Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish Fishery and Shrimp Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Amendment 27/14, 5117-5128 [E8-1547]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 19 / Tuesday, January 29, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
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Danforth-style anchor at each end of the
net string.
The restrictions will be in effect
beginning at 0001 hours January 31,
2008, through 2400 hours February 14,
2008, unless terminated sooner or
extended by NMFS through another
notification in the Federal Register.
The restrictions will be announced to
state officials, fishermen, ALWTRT
members, and other interested parties
through e-mail, phone contact, NOAA
website, and other appropriate media
immediately upon issuance of the rule
by the AA.
Classification
In accordance with section 118(f)(9) of
the MMPA, the Assistant Administrator
(AA) for Fisheries has determined that
this action is necessary to implement a
take reduction plan to protect North
Atlantic right whales.
Environmental Assessments for the
DAM program were prepared on
December 28, 2001, and August 6, 2003.
This action falls within the scope of the
analyses of these EAs, which are
available from the agency upon request.
NMFS provided prior notice and an
opportunity for public comment on the
regulations establishing the criteria and
procedures for implementing a DAM
zone. Providing prior notice and
opportunity for comment on this action,
pursuant to those regulations, would be
impracticable because it would prevent
NMFS from executing its functions to
protect and reduce serious injury and
mortality of endangered right whales.
The regulations establishing the DAM
program are designed to enable the
agency to help protect unexpected
concentrations of right whales. In order
to meet the goals of the DAM program,
the agency needs to be able to create a
DAM zone and implement restrictions
on fishing gear as soon as possible once
the criteria are triggered and NMFS
determines that a DAM restricted zone
is appropriate. If NMFS were to provide
prior notice and an opportunity for
public comment upon the creation of a
DAM restricted zone, the aggregated
right whales would be vulnerable to
entanglement which could result in
serious injury and mortality.
Additionally, the right whales would
most likely move on to another location
before NMFS could implement the
restrictions designed to protect them,
thereby rendering the action obsolete.
Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B), the AA finds that good cause
exists to waive prior notice and an
opportunity to comment on this action
to implement a DAM restricted zone to
reduce the risk of entanglement of
endangered right whales in commercial
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lobster trap/pot and anchored gillnet
gear as such procedures would be
impracticable.
For the same reasons, the AA finds
that, under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), good
cause exists to waive the 30–day delay
in effective date. If NMFS were to delay
for 30 days the effective date of this
action, the aggregated right whales
would be vulnerable to entanglement,
which could cause serious injury and
mortality. Additionally, right whales
would likely move to another location
between the time NMFS approved the
action creating the DAM restricted zone
and the time it went into effect, thereby
rendering the action obsolete and
ineffective. Nevertheless, NMFS
recognizes the need for fishermen to
have time to either modify or remove (if
not in compliance with the required
restrictions) their gear from a DAM zone
once one is approved. Thus, NMFS
makes this action effective 2 days after
the date of publication of this document
in the Federal Register. NMFS will also
endeavor to provide notice of this action
to fishermen through other means upon
issuance of the rule by the AA, thereby
providing approximately 3 additional
days of notice while the Office of the
Federal Register processes the
document for publication.
NMFS determined that the regulations
establishing the DAM program and
actions such as this one taken pursuant
to those regulations are consistent to the
maximum extent practicable with the
enforceable policies of the approved
coastal management program of the U.S.
Atlantic coastal states. This
determination was submitted for review
by the responsible state agencies under
section 307 of the Coastal Zone
Management Act. Following state
review of the regulations creating the
DAM program, no state disagreed with
NMFS’ conclusion that the DAM
program is consistent to the maximum
extent practicable with the enforceable
policies of the approved coastal
management program for that state.
The DAM program under which
NMFS is taking this action contains
policies with federalism implications
warranting preparation of a federalism
assessment under Executive Order
13132. Accordingly, in October 2001
and March 2003, the Assistant Secretary
for Intergovernmental and Legislative
Affairs, Department of Commerce,
provided notice of the DAM program
and its amendments to the appropriate
elected officials in states to be affected
by actions taken pursuant to the DAM
program. Federalism issues raised by
state officials were addressed in the
final rules implementing the DAM
program. A copy of the federalism
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5117
Summary Impact Statement for the final
rules is available upon request
(ADDRESSES).
The rule implementing the DAM
program has been determined to be not
significant under Executive Order
12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq. and 50
CFR 229.32(g)(3)
Dated: January 23, 2008.
John Oliver,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Operations, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 08–375 Filed 1–24–08; 1:37 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 0612243157–7799–07]
RIN 0648–AT87
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery and Shrimp Fishery of the Gulf
of Mexico; Amendment 27/14
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to
implement joint Amendment 27 to the
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the
Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of
Mexico (Reef Fish FMP) and
Amendment 14 to the Fishery
Management Plan for the Shrimp
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico (Shrimp
FMP)(Amendment 27/14) prepared by
the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management
Council (Council). This final rule
reduces the commercial and recreational
quotas for red snapper, reduces the
commercial minimum size limit for red
snapper, reduces the recreational bag
limit for red snapper, prohibits the
retention of red snapper under the bag
limit for the captain and crew of a vessel
operating as a charter vessel or
headboat, establishes a red snapper
recreational season that is open from
June 1 through September 30 each year,
requires the use of non-stainless steel
circle hooks when using natural baits to
fish for Gulf reef fish, requires the use
of venting tools and dehooking devices
when participating in the commercial or
recreational reef fish fisheries, and
consistent with the Amendment’s
framework procedure, provides for
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implementing seasonal closures of the
Gulf shrimp fishery to reduce red
snapper bycatch based upon the 74
percent bycatch reduction target
established in this final rule. In
addition, this final rule establishes a
framework procedure to adjust the target
effort level and any necessary closures
for the Gulf shrimp fishery. The
measures contained in this final rule are
intended to establish a revised red
snapper rebuilding plan and to end
overfishing of the red snapper resource
in the Gulf of Mexico.
DATES: This final rule is effective
February 28, 2008, except for
§ 622.41(m) which is effective June 1,
2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Final
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (FSEIS), the Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA), and the
Record of Decision (ROD) may be
obtained from Peter Hood, NMFS,
Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th
Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701;
telephone 727–824–5305; fax 727–824–
5308; e-mail peter.hood@noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peter Hood, telephone 727–824–5305;
fax 727–824–5308; e-mail
peter.hood@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The reef
fish and shrimp fisheries of the Gulf of
Mexico are managed under their
respective FMPs (Reef Fish FMP and
Shrimp FMP). The FMPs were prepared
by the Council and are implemented
through regulations at 50 CFR part 622
under the authority of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens
Act).
On July 26, 2007, NMFS published a
notice of availability of Amendment 27/
14 and requested public comments (72
FR 41046). On October 23, 2007, NMFS
published the proposed rule to
implement Amendment 27/14 and
requested public comments (72 FR
59989). NMFS partially approved
Amendment 27/14 on October 19, 2007.
The rationale for the measures in
Amendment 27/14 is provided in the
amendment and in the preamble to the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
Partial Disapproval of Amendment 27/
14
NMFS disapproved the proposed
management measure that would have
assumed a 10–percent reduction in posthurricane recreational fishing effort and
landings as it related to total allowable
catch (TAC) levels and associated
management measures. NMFS
determined that a 10–percent reduction
in recreational fishing effort and
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landings was not based on the best
scientific information available as
required by national standard 2 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and was
inconsistent with Council’s stated
objective to reduce fishing mortality and
rebuild the red snapper stock. As a
result of this disapproval, this final rule
establishes a red snapper recreational
season that remains open from June 1
through September 30 each year rather
than the May 1 through October 15
season that would have resulted if the
assumption of a 10–percent reduction in
recreational fishing effort and landings
had been approved.
Delayed Effectiveness for Requirement
of Circle Hooks, Dehooking Devices,
and Venting Tools
NMFS is delaying, until June 1, 2008,
the effectiveness of the requirements in
§ 622.41(m) to use non-stainless steel
circle hooks when using natural baits to
fish for Gulf reef fish and to use
dehooking devices and venting tools
when fishing for Gulf reef fish in the
Gulf exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
This delay in effectiveness will provide
additional time for manufacturers and
retail outlets to prepare for the demand
for these newly required products and
will provide more time for commercial
and recreational fishers to comply with
these new gear requirements.
Comments and Responses
Following are the public comments
received on Amendment 27/14 and on
the proposed rule along with NMFS’
responses to those comments.
Comment 1: Fishing conditions have
improved, especially in the northeastern
Gulf of Mexico, and there is no need to
institute reductions in TAC, the bag
limit, or the recreational season. In
addition, artificial reefs and reductions
in shrimp trawl effort have improved
red snapper fishing.
Response: The red snapper stock
assessment evaluated the status of the
population both east and west of the
Mississippi River delta. The assessment
found the eastern portion of the
population to be in better condition
than the western portion, and that stock
condition was improving. This increase
in population abundance is likely the
reason fishermen are seeing an
improvement in fishing conditions.
However, the red snapper population in
both the eastern and western Gulf of
Mexico is still considered overfished
and undergoing overfishing; therefore,
management measures are needed to
allow the stock to rebuild by 2032.
Based on the red snapper rebuilding
plan adopted by the Council in 2005,
overfishing must end between 2009 and
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2010. Ending overfishing and recovery
of the red snapper population is
contingent on reducing mortality in
both the directed commercial and
recreational fisheries and bycatch in the
shrimp trawl fishery. More restrictive
management measures are needed
across all of these fisheries to constrain
harvest and bycatch mortality.
The reduction in the directed fishery’s
TAC accounts for decreases in shrimp
trawl effort. These decreases in shrimp
trawl effort are expected to improve
survival of juvenile red snapper.
However, as mentioned above, fishing
mortality in the directed fishery must
also be reduced to rebuild red snapper.
Artificial reefs are known to improve
recreational fishing opportunities for
red snapper, and may increase red
snapper productivity. Conversely,
artificial reefs serve as fish attracting
devices and, therefore, increase fishing
mortality. Artificial reefs were discussed
as one of several possible mechanisms
to account for high stock recruitment
during the Southeast Data, Assessment,
and Review (SEDAR) process.
Regardless, recreational fishing
mortality is still higher than needed to
rebuild the population and manage it at
sustainable levels.
Comment 2: High fuel prices and the
after-effects of the 2005 hurricanes have
reduced charter fishing operations and
private recreational fishing effort, and,
thus, little or no further action needs to
be taken to constrain recreational red
snapper harvest. Data used to analyze
recent trends in effort and landings are
questionable. Differences in regulations
between state and Federal waters may
have influenced the 2007 Marine
Recreational Fisheries Statistical Survey
(MRFSS) landings data, particularly
with how anglers report where fish were
harvested, causing an artificial spike in
red snapper landings.
Response: The 2005 hurricane season
was the busiest and costliest on record,
resulting in significant physical and
economic damage to coastal
communities. In revising the red
snapper rebuilding plan and developing
management measures to constrain
directed harvest, the Council selected as
their preferred alternative the
assumption of a continuing 10–percent
reduction in post-hurricane directed
fishing effort, even though the Council’s
Science and Statistical Committee (SSC)
did not support the assumption that
there would be a continuing reduction
in fishing effort.
Similarly, the Southeast Fisheries
Science Center (SEFSC) concluded the
available data do not support the
assumption of a 10–percent reduction in
overall effort in the directed fishery
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following the 2005 hurricane season.
The SEFSC based this determination on
weighted 2006 effort levels, which were
about 99 percent of the 2000–2004
average effort levels. The SEFSC
indicated mixed changes occurred in
recreational effort showing reductions
in some sectors (particularly private
vessels), but increases in other sectors
(charter vessel and headboat). Increases
in red snapper fishing efficiencies and
landings, particularly off western
Florida and Louisiana between 2005
and 2006 were also observed. The
SEFSC also noted a fluctuating, but
gradually increasing, trend in
recreational effort commensurate with
increases in the population. Given that
private effort in state waters and for-hire
effort in Federal waters are increasing,
it is unlikely private effort in Federal
waters will remain at current levels.
Preliminary MRFSS data through
October 2007 indicate landings
exceeded the 2007 recreational quota of
3.185 million lb (1.445 million kg), even
under a reduced red snapper bag limit
in Federal waters of two fish.
Preliminary 2007 MRFSS landings were
similar to or higher than landings in
previous years during comparable time
periods. There is no indication effort
has been reduced to a point that would
prevent recreational anglers from
meeting or exceeding the annual quota
(See also the response to Comment 3
regarding trip information). Even if
these preliminary MRFSS landings are
overestimated, recreational red snapper
landings are likely to exceed the
specified 2007 quota given that
headboat red snapper landings and
Texas Parks and Wildlife private and
charter landings are not included in the
preliminary 2007 landings estimate.
Comment 3: Economic impacts of the
recreational quota reductions and
associated measures on the charter
industry and associated businesses and
communities are underestimated.
Response: Best available survey and
modeling results indicate that relatively
few trip cancellations are expected to
occur as a result of this action. Most
survey respondents indicated that when
faced with a reduced or zero red
snapper bag limit, they would either
continue fishing for red snapper or fish
for another species. Fishing for other
species may generate distributional
effects (i.e., the trips may occur from
different ports, modes, or seasons,
resulting in one port or entity or season
losing business while another gains).
These distributional effects, however,
cannot be predicted with current data.
Preliminary data through August 2007
do not support claims of widespread
reductions in charter business as a
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result of the interim measures reducing
the recreational quota and bag limit.
Because the recreational red snapper
fishery in Federal waters did not open
until late April, data for May through
August 2007 were examined. During
this period, approximately 461,000 trips
were taken by recreational anglers on
charterboats in the Gulf from Florida
through Louisiana (data for Texas are
not collected in the same data program
and are not available). This compares to
an average of approximately 403,000
angler trips on average per year for the
previous 3 years, 2004 through 2006.
Omitting 2006 data on the assumption
that effort in that year was reduced due
to lingering effects of the 2005
hurricanes, the annual average for 2004
through 2005 was only slightly greater
at approximately 405,000 angler trips.
Thus, while available data cannot
address claims of severe economic
losses by individual entities,
preliminary 2007 data do not support
contentions of widespread industry
harm. Consistent with the projections,
while effort may have shifted to other
species or other charter businesses,
widespread loss of effort as a result of
the interim quota and bag limit
reduction is not apparent. Although the
management measures in the final rule
are more restrictive than the interim
measures, widespread effort declines are
similarly not expected.
Comment 4: A total mortality limit
should be set for both commercial and
recreational red snapper fisheries. This
limit would include all fish killed for
each sector. A sector that can reduce
dead discards would see a
commensurate increase in allowed
landings.
Response: Establishing a total
mortality limit was not considered in
Amendment 27/14. While this concept
would provide incentives for the
respective fisheries to minimize dead
discards, better estimates of discard
mortality are needed. Only a short time
series of commercial discard data was
available for the most recent red
snapper stock assessment and the data
workshop panel believed recreational
discards were much higher than
estimated by MRFSS. For these reasons,
available recreational and commercial
discard data were not used in the
assessment. Instead, discards were
assumed to be due to the minimum size
limit and were estimated from the
predicted length composition of the
catch. Because currently the only
estimates of dead discards are produced
from assessment model projections, it is
not possible at this time to monitor total
mortality limits on a real-time basis.
