Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; West Coast Salmon Fisheries; 2008 Management Measures and a Temporary Rule, 23971-23981 [E8-9687]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 85 / Thursday, May 1, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
implementing amendments to the
Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction
Plan.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
The information collection
requirements associated with the final
rule published on October 5, 2007 are
effective May 1, 2008.
DATES:
Diane Borggaard, NMFS, Northeast
Region, 978–281–9300 Ext. 6503,
diane.borggaard@noaa.gov; Kristy Long,
NMFS, Office of Protected Resources,
301–713–2322, kristy.long@noaa.gov; or
Barb Zoodsma, NMFS, Southeast
Region, 904–321–2806,
barb.zoodsma@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is
also accessible at the web site of the
Office of the Federal Register: https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background
On October 5, 2007, NMFS published
a final rule implementing the Atlantic
Large Whale Take Reduction Plan
(ALWTRP) (72 FR 57104). That final
rule contained collection-of-information
requirements that were submitted to,
but not yet approved by, the Office of
Management and Budget. Because OMB
had not yet approved the collection-ofinformation requirements by the
publication date of that final rule,
NMFS noted in that final rule that it
would publish a subsequent Federal
Register notice upon OMB’s issuance of
a control number.
On December 7, 2007, OMB approved
the collection-of-information
requirements contained in the October
5, 2007 final rule. NMFS announces that
the collection-of-information
requirements are approved under
Control Number 0648–0364, with an
expiration date of February 28, 2009.
Dated: April 25, 2008.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 08–1202 Filed 4–28–08; 4:00 pm]
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[Docket No. 080428611–8612–01]
RIN 0648–AW60
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in
the Western Pacific; West Coast
Salmon Fisheries; 2008 Management
Measures and a Temporary Rule
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; and a temporary rule
for emergency action; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS establishes fishery
management measures for the 2008
ocean salmon fisheries off Washington,
Oregon, California and the 2009 salmon
seasons opening earlier than May 1,
2009. The temporary rule for emergency
action (emergency rule), under the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), implements
the 2008 annual management measures
for the west coast ocean salmon
fisheries for the area from Cape Falcon,
OR, to the Oregon/California Border
from June 22 to August 31, 2008. The
emergency rule is required because
Sacramento River fall Chinook (SRFC)
are projected to not meet their
conservation objective of 122,000 to
180,000 natural and hatchery adult
spawners established in the Pacific
Coast Salmon Fishery Management Plan
(Salmon FMP). Specific fishery
management measures vary by fishery
and by area. The measures establish
fishing areas, seasons, quotas, legal gear,
recreational fishing days and catch
limits, possession and landing
restrictions, and minimum lengths for
salmon taken in the U.S. exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) (3–200 nm) off
Washington, Oregon, and California.
The management measures are intended
to prevent overfishing and to apportion
the ocean harvest equitably among
treaty Indian, non-treaty commercial,
and recreational fisheries. The measures
are also intended to allow a portion of
the salmon runs to escape the ocean
fisheries in order to provide for
spawning escapement and to provide for
inside fisheries (fisheries occurring in
state internal waters).
DATES: Final rule is effective from 0001
hours Pacific Daylight Time, May 1,
2008, until the effective date of the 2009
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management measures, as published in
the Federal Register. Temporary rule is
effective from 0001 hours Pacific
Daylight Time June 22, 2008, to 1159
hours Pacific Daylight Time August 31,
2008 or the attainment of the specific
quota as listed below in section two of
this rule. Comments must be received
by May 16, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by 0648–AW60, by any one of
the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal https://
www.regulations.gov.
• Fax: 206–526–6736. Attn: Sarah
McAvinchey, or 562–980–4047 Attn:
Eric Chavez.
• Mail: D. Robert Lohn, Regional
Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way, NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115–0070 or to Rod
McInnis, Regional Administrator,
Southwest Region, NMFS, 501 West
Ocean Boulevard, Suite 4200, Long
Beach, CA 90802–4213.
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
example, name, address, etc.)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit Confidential Business
Information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments.
Attachments to electronic comments
will be accepted in Microsoft Word,
Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF file
formats only.
Copies of the documents cited in this
document are available from Dr. Donald
O. McIsaac, Executive Director, Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 7700 NE.,
Ambassador Place, Suite 200, Portland,
OR 97220–1384, and are posted on its
Web site (https://www.pcouncil.org).
Send comments regarding the
reporting burden estimate or any other
aspect of the collection-of-information
requirements in these management
measures, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to one of the
NMFS addresses listed above and to
David Rostker, Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), by e-mail at
David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov, or by fax
at (202) 395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah McAvinchey at 206–526–4323, or
Eric Chavez at 562–980–4064.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The ocean salmon fisheries in the EEZ
off Washington, Oregon, and California
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are managed under a ‘‘framework’’
fishery management plan entitled the
Pacific Coast Salmon Fishery
Management Plan (Salmon FMP).
Regulations at 50 CFR part 660, subpart
H, provide the mechanism for making
preseason and inseason adjustments to
the management measures, within limits
set by the Salmon FMP, by notification
in the Federal Register.
These management measures for the
2008 and pre-May 2009 ocean salmon
fisheries were recommended by the
Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) at its April 7 to 11, 2008,
meeting.
Schedule Used to Establish 2008
Management Measures
The Council announced its annual
preseason management process for the
2008 ocean salmon fisheries in the
Federal Register on January 2, 2008 (73
FR 169), and on their Web site at
(https://www.pcouncil.org). This notice
announced the availability of Council
documents as well as the dates and
locations of Council meetings and
public hearings comprising the
Council’s complete schedule of events
for determining the annual proposed
and final modifications to ocean salmon
fishery management measures. The
agendas for the March and April
Council meetings were published in the
Federal Register prior to the actual
meetings.
In accordance with the Salmon FMP,
the Council’s Salmon Technical Team
(STT) and staff economist prepared a
series of reports for the Council, its
advisors, and the public. The first of the
reports was prepared in February when
the scientific information necessary for
crafting management measures for the
2008 and pre-May 2009 ocean salmon
fishery first became available. The first
report, ‘‘Review of 2007 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries’’, summarizes biological and
socio-economic data for the 2007 ocean
salmon fisheries and assesses how well
the Council’s 2007 management
objectives were met. The second report,
‘‘Preseason Report I Stock Abundance
Analysis for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries’’ (PRE I), provides the 2008
salmon stock abundance projections and
analyzes the impacts on the stocks and
Council management goals if the 2007
regulations and regulatory procedures
were applied to the projected 2008 stock
abundances. The completion of PRE I is
the initial step in evaluating the full
suite of preseason options.
The Council met in Sacramento, CA
from March 10 to 14, 2008, to develop
2008 management options for proposal
to the public. The Council proposed
three options for commercial and
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recreational fisheries management for
analysis and public comment. These
options consisted of various
combinations of management measures
designed to protect weak stocks of coho
and Chinook salmon and to provide for
ocean harvests of more abundant stocks.
After the March Council meeting, the
Council’s STT and staff economist
prepared a third report, ‘‘Preseason
Report II Analysis of Proposed
Regulatory Options for 2008 Ocean
Salmon Fisheries,’’ which analyzes the
effects of the proposed 2008
management options. This report was
made available to the Council, its
advisors, and the public.
Public hearings, sponsored by the
Council, to receive testimony on the
proposed options were held on March
31, 2008, in Westport, WA and Coos
Bay, OR; and April 1, 2008, in Eureka,
CA. The States of Washington, Oregon,
and California sponsored meetings in
various forums that also collected
public testimony, which was then
presented to the Council by each state’s
Council representative. The Council
also received public testimony at both
the March and April meetings and
received written comments at the
Council office.
The Council met from April 7 to 11,
2008, in Seatac, WA, to adopt its final
2008 recommendations. Following the
April Council meeting, the Council’s
STT and staff economist prepared a
fourth report, ‘‘Preseason Report III
Analysis of Council-Adopted
Management Measures for 2008 Ocean
Salmon Fisheries,’’ which analyzes the
environmental and socio-economic
effects of the Council’s final
recommendations. This report was also
made available to the Council, its
advisors, and the public. After the
Council took final action on the annual
ocean salmon specifications in April, it
published the recommended
management measures in its newsletter
and also posted them on the Council
Web site (https://www.pcouncil.org).
Resource Status
At the start of the preseason planning
process for the 2008 management
season, NMFS provided a letter to the
Council, dated February 26, 2008,
summarizing its Endangered Species
Act (ESA) consultation standards for
listed species as required by the Salmon
FMP. The Council’s recommended
management measures comply with
NMFS ESA consultation standards and
guidance for those listed salmon species
which may be affected by Council
fisheries. In most cases, the
recommended measures are more
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restrictive than NMFS’s ESA
requirements.
NMFS provided guidance to the
Council and a new biological opinion
regarding the effects of the 2008
fisheries on Lower Columbia River
(LCR) coho and LCR Chinook salmon.
This will be the third year that NMFS
has consulted on LCR coho. Since the
listing of LCR coho in August 2005, the
states of Oregon and Washington have
been working with NMFS to develop
and evaluate a management plan for
LCR coho that can be used as the basis
for their long-term management. The
states have focused on use of a harvest
matrix similar to the one used for
Oregon Coast coho. Under the matrix
the harvest allowed in a given year
depends on indicators of marine
survival and brood year escapement.
Generally speaking, NMFS supports use
of management planning tools that
allow harvest rates to vary depending on
the year-specific circumstances.
Although there has been progress in the
development and review of the matrix,
there is still work to be done before
NMFS can reasonably conclude that the
proposed harvest matrix provides the
necessary long-term protection for the
species.
In the meantime, NMFS needed to
provide guidance for the 2008 fisheries.
In 2008, brood year and marine survival
indicators were generally lower than
they were in 2007. Given the
circumstances the matrix would have
allowed for a total exploitation rate of
11.7 percent. However, uncertainties
related to selection of a particular longterm management strategy are such that
it is still prudent to take a conservative
approach to management until those
questions can be resolved. Based on the
above described circumstances, NMFS
guidance to the Council was that ocean
salmon fisheries, and fisheries in the
mainstem Columbia River be managed
subject to a total exploitation rate limit
on LCR coho of 8 percent. As a
consequence of this guidance the
Council proposed to limit Council area
fisheries to an exploitation rate of 6
percent recognizing that this provided
for some fishing opportunity in the
Columbia River. The resulting coho
quota for the area north of Cape Falcon
in 2008 is 44,350 compared to quotas of
178,000, 117,500 and 195,000 in the last
three years.
