Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Biennial Specifications and Management Measures; Inseason Adjustments, 19390-19410 [07-1917]
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PART 90—PRIVATE LAND MOBILE
RADIO SERVICES
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
1. The authority citation for part 90
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: Sections 4(i), 11, 303(g), 303(r),
and 332(c)(7) of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), 332(c)(7).
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 070404078–7078–01; I.D.
082806B]
RIN 0648–AV52
2. Amend § 90.203 by revising
paragraph (j)(4) introductory text and
paragraph (j)(5); and removing
paragraph (j)(6); and by redesignating
paragraphs (j)(7) through (j)(11) as (j)(6)
through (j)(10) to read as follows:
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions;
Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
Biennial Specifications and
Management Measures; Inseason
Adjustments
§ 90.203
AGENCY:
I
Certification required.
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(j) * * *
(4) Applications for part 90
certification of transmitters designed to
operate on frequencies in the 150.8–
162.0125 MHz, 173.2–173.4 MHz, and/
or 421–512 MHz bands, received on or
after January 1, 2011, except for handheld transmitters with an output power
of two watts or less, will only be granted
for equipment with the following
channel bandwidths:
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(5) Applications for part 90
certification of transmitters designed to
operate on frequencies in the 150.8–
162.0125 MHz, 173.2–173.4 MHz, and/
or 421–512 MHz bands, received on or
after January 1, 2011, must include a
certification that the equipment meets a
spectrum efficiency standard of one
voice channel per 6.25 kHz of channel
bandwidth. Additionally, if the
equipment is capable of transmitting
data, has transmitter output power
greater than 500 mW, and has a channel
bandwidth of more than 6.25 kHz, the
equipment must be capable of
supporting a minimum data rate of 4800
bits per second per 6.25 kHz of channel
bandwidth.
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[FR Doc. E7–7252 Filed 4–17–07; 8:45 am]
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National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; inseason adjustments
to groundfish management measures;
request for comments.
SUMMARY: This final rule takes two
actions: It establishes the 2007 harvest
specifications for Pacific whiting
(whiting) in the U.S. exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) and state waters
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California; and, it announces
inseason changes to management
measures in the commercial and
recreational Pacific Coast groundfish
fisheries. These actions are authorized
by the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). The 2007
whiting harvest specifications include
the level of the acceptable biological
catch (ABC), optimum yield (OY), tribal
allocation, and allocations for the nontribal commercial whiting sectors, and
are intended to establish allowable
harvest levels of whiting based on the
best available scientific information.
The inseason changes to fishery
management measures are intended to
allow fisheries to access more abundant
groundfish stocks while protecting
overfished and depleted species, and to
reduce possible confusion to the public
over differing state and Federal
regulations.
DATES: Effective April 17, 2007.
Comments on this rule must be received
no later than 5 p.m., local time on May
18, 2007.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by I.D. 082806B by any of the
following methods:
∑ E-mail:
WhitingABCOYInseason1.nwr@
noaa.gov. Include I.D. 082806B in the
subject line of the message.
∑ Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
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∑ Fax: 206–526–6736, Attn: Gretchen
Arentzen
∑ Mail: D. Robert Lohn,
Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE,
Seattle, WA 98115–0070, Attn: Gretchen
Arentzen.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gretchen Arentzen (Northwest Region,
NMFS), phone: 206–526–6147, fax: 206–
526–6736 and e-mail
gretchen.arentzen@noaa.gov; or Becky
Renko (Northwest Region, NMFS),
phone: 206–526–6110 fax: 206–526–
6736 and e-mail becky.renko@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This final rule is accessible via the
Internet at the Office of the Federal
Register’s Web site at https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background information and documents
are available at the Pacific Fishery
Management Council’s (Council’s) Web
site at https://www.pcouncil.org/.
Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP
and its implementing regulations at title
50 in the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR), part 660, subpart G, regulate
fishing for over 90 species of groundfish
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California. Groundfish
specifications and management
measures are developed by the Council,
and are implemented by NMFS. A
proposed rulemaking to implement the
2007–2008 specifications and
management measures for the Pacific
Coast groundfish fishery and
Amendment 16–4 of the FMP was
published on September 29, 2006 (71 FR
57764). The final rule to implement the
2007–2008 specifications and
management measures for the Pacific
Coast Groundfish Fishery was published
on December 29, 2006 (71 FR 78638).
These specifications and management
measures were codified in the CFR (50
CFR part 660, subpart G). The final rule
was subsequently amended on March
20, 2007 via a correcting amendment (71
FR 13043).
Changes to current groundfish
management measures implemented by
this action were recommended by the
Council, in consultation with Pacific
Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and the
States of Washington, Oregon, and
California, at its March 5–9, 2007,
meeting in Sacramento, California. The
Council recommended changes to
current regulations pertaining to two
separate actions: (1) Setting the final
2007 ABC and OY values for the Pacific
coast whiting fishery and the 2007 tribal
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allocation of whiting; and (2) adjusting
current groundfish management
measures to respond to updated fishery
information and other inseason
management needs.
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Pacific Whiting Specifications for 2007
In November 2003, the United States
and Canada signed an agreement
regarding the conservation, research,
and catch sharing of whiting. The
whiting catch sharing arrangement that
was agreed upon provides 73.88 percent
of the total catch OY to the U.S.
fisheries and 26.12 percent to the
Canadian fisheries. At this time, both
countries are taking steps to fully
implement this agreement. Until this
occurs, the negotiators recommended
that each country apply the agreed upon
provisions to their respective fisheries.
In anticipation of the ratification of
the U.S.-Canada agreement, a new stock
assessment, and given the small amount
of whiting that is typically landed under
trip limits prior to the April 1 start of
the primary season, the Council adopted
a range for OY and ABC in the 2007–
2008 specifications, and delayed
adoption of final 2007 and 2008 ABC
and OY until its March 2007 and 2008
meetings, respectively. To date, the
international agreement has not yet been
ratified by the United States, but the
implementing legislation was recently
signed into law on January 12, 2007.
The ABC and OY values recommended
by the Council as final ABC and OY
values for 2007 are based on the 2007
stock assessment, and their impacts are
within the scope of impacts considered
in the EIS for the 2007 and 2008
management measures. The whiting OY
being implemented in this rule, and the
resulting allocations among the sectors,
is reduced by approximately 10 percent
from the 2006 OY.
Pacific Whiting Stock Status
In general, whiting is a very
productive species with highly variable
recruitment (the biomass of fish that
mature and enter the population and/or
fishery each year) and a relatively short
life span when compared to other
groundfish species. In 1987, the whiting
biomass was at a historically high level
due to an exceptionally large number of
fish that recruited into the population in
1980 and 1984 (fish recruited during a
particular year are referred to as year
classes). As these large year classes of
fish passed through the population and
were replaced by moderate sized year
classes, the stock declined. The whiting
stock stabilized between 1995 and 1997,
but then declined to its lowest level in
2001. After 2001, the whiting biomass
increased substantially as a strong 1999
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year class matured and entered the
spawning population. The 1999 year
class has now reached its peak biomass
level and is declining, and in the
absence of additional strong year classes
the stock is expected to decline in the
near term even in the absence of fishing.
The joint US-Canada Stock
Assessment Review (STAR) panel met
February 5–9, 2007, to review the
whiting stock assessment prepared
jointly by scientists from the NMFS
Northwest Fisheries Science Center and
the University of British Columbia
Fisheries Centre. The STAR panel
accepted two equally plausible
assessment models that consider
uncertainty in the relative depletion
level and stock productivity.
As in 2006, the amount of whiting
that the hydroacoustic survey was able
to measure relative to the total amount
of whiting in the surveyed area (acoustic
survey catchability coefficient, or q) was
identified as a major source of
uncertainty in the new stock
assessment. Because of this uncertainty,
two models were presented to bracket
the range of uncertainty in q: The base
model with a fixed value of q=1,
representing the lower range of biomass
and ABC/OY estimates; and the
alternative model (using an informative
prior) to arrive at q=0.7, which results
in an upward scaling of both biomass
and ABC/OY estimates. Uncertainty
regarding the true value of q has been
a major issue with whiting stock
assessments in recent years, and as a
precautionary measure the Council has
based whiting ABCs from the last
several assessments on models where
q=1.
Using the base model, q=1, the
whiting stock biomass at the end of
2006 was estimated to be at 36 percent
of its unfished biomass and at 44
percent of its unfished biomass with the
alternative model, q=0.7. As no strong
year classes have been observed since
1999, the whiting biomass is projected
to decline in the near future. Data from
the 2005 hydroacoustic survey
suggested a moderately strong 2003 year
class; however current recruitment
estimates from fishery-dependent
indices predict that the 2003
recruitment will be below the mean.
Current estimates, while not validated
with a hydroacoustic survey, predict
larger 2004 recruitment than for
surrounding years. If these year classes
are stronger than currently projected,
the recent downward trend in whiting
biomass could stabilize.
The steepness of the stockrecruitment relationship (the proportion
of young fish entering the population in
relation to the number of adult fish) in
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the 2007 assessment was estimated to be
0.75. This is the same value that was
used in 2006 when it was redefined in
the 2006 assessment, whereas a value of
1 was used in 2005. Assuming a
steepness of 1 implies that the spawning
biomass level has no influence on the
number of recruits produced in any
given year, which may result in overly
optimistic projections. Reducing the
steepness to 0.75 increases the
dependency of recruitment on the
number of adult fish in the population.
Based on its review, the SSC endorsed
the use of both models in setting 2007
ABCs and OYS.
The U.S. implementing legislation
and the U.S.-Canada agreement
provisions include the use of a default
harvest rate of F40. A harvest rate of F40
can be explained as that which reduces
spawning potential per female to 40
percent of what it would have been
without fishing mortality. The selection
of the F40 value was based on an
analysis of stock and recruitment data
for other whiting (hake) species.
However, because the whiting stock is
projected to fall below the overfished
threshold if managed with a harvest rate
of F40, primarily due to the highly
variable recruitment characteristic of the
stock, the SSC noted that use of a
control rule that allows for maximized
yield may be inconsistent with the need
to prevent whiting from falling below
the overfished threshold.
The range of U.S. ABCs and OYs
considered by the Council and analyzed
in the EIS for 2007 and 2008 included:
A low ABC of 244,425 mt and a high
ABC of 733,275 mt (50 percent and 150
percent, respectively, of the 2006 U.S.
ABC of 488,850); and a low OY of
134,534 mt and a high OY of 403,604 mt
(50 percent and 150 percent,
respectively, of the 2005/2006 U.S. OY
of 269,069). These broad ranges in
whiting harvest levels were analyzed in
order to assess the potential range of the
effects of the whiting fishery on
incidentally-caught overfished species
and the economic effects to coastal
communities.
At its March 5–9, 2007, meeting in
Sacramento, CA, the Council reviewed
the results of the new whiting stock
assessment and recommended adopting
a U.S.-Canada coastwide ABC of
612,068 mt (results in a U.S. ABC of
452,196 mt) based on the q=1
assessment model. Because the whiting
biomass is estimated to be below 40
percent of its unfished biomass, the 40–
10 adjustment was applied as specified
in the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP,
the U.S.-Canada agreement, and the
Pacific Whiting Act of 2006. With the
40–10 adjustment, the U.S.-Canada
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coastwide OY was 575,090 mt with the
q=1 model, and 878,670 mt with the
q=0.7 model. The potential OYs with
the 40–10 adjustment were considered
by the Council to be too high during a
time when the stock biomass is in
decline. The 40–10-based OY for the
q=1 model was projected to result in the
stock biomass falling below the
overfished threshold of 25 percent of
unfished biomass by 2008. The 40–10based OY for the q=0.7 model was
projected to result in the stock biomass
falling below the overfished threshold
by 2009. Given the potential impact on
future stock biomass levels and as
contemplated by the Pacific Whiting Act
of 2006, the Council considered a more
conservative range of U.S.-Canada
coastwide OYs.
Following discussion and public
testimony, the Council recommended
adopting a U.S.-Canada coastwide OY of
328,358 mt, which corresponds to a U.S.
OY of 242,591 mt according to the
international allocation in the U.S.Canada agreement. The 2007 U.S. OY is
almost 10 percent less than the 2006 OY
(269,069 mt), as a precautionary
response to the declining trend in stock
biomass, no strong year class available
for the 2007 fishery, and continuing
uncertainty in the model relative to the
parameter q. With a constant harvest
rate corresponding to the 2007 U.S. OY
of 242,591 mt, the stock biomass level
is projected to drop below the
overfished level (B25, or 25 percent of
estimated unfished biomass) by 2009 if
q=1 is the true state of nature; however,
the biomass would remain near 30
percent of the unfished level through
2009 if q=0.7 is the true state of nature.
When the results of both models are
combined and given equal weighting,
the 2009 depletion level is projected to
be slightly above the overfished level.