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Comment 5: Greater reductions in
discard mortality in the commercial and
recreational directed fisheries are
needed to maximize both short-term and
long-term yields.
Response: Reductions in red snapper
regulatory discards are needed in all
sectors of the directed red snapper
fishery for the stock to recover over the
long term and to reduce overfishing in
the short term. If a 74–percent reduction
could be achieved in directed fishery
discard mortality, TAC could have been
set at 7 million lb (3.2 million kg), and
future TACs could be set higher. This
level of reduction is not possible at this
time given the available tools (e.g., gear
restrictions, bag limits, size limits, etc.)
managers have to limit bycatch.
However, the rule does implement
measures to reduce red snapper discard
mortality. This rule sets the commercial
size limit at 13 inches (33 cm) total
length (TL) for the commercial fishery,
requires the use of non-stainless steel
circle hooks when fishing for reef fish
with live bait , and requires specific
venting tools and dehooking devices for
both the commercial and recreational
fisheries. Reductions in the commercial
size limit are estimated to reduce dead
discards by 40 to 60 percent and allow
the stock to recover faster. It is unknown
to what extent a requirement of circle
hooks, venting tools, and dehooking
devices will have in reducing bycatch
mortality when harvesting reef fish, but
all these gears have been shown to
increase the survival of released fish.
Comment 6: Reducing the commercial
minimum size limit will enhance user
conflict and is not fair and equitable.
Recreational size limits should also be
reduced to lower discard mortality. The
commercial size limit should be further
reduced to 12 inches (30.5 cm) TL, or
no size limit should be implemented, to
allow the stock to recover more quickly.
Response: Scientific analyses suggest
both the red snapper stock and
commercial fishery participants would
benefit from reducing the commercial
minimum size limit. This is because of
high commercial discard mortality rates
that nullify any benefit derived from
protecting smaller size fish. However,
reducing the minimum size limit in the
recreational fishery would not benefit
the red snapper stock or stock recovery
in the long-term. The discard mortality
rate of the recreational fishery is 15 to
40 percent whereas discard mortality
rates for commercially caught red
snapper are estimated to range between
71 and 82 percent. Thus, smaller fish
caught and released by the recreational
fishery are more likely to survive and
help contribute to stock recovery. By
contrast, reducing the commercial
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minimum size limit to 13 inches (33 cm)
TL will allow previously discarded fish
to be retained and counted toward the
quota. In addition, long-term TACs
associated with lower recreational
minimum size limits are expected to be
slightly less than TACs with a 16–inch
(41–cm) TL minimum size limit.
Therefore, reducing the minimum size
in the recreational fishery will not
maximize yield over the long-term.
Although having no commercial
minimum size limit was estimated to
allow the stock to rebuild slightly faster
than with a 13–inch (33–cm) TL size
limit, the difference in rebuilding is
small. Also, if the commercial minimum
size limit were eliminated, while the
recreational sector operates under a
minimum size limit, the potential for
competition and conflict between
recreational and commercial fishers
would have increased. The Council
recommended, and NMFS approved, a
13–inch (33–cm) TL minimum size limit
because it will have positive biological
impacts and will reduce the potential
for user conflicts between the
commercial and recreational sectors
relative to the alternative of eliminating
the commercial minimum size limit.
Comment 7: The recreational fishing
season should be changed. Suggested
seasons included a separate spring/early
summer season and late summer/fall
season, shifting the season forward or
backwards, or weekend openings. In
addition, comments suggested the
commercial fishery should be held to
the same season as the recreational
fishery.
Response: The Council evaluated
numerous recreational fishing seasons
including seasons with weekend
openings. Ultimately, the Council
determined it needed to preserve a core
summer recreational fishing season.
Comments from the public have
indicated keeping the season open as
long as possible is more preferable to
more liberal bag or size limits.
Therefore, given a bag limit of two fish,
a zero-bag limit for the captain and crew
of for-hire vessels, and a 16–inch (41–
cm) TL minimum size limit, the Council
recommended, and NMFS approved, the
longest season that could be achieved
and still cover the core summer fishing
season. This season would be from June
1 to September 30 (122 days).
NMFS did not evaluate seasonal
closure alternatives for the commercial
red snapper fishery because fishery
landings are managed in-season through
an individual fishing quota (IFQ)
program. This program was
implemented in part to eliminate the
derby fishery conditions that had
developed in response to short fishing
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seasons. IFQ programs effectively
control total annual harvest by enabling
fishery managers to track and limit the
landings of each individual program
participant.
Comment 8: Recreational measures for
the eastern and western Gulf of Mexico
recreational red snapper fisheries need
to be different because of differences in
how the fisheries operate.
Response: The Council considered
different regulations between the
eastern and western Gulf for the
recreational fishery. Measures
considered primarily examined different
seasons; however, these options were
not selected, in part, because of
enforcement problems and angler
confusion in areas around where the
line of demarcation between the eastern
and western Gulf is drawn.
Comment 9: The two-fish bag limit is
too restrictive. Either the four-fish bag
limit should be maintained, or the bag
limit should be the first four to six fish
landed.
Response: In managing the
recreational fishery such that harvest is
constrained to the recreational quota,
NMFS has employed bag limits, size
limits, and seasonal closures. The
combined effect of reducing the
recreational bag limit from four to two
fish, reducing the captain and crew bag
limit for for-hire vessels, and reducing
the season to a June 1 to September 30
should control effort sufficiently to
ensure the recreational fishery remains
within the 2.45 million-lb (1.11 millionkg) quota. To maintain a four-fish bag
limit or institute some other bag limit
greater than two fish, the fishing season
would need to be further reduced.
While some fishermen commented they
would prefer to maintain the bag limit
over season length, the majority of
testimony from fishermen suggested
they would prefer a reduction in the bag
limit rather than a reduction in season
length.
Comment 10: The economic and
social value of both recreational and
commercial sectors needs to be
considered in setting TAC. Current
allocations of TAC should be changed to
reflect these differences. The
recreational fishery needs to be further
divided into a for-hire and private
angler allocation.
Response: This rule is intended to
reduce the red snapper catch, bycatch,
and discard mortality in the reef fish
and shrimp fisheries, end overfishing of
red snapper by 2010, and rebuild the
red snapper stock by 2032. Therefore,
addressing allocations is outside the
scope of this rule. However, the Council
is developing an amendment to address
the allocation of different reef fish
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species for recommendation to NMFS
and may include red snapper.
Comment 11: Requirements for
dehooking devices and venting tools
should be standardized due to
differences in performance of differently
designed tools and other devices should
be allowed. The effective date for
specific fishing gear should be delayed
to allow the fishing gear industry time
to provide products to the public. The
requirement for circle hooks creates an
unfair burden on fishermen and causes
increases in gut hooking.
Response: This rule provides specific
details regarding the configuration of
both dehooking devices and venting
tools, as well as their use. The rule will
require at least one dehooking device on
a reef fish vessel, and the device must
be able to remove hooks embedded in
Gulf reef fish with minimum damage.
For the venting tool, the rule will
require at least one venting tool aboard
a vessel, and the tool must be used to
deflate the swim bladders of Gulf reef
fish to release the fish with minimum
damage. Gear types evaluated for this
action were commercially available and
easily obtainable by fishermen.
Weighted release devices identified as
alternative gear in comments on the rule
are not commercially available at this
time.
Additional public comments
requested that the implementation of
the circle hook requirement be delayed
to allow manufacturers, distributors,
and retail outlets sufficient time to
produce and distribute the hooks and
ensure adequate stock is available to
meet fisherman demand. Additional
time is reasonable to allow retailers to
acquire sufficient stock and fishermen
to come into compliance with these new
gear requirements. Therefore, this final
rule delays the effective date of these
new gear requirements until June 1,
2008.
Circle hooks do not increase gut
hooking in reef fish. As described in
Amendment 27/14, circle hooks tend to
embed in the corner of a fish’s mouth,
unlike J-hooks which are more likely to
be swallowed. Swallowed hooks can
cause internal damage leading to
mortality. Because circle hooks tend to
embed in the jaw, they are also easier
to remove, causing the fish less stress
when released and enhancing survival.
Requiring the use of non-stainless steel
circle hooks will allow a hook to
degrade over time, providing a fish with
a greater chance for survival.
Comment 12: There is a lack of
enforcement of commercial fishing
vessels, which allows illegal harvest of
red snapper and contributes to
overfishing.
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Response: NMFS law enforcement
officials work cooperatively with other
Federal and state agencies to reduce and
prevent illegal activity. The recently
implemented red snapper IFQ program
was designed with enforceability in
mind and with full input by Federal and
state law enforcement officers. The red
snapper IFQ program is the best
monitored fishery in the Gulf. It
incorporates a vessel monitoring system,
pre-departure and advance landing
notification requirements, a dockside
monitoring component, and real-time
data management to account for all red
snapper landed including a checks-andbalances system matching quota
allocations with fish purchased by
dealers.
Comment 13: Closures would
preclude the shrimp fishery from
achieving optimum yield (OY), and
hence limit economic opportunities for
the fishery.
Response: A restriction on effort in
the mid-shelf region, which only affects
the ability of the fishery to utilize a
portion of the shrimp grounds for a
limited time frame during the year,
should not preclude the fishery from
having the opportunity to achieve OY,
as currently defined, on a continuing
basis. Should it be necessary to
implement a time-area closure to restrict
fishing mortality on red snapper, shrimp
fishing effort can shift either inshore or
offshore of the closed areas with highest
red snapper abundance. However,
currently the shrimp fishery is adversely
affected by external economic factors,
such as increased fuel prices and
depressed ex-vessel prices, which are
constraining fishing effort.
If economic conditions should
improve and effort increase in the
shrimp fishery, especially in the midshelf region where juvenile red snapper
are abundant, then a time-area closure
might have to be implemented to
maintain the 74–percent shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality reduction target. If a
closure was implemented for an
extended period of time, especially a
closure concurrent with the Texas
Closure, the likelihood of achieving OY
might be decreased. However, the
Council and NMFS could take
subsequent action to address that
problem if it occurred. Moving the
fishery into shallower water would lead
to catches of smaller shrimp, which
could result in reduced profits.
However, such an extended closure, or
an expansion of the fishery, is not
expected in the near future.
Alternatively, if more efficient bycatch
reduction devices (BRDs) are developed
in the future and provide better
reductions in juvenile red snapper
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mortality, time-area closures could be
reduced. This could then allow the
fishing mortality target to be achieved
while simultaneously allowing effort to
increase to a level that increases the
likelihood that OY would be caught.
Given the above, the likelihood of
significant adverse economic
consequences resulting from a shrimp
fishery area closure is low. The
proposed bycatch mortality reduction
target is allowed to decrease through
time consistent with the framework
procedure if supported by the best
available scientific information. This
would further reduce the chance the
shrimp fishery would exceed its bycatch
target. The long-term economic benefits
associated with the proposed action are
expected to outweigh the short-term
adverse economic impacts that would
result from fishing effort restrictions.
Comment 14: Effort shifts to other
areas because of closures will shift
bycatch problems to other benthic
species.
Response: Insufficient information is
available to assess the differences in the
quantity and species composition of
bycatch on a scale that would allow
estimation of differential impacts to
marine species. Seasonal area closures
are intended to achieve a level of fishing
mortality reduction in red snapper.
Seasonal closures that lead to relocation
of effort by the shrimp fleet to nearshore
waters would most likely increase the
level of other finfish bycatch. The ratio
of finfish biomass to shrimp biomass is
often twice as high for nearshore waters
as it is for offshore waters. However,
populations of many of the common
species, such as Atlantic croaker, spot,
and longspine porgy, are less
susceptible to the adverse effects of
shrimp trawling because they are shortlived, and have high natural mortality
rates.
Comment 15: The rule does not reflect
the Council’s intent that the targetreduction of shrimp trawl bycatch
mortality of red snapper be phased
down from 74 percent of the benchmark
years of 2001–2003, to 67 percent in
2011, and thereafter, reduced as
necessary, to achieve the target goal of
60 percent by 2032.
Response: This rule allows NMFS the
flexibility to modify the mortality
reduction target over time via
appropriate rulemaking, based on new
information and analyses. The preferred
alternative selected by the Council in
Amendment 27/14 illustrates the
Council’s intent to adjust the targets
over time to appropriate levels while
maintaining the red snapper rebuilding
schedule. As stated in the amendment,
the specific reduction target values
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identified in the Council’s preferred
alternative may not be appropriate in
the future following new assessments
and scientific advice, much like future
adjustments to TAC in the directed
fishery. Nevertheless, any future
adjustment would need to be made
through the FMP framework procedures
established in this rule. The framework
procedure provides the NMFS Southeast
Regional Administrator authority to
adjust the target reduction level
consistent with the red snapper
rebuilding plan and the findings of
subsequent stock assessments via
appropriate rulemaking.
Comment 16: The shrimp trawl
fishery is not being constrained
sufficiently through this rule, or is being
constrained too much. Relaxation of the
bycatch targets that occur later in the
rebuilding plan could allow excessive
bycatch by the shrimp fishery.
Response: This rule provides a
procedure to constrain shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality on red snapper to a
level that is 74 percent less than the
benchmark years of 2001–2003. The rule
provides for adjustment of the target
level reduction, consistent with the red
snapper stock rebuilding plan and the
findings of subsequent stock
assessments, via appropriate
rulemaking. These provisions ensure
that any restrictions on shrimp trawl
bycatch of red snapper will be
consistent with the red snapper
rebuilding plan and the best scientific
information available.
In the near future, minimal measures
to manage shrimp fishing effort in
relation to the target red snapper
bycatch mortality reduction goal may be
needed. This is because the economic
downturn in the shrimp fishery,
coupled with increased fuel costs and
hurricane damage to vessels and
infrastructure, reduced effort from the
benchmark years by nearly 60 percent in
2005 and 65 percent in 2006. Had the
shrimp trawl fishery been operating at
levels associated with the benchmark
years, substantial action would have
been required and proposed measures
would have had greater adverse
economic effects. Preliminary effort
estimates for 2007 indicate the shrimp
fishery is operating below the target
level.
Allowing the shrimp bycatch
reduction target to be reduced as the red
snapper stock rebuilds will allow
bycatch and bycatch mortality of red
snapper to increase. However, any such
increases would be constrained to levels
consistent with the red snapper
rebuilding plan and best available
scientific information. The Council and
NMFS believe it is appropriate to
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provide for reduction of the shrimp
bycatch mortality target, so that the
shrimp fishery could receive some
benefit from stock rebuilding. Holding
the shrimp bycatch mortality constant
would not provide any benefits to the
shrimp fishery, while the directed red
snapper fishery would benefit from
larger TACs. In making any future
adjustments to the target bycatch goal,
NMFS will ensure bycatch is being
minimized to the extent practicable.
To ensure red snapper bycatch does
not increase above levels specified in
Amendment 27/14, the rule establishes
a framework and actions for NMFS to
take should the target not be met. These
are summarized in the above comment.