NMFS reinitiated consultation on an
earlier biological opinion related to the
effects on LCR Chinook. From 2002–
2006 Council fisheries were managed
subject to a total exploitation rate limit
of 49 percent for the ‘‘tule’’ component
of the listed evolutionarily significant
unit (ESU). Since then, NMFS has been
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engaged in ongoing review of LCR tule
Chinook in particular. In 2007, the
exploitation rate limit has been reduced
to 42%. In 2008, the allowable
exploitation rate limit was reduced
further to 41%. The reduction in
exploitation rate is intended to address
the needs of the ESU and the weaker
populations in the ESU. NMFS intends
to continue its review of harvest and
seeks to implement changes that are
consistent with the evolving
information, the expected evolution of
the hatchery programs, and the long
term goal of recovery articulated in the
Lower Columbia Salmon Recovery Plan.
NMFS expects that further reductions in
the harvest on naturally-spawning fish
may be required. Based on the guidance
provided, the Council proposed to limit
Council fisheries such that the total
exploitation rate from all fisheries was
35.8 percent and thus well below the
limit. The Chinook catch quota for the
area north of Cape Falcon in 2008 is
77,500, compared to quotas of 67,500,
107,000 and 135,000 in the last three
years. Because fisheries are so restricted
this year NMFS ESA requirements for
all other listed salmonids including
Snake River fall Chinook, Puget Sound
Chinook, and California Coastal
Chinook will be met.
Emergency Rule
The Council’s final recommendation
for the ocean salmon fishing seasons
that commence May 1st deviates from
the Salmon FMP specifically with
regard to meeting the Sacramento River
fall Chinook (SRFC) conservation
objective of 122,000–180,000 natural
and hatchery adult spawners. Under the
circumstances, implementation of an
Emergency Action under MagnusonStevens Act authority at section
305(c)(2)(B) is necessary to modify the
conservation objective in the Salmon
FMP in order to implement the
Council’s proposal. The Temporary Rule
for Emergency Action applies to the area
between Cape Falcon, Oregon, and the
Oregon/California border.
The conservation objective for SRFC
in the Salmon FMP requires a return of
122,000–180,000 natural and hatchery
adult spawners each year. The
preseason forecast for SRFC for 2008 is
at a record low, with a projected
escapement of 59,100 hatchery and
natural fish absent any further fishing
south of Cape Falcon, OR. Under the
Salmon FMP, a ‘‘conservation alert’’ is
triggered when a stock is projected to
fall below its conservation objective.
Under such circumstances the Council
is required to close salmon fisheries
within Council jurisdiction that impact
the stock.
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Because of differences in stock
composition and in how salmon
fisheries are managed, the Council splits
its management decisions
geographically into North of Cape
Falcon, OR (managed mostly by quotas),
and South of Cape Falcon (managed
mostly by seasons and trip limits). Cape
Falcon is near the Columbia River in
Oregon. Because annual management
measures must meet the Salmon FMP
conservation objectives of all the key
stocks, fishing seasons are usually
limited by the necessity of meeting the
requirements for the least abundant
stock. South of Cape Falcon, the
dramatically low abundance of
Sacramento River fall Chinook was the
primary constraint for fisheries in
Oregon and California.
When defining the area of impact
NMFS considers the distribution of the
stock, the magnitude of harvest impacts
at the margin of that distribution and
the relation of that distribution to
existing fishery management
boundaries. In 2006, when Klamath
River fall Chinook were projected to be
below their conservation objective, the
area of impact was determined to be
from Cape Falcon, Oregon, to Point Sur,
California. This was designated as the
impact area based on estimates
indicating that the vast majority of
harvest impacts, in this case 99%,
occurred in the area. In 2008, there is a
similar conservation concern for
Sacramento River fall Chinook. Using
the same rationale for SRFC, the area of
impact that would be closed pursuant to
the Salmon FMP would include the area
from Cape Falcon, Oregon, to the U.S./
Mexico Border where the vast majority
of harvest impacts on SRFC occur. In
this case, NMFS estimated that 99% of
harvest mortality occurs in the area
South of Cape Falcon, Oregon. Given
the circumstances, any fishing in the
impact area would have to be
implemented through an emergency
rule that modifies the Salmon FMP.
The process for setting this year’s
management measures was
controversial given the proposed
reductions in fishing opportunities and
potential extensive closures. At both the
March and April Council meetings, and
the coastwide public hearings, there was
substantial public participation and
comments from the various fishing
sectors and related industries regarding
the proposed 2008 management
measures. The majority of the comments
expressed great concern that elimination
of the ocean fisheries that impact SRFC,
which typically comprises the majority
of the catch in California and Oregon,
would cause severe economic hardship
to coastal communities in California and
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Oregon. Those testifying also spoke at
length regarding concerns for the
demise of the infrastructure that
supports the fishing industry, as well as
other related businesses, and thus the
long-term consequences of a fishery
closure or severe restrictions in 2008.
The Council, in order to address the
conservation concerns for SRFC,
recommended closing the commercial
salmon fishery South of Cape Falcon
Oregon. They also recommended no
recreational fishery off California. In
order to protect SRFC and mitigate to
some extent the adverse economic and
social consequences of this year’s
restricted fishing season the Council
recommended an emergency rule to
implement only a small recreational
fishery for hatchery marked coho in
Oregon with a 9,000 fish quota, from
Cape Falcon, OR, to the California/
Oregon border from June 22 through
August 31, 2008.
For NMFS, the key issue in
considering whether to approve the
emergency rule was whether the
proposed fishery would jeopardize the
capacity of the fishery to produce
maximum sustainable yield (MSY) on a
continuing basis. NMFS used available
information provided by the Council’s
advisory bodies to assess the potential
risk to SRFC. The method developed by
the STT for modeling impacts to SRFC
was reviewed favorably by the Council’s
Scientific and Statistical Committee.
Using this model, the projected
mortality of SRFC is 55 fish.
Furthermore, not all of these fish would
be expected to return to the Sacramento
River this year. Some of the fish would
not mature and would remain in the
ocean in 2008. Others would be
expected to die of natural causes. The
estimate of escapement absent fishing is
59,100; the proposed fishery would
reduce the escapement by a few tens of
fish. Given the magnitude of the fishery
and the available information on
anticipated impacts to SRFC, NMFS
concluded that the marginal decrease in
escapement that will result from the
limited fishery in the SRFC impact area
proposed for 2008 does not jeopardize
the capacity of the stock to produce
MSY on a continuing basis. NMFS
further concluded that the limited
fishery in the SRFC impact area does
not increase the conservation concerns
for SRFC while mitigating, to the degree
possible, some adverse effects to the
fishing community. The vote of the
Council reflects their concurrence with
NMFS’ conclusion. The Temporary Rule
for Emergency Action to approve the
2008 annual management measures for
the west coast ocean salmon fisheries
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would cover the area from Cape Falcon,
Oregon, to the Oregon/California Border
where the limited recreational marked
hatchery coho fishery will occur.
Management Measures for 2008
Fisheries
The Council-recommended ocean
harvest levels and management
measures for 2008 fisheries are designed
to apportion the burden of protecting
the weak stocks identified and
discussed in PRE I equitably among
ocean fisheries and to allow maximum
harvest of natural and hatchery runs
surplus to inside fishery and spawning
needs. NMFS finds the Council’s
recommendations responsive to the
goals of the Salmon FMP, the
requirements of the resource, and the
socio-economic factors affecting
resource users. The recommendations
are consistent with the requirements of
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act and
U.S. obligations to Indian tribes with
federally recognized fishing rights, and
U.S. international obligations regarding
Pacific salmon. Accordingly, NMFS has
adopted them.
North of Cape Falcon the 2008
management measures have a higher
Chinook quota and a substantially lower
coho quota relative to the 2008 season.
The total allowable catch for 2008 is
77,500 Chinook and 44,350 marked
hatchery coho; these fisheries are
restricted to protect threatened
Columbia River wild fall Chinook,
threatened Lower Columbia natural
coho, threatened Oregon Coastal Natural
coho, and Hood Canal natural coho.
Washington coastal and Puget Sound
Chinook generally migrate to the far
north and are not greatly affected by
ocean harvests from Cape Falcon, OR, to
the U.S.-Canada border. Nevertheless,
ocean fisheries in combination with
fisheries inside Puget Sound were
restricted in order to meet ESA related
conservation objectives for Puget Sound
Chinook. North of Cape Alava, WA, the
Council recommends a provision
prohibiting retention of chum salmon
during August and September to protect
ESA listed Hood Canal summer chum.
The Council has recommended such a
prohibition for the last seven years.
South of Cape Falcon, OR, the
commercial salmon fishery is closed in
2008 because of the projected failure of
the Sacramento River Fall Chinook to
reach their conservation objective, even
with no fishing on the stock. For the
same reason, the only recreational
fishery that will occur South of Cape
Falcon is a small selective fishery off
Oregon with a 9,000-fish quota of
marked hatchery coho. This is the fifth
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year the selective fishery includes the
southern coastal area of Oregon. The
Council’s recommendations are below
the 8-percent exploitation rate permitted
under ESA limitations for Oregon Coast
Natural (OCN) coho stocks, with an
expected 6.9-percent OCN coho
exploitation rate. The expected ocean
exploitation rate for Rogue/Klamath
coho is 1.0 percent, and is also below its
exploitation rate limit of 13.0 percent.
Treaty Indian Fisheries for 2008
The treaty-Indian commercial troll
fishery quota is 37,500 Chinook in
ocean management areas and
Washington State Statistical Area 4B
combined. This quota is slightly higher
than the 35,000-Chinook quota in 2007.
The fisheries include a Chinookdirected fishery in May and June (under
a quota of 20,000 Chinook) and an allsalmon season beginning July 1 with a
17,500 Chinook sub-quota. The coho
quota for the treaty-Indian troll fishery
in ocean management areas, including
Washington State Statistical Area 4B for
the July-September period is 20,000
coho, a decrease from the 38,500-coho
quota in 2007.
Management Measures for 2009
Fisheries
The timing of the March and April
Council meetings makes it impracticable
for the Council to recommend fishing
seasons that begin before May 1 of the
same year. Therefore, the 2009 fishing
seasons opening earlier than May 1 are
also established in this action. The
Council recommended, and NMFS
concurs, that the commercial season off
Oregon from Cape Falcon to Humbug
Mountain, from Humbug Mountain to
the Oregon/California border and the
recreational season off Oregon from
Cape Falcon to the Oregon/California
border will open in 2009 as indicated in
the Season Description section. At the
March 2009 meeting, the Council may
consider inseason recommendations to
adjust the commercial season prior to
May 1 in the areas off Oregon.
Inseason Actions
The following sections set out the
management regime for the salmon
fishery. Open seasons and days are
described in sections 1, 2, and 3 of the
2008 management measures. Inseason
closures in the commercial and
recreational fisheries are announced on
the NMFS hotline and through the U.S.
Coast Guard Notice to Mariners as
described in section 6. Other inseason
adjustments to management measures
are also announced on the hotline and
through the Notice to Mariners.
Inseason actions will also be published
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in the Federal Register as soon as
practicable.
The following are the management
measures recommended by the Council
and approved and implemented here for
2008 and, as specified, for 2009.