Because whiting stock assessments are
prepared annually and OYs adjusted
annually, the risk of reaching an
overfished condition is reduced. A new
stock assessment will be prepared prior
to the 2008 fishing year and will
provide an opportunity to further adjust
harvest levels in response to new
assessment information. The 2008
assessment will be informed with
results from the 2007 hydroacoustic
survey (the 2007 assessment used
results from the 2005 hydroacoustic
survey which is conducted every other
year) and will further investigate the
appropriateness of model parameters,
harvest rates proxies, and year class
strength.
Allocations
In 1994, the United States formally
recognized that the four Washington
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coastal treaty Indian tribes (Makah,
Quileute, Hoh, and Quinault) have
treaty rights to fish for groundfish in the
Pacific Ocean. In general terms, the
quantification of those rights is 50
percent of the harvestable surplus of
groundfish that pass through the tribes’
usual and accustomed fishing areas
(described at 50 CFR 660.324).
The Pacific Coast Indian treaty fishing
rights, described at 50 CFR 660.324 and
660.385, provide for the allocation of
groundfish to the tribes through the
specifications and management
measures process. A tribal allocation is
subtracted from the species’ OY before
limited entry and open access
allocations are derived. The tribal
whiting fishery is a separate fishery, and
is not governed by the limited entry or
open access regulations or allocations.
To date, only the Makah Tribe has
participated. The Makah Tribe regulates,
and in cooperation with NMFS,
monitors this fishery so as not to exceed
the tribal allocation.
Beginning in 1999, NMFS set the
tribal allocation according to an
abundance-based sliding scale method,
proposed by the Makah Tribe in 1998
(see 64 FR 27928, May 24, 1999; 65 FR
221, January 4, 2000; and 66 FR 2338,
January 11, 2001). Details on the
abundance-based sliding scale
allocation method and related litigation
were discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule to implement the 2005–
2006 groundfish specifications and
management measures and are not
repeated here. On December 28, 2004,
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
upheld the sliding scale approach in
Midwater Trawler’s Cooperative v.
Daley, 393 F. 3d 994 (9th Cir. 2004).
Under the sliding scale allocation
method, the tribal allocation varies with
the U.S. whiting OY, ranging from a low
of 14 percent (or less) of the U.S. OY
when OY levels are above 250,000 mt,
to a high of 17.5 percent of the U.S. OY
when the OY level is at or below
145,000 mt. For 2007, using the sliding
scale allocation method, the tribal
allocation will be 32,500 mt. The Makah
Tribe is the only Washington Coast tribe
that requested a whiting allocation for
2007. The tribal fleet is comprised of
five midwater trawlers who deliver to
shoreside plants and to one at-sea
mothership.
The 2007 commercial OY (non-tribal)
for whiting is 208,091 mt. This is
calculated by deducting the 32,500 mt
tribal allocation and 2,000 mt for
research catch and bycatch in nongroundfish fisheries from the 242,591
mt U.S. OY. Regulations at 50 CFR
660.323(a)(2) divide the commercial OY
into separate allocations for the non-
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tribal catcher/processor, mothership,
and shore-based sectors of the whiting
fishery and the specific values are found
in tables 1a and 2a to part 660 subpart
G.
The catcher/processor sector is
comprised of vessels that harvest and
process whiting at sea (the fleet has
typically been six to nine vessels
annually since the formation of the
Pacific Whiting Conservation
Cooperative in 1997). The mothership
sector is comprised of motherships and
catcher vessels that harvest whiting for
delivery to motherships that process the
whiting at sea (typically three–six
motherships operate in the fishery with
one mothership also servicing the tribal
fleet). Motherships are vessels that do
not harvest, but process the whiting at
sea. The shoreside sector is comprised
of vessels that harvest whiting for
delivery to shoreside processors (in
recent years, the number of participating
vessels has ranged from 29 to 37 vessels,
some of which also service the nontribal mothership sector). Each sector
receives a portion of the non-tribal
commercial OY, with the catcher/
processors receiving 34 percent (70,751
mt), the mothership sector receiving 24
percent (49,942 mt), and the shoreside
sector receiving 42 percent (87,398 mt),
amounts that are roughly an 11%
reduction from 2005 and 2006 levels.
It should also be noted that whiting is
not the only fishery that these vessels
depend on. Shoreside vessels typically
participate in other fisheries, such as
non-whiting groundfish, crab, and
shrimp fisheries. Mothership and
catcher-processor vessels typically
participate in the Alaska pollock
fishery.
All whiting caught in 2007 before the
effective date of this action will be
counted against the new 2007 OY. As in
the past, the specification include fish
caught in state ocean waters (0–3
nautical miles (nm) offshore) as well as
fish caught in the EEZ (3–200 nm
offshore).
Inseason Adjustments to Fishery
Management Measures
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP
and its implementing regulations at 50
CFR part 660, subpart G, provide for
routine management measures to be
used for inseason management of the
Pacific coast groundfish fishery. The
changes to current groundfish
management measures implemented by
this action were recommended by the
Council, in consultation with Pacific
Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and the
States of Washington, Oregon, and
California, at its March 5–9, 2007,
meeting in Sacramento, CA. At that
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meeting the Council recommended
changes to management measures in
response to three primary concerns: (1)
Higher than expected canary rockfish
bycatch rates in the non-whiting limited
entry trawl fishery north of 40°10.00′ N.
lat. based on newly-available scientific
information; (2) higher than expected
catch of petrale sole in the limited entry
trawl fishery; and (3) the need for state
and Federal groundfish regulations to
conform in order to minimize confusion
for the public. To address these
concerns, the Council recommended the
following revisions to groundfish
management measures: (1) Close the
areas shoreward of the trawl Rockfish
Conservation Area (RCA) north of Cape
Alava and between Capa Arago and
Humbug Mountain beginning April 1;
(2) adjust the shoreward boundary of the
trawl RCA to a line approximating the
60-fm (110-m) contour between
Leadbetter Point and the OregonWashington border from April 1 through
October 31; (3) adjust the seaward
boundary of the trawl RCA to a line
approximating the 150-fm (274-m)
contour north of Cascade Head and to a
line approximating the 200-fm (366-m)
contour south of Cascade Head
beginning April 1 through August 31;
(4) adjust the seaward boundary of the
trawl RCA to the petrale-modified line
approximating the 200-fm (366-m)
contour, coastwide, from November 1
through December 31; (5) north of
40°10.00′ N. lat., increase cumulative
limits for lingcod and shortspine
thornyhead taken with large and small
footrope trawl gear, and south of
40°10.00′ N. lat., increase cumulative
limits for lingcod taken with large
footrope and midwater trawl gear; (6)
north of 40°10.00′ N. lat., decrease
cumulative limits for selective flatfish
trawls for sablefish, Dover sole, and
petrale sole beginning May 1; (7)
combine cumulative limited entry trawl
limits for Other Flatfish and arrowtooth
flounder coastwide beginning May 1; (8)
north of 40°10.00′ N. lat., reduce
cumulative limits for slope rockfish for
all trawl gears beginning May 1; (9)
reduce cumulative limits for petrale sole
using large and small footrope trawl
gears coastwide beginning May 1; and
(10) adjust Federal regulations to
conform with Washington recreational
fishery management measures to
prohibit the retention of groundfish
seaward of a line approximating the 20fm (37-m) contour from May 21 through
September 30, in the area from the U.S.
border with Canada to the Queets River,
WA (47°31.70′ N. lat.), except on days
when the Pacific halibut fishery is open
in this area, and prohibit the retention
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of groundfish seaward of a line
approximating the 30-fm (55-m) contour
from March 17 through June 15, in the
area between the Queets River and
Leadbetter Point, except that retention
of sablefish and Pacific cod is allowed
from May 1 through June 15.
widow rockfish bycatch limit be raised
to 220 mt, the same bycatch limit that
was in effect at the end of 2006. With
this increase, the 2007 estimated total
catch of widow rockfish is still
predicted to be well below the 2007
widow rockfish OY of 368 mt.
Overfished Species Bycatch Limits in
the Pacific Whiting Fishery
The availability of overfished species
as incidental catch, particularly canary
rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, and
widow rockfish, may prevent the
industry from harvesting the entire
whiting OY during 2007. To allow the
industry to have the opportunity to
harvest the higher whiting OY while
keeping incidental catch within the
rebuilding OYs for the incidental
species, the Council recommended
bycatch limits for the overfished species
most commonly taken as incidental
catch in the whiting fishery. With
bycatch limits, the industry has the
opportunity to harvest a larger amount
of whiting, if they can do so while
keeping the incidental catch of specific
overfished species within adopted
bycatch limits. Regulations provide for
the automatic closure of the commercial
(non-tribal) portion of the whiting
fishery upon attainment of a bycatch
limit.
In recent years, the most constraining
overfished species for the whiting
fishery have been darkblotched, canary
and widow rockfish. Prior to this final
rule, regulations at 50 CFR 660.373
(b)(4) contained the following bycatch
limits for the commercial sectors (nontribal) of the whiting fishery: 4.7 mt for
canary, 200 mt for widow, and 25 mt for
darkblotched rockfish.
At the March 2007 Council meeting,
the Council’s groundfish management
team (GMT) examined the 2007 whiting
OY alternatives in relation to the
potential bycatch of overfished species.
With a U.S. OY of 242,591 mt and in the
absence of any further restrictions, the
bycatch of canary rockfish was projected
to be approximately 3.9 mt, the bycatch
of widow rockfish was projected to be
approximately 217 mt, and the bycatch
of darkblotched rockfish was projected
to be approximately 12.4 mt. After
considering the projected catch of
overfished species in all other fishing
and research activities, the Council
recommended that the canary and
darkblotched rockfish bycatch limits for
the whiting fishery remain at 4.7 mt and
25 mt, respectively, which were the
same limits that were available during
the 2006 primary whiting season. To
accommodate current incidental catch
projections for the non-tribal whiting
fishery, the Council recommended the
Limited Entry Trawl Fishery
Management Measures
At its March 2007 meeting, the
Council received new data and analyses
on the catch of groundfish in the limited
entry trawl fishery. The Council’s
recommendations for revising 2007
trawl fishery management measures
focused on modifying the RCA
boundary lines and trip limits to move
vessels away from areas where canary
rockfish most commonly co-occur with
more abundant groundfish stocks,
limiting the resulting effects of the
movement of the fleet on darkblotched
rockfish, and reducing the availability of
petrale sole early in 2007 in order to
better ensure that petrale sole is
available for harvest later in the 2007
fishing year.
According to the most recently
available West Coast Groundfish
Observer Program (WCGOP) data,
released in late January, 2007, bycatch
rates for canary rockfish using selective
flatfish trawl gear north of 40°10.00′ N.
lat. were much higher in 2005 than had
been anticipated. By applying these new
bycatch rates to landings of target
species in the existing fishery bycatch
model, NMFS concluded that the 2005
canary rockfish OY had been exceeded
by 2 mt. While estimated 2006 total
catch of canary rockfish has yet to be
determined, higher than anticipated
bycatch rates in the north by selective
flatfish trawls would be expected to
continue in 2006. Based on 2005
WCGOP data indicating higher canary
rockfish bycatch rates using selective
flatfish trawls north of 40°10.00′ N. lat.,
NMFS believes that the canary rockfish
OY could be exceeded in 2007 under
status quo regulations. The 2007
regulatory measures were developed
assuming a canary rockfish bycatch rate
that now has been determined to be too
low, which results in an underestimate
in the predicted impacts to canary
rockfish. In order to keep catch levels
within the canary rockfish OY, inseason
adjustments are necessary to constrain
incidental canary rockfish catch in the
limited entry non-whiting trawl fishery.
The Council considered several short
term options available to reduce impacts
on canary rockfish in the non-whiting
limited entry trawl fishery north of
40°10.00′ N. lat. to harvest levels
initially projected for the fisheries
during development of the 2007
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management measures: (1) The
modification of trawl cumulative limits;
(2) modifications of the trawl RCA
boundaries; and (3) the use of
management area boundaries and
commonly used geographic coordinates,
defined at 50 CFR 660.302 under
‘‘North-South management area’’, to
provide more area-specific management
measures on portions of the coast with
differential canary rockfish bycatch
rates. For the longer term, the Council
discussed the development of other
tools, such as more refined area
closures, similar to the yelloweye
rockfish RCAs, but concluded that
implementing these types of closures
would not be routine management
measure changes under either the FMP
at 6.2.D or Federal regulations at 50 CFR
660.370(c).
Based on analysis of 2005 WCGOP
data, the areas of the coast with highest
bycatch rate of canary rockfish relative
to target species taken in the nonwhiting trawl fishery are: The area
shoreward of the trawl RCA north of
Cape Alava (48°10.00′ N. lat.) to the
U.S./Canada boundary; the area
shoreward of the trawl RCA between
Leadbetter Point (46°38.17′ N. lat.) and
the Oregon/Washington border
(46°16.00′ N. lat.); and the area
shoreward of the trawl RCA between
Cape Arago (43°20.83′ N. lat.) and
Humbug Mountain (42°40.50′ N. lat.).