Comment 17: The final version of the
amendment submitted for Secretarial
review included updated shrimp
landings information not available for
the public hearing draft of the
amendment. This lack of information
was misleading regarding the Council’s
final choice of a preferred alternative,
especially regarding the potential social
and economic impacts of a closure. The
text in the amendment is confusing in
regard to how the revised BRD criterion
would assist in reducing red snapper
fishing mortality to achieve the
reduction target. The document
indicated an additional 10–percent
reduction in fishing mortality on
juvenile red snapper would be achieved
through the certification and use of
BRDs that are more efficient than the
industry-standard Fisheye BRD.
Conversely, another section of the
document suggested there would be
minimal additional reduction benefits
from BRDs expected in the short-term.
Response: Updated information for
2006 indicated red snapper fishing
mortality attributable to the shrimp
fishery was 65 percent less than the
benchmark years, and not 72 percent as
noted in the public hearing draft. The
updated shrimp effort data and possible
implications were brought to the
Council’s attention at their June 2007
meeting prior to the Council’s approval
of the amendment for review by the
Secretary. The public hearing draft of
Amendment 27/14 contained the most
recent information available at the time.
This text was clear to point out the 2006
shrimp effort estimates were
preliminary and based on two of three
trimesters of data. If those estimates
held true, the shrimp fishery would be
near the 74 percent reduction goal.
With respect to the information on
bycatch reductions from BRDs, both
statements are accurate and are not
contradictory. Additional bycatch
mortality reduction is expected from the
introduction of new BRDs for the fishery
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under a pending revision to the
certification criterion for BRDs. Recent
evaluations of the most commonly used
BRD, the Fisheye positioned forward in
the cod end, indicate this BRD is
reducing fishing mortality (F) on
juvenile red snapper by approximately
11 percent. Based on a proposed new
certification criterion to be established
in 2008, NMFS expects that new and
more effective BRDs will be certified for
use in the fishery. These new BRDs
reduce F on juvenile red snapper by
greater than 20 percent; therefore, the
new BRDs should double the reduction
in F derived from using BRDs. However,
the contribution attributable to BRDs is
much less than the reductions of F
achieved by restricting fishing effort in
areas where juvenile red snapper are
caught.
Comment 18: The rule does not
consider mortality reductions achieved
through improved BRDs in the process
whereby the SEFSC makes
recommendations to the RA in
determining the scope and durations of
shrimp closed areas. The condensing of
the 12 statistical areas into 3 zones will
reduce the SEFSC’s ability to tailor the
geographical scope of the time-area
closures.
Response: The 74–percent reduction
target in shrimp trawl bycatch mortality
on red snapper from the 10–30 fathom
area required by the red snapper
rebuilding plan is based on total bycatch
reduction. This includes both
reductions in mortality from reduced
fishing effort as well as reductions
obtained from BRDs.
The three shrimp zones identified in
this rule were developed to identify the
geographical scope of the 10–30 fathom
area of statistical zones 10–21 that could
be closed to shrimp fishing should a
closure be needed. The Texas zone
corresponds to the area where the
cooperative 60-day seasonal closure
with the State of Texas to protect small
brown shrimp emigrating from bay
nursery areas occurs. The Louisiana and
Eastern zones identify the rest of the
area to be managed under the
framework, but were split because of the
lack of trawlable 10–30 fathom bottom
in Federal waters between Louisiana
and Mississippi. Because the rule states
‘‘the RA will, if necessary, establish a
seasonal area closure of the shrimp
fishery in all or a portion of the areas
of the Gulf EEZ specified in paragraphs
(l)(2) through (l)(4),’’ the closure could
apply to all or a part of one or all three
geographic zones. The extent of these
closures would be based on the SEFSC’s
assessment.
Comment 19: The shrimp assessment
conducted by the SEFSC and framework
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procedures to set time and area closures
should allow for input from the shrimp
fishery.
Response: The SEFSC is dependent
on landings and effort data from the
shrimp fishery in conducting its
assessment. The framework procedure
indicates this assessment will be
provided to the RA on or about March
1 of each year. At this time, the
assessment results will be available to
the public. Once the assessment is
available, comments may be directed to
the RA to use in the RA’s determination
if a closure is necessary, and if so, to
what extent. It is also likely the
assessment results will be presented to
the Council for their review. Comments
could also be introduced at this time
when the Council evaluates the RAs
decision.
Classification
The Administrator, Southeast Region,
NMFS, determined that Amendment 27/
14 is necessary for the conservation and
management of the Gulf red snapper
fishery and that it is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable laws.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared an SEIS for this
amendment. A notice of availability for
the draft SEIS was published on April
20, 2007 (72 FR 19928). A notice of
availability for the final SEIS was
published on August 3, 2007 (72 FR
43271).
A FRFA was prepared. The FRFA
incorporates the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, a summary of the
significant economic issues raised by
public comments, NMFS responses to
those comments, and a summary of the
analyses completed to support the
action. A copy of the full analysis is
available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
A summary of the FRFA follows.
The final rule will reduce the
commercial quota from 4.65 million lb
(2.14 million kg) to 2.55 million lb (1.16
million kg) and the recreational quota
from 4.47 million lb (2.06 million kg) to
2.45 million lb (1.11 million kg), reduce
the recreational bag limit from four fish
to two fish and the bag limit for captain
and crew of for-hire vessels to zero,
reduce the commercial minimum size
limit from 15 inches (38 cm) TL to 13
inches (33 cm) TL, require participants
in all Gulf reef fish fishery sectors to use
non-stainless steel circle hooks (when
using natural baits) and to use venting
tools and dehooking devices, provides
for seasonal area closures of the Gulf
shrimp fishery to reduce red snapper
bycatch consistent with Amendment 27/
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14’s framework procedure, and
establishes authority to adjust the target
shrimp bycatch reduction and effort
levels and time-area closures consistent
with the framework procedure.
The purpose of this final rule is to
reduce red snapper catch, bycatch, and
discard mortality in the directed
commercial and recreational fisheries
and the shrimp fishery in order to end
overfishing for red snapper between
2009 and 2010 and rebuild the stock by
2032 in compliance with the red
snapper rebuilding plan.
Several public comments were
received on the economic impact of the
rule. These comments stated that the
economic impacts of the proposed TAC
reduction and associated measures on
the charter industry and associated
businesses and communities were
underestimated. Best available survey
and modeling results indicate that
relatively few angler trip cancellations
are expected to occur as a result of this
action. Most survey respondents
indicated that when faced with a
reduced red snapper bag limit,
including a zero-fish bag limit, they
would either continue fishing for red
snapper or fish for another species.
Fishing for other species may generate
distributional effects (i.e., the trips may
occur from different ports, modes, or
seasons, resulting in one port/entity/
season losing business while another
gains). These distributional effects,
however, cannot be predicted with
current data. Additionally, contrary to
the comments, preliminary data through
August 2007 do not support claims of
widespread reductions in charter
business as a result of the interim
reduction in the recreational quota and
bag limit. Because the recreational red
snapper fishery in Federal waters did
not open until late April, data for May
through August 2007 were examined.
During this period, approximately
461,000 trips were estimated to have
been taken by recreational anglers on
charterboats in the Gulf from Florida
through Louisiana (data for Texas are
not collected in the same data program
and are not available). This compares to
an average of approximately 403,000
angler trips per year for the previous 3
years, 2004 through 2006. Omitting
2006 data on the assumption that effort
in that year was reduced due to
lingering effects of the Fall 2005
hurricanes, the annual average for 2004
through 2005 was only slightly greater,
at approximately 405,000 angler trips.
Thus, while these results do not
address, and available data cannot
address, claims of severe economic loss
by individual entities, preliminary 2007
data do not support contentions of
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widespread industry harm. Consistent
with the projections, while effort may
have shifted to other species or other
charter businesses, a widespread
reduction in effort as a result of the
reduced interim recreational quota and
bag limit is not apparent. The
management measures in the final rule
are more restrictive than the interim
measures, i.e., while the bag limit would
remain at the interim 2–fish bag limit,
a lower quota results in a shorter open
season. However, because anglers
indicated they would generally continue
to fish under a lower bag limit,
including a 0–fish limit, widespread
effort declines are similarly not
expected. For these reasons, no changes
were made in the final rule as a result
of these comments.
Additional public comments
requested that the implementation of
the circle hook requirement be delayed
to allow manufacturers, distributors,
and retailers sufficient time to produce
and distribute the hooks and ensure
adequate stock is available to meet
fisherman demand. NMFS has revised
this final rule to delay the effective date
of these new gear requirements until
June 1, 2008.
The management actions considered
in this final rule are expected to affect
all vessels that operate in the
commercial red snapper fishery, all
vessels that have a Federal reef fish forhire permit, and all dealers and
processors that handle product from
these fisheries. Although this final rule
contains actions that pertain to the
commercial shrimp fishery, these
actions are not expected to impose any
direct adverse impacts on the shrimp
fishery or associated entities.
An IFQ program was implemented
January 2007 for the commercial red
snapper fishery. Summary data on the
fleet economics under this program are
not yet available. Prior to the
implementation of the IFQ program,
however, 136 entities held Class 1
licenses that allowed a commercial
vessel trip limit of up to 2,000 lb (907
kg) of red snapper and 628 entities held
Class 2 licenses that allowed a trip limit
of up to 200 lb (91 kg) of red snapper.
Between 2002 and 2004, the top 50 red
snapper vessels in terms of landings
harvested 2.77 million lb (1.26 million
kg) of red snapper, on average, or 64
percent of the industry total. Vessels
ranked 51 to 131 harvested 1.29 million
lb (0.59 million kg), on average, or 30
percent of the industry total for the
same period. Thus, the top 131 red
snapper vessels accounted for
approximately 94 percent of the total
industry red snapper landings. Red
snapper are mainly harvested by
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fishermen using vertical-line gear. These
fishermen accounted for approximately
90 percent of commercial red snapper
Gulf harvests, on average, between 2002
and 2004.
Average annual gross receipts (2004
dollars) and net income (gross receipts
minus all costs) per vessel vary by gear
type, area fished, and volume of catch.
High-volume vessels using vertical lines
averaged gross receipts and net income
of $110,070 and $28,466 in the northern
Gulf, but only $67,979 and $23,822 in
the eastern Gulf. Low-volume vessels
using vertical lines averaged gross
receipts and net income of $24,095 and
$6,801 in the northern Gulf, but $24,588
and $4,479 respectively in the eastern
Gulf. Vessels using bottom longlines
averaged gross receipts and net income
of $116,989 and $25,452 for highvolume vessels, but only $87,635 and
$14,978 respectively for low-volume
vessels.
The current fleet permitted to operate
in the Gulf reef fish for-hire sector is
estimated to be 1,625 vessels. The forhire fleet is comprised of charterboats,
which charge a fee on a vessel basis, and
headboats, which charge a fee on an
individual angler (head) basis. The
average charterboat is estimated to
generate $76,960 in annual revenues
and $36,758 in annual profits, whereas
the appropriate values for the average
headboat are $404,172 and $338,209,
respectively.
The measures in this final rule are
also expected to affect fish dealers,
particularly those that receive red
snapper from harvesting vessels. A
Federal permit is required for a fish
dealer to receive reef fish from
commercial vessels, and there are 227
dealers currently permitted to buy and
sell reef fish species. All reef fish
processors are included in this total
because all processors must be dealers.
Most of these dealers are located in
Florida (146), with 29 in Louisiana, 18
in Texas, 14 in Alabama, 5 in
Mississippi, and 15 in states outside the
Gulf. In addition, vessels identify the
dealers who receive their fish on
logbook reports. Commercial reef fish
vessels with Federal permits are
required to sell their harvest only to
permitted dealers. From 1997 through
2002, on average, 154 reef fish dealers
actively bought and sold red snapper.
These dealers were distributed around
the Gulf as follows: 7 in Alabama, 96 in
Florida, 22 in Louisiana, 7 in
Mississippi, and 22 in Texas. On
average, Florida dealers purchased
approximately $1.8 million of red
snapper, followed by Louisiana ($1.4
million), Texas ($1.3 million),
Mississippi ($174,000), and Alabama
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($88,000). These dealers may hold
permits for multiple fisheries, but it is
not possible to determine what
percentage of their total business comes
from the red snapper fishery.
Approximately 2,000 vessels are
expected to be issued a shrimp
moratorium permit, which has been
required to operate in the Gulf
commercial EEZ shrimp fishery since
March 26, 2007. Economic profiles of
these vessels are not available at this
time. Prior to implementation of the
moratorium permit, approximately
2,666 vessels were identified as
qualifying for the permit based on
historical participation in the fishery.
The following description of the shrimp
fleet is based on an assessment of these
qualifying vessels.
The average annual gross revenue (all
harvest species) per qualifying shrimp
vessel in 2005 was approximately
$116,000, while the comparable figure
for qualifying vessels active in the Gulf
shrimp fishery, i.e., vessels with
recorded shrimp landings in 2005, was
approximately $152,000. In the same
year, the maximum annual gross
revenue from shrimp by a vessel was
approximately $757,000 for both
qualifying and active qualifying vessels,
whereas the maximum annual gross
revenue for all harvest species was
approximately $1.89 million by an
inactive qualifier and $757,000 for an
active qualifier. According to recent
projections, on average, Gulf EEZ
commercial shrimp vessels are
experiencing a -33 percent rate of return
(net revenues/total fixed and variable
costs). These economic losses were
projected to continue until 2012.
In 2005, 609 dealers were identified
operating in the commercial shrimp
fishery. Employment information for
this sector is not available. In 2005, 60
processors in the shrimp fishery were
identified, employing approximately
3,400 persons, or an average of 56
employees per entity. The maximum
number of employees for a shrimp
processor in 2005 was 353.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) defines a small business in the
commercial fishing industry as an entity
that is independently owned and
operated, is not dominant in its field of
operation (including its affiliates), and
has total annual average receipts not in
excess of $4.0 million annually (NAICS
codes 114111 and 114112, finfish and
shellfish fishing). For for-hire vessels,
these same criteria apply except that the
average annual receipts threshold is
$6.5 million (NAICS code 713990,
recreational industries). For seafood
processors and dealers, the SBA uses an
employee threshold rather than a
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receipts threshold. The threshold is 500
or fewer persons on a full-time, parttime, temporary, or other basis, at all its
affiliated operations worldwide for a
seafood processor and 100 or fewer
persons for a seafood dealer.
Some persons/entities are known to
own multiple vessels (i.e., fleet
operations) in the commercial red
snapper fishery and in the commercial
reef fish fisheries in general, but the
extent of such operations is unknown.
The maximum number of reef fish
permits reported owned by the same
person/entity is 6 permits. Additional
permits and the revenues associated
with those permits may be linked to an
entity through affiliation rules, but such
affiliation links cannot be made using
existing data. Further, a definitive
determination of whether any
commercial entity would be considered
a large entity cannot be made using
average revenue information. However,
since the average total revenue in the
commercial red snapper fishery between
2002 and 2004 was $11.652 million,
given the number of license holders in
the fishery is 764, the summary
statistics and the maximum number of
permits owned by a single person/entity
provided above, NMFS determined that
all commercial reef fish harvest entities
that will be affected by this final rule are
small entities.
Fleet operations also exist in the forhire sector, with at least one entity
reported to hold 12 permits. The bulk of
the fleet, however, consists of single
permit operations. Thus, based on the
average revenue figures above, NMFS
determined that all for-hire operations
that will be affected by this final rule are
small entities.