Section 1. Commercial Management
Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in
parts A, B, and C that must be followed for
lawful participation in the fishery. Each
fishing area identified in part A specifies the
fishing area by geographic boundaries from
north to south, the open seasons for the area,
the salmon species allowed to be caught
during the seasons, and any other special
restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C
specifies special requirements, definitions,
restrictions and exceptions.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR U.S./Canada
Border to Cape Falcon
May 3 through earlier of June 30 or
11,700 Chinook quota. Saturday through
Tuesday with a landing and possession
limit of 50 Chinook per vessel for each
open period north of Leadbetter Point or
50 Chinook south of Leadbetter Point
(c.1). All salmon except coho (c.7). Cape
Flattery, Mandatory Yelloweye Rockfish
Conservation Area, and Columbia
Control Zones closed (c.5). See gear
restrictions and definitions (c.2, C.3).
Oregon State regulations require that
fishers south of Cape Falcon, OR
intending to fish within this area notify
the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife (ODFW) before transiting the
Cape Falcon, OR line (45°46′00″ N. lat.)
at the following number: 541–867–0300
Ext. 271. Vessels must land and deliver
their fish within 24 hours of any closure
of this fishery. Under state law, vessels
must report their catch on a state fish
receiving ticket. Vessels fishing or in
possession of salmon while fishing
north of Leadbetter Point must land and
deliver their fish within the area and
north of Leadbetter Point. Vessels
fishing or in possession of salmon while
fishing south of Leadbetter Point must
land and deliver their fish within the
area and south of Leadbetter Point,
except that Oregon permitted vessels
may also land their fish in Garibaldi,
Oregon. Oregon State regulations
require that all fishers landing salmon
into Oregon from any fishery between
Leadbetter Point, Washington and Cape
Falcon, Oregon must notify ODFW
within one hour of delivery or prior to
transport away from the port of landing
by calling 541–867–0300 Ext. 271.
Notification shall include vessel name
and number, number of salmon by
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species, port of landing and location of
delivery, and estimated time of delivery.
Inseason actions may modify harvest
guidelines in later fisheries to achieve or
prevent exceeding the overall allowable
troll harvest impacts (c.8).
July 1 through earlier of September 16
or 8,300 preseason Chinook guideline
(c.8) or a 4,000-marked coho quota
(C.8.d). Open July 1–2, then Saturday
through Tuesday thereafter. Landing
and possession limit of 35 Chinook and
25 coho per vessel per open period
north of Leadbetter Point or 35 Chinook
and 25 coho south of Leadbetter Point
(c.1). All Salmon except no chum
retention north of Cape Alava,
Washington in August and September
(c.7). All coho must have a healed
adipose fin clip (C.8.d). Gear restricted
to plugs six inches (15.24 cm) or longer.
See gear restrictions and definitions
(c.2, C.3). Cape Flattery, Mandatory
Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area,
and Columbia Control Zones closed
(c.5). Oregon State regulations require
that fishers south of Cape Falcon, OR
intending to fish within this area notify
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
before transiting the Cape Falcon, OR
line (45°46′00″ N. lat.) at the following
number: 541–867–0300 Ext. 271.
Vessels must land and deliver their fish
within 24 hours of any closure of this
fishery. Under state law, vessels must
report their catch on a state fish
receiving ticket. Vessels fishing or in
possession of salmon while fishing
north of Leadbetter Point must land and
deliver their fish within the area and
north of Leadbetter Point. Vessels
fishing or in possession of salmon while
fishing south of Leadbetter Point must
land and deliver their fish within the
area and south of Leadbetter Point,
except that Oregon permitted vessels
may also land their fish in Garibaldi,
Oregon. Oregon State regulations
require that all fishers landing salmon
into Oregon from any fishery between
Leadbetter Point, Washington and Cape
Falcon, Oregon must notify ODFW
within one hour of delivery or prior to
transport away from the port of landing
by calling 541–867–0300 Ext. 271.
Notification shall include vessel name
23975
and number, number of salmon by
species, port of landing and location of
delivery, and estimated time of delivery.
Inseason actions may modify harvest
guidelines in later fisheries to achieve or
prevent exceeding the overall allowable
troll harvest impacts (c.8).
South of Cape Falcon, OR Cape Falcon
to Humbug Mountain
Closed in 2008. In 2009, the season
will open March 15 for all salmon
except coho. This opening could be
modified following Council review at its
March 2009 meeting.
Humbug Mountain to Oregon/California
Border
Closed in 2008. In 2009, the season
will open March 15 for all salmon
except coho. This opening could be
modified following Council review at its
March 2009 meeting.
Oregon/California Border to U.S./
Mexico Border Closed.
B. Minimum Size (Inches) (See C.1)
Chinook
Coho
Area (when open)
Pink
Total length
North of Cape Falcon, OR ..................................................................
Cape Falcon to OR-CA Border ...........................................................
OR-CA Border to US-Mexico Border ..................................................
Head-off
Total length
Head-off
28.0
28.0
........................
21.5
21.5
........................
16.0
16.0
........................
12.0
12.0
........................
None
Metric equivalents: 28.0 in = 71.1 cm, 27.0 in = 68.6 cm, 26.0 in = 66.0 cm, 21.5 in = 54.6 cm, 19.5 in = 49.5 cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0
in = 30.5 cm.
C. Special Requirements, Definitions,
Restrictions, or Exceptions
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C.1. Compliance with Minimum Size or
Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must
meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special
requirements for the area being fished
and the area in which they are landed
if the area is open. Salmon may be
landed in an area that has been closed
more than 96 hours only if they meet
the minimum size, landing/possession
limit, or other special requirements for
the area in which they were caught.
Salmon may be landed in an area that
has been closed less than 96 hours only
if they meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special
requirements for the areas in which they
were caught and landed.
States may require fish landing/
receiving tickets to be kept on board the
vessel for 90 days after landing to
account for all previous salmon
landings.
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C.2. Gear Restrictions: Salmon May Be
Taken Only by Hook and Line Using
Barbless Hooks
a. Single point, single shank, barbless
hooks are required in all fisheries.
b. Cape Falcon, Oregon, to the OR/CA
border: No more than 4 spreads are
allowed per line.
c. OR/CA border to U.S./Mexico
border: No more than 6 lines are
allowed per vessel, and barbless circle
hooks are required when fishing with
bait by any means other than trolling.
C.3. Gear Definitions
Trolling defined: Fishing from a boat
or floating device that is making way by
means of a source of power, other than
drifting by means of the prevailing
water current or weather conditions.
Troll fishing gear defined: One or
more lines that drag hooks behind a
moving fishing vessel. In that portion of
the fishery management area (FMA) off
Oregon and Washington, the line or
lines must be affixed to the vessel and
must not be intentionally disengaged
from the vessel at any time during the
fishing operation.
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Spread defined: A single leader
connected to an individual lure or bait.
Circle hook defined: A hook with a
generally circular shape and a point
which turns inward, pointing directly to
the shank at a 90° angle.
C.4. Transit Through Closed Areas with
Salmon on Board
It is unlawful for a vessel to have troll
or recreational gear in the water while
transiting any area closed to fishing for
a certain species of salmon, while
possessing that species of salmon;
however, fishing for species other than
salmon is not prohibited if the area is
open for such species, and no salmon
are in possession.
C.5. Control Zone Definitions
a. Cape Flattery Control Zone—The
area from Cape Flattery (48°23′00″ N.
lat.) to the northern boundary of the
U.S. EEZ; and the area from Cape
Flattery south to Cape Alava (48°10′00″
N. lat.) and east of 125°05′00″ W. long.
b. Mandatory Yelloweye Rockfish
Conservation Area—The area in
Washington Marine Catch Area 3 from
48°00.00′ N. lat.; 125°14.00′ W. long. to
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48°02.00′ N. lat.; 125°14.00′ W. long. to
48°02.00′ N. lat.; 125°16.50′ W. long. to
48°00.00′ N. lat.; 125°16.50′ W. long.
and connecting back to 48°00.00′ N. lat.;
125°14.00′ W. long.
c. Columbia Control Zone—An area at
the Columbia River mouth, bounded on
the west by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy
#4 (46°13′35″ N. lat., 124°06′50″ W.
long.) and the green lighted Buoy #7
(46°15′09″ N. lat., 124°06′16″ W. long.);
on the east, by the Buoy #10 line which
bears north/south at 357° true from the
south jetty at 46°14′00″ N. lat.,
124°03′07″ W. long. to its intersection
with the north jetty; on the north, by a
line running northeast/southwest
between the green lighted Buoy #7 to
the tip of the north jetty (46°15′48″ N.
lat., 124°05′20″ W. long.), and then
along the north jetty to the point of
intersection with the Buoy #10 line;
and, on the south, by a line running
northeast/southwest between the red
lighted Buoy #4 and tip of the south
jetty (46°14′03″ N. lat., 124°04′05″ W.
long.), and then along the south jetty to
the point of intersection with the Buoy
#10 line.
d. Bandon High Spot Control Zone—
The area west of a line between
43°07′00″ N. lat.; 124°37′00″ W. long.
and 42°40′30″ N. lat; 124° 52′0″ W. long.
extending to the western edge of the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
e. Klamath Control Zone—The ocean
area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41°38′48″ N.
lat. (approximately six nautical miles
north of the Klamath River mouth); on
the west, by 124°23′00″ W. long.
(approximately 12 nautical miles off
shore); and on the south, by 41°26′48″
N. lat. (approximately six nautical miles
south of the Klamath River mouth).
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C.6. Notification When Unsafe
Conditions Prevent Compliance With
Regulations
If prevented by unsafe weather
conditions or mechanical problems from
meeting special management area
landing restrictions, vessels must notify
the U.S. Coast Guard and receive
acknowledgment of such notification
prior to leaving the area. This
notification shall include the name of
the vessel, port where delivery will be
made, approximate amount of salmon
(by species) on board, and the estimated
time of arrival.
C.7. Incidental Halibut Harvest
During authorized periods, the
operator of a vessel that has been issued
an incidental halibut harvest license
may retain Pacific halibut caught
incidentally in Area 2A while trolling
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for salmon. Halibut retained must be no
less than 32 inches (81.28 cm) in total
length, measured from the tip of the
lower jaw with the mouth closed to the
extreme end of the middle of the tail,
and must be landed with the head on.
License applications for incidental
harvest must be obtained from the
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (phone: 206–634–1838).
Applicants must apply prior to April 1
of each year. Incidental harvest is
authorized only during May and June
troll seasons and after June 30 if quota
remains and if announced on the NMFS
hotline (phone: 800–662–9825). ODFW
and Washington Department of Fish and
Wildlife (WDFW) will monitor landings.
If the landings are projected to exceed
the 37,707 pound preseason allocation
or the total Area 2A non-Indian
commercial halibut allocation, NMFS
will take inseason action to close the
incidental halibut fishery.