The Council considered several
combinations of available management
measures and looked at the projected
impact of these measures on the
resource and the fishery. In order to
keep projected impacts of the nonwhiting trawl fishery on canary rockfish
within the 2007 OY, and to allow
fishing opportunities in geographic
areas with low canary rockfish bycatch,
several modifications were
recommended to the limited entry nonwhiting trawl fishery regulations,
including: (1) Modify the trawl RCA
boundaries; (2) close two areas of the
coast shoreward of the trawl RCA; (3)
reduce cumulative limits for some
species using selective flatfish trawl
gear; (4) combine arrowtooth and Other
Flatfish into a flatfish species group
with a single, reduced cumulative limit;
and (5) increase opportunities for
lingcod and shortspine thornyheads in
areas seaward of the trawl RCA.
Rockfish Conservation Area
Boundaries
The Council determined that, in order
to constrain the incidental catch of
canary rockfish and to prevent
exceeding the 2007 canary rockfish OY,
the limited entry trawl RCA north of
40°10.00′ N. lat. should be expanded
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shoreward, so that the RCA’s shoreward
boundary is no deeper than a line
approximating the 75-fm (137-m)
contour for the entire year. This RCA
expansion is expected to have a dual
effect of eliminating fishing opportunity
in areas with trawl efforts exhibiting
higher canary rockfish bycatch rates, as
well as shifting fishing effort to areas
exhibiting relatively lower canary
rockfish bycatch rates. The Council also
considered a more refined modification
of the shoreward RCA boundaries in
areas north of 40°10.00′ N. lat. that
would close or substantially restrict
areas with the highest bycatch rates, as
identified from WCGOP data. The areas
of highest canary rockfish bycatch rates
included: The area shoreward of the
RCA north of Cape Alava; the area
shoreward of the RCA between
Leadbetter Point and the Washington/
Oregon border; and the area shoreward
of the RCA between Cape Arago and
Humbug Mountain. The Council’s
Groundfish Management Team (GMT)
analyzed the effect of relatively greater
restrictions in these three areas and,
based on that analysis, recommended
closing the shoreward area north of
Cape Alava, closing the shoreward area
between Cape Arago and Humbug
Mountain, and expanding the
shoreward boundary of the trawl RCA to
a line approximating the 60-fm (110-m)
contour during the summer in the area
between Leadbetter Point and the
Oregon/Washington border. The
Council also considered various
alternatives that would leave the area
shoreward of the RCA and north of Cape
Alava open during winter months to
reduce the disproportionate impact this
closure would have on vessels based in
northern Washington. However, the
necessary reductions in cumulative trip
limits required to keep this area open
would make trawling with selective
flatfish gear not economically viable for
many participants in the non-whiting
trawl fishery. The Council also
considered the potential impacts of
interaction with soft-shelled crab as
trawl effort is shifted to areas closer to
shore between Leadbetter Point and the
Oregon/Washington border during
summer months. The line
approximating the 60-fm (110-m) depth
contour is farther offshore in this area
and GMT analysis suggested that
interactions between groundfish
trawlers and soft-shelled crab would be
minimal if a 60-fm (110-m) shoreward
boundary were put in place. In order to
reduce economic impacts on vessels
that formerly operated in the nearshore
fishing areas, the Council supported
liberalization, where possible, of the
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seaward boundary of the RCA in order
to provide open fishing areas of
relatively low canary bycatch to
accommodate a shift in fishing effort
from nearshore to offshore waters. The
benefits of shifting effort offshore are
twofold: Since the highest rates of
canary bycatch occur in the areas
shoreward of the RCA, shifting effort
seaward of the RCA further reduces the
effort in the nearshore areas that remain
open, thus reducing the amount of
canary rockfish caught in those areas;
and some displaced vessels whose effort
was concentrated in the areas that are
now closed may be able to shift their
effort seaward of the RCA and remain in
the fishery.
Trawl fishing opportunities seaward
of the trawl RCA are primarily
constrained by measures intended to
minimize the incidental catch of
darkblotched rockfish. Data from the
NMFS trawl survey, logbook data, and
anecdotal information from the trawl
industry shows that various target
species and darkblotched rockfish are
found in shallower depths in the north
and move deeper toward the south. The
Council considered changes to the
seaward boundary of the RCA within
the context of allowing increased fishing
opportunity while maintaining
protections for darkblotched rockfish.
Dividing the seaward boundary of the
RCA at Cascade Head (45°03.83′ N. lat.)
allows more refined area management in
response to the depth-based shift in
abundance from north to south of
darkblotched rockfish and target
species. North of Cascade Head, target
species and darkblotched rockfish are
more abundant in shallower water, so
the seaward boundary of the RCA can be
shifted shoreward to allow increased
targeting opportunity while still
protecting darkblotched rockfish. South
of Cascade Head, target species and
darkblotched rockfish are more
abundant in deeper water, so only
minor adjustments to the seaward
boundary of the RCA, which remains
similar to what was in place at the
beginning of 2007, provides targeting
opportunity while still protecting
darkblotched rockfish.
Based on the information and analysis
described above, the Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing the following changes to
the trawl RCA north of 40°10.00′ N. lat.:
North of Cape Alava, and between Cape
Arago and Humbug Mountain, the
shoreward boundary of the RCA is
shifted to the shore, closing the area
shoreward of the RCA for the remainder
of 2007; between Leadbetter Point and
the Oregon/Washington border, the
shoreward boundary is shifted
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shoreward to a line approximating the
60-fm (110-m) depth contour from April
1 through October 31; unless otherwise
specified above, the RCA will have a
shoreward boundary of a line
approximating the 75-fm (137-m) depth
contour from April 1 through December
31, 2007; north of Cascade Head, the
seaward boundary of the trawl RCA is
shifted shoreward to a line
approximating the 150-fm (274-m)
depth contour from April 1 through
August 31, 2007; north of Cascade Head,
the seaward boundary of the RCA will
remain at a line approximating the 200fm (366-m) depth contour from
September 1 through October 31, 2007;
south of Cascade Head, the seaward
boundary of the RCA will be shifted
shoreward to a line approximating the
200-fm (366-m) depth contour from
April 1 through April 30, and remain at
the 200-fm (366-m) depth contour
through October 31, 2007; north of
40°10.00′ N. lat., the seaward boundary
of the RCA will be shifted shoreward to
a line approximating the petralemodified 200-fm (366-m) depth contour
from November 1 through December 31,
2007.
Limited Entry Trawl Trip Limits
In addition to area closures, the
Council determined that cumulative
limits in the limited entry trawl fishery
north of 40°10.00′ N. lat. should be
modified to: Reduce effort and catch of
target species in order to reduce impacts
on co-occurring canary rockfish and
prevent exceeding the 2007 canary
rockfish OY; constrain the effect of any
fleet movement away from canary
rockfish grounds and into darkblotched
rockfish grounds; and reduce the early
2007 rate of petrale sole catch in order
to allow more petrale sole to be
available for harvest later in the 2007
season.
The Council considered various
combinations of cumulative limit
adjustments paired with RCA
modifications and area closures to
reduce impacts to canary rockfish. As
with the RCA boundary revisions, the
Council’s GMT analyzed revisions to
trip limits intended to shift fishing effort
away from areas where canary rockfish
are more commonly taken as bycatch.
The GMT recommended that the
Council consider reducing sablefish and
Dover sole opportunity for vessels using
selective flatfish trawl gear, in order to
provide for a disincentive to fish in
areas where canary rockfish are found
and to shift effort away from areas with
a relatively high canary rockfish bycatch
rate. Reductions in petrale sole
opportunities were primarily driven by
the need to slow the catch of petrale
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sole, but this adjustment also results in
lower impacts on canary rockfish
compared to status quo measures.
Given the need to reduce overall catch
and to result in lower predicted canary
rockfish impacts than under current
management measures, the GMT also
recommended combining the
arrowtooth and Other Flatfish
cumulative limits to enable fishermen to
better vary their target strategy while
still gaining the benefit of reducing
canary rockfish impacts. GMT estimates
showed that this approach allows for
greater opportunities for those particular
target strategies, but that the total catch,
and thus overfished species impacts, are
less than if separate cumulative limits
were applied.
Based on these analyses and
recommendations the Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing a decrease in the limited
entry selective flatfish trawl fishery
cumulative limits north of 40°10.00′ N.
lat. beginning May 1: For sablefish from
‘‘8,000 lb per two months’’ to ‘‘5,000 lb
per two months’’ through December 31,
2007; for Dover sole from ‘‘40,000 lb per
two months’’ to ‘‘38,000 lb per two
months’’ through October 31, 2007 and
from ‘‘40,000 lb per two months’’ to
‘‘25,000 lb per two months’’ through
December 31, 2007; and for petrale sole,
from ‘‘25,000 lb per two months’’ to
‘‘20,000 lb per two months’’ through
August 31, 2007, to ‘‘15,000 lb per two
months’’ from September 1 through
October 31, and to ‘‘8,000 lb per two
months’’ from November 1 through
December 31, 2007. The Council also
recommended and NMFS is
implementing, beginning May 1,
combining cumulative limits for
arrowtooth and Other Flatfish within a
single cumulative limit for Other
Flatfish (including arrowtooth). For
large and small footrope trawl gears,
arrowtooth limits are modified from
‘‘100,000 lb per two months’’ and
combined within Other Flatfish limits
into a combined cumulative limit of
‘‘110,000 lb per two months’’ through
December 31, 2007. For selective flatfish
trawl gears, arrowtooth limits are
modified from ‘‘90,000 lb per two
months’’ and combined within Other
Flatfish limits into a combined
cumulative limit of ‘‘70,000 lb per two
months’’ through October 31, 2007.
Beginning November 1, the cumulative
limit for Other Flatfish, including
arrowtooth, taken with selective flatfish
trawl gear is reduced from ‘‘90,000 lb
per two months’’ to ‘‘30,000 lb per two
months’’ through December 31, 2007.
In addition to liberalizing the seaward
boundaries of the trawl RCA north of
40°10.00′ N. lat., the Council considered
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increasing cumulative limits for DTS
species and lingcod in areas seaward of
the RCA in order to shift more fishing
effort to offshore waters. North of
40°10.00′ N. lat., the Council considered
increasing limits for lingcod and
shortspine thornyheads taken with large
and small footrope trawl gears, which
are only allowed when fishing seaward
of the trawl RCA, to create incentives to
fish in areas with lower canary rockfish
bycatch rates. South of 40°10.00′ N. lat.,
the Council considered increasing limits
for lingcod taken with large footrope
and midwater trawl gears, which are
only allowed when fishing seaward of
the trawl RCA, to accommodate a shift
in effort from shoreward areas, and to
reduce discards of non-constraining
target species. The Council determined
that increasing trip limits for lingcod
and shortspine thornyhead would help
prevent exceeding the 2007 canary
rockfish OY, reduce unnecessary
discards, and reduce economic impacts
for the following reasons: (1) The shift
in effort to areas with lower canary
rockfish bycatch rates will reduce total
coastwide incidental catch of canary
rockfish; (2) it may reduce the economic
impacts on vessels displaced by
nearshore fishery closures by providing
fishing opportunity while also
constraining incidental catch of canary
rockfish; and (3) it will reduce
unnecessary discards of lingcod and
shortspine thornyheads.
Increasing incentives to fish seaward
of the trawl RCA will increase effort in
an area of known darkblotched rockfish
abundance; accordingly, the Council
considered various ways to mitigate
these impacts and prevent exceeding the
2007 darkblotched rockfish OY.
Changes to management measures to
constrain the catch of canary rockfish
will also affect the incidental catch of
darkblotched rockfish and Pacific ocean
perch (POP). The incidental catch of
darkblotched rockfish is likely to
increase compared to predicted impacts
under current management measures,
and will be caused by a shift in effort
away from areas of high canary rockfish
bycatch to areas of greater darkblotched
rockfish and POP abundance. However,
POP is not considered to be a
constraining species in the limited entry
trawl fishery; the inseason adjustments
to management measures implemented
by this action are anticipated to keep
POP total catch well within its 2007 OY
of 150 mt. The Council focused its
discussions of various continental slope
actions to prevent exceeding the 2007
darkblotched rockfish OY, including
modification of the seaward boundary of
the trawl RCA, and changes in catch
limit opportunities. The Council’s GMT
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analyzed the effects of changes in RCA
boundaries, cumulative limit
opportunities, and fishing effort on the
incidental catch of darkblotched
rockfish, and recommended that
cumulative limits for slope rockfish be
decreased to reduce the impact of
greater effort occurring in areas where
darkblotched rockfish are found. The
combined effects of these actions are
predicted to result in a total 2007 catch
of darkblotched rockfish that is lower
than the 2007 OY. Catch of
darkblotched rockfish will be monitored
and action can be taken inseason if
necessary to modify the trawl RCA and
cumulative limits to keep total catch
within the 2007 darkblotched rockfish
OY.