Average employment per reef fish
dealer is unknown. Although dealers
and processors are not synonymous
entities, total employment for reef fish
processors in the Southeast is
approximately 700 individuals, both
part and full time. While all processors
must be dealers, a dealer need not be a
processor. Further, processing fish is a
more labor intensive than buying fish.
Therefore, given the employment
estimate for the processing sector and
the number of dealers that participated
in the fishery on average per year from
1997–2002 (154 dealers), NMFS
assumed that the maximum number of
employees for reef fish dealers and
processors are unlikely to surpass the
SBA employment benchmarks.
Therefore, NMFS determined that all
reef fish dealers and processors that will
be affected by this final rule are small
entities.
As with the other fishery sectors, fleet
operations are known to exist in the
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commercial shrimp fishery, but the
magnitude of such cannot be
determined using available data. Given
the maximum revenue per vessel figures
noted above, NMFS determined that all
shrimp vessels that could be affected by
this final rule are small entities.
Similar to the reef fish industry,
processing shrimp is more labor
intensive than buying shrimp. Thus,
average employment in the shrimp
dealer sector is assumed to be less than
that in the processing sector. Because
the maximum number of employees for
a shrimp processor does not exceed the
SBA threshold, NMFS determined that
all shrimp dealers and processors that
could be affected by this proposed rule
are small entities.
The red snapper recreational and
commercial quota reductions are
expected to reduce profits in the for-hire
and commercial sectors. In the for-hire
sector, declines in profits, approximated
by net operating revenue (gross revenue
minus operating costs except labor)
decreases, are expected due to declines
in individual angler trip bookings.
Under the 2.45 million lb (1.11 million
kg) recreational quota and two-fish bag
limit, the for-hire sector is projected to
lose approximately $1.1 million in
annual net operating revenues per year.
It is not possible to accurately estimate
the extent to which individual for-hire
operations will be affected by the quota
reduction. Depending on the geographic
location of their operation, level of
activity, reliance on red snapper trips,
variety of species available, and
preferences of their core clientele, some
vessels will be impacted more than
others. Quantifying the number of
vessels that will face the greatest
economic losses is not possible with
available data. The average impact per
vessel will vary inversely with the
number of vessels substantially
involved in and dependent upon the red
snapper fishery. For example, if the
expected economic impacts were borne
by 10 to 25 percent of the fleet, average
losses in net annual operating revenue
per vessel would be expected to range
from approximately $2,700 to $6,800.
These losses still represent an average,
however, and individual losses for some
vessels will be higher by an
indeterminate amount.
The assessment of impacts on for-hire
profits was based on the recreational
quota and not season length. Although
industry comment during the
development of the proposed rule
indicated that a longer open season was
preferable to a shorter season, regardless
of total allowable catch, and would
result in less economic losses,
estimating the differential economic
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impacts of season length was not
possible with available data. As a result,
the estimated reduction in for-hire
profits is neutral with respect to season
length. If the red snapper season length
is a significant factor in for-hire profits,
then the estimated $1.1 million losses
will understate the impacts of a shorter
season by an indeterminate amount.
The commercial red snapper sector is
expected to experience reductions in
profits, measured by changes in net
operating revenue to owners, captains,
and crew, as a result of the lower quota
specified by the final rule. Some of
these losses will be mitigated by the
reduction in the commercial minimum
size limit. The impact analysis for the
commercial red snapper sector assumed
the fishery was operating under an IFQ
program, which was implemented in
January 2007. Under the IFQ, the
number of vessels operating in the
fishery is expected to decline
substantially as quota shares are
consolidated. However, since the IFQ
program has been operating less than
one year, sufficient data on the expected
contraction is not yet available to
indicate the size and type of fleet that
will develop. Therefore, the analysis of
the expected impacts of the commercial
quota reduction assumed the fleet
would contract to homogenous fleets of
a specific vessel size and accompanying
operational characteristics, with the
resultant fleet comprised of either more
small vessels (35 ft (10.7 m)) or fewer
large vessels (65 ft (19.8 m)).
Under the status quo commercial
quota of 4.65 million lb (2.14 million
kg), the fleet is projected to contract to
between ninety-five 35–ft (10.7 m)
vessels or thirty-nine 65–ft (19.8 m)
vessels. The average annual net
operating revenue per vessel within
each vessel size class was estimated at
$274,000 and $667,000, respectively.
Under the 2.55 million lb (1.16 million
kg) commercial quota in the final rule,
projected losses in net operating
revenues to owners, captains, and crew
in the commercial sector are estimated
to be approximately $11.5 million. The
resultant fleet is projected to consist of
between fifty-two 35–ft (10.7–m) or
twenty-two 65–ft (19.8–m) vessels,
representing a reduction of forty-three
35–ft (10.7–m) vessels to seventeen 65–
ft (19.8–m) vessels. For each of these
potential fleets, the corresponding
average net operating revenue for
remaining vessels was estimated at
$278,000 and $665,000, respectively.
Average short-term net operating
revenue losses per vessel are estimated
at $121,000 and $295,000 for the 35–ft
(10.7–m) and 65–ft (19.8–m) vessel
classes, respectively.
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Jkt 214001
The reduction in the commercial
quota is also expected to adversely
impact dealers and processors that
purchase and sell red snapper. Although
substantial decreases in revenues
collected from domestic red snapper are
anticipated, the expected losses to
dealers and processors cannot be
quantified due to lack of firm-level gross
revenues and profit data. To mitigate the
adverse economic impacts that will
result from the 45–percent decrease in
the commercial quota, dealers and
processors may increase their reliance
on imported snapper and use other reef
fish species as substitutes.
The zero-fish captain and crew bag
limit while on charter is not expected to
affect the profitability of for-hire
operations because the sale of
recreational reef fish landings is already
prohibited. Requiring all persons aboard
reef fish vessels to use non-stainless
steel circle hooks when using natural
baits, venting tools, and dehooking
devices is expected to result in minimal
impacts on the profitability of small
entities because of the current
widespread use of circle hooks, their
competitive pricing, and the availability
of dehooking devices and venting tools
for less than $15 each.
The management measures
considered in this final rule do not
affect the reporting or record-keeping
requirements for reef fish and shrimp
vessels, dealers, or processors. This final
rule does not require additional records
or report preparation.
Four alternatives, including the status
quo, were considered for the action to
set TAC and, thus, establish the
recreational and commercial quotas in
the red snapper fishery. Three of the
alternatives include multiple options
and sub-options to manage the
recreational fishery under the respective
TACs and quotas. The first alternative,
the status quo, would not be consistent
with assumptions related to expected
reductions in directed and bycatch
mortality rates and would not result in
a sufficient, i.e., greater than 50 percent,
probability of the red snapper
rebuilding plan’s success. If
implemented, the status quo alternative
would result in drastic TAC and quota
reductions in subsequent years and,
thus, greater adverse economic impacts
during that time in order for the
resource to continue on the designated
recovery path.
The second alternative to the red
snapper TAC would have reduced the
TAC to 7.0 million lb (3.175 million kg),
with resultant commercial and
recreational quotas of 3.57 and 3.43
million lb (1.62 and 1.44 million kg),
respectively. This alternative has the
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5125
potential of generating, depending upon
the sub-option selected, lower shortterm adverse economic impacts than the
final rule. However, a 7.0 million lb
(3.175 million kg) TAC is not consistent
with the current mortality reduction
assumptions and would not provide the
necessary greater than 50- percent
probability of achieving the rebuilding
plan objectives. Like the status quo, this
alternative would require greater TAC
reductions in subsequent years, thereby
generating greater adverse economic
impacts over that time than the final
rule.
The third alternative to the red
snapper TAC would have reduced the
TAC to 3.0 million lb (1.36 million kg),
with resultant commercial and
recreational quotas of 1.53 and 1.47
million lb (0.69 and 0.67 million kg),
respectively. This alternative would
have reduced the TAC and quotas more
than necessary to end overfishing
within the specified time period and
would be expected to result in an overly
restrictive management approach with
unnecessary and greater adverse
economic impacts than the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the
status quo, were considered for the
action addressing post-hurricane effort
and landings reductions. Although some
post-hurricane reduction in effort and
landings is demonstrated by available
data, the reductions are not consistent
across the entire fishery and are not
expected to persist. Therefore, the final
rule does not assume any post-hurricane
effort reduction in the determination of
the management measures necessary to
limit the recreational sector to its quota.
The second alternative would have
assumed a 10–percent reduction in posthurricane effort in the recreational red
snapper fishery. This alternative would
extend the fishing season and yield
greater short term economic benefits
than the final rule. However, a 10–
percent reduction in effort is not
supported by available data, and
adopting such an assumption may result
in a failure to meet conservation goals,
resulting in long-term negative
economic impacts relative to the
proposed action. The third alternative
would have assumed a 25–percent
reduction in post-hurricane effort and
landings. This alternative would result
in a longer season than the final rule
and result in greater short-term
economic benefits than the final rule.
However, a 25–percent reduction is also
not supported by available data, and
adopting that assumption would be
expected to result in a failure to meet
conservation goals, resulting in
substantial long-term negative economic
impacts relative to the final rule.
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29JAR1
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Two alternatives, including the status
quo, were considered for the action to
set the captain and crew bag limit. The
final rule will allow the recreational red
snapper fishing season to remain open
4–16 days longer relative to the status
quo. The status quo alternative, which
would allow the captain and crew to
retain the angler bag limit, would
require either a shorter season or a
lower bag limit for recreational anglers
to achieve the rebuilding goals. These
more restrictive measures would be
expected to result in greater reductions
in trip demand and increased
reductions in for-hire profits and angler
value than the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the
status quo, were considered for the
commercial red snapper minimum size
limit. The first alternative to the final
rule, the status quo, would be expected
to result in continued unnecessary
bycatch mortality and would not,
therefore, meet the Council’s objectives.
The 13–inch (33–cm) minimum size
limit in the commercial sector is
expected to result in decreased
economic impacts to the fishery and
associated industries due to increases in
the operational efficiency of commercial
vessels and a potential ex-vessel price
increase for smaller fish. The third
alternative would eliminate the
commercial minimum size limit.
Eliminating the commercial minimum
size limit would increase user conflicts
between the commercial and
recreational sectors since the
recreational sector would have a 16–
inch (41 cm) minimum size limit, while
the commercial sector would not have
any minimum size limit. Further,
because no commercial market is
currently known to exist for red snapper
smaller than 12 inches (30 cm), no
additional benefits would be expected
to accrue to the commercial sector.
Thus, the total economic impacts to the
commercial sector of an elimination of
the minimum size limit would be
expected to be comparable to those of
the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the
status quo, were considered for the gear
requirement action. The two alternatives
that contained new gear requirements
contained options that specified the
fisheries over which the requirements
would apply. The final rule will require
the use of non-stainless steel circle
hooks when using natural baits, and
require the use of venting tools and
dehooking devices for all participants in
the reef fish fisheries in the EEZ of the
Gulf of Mexico. The final rule will
reduce bycatch and bycatch mortality in
the red snapper and reef fish fisheries
and contribute to improving the
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16:22 Jan 28, 2008
Jkt 214001
likelihood of success of the red snapper
rebuilding plan. This is expected to
result in increased long-term economic
benefits. The sub-options that reduced
the fisheries to which the gear
requirements will apply would be
expected to result in less reduction in
bycatch mortality and lower long-term
economic benefits than the final rule.
However, in general, little economic
impact is expected because of the
current widespread use of circle hooks
and the low cost of venting/dehooking
devices (less than $15 each).
The first alternative to the final gear
action would not impose new gear
requirements on fishermen and would
not, in the short term, result in any
direct adverse economic impacts.
However, this alternative would not
contribute to improving the likelihood
of success of the red snapper rebuilding
plan. Relative to the final rule, this
alternative could result in more severe
restrictions on fishery participants in
the long run and, thus, generate greater
adverse economic impacts.
The second alternative and associated
sub-options to the final gear action
would specify only a minimum hook
size. Compared to the final rule, this
alternative would be less effective in
reducing bycatch and bycatch mortality.
As a result, in the long run, it would be
expected to result in smaller economic
benefits than the final rule.
Six alternatives, including the status
quo, were considered for the bycatch
reduction target in the commercial
shrimp fishery. The status quo would
not establish a bycatch reduction target,
would not ensure consistent reductions
in bycatch fishing mortality on juvenile
red snapper in the shrimp fishery, and
would not be consistent with the 2005
SEDAR assessment recommendations to
further reduce bycatch fishing mortality
rates on the red snapper stock. The final
rule incorporates a target reduction of
shrimp trawl bycatch mortality on red
snapper 74 percent less than the
benchmark years of 2001–2003 as
specified in the amendment, which is
consistent with the red snapper quotas
established by final rule, and increases
the probability of success of the red
snapper rebuilding plan. Establishment
of the bycatch reduction target is an
administrative action and will not result
in any direct adverse economic effects.
The second and third alternatives to
the final bycatch reduction target would
establish lower reduction targets than
the 74–percent target reduction
incorporated in the final rule. Like the
final rule, these alternatives are not
expected to result in direct adverse
economic impacts. However, the lower
targets do not contribute sufficiently to
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
increasing the likelihood of the success
of the red snapper rebuilding plan and
could be expected to require further
effort reductions, resulting in more
severe management measures in the
long run. The fourth alternative would,
as will the final rule, incorporate a 74–
percent reduction in shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality on red snapper, but
would not specify changes to the target
or the method by which the target might
be adjusted in the future. Similarly, the
fifth alternative would establish a 74–
percent reduction in shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality on red snapper, but
would also explicitly link future
adjustments to the bycatch reduction
target to red snapper stock assessment
updates.
Four alternatives, including the status
quo, were considered for the action to
potentially establish fishing restrictions
for the EEZ shrimp fishery in the Gulf
of Mexico if the bycatch reduction target
in the fishery is not met. The first
alternative to the final rule, the status
quo, would not establish potential
fishing restrictions for the Gulf shrimp
fishery. The status quo would not result
in direct or indirect adverse economic
impacts because potential restrictions
would not be established for the shrimp
fishery. However, if effort reductions in
the fishery are not sufficient to achieve
target goals, this alternative may result
in more severe future restrictions and
potentially greater adverse economic
impacts than the enactment of potential
effort restrictions at this time.
The final rule will, if necessary,
establish a procedure for implementing
a seasonal closure in the 10- to 30–
fathom (18- to 55–m) zone of selected
areas within statistical zones 10–21 in
the Gulf of Mexico via appropriate
rulemaking. The closure is intended,
when possible, to begin on the same
start date as the closure of the EEZ off
Texas. This measure will ensure that
target reductions in shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality are met, is consistent
with the red snapper quotas, and will
contribute to increasing the likelihood
of the success of the red snapper
rebuilding plan. Establishment of this
procedure is an administrative action
and will not result in any direct
economic effects. Direct economic
impacts will only accrue if, in the
future, it is determined that the bycatch
reduction target has not been met and a
seasonal closure is necessary. The direct
economic effects of the closure would
be analyzed at that time, as appropriate.