Beginning May 1, license holders may
land no more than one Pacific halibut
per each two Chinook, except one
Pacific halibut may be landed without
meeting the ratio requirement, and no
more than 35 halibut may be landed per
open period. Pacific halibut retained
must be no less than 32 inches in total
length (with head on).
A ‘‘C-shaped’’ yelloweye rockfish
conservation area (YRCA) is an area to
be voluntarily avoided for salmon
trolling. NMFS and the Council request
salmon trollers voluntarily avoid this
area in order to protect yelloweye
rockfish. The area is defined in the
Pacific Council Halibut Catch Sharing
Plan in the North Coast subarea
(Washington marine area 3), with the
following coordinates in the order
listed:
48°18′ N. lat.; 125°18′ W. long.;
48°18′ N. lat.; 124°59′ W. long.;
48°11′ N. lat.; 124°59′ W. long.;
48°11′ N. lat.; 125°11′ W. long.;
48°04′ N. lat.; 125°11′ W. long.;
48°04′ N. lat.; 124°59′ W. long.;
48°00′ N. lat.; 124°59′ W. long.;
48°00′ N. lat.; 125°18′ W. long.;
and connecting back to 48°18′ N. lat.;
125°18′ W. long.
C.8. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason
actions or modifications already noted
under the season description, the
following inseason guidance is provided
to NMFS:
a. Chinook remaining from the May
through June non-Indian commercial
troll harvest guideline north of Cape
Falcon may be transferred to the July
through September harvest guideline on
a fishery impact equivalent basis.
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b. NMFS may transfer fish between
the recreational and commercial
fisheries north of Cape Falcon if there is
agreement among the areas’
representatives on the Salmon Advisory
Subpanel (SAS).
c. At the March 2009 meeting, the
Council will consider inseason
recommendations for special regulations
for any experimental fisheries
(proposals must meet Council protocol
and be received in November 2008).
d. If retention of unmarked coho is
permitted in the area from the U.S./
Canada border to Cape Falcon, Oregon,
by inseason action, the allowable coho
quota will be adjusted to ensure
preseason projected mortality of critical
stocks is not exceeded.
C.9. Consistent with Council
Management Objectives
a. The State of Oregon may establish
additional late-season fisheries in state
waters. Check state regulations for
details.
b. The State of California may
establish limited fisheries in selected
state waters.
C.10. For the purposes of California
Department of Fish and Game (CDFG)
Code, section 8232.5, the definition of
the Klamath Management Zone (KMZ)
for the ocean salmon season shall be
that area from Humbug Mt., Oregon, to
Horse Mt., California.
Section 2. Recreational Management
Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in
parts A, B, and C that must be followed for
lawful participation in the fishery. Each
fishing area identified in part A specifies the
fishing area by geographic boundaries from
north to south, the open seasons for the area,
the salmon species allowed to be caught
during the seasons, and any other special
restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C
specifies special requirements, definitions,
restrictions and exceptions.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR U.S./Canada
Border to Leadbetter Point
June 1 through earlier of June 28 or a
quota of 8,200 Chinook (c.5). Tuesday
through Saturday north of the Queets
River (Neah Bay and La Push Subareas)
and Sunday through Thursday south of
the Queets River (Westport subarea).
Chinook only, one fish per day. Chinook
24-inch (60.96 cm) total length
minimum size limit (B). See gear
restrictions (c.2). Inseason management
may be used to sustain season length
and keep harvest within the overall
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Chinook recreational TAC for north of
Cape Falcon (c.5).
Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon
(Columbia River Subarea)
June 1 through earlier of June 28 or a
subarea guideline of 5,300 Chinook
(c.5). Seven days per week. Chinook
only, one fish per day. Chinook 24-inch
(60.96 cm) total length minimum size
limit (B). See gear restrictions (c.2).
Inseason management may be used to
sustain season length and keep harvest
within the overall Chinook recreational
TAC for north of Cape Falcon (c.5).
U.S./Canada Border to Cape Alava
(Neah Bay)
July 1 through earlier of September 13
or 2,060 marked coho subarea quota
with a subarea guideline of 950 Chinook
(c.5). Tuesday through Saturday. All
salmon two fish per day, no more than
one of which can be a Chinook and no
chum retention August 1 through Sept.
13. Chinook 24-inch total length
minimum size limit (B). All retained
coho must be marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions
(c.2). Closed east of a true north-south
line running through Sail Rock in July.
Beginning August 1, Chinook nonretention east of the Bonilla-Tatoosh
line (C.4.a) during Council managed
ocean fishery. Inseason management
may be used to sustain season length
and keep harvest within the overall
Chinook recreational TAC for north of
Cape Falcon (C.5).
Cape Alava to Queets River (La Push
Subarea)
July 1 through earlier of September 13
or 540 marked coho subarea quota with
a subarea guideline of 350 Chinook (C5).
23977
September 20 through earlier of October
5 or 50 marked coho quota or 100
Chinook quota (C5): In the area north of
47°50′00″ N. lat. and south of 48°00′00″
N. lat. (C.6). Tuesday through Saturday
through September 13. All salmon, two
fish per day, no more than one of which
can be a Chinook. Chinook 24-inch
(60.96 cm) total length minimum size
limit (B). All retained coho must be
marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See gear restrictions (C.2). Inseason
management may be used to sustain
season length and keep harvest within
the overall Chinook recreational TAC
for north of Cape Falcon (C.5).
Sunday through Thursday. All salmon,
two fish per day, no more than one of
which can be a Chinook. Chinook 24inch (60.96 cm) total length minimum
size limit (B). All retained coho must be
marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See gear restrictions and definitions
(C.2, C.3). Columbia Control Zone
closed (C.4.c). Inseason management
may be used to sustain season length
and keep harvest within the overall
Chinook recreational TAC for north of
Cape Falcon (C.5).
Queets River to Leadbetter Point
(Westport Subarea)
June 22 through earlier of August 31
or a landed catch of 9,000 marked coho
(C.6). Seven days per week. All salmon
except Chinook, two fish per day (C.1).
All retained coho must be marked with
a healed adipose fin clip. Fishing in the
Stonewall Bank groundfish conservation
area restricted to trolling only on days
the all depth recreational halibut fishery
is open (see 70 FR 20304, June 24, 2005,
and call the halibut fishing hotline 1–
800–662–9825 for additional dates) (C.3,
C.4.d). Open days may be adjusted
inseason to utilize the available quota
(C.5).
In 2009, the season between Cape
Falcon and Humbug Mt. will open
March 15 for all salmon except coho,
two fish per day (C.1). Chinook
minimum size limit of 24 inches (60.96
cm) total length (B).
June 29 through earlier of September
13 or 7,520 marked coho subarea quota
with a subarea guideline of 5,100
Chinook (C.5). Sunday through
Thursday. All salmon, two fish per day,
no more than one of which can be a
Chinook. Chinook 24-inch total length
minimum size limit (B). All retained
coho must be marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions
and definitions (C.2, C.3). Grays Harbor
Control Zone closed beginning August 1
(C.4.b). Inseason management may be
used to sustain season length and keep
harvest within the overall Chinook
recreational TAC for north of Cape
Falcon (C.5).
Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon
(Columbia River Subarea)
June 29 through earlier of September
30 or 10,180 marked coho subarea quota
with any remainder of the 5,300
Chinook subarea guideline from the
June Chinook directed fishery (C.5).
South of Cape Falcon, OR Cape Falcon
to the Oregon/California Border
Oregon/California Border to U.S./
Mexico Border
Closed.
B. Minimum Size (Total Length in
Inches) (See C.1)
Area (when open)
Chinook
Coho
Pink
North of Cape Falcon, OR ...................................................................................................................................
Cape Falcon to OR-CA Border ...........................................................................................................................
OR-CA Border to Horse Mountain ......................................................................................................................
Horse Mt. to U.S.-Mexico Border ........................................................................................................................
24.0
24.0
................
................
16.0
16.0
16.0
................
None
None
................
................
Metric equivalents: 26.0 in = 66.0 cm, 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 20.0 in = 50.8 cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm.
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size
and Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must
meet the minimum size or other special
requirements for the area being fished
and the area in which they are landed
if that area is open. Salmon may be
landed in an area that is closed only if
they meet the minimum size or other
special requirements for the area in
which they were caught.
Ocean Boat Limits: Off the coast of
Washington, Oregon, and California,
each fisher aboard a vessel may
continue to use angling gear until the
combined daily limits of salmon for all
licensed and juvenile anglers aboard has
been attained (additional state
restrictions may apply).
C.2. Gear Restrictions: Salmon May be
Taken Only by Hook and Line Using
Barbless Hooks
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C. Special Requirements, Definitions,
Restrictions, or Exceptions
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All persons fishing for salmon, and all
persons fishing from a boat with salmon
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on board, must meet the gear
restrictions listed below for specific
areas or seasons.
a. U.S./Canada Border to Point
Conception, California: No more than
one rod may be used per angler; and no
more than two single point, single shank
barbless hooks are required for all
fishing gear. [Note: ODFW regulations in
the state-water fishery off Tillamook Bay
may allow the use of barbed hooks to be
consistent with inside regulations.]
b. Cape Falcon, Oregon, to Point
Conception, California: Anglers must
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use no more than two single point,
single shank, barbless hooks.
c. Horse Mt., California, to Point
Conception, California: Single point,
single shank, barbless circle hooks
(below) are required when fishing with
bait by any means other than trolling,
and no more than two such hooks shall
be used. When angling with two hooks,
the distance between the hooks must
not exceed five inches when measured
from the top of the eye of the top hook
to the inner base of the curve of the
lower hook, and both hooks must be
permanently tied in place (hard tied).
Circle hooks are not required when
artificial lures are used without bait.