Based on these analyses and
recommendations, the Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing an increase in the limited
entry trawl fishery cumulative limits
taken with large and small footrope
trawl gears north of 40°10.00′ N. lat.
beginning May 1 through December 31,
2007: For lingcod from ‘‘1,200 lb per
two months’’ to ‘‘4,000 lb per two
months’’; and for shortspine
thornyheads from ‘‘7,500 lb per two
months’’ to ‘‘10,000 lb per two months’’.
South of 40°10.00′ N. lat., limited entry
trawl fishery cumulative limits for
lingcod taken with large footrope and
midwater trawl gears will increase,
beginning May 1 through December 31,
2007, from ‘‘1,200 lb per two months’’
to ‘‘4,000 lb per two months’’. The
Council also recommended and NMFS
is implementing a decrease in the
limited entry trawl fishery cumulative
limits for minor slope and darkblotched
rockfish north of 40°10.00′ N. lat.,
beginning May 1 through December 31,
2007, from ‘‘4,000 lb per two months’’
to ‘‘1,500 lb per two months’’.
In early February 2007, NMFS
received preliminary fishery data
showing higher than expected limited
entry trawl landings of petrale sole.
NMFS estimated that the catch of
petrale sole could be 1,200 mt out of a
coastwide OY of 2,499 by the end of
February. On February 9, NMFS issued
a public notice asking for industry
cooperation in reducing petrale sole
catch to keep petrale sole from
exceeding the 2007 OY, and still allow
for management flexibility to keep
petrale sole fishing opportunities
throughout the calendar year. As a
result of this voluntary action,
significant reductions in catch occurred
during the remainder of February and
petrale sole catch was estimated to be
between 850 and 900 mt at the end of
February. In an effort to slow the catch
of petrale sole, to prevent exceeding the
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2007 OY, and allow petrale sole target
opportunities through the end of 2007,
the Council considered reductions of
petrale sole cumulative limits in the
limited entry trawl fishery. Industry
representatives indicated that petrale
sole limits less than 20,000 lbs (9,072
kg) per two months were not
economically sustainable, given the cost
of fuel needed to access that catch. The
Council also considered the effects of
petrale sole cumulative limit reductions
on the bycatch of canary rockfish.
Based on these analyses and
information, the Council recommended
and NMFS is implementing a decrease
in the limited entry trawl fishery
cumulative limits for petrale sole north
of 40°10.00′ N. lat.: Beginning May 1
through October 31, 2007, from ‘‘25,000
lb per two months’’ to ‘‘20,000 lb per
two months’’; and beginning November
1 through December 31, 2007, from
‘‘50,000 lb per two months’’ to ‘‘30,000
lb per two months’’. South of 40°10.00′
N. lat., beginning May 1 through
October 31, 2007, the Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing reductions in cumulative
limits for petrale sole from ‘‘30,000 lb
per two months’’ to ‘‘25,000 lb per two
months’’.
Washington’s Recreational Groundfish
RCA
The States of Washington and Oregon
manage canary and yelloweye rockfish
under a joint harvest guideline for their
recreational fisheries. The states modify
portions of their recreational fisheries,
through inseason adjustment to state
regulations, in order to keep catch
within the harvest guidelines for canary
and/or yelloweye rockfish.
During 2005, after receiving inseason
recreational catch data, the Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife’s
(WDFW) revised catch projections for
the year indicated that the state harvest
targets for canary and yelloweye
rockfish would be prematurely attained,
and WDFW took action to prevent
exceeding the Washington/Oregon
harvest guidelines for these species. For
2006, new Washington recreational
management measures were adopted to
avoid early canary and yelloweye
rockfish harvest guideline attainment.
During development of the 2007–2008
groundfish specifications and
management measures, WDFW
identified additional RCA restrictions
that could be in place if needed, based
on harvest data through 2005. These
additional restrictions were adopted by
the Council and implemented by NMFS
in the final rule for the 2007–2008
groundfish specifications and
management measures (71 FR 78638).
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New 2006 harvest estimates, based on
data collected in WDFW’s Ocean
Sampling Program, indicated that the
Washington recreational fishery stayed
well below their portion of the 2006
Oregon/Washington harvest guidelines,
harvesting 1.28 mt of canary and 1.70
mt of yelloweye (out of the 2006
Oregon/Washington harvest guidelines
of 8.5 mt and 6.7 mt for canary and
yelloweye rockfish, respectively). The
2007 Oregon/Washington canary and
yelloweye rockfish harvest guidelines
are 8.2 mt and 6.8 mt, respectively. At
the March 2007 meeting, WDFW
requested that the duration of the
closure of the Washington recreational
RCAs be shortened for 2007 and 2008 to
reduce the adverse impacts on
Washington’s coastal communities from
the additional restrictions implemented
as part of the 2007–2008 specifications
and management measures. Compared
to the duration of the Washington
recreational RCAs implemented in the
2007–2008 specifications, the 2007–
2008 closure north of Queets River will
be 20 days shorter and between the
Queets River and Leadbetter Point, the
2007–2008 closure will be 46 days
shorter. Based on data from the 2006
Washington recreational fisheries, the
revised RCA restrictions are still
expected to constrain total catch of
canary and yelloweye rockfish to stay
within the shared Oregon and
Washington harvest guidelines.
Therefore, the Pacific Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing: (1) A prohibition of
groundfish fishing in the Washington
recreational fishery, north of the Queets
River and seaward of a line
approximating the 20-fm (37-m) contour
from May 21–September 30, except on
days when the Pacific halibut fishery is
open in this area; and (2) a prohibition
of groundfish fishing in the Washington
recreational fishery, between the Queets
River and Leadbetter Point seaward of a
line approximating the 30–fm (55-m)
contour from March 17–June 15, except
retention of sablefish and Pacific cod is
allowed from May 1–June 15.
Classification
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Final Whiting Specifications for 2007
and Inseason Adjustments to Fishery
Management Measures
The final whiting specifications and
management measures for 2007 are
issued under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), and are in
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accordance with 50 CFR part 660, the
regulations implementing the FMP.
These actions are based on the most
recent data available. The aggregate data
upon which these actions are based are
available for public inspection at the
Office of the Administrator, Northwest
Region, NMFS, (see ADDRESSES) during
business hours.
For the following reasons, NMFS
finds good cause to waive prior public
notice and comment on the revisions to
the 2007 Pacific whiting specifications
under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) because notice
and comment would be impracticable
and contrary to the public interest. Also
for the same reasons, NMFS finds good
cause to waive the 30-day delay in
effectiveness pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3), so that this final rule may
become effective as close as possible to
the April 1, 2007, fishery start date.
The proposed rulemaking to
implement the 2007 specifications and
management measures, published on
September 29, 2006 (71 FR 57764), first
explained the need to delay adopting
the whiting ABC and harvest
specifications until after the March 2007
and March 2008 Council meetings.
NMFS requested public comment on the
proposed rule through October 31, 2006.
The final rule, published on December
29, 2006 (71 FR 78638), again explained
the range in the specifications and that
the final OY and ABC would be
recommended at the Council’s March
2007 and 2008 meetings.
The FMP requires that fishery
specifications be evaluated periodically
using the best scientific information
available. Every year NMFS does a stock
assessment in which U.S. and Canadian
scientists cooperate. The 2007 stock
assessment for whiting was prepared in
early 2007, the earliest possible time to
conduct an assessment incorporating
2006 data. Whiting differs from other
groundfish species in that it has a
shorter life span and the population
exhibits greater recruitment variability.
Thus, it is important to use the most
recent fisheries and survey data in stock
assessment when determining ABC and
OY. Because of the timing of the
assessment, the results are not available
for use in developing the new ABC and
OY until just before the Council’s
annual March meeting. The Council
made its recommendations at its March
5–9, 2007 meeting in Sacramento, CA.
For the actions to be implemented in
this final rule, affording the time
necessary for prior notice and
opportunity for public comment would
prevent the Agency from managing the
Pacific whiting and related fisheries
using the best available science by
approaching without exceeding the OYs
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for federally managed species. The
adjustments to management measures in
this document affect commercial trawl
fisheries off Washington, Oregon, and
California and recreational fisheries off
Washington. These adjustments to
management measures must be
implemented immediately to: Prevent
exceeding the 2007 OYs for petrale sole,
widow rockfish, and canary rockfish;
prevent premature closure of fisheries;
and eliminate confusion for the public
and to improve enforcement by ensuring
that Federal and state recreational
regulations conform to each other.
Changes to the cumulative limits in
the limited entry trawl fishery and to
the trawl RCA are needed to reduce the
projected bycatch of canary rockfish, a
groundfish species that is currently
subject to rebuilding requirements. The
projected bycatch of canary rockfish
must be reduced in order to keep
coastwide fisheries from exceeding that
species’s rebuilding OY. Changes to the
trawl RCA to reduce the bycatch of
canary rockfish must be implemented as
close as possible to the April 1, 2007
start of the fishing season so that the
total catch of canary rockfish stays
within its 2007 OY, as defined in the
rebuilding plan for this species. Changes
to petrale sole cumulative limits in the
limited entry trawl fishery must be
implemented in a timely manner by
May 1, 2007, so that harvest of petrale
sole stays within the harvest levels
projected for 2007 and so that petrale
sole catch is available for harvest for as
long as possible throughout the year.
Changes to the non-tribal whiting
widow rockfish bycatch limit must be
implemented as close as possible to the
start of the California whiting fishery,
on April 1, 2007. Ensuring that the
bycatch limit is in place by the season
start date provides an opportunity for
participants in this fishery to catch the
available whiting quota without
reaching or exceeding the bycatch limit
of widow rockfish or its OY,
prematurely closing the fishery.
Changes to the Washington
recreational groundfish RCA must be
implemented in a timely manner by
May 1, 2007, to allow the recreational
fishermen to fish in the newly opened
area in the EEZ, in order to eliminate
confusion for the public, and to improve
enforcement by ensuring that Federal
and state recreational regulations
conform to each other.
These revisions are needed to protect
overfished groundfish species and to
keep the harvest of other groundfish
species within the harvest levels
projected for 2007, while allowing
fishermen access to healthy stocks.
Without these measures in place, the
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19397
fisheries could risk exceeding harvest
levels early in the year, causing early
and unanticipated fishery closures and
economic harm to fishing communities.
Delaying these changes would keep
management measures in place that are
not based on the best available data and
which could lead to early closures of the
fishery if harvest of groundfish exceeds
levels projected for 2007. Such delay
would impair achievement of one of the
Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP objectives
of providing for year-round harvest
opportunities or extending fishing
opportunities as long as practicable
during the fishing year. In addition, it is
also in the public interest to implement
the recreational measures in this notice
as soon as possible to improve
enforcement and eliminate confusion
for the public by removing differences
between different regulations that affect
the same waters and fisheries.
The environmental impacts associated
with the Pacific whiting harvest levels
being adopted by this action are
considered in the final environmental
impact statement for the 2007–2008
specifications and management
measures. Copies of the FEIS and the
ROD are available from the Council (see
ADDRESSES).
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175,
this action was developed after
meaningful consultation and
collaboration with tribal officials from
the area covered by the FMP. Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16 U.S.C.
1852(b)(5), one of the voting members of
the Council must be a representative of
an Indian tribe with federally
recognized fishing rights from the area
of the Council’s jurisdiction. In
addition, regulations implementing the
FMP establish a procedure by which the
tribes with treaty fishing rights in the
area covered by the FMP request new
allocations or regulations specific to the
tribes, in writing, before the first of the
two meetings at which the Council
considers groundfish management
measures. Only the Makah Tribe
requested a whiting allocation for 2007.
The regulations at 50 CFR 660.324(d)
further state ‘‘the Secretary will develop
tribal allocations and regulations under
this paragraph in consultation with the
affected tribe(s) and, insofar as possible,
with tribal consensus.’’ The tribal
whiting allocation finalized by this final
rule was recommended by the Council
based on the sliding scale allocation
formula described above.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fishing, Fisheries, and Indian
fisheries.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 74 / Wednesday, April 18, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: April 11, 2007.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended
as follows:
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES
1. The authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows:
I
§ 660.384 Recreational fishery
management measures.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 660.373, paragraph (b)(4) is
revised to read as follows:
I
*
§ 660.373 Pacific whiting (whiting) fishery
management.