The second and third alternatives to
the final action to establish fishing
restrictions if the bycatch reduction
target in the fishery is not met would
also establish a procedure for
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 19 / Tuesday, January 29, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
implementing seasonal closures, as
necessary, in the 10 to 30–fathom (18 to
55 m) zone of selected areas within
statistical zones 10–21 in the Gulf of
Mexico but would consider alternative
time frames for the closures. As with the
final rule, this procedure and associated
alternatives are administrative in nature
and would not be expected to result in
any direct economic effects. Direct
economic impacts would only accrue if,
in the future, it is determined that the
bycatch reduction target has not been
met and a seasonal closure is necessary.
However, compared to the long-term
benefits expected to accrue to the red
snapper fishery from the final rule,
smaller long-term economic benefits to
the red snapper fishery would be
expected from these alternatives. The
greater positive impacts associated with
the final rule are attributable to the
intended starting date of any potential
closure coinciding with the movement
of age 1 snapper from shrimp grounds
to larger structures.
Two alternatives, including the status
quo, were considered for the action to
establish a framework procedure to
adjust effort in the commercial shrimp
fishery. The status quo would not
establish a framework procedure and
would not support adjusting effort in
the commercial shrimp fishery in
response to a failure to meet bycatch
reduction requirements in a timely and
efficient manner. The final rule will
allow the Regional Administrator to
implement closures based upon annual
shrimp effort assessments conducted by
the Southeast Fisheries Science Center.
This procedure is expected to be the
quickest and most efficient approach to
establishing closures. Two other options
were considered under the second
alternative. These options would
establish less expedient means of
implementing recommended closures.
Direct adverse economic impacts are not
expected to result from the alternatives
included in this action because the
establishment of a framework procedure
to adjust effort in the commercial
shrimp fishery is an administrative
action. Direct effects will only accrue if
shrimp effort needs to be adjusted. The
direct effects of any adjustment will be
analyzed at the time such action is
initiated, as appropriate.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Fisheries, Fishing, Puerto Rico,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Virgin Islands.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:22 Jan 28, 2008
Jkt 214001
Dated: January 23, 2008
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 622 is amended
as follows:
I
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 622.2, the definitions for
‘‘circle hook,’’ ‘‘dehooking device,’’ and
‘‘venting device’’ are added in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
I
§ 622.2
Definitions and acronyms.
*
*
*
*
*
Circle hook means a fishing hook
designed and manufactured so that the
point is turned perpendicularly back to
the shank to form a generally circular,
or oval, shape.
*
*
*
*
*
Dehooking device means a device
intended to remove a hook embedded in
a fish to release the fish with minimum
damage.
*
*
*
*
*
Venting device means a device
intended to deflate the swim bladder of
a fish to release the fish with minimum
damage.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. In § 622.34, paragraph (l) is added
and the first sentence of paragraph (m)
is revised to read as follows:
§ 622.34 Gulf EEZ seasonal and/or area
closures.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Closures of the Gulf shrimp fishery
to reduce red snapper bycatch. During a
closure implemented in accordance
with this paragraph (l), trawling is
prohibited within the specified closed
area(s).
(1) Procedure for determining need for
and extent of closures. Each year, in
accordance with the applicable
framework procedure established in the
FMP for the Shrimp Fishery in the Gulf
of Mexico (FMP), the RA will, if
necessary, establish a seasonal area
closure for the shrimp fishery in all or
a portion of the areas of the Gulf EEZ
specified in paragraphs (l)(2) through
(l)(4) of this section. The RA’s
determination of the need for such
closure and its geographical scope and
duration will be based on an annual
assessment, by the Southeast Fisheries
Science Center, of the shrimp effort and
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Sfmt 4700
associated shrimp trawl bycatch
mortality on red snapper in the 10–30
fathom area of statistical zones 10–21,
compared to the 74–percent target
reduction of shrimp trawl bycatch
mortality on red snapper from the
benchmark years of 2001–2003
established in the FMP. The framework
procedure provides for adjustment of
this target reduction level, consistent
with the red snapper stock rebuilding
plan and the findings of subsequent
stock assessments, via appropriate
rulemaking. The assessment will use
shrimp effort data for the most recent
12-month period available and will
include a recommendation regarding the
geographical scope and duration of the
closure. The Southeast Fisheries
Science Center’s assessment will be
provided to the RA on or about March
1 of each year. If the RA determines that
a closure is necessary, the closure falls
within the scope of the potential
closures evaluated in the FMP, and good
cause exists to waive notice and
comment, NMFS will implement the
closure by publication of a final rule in
the Federal Register. If such good cause
waiver is not justified, NMFS will
implement the closure via appropriate
notice and comment rulemaking. NMFS
intends that any closure implemented
consistent with this paragraph (l) will
begin on the same date and time as the
Texas closure unless circumstances
dictate otherwise.
(2) Eastern zone. The eastern zone is
bounded by rhumb lines connecting, in
order, the following points:
Point
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
A
North lat.
29°14′
29°24′
29°34′
30°04′
30°04′
29°36′
29°21′
29°14′
West long.
88°57′
88°34′
87°38′
87°00′
88°41′
88°37′
88°59′
88°57′
(3) Louisiana zone. The Louisiana
zone is bounded by rhumb lines
connecting, in order, the following
points:
Point
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
A
E:\FR\FM\29JAR1.SGM
North lat.
29°09.1′
29°09.25′
28°35′
29°09′
28°57′
28°40′
28°18′
28°25′
28°21.7′
29°09.1′
29JAR1
West long.
93°41.4′
92°36′
90°44′
89°48′
89°34′
90°09′
90°33′
91°37′
93°28.4′
93°41.4′
5128
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 19 / Tuesday, January 29, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
(4) Texas zone. The Texas zone is
bounded by rhumb lines connecting, in
order, the following points:
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Red snapper -16 inches (40.6 cm),
TL, for a fish taken by a person subject
to the bag limit specified in § 622.39
(b)(1)(iii) and 13 inches (38.1 cm), TL,
for a fish taken by a person not subject
to the bag limit.
*
*
*
*
*
I 5. In § 622.39, paragraphs (b)(1)(viii)
through (b)(1)(x) are removed, and
paragraphs (b)(1)(iii) and (b)(1)(v) are
revised to read as follows:
(m) Required gear in the Gulf reef fish
fishery. For a person on board a vessel
to fish for Gulf reef fish in the Gulf EEZ,
the vessel must possess on board and
such person must use the gear as
specified in paragraphs (m)(1) through
(m)(3) of this section.
(1) Non-stainless steel circle hooks.
Non-stainless steel circle hooks are
required when fishing with natural
baits.
(2) Dehooking device. At least one
dehooking device is required and must
be used to remove hooks embedded in
Gulf reef fish with minimum damage.
The hook removal device must be
constructed to allow the hook to be
secured and the barb shielded without
re-engaging during the removal process.
The dehooking end must be blunt, and
all edges rounded. The device must be
of a size appropriate to secure the range
of hook sizes and styles used in the Gulf
reef fish fishery.
(3) Venting tool. At least one venting
tool is required and must be used to
deflate the swim bladders of Gulf reef
fish to release the fish with minimum
damage. This tool must be a sharpened,
hollow instrument, such as a
hypodermic syringe with the plunger
removed, or a 16–gauge needle fixed to
a hollow wooden dowel. A tool such as
a knife or an ice-pick may not be used.
The venting tool must be inserted into
the fish at a 45–degree angle
approximately 1 to 2 inches (2.54 to
5.08 cm) from the base of the pectoral
fin. The tool must be inserted just deep
enough to release the gases, so that the
fish may be released with minimum
damage.
I 7. In § 622.42, paragraphs (a)(1)(v) and
(a)(3) are removed, and paragraphs
(a)(1)(i) and (a)(2) are revised to read as
follows:
§ 622.39
§ 622.42
Point
North lat.
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
A
29°09.1′
28°44′
28°11′
27°44′
27°02′
26°00.5′
26°00.5′
26°24′
26°49′
27°12′
27°39′
27°55′
28°21.7′
29°09.1′
West long.
93°41.4′
95°15′
96°17′
96°53′
97°11′
96°57.3′
96°35.85′
96°36′
96°52′
96°51′
96°33′
96°04′
93°28.4′
93°41.4′
(m)***
The recreational fishery for red
snapper in or from the Gulf EEZ is
closed from January 1 through May 31
and from October 1 through December
31, each year. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
I 4. In § 622.37, paragraph (d)(1)(vi) is
removed and paragraph (d)(1)(iv) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.37
Size limits.
*
Bag and possession limits.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Red snapper -2. However, no red
snapper may be retained by the captain
or crew of a vessel operating as a charter
vessel or headboat. The bag limit for
such captain and crew is zero.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Gulf reef fish, combined,
excluding those specified in paragraphs
(b)(1)(i) through (b)(1)(iv) and
paragraphs (b)(1)(vi) through (b)(1)(vii)
of this section and excluding dwarf sand
perch and sand perch -20.
*
*
*
*
*
I 6. In § 622.41, paragraph (m) is added
to read as follows:
§ 622.41
*
*
Species specific limitations.
*
VerDate Aug<31>2005
*
*
16:22 Jan 28, 2008
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Red snapper -2.55 million lb (1.16
million kg), round weight.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Recreational quota for red
snapper. The following quota applies to
persons who harvest red snapper other
than under commercial vessel permits
for Gulf reef fish and the commercial
quota specified in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of
this section -2.45 million lb (1.11
million kg), round weight.
*
*
*
*
*
I 8. In § 622.48, paragraph (i) is revised
to read as follows:
§ 622.48 Adjustment of management
measures.
*
Jkt 214001
Quotas.
*
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*
*
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*
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*
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(i) Gulf shrimp. Closed seasons and
areas, target effort and fishing mortality
reduction levels, bycatch reduction
criteria, BRD certification and
decertification criteria, BRD testing
protocol, certified BRDs, and BRD
specification.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. E8–1547 Filed 1–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 070213032–7032–01]
RIN 0648–XF34
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pollock in Statistical
Area 630 of the Gulf of Alaska
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; modification of
a closure.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS is reopening directed
fishing for pollock in Statistical Area
630 of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) for 48
hours. This action is necessary to fully
use the A season allowance of the 2008
total allowable catch (TAC) of pollock
specified for Statistical Area 630 of the
GOA.
DATES: Effective 1200 hrs, Alaska local
time (A.l.t.), January 25, 2008, through
1200 hrs, A.l.t., January 27, 2008.
Comments must be received at the
following address no later than 4:30
p.m., A.l.t., February 8, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by 0648–XF34, by any one of
the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal website at
https://www.regulations.gov;
• Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802;
• FAX: (907) 586–7557; or
• Hand delivery to the Federal
Building: 709 West 9th Street, Room
420A, Juneau, AK. Send comments to
Sue Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian.
Instructions: All comments received
are a part of the public record and will
generally be posted to https://
www.regulations.gov without change.
All Personal Identifying Information (for
E:\FR\FM\29JAR1.SGM
29JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 19 (Tuesday, January 29, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 5117-5128]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-1547]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 0612243157-7799-07]
RIN 0648-AT87
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Fishery and Shrimp Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Amendment
27/14
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to implement joint Amendment 27 to
the Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the Reef Fish Resources of the
Gulf of Mexico (Reef Fish FMP) and Amendment 14 to the Fishery
Management Plan for the Shrimp Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico (Shrimp
FMP)(Amendment 27/14) prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management
Council (Council). This final rule reduces the commercial and
recreational quotas for red snapper, reduces the commercial minimum
size limit for red snapper, reduces the recreational bag limit for red
snapper, prohibits the retention of red snapper under the bag limit for
the captain and crew of a vessel operating as a charter vessel or
headboat, establishes a red snapper recreational season that is open
from June 1 through September 30 each year, requires the use of non-
stainless steel circle hooks when using natural baits to fish for Gulf
reef fish, requires the use of venting tools and dehooking devices when
participating in the commercial or recreational reef fish fisheries,
and consistent with the Amendment's framework procedure, provides for
[[Page 5118]]
implementing seasonal closures of the Gulf shrimp fishery to reduce red
snapper bycatch based upon the 74 percent bycatch reduction target
established in this final rule. In addition, this final rule
establishes a framework procedure to adjust the target effort level and
any necessary closures for the Gulf shrimp fishery. The measures
contained in this final rule are intended to establish a revised red
snapper rebuilding plan and to end overfishing of the red snapper
resource in the Gulf of Mexico.
DATES: This final rule is effective February 28, 2008, except for Sec.
622.41(m) which is effective June 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Final Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (FSEIS), the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA),
and the Record of Decision (ROD) may be obtained from Peter Hood, NMFS,
Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL
33701; telephone 727-824-5305; fax 727-824-5308; e-mail
peter.hood@noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peter Hood, telephone 727-824-5305;
fax 727-824-5308; e-mail peter.hood@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The reef fish and shrimp fisheries of the
Gulf of Mexico are managed under their respective FMPs (Reef Fish FMP
and Shrimp FMP). The FMPs were prepared by the Council and are
implemented through regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act).
On July 26, 2007, NMFS published a notice of availability of
Amendment 27/14 and requested public comments (72 FR 41046). On October
23, 2007, NMFS published the proposed rule to implement Amendment 27/14
and requested public comments (72 FR 59989). NMFS partially approved
Amendment 27/14 on October 19, 2007. The rationale for the measures in
Amendment 27/14 is provided in the amendment and in the preamble to the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
Partial Disapproval of Amendment 27/14
NMFS disapproved the proposed management measure that would have
assumed a 10-percent reduction in post-hurricane recreational fishing
effort and landings as it related to total allowable catch (TAC) levels
and associated management measures. NMFS determined that a 10-percent
reduction in recreational fishing effort and landings was not based on
the best scientific information available as required by national
standard 2 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and was inconsistent with
Council's stated objective to reduce fishing mortality and rebuild the
red snapper stock. As a result of this disapproval, this final rule
establishes a red snapper recreational season that remains open from
June 1 through September 30 each year rather than the May 1 through
October 15 season that would have resulted if the assumption of a 10-
percent reduction in recreational fishing effort and landings had been
approved.
Delayed Effectiveness for Requirement of Circle Hooks, Dehooking
Devices, and Venting Tools
NMFS is delaying, until June 1, 2008, the effectiveness of the
requirements in Sec. 622.41(m) to use non-stainless steel circle hooks
when using natural baits to fish for Gulf reef fish and to use
dehooking devices and venting tools when fishing for Gulf reef fish in
the Gulf exclusive economic zone (EEZ). This delay in effectiveness
will provide additional time for manufacturers and retail outlets to
prepare for the demand for these newly required products and will
provide more time for commercial and recreational fishers to comply
with these new gear requirements.
Comments and Responses
Following are the public comments received on Amendment 27/14 and
on the proposed rule along with NMFS' responses to those comments.
Comment 1: Fishing conditions have improved, especially in the
northeastern Gulf of Mexico, and there is no need to institute
reductions in TAC, the bag limit, or the recreational season. In
addition, artificial reefs and reductions in shrimp trawl effort have
improved red snapper fishing.
Response: The red snapper stock assessment evaluated the status of
the population both east and west of the Mississippi River delta. The
assessment found the eastern portion of the population to be in better
condition than the western portion, and that stock condition was
improving. This increase in population abundance is likely the reason
fishermen are seeing an improvement in fishing conditions. However, the
red snapper population in both the eastern and western Gulf of Mexico
is still considered overfished and undergoing overfishing; therefore,
management measures are needed to allow the stock to rebuild by 2032.