C.3. Gear Definitions
a. Recreational fishing gear defined:
Angling tackle consisting of a line with
no more than one artificial lure or
natural bait attached. Off Oregon and
Washington, the line must be attached
to a rod and reel held by hand or closely
attended; the rod and reel must be held
by hand while playing a hooked fish. No
person may use more than one rod and
line while fishing off Oregon or
Washington. Off California, the line
must be attached to a rod and reel held
by hand or closely attended. Weights
directly attached to a line may not
exceed four pounds (1.8 kg). While
fishing off California north of Point
Conception, no person fishing for
salmon, and no person fishing from a
boat with salmon on board, may use
more than one rod and line. Fishing
includes any activity which can
reasonably be expected to result in the
catching, taking, or harvesting of fish.
b. Trolling defined: Angling from a
boat or floating device that is making
way by means of a source of power,
other than drifting by means of the
prevailing water current or weather
conditions.
c. Circle hook defined: A hook with a
generally circular shape and a point
which turns inward, pointing directly to
the shank at a 90° angle.
rfrederick on PROD1PC67 with RULES
C.4. Control Zone Definitions
a. The Bonilla-Tatoosh Line: A line
running from the western end of Cape
Flattery to Tatoosh Island Lighthouse
(48°23′30″ N. lat., 124°44′12″ W. long.)
to the buoy adjacent to Duntze Rock
(48°28′00″ N. lat., 124°45′00″ W. long.),
then in a straight line to Bonilla Point
(48°35′30″ N. lat., 124°43′00″ W. long.)
on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
b. Grays Harbor Control Zone—The
area defined by a line drawn from the
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Westport Lighthouse (46°53′18″ N. lat.,
124°07′01″ W. long.) to Buoy #2
(46°52′42″ N. lat., 124°12′42″ W. long.)
to Buoy #3 (46°55′00″ N. lat., 124°14′48″
W. long.) to the Grays Harbor north jetty
(46°36′00″ N. lat., 124°10′51″ W. long.).
c. Columbia Control Zone: An area at
the Columbia River mouth, bounded on
the west by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy
#4 (46°13′35″ N. lat., 124°06′50″ W.
long.) and the green lighted Buoy #7
(46°15′09″ N. lat., 124°06′16″ W. long.);
on the east, by the Buoy #10 line which
bears north/south at 357° true from the
south jetty at 46°14′00″ N. lat.,
124°03′07″ W. long. to its intersection
with the north jetty; on the north, by a
line running northeast/southwest
between the green lighted Buoy #7 to
the tip of the north jetty (46°15′48″ N.
lat., 124°05′20″ W. long. and then along
the north jetty to the point of
intersection with the Buoy #10 line; and
on the south, by a line running
northeast/southwest between the red
lighted Buoy #4 and tip of the south
jetty (46°14′03″ N. lat., 124°04′05″ W.
long.), and then along the south jetty to
the point of intersection with the Buoy
#10 line.
d. Stonewall Bank Groundfish
Conservation Area: The area defined by
the following coordinates in the order
listed:
44°37.46′ N. lat.; 124°24.92′ W. long.;
44°37.46′ N. lat.; 124°23.63′ W. long.;
44°28.71′ N. lat.; 124°21.80′ W. long.;
44°28.71′ N. lat.; 124°24.10′ W. long.;
44°31.42′ N. lat.; 124°25.47′ W. long.;
and connecting back to 44°37.46′ N. lat.;
124°24.92′ W. long.
e. Klamath Control Zone: The ocean
area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41°38′48″ N.
lat. (approximately six nautical miles
north of the Klamath River mouth); on
the west, by 124°23′00″ W. long.
(approximately 12 nautical miles off
shore); and, on the south, by 41°26′48″
N. lat. (approximately 6 nautical miles
south of the Klamath River mouth).
C.5. Inseason Management
Regulatory modifications may become
necessary inseason to meet preseason
management objectives such as quotas,
harvest guidelines, and season duration.
In addition to standard inseason actions
or modifications already noted under
the season description, the following
inseason guidance is provided by
NMFS:
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a. Actions could include
modifications to bag limits, or days
open to fishing, and extensions or
reductions in areas open to fishing.
b. Coho may be transferred inseason
among recreational subareas north of
Cape Falcon on an impact neutral basis
to help meet the recreational season
duration objectives (for each subarea)
after conferring with representatives of
the affected ports and the Council’s SAS
recreational representatives north of
Cape Falcon.
c. Chinook and coho may be
transferred between the recreational and
commercial fisheries north of Cape
Falcon on an impact neutral basis if
there is agreement among the
representatives of the Salmon Advisory
Subpanel (SAS).
d. If retention of unmarked coho is
permitted in the area from the U.S./
Canada border to Cape Falcon, Oregon,
by inseason action, the allowable coho
quota will be adjusted to ensure
preseason projected mortality of critical
stocks is not exceeded.
C.6. Additional Seasons in State
Territorial Waters
Consistent with Council management
objectives, the States of Washington,
Oregon, and California may establish
limited seasons in state waters. Oregon
State-water fisheries are limited to
Chinook salmon. Check state regulations
for details.
Section 3. Treaty Indian Management
Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in
parts A, B, and C which must be followed for
lawful participation in the fishery.
A. Season Descriptions
U.S./Canada Border to Cape Falcon
May 1 through the earlier of June 30
or 20,000 Chinook quota. All salmon
except coho. If the Chinook quota for
the May-June fishery is not fully
utilized, the excess fish cannot be
transferred into the later all-salmon
season. If the Chinook quota is
exceeded, the excess will be deducted
from the later all-salmon season. See
size limit (B) and other restrictions (C).
July 1 through the earlier of
September 15, or 17,500 preseason
Chinook quota, or 20,000 coho quota.
All Salmon. See size limit (B) and
other restrictions (C).
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B. Minimum Size (Inches)
Chinook
Coho
Area (when open)
Pink
Total length
North of Cape Falcon, OR ...................................................
Head-off
Total length
Head-off
24.0
18.0
16.0
12.0
None.
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 18.0 in = 45.7 cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0 in = 30.5 cm.
C. Special Requirements, Restrictions,
and Exceptions
C.1. Tribe and Area Boundaries
All boundaries may be changed to
include such other areas as may
hereafter be authorized by a Federal
court for that tribe’s treaty fishery.
S’KLALLAM—Washington State
Statistical Area 4B (All).
MAKAH—Washington State Statistical
Area 4B and that portion of the FMA
north of 48°02′15″ N. lat. (Norwegian
Memorial) and east of 125°44′00″ W.
long.
QUILEUTE—That portion of the FMA
between 48°07′36″ N. lat. (Sand Pt.)
and 47°31′42″ N. lat. (Queets River)
and east of 125°44′00″ W. long.
HOH—That portion of the FMA
between 47°54′18″ N. lat. (Quillayute
River) and 47°21′00″ N. lat. (Quinault
River) and east of 125°44′00″ W. long.
QUINAULT—That portion of the FMA
between 47°40′06″ N. lat. (Destruction
Island) and 46°53′18″ N. lat. (Point
Chehalis) and east of 125°44′00″ W.
long.
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C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Single point, single shank, barbless
hooks are required in all fisheries.
b. No more than eight fixed lines per
boat.
c. No more than four hand held lines
per person in the Makah area fishery
(Washington State Statistical Area 4B
and that portion of the FMA north of
48°02′15″ N. lat. (Norwegian Memorial)
and east of 125°44′00″ W. long.)
C.3. Quotas
a. The quotas include troll catches by
the S’Klallam and Makah tribes in
Washington State Statistical Area 4B
from May 1 through September 15.
b. The Quileute Tribe will continue a
ceremonial and subsistence fishery
during the time frame of September 15
through October 15 in the same manner
as in 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Fish
taken during this fishery are to be
counted against treaty troll quotas
established for the 2008 season
(estimated harvest during the October
ceremonial and subsistence fishery: 100
Chinook; 200 coho).
C.4. Area Closures
a. The area within a six nautical mile
radius of the mouths of the Queets River
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(47°31′42″ N. lat.) and the Hoh River
(47°45′12″ N. lat.) will be closed to
commercial fishing.
b. A closure within two nautical miles
of the mouth of the Quinault River
(47°21′00″ N. lat.) may be enacted by the
Quinault Nation and/or the State of
Washington and will not adversely
affect the Secretary of Commerce’s
management regime.
Section 4. Halibut Retention
Under the authority of the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act, NMFS promulgated
regulations governing the Pacific halibut
fishery which appear at 50 CFR part
300, subpart E. On March 7, 2008,
NMFS published a final rule (73 FR
12280) to implement the International
Pacific Halibut Commission’s (IPHC)
recommendations, to announce fishery
regulations for U.S. waters off Alaska
and fishery regulations for treaty
commercial and ceremonial and
subsistence fisheries, some regulations
for non-treaty commercial fisheries for
U.S. waters off the West Coast, and
approval of and implementation of the
Area 2A Pacific halibut Catch Sharing
Plan and the Area 2A management
measures for 2008. The regulations and
management measures provide that
vessels participating in the salmon troll
fishery in Area 2A (all waters off the
States of Washington, Oregon, and
California), which have obtained the
appropriate IPHC license, may retain
halibut caught incidentally during
authorized periods in conformance with
provisions published with the annual
salmon management measures. A
salmon troller may participate in the
halibut incidental catch fishery during
the salmon troll season or in the
directed commercial fishery targeting
halibut, but not both.
The following measures have been
approved by the IPHC, and
implemented by NMFS. During
authorized periods, the operator of a
vessel that has been issued an incidental
halibut harvest license may retain
Pacific halibut caught incidentally in
Area 2A while trolling for salmon.
Halibut retained must be no less than 32
inches (81.28 cm) in total length,
measured from the tip of the lower jaw
with the mouth closed to the extreme
end of the middle of the tail, and must
be landed with the head on. License
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applications for incidental harvest must
be obtained from the International
Pacific Halibut Commission (phone:
206–634–1838). Applicants must apply
prior to April 1 of each year. Incidental
harvest is authorized only during May
and June troll seasons and after June 30
if quota remains and if announced on
the NMFS hotline (phone: 800–662–
9825). ODFW and WDFW will monitor
landings. If the landings are projected to
exceed the 37,707 pound preseason
allocation or the total Area 2A nonIndian commercial halibut allocation,
NMFS will take inseason action to close
the incidental halibut fishery.
Beginning May 1, license holders may
land no more than one Pacific halibut
per each two Chinook, except one
Pacific halibut may be landed without
meeting the ratio requirement, and no
more than 35 halibut may be landed per
open period. Pacific halibut retained
must be no less than 32 inches in total
length (with head on).
NMFS and the Council request that
salmon trollers voluntarily avoid a ‘‘Cshaped’’ YRCA (North Coast
Recreational YRCA) in order to protect
yelloweye rockfish. The area is defined
in the Pacific Council Halibut Catch
Sharing Plan in the North Coast subarea
(WA marine area 3)(See section 1.C.7.
for the coordinates).
Section 5. Geographical Landmarks
Wherever the words ‘‘nautical miles
off shore’’ are used in this document,
the distance is measured from the
baseline from which the territorial sea is
measured.
Geographical landmarks referenced in
this document are at the following
locations:
Cape Flattery, WA—48°23′00″ N. lat.
Cape Alava, WA—48°10′00″ N. lat.
Queets River, WA—47°31′42″ N. lat.
Leadbetter Point, WA—46°38′10″ N. lat.
Cape Falcon, OR—45°46′00″ N. lat.
Florence South Jetty, OR—44°00′54″ N.
lat.
Humbug Mountain, OR—42°40′30″ N.
lat.
Oregon-California Border—42°00′00″ N.
lat.
Humboldt South Jetty, CA—40°45′53″
N. lat.
Horse Mountain, CA—40°05′00″ N. lat.
Point Arena, CA—38°57′30″ N. lat.
Point Reyes, CA—37°59′44″ N. lat.
Point San Pedro, CA—37°35′40″ N. lat.
Pigeon Point, CA—37°11′00″ N. lat.
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Point Sur, CA—36°18′00″ N. lat.