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) Bycatch limits in the whiting
fishery. The bycatch limits for the
whiting fishery may be used in season
to close a sector or sectors of the whiting
fishery to achieve the rebuilding of an
overfished or depleted stock, under
routine management measure authority
at § 660.370(c)(1)(ii). These limits are
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routine management measures under
§ 660.370(c) and, as such, may be
adjusted inseason or may have new
species added to the list of those with
bycatch limits. The whiting fishery
bycatch limits for the sectors identified
in § 660.323(a) are: 4.7 mt of canary
rockfish; 220 mt of widow rockfish; and
25 mt of darkblotched rockfish.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. In § 660.384, paragraphs
(c)(1)(i)(C)(1) and (2) are revised to read
as follows:
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) * * *
(1) Between the U.S. border with
Canada and the Queets River,
recreational fishing for groundfish is
prohibited seaward of a boundary line
approximating the 20-fm (37-m) depth
contour from May 21 through
September 30, except on days when the
Pacific halibut fishery is open in this
area. Days open to Pacific halibut
recreational fishing off Washington are
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announced on the NMFS hotline at
(206) 526–6667 or (800) 662–9825.
Coordinates for the boundary line
approximating the 20-fm (37-m) depth
contour are listed in § 660.391.
(2) Between the Queets River and
Leadbetter Point, recreational fishing for
groundfish is prohibited seaward of a
boundary line approximating the 30-fm
(55-m) depth contour from March 17,
2007, through June 15, 2007, except that
recreational fishing for sablefish and
Pacific cod is permitted within the
recreational RCA from May 1 through
June 15. In 2008, recreational fishing for
groundfish is prohibited seaward of a
boundary line approximating the 30-fm
(55-m) depth contour in from March 15,
2008, through June 15, 2008, except that
recreational fishing for sablefish and
Pacific cod is permitted within the
recreational RCA from May 1 through
June 15. Coordinates for the boundary
line approximating the 30-fm (55-m)
depth contour are listed in § 660.391.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Table 1a to part 660 subpart G is
revised to read as follows.
I
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5. Tables 3 (North) and 3 (South) to
part 660 subpart G are revised to read
as follows.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 74 (Wednesday, April 18, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19390-19410]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-1917]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 070404078-7078-01; I.D. 082806B]
RIN 0648-AV52
Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Biennial Specifications and
Management Measures; Inseason Adjustments
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; inseason adjustments to groundfish management
measures; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule takes two actions: It establishes the 2007
harvest specifications for Pacific whiting (whiting) in the U.S.
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and state waters off the coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California; and, it announces inseason changes
to management measures in the commercial and recreational Pacific Coast
groundfish fisheries. These actions are authorized by the Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP). The 2007 whiting harvest
specifications include the level of the acceptable biological catch
(ABC), optimum yield (OY), tribal allocation, and allocations for the
non-tribal commercial whiting sectors, and are intended to establish
allowable harvest levels of whiting based on the best available
scientific information. The inseason changes to fishery management
measures are intended to allow fisheries to access more abundant
groundfish stocks while protecting overfished and depleted species, and
to reduce possible confusion to the public over differing state and
Federal regulations.
DATES: Effective April 17, 2007. Comments on this rule must be received
no later than 5 p.m., local time on May 18, 2007.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by I.D. 082806B by any
of the following methods:
E-mail: WhitingABCOYInseason1.nwr@noaa.gov. Include I.D.
082806B in the subject line of the message.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Fax: 206-526-6736, Attn: Gretchen Arentzen
Mail: D. Robert Lohn, Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115-0070, Attn: Gretchen
Arentzen.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gretchen Arentzen (Northwest Region,
NMFS), phone: 206-526-6147, fax: 206-526-6736 and e-mail
gretchen.arentzen@noaa.gov; or Becky Renko (Northwest Region, NMFS),
phone: 206-526-6110 fax: 206-526-6736 and e-mail becky.renko@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This final rule is accessible via the Internet at the Office of the
Federal Register's Web site at https://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background information and documents are available at the Pacific
Fishery Management Council's (Council's) Web site at https://
www.pcouncil.org/.
Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP and its implementing regulations
at title 50 in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), part 660, subpart
G, regulate fishing for over 90 species of groundfish off the coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California. Groundfish specifications and
management measures are developed by the Council, and are implemented
by NMFS. A proposed rulemaking to implement the 2007-2008
specifications and management measures for the Pacific Coast groundfish
fishery and Amendment 16-4 of the FMP was published on September 29,
2006 (71 FR 57764). The final rule to implement the 2007-2008
specifications and management measures for the Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery was published on December 29, 2006 (71 FR 78638). These
specifications and management measures were codified in the CFR (50 CFR
part 660, subpart G). The final rule was subsequently amended on March
20, 2007 via a correcting amendment (71 FR 13043).
Changes to current groundfish management measures implemented by
this action were recommended by the Council, in consultation with
Pacific Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and the States of Washington,
Oregon, and California, at its March 5-9, 2007, meeting in Sacramento,
California. The Council recommended changes to current regulations
pertaining to two separate actions: (1) Setting the final 2007 ABC and
OY values for the Pacific coast whiting fishery and the 2007 tribal
[[Page 19391]]
allocation of whiting; and (2) adjusting current groundfish management
measures to respond to updated fishery information and other inseason
management needs.
Pacific Whiting Specifications for 2007
In November 2003, the United States and Canada signed an agreement
regarding the conservation, research, and catch sharing of whiting. The
whiting catch sharing arrangement that was agreed upon provides 73.88
percent of the total catch OY to the U.S. fisheries and 26.12 percent
to the Canadian fisheries. At this time, both countries are taking
steps to fully implement this agreement. Until this occurs, the
negotiators recommended that each country apply the agreed upon
provisions to their respective fisheries.
In anticipation of the ratification of the U.S.-Canada agreement, a
new stock assessment, and given the small amount of whiting that is
typically landed under trip limits prior to the April 1 start of the
primary season, the Council adopted a range for OY and ABC in the 2007-
2008 specifications, and delayed adoption of final 2007 and 2008 ABC
and OY until its March 2007 and 2008 meetings, respectively. To date,
the international agreement has not yet been ratified by the United
States, but the implementing legislation was recently signed into law
on January 12, 2007. The ABC and OY values recommended by the Council
as final ABC and OY values for 2007 are based on the 2007 stock
assessment, and their impacts are within the scope of impacts
considered in the EIS for the 2007 and 2008 management measures. The
whiting OY being implemented in this rule, and the resulting
allocations among the sectors, is reduced by approximately 10 percent
from the 2006 OY.
Pacific Whiting Stock Status
In general, whiting is a very productive species with highly
variable recruitment (the biomass of fish that mature and enter the
population and/or fishery each year) and a relatively short life span
when compared to other groundfish species. In 1987, the whiting biomass
was at a historically high level due to an exceptionally large number
of fish that recruited into the population in 1980 and 1984 (fish
recruited during a particular year are referred to as year classes). As
these large year classes of fish passed through the population and were
replaced by moderate sized year classes, the stock declined. The
whiting stock stabilized between 1995 and 1997, but then declined to
its lowest level in 2001. After 2001, the whiting biomass increased
substantially as a strong 1999 year class matured and entered the
spawning population. The 1999 year class has now reached its peak
biomass level and is declining, and in the absence of additional strong
year classes the stock is expected to decline in the near term even in
the absence of fishing.
The joint US-Canada Stock Assessment Review (STAR) panel met
February 5-9, 2007, to review the whiting stock assessment prepared
jointly by scientists from the NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science Center
and the University of British Columbia Fisheries Centre. The STAR panel
accepted two equally plausible assessment models that consider
uncertainty in the relative depletion level and stock productivity.
As in 2006, the amount of whiting that the hydroacoustic survey was
able to measure relative to the total amount of whiting in the surveyed
area (acoustic survey catchability coefficient, or q) was identified as
a major source of uncertainty in the new stock assessment. Because of
this uncertainty, two models were presented to bracket the range of
uncertainty in q: The base model with a fixed value of q=1,
representing the lower range of biomass and ABC/OY estimates; and the
alternative model (using an informative prior) to arrive at q=0.7,
which results in an upward scaling of both biomass and ABC/OY
estimates. Uncertainty regarding the true value of q has been a major
issue with whiting stock assessments in recent years, and as a
precautionary measure the Council has based whiting ABCs from the last
several assessments on models where q=1.
Using the base model, q=1, the whiting stock biomass at the end of
2006 was estimated to be at 36 percent of its unfished biomass and at
44 percent of its unfished biomass with the alternative model, q=0.7.
As no strong year classes have been observed since 1999, the whiting
biomass is projected to decline in the near future. Data from the 2005
hydroacoustic survey suggested a moderately strong 2003 year class;
however current recruitment estimates from fishery-dependent indices
predict that the 2003 recruitment will be below the mean. Current
estimates, while not validated with a hydroacoustic survey, predict
larger 2004 recruitment than for surrounding years. If these year
classes are stronger than currently projected, the recent downward
trend in whiting biomass could stabilize.
The steepness of the stock-recruitment relationship (the proportion
of young fish entering the population in relation to the number of
adult fish) in the 2007 assessment was estimated to be 0.75. This is
the same value that was used in 2006 when it was redefined in the 2006
assessment, whereas a value of 1 was used in 2005. Assuming a steepness
of 1 implies that the spawning biomass level has no influence on the
number of recruits produced in any given year, which may result in
overly optimistic projections. Reducing the steepness to 0.75 increases
the dependency of recruitment on the number of adult fish in the
population. Based on its review, the SSC endorsed the use of both
models in setting 2007 ABCs and OYS.
The U.S. implementing legislation and the U.S.-Canada agreement
provisions include the use of a default harvest rate of F40.
A harvest rate of F40 can be explained as that which reduces
spawning potential per female to 40 percent of what it would have been
without fishing mortality. The selection of the F40 value
was based on an analysis of stock and recruitment data for other
whiting (hake) species. However, because the whiting stock is projected
to fall below the overfished threshold if managed with a harvest rate
of F40, primarily due to the highly variable recruitment
characteristic of the stock, the SSC noted that use of a control rule
that allows for maximized yield may be inconsistent with the need to
prevent whiting from falling below the overfished threshold.
The range of U.S. ABCs and OYs considered by the Council and
analyzed in the EIS for 2007 and 2008 included: A low ABC of 244,425 mt
and a high ABC of 733,275 mt (50 percent and 150 percent, respectively,
of the 2006 U.S. ABC of 488,850); and a low OY of 134,534 mt and a high
OY of 403,604 mt (50 percent and 150 percent, respectively, of the
2005/2006 U.S. OY of 269,069). These broad ranges in whiting harvest
levels were analyzed in order to assess the potential range of the
effects of the whiting fishery on incidentally-caught overfished
species and the economic effects to coastal communities.
At its March 5-9, 2007, meeting in Sacramento, CA, the Council
reviewed the results of the new whiting stock assessment and
recommended adopting a U.S.-Canada coastwide ABC of 612,068 mt (results
in a U.S. ABC of 452,196 mt) based on the q=1 assessment model. Because
the whiting biomass is estimated to be below 40 percent of its unfished
biomass, the 40-10 adjustment was applied as specified in the Pacific
Coast Groundfish FMP, the U.S.-Canada agreement, and the Pacific
Whiting Act of 2006. With the 40-10 adjustment, the U.S.-Canada
[[Page 19392]]
coastwide OY was 575,090 mt with the q=1 model, and 878,670 mt with the
q=0.7 model. The potential OYs with the 40-10 adjustment were
considered by the Council to be too high during a time when the stock
biomass is in decline. The 40-10-based OY for the q=1 model was
projected to result in the stock biomass falling below the overfished
threshold of 25 percent of unfished biomass by 2008. The 40-10-based OY
for the q=0.7 model was projected to result in the stock biomass
falling below the overfished threshold by 2009. Given the potential
impact on future stock biomass levels and as contemplated by the
Pacific Whiting Act of 2006, the Council considered a more conservative
range of U.S.-Canada coastwide OYs.
Following discussion and public testimony, the Council recommended
adopting a U.S.-Canada coastwide OY of 328,358 mt, which corresponds to
a U.S. OY of 242,591 mt according to the international allocation in
the U.S.-Canada agreement. The 2007 U.S. OY is almost 10 percent less
than the 2006 OY (269,069 mt), as a precautionary response to the
declining trend in stock biomass, no strong year class available for
the 2007 fishery, and continuing uncertainty in the model relative to
the parameter q. With a constant harvest rate corresponding to the 2007
U.S. OY of 242,591 mt, the stock biomass level is projected to drop
below the overfished level (B25, or 25 percent of estimated
unfished biomass) by 2009 if q=1 is the true state of nature; however,
the biomass would remain near 30 percent of the unfished level through
2009 if q=0.7 is the true state of nature. When the results of both
models are combined and given equal weighting, the 2009 depletion level
is projected to be slightly above the overfished level. Because whiting
stock assessments are prepared annually and OYs adjusted annually, the
risk of reaching an overfished condition is reduced. A new stock
assessment will be prepared prior to the 2008 fishing year and will
provide an opportunity to further adjust harvest levels in response to
new assessment information. The 2008 assessment will be informed with
results from the 2007 hydroacoustic survey (the 2007 assessment used
results from the 2005 hydroacoustic survey which is conducted every
other year) and will further investigate the appropriateness of model
parameters, harvest rates proxies, and year class strength.