Based on the red snapper rebuilding plan adopted by the Council in
2005, overfishing must end between 2009 and 2010. Ending overfishing
and recovery of the red snapper population is contingent on reducing
mortality in both the directed commercial and recreational fisheries
and bycatch in the shrimp trawl fishery. More restrictive management
measures are needed across all of these fisheries to constrain harvest
and bycatch mortality.
The reduction in the directed fishery's TAC accounts for decreases
in shrimp trawl effort. These decreases in shrimp trawl effort are
expected to improve survival of juvenile red snapper. However, as
mentioned above, fishing mortality in the directed fishery must also be
reduced to rebuild red snapper.
Artificial reefs are known to improve recreational fishing
opportunities for red snapper, and may increase red snapper
productivity. Conversely, artificial reefs serve as fish attracting
devices and, therefore, increase fishing mortality. Artificial reefs
were discussed as one of several possible mechanisms to account for
high stock recruitment during the Southeast Data, Assessment, and
Review (SEDAR) process. Regardless, recreational fishing mortality is
still higher than needed to rebuild the population and manage it at
sustainable levels.
Comment 2: High fuel prices and the after-effects of the 2005
hurricanes have reduced charter fishing operations and private
recreational fishing effort, and, thus, little or no further action
needs to be taken to constrain recreational red snapper harvest. Data
used to analyze recent trends in effort and landings are questionable.
Differences in regulations between state and Federal waters may have
influenced the 2007 Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistical Survey
(MRFSS) landings data, particularly with how anglers report where fish
were harvested, causing an artificial spike in red snapper landings.
Response: The 2005 hurricane season was the busiest and costliest
on record, resulting in significant physical and economic damage to
coastal communities. In revising the red snapper rebuilding plan and
developing management measures to constrain directed harvest, the
Council selected as their preferred alternative the assumption of a
continuing 10-percent reduction in post-hurricane directed fishing
effort, even though the Council's Science and Statistical Committee
(SSC) did not support the assumption that there would be a continuing
reduction in fishing effort.
Similarly, the Southeast Fisheries Science Center (SEFSC) concluded
the available data do not support the assumption of a 10-percent
reduction in overall effort in the directed fishery
[[Page 5119]]
following the 2005 hurricane season. The SEFSC based this determination
on weighted 2006 effort levels, which were about 99 percent of the
2000-2004 average effort levels. The SEFSC indicated mixed changes
occurred in recreational effort showing reductions in some sectors
(particularly private vessels), but increases in other sectors (charter
vessel and headboat). Increases in red snapper fishing efficiencies and
landings, particularly off western Florida and Louisiana between 2005
and 2006 were also observed. The SEFSC also noted a fluctuating, but
gradually increasing, trend in recreational effort commensurate with
increases in the population. Given that private effort in state waters
and for-hire effort in Federal waters are increasing, it is unlikely
private effort in Federal waters will remain at current levels.
Preliminary MRFSS data through October 2007 indicate landings
exceeded the 2007 recreational quota of 3.185 million lb (1.445 million
kg), even under a reduced red snapper bag limit in Federal waters of
two fish. Preliminary 2007 MRFSS landings were similar to or higher
than landings in previous years during comparable time periods. There
is no indication effort has been reduced to a point that would prevent
recreational anglers from meeting or exceeding the annual quota (See
also the response to Comment 3 regarding trip information). Even if
these preliminary MRFSS landings are overestimated, recreational red
snapper landings are likely to exceed the specified 2007 quota given
that headboat red snapper landings and Texas Parks and Wildlife private
and charter landings are not included in the preliminary 2007 landings
estimate.
Comment 3: Economic impacts of the recreational quota reductions
and associated measures on the charter industry and associated
businesses and communities are underestimated.
Response: Best available survey and modeling results indicate that
relatively few trip cancellations are expected to occur as a result of
this action. Most survey respondents indicated that when faced with a
reduced or zero red snapper bag limit, they would either continue
fishing for red snapper or fish for another species. Fishing for other
species may generate distributional effects (i.e., the trips may occur
from different ports, modes, or seasons, resulting in one port or
entity or season losing business while another gains). These
distributional effects, however, cannot be predicted with current data.
Preliminary data through August 2007 do not support claims of
widespread reductions in charter business as a result of the interim
measures reducing the recreational quota and bag limit. Because the
recreational red snapper fishery in Federal waters did not open until
late April, data for May through August 2007 were examined. During this
period, approximately 461,000 trips were taken by recreational anglers
on charterboats in the Gulf from Florida through Louisiana (data for
Texas are not collected in the same data program and are not
available). This compares to an average of approximately 403,000 angler
trips on average per year for the previous 3 years, 2004 through 2006.
Omitting 2006 data on the assumption that effort in that year was
reduced due to lingering effects of the 2005 hurricanes, the annual
average for 2004 through 2005 was only slightly greater at
approximately 405,000 angler trips. Thus, while available data cannot
address claims of severe economic losses by individual entities,
preliminary 2007 data do not support contentions of widespread industry
harm. Consistent with the projections, while effort may have shifted to
other species or other charter businesses, widespread loss of effort as
a result of the interim quota and bag limit reduction is not apparent.
Although the management measures in the final rule are more restrictive
than the interim measures, widespread effort declines are similarly not
expected.
Comment 4: A total mortality limit should be set for both
commercial and recreational red snapper fisheries. This limit would
include all fish killed for each sector. A sector that can reduce dead
discards would see a commensurate increase in allowed landings.
Response: Establishing a total mortality limit was not considered
in Amendment 27/14. While this concept would provide incentives for the
respective fisheries to minimize dead discards, better estimates of
discard mortality are needed. Only a short time series of commercial
discard data was available for the most recent red snapper stock
assessment and the data workshop panel believed recreational discards
were much higher than estimated by MRFSS. For these reasons, available
recreational and commercial discard data were not used in the
assessment. Instead, discards were assumed to be due to the minimum
size limit and were estimated from the predicted length composition of
the catch. Because currently the only estimates of dead discards are
produced from assessment model projections, it is not possible at this
time to monitor total mortality limits on a real-time basis.
Comment 5: Greater reductions in discard mortality in the
commercial and recreational directed fisheries are needed to maximize
both short-term and long-term yields.
Response: Reductions in red snapper regulatory discards are needed
in all sectors of the directed red snapper fishery for the stock to
recover over the long term and to reduce overfishing in the short term.
If a 74-percent reduction could be achieved in directed fishery discard
mortality, TAC could have been set at 7 million lb (3.2 million kg),
and future TACs could be set higher. This level of reduction is not
possible at this time given the available tools (e.g., gear
restrictions, bag limits, size limits, etc.) managers have to limit
bycatch. However, the rule does implement measures to reduce red
snapper discard mortality. This rule sets the commercial size limit at
13 inches (33 cm) total length (TL) for the commercial fishery,
requires the use of non-stainless steel circle hooks when fishing for
reef fish with live bait , and requires specific venting tools and
dehooking devices for both the commercial and recreational fisheries.
Reductions in the commercial size limit are estimated to reduce dead
discards by 40 to 60 percent and allow the stock to recover faster. It
is unknown to what extent a requirement of circle hooks, venting tools,
and dehooking devices will have in reducing bycatch mortality when
harvesting reef fish, but all these gears have been shown to increase
the survival of released fish.
Comment 6: Reducing the commercial minimum size limit will enhance
user conflict and is not fair and equitable. Recreational size limits
should also be reduced to lower discard mortality. The commercial size
limit should be further reduced to 12 inches (30.5 cm) TL, or no size
limit should be implemented, to allow the stock to recover more
quickly.
Response: Scientific analyses suggest both the red snapper stock
and commercial fishery participants would benefit from reducing the
commercial minimum size limit. This is because of high commercial
discard mortality rates that nullify any benefit derived from
protecting smaller size fish. However, reducing the minimum size limit
in the recreational fishery would not benefit the red snapper stock or
stock recovery in the long-term. The discard mortality rate of the
recreational fishery is 15 to 40 percent whereas discard mortality
rates for commercially caught red snapper are estimated to range
between 71 and 82 percent. Thus, smaller fish caught and released by
the recreational fishery are more likely to survive and help contribute
to stock recovery. By contrast, reducing the commercial
[[Page 5120]]
minimum size limit to 13 inches (33 cm) TL will allow previously
discarded fish to be retained and counted toward the quota. In
addition, long-term TACs associated with lower recreational minimum
size limits are expected to be slightly less than TACs with a 16-inch
(41-cm) TL minimum size limit. Therefore, reducing the minimum size in
the recreational fishery will not maximize yield over the long-term.
Although having no commercial minimum size limit was estimated to
allow the stock to rebuild slightly faster than with a 13-inch (33-cm)
TL size limit, the difference in rebuilding is small. Also, if the
commercial minimum size limit were eliminated, while the recreational
sector operates under a minimum size limit, the potential for
competition and conflict between recreational and commercial fishers
would have increased. The Council recommended, and NMFS approved, a 13-
inch (33-cm) TL minimum size limit because it will have positive
biological impacts and will reduce the potential for user conflicts
between the commercial and recreational sectors relative to the
alternative of eliminating the commercial minimum size limit.
Comment 7: The recreational fishing season should be changed.
Suggested seasons included a separate spring/early summer season and
late summer/fall season, shifting the season forward or backwards, or
weekend openings. In addition, comments suggested the commercial
fishery should be held to the same season as the recreational fishery.
Response: The Council evaluated numerous recreational fishing
seasons including seasons with weekend openings. Ultimately, the
Council determined it needed to preserve a core summer recreational
fishing season. Comments from the public have indicated keeping the
season open as long as possible is more preferable to more liberal bag
or size limits. Therefore, given a bag limit of two fish, a zero-bag
limit for the captain and crew of for-hire vessels, and a 16-inch (41-
cm) TL minimum size limit, the Council recommended, and NMFS approved,
the longest season that could be achieved and still cover the core
summer fishing season. This season would be from June 1 to September 30
(122 days).
NMFS did not evaluate seasonal closure alternatives for the
commercial red snapper fishery because fishery landings are managed in-
season through an individual fishing quota (IFQ) program. This program
was implemented in part to eliminate the derby fishery conditions that
had developed in response to short fishing seasons. IFQ programs
effectively control total annual harvest by enabling fishery managers
to track and limit the landings of each individual program participant.
Comment 8: Recreational measures for the eastern and western Gulf
of Mexico recreational red snapper fisheries need to be different
because of differences in how the fisheries operate.
Response: The Council considered different regulations between the
eastern and western Gulf for the recreational fishery. Measures
considered primarily examined different seasons; however, these options
were not selected, in part, because of enforcement problems and angler
confusion in areas around where the line of demarcation between the
eastern and western Gulf is drawn.
Comment 9: The two-fish bag limit is too restrictive. Either the
four-fish bag limit should be maintained, or the bag limit should be
the first four to six fish landed.
Response: In managing the recreational fishery such that harvest is
constrained to the recreational quota, NMFS has employed bag limits,
size limits, and seasonal closures. The combined effect of reducing the
recreational bag limit from four to two fish, reducing the captain and
crew bag limit for for-hire vessels, and reducing the season to a June
1 to September 30 should control effort sufficiently to ensure the
recreational fishery remains within the 2.45 million-lb (1.11 million-
kg) quota. To maintain a four-fish bag limit or institute some other
bag limit greater than two fish, the fishing season would need to be
further reduced. While some fishermen commented they would prefer to
maintain the bag limit over season length, the majority of testimony
from fishermen suggested they would prefer a reduction in the bag limit
rather than a reduction in season length.
Comment 10: The economic and social value of both recreational and
commercial sectors needs to be considered in setting TAC. Current
allocations of TAC should be changed to reflect these differences. The
recreational fishery needs to be further divided into a for-hire and
private angler allocation.
Response: This rule is intended to reduce the red snapper catch,
bycatch, and discard mortality in the reef fish and shrimp fisheries,
end overfishing of red snapper by 2010, and rebuild the red snapper
stock by 2032. Therefore, addressing allocations is outside the scope
of this rule. However, the Council is developing an amendment to
address the allocation of different reef fish species for
recommendation to NMFS and may include red snapper.
Comment 11: Requirements for dehooking devices and venting tools
should be standardized due to differences in performance of differently
designed tools and other devices should be allowed. The effective date
for specific fishing gear should be delayed to allow the fishing gear
industry time to provide products to the public. The requirement for
circle hooks creates an unfair burden on fishermen and causes increases
in gut hooking.
Response: This rule provides specific details regarding the
configuration of both dehooking devices and venting tools, as well as
their use. The rule will require at least one dehooking device on a
reef fish vessel, and the device must be able to remove hooks embedded
in Gulf reef fish with minimum damage. For the venting tool, the rule
will require at least one venting tool aboard a vessel, and the tool
must be used to deflate the swim bladders of Gulf reef fish to release
the fish with minimum damage. Gear types evaluated for this action were
commercially available and easily obtainable by fishermen. Weighted
release devices identified as alternative gear in comments on the rule
are not commercially available at this time.
Additional public comments requested that the implementation of the
circle hook requirement be delayed to allow manufacturers,
distributors, and retail outlets sufficient time to produce and
distribute the hooks and ensure adequate stock is available to meet
fisherman demand. Additional time is reasonable to allow retailers to
acquire sufficient stock and fishermen to come into compliance with
these new gear requirements. Therefore, this final rule delays the
effective date of these new gear requirements until June 1, 2008.
Circle hooks do not increase gut hooking in reef fish. As described
in Amendment 27/14, circle hooks tend to embed in the corner of a
fish's mouth, unlike J-hooks which are more likely to be swallowed.
Swallowed hooks can cause internal damage leading to mortality. Because
circle hooks tend to embed in the jaw, they are also easier to remove,
causing the fish less stress when released and enhancing survival.
Requiring the use of non-stainless steel circle hooks will allow a hook
to degrade over time, providing a fish with a greater chance for
survival.
Comment 12: There is a lack of enforcement of commercial fishing
vessels, which allows illegal harvest of red snapper and contributes to
overfishing.
[[Page 5121]]
Response: NMFS law enforcement officials work cooperatively with
other Federal and state agencies to reduce and prevent illegal
activity. The recently implemented red snapper IFQ program was designed
with enforceability in mind and with full input by Federal and state
law enforcement officers. The red snapper IFQ program is the best
monitored fishery in the Gulf. It incorporates a vessel monitoring
system, pre-departure and advance landing notification requirements, a
dockside monitoring component, and real-time data management to account
for all red snapper landed including a checks-and-balances system
matching quota allocations with fish purchased by dealers.
Comment 13: Closures would preclude the shrimp fishery from
achieving optimum yield (OY), and hence limit economic opportunities
for the fishery.
Response: A restriction on effort in the mid-shelf region, which
only affects the ability of the fishery to utilize a portion of the
shrimp grounds for a limited time frame during the year, should not
preclude the fishery from having the opportunity to achieve OY, as
currently defined, on a continuing basis. Should it be necessary to
implement a time-area closure to restrict fishing mortality on red
snapper, shrimp fishing effort can shift either inshore or offshore of
the closed areas with highest red snapper abundance. However, currently
the shrimp fishery is adversely affected by external economic factors,
such as increased fuel prices and depressed ex-vessel prices, which are
constraining fishing effort.