Point Conception, CA—34°27′00″ N. lat.
Section 6. Inseason Notice Procedures
Actual notice of inseason
management actions will be provided by
a telephone hotline administered by the
Northwest Region, NMFS, 206–526–
6667 or 800–662–9825, and by U.S.
Coast Guard Notice to Mariners
broadcasts. These broadcasts are
announced on Channel 16 VHF–FM and
2182 KHz at frequent intervals. The
announcements designate the channel
or frequency over which the Notice to
Mariners will be immediately broadcast.
Inseason actions will also be filed with
the Federal Register as soon as
practicable. Since provisions of these
management measures may be altered
by inseason actions, fishermen should
monitor either the telephone hotline or
Coast Guard broadcasts for current
information for the area in which they
are fishing.
rfrederick on PROD1PC67 with RULES
Classification
This rule is necessary for conservation
and management and is consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The emergency rule temporarily
modifying the conservation objective for
Sacramento River fall Chinook is
consistent with the agency’s policy on
use of emergency actions under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act published at 62
FR 44422 (Thursday, August 21, 1997).
The emergency, in this case, is a
consequence of a predicted run size that
is less than the lower end of the
122,000–180,000 spawner escapement
range. The run size forecast was not
available until February of 2008 and
was thus unforeseen. These emergency
circumstances present serious
conservation and management
problems. The emergency regulations
provide the opportunity to address the
conservation problem consistent with
the requirement to manage, on a
continuing basis, for maximum
sustained yield, and still provide some
limited harvest opportunity. Without
use of emergency regulations, the
Pacific Coast Salmon Fishery
Management Plan (Salmon FMP) would
require closure of all salmon fishing
south of Cape Falcon, Oregon, causing
severe social and economic hardship in
the coastal communities. The limited
mark-selective recreational coho fishery
off Oregon that will require the
emergency regulations to implement
will result in a marginal decrease in the
SRFC escapement while alleviating
some adverse effects to the fishing
community.
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Jkt 214001
This notification of annual
management measures is exempt from
review under Executive Order 12866.
The Assistant Administrator has
determined that the measures described
in the preamble that deviate from the
framework FMP and its implementing
regulations are necessary to respond to
an emergency situation and are
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act and other applicable law. The
measures falling under emergency
authority of section 305(C) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act (emergency rule)
involve an ocean impact of
approximately 55 Sacramento River fall
Chinook in the SRFC impact area to
allow a mark-selective recreational
fishery for hatchery coho to proceed off
of Oregon. Because SRFC are not
projected to meet the conservation
objective established in the FMP, it is
necessary to amend those portions of
the framework FMP and its
implementing regulations by emergency
action pursuant to 16 U.S.C. 1855(C).
The provisions of 50 CFR 660.411
state that if, for good cause, an action
must be filed without affording a prior
opportunity for public comment, the
measures will become effective;
however, public comments on the
action will be received for a period of
15 days after the date of publication in
the Federal Register. NMFS will receive
public comments on this action until
May 16, 2008. These regulations are
being promulgated under the authority
of 16 U.S.C. 1855(C) and (d).
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA (AA) finds good cause
under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), to waive the
requirement for prior notice and
opportunity for public comment, as
such procedures are impracticable and
contrary to the public interest.
The annual salmon management cycle
begins May 1 and continues through
April 30 of the following year. May 1
was chosen because the pre-May
harvests constitute a relatively small
portion of the annual catch. The timeframe of the preseason process for
determining the annual modifications to
ocean salmon fishery management
measures depends on when the
pertinent biological data are available.
Salmon stocks are managed to meet
annual spawning escapement goals or
specific exploitation rates. Achieving
either of these objectives requires
designing management measures that
are appropriate for the ocean abundance
predicted for that year. These pre-season
abundance forecasts, which are derived
from the previous year’s observed
spawning escapement, vary
substantially from year to year, and are
not available until January and February
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Fmt 4700
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because spawning escapement
continues through the fall.
The preseason planning and public
review process associated with
developing Council recommendations is
initiated in February as soon as the
forecast information becomes available.
The public planning process requires
coordination of management actions of
four states, numerous Indian tribes, and
the Federal Government, all of which
have management authority over the
stocks. This complex process includes
the affected user groups, as well as the
general public. The process is
compressed into a 2-month period
which culminates at the April Council
meeting at which the Council adopts a
recommendation that is forwarded to
NMFS for review, approval and
implementation of fishing regulations
effective on May 1.
Providing opportunity for prior notice
and public comments on the Council’s
recommended measures through a
proposed and final rulemaking process
would require 30 to 60 days in addition
to the two-month period required for
development of the regulations.
Delaying implementation of annual
fishing regulations, which are based on
the current stock abundance projections,
for an additional 60 days, would require
that fishing regulations for May and
June be set in the previous year, without
knowledge of current stock status.
Although this is currently done for
fisheries opening prior to May,
relatively little harvest occurs during
that period (e.g. in 2006 less than 10
percent of commercial and recreational
harvest occurred prior to May 1).
Allowing the much more substantial
harvest levels normally associated with
the May and June seasons to be
regulated in a similar way would impair
NMFS ability to protect weak stocks and
Endangered Species Act (ESA) listed
stocks, and provide harvest opportunity
where appropriate. For example, 58,000
Chinook were caught off California
during May and June of 2007. If fishing
were allowed in 2008 under last year’s
regulations a similar number of Chinook
could be caught. Under the
recommended 2008 regulations, this
May and June fisheries will be closed.
Conversely, north of Cape Falcon the
recreational fishing was closed in May
and June of 2007. Under the
recommended 2008 regulations, the
recreational fishery is open in June with
a quota of 13,500. Managing fisheries in
May and June of 2008 under 2007
regulations would limit harvest
opportunity that could otherwise be
available. The choice of May 1 as the
beginning of the regulatory season
balances the need to gather and analyze
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the data needed to meet the
management objectives of the Salmon
FMP and the requirements to provide
adequate public notice and comment on
the regulations implemented by NMFS.
Overall, the annual population
dynamics of the various salmon stocks
require managers to vary the season
structure of the various West Coast area
fisheries to both protect weaker stocks
and give fishers access to stronger
salmon stocks, particularly hatchery
produced fish. Failure to implement
these measures immediately could
compromise the status of certain stocks,
or result in foregone opportunity to
harvest stocks whose abundance has
increased relative to the previous year
thereby undermining the purpose of this
agency action. Based upon the abovedescribed need to have these measures
effective on May 1 and the fact that
there is limited time available to
implement these new measures after the
final Council meeting in April and
before the commencement of the ocean
salmon fishing year on May 1, NMFS
has concluded it is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest to provide
an opportunity for prior notice and
public comment under 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B).
The AA also finds that good cause
exists under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), to waive
the 30-day delay in effectiveness of this
final rule. As previously discussed, data
are not available until February and
management measures not finalized
until early April. These measures are
essential to conserve threatened and
endangered ocean salmon stocks, and to
provide for harvest of more abundant
stocks. If these measures are not in place
on May 1, the previous year’s
management measures will continue to
apply. Failure to implement these
measures immediately could
compromise the status of certain stocks,
including Sacramento River fall
Chinook, and negatively impact
international, state, and tribal salmon
fisheries, thereby undermining the
purposes of this agency action.
To enhance notification of the fishing
industry of these new measures, NMFS
is announcing the new measures over
the telephone hotline used for inseason
management actions and is also posting
the regulations on both of its West Coast
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15:05 Apr 30, 2008
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regional Web sites (https://
www.nwr.noaa.gov and https://
swr.nmfs.noaa.gov). NMFS is also
advising the States of Washington,
Oregon, and California on the new
management measures. These states
announce the seasons for applicable
state and Federal fisheries through their
own public notification systems.
This action contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), and
which have been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
under control number 0648–0433. The
public reporting burden for providing
notifications if landing area restrictions
cannot be met, or to obtain shelter in
Brookings, OR, is estimated to average
15 minutes per response. This estimate
includes the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
Send comments regarding this burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this data
collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to NMFS (see
ADDRESSES) and by e-mail to
David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov, or fax to
202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
NMFS has current ESA biological
opinions that cover fishing under these
regulations on all listed salmon species,
except Lower Columbia River (LCR)
coho and LCR Chinook. NMFS
reiterated their ESA related consultation
standards in their annual Guidance
letter to the Council dated February 26,
2008. Some of NMFS’s past biological
opinions have found no jeopardy, and
others have found jeopardy, but
provided reasonable and prudent
alternatives to avoid jeopardy. The
management measures for 2008 are
consistent with the biological opinions
that found no jeopardy, and with the
reasonable and prudent alternatives in
the jeopardy biological opinions. NMFS
also consulted this year on the effects of
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23981
the 2008 annual regulations on LCR
coho and LCR Chinook. NMFS
concluded that the proposed 2008
fisheries are not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of LCR coho and
LCR Chinook. The Council’s
recommended management measures
therefore comply with NMFS’s
consultation standards and guidance for
all listed salmon species which may be
affected by Council fisheries. In most
cases, the recommended measures result
in impacts that are more restrictive than
NMFS’s ESA requirements.
Southern resident killer whales were
listed as endangered effective February
16, 2006. NMFS consulted on the effects
of the 2006 and 2007 fisheries on killer
whales and concluded that the fisheries
were not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of the species.
NMFS is again consulting regarding the
effects on the 2008 fisheries on killer
whales through a separate biological
opinion. NMFS expects to complete the
consultation prior to May 1, 2008. While
the consultation may not be completed
prior to approval of this action, NMFS
has determined that the anticipated
fisheries will not make any irreversible
or irretrievable commitment of
resources with respect to the agency
action which has the effect of
foreclosing the formulation or
implementation of any reasonable and
prudent alternative measures. In the
event that the review suggests that
further constraints in the 2008 fisheries
are necessary, appropriate corrections
can be made by NMFS through inseason
action.
This final rule was developed after
meaningful consultation and
collaboration with the affected tribes.
The tribal representative on the Council
made the motion for the regulations that
apply to the tribal vessels.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773–773k; 1801 et
seq.
Dated: April 29, 2008.
Samuel D. Rauch,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E8–9687 Filed 4–30–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 85 (Thursday, May 1, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 23971-23981]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-9687]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 080428611-8612-01]
RIN 0648-AW60
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; West
Coast Salmon Fisheries; 2008 Management Measures and a Temporary Rule
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; and a temporary rule for emergency action; request
for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS establishes fishery management measures for the 2008
ocean salmon fisheries off Washington, Oregon, California and the 2009
salmon seasons opening earlier than May 1, 2009. The temporary rule for
emergency action (emergency rule), under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), implements the
2008 annual management measures for the west coast ocean salmon
fisheries for the area from Cape Falcon, OR, to the Oregon/California
Border from June 22 to August 31, 2008. The emergency rule is required
because Sacramento River fall Chinook (SRFC) are projected to not meet
their conservation objective of 122,000 to 180,000 natural and hatchery
adult spawners established in the Pacific Coast Salmon Fishery
Management Plan (Salmon FMP). Specific fishery management measures vary
by fishery and by area. The measures establish fishing areas, seasons,
quotas, legal gear, recreational fishing days and catch limits,
possession and landing restrictions, and minimum lengths for salmon
taken in the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) (3-200 nm) off
Washington, Oregon, and California. The management measures are
intended to prevent overfishing and to apportion the ocean harvest
equitably among treaty Indian, non-treaty commercial, and recreational
fisheries. The measures are also intended to allow a portion of the
salmon runs to escape the ocean fisheries in order to provide for
spawning escapement and to provide for inside fisheries (fisheries
occurring in state internal waters).
