areas of the EEZ to
fishing for or possession of all species or eliminating the use of fish
traps in the EEZ, which would have had greater adverse economic
impacts. Alternatives to the proposed ban on filleting of fish in the
EEZ would have established seasonal or area closures to protect
spawning stocks of Nassau and Goliath grouper, which would have had
greater adverse economic impact on fishers, especially St. Croix
fishers. One alternative to the proposed seasonal ban on fishing for or
possession of all fish in the Grammanik Bank, except highly migratory
species, would have increased the size and length of the ban and the
second alternative would have added a year-round ban on fishing for or
possession of yellowfin grouper in the EEZ. Both of these alternatives
would have increased the adverse economic impact. Finally, an
alternative to the proposed modification of the trip ticket system to
include bycatch information would have implemented a Federal permit
system for commercial and charter fishing businesses that operate in
the EEZ, with a mandatory monthly reporting requirement, and would have
had a greater adverse impact than the proposed action.
List of Subjects
50 CFR Part 600
Administrative practice and procedure, Confidential business
information, Fisheries, Fishing, Fishing vessels, Foreign relations,
Intergovernmental relations, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Statistics.
50 CFR Part 622
Fisheries, Fishing, Puerto Rico, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Virgin Islands.
Dated: September 2, 2005.
John Oliver,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Operations, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR parts 600 and 622
are proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 600--MAGNUSON-STEVENS ACT PROVISIONS
1. The authority citation for part 600, Subpart H continues to read
as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 561 and 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Sec. 600.725 [Amended]
2. In Sec. 600.725, amend the table in paragraph (v), section V.,
as follows:
a. Under the heading ``1. Caribbean Spiny Lobster Fishery (FMP)'',
remove entry ``C'' from the first and second columns; redesignate
entries ``D'' and ``E'' as ``C'' and ``D'', respectively, in the first
and second columns; and remove the words ``gillnet, trammel net'' from
the second column in the newly redesignated entry ``D''; and
b. Under the heading ``2. Caribbean Shallow Water Reef Fish Fishery
(FMP)'', remove entry ``C'' from the first and second columns; and
redesignate entry ``D'' as ``C'' in the first and second columns.
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF, AND SOUTH ATLANTIC
3. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
4. In Sec. 622.2, the definition of ``Caribbean conch resource''
is removed, and a definition of ``Caribbean queen conch'' is added in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 622.2 Definitions and acronyms.
* * * * *
Caribbean queen conch means the species, Strombus gigus, or a part
thereof.
* * * * *
5. In Sec. 622.6, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A) is revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.6 Vessel and gear identification.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Caribbean EEZ. Traps or pots used in the Caribbean spiny
lobster or Caribbean reef fish fisheries that are fished individually,
rather than tied together in a trap line, must have at least one buoy
attached that floats on the surface. Traps or pots used in the
Caribbean spiny lobster or Caribbean reef fish fisheries that are tied
together in a trap line must have at least one buoy that floats at the
surface attached at each end of the trap line. Each buoy must display
the official number and color code assigned to the vessel by Puerto
Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands, whichever is applicable.
* * * * *
6. In Sec. 622.31, paragraph (l) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.31 Prohibited gear and methods.
* * * * *
(l) Gillnets and trammel nets in the Caribbean EEZ. A gillnet or
trammel net may not be used in the Caribbean EEZ to fish for Caribbean
reef fish or Caribbean spiny lobster. Possession of a gillnet or
trammel net and any Caribbean reef fish or Caribbean spiny lobster in
or from the Caribbean EEZ is prima facie evidence of violation of this
paragraph (l). A gillnet or trammel net used in the Caribbean EEZ to
fish for any other species, including species in the family
Exocoetidae, flyingfishes, or the family Belonidae, needlefishes, must
be tended at all times.
7. In Sec. 622.32, paragraph (b)(1)(ii) is revised, and paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.32 Prohibited and limited-harvest species.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) No person may fish for or possess goliath grouper and Nassau
grouper in or from the Caribbean EEZ. Such fish caught in the Caribbean
EEZ must be released immediately with a minimum of harm.
* * * * *
(iv) No person may fish for, or possess on board a fishing vessel,
a Caribbean queen conch in or from the Caribbean EEZ, except during
October through June in the area east of 64[deg]34' W. longitude which
includes Lang Bank east of St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
* * * * *
8. In Sec. 622.33, paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph
(a)(3) are revised, and paragraphs (a)(4) through (a)(7) are added to
read as follows:
[[Page 53986]]
Sec. 622.33 Caribbean EEZ seasonal and/or area closures.
(a) Seasonal closures. In addition to the other restrictions
specified in this paragraph (a), fishing with pots, traps, bottom
longlines, gillnets or trammel nets is prohibited year-round in the
closed areas specified in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(3) of this
section.
* * * * *
(3) Grammanik Bank closed area. (i) The Grammanik Bank closed area
is bounded by rhumb lines connecting, in order, the following points:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Point North lat. West long.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A 18[deg]11.898' 64[deg]56.328'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B 18[deg]11.645' 64[deg]56.225'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C 18[deg]11.058' 64[deg]57.810'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D 18[deg]11.311' 64[deg]57.913'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A 18[deg]11.898' 64[deg]56.328'
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) From February through April, each year, no person may fish for
or possess any species of fish, except highly migratory species, in or
from the Grammanik Bank closed area. This prohibition on possession
does not apply to such fish harvested and landed ashore prior to the
closure. For the purpose of paragraph (a)(4) of this section, ``fish''
means finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all other forms of marine
animal and plant life other than marine mammals and birds. ``Highly
migratory species'' means bluefin, bigeye, yellowfin, albacore, and
skipjack tunas; swordfish; sharks (listed in Appendix A to Part 635 of
this title); white marlin, blue marlin, sailfish, and longbill
spearfish.