If economic conditions should improve and effort increase in the
shrimp fishery, especially in the mid-shelf region where juvenile red
snapper are abundant, then a time-area closure might have to be
implemented to maintain the 74-percent shrimp trawl bycatch mortality
reduction target. If a closure was implemented for an extended period
of time, especially a closure concurrent with the Texas Closure, the
likelihood of achieving OY might be decreased. However, the Council and
NMFS could take subsequent action to address that problem if it
occurred. Moving the fishery into shallower water would lead to catches
of smaller shrimp, which could result in reduced profits. However, such
an extended closure, or an expansion of the fishery, is not expected in
the near future. Alternatively, if more efficient bycatch reduction
devices (BRDs) are developed in the future and provide better
reductions in juvenile red snapper mortality, time-area closures could
be reduced. This could then allow the fishing mortality target to be
achieved while simultaneously allowing effort to increase to a level
that increases the likelihood that OY would be caught.
Given the above, the likelihood of significant adverse economic
consequences resulting from a shrimp fishery area closure is low. The
proposed bycatch mortality reduction target is allowed to decrease
through time consistent with the framework procedure if supported by
the best available scientific information. This would further reduce
the chance the shrimp fishery would exceed its bycatch target. The
long-term economic benefits associated with the proposed action are
expected to outweigh the short-term adverse economic impacts that would
result from fishing effort restrictions.
Comment 14: Effort shifts to other areas because of closures will
shift bycatch problems to other benthic species.
Response: Insufficient information is available to assess the
differences in the quantity and species composition of bycatch on a
scale that would allow estimation of differential impacts to marine
species. Seasonal area closures are intended to achieve a level of
fishing mortality reduction in red snapper. Seasonal closures that lead
to relocation of effort by the shrimp fleet to nearshore waters would
most likely increase the level of other finfish bycatch. The ratio of
finfish biomass to shrimp biomass is often twice as high for nearshore
waters as it is for offshore waters. However, populations of many of
the common species, such as Atlantic croaker, spot, and longspine
porgy, are less susceptible to the adverse effects of shrimp trawling
because they are short-lived, and have high natural mortality rates.
Comment 15: The rule does not reflect the Council's intent that the
target-reduction of shrimp trawl bycatch mortality of red snapper be
phased down from 74 percent of the benchmark years of 2001-2003, to 67
percent in 2011, and thereafter, reduced as necessary, to achieve the
target goal of 60 percent by 2032.
Response: This rule allows NMFS the flexibility to modify the
mortality reduction target over time via appropriate rulemaking, based
on new information and analyses. The preferred alternative selected by
the Council in Amendment 27/14 illustrates the Council's intent to
adjust the targets over time to appropriate levels while maintaining
the red snapper rebuilding schedule. As stated in the amendment, the
specific reduction target values identified in the Council's preferred
alternative may not be appropriate in the future following new
assessments and scientific advice, much like future adjustments to TAC
in the directed fishery. Nevertheless, any future adjustment would need
to be made through the FMP framework procedures established in this
rule. The framework procedure provides the NMFS Southeast Regional
Administrator authority to adjust the target reduction level consistent
with the red snapper rebuilding plan and the findings of subsequent
stock assessments via appropriate rulemaking.
Comment 16: The shrimp trawl fishery is not being constrained
sufficiently through this rule, or is being constrained too much.
Relaxation of the bycatch targets that occur later in the rebuilding
plan could allow excessive bycatch by the shrimp fishery.
Response: This rule provides a procedure to constrain shrimp trawl
bycatch mortality on red snapper to a level that is 74 percent less
than the benchmark years of 2001-2003. The rule provides for adjustment
of the target level reduction, consistent with the red snapper stock
rebuilding plan and the findings of subsequent stock assessments, via
appropriate rulemaking. These provisions ensure that any restrictions
on shrimp trawl bycatch of red snapper will be consistent with the red
snapper rebuilding plan and the best scientific information available.
In the near future, minimal measures to manage shrimp fishing
effort in relation to the target red snapper bycatch mortality
reduction goal may be needed. This is because the economic downturn in
the shrimp fishery, coupled with increased fuel costs and hurricane
damage to vessels and infrastructure, reduced effort from the benchmark
years by nearly 60 percent in 2005 and 65 percent in 2006. Had the
shrimp trawl fishery been operating at levels associated with the
benchmark years, substantial action would have been required and
proposed measures would have had greater adverse economic effects.
Preliminary effort estimates for 2007 indicate the shrimp fishery is
operating below the target level.
Allowing the shrimp bycatch reduction target to be reduced as the
red snapper stock rebuilds will allow bycatch and bycatch mortality of
red snapper to increase. However, any such increases would be
constrained to levels consistent with the red snapper rebuilding plan
and best available scientific information. The Council and NMFS believe
it is appropriate to
[[Page 5122]]
provide for reduction of the shrimp bycatch mortality target, so that
the shrimp fishery could receive some benefit from stock rebuilding.
Holding the shrimp bycatch mortality constant would not provide any
benefits to the shrimp fishery, while the directed red snapper fishery
would benefit from larger TACs. In making any future adjustments to the
target bycatch goal, NMFS will ensure bycatch is being minimized to the
extent practicable.
To ensure red snapper bycatch does not increase above levels
specified in Amendment 27/14, the rule establishes a framework and
actions for NMFS to take should the target not be met. These are
summarized in the above comment.
Comment 17: The final version of the amendment submitted for
Secretarial review included updated shrimp landings information not
available for the public hearing draft of the amendment. This lack of
information was misleading regarding the Council's final choice of a
preferred alternative, especially regarding the potential social and
economic impacts of a closure. The text in the amendment is confusing
in regard to how the revised BRD criterion would assist in reducing red
snapper fishing mortality to achieve the reduction target. The document
indicated an additional 10-percent reduction in fishing mortality on
juvenile red snapper would be achieved through the certification and
use of BRDs that are more efficient than the industry-standard Fisheye
BRD. Conversely, another section of the document suggested there would
be minimal additional reduction benefits from BRDs expected in the
short-term.
Response: Updated information for 2006 indicated red snapper
fishing mortality attributable to the shrimp fishery was 65 percent
less than the benchmark years, and not 72 percent as noted in the
public hearing draft. The updated shrimp effort data and possible
implications were brought to the Council's attention at their June 2007
meeting prior to the Council's approval of the amendment for review by
the Secretary. The public hearing draft of Amendment 27/14 contained
the most recent information available at the time. This text was clear
to point out the 2006 shrimp effort estimates were preliminary and
based on two of three trimesters of data. If those estimates held true,
the shrimp fishery would be near the 74 percent reduction goal.
With respect to the information on bycatch reductions from BRDs,
both statements are accurate and are not contradictory. Additional
bycatch mortality reduction is expected from the introduction of new
BRDs for the fishery under a pending revision to the certification
criterion for BRDs. Recent evaluations of the most commonly used BRD,
the Fisheye positioned forward in the cod end, indicate this BRD is
reducing fishing mortality (F) on juvenile red snapper by approximately
11 percent. Based on a proposed new certification criterion to be
established in 2008, NMFS expects that new and more effective BRDs will
be certified for use in the fishery. These new BRDs reduce F on
juvenile red snapper by greater than 20 percent; therefore, the new
BRDs should double the reduction in F derived from using BRDs. However,
the contribution attributable to BRDs is much less than the reductions
of F achieved by restricting fishing effort in areas where juvenile red
snapper are caught.
Comment 18: The rule does not consider mortality reductions
achieved through improved BRDs in the process whereby the SEFSC makes
recommendations to the RA in determining the scope and durations of
shrimp closed areas. The condensing of the 12 statistical areas into 3
zones will reduce the SEFSC's ability to tailor the geographical scope
of the time-area closures.
Response: The 74-percent reduction target in shrimp trawl bycatch
mortality on red snapper from the 10-30 fathom area required by the red
snapper rebuilding plan is based on total bycatch reduction. This
includes both reductions in mortality from reduced fishing effort as
well as reductions obtained from BRDs.
The three shrimp zones identified in this rule were developed to
identify the geographical scope of the 10-30 fathom area of statistical
zones 10-21 that could be closed to shrimp fishing should a closure be
needed. The Texas zone corresponds to the area where the cooperative
60-day seasonal closure with the State of Texas to protect small brown
shrimp emigrating from bay nursery areas occurs. The Louisiana and
Eastern zones identify the rest of the area to be managed under the
framework, but were split because of the lack of trawlable 10-30 fathom
bottom in Federal waters between Louisiana and Mississippi. Because the
rule states ``the RA will, if necessary, establish a seasonal area
closure of the shrimp fishery in all or a portion of the areas of the
Gulf EEZ specified in paragraphs (l)(2) through (l)(4),'' the closure
could apply to all or a part of one or all three geographic zones. The
extent of these closures would be based on the SEFSC's assessment.
Comment 19: The shrimp assessment conducted by the SEFSC and
framework procedures to set time and area closures should allow for
input from the shrimp fishery.
Response: The SEFSC is dependent on landings and effort data from
the shrimp fishery in conducting its assessment. The framework
procedure indicates this assessment will be provided to the RA on or
about March 1 of each year. At this time, the assessment results will
be available to the public. Once the assessment is available, comments
may be directed to the RA to use in the RA's determination if a closure
is necessary, and if so, to what extent. It is also likely the
assessment results will be presented to the Council for their review.
Comments could also be introduced at this time when the Council
evaluates the RAs decision.
Classification
The Administrator, Southeast Region, NMFS, determined that
Amendment 27/14 is necessary for the conservation and management of the
Gulf red snapper fishery and that it is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, and other applicable laws.
This proposed rule has been determined to be significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared an SEIS for this amendment. A notice of availability
for the draft SEIS was published on April 20, 2007 (72 FR 19928). A
notice of availability for the final SEIS was published on August 3,
2007 (72 FR 43271).
A FRFA was prepared. The FRFA incorporates the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, a summary of the significant economic issues
raised by public comments, NMFS responses to those comments, and a
summary of the analyses completed to support the action. A copy of the
full analysis is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of the
FRFA follows.
The final rule will reduce the commercial quota from 4.65 million
lb (2.14 million kg) to 2.55 million lb (1.16 million kg) and the
recreational quota from 4.47 million lb (2.06 million kg) to 2.45
million lb (1.11 million kg), reduce the recreational bag limit from
four fish to two fish and the bag limit for captain and crew of for-
hire vessels to zero, reduce the commercial minimum size limit from 15
inches (38 cm) TL to 13 inches (33 cm) TL, require participants in all
Gulf reef fish fishery sectors to use non-stainless steel circle hooks
(when using natural baits) and to use venting tools and dehooking
devices, provides for seasonal area closures of the Gulf shrimp fishery
to reduce red snapper bycatch consistent with Amendment 27/
[[Page 5123]]
14's framework procedure, and establishes authority to adjust the
target shrimp bycatch reduction and effort levels and time-area
closures consistent with the framework procedure.
The purpose of this final rule is to reduce red snapper catch,
bycatch, and discard mortality in the directed commercial and
recreational fisheries and the shrimp fishery in order to end
overfishing for red snapper between 2009 and 2010 and rebuild the stock
by 2032 in compliance with the red snapper rebuilding plan.
Several public comments were received on the economic impact of the
rule. These comments stated that the economic impacts of the proposed
TAC reduction and associated measures on the charter industry and
associated businesses and communities were underestimated. Best
available survey and modeling results indicate that relatively few
angler trip cancellations are expected to occur as a result of this
action. Most survey respondents indicated that when faced with a
reduced red snapper bag limit, including a zero-fish bag limit, they
would either continue fishing for red snapper or fish for another
species. Fishing for other species may generate distributional effects
(i.e., the trips may occur from different ports, modes, or seasons,
resulting in one port/entity/season losing business while another
gains). These distributional effects, however, cannot be predicted with
current data. Additionally, contrary to the comments, preliminary data
through August 2007 do not support claims of widespread reductions in
charter business as a result of the interim reduction in the
recreational quota and bag limit. Because the recreational red snapper
fishery in Federal waters did not open until late April, data for May
through August 2007 were examined. During this period, approximately
461,000 trips were estimated to have been taken by recreational anglers
on charterboats in the Gulf from Florida through Louisiana (data for
Texas are not collected in the same data program and are not
available). This compares to an average of approximately 403,000 angler
trips per year for the previous 3 years, 2004 through 2006. Omitting
2006 data on the assumption that effort in that year was reduced due to
lingering effects of the Fall 2005 hurricanes, the annual average for
2004 through 2005 was only slightly greater, at approximately 405,000
angler trips. Thus, while these results do not address, and available
data cannot address, claims of severe economic loss by individual
entities, preliminary 2007 data do not support contentions of
widespread industry harm. Consistent with the projections, while effort
may have shifted to other species or other charter businesses, a
widespread reduction in effort as a result of the reduced interim
recreational quota and bag limit is not apparent. The management
measures in the final rule are more restrictive than the interim
measures, i.e., while the bag limit would remain at the interim 2-fish
bag limit, a lower quota results in a shorter open season. However,
because anglers indicated they would generally continue to fish under a
lower bag limit, including a 0-fish limit, widespread effort declines
are similarly not expected. For these reasons, no changes were made in
the final rule as a result of these comments.
Additional public comments requested that the implementation of the
circle hook requirement be delayed to allow manufacturers,
distributors, and retailers sufficient time to produce and distribute
the hooks and ensure adequate stock is available to meet fisherman
demand. NMFS has revised this final rule to delay the effective date of
these new gear requirements until June 1, 2008.
The management actions considered in this final rule are expected
to affect all vessels that operate in the commercial red snapper
fishery, all vessels that have a Federal reef fish for-hire permit, and
all dealers and processors that handle product from these fisheries.
Although this final rule contains actions that pertain to the
commercial shrimp fishery, these actions are not expected to impose any
direct adverse impacts on the shrimp fishery or associated entities.
An IFQ program was implemented January 2007 for the commercial red
snapper fishery. Summary data on the fleet economics under this program
are not yet available. Prior to the implementation of the IFQ program,
however, 136 entities held Class 1 licenses that allowed a commercial
vessel trip limit of up to 2,000 lb (907 kg) of red snapper and 628
entities held Class 2 licenses that allowed a trip limit of up to 200
lb (91 kg) of red snapper. Between 2002 and 2004, the top 50 red
snapper vessels in terms of landings harvested 2.77 million lb (1.26
million kg) of red snapper, on average, or 64 percent of the industry
total. Vessels ranked 51 to 131 harvested 1.29 million lb (0.59 million
kg), on average, or 30 percent of the industry total for the same
period. Thus, the top 131 red snapper vessels accounted for
approximately 94 percent of the total industry red snapper landings.
Red snapper are mainly harvested by fishermen using vertical-line gear.
These fishermen accounted for approximately 90 percent of commercial
red snapper Gulf harvests, on average, between 2002 and 2004.
Average annual gross receipts (2004 dollars) and net income (gross
receipts minus all costs) per vessel vary by gear type, area fished,
and volume of catch. High-volume vessels using vertical lines averaged
gross receipts and net income of $110,070 and $28,466 in the northern
Gulf, but only $67,979 and $23,822 in the eastern Gulf. Low-volume
vessels using vertical lines averaged gross receipts and net income of
$24,095 and $6,801 in the northern Gulf, but $24,588 and $4,479
respectively in the eastern Gulf. Vessels using bottom longlines
averaged gross receipts and net income of $116,989 and $25,452 for
high-volume vessels, but only $87,635 and $14,978 respectively for low-
volume vessels.