Allocations
In 1994, the United States formally recognized that the four
Washington coastal treaty Indian tribes (Makah, Quileute, Hoh, and
Quinault) have treaty rights to fish for groundfish in the Pacific
Ocean. In general terms, the quantification of those rights is 50
percent of the harvestable surplus of groundfish that pass through the
tribes' usual and accustomed fishing areas (described at 50 CFR
660.324).
The Pacific Coast Indian treaty fishing rights, described at 50 CFR
660.324 and 660.385, provide for the allocation of groundfish to the
tribes through the specifications and management measures process. A
tribal allocation is subtracted from the species' OY before limited
entry and open access allocations are derived. The tribal whiting
fishery is a separate fishery, and is not governed by the limited entry
or open access regulations or allocations. To date, only the Makah
Tribe has participated. The Makah Tribe regulates, and in cooperation
with NMFS, monitors this fishery so as not to exceed the tribal
allocation.
Beginning in 1999, NMFS set the tribal allocation according to an
abundance-based sliding scale method, proposed by the Makah Tribe in
1998 (see 64 FR 27928, May 24, 1999; 65 FR 221, January 4, 2000; and 66
FR 2338, January 11, 2001). Details on the abundance-based sliding
scale allocation method and related litigation were discussed in the
preamble to the proposed rule to implement the 2005-2006 groundfish
specifications and management measures and are not repeated here. On
December 28, 2004, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the
sliding scale approach in Midwater Trawler's Cooperative v. Daley, 393
F. 3d 994 (9th Cir. 2004). Under the sliding scale allocation method,
the tribal allocation varies with the U.S. whiting OY, ranging from a
low of 14 percent (or less) of the U.S. OY when OY levels are above
250,000 mt, to a high of 17.5 percent of the U.S. OY when the OY level
is at or below 145,000 mt. For 2007, using the sliding scale allocation
method, the tribal allocation will be 32,500 mt. The Makah Tribe is the
only Washington Coast tribe that requested a whiting allocation for
2007. The tribal fleet is comprised of five midwater trawlers who
deliver to shoreside plants and to one at-sea mothership.
The 2007 commercial OY (non-tribal) for whiting is 208,091 mt. This
is calculated by deducting the 32,500 mt tribal allocation and 2,000 mt
for research catch and bycatch in non-groundfish fisheries from the
242,591 mt U.S. OY. Regulations at 50 CFR 660.323(a)(2) divide the
commercial OY into separate allocations for the non-tribal catcher/
processor, mothership, and shore-based sectors of the whiting fishery
and the specific values are found in tables 1a and 2a to part 660
subpart G.
The catcher/processor sector is comprised of vessels that harvest
and process whiting at sea (the fleet has typically been six to nine
vessels annually since the formation of the Pacific Whiting
Conservation Cooperative in 1997). The mothership sector is comprised
of motherships and catcher vessels that harvest whiting for delivery to
motherships that process the whiting at sea (typically three-six
motherships operate in the fishery with one mothership also servicing
the tribal fleet). Motherships are vessels that do not harvest, but
process the whiting at sea. The shoreside sector is comprised of
vessels that harvest whiting for delivery to shoreside processors (in
recent years, the number of participating vessels has ranged from 29 to
37 vessels, some of which also service the non-tribal mothership
sector). Each sector receives a portion of the non-tribal commercial
OY, with the catcher/processors receiving 34 percent (70,751 mt), the
mothership sector receiving 24 percent (49,942 mt), and the shoreside
sector receiving 42 percent (87,398 mt), amounts that are roughly an
11% reduction from 2005 and 2006 levels.
It should also be noted that whiting is not the only fishery that
these vessels depend on. Shoreside vessels typically participate in
other fisheries, such as non-whiting groundfish, crab, and shrimp
fisheries. Mothership and catcher-processor vessels typically
participate in the Alaska pollock fishery.
All whiting caught in 2007 before the effective date of this action
will be counted against the new 2007 OY. As in the past, the
specification include fish caught in state ocean waters (0-3 nautical
miles (nm) offshore) as well as fish caught in the EEZ (3-200 nm
offshore).
Inseason Adjustments to Fishery Management Measures
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP and its implementing regulations
at 50 CFR part 660, subpart G, provide for routine management measures
to be used for inseason management of the Pacific coast groundfish
fishery. The changes to current groundfish management measures
implemented by this action were recommended by the Council, in
consultation with Pacific Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and the States of
Washington, Oregon, and California, at its March 5-9, 2007, meeting in
Sacramento, CA. At that
[[Page 19393]]
meeting the Council recommended changes to management measures in
response to three primary concerns: (1) Higher than expected canary
rockfish bycatch rates in the non-whiting limited entry trawl fishery
north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat. based on newly-available scientific
information; (2) higher than expected catch of petrale sole in the
limited entry trawl fishery; and (3) the need for state and Federal
groundfish regulations to conform in order to minimize confusion for
the public. To address these concerns, the Council recommended the
following revisions to groundfish management measures: (1) Close the
areas shoreward of the trawl Rockfish Conservation Area (RCA) north of
Cape Alava and between Capa Arago and Humbug Mountain beginning April
1; (2) adjust the shoreward boundary of the trawl RCA to a line
approximating the 60-fm (110-m) contour between Leadbetter Point and
the Oregon-Washington border from April 1 through October 31; (3)
adjust the seaward boundary of the trawl RCA to a line approximating
the 150-fm (274-m) contour north of Cascade Head and to a line
approximating the 200-fm (366-m) contour south of Cascade Head
beginning April 1 through August 31; (4) adjust the seaward boundary of
the trawl RCA to the petrale-modified line approximating the 200-fm
(366-m) contour, coastwide, from November 1 through December 31; (5)
north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., increase cumulative limits for lingcod
and shortspine thornyhead taken with large and small footrope trawl
gear, and south of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., increase cumulative limits
for lingcod taken with large footrope and midwater trawl gear; (6)
north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., decrease cumulative limits for
selective flatfish trawls for sablefish, Dover sole, and petrale sole
beginning May 1; (7) combine cumulative limited entry trawl limits for
Other Flatfish and arrowtooth flounder coastwide beginning May 1; (8)
north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., reduce cumulative limits for slope
rockfish for all trawl gears beginning May 1; (9) reduce cumulative
limits for petrale sole using large and small footrope trawl gears
coastwide beginning May 1; and (10) adjust Federal regulations to
conform with Washington recreational fishery management measures to
prohibit the retention of groundfish seaward of a line approximating
the 20-fm (37-m) contour from May 21 through September 30, in the area
from the U.S. border with Canada to the Queets River, WA (47[deg]31.70'
N. lat.), except on days when the Pacific halibut fishery is open in
this area, and prohibit the retention of groundfish seaward of a line
approximating the 30-fm (55-m) contour from March 17 through June 15,
in the area between the Queets River and Leadbetter Point, except that
retention of sablefish and Pacific cod is allowed from May 1 through
June 15.
Overfished Species Bycatch Limits in the Pacific Whiting Fishery
The availability of overfished species as incidental catch,
particularly canary rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, and widow
rockfish, may prevent the industry from harvesting the entire whiting
OY during 2007. To allow the industry to have the opportunity to
harvest the higher whiting OY while keeping incidental catch within the
rebuilding OYs for the incidental species, the Council recommended
bycatch limits for the overfished species most commonly taken as
incidental catch in the whiting fishery. With bycatch limits, the
industry has the opportunity to harvest a larger amount of whiting, if
they can do so while keeping the incidental catch of specific
overfished species within adopted bycatch limits. Regulations provide
for the automatic closure of the commercial (non-tribal) portion of the
whiting fishery upon attainment of a bycatch limit.
In recent years, the most constraining overfished species for the
whiting fishery have been darkblotched, canary and widow rockfish.
Prior to this final rule, regulations at 50 CFR 660.373 (b)(4)
contained the following bycatch limits for the commercial sectors (non-
tribal) of the whiting fishery: 4.7 mt for canary, 200 mt for widow,
and 25 mt for darkblotched rockfish.
At the March 2007 Council meeting, the Council's groundfish
management team (GMT) examined the 2007 whiting OY alternatives in
relation to the potential bycatch of overfished species. With a U.S. OY
of 242,591 mt and in the absence of any further restrictions, the
bycatch of canary rockfish was projected to be approximately 3.9 mt,
the bycatch of widow rockfish was projected to be approximately 217 mt,
and the bycatch of darkblotched rockfish was projected to be
approximately 12.4 mt. After considering the projected catch of
overfished species in all other fishing and research activities, the
Council recommended that the canary and darkblotched rockfish bycatch
limits for the whiting fishery remain at 4.7 mt and 25 mt,
respectively, which were the same limits that were available during the
2006 primary whiting season. To accommodate current incidental catch
projections for the non-tribal whiting fishery, the Council recommended
the widow rockfish bycatch limit be raised to 220 mt, the same bycatch
limit that was in effect at the end of 2006. With this increase, the
2007 estimated total catch of widow rockfish is still predicted to be
well below the 2007 widow rockfish OY of 368 mt.
Limited Entry Trawl Fishery Management Measures
At its March 2007 meeting, the Council received new data and
analyses on the catch of groundfish in the limited entry trawl fishery.
The Council's recommendations for revising 2007 trawl fishery
management measures focused on modifying the RCA boundary lines and
trip limits to move vessels away from areas where canary rockfish most
commonly co-occur with more abundant groundfish stocks, limiting the
resulting effects of the movement of the fleet on darkblotched
rockfish, and reducing the availability of petrale sole early in 2007
in order to better ensure that petrale sole is available for harvest
later in the 2007 fishing year.
According to the most recently available West Coast Groundfish
Observer Program (WCGOP) data, released in late January, 2007, bycatch
rates for canary rockfish using selective flatfish trawl gear north of
40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat. were much higher in 2005 than had been
anticipated. By applying these new bycatch rates to landings of target
species in the existing fishery bycatch model, NMFS concluded that the
2005 canary rockfish OY had been exceeded by 2 mt. While estimated 2006
total catch of canary rockfish has yet to be determined, higher than
anticipated bycatch rates in the north by selective flatfish trawls
would be expected to continue in 2006. Based on 2005 WCGOP data
indicating higher canary rockfish bycatch rates using selective
flatfish trawls north of 40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat., NMFS believes that
the canary rockfish OY could be exceeded in 2007 under status quo
regulations. The 2007 regulatory measures were developed assuming a
canary rockfish bycatch rate that now has been determined to be too
low, which results in an underestimate in the predicted impacts to
canary rockfish. In order to keep catch levels within the canary
rockfish OY, inseason adjustments are necessary to constrain incidental
canary rockfish catch in the limited entry non-whiting trawl fishery.
The Council considered several short term options available to
reduce impacts on canary rockfish in the non-whiting limited entry
trawl fishery north of 40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat. to harvest levels
initially projected for the fisheries during development of the 2007
[[Page 19394]]
management measures: (1) The modification of trawl cumulative limits;
(2) modifications of the trawl RCA boundaries; and (3) the use of
management area boundaries and commonly used geographic coordinates,
defined at 50 CFR 660.302 under ``North-South management area'', to
provide more area-specific management measures on portions of the coast
with differential canary rockfish bycatch rates. For the longer term,
the Council discussed the development of other tools, such as more
refined area closures, similar to the yelloweye rockfish RCAs, but
concluded that implementing these types of closures would not be
routine management measure changes under either the FMP at 6.2.D or
Federal regulations at 50 CFR 660.370(c).
Based on analysis of 2005 WCGOP data, the areas of the coast with
highest bycatch rate of canary rockfish relative to target species
taken in the non-whiting trawl fishery are: The area shoreward of the
trawl RCA north of Cape Alava (48[deg]10.00' N. lat.) to the U.S./
Canada boundary; the area shoreward of the trawl RCA between Leadbetter
Point (46[deg]38.17[min] N. lat.) and the Oregon/Washington border
(46[deg]16.00' N. lat.); and the area shoreward of the trawl RCA
between Cape Arago (43[deg]20.83' N. lat.) and Humbug Mountain
(42[deg]40.50' N. lat.). The Council considered several combinations of
available management measures and looked at the projected impact of
these measures on the resource and the fishery. In order to keep
projected impacts of the non-whiting trawl fishery on canary rockfish
within the 2007 OY, and to allow fishing opportunities in geographic
areas with low canary rockfish bycatch, several modifications were
recommended to the limited entry non-whiting trawl fishery regulations,
including: (1) Modify the trawl RCA boundaries; (2) close two areas of
the coast shoreward of the trawl RCA; (3) reduce cumulative limits for
some species using selective flatfish trawl gear; (4) combine
arrowtooth and Other Flatfish into a flatfish species group with a
single, reduced cumulative limit; and (5) increase opportunities for
lingcod and shortspine thornyheads in areas seaward of the trawl RCA.