DATES: Final rule is effective from 0001 hours Pacific Daylight Time,
May 1, 2008, until the effective date of the 2009 management measures,
as published in the Federal Register. Temporary rule is effective from
0001 hours Pacific Daylight Time June 22, 2008, to 1159 hours Pacific
Daylight Time August 31, 2008 or the attainment of the specific quota
as listed below in section two of this rule. Comments must be received
by May 16, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by 0648-AW60, by any one
of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal https://www.regulations.gov.
Fax: 206-526-6736. Attn: Sarah McAvinchey, or 562-980-4047
Attn: Eric Chavez.
Mail: D. Robert Lohn, Regional Administrator, Northwest
Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way, NE., Seattle, WA 98115-0070 or to
Rod McInnis, Regional Administrator, Southwest Region, NMFS, 501 West
Ocean Boulevard, Suite 4200, Long Beach, CA 90802-4213.
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 example, name,
address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be publicly
accessible. Do not submit Confidential Business Information or
otherwise sensitive or protected information. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments. Attachments to electronic comments will be accepted
in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
Copies of the documents cited in this document are available from
Dr. Donald O. McIsaac, Executive Director, Pacific Fishery Management
Council, 7700 NE., Ambassador Place, Suite 200, Portland, OR 97220-
1384, and are posted on its Web site (https://www.pcouncil.org).
Send comments regarding the reporting burden estimate or any other
aspect of the collection-of-information requirements in these
management measures, including suggestions for reducing the burden, to
one of the NMFS addresses listed above and to David Rostker, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), by e-mail at David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov,
or by fax at (202) 395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah McAvinchey at 206-526-4323, or
Eric Chavez at 562-980-4064.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The ocean salmon fisheries in the EEZ off Washington, Oregon, and
California
[[Page 23972]]
are managed under a ``framework'' fishery management plan entitled the
Pacific Coast Salmon Fishery Management Plan (Salmon FMP). Regulations
at 50 CFR part 660, subpart H, provide the mechanism for making
preseason and inseason adjustments to the management measures, within
limits set by the Salmon FMP, by notification in the Federal Register.
These management measures for the 2008 and pre-May 2009 ocean
salmon fisheries were recommended by the Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) at its April 7 to 11, 2008, meeting.
Schedule Used to Establish 2008 Management Measures
The Council announced its annual preseason management process for
the 2008 ocean salmon fisheries in the Federal Register on January 2,
2008 (73 FR 169), and on their Web site at (https://www.pcouncil.org).
This notice announced the availability of Council documents as well as
the dates and locations of Council meetings and public hearings
comprising the Council's complete schedule of events for determining
the annual proposed and final modifications to ocean salmon fishery
management measures. The agendas for the March and April Council
meetings were published in the Federal Register prior to the actual
meetings.
In accordance with the Salmon FMP, the Council's Salmon Technical
Team (STT) and staff economist prepared a series of reports for the
Council, its advisors, and the public. The first of the reports was
prepared in February when the scientific information necessary for
crafting management measures for the 2008 and pre-May 2009 ocean salmon
fishery first became available. The first report, ``Review of 2007
Ocean Salmon Fisheries'', summarizes biological and socio-economic data
for the 2007 ocean salmon fisheries and assesses how well the Council's
2007 management objectives were met. The second report, ``Preseason
Report I Stock Abundance Analysis for 2008 Ocean Salmon Fisheries''
(PRE I), provides the 2008 salmon stock abundance projections and
analyzes the impacts on the stocks and Council management goals if the
2007 regulations and regulatory procedures were applied to the
projected 2008 stock abundances. The completion of PRE I is the initial
step in evaluating the full suite of preseason options.
The Council met in Sacramento, CA from March 10 to 14, 2008, to
develop 2008 management options for proposal to the public. The Council
proposed three options for commercial and recreational fisheries
management for analysis and public comment. These options consisted of
various combinations of management measures designed to protect weak
stocks of coho and Chinook salmon and to provide for ocean harvests of
more abundant stocks. After the March Council meeting, the Council's
STT and staff economist prepared a third report, ``Preseason Report II
Analysis of Proposed Regulatory Options for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries,'' which analyzes the effects of the proposed 2008 management
options. This report was made available to the Council, its advisors,
and the public.
Public hearings, sponsored by the Council, to receive testimony on
the proposed options were held on March 31, 2008, in Westport, WA and
Coos Bay, OR; and April 1, 2008, in Eureka, CA. The States of
Washington, Oregon, and California sponsored meetings in various forums
that also collected public testimony, which was then presented to the
Council by each state's Council representative. The Council also
received public testimony at both the March and April meetings and
received written comments at the Council office.
The Council met from April 7 to 11, 2008, in Seatac, WA, to adopt
its final 2008 recommendations. Following the April Council meeting,
the Council's STT and staff economist prepared a fourth report,
``Preseason Report III Analysis of Council-Adopted Management Measures
for 2008 Ocean Salmon Fisheries,'' which analyzes the environmental and
socio-economic effects of the Council's final recommendations. This
report was also made available to the Council, its advisors, and the
public. After the Council took final action on the annual ocean salmon
specifications in April, it published the recommended management
measures in its newsletter and also posted them on the Council Web site
(https://www.pcouncil.org).
Resource Status
At the start of the preseason planning process for the 2008
management season, NMFS provided a letter to the Council, dated
February 26, 2008, summarizing its Endangered Species Act (ESA)
consultation standards for listed species as required by the Salmon
FMP. The Council's recommended management measures comply with NMFS ESA
consultation standards and guidance for those listed salmon species
which may be affected by Council fisheries. In most cases, the
recommended measures are more restrictive than NMFS's ESA requirements.
NMFS provided guidance to the Council and a new biological opinion
regarding the effects of the 2008 fisheries on Lower Columbia River
(LCR) coho and LCR Chinook salmon. This will be the third year that
NMFS has consulted on LCR coho. Since the listing of LCR coho in August
2005, the states of Oregon and Washington have been working with NMFS
to develop and evaluate a management plan for LCR coho that can be used
as the basis for their long-term management. The states have focused on
use of a harvest matrix similar to the one used for Oregon Coast coho.
Under the matrix the harvest allowed in a given year depends on
indicators of marine survival and brood year escapement. Generally
speaking, NMFS supports use of management planning tools that allow
harvest rates to vary depending on the year-specific circumstances.
Although there has been progress in the development and review of the
matrix, there is still work to be done before NMFS can reasonably
conclude that the proposed harvest matrix provides the necessary long-
term protection for the species.
In the meantime, NMFS needed to provide guidance for the 2008
fisheries. In 2008, brood year and marine survival indicators were
generally lower than they were in 2007. Given the circumstances the
matrix would have allowed for a total exploitation rate of 11.7
percent. However, uncertainties related to selection of a particular
long-term management strategy are such that it is still prudent to take
a conservative approach to management until those questions can be
resolved. Based on the above described circumstances, NMFS guidance to
the Council was that ocean salmon fisheries, and fisheries in the
mainstem Columbia River be managed subject to a total exploitation rate
limit on LCR coho of 8 percent. As a consequence of this guidance the
Council proposed to limit Council area fisheries to an exploitation
rate of 6 percent recognizing that this provided for some fishing
opportunity in the Columbia River. The resulting coho quota for the
area north of Cape Falcon in 2008 is 44,350 compared to quotas of
178,000, 117,500 and 195,000 in the last three years.
NMFS reinitiated consultation on an earlier biological opinion
related to the effects on LCR Chinook. From 2002-2006 Council fisheries
were managed subject to a total exploitation rate limit of 49 percent
for the ``tule'' component of the listed evolutionarily significant
unit (ESU). Since then, NMFS has been
[[Page 23973]]
engaged in ongoing review of LCR tule Chinook in particular. In 2007,
the exploitation rate limit has been reduced to 42%. In 2008, the
allowable exploitation rate limit was reduced further to 41%. The
reduction in exploitation rate is intended to address the needs of the
ESU and the weaker populations in the ESU. NMFS intends to continue its
review of harvest and seeks to implement changes that are consistent
with the evolving information, the expected evolution of the hatchery
programs, and the long term goal of recovery articulated in the Lower
Columbia Salmon Recovery Plan. NMFS expects that further reductions in
the harvest on naturally-spawning fish may be required. Based on the
guidance provided, the Council proposed to limit Council fisheries such
that the total exploitation rate from all fisheries was 35.8 percent
and thus well below the limit. The Chinook catch quota for the area
north of Cape Falcon in 2008 is 77,500, compared to quotas of 67,500,
107,000 and 135,000 in the last three years. Because fisheries are so
restricted this year NMFS ESA requirements for all other listed
salmonids including Snake River fall Chinook, Puget Sound Chinook, and
California Coastal Chinook will be met.
Emergency Rule
The Council's final recommendation for the ocean salmon fishing
seasons that commence May 1st deviates from the Salmon FMP specifically
with regard to meeting the Sacramento River fall Chinook (SRFC)
conservation objective of 122,000-180,000 natural and hatchery adult
spawners. Under the circumstances, implementation of an Emergency
Action under Magnuson-Stevens Act authority at section 305(c)(2)(B) is
necessary to modify the conservation objective in the Salmon FMP in
order to implement the Council's proposal. The Temporary Rule for
Emergency Action applies to the area between Cape Falcon, Oregon, and
the Oregon/California border.
The conservation objective for SRFC in the Salmon FMP requires a
return of 122,000-180,000 natural and hatchery adult spawners each
year. The preseason forecast for SRFC for 2008 is at a record low, with
a projected escapement of 59,100 hatchery and natural fish absent any
further fishing south of Cape Falcon, OR. Under the Salmon FMP, a
``conservation alert'' is triggered when a stock is projected to fall
below its conservation objective. Under such circumstances the Council
is required to close salmon fisheries within Council jurisdiction that
impact the stock.
Because of differences in stock composition and in how salmon
fisheries are managed, the Council splits its management decisions
geographically into North of Cape Falcon, OR (managed mostly by
quotas), and South of Cape Falcon (managed mostly by seasons and trip
limits). Cape Falcon is near the Columbia River in Oregon. Because
annual management measures must meet the Salmon FMP conservation
objectives of all the key stocks, fishing seasons are usually limited
by the necessity of meeting the requirements for the least abundant
stock. South of Cape Falcon, the dramatically low abundance of
Sacramento River fall Chinook was the primary constraint for fisheries
in Oregon and California.