The current fleet permitted to operate in the Gulf reef fish for-
hire sector is estimated to be 1,625 vessels. The for-hire fleet is
comprised of charterboats, which charge a fee on a vessel basis, and
headboats, which charge a fee on an individual angler (head) basis. The
average charterboat is estimated to generate $76,960 in annual revenues
and $36,758 in annual profits, whereas the appropriate values for the
average headboat are $404,172 and $338,209, respectively.
The measures in this final rule are also expected to affect fish
dealers, particularly those that receive red snapper from harvesting
vessels. A Federal permit is required for a fish dealer to receive reef
fish from commercial vessels, and there are 227 dealers currently
permitted to buy and sell reef fish species. All reef fish processors
are included in this total because all processors must be dealers. Most
of these dealers are located in Florida (146), with 29 in Louisiana, 18
in Texas, 14 in Alabama, 5 in Mississippi, and 15 in states outside the
Gulf. In addition, vessels identify the dealers who receive their fish
on logbook reports. Commercial reef fish vessels with Federal permits
are required to sell their harvest only to permitted dealers. From 1997
through 2002, on average, 154 reef fish dealers actively bought and
sold red snapper. These dealers were distributed around the Gulf as
follows: 7 in Alabama, 96 in Florida, 22 in Louisiana, 7 in
Mississippi, and 22 in Texas. On average, Florida dealers purchased
approximately $1.8 million of red snapper, followed by Louisiana ($1.4
million), Texas ($1.3 million), Mississippi ($174,000), and Alabama
[[Page 5124]]
($88,000). These dealers may hold permits for multiple fisheries, but
it is not possible to determine what percentage of their total business
comes from the red snapper fishery.
Approximately 2,000 vessels are expected to be issued a shrimp
moratorium permit, which has been required to operate in the Gulf
commercial EEZ shrimp fishery since March 26, 2007. Economic profiles
of these vessels are not available at this time. Prior to
implementation of the moratorium permit, approximately 2,666 vessels
were identified as qualifying for the permit based on historical
participation in the fishery. The following description of the shrimp
fleet is based on an assessment of these qualifying vessels.
The average annual gross revenue (all harvest species) per
qualifying shrimp vessel in 2005 was approximately $116,000, while the
comparable figure for qualifying vessels active in the Gulf shrimp
fishery, i.e., vessels with recorded shrimp landings in 2005, was
approximately $152,000. In the same year, the maximum annual gross
revenue from shrimp by a vessel was approximately $757,000 for both
qualifying and active qualifying vessels, whereas the maximum annual
gross revenue for all harvest species was approximately $1.89 million
by an inactive qualifier and $757,000 for an active qualifier.
According to recent projections, on average, Gulf EEZ commercial shrimp
vessels are experiencing a -33 percent rate of return (net revenues/
total fixed and variable costs). These economic losses were projected
to continue until 2012.
In 2005, 609 dealers were identified operating in the commercial
shrimp fishery. Employment information for this sector is not
available. In 2005, 60 processors in the shrimp fishery were
identified, employing approximately 3,400 persons, or an average of 56
employees per entity. The maximum number of employees for a shrimp
processor in 2005 was 353.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) defines a small business in
the commercial fishing industry as an entity that is independently
owned and operated, is not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates), and has total annual average receipts not
in excess of $4.0 million annually (NAICS codes 114111 and 114112,
finfish and shellfish fishing). For for-hire vessels, these same
criteria apply except that the average annual receipts threshold is
$6.5 million (NAICS code 713990, recreational industries). For seafood
processors and dealers, the SBA uses an employee threshold rather than
a receipts threshold. The threshold is 500 or fewer persons on a full-
time, part-time, temporary, or other basis, at all its affiliated
operations worldwide for a seafood processor and 100 or fewer persons
for a seafood dealer.
Some persons/entities are known to own multiple vessels (i.e.,
fleet operations) in the commercial red snapper fishery and in the
commercial reef fish fisheries in general, but the extent of such
operations is unknown. The maximum number of reef fish permits reported
owned by the same person/entity is 6 permits. Additional permits and
the revenues associated with those permits may be linked to an entity
through affiliation rules, but such affiliation links cannot be made
using existing data. Further, a definitive determination of whether any
commercial entity would be considered a large entity cannot be made
using average revenue information. However, since the average total
revenue in the commercial red snapper fishery between 2002 and 2004 was
$11.652 million, given the number of license holders in the fishery is
764, the summary statistics and the maximum number of permits owned by
a single person/entity provided above, NMFS determined that all
commercial reef fish harvest entities that will be affected by this
final rule are small entities.
Fleet operations also exist in the for-hire sector, with at least
one entity reported to hold 12 permits. The bulk of the fleet, however,
consists of single permit operations. Thus, based on the average
revenue figures above, NMFS determined that all for-hire operations
that will be affected by this final rule are small entities.
Average employment per reef fish dealer is unknown. Although
dealers and processors are not synonymous entities, total employment
for reef fish processors in the Southeast is approximately 700
individuals, both part and full time. While all processors must be
dealers, a dealer need not be a processor. Further, processing fish is
a more labor intensive than buying fish. Therefore, given the
employment estimate for the processing sector and the number of dealers
that participated in the fishery on average per year from 1997-2002
(154 dealers), NMFS assumed that the maximum number of employees for
reef fish dealers and processors are unlikely to surpass the SBA
employment benchmarks. Therefore, NMFS determined that all reef fish
dealers and processors that will be affected by this final rule are
small entities.
As with the other fishery sectors, fleet operations are known to
exist in the commercial shrimp fishery, but the magnitude of such
cannot be determined using available data. Given the maximum revenue
per vessel figures noted above, NMFS determined that all shrimp vessels
that could be affected by this final rule are small entities.
Similar to the reef fish industry, processing shrimp is more labor
intensive than buying shrimp. Thus, average employment in the shrimp
dealer sector is assumed to be less than that in the processing sector.
Because the maximum number of employees for a shrimp processor does not
exceed the SBA threshold, NMFS determined that all shrimp dealers and
processors that could be affected by this proposed rule are small
entities.
The red snapper recreational and commercial quota reductions are
expected to reduce profits in the for-hire and commercial sectors. In
the for-hire sector, declines in profits, approximated by net operating
revenue (gross revenue minus operating costs except labor) decreases,
are expected due to declines in individual angler trip bookings. Under
the 2.45 million lb (1.11 million kg) recreational quota and two-fish
bag limit, the for-hire sector is projected to lose approximately $1.1
million in annual net operating revenues per year. It is not possible
to accurately estimate the extent to which individual for-hire
operations will be affected by the quota reduction. Depending on the
geographic location of their operation, level of activity, reliance on
red snapper trips, variety of species available, and preferences of
their core clientele, some vessels will be impacted more than others.
Quantifying the number of vessels that will face the greatest economic
losses is not possible with available data. The average impact per
vessel will vary inversely with the number of vessels substantially
involved in and dependent upon the red snapper fishery. For example, if
the expected economic impacts were borne by 10 to 25 percent of the
fleet, average losses in net annual operating revenue per vessel would
be expected to range from approximately $2,700 to $6,800. These losses
still represent an average, however, and individual losses for some
vessels will be higher by an indeterminate amount.
The assessment of impacts on for-hire profits was based on the
recreational quota and not season length. Although industry comment
during the development of the proposed rule indicated that a longer
open season was preferable to a shorter season, regardless of total
allowable catch, and would result in less economic losses, estimating
the differential economic
[[Page 5125]]
impacts of season length was not possible with available data. As a
result, the estimated reduction in for-hire profits is neutral with
respect to season length. If the red snapper season length is a
significant factor in for-hire profits, then the estimated $1.1 million
losses will understate the impacts of a shorter season by an
indeterminate amount.
The commercial red snapper sector is expected to experience
reductions in profits, measured by changes in net operating revenue to
owners, captains, and crew, as a result of the lower quota specified by
the final rule. Some of these losses will be mitigated by the reduction
in the commercial minimum size limit. The impact analysis for the
commercial red snapper sector assumed the fishery was operating under
an IFQ program, which was implemented in January 2007. Under the IFQ,
the number of vessels operating in the fishery is expected to decline
substantially as quota shares are consolidated. However, since the IFQ
program has been operating less than one year, sufficient data on the
expected contraction is not yet available to indicate the size and type
of fleet that will develop. Therefore, the analysis of the expected
impacts of the commercial quota reduction assumed the fleet would
contract to homogenous fleets of a specific vessel size and
accompanying operational characteristics, with the resultant fleet
comprised of either more small vessels (35 ft (10.7 m)) or fewer large
vessels (65 ft (19.8 m)).
Under the status quo commercial quota of 4.65 million lb (2.14
million kg), the fleet is projected to contract to between ninety-five
35-ft (10.7 m) vessels or thirty-nine 65-ft (19.8 m) vessels. The
average annual net operating revenue per vessel within each vessel size
class was estimated at $274,000 and $667,000, respectively. Under the
2.55 million lb (1.16 million kg) commercial quota in the final rule,
projected losses in net operating revenues to owners, captains, and
crew in the commercial sector are estimated to be approximately $11.5
million. The resultant fleet is projected to consist of between fifty-
two 35-ft (10.7-m) or twenty-two 65-ft (19.8-m) vessels, representing a
reduction of forty-three 35-ft (10.7-m) vessels to seventeen 65-ft
(19.8-m) vessels. For each of these potential fleets, the corresponding
average net operating revenue for remaining vessels was estimated at
$278,000 and $665,000, respectively. Average short-term net operating
revenue losses per vessel are estimated at $121,000 and $295,000 for
the 35-ft (10.7-m) and 65-ft (19.8-m) vessel classes, respectively.
The reduction in the commercial quota is also expected to adversely
impact dealers and processors that purchase and sell red snapper.
Although substantial decreases in revenues collected from domestic red
snapper are anticipated, the expected losses to dealers and processors
cannot be quantified due to lack of firm-level gross revenues and
profit data. To mitigate the adverse economic impacts that will result
from the 45-percent decrease in the commercial quota, dealers and
processors may increase their reliance on imported snapper and use
other reef fish species as substitutes.
The zero-fish captain and crew bag limit while on charter is not
expected to affect the profitability of for-hire operations because the
sale of recreational reef fish landings is already prohibited.
Requiring all persons aboard reef fish vessels to use non-stainless
steel circle hooks when using natural baits, venting tools, and
dehooking devices is expected to result in minimal impacts on the
profitability of small entities because of the current widespread use
of circle hooks, their competitive pricing, and the availability of
dehooking devices and venting tools for less than $15 each.
The management measures considered in this final rule do not affect
the reporting or record-keeping requirements for reef fish and shrimp
vessels, dealers, or processors. This final rule does not require
additional records or report preparation.
Four alternatives, including the status quo, were considered for
the action to set TAC and, thus, establish the recreational and
commercial quotas in the red snapper fishery. Three of the alternatives
include multiple options and sub-options to manage the recreational
fishery under the respective TACs and quotas. The first alternative,
the status quo, would not be consistent with assumptions related to
expected reductions in directed and bycatch mortality rates and would
not result in a sufficient, i.e., greater than 50 percent, probability
of the red snapper rebuilding plan's success. If implemented, the
status quo alternative would result in drastic TAC and quota reductions
in subsequent years and, thus, greater adverse economic impacts during
that time in order for the resource to continue on the designated
recovery path.
The second alternative to the red snapper TAC would have reduced
the TAC to 7.0 million lb (3.175 million kg), with resultant commercial
and recreational quotas of 3.57 and 3.43 million lb (1.62 and 1.44
million kg), respectively. This alternative has the potential of
generating, depending upon the sub-option selected, lower short-term
adverse economic impacts than the final rule. However, a 7.0 million lb
(3.175 million kg) TAC is not consistent with the current mortality
reduction assumptions and would not provide the necessary greater than
50- percent probability of achieving the rebuilding plan objectives.
Like the status quo, this alternative would require greater TAC
reductions in subsequent years, thereby generating greater adverse
economic impacts over that time than the final rule.
The third alternative to the red snapper TAC would have reduced the
TAC to 3.0 million lb (1.36 million kg), with resultant commercial and
recreational quotas of 1.53 and 1.47 million lb (0.69 and 0.67 million
kg), respectively. This alternative would have reduced the TAC and
quotas more than necessary to end overfishing within the specified time
period and would be expected to result in an overly restrictive
management approach with unnecessary and greater adverse economic
impacts than the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the status quo, were considered for
the action addressing post-hurricane effort and landings reductions.
Although some post-hurricane reduction in effort and landings is
demonstrated by available data, the reductions are not consistent
across the entire fishery and are not expected to persist. Therefore,
the final rule does not assume any post-hurricane effort reduction in
the determination of the management measures necessary to limit the
recreational sector to its quota. The second alternative would have
assumed a 10-percent reduction in post-hurricane effort in the
recreational red snapper fishery. This alternative would extend the
fishing season and yield greater short term economic benefits than the
final rule. However, a 10-percent reduction in effort is not supported
by available data, and adopting such an assumption may result in a
failure to meet conservation goals, resulting in long-term negative
economic impacts relative to the proposed action. The third alternative
would have assumed a 25-percent reduction in post-hurricane effort and
landings. This alternative would result in a longer season than the
final rule and result in greater short-term economic benefits than the
final rule. However, a 25-percent reduction is also not supported by
available data, and adopting that assumption would be expected to
result in a failure to meet conservation goals, resulting in
substantial long-term negative economic impacts relative to the final
rule.
[[Page 5126]]
Two alternatives, including the status quo, were considered for the
action to set the captain and crew bag limit. The final rule will allow
the recreational red snapper fishing season to remain open 4-16 days
longer relative to the status quo. The status quo alternative, which
would allow the captain and crew to retain the angler bag limit, would
require either a shorter season or a lower bag limit for recreational
anglers to achieve the rebuilding goals. These more restrictive
measures would be expected to result in greater reductions in trip
demand and increased reductions in for-hire profits and angler value
than the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the status quo, were considered for
the commercial red snapper minimum size limit. The first alternative to
the final rule, the status quo, would be expected to result in
continued unnecessary bycatch mortality and would not, therefore, meet
the Council's objectives. The 13-inch (33-cm) minimum size limit in the
commercial sector is expected to result in decreased economic impacts
to the fishery and associated industries due to increases in the
operational efficiency of commercial vessels and a potential ex-vessel
price increase for smaller fish. The third alternative would eliminate
the commercial minimum size limit. Eliminating the commercial minimum
size limit would increase user conflicts between the commercial and
recreational sectors since the recreational sector would have a 16-inch
(41 cm) minimum size limit, while the commercial sector would not have
any minimum size limit. Further, because no commercial market is
currently known to exist for red snapper smaller than 12 inches (30
cm), no additional benefits would be expected to accrue to the
commercial sector. Thus, the total economic impacts to the commercial
sector of an elimination of the minimum size limit would be expected to
be comparable to those of the final rule.
Three alternatives, including the status quo, were considered for
the gear requirement acti