(4) Red, black, tiger, yellowfin, or yellowedge grouper. From
February through April, each year, no person may fish for or possess
red, black, tiger, yellowfin, or yellowedge grouper in or from the
Caribbean EEZ. This prohibition on possession does not apply to such
grouper harvested and landed ashore prior to the closure.
(5) Additional red hind closure. From December through February,
each year, no person may fish for or possess red hind in or from the
Caribbean EEZ west of 67[deg]10' W. longitude. This prohibition on
possession does not apply to red hind harvested and landed ashore prior
to the closure.
(6) Vermilion, black, silk, or blackfin snapper. From October
through December, each year, no person may fish for or possess
vermilion, black, silk, or blackfin snapper in or from the Caribbean
EEZ. This prohibition on possession does not apply to such snapper
harvested and landed ashore prior to the closure.
(7) Lane or mutton snapper. From April through June, each year, no
person may fish for or possess lane or mutton snapper in or from the
Caribbean EEZ. This prohibition on possession does not apply to such
snapper harvested and landed ashore prior to the closure.
* * * * *
9. In Sec. 622.38, paragraphs (a), (d), and (f) are revised to
read as follows:
Sec. 622.38 Landing fish intact.
* * * * *
(a) The following must be maintained with head and fins intact:
cobia, king mackerel, and Spanish mackerel in or from the Gulf, Mid-
Atlantic, or South Atlantic EEZ, except as specified for king mackerel
in paragraph (g) of this section; dolphin and wahoo in or from the
Atlantic EEZ; South Atlantic snapper-grouper in or from the South
Atlantic EEZ, except as specified in paragraph (h) of this section;
finfish in or from the Caribbean EEZ, except as specified in paragraphs
(c) and (d) of this section; and finfish in or from the Gulf EEZ,
except as specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. Such
fish may be eviscerated, gilled, and scaled, but must otherwise be
maintained in a whole condition.
* * * * *
(d) In the Gulf EEZ or Caribbean EEZ:
(1) Bait is exempt from the requirement to be maintained with head
and fins intact.
(i) For the purpose of this paragraph (d)(1), ``bait'' means--
(A) Packaged, headless fish fillets that have the skin attached and
are frozen or refrigerated;
(B) Headless fish fillets that have the skin attached and are held
in brine; or
(C) Small pieces no larger than 3 in3 (7.6 cm3) or strips no larger
than 3 inches by 9 inches (7.6 cm by 22.9 cm) that have the skin
attached and are frozen, refrigerated, or held in brine.
(ii) Paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section notwithstanding, a finfish
or part thereof possessed in or landed from the Gulf EEZ or Caribbean
EEZ that is subsequently sold or purchased as a finfish species, rather
than as bait, is not bait.
(2) Legal-sized finfish possessed for consumption at sea on the
harvesting vessel are exempt from the requirement to have head and fins
intact, provided--
(i) Such finfish do not exceed any applicable bag limit;
(ii) Such finfish do not exceed 1.5 lb (680 g) of finfish parts per
person aboard; and
(iii) The vessel is equipped to cook such finfish on board.
* * * * *
(f) Queen conch in or from the Caribbean EEZ must be maintained
with meat and shell intact.
* * * * *
10. In Sec. 622.40, paragraph (b)(1)(i) is revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.40 Limitations on traps and pots.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) A fish trap used or possessed in the Caribbean EEZ must have a
panel located on one side of the trap, excluding the top, bottom, and
side containing the trap entrance. The opening covered by the panel
must measure not less than 8 by 8 inches (20.3 by 20.3 cm). The mesh
size of the panel may not be smaller than the mesh size of the trap.
The panel must be attached to the trap with untreated jute twine with a
diameter not exceeding 1/8 inch (3.2 mm). An access door may serve as
the panel, provided it is on an appropriate side, it is hinged only at
its bottom, its only other fastening is untreated jute twine with a
diameter not exceeding 1/8 inch (3.2 mm), and such fastening is at the
top of the door so that the door will fall open when such twine
degrades. Jute twine used to secure a panel may not be wrapped or
overlapped.
* * * * *
11. In Sec. 622.41, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
[[Page 53987]]
Sec. 622.41 Species specific limitations.
* * * * *
(b) Caribbean reef fish anchoring restriction. The owner or
operator of any fishing vessel, recreational or commercial, that fishes
for or possesses Caribbean reef fish in or from the Caribbean EEZ must
ensure that the vessel uses only an anchor retrieval system that
recovers the anchor by its crown, thereby preventing the anchor from
dragging along the bottom during recovery. For a grapnel hook, this
could include an incorporated anchor rode reversal bar that runs
parallel along the shank, which allows the rode to reverse and slip
back towards the crown. For a fluke- or plow-type anchor, a trip line
consisting of a line from the crown of the anchor to a surface buoy
would be required.
* * * * *
12. In Appendix A to Part 622, Tables 1 and 2 are revised, and
Table 5 is added to read as follows:
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* * * * *
Table 5 of Appendix A to Part 622--Caribbean Conch Resources
Queen conch, Strombus gigas
The following species are included for data collection purposes
only:
Atlantic triton's trumpet, Charonia variegata
Cameo helmet, Cassis madagascarensis
Green star shell, Astrea tuber
Hawkwing conch, Strombus raninus
Milk conch, Strombus costatus
Roostertail conch, Strombus gallus
West Indian fighting conch, Strombus pugilis
True tulip, Fasciolaria tulipa
[FR Doc. 05-17945 Filed 9-12-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C