Rockfish Conservation Area Boundaries
The Council determined that, in order to constrain the incidental
catch of canary rockfish and to prevent exceeding the 2007 canary
rockfish OY, the limited entry trawl RCA north of 40[deg]10.00[min] N.
lat. should be expanded shoreward, so that the RCA's shoreward boundary
is no deeper than a line approximating the 75-fm (137-m) contour for
the entire year. This RCA expansion is expected to have a dual effect
of eliminating fishing opportunity in areas with trawl efforts
exhibiting higher canary rockfish bycatch rates, as well as shifting
fishing effort to areas exhibiting relatively lower canary rockfish
bycatch rates. The Council also considered a more refined modification
of the shoreward RCA boundaries in areas north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat.
that would close or substantially restrict areas with the highest
bycatch rates, as identified from WCGOP data. The areas of highest
canary rockfish bycatch rates included: The area shoreward of the RCA
north of Cape Alava; the area shoreward of the RCA between Leadbetter
Point and the Washington/Oregon border; and the area shoreward of the
RCA between Cape Arago and Humbug Mountain. The Council's Groundfish
Management Team (GMT) analyzed the effect of relatively greater
restrictions in these three areas and, based on that analysis,
recommended closing the shoreward area north of Cape Alava, closing the
shoreward area between Cape Arago and Humbug Mountain, and expanding
the shoreward boundary of the trawl RCA to a line approximating the 60-
fm (110-m) contour during the summer in the area between Leadbetter
Point and the Oregon/Washington border. The Council also considered
various alternatives that would leave the area shoreward of the RCA and
north of Cape Alava open during winter months to reduce the
disproportionate impact this closure would have on vessels based in
northern Washington. However, the necessary reductions in cumulative
trip limits required to keep this area open would make trawling with
selective flatfish gear not economically viable for many participants
in the non-whiting trawl fishery. The Council also considered the
potential impacts of interaction with soft-shelled crab as trawl effort
is shifted to areas closer to shore between Leadbetter Point and the
Oregon/Washington border during summer months. The line approximating
the 60-fm (110-m) depth contour is farther offshore in this area and
GMT analysis suggested that interactions between groundfish trawlers
and soft-shelled crab would be minimal if a 60-fm (110-m) shoreward
boundary were put in place. In order to reduce economic impacts on
vessels that formerly operated in the nearshore fishing areas, the
Council supported liberalization, where possible, of the seaward
boundary of the RCA in order to provide open fishing areas of
relatively low canary bycatch to accommodate a shift in fishing effort
from nearshore to offshore waters. The benefits of shifting effort
offshore are twofold: Since the highest rates of canary bycatch occur
in the areas shoreward of the RCA, shifting effort seaward of the RCA
further reduces the effort in the nearshore areas that remain open,
thus reducing the amount of canary rockfish caught in those areas; and
some displaced vessels whose effort was concentrated in the areas that
are now closed may be able to shift their effort seaward of the RCA and
remain in the fishery.
Trawl fishing opportunities seaward of the trawl RCA are primarily
constrained by measures intended to minimize the incidental catch of
darkblotched rockfish. Data from the NMFS trawl survey, logbook data,
and anecdotal information from the trawl industry shows that various
target species and darkblotched rockfish are found in shallower depths
in the north and move deeper toward the south. The Council considered
changes to the seaward boundary of the RCA within the context of
allowing increased fishing opportunity while maintaining protections
for darkblotched rockfish. Dividing the seaward boundary of the RCA at
Cascade Head (45[deg]03.83' N. lat.) allows more refined area
management in response to the depth-based shift in abundance from north
to south of darkblotched rockfish and target species. North of Cascade
Head, target species and darkblotched rockfish are more abundant in
shallower water, so the seaward boundary of the RCA can be shifted
shoreward to allow increased targeting opportunity while still
protecting darkblotched rockfish. South of Cascade Head, target species
and darkblotched rockfish are more abundant in deeper water, so only
minor adjustments to the seaward boundary of the RCA, which remains
similar to what was in place at the beginning of 2007, provides
targeting opportunity while still protecting darkblotched rockfish.
Based on the information and analysis described above, the Council
recommended and NMFS is implementing the following changes to the trawl
RCA north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat.: North of Cape Alava, and between
Cape Arago and Humbug Mountain, the shoreward boundary of the RCA is
shifted to the shore, closing the area shoreward of the RCA for the
remainder of 2007; between Leadbetter Point and the Oregon/Washington
border, the shoreward boundary is shifted
[[Page 19395]]
shoreward to a line approximating the 60-fm (110-m) depth contour from
April 1 through October 31; unless otherwise specified above, the RCA
will have a shoreward boundary of a line approximating the 75-fm (137-
m) depth contour from April 1 through December 31, 2007; north of
Cascade Head, the seaward boundary of the trawl RCA is shifted
shoreward to a line approximating the 150-fm (274-m) depth contour from
April 1 through August 31, 2007; north of Cascade Head, the seaward
boundary of the RCA will remain at a line approximating the 200-fm
(366-m) depth contour from September 1 through October 31, 2007; south
of Cascade Head, the seaward boundary of the RCA will be shifted
shoreward to a line approximating the 200-fm (366-m) depth contour from
April 1 through April 30, and remain at the 200-fm (366-m) depth
contour through October 31, 2007; north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., the
seaward boundary of the RCA will be shifted shoreward to a line
approximating the petrale-modified 200-fm (366-m) depth contour from
November 1 through December 31, 2007.
Limited Entry Trawl Trip Limits
In addition to area closures, the Council determined that
cumulative limits in the limited entry trawl fishery north of
40[deg]10.00' N. lat. should be modified to: Reduce effort and catch of
target species in order to reduce impacts on co-occurring canary
rockfish and prevent exceeding the 2007 canary rockfish OY; constrain
the effect of any fleet movement away from canary rockfish grounds and
into darkblotched rockfish grounds; and reduce the early 2007 rate of
petrale sole catch in order to allow more petrale sole to be available
for harvest later in the 2007 season.
The Council considered various combinations of cumulative limit
adjustments paired with RCA modifications and area closures to reduce
impacts to canary rockfish. As with the RCA boundary revisions, the
Council's GMT analyzed revisions to trip limits intended to shift
fishing effort away from areas where canary rockfish are more commonly
taken as bycatch. The GMT recommended that the Council consider
reducing sablefish and Dover sole opportunity for vessels using
selective flatfish trawl gear, in order to provide for a disincentive
to fish in areas where canary rockfish are found and to shift effort
away from areas with a relatively high canary rockfish bycatch rate.
Reductions in petrale sole opportunities were primarily driven by the
need to slow the catch of petrale sole, but this adjustment also
results in lower impacts on canary rockfish compared to status quo
measures.
Given the need to reduce overall catch and to result in lower
predicted canary rockfish impacts than under current management
measures, the GMT also recommended combining the arrowtooth and Other
Flatfish cumulative limits to enable fishermen to better vary their
target strategy while still gaining the benefit of reducing canary
rockfish impacts. GMT estimates showed that this approach allows for
greater opportunities for those particular target strategies, but that
the total catch, and thus overfished species impacts, are less than if
separate cumulative limits were applied.
Based on these analyses and recommendations the Council recommended
and NMFS is implementing a decrease in the limited entry selective
flatfish trawl fishery cumulative limits north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat.
beginning May 1: For sablefish from ``8,000 lb per two months'' to
``5,000 lb per two months'' through December 31, 2007; for Dover sole
from ``40,000 lb per two months'' to ``38,000 lb per two months''
through October 31, 2007 and from ``40,000 lb per two months'' to
``25,000 lb per two months'' through December 31, 2007; and for petrale
sole, from ``25,000 lb per two months'' to ``20,000 lb per two months''
through August 31, 2007, to ``15,000 lb per two months'' from September
1 through October 31, and to ``8,000 lb per two months'' from November
1 through December 31, 2007. The Council also recommended and NMFS is
implementing, beginning May 1, combining cumulative limits for
arrowtooth and Other Flatfish within a single cumulative limit for
Other Flatfish (including arrowtooth). For large and small footrope
trawl gears, arrowtooth limits are modified from ``100,000 lb per two
months'' and combined within Other Flatfish limits into a combined
cumulative limit of ``110,000 lb per two months'' through December 31,
2007. For selective flatfish trawl gears, arrowtooth limits are
modified from ``90,000 lb per two months'' and combined within Other
Flatfish limits into a combined cumulative limit of ``70,000 lb per two
months'' through October 31, 2007. Beginning November 1, the cumulative
limit for Other Flatfish, including arrowtooth, taken with selective
flatfish trawl gear is reduced from ``90,000 lb per two months'' to
``30,000 lb per two months'' through December 31, 2007.
In addition to liberalizing the seaward boundaries of the trawl RCA
north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., the Council considered increasing
cumulative limits for DTS species and lingcod in areas seaward of the
RCA in order to shift more fishing effort to offshore waters. North of
40[deg]10.00' N. lat., the Council considered increasing limits for
lingcod and shortspine thornyheads taken with large and small footrope
trawl gears, which are only allowed when fishing seaward of the trawl
RCA, to create incentives to fish in areas with lower canary rockfish
bycatch rates. South of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., the Council considered
increasing limits for lingcod taken with large footrope and midwater
trawl gears, which are only allowed when fishing seaward of the trawl
RCA, to accommodate a shift in effort from shoreward areas, and to
reduce discards of non-constraining target species. The Council
determined that increasing trip limits for lingcod and shortspine
thornyhead would help prevent exceeding the 2007 canary rockfish OY,
reduce unnecessary discards, and reduce economic impacts for the
following reasons: (1) The shift in effort to areas with lower canary
rockfish bycatch rates will reduce total coastwide incidental catch of
canary rockfish; (2) it may reduce the economic impacts on vessels
displaced by nearshore fishery closures by providing fishing
opportunity while also constraining incidental catch of canary
rockfish; and (3) it will reduce unnecessary discards of lingcod and
shortspine thornyheads.
Increasing incentives to fish seaward of the trawl RCA will
increase effort in an area of known darkblotched rockfish abundance;
accordingly, the Council considered various ways to mitigate these
impacts and prevent exceeding the 2007 darkblotched rockfish OY.
Changes to management measures to constrain the catch of canary
rockfish will also affect the incidental catch of darkblotched rockfish
and Pacific ocean perch (POP). The incidental catch of darkblotched
rockfish is likely to increase compared to predicted impacts under
current management measures, and will be caused by a shift in effort
away from areas of high canary rockfish bycatch to areas of greater
darkblotched rockfish and POP abundance. However, POP is not considered
to be a constraining species in the limited entry trawl fishery; the
inseason adjustments to management measures implemented by this action
are anticipated to keep POP total catch well within its 2007 OY of 150
mt. The Council focused its discussions of various continental slope
actions to prevent exceeding the 2007 darkblotched rockfish OY,
including modification of the seaward boundary of the trawl RCA, and
changes in catch limit opportunities. The Council's GMT
[[Page 19396]]
analyzed the effects of changes in RCA boundaries, cumulative limit
opportunities, and fishing effort on the incidental catch of
darkblotched rockfish, and recommended that cumulative limits for slope
rockfish be decreased to reduce the impact of greater effort occurring
in areas where darkblotched rockfish are found. The combined effects of
these actions are predicted to result in a total 2007 catch of
darkblotched rockfish that is lower than the 2007 OY. Catch of
darkblotched rockfish will be monitored and action can be taken
inseason if necessary to modify the trawl RCA and cumulative limits to
keep total catch within the 2007 darkblotched rockfish OY.
Based on these analyses and recommendations, the Council
recommended and NMFS is implementing an increase in the limited entry
trawl fishery cumulative limits taken with large and small footrope
trawl gears north of 40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat. beginning May 1 through
December 31, 2007: For lingcod from ``1,200 lb per two months'' to
``4,000 lb per two months''; and for shortspine thornyheads from
``7,500 lb per two months'' to ``10,000 lb per two months''. South of
40[deg]10.00' N. lat., limited entry trawl fishery cumulative limits
for lingcod taken with large footrope and midwater trawl gears will
increase, beginning May 1 through December 31, 2007, from ``1,200 lb
per two months'' to ``4,000 lb per two months''. The Council also
recommended and NMFS is implementing a decrease in the limited entry
trawl fishery cumulative limits for minor slope and darkblotched
rockfish north of 40[deg]10.00' N. lat., beginning May 1 through
December 31, 2007, from ``4,000 lb per two months'' to ``1,500 lb per
two months''.
In early February 2007, NMFS received preliminary fishery data
showing higher than expected limited entry trawl landings of petrale
sole. NMFS estimated that the catch of petrale sole could be 1,200 mt
out of a coastwide OY of 2,499 by the end of February. On February 9,
NMFS issued a public notice asking for industry cooperation in reducing
petrale sole catch to keep petrale sole from exceeding the 2007 OY, and
still allow for management flexibility to keep petrale sole fishing
opportunities throughout the calendar year. As a result of this
voluntary action, significant reductions in catch occurred during the
remainder of February and petrale sole catch was estimated to be
between 850 and 900 mt at the end of February. In an effort to slow the
catch of petrale sole, to prevent exceeding the 2007 OY, and allow
petrale sole target opportunities through the end of 2007, the Council
considered reductions of petrale sole cumulative limits in the limited
entry trawl fishery. Industry representatives indicated that petrale
sole limits less than 20,000 lbs (9,072 kg) per two months were not
economically sustainable, given the cost of fuel needed to access that
catch. The Council also considered the effects of petrale sole
cumulative limit reductions on the bycatch of canary rockfish.
Based on these analyses and information, the Council recommended
and NMFS is implementing a decrease in the limited entry trawl fishery
cumulative limits for petrale sole north of 40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat.:
Beginning May 1 through October 31, 2007, from ``25,000 lb per two
months'' to ``20,000 lb per two months''; and beginning November 1
through December 31, 2007, from ``50,000 lb per two months'' to
``30,000 lb per two months''. South of 40[deg]10.00[min] N. lat.,
beginning May 1 through October 31, 2007, the Council recommended and
NMFS is implementing reductions in cumulative limits for petrale sole
from ``30,000 lb per two months'' to ``25,000 lb per two months''.
Washington's Recreational Groundfish RCA
The States of Washington and Oregon manage canary and yelloweye
rockfish under a joint harvest guideline for their recreational
fisheries. The states modify portions of their recreational fisheries,
through inseason adjustment to state regulations, in order to keep
catch within the harvest guidelines for canary and/or yelloweye
rockfish.
During 2005, after receiving inseason recreational catch data, the
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife's (WDFW) revised catch
projections for the year indicated that the state harvest targets for
canary and yelloweye rockfish would be prematurely attained, and WDFW
took action to prevent exceeding the Washington/Oregon harvest
guidelines for these species. For 2006, new Washington recreational
management measures were adopted to avoid early canary and yelloweye
rockfish harvest guideline attainment. During development of the 2007-
2008 groundfish specifications and management measures, WDFW identified
additional RCA restrictions that could be in place if needed, based on
harvest data through 2005. These additional restrictions were adopted
by the Council and implemented by NMFS in the final rule for the 2007-
2008 groundfish specifications and management measures (71 FR 78638).
New 2006 harvest estimates, based on data collected in WDFW's Ocean
Sampling Program, indicated that the Washington recreational fishery
stayed well below their portion of the 2006 Oregon/Washington harvest
guidelines, harvesting 1.28 mt of canary and 1.70 mt of yelloweye (out
of the 2006 Oregon/Washington harvest guidelines of 8.5 mt and 6.7 mt
for canary and yelloweye rockfish, respectively). The 2007 Oregon/
Washington canary and yelloweye rockfish harvest guidelines are 8.2 mt
and 6.8 mt, respectively. At the March 2007 meeting, WDFW requested
that the duration of the closure of the Washington recreational RCAs be
shortened for 2007 and 2008 to reduce the adverse impacts on
Washington's coastal communities from the additional restrictions
implemented as part of the 2007-2008 specifications and management
measures. Compared to the duration of the Washington recreational RCAs
implemented in the 2007-2008 specifications, the 2007-2008 closure
north of Queets River will be 20 days shorter and between the Queets
River and Leadbetter Point, the 2007-2008 closure will be 46 days
shorter. Based on data from the 2006 Washington recreational fisheries,
the revised RCA restrictions are still expected to constrain total
catch of canary and yelloweye rockfish to stay within the shared Oregon
and Washington harvest guidelines.
Therefore, the Pacific Council recommended and NMFS is
implementing: (1) A prohibition of groundfish fishing in the Washington
recreational fishery, north of the Queets River and seaward of a line
approximating the 20-fm (37-m) contour from May 21-September 30, except
on days when the Pacific halibut fishery is open in this area; and (2)
a prohibition of groundfish fishing in the Washington recreational
fishery, between the Queets River and Leadbetter Point seaward of a
line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) contour from March 17-June 15,
except retention of sablefish and Pacific cod is allowed from May 1-
June 15.
Classification
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Final Whiting Specifications for 2007 and Inseason Adjustments to
Fishery Management Measures
The final whiting specifications and management measures for 2007
are issued under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), and are in
[[Page 19397]]
accordance with 50 CFR part 660, the regulations implementing the FMP.
These actions are based on the most recent data available. The
aggregate data upon which these actions are based are available for
public inspection at the Office of the Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, (see ADDRESSES) during business hours.
For the following reasons, NMFS finds good cause to waive prior
public notice and comment on the revisions to the 2007 Pacific whiting
specifications under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) because notice and comment
would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest. Also for
the same reasons, NMFS finds good cause to waive the 30-day delay in
effectiveness pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), so that this final rule
may become effective as close as possible to the April 1, 2007, fishery
start date.
The proposed rulemaking to implement the 2007 specifications and
management measures, published on September 29, 2006 (71 FR 57764),
first explained the need to delay adopting the whiting ABC and harvest
specifications until after the March 2007 and March 2008 Council
meetings. NMFS requested public comment on the proposed rule through
October 31, 2006. The final rule, published on December 29, 2006 (71 FR
78638), again explained the range in the specifications and that the
final OY and ABC would be recommended at the Council's March 2007 and
2008 meetings.
The FMP requires that fishery specifications be evaluated
periodically using the best scientific information available. Every
year NMFS does a stock assessment in which U.S. and Canadian scientists
cooperate. The 2007 stock assessment for whiting was prepared in early
2007, the earliest possible time to conduct an assessment incorporating
2006 data. Whiting differs from other groundfish species in that it has
a shorter life span and the population exhibits greater recruitment
variability. Thus, it is important to use the most recent fisheries and
survey data in stock assessment when determining ABC and OY. Because of
the timing of the assessment, the results are not available for use in
developing the new ABC and OY until just before the Council's annual
March meeting. The Council made its recommendations at its March 5-9,
2007 meeting in Sacramento, CA.
For the actions to be implemented in this final rule, affording the
time necessary for prior notice and opportunity for public comment
would prevent the Agency from managing the Pacific whiting and related
fisheries using the best available science by approaching without
exceeding the OYs for federally managed species. The adjustments to
management measures in this document affect commercial trawl fisheries
off Washington, Oregon, and California and recreational fisheries off
Washington. These adjustments to management measures must be
implemented immediately to: Prevent exceeding the 2007 OYs for petrale
sole, widow rockfish, and canary rockfish; prevent premature closure of
fisheries; and eliminate confusion for the public and to improve
enforcement by ensuring that Federal and state recreational regulations
conform to each other.
Changes to the cumulative limits in the limited entry trawl fishery
and to the trawl RCA are needed to reduce the projected bycatch of
canary rockfish, a groundfish species that is currently subject to
rebuilding requirements. The projected bycatch of canary rockfish must
be reduced in order to keep coastwide fisheries from exceeding that
species's rebuilding OY. Changes to the trawl RCA to reduce the bycatch
of canary rockfish must be implemented as close as possible to the
April 1, 2007 start of the fishing season so that the total catch of
canary rockfish stays within its 2007 OY, as defined in the rebuilding
plan for this species. Changes to petrale sole cumulative limits in the
limited entry trawl fishery must be implemented in a timely manner by
May 1, 2007, so that harvest of petrale sole stays within the harvest
levels projected for 2007 and so that petrale sole catch is available
for harvest for as long as possible throughout the year.
Changes to the non-tribal whiting widow rockfish bycatch limit must
be implemented as close as possible to the start of the California
whiting fishery, on April 1, 2007. Ensuring that the bycatch limit is
in place by the season start date provides an opportunity for
participants in this fishery to catch the available whiting quota
without reaching or exceeding the bycatch limit of widow rockfish or
its OY, prematurely closing the fishery.
Changes to the Washington recreational groundfish RCA must be
implemented in a timely manner by May 1, 2007, to allow the
recreational fishermen to fish in the newly opened area in the EEZ, in
order to eliminate confusion for the public, and to improve enforcement
by ensuring that Federal and state recreational regulations conform to
each other.
These revisions are needed to protect overfished groundfish species
and to keep the harvest of other groundfish species within the harvest
levels projected for 2007, while allowing fishermen access to healthy
stocks. Without these measures in place, the fisheries could risk
exceeding harvest levels early in the year, causing early and
unanticipated fishery closures and economic harm to fishing
communities. Delaying these changes would keep management measures in
place that are not based on the best available data and which could
lead to early closures of the fishery if harvest of groundfish exceeds
levels projected for 2007. Such delay would impair achievement of one
of the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP objectives of providing for year-
round harvest opportunities or extending fishing opportunities as long
as practicable during the fishing year. In addition, it is also in the
public interest to implement the recreational measures in this notice
as soon as possible to improve enforcement and eliminate confusion for
the public by removing differences between different regulations that
affect the same waters and fisheries.
The environmental impacts associated with the Pacific whiting
harvest levels being adopted by this action are considered in the final
environmental impact statement for the 2007-2008 specifications and
management measures. Copies of the FEIS and the ROD are available from
the Council (see ADDRESSES).
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, this action was developed after
meaningful consultation and collaboration with tribal officials from
the area covered by the FMP. Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16
U.S.C. 1852(b)(5), one of the voting members of the Council must be a
representative of an Indian tribe with federally recognized fishing
rights from the area of the Council's jurisdiction. In addition,
regulations implementing the FMP establish a procedure by which the
tribes with treaty fishing rights in the area covered by the FMP
request new allocations or regulations specific to the tribes, in
writing, before the first of the two meetings at which the Council
considers groundfish management measures. Only the Makah Tribe
requested a whiting allocation for 2007. The regulations at 50 CFR
660.324(d) further state ``the Secretary will develop tribal
allocations and regulations under this paragraph in consultation with
the affected tribe(s) and, insofar as possible, with tribal
consensus.'' The tribal whiting allocation finalized by this final rule
was recommended by the Council based on the sliding scale allocation
formula described above.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fishing, Fisheries, and Indian fisheries.
[[Page 19398]]
Dated: April 11, 2007.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended
as follows:
PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 660.373, paragraph (b)(4) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 660.373 Pacific whiting (whiting) fishery management.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) Bycatch limits in the whiting fishery. The bycatch limits for
the whiting fishery may be used in season to close a sector or sectors
of the whiting fishery to achieve the rebuilding of an overfished or
depleted stock, under routine management measure authority at Sec.
660.370(c)(1)(ii). These limits are routine management measures under
Sec. 660.370(c) and, as such, may be adjusted inseason or may have new
species added to the list of those with bycatch limits. The whiting
fishery bycatch limits for the sectors identified in Sec. 660.323(a)
are: 4.7 mt of canary rockfish; 220 mt of widow rockfish; and 25 mt of
darkblotched rockfish.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 660.384, paragraphs (c)(1)(i)(C)(1) and (2) are revised to
read as follows:
Sec. 660.384 Recreational fishery management measures.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) * * *
(1) Between the U.S. border with Canada and the Queets River,
recreational fishing for groundfish is prohibited seaward of a boundary
line approximating the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour from May 21 through
September 30, except on days when the Pacific halibut fishery is open
in this area. Days open to Pacific halibut recreational fishing off
Washington are announced on the NMFS hotline at (206) 526-6667 or (800)
662-9825. Coordinates for the boundary line approximating the 20-fm
(37-m) depth contour are listed in Sec. 660.391.
(2) Between the Queets River and Leadbetter Point, recreational
fishing for groundfish is prohibited seaward of a boundary line
approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour from March 17, 2007,
through June 15, 2007, except that recreational fishing for sablefish
and Pacific cod is permitted within the recreational RCA from May 1
through June 15. In 2008, recreational fishing for groundfish is
prohibited seaward of a boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m)
depth contour in from March 15, 2008, through June 15, 2008, except
that recreational fishing for sablefish and Pacific cod is permitted
within the recreational RCA from May 1 through June 15. Coordinates for
the boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour are
listed in Sec. 660.391.
* * * * *
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4. Table 1a to part 660 subpart G is revised to read as follows.
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5. Tables 3 (North) and 3 (South) to part 660 subpart G are revised to
read as follows.
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[FR Doc. 07-1917 Filed 4-17-07; 8:45 am]
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