When defining the area of impact NMFS considers the distribution of
the stock, the magnitude of harvest impacts at the margin of that
distribution and the relation of that distribution to existing fishery
management boundaries. In 2006, when Klamath River fall Chinook were
projected to be below their conservation objective, the area of impact
was determined to be from Cape Falcon, Oregon, to Point Sur,
California. This was designated as the impact area based on estimates
indicating that the vast majority of harvest impacts, in this case 99%,
occurred in the area. In 2008, there is a similar conservation concern
for Sacramento River fall Chinook. Using the same rationale for SRFC,
the area of impact that would be closed pursuant to the Salmon FMP
would include the area from Cape Falcon, Oregon, to the U.S./Mexico
Border where the vast majority of harvest impacts on SRFC occur. In
this case, NMFS estimated that 99% of harvest mortality occurs in the
area South of Cape Falcon, Oregon. Given the circumstances, any fishing
in the impact area would have to be implemented through an emergency
rule that modifies the Salmon FMP.
The process for setting this year's management measures was
controversial given the proposed reductions in fishing opportunities
and potential extensive closures. At both the March and April Council
meetings, and the coastwide public hearings, there was substantial
public participation and comments from the various fishing sectors and
related industries regarding the proposed 2008 management measures. The
majority of the comments expressed great concern that elimination of
the ocean fisheries that impact SRFC, which typically comprises the
majority of the catch in California and Oregon, would cause severe
economic hardship to coastal communities in California and Oregon.
Those testifying also spoke at length regarding concerns for the demise
of the infrastructure that supports the fishing industry, as well as
other related businesses, and thus the long-term consequences of a
fishery closure or severe restrictions in 2008. The Council, in order
to address the conservation concerns for SRFC, recommended closing the
commercial salmon fishery South of Cape Falcon Oregon. They also
recommended no recreational fishery off California. In order to protect
SRFC and mitigate to some extent the adverse economic and social
consequences of this year's restricted fishing season the Council
recommended an emergency rule to implement only a small recreational
fishery for hatchery marked coho in Oregon with a 9,000 fish quota,
from Cape Falcon, OR, to the California/Oregon border from June 22
through August 31, 2008.
For NMFS, the key issue in considering whether to approve the
emergency rule was whether the proposed fishery would jeopardize the
capacity of the fishery to produce maximum sustainable yield (MSY) on a
continuing basis. NMFS used available information provided by the
Council's advisory bodies to assess the potential risk to SRFC. The
method developed by the STT for modeling impacts to SRFC was reviewed
favorably by the Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee. Using
this model, the projected mortality of SRFC is 55 fish. Furthermore,
not all of these fish would be expected to return to the Sacramento
River this year. Some of the fish would not mature and would remain in
the ocean in 2008. Others would be expected to die of natural causes.
The estimate of escapement absent fishing is 59,100; the proposed
fishery would reduce the escapement by a few tens of fish. Given the
magnitude of the fishery and the available information on anticipated
impacts to SRFC, NMFS concluded that the marginal decrease in
escapement that will result from the limited fishery in the SRFC impact
area proposed for 2008 does not jeopardize the capacity of the stock to
produce MSY on a continuing basis. NMFS further concluded that the
limited fishery in the SRFC impact area does not increase the
conservation concerns for SRFC while mitigating, to the degree
possible, some adverse effects to the fishing community. The vote of
the Council reflects their concurrence with NMFS' conclusion. The
Temporary Rule for Emergency Action to approve the 2008 annual
management measures for the west coast ocean salmon fisheries
[[Page 23974]]
would cover the area from Cape Falcon, Oregon, to the Oregon/California
Border where the limited recreational marked hatchery coho fishery will
occur.
Management Measures for 2008 Fisheries
The Council-recommended ocean harvest levels and management
measures for 2008 fisheries are designed to apportion the burden of
protecting the weak stocks identified and discussed in PRE I equitably
among ocean fisheries and to allow maximum harvest of natural and
hatchery runs surplus to inside fishery and spawning needs. NMFS finds
the Council's recommendations responsive to the goals of the Salmon
FMP, the requirements of the resource, and the socio-economic factors
affecting resource users. The recommendations are consistent with the
requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and U.S. obligations to Indian tribes with federally
recognized fishing rights, and U.S. international obligations regarding
Pacific salmon. Accordingly, NMFS has adopted them.
North of Cape Falcon the 2008 management measures have a higher
Chinook quota and a substantially lower coho quota relative to the 2008
season. The total allowable catch for 2008 is 77,500 Chinook and 44,350
marked hatchery coho; these fisheries are restricted to protect
threatened Columbia River wild fall Chinook, threatened Lower Columbia
natural coho, threatened Oregon Coastal Natural coho, and Hood Canal
natural coho. Washington coastal and Puget Sound Chinook generally
migrate to the far north and are not greatly affected by ocean harvests
from Cape Falcon, OR, to the U.S.-Canada border. Nevertheless, ocean
fisheries in combination with fisheries inside Puget Sound were
restricted in order to meet ESA related conservation objectives for
Puget Sound Chinook. North of Cape Alava, WA, the Council recommends a
provision prohibiting retention of chum salmon during August and
September to protect ESA listed Hood Canal summer chum. The Council has
recommended such a prohibition for the last seven years.
South of Cape Falcon, OR, the commercial salmon fishery is closed
in 2008 because of the projected failure of the Sacramento River Fall
Chinook to reach their conservation objective, even with no fishing on
the stock. For the same reason, the only recreational fishery that will
occur South of Cape Falcon is a small selective fishery off Oregon with
a 9,000-fish quota of marked hatchery coho. This is the fifth year the
selective fishery includes the southern coastal area of Oregon. The
Council's recommendations are below the 8-percent exploitation rate
permitted under ESA limitations for Oregon Coast Natural (OCN) coho
stocks, with an expected 6.9-percent OCN coho exploitation rate. The
expected ocean exploitation rate for Rogue/Klamath coho is 1.0 percent,
and is also below its exploitation rate limit of 13.0 percent.
Treaty Indian Fisheries for 2008
The treaty-Indian commercial troll fishery quota is 37,500 Chinook
in ocean management areas and Washington State Statistical Area 4B
combined. This quota is slightly higher than the 35,000-Chinook quota
in 2007. The fisheries include a Chinook-directed fishery in May and
June (under a quota of 20,000 Chinook) and an all-salmon season
beginning July 1 with a 17,500 Chinook sub-quota. The coho quota for
the treaty-Indian troll fishery in ocean management areas, including
Washington State Statistical Area 4B for the July-September period is
20,000 coho, a decrease from the 38,500-coho quota in 2007.
Management Measures for 2009 Fisheries
The timing of the March and April Council meetings makes it
impracticable for the Council to recommend fishing seasons that begin
before May 1 of the same year. Therefore, the 2009 fishing seasons
opening earlier than May 1 are also established in this action. The
Council recommended, and NMFS concurs, that the commercial season off
Oregon from Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain, from Humbug Mountain to the
Oregon/California border and the recreational season off Oregon from
Cape Falcon to the Oregon/California border will open in 2009 as
indicated in the Season Description section. At the March 2009 meeting,
the Council may consider inseason recommendations to adjust the
commercial season prior to May 1 in the areas off Oregon.
Inseason Actions
The following sections set out the management regime for the salmon
fishery. Open seasons and days are described in sections 1, 2, and 3 of
the 2008 management measures. Inseason closures in the commercial and
recreational fisheries are announced on the NMFS hotline and through
the U.S. Coast Guard Notice to Mariners as described in section 6.
Other inseason adjustments to management measures are also announced on
the hotline and through the Notice to Mariners. Inseason actions will
also be published in the Federal Register as soon as practicable.
The following are the management measures recommended by the
Council and approved and implemented here for 2008 and, as specified,
for 2009.
Section 1. Commercial Management Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in parts A, B, and C
that must be followed for lawful participation in the fishery. Each
fishing area identified in part A specifies the fishing area by
geographic boundaries from north to south, the open seasons for the
area, the salmon species allowed to be caught during the seasons,
and any other special restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C specifies special
requirements, definitions, restrictions and exceptions.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR U.S./Canada Border to Cape Falcon
May 3 through earlier of June 30 or 11,700 Chinook quota. Saturday
through Tuesday with a landing and possession limit of 50 Chinook per
vessel for each open period north of Leadbetter Point or 50 Chinook
south of Leadbetter Point (c.1). All salmon except coho (c.7). Cape
Flattery, Mandatory Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area, and Columbia
Control Zones closed (c.5). See gear restrictions and definitions (c.2,
C.3). Oregon State regulations require that fishers south of Cape
Falcon, OR intending to fish within this area notify the Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) before transiting the Cape
Falcon, OR line (45[deg]46'00'' N. lat.) at the following number: 541-
867-0300 Ext. 271. Vessels must land and deliver their fish within 24
hours of any closure of this fishery. Under state law, vessels must
report their catch on a state fish receiving ticket. Vessels fishing or
in possession of salmon while fishing north of Leadbetter Point must
land and deliver their fish within the area and north of Leadbetter
Point. Vessels fishing or in possession of salmon while fishing south
of Leadbetter Point must land and deliver their fish within the area
and south of Leadbetter Point, except that Oregon permitted vessels may
also land their fish in Garibaldi, Oregon. Oregon State regulations
require that all fishers landing salmon into Oregon from any fishery
between Leadbetter Point, Washington and Cape Falcon, Oregon must
notify ODFW within one hour of delivery or prior to transport away from
the port of landing by calling 541-867-0300 Ext. 271. Notification
shall include vessel name and number, number of salmon by
[[Page 23975S]]
species, port of landing and location of delivery, and estimated time
of delivery. Inseason actions may modify harvest guidelines in later
fisheries to achieve or prevent exceeding the overall allowable troll
harvest impacts (c.8).
July 1 through earlier of September 16 or 8,300 preseason Chinook
guideline (c.8) or a 4,000-marked coho quota (C.8.d). Open July 1-2,
then Saturday through Tuesday thereafter. Landing and possession limit
of 35 Chinook and 25 coho per vessel per open period north of
Leadbetter Point or 35 Chinook and 25 coho south of Leadbetter Point
(c.1). All Salmon except no chum retention north of Cape Alava,
Washington in August and September (c.7). All coho must have a healed
adipose fin clip (C.8.d). Gear restricted to plugs six inches (15.24
cm) or longer. See gear restrictions and definitions (c.2, C.3). Cape
Flattery, Mandatory Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area, and Columbia
Control Zones closed (c.5). Oregon State regulations require that
fishers south of Cape Falcon, OR intending to fish within this area
notify Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife before transiting the
Cape Falcon, OR line (45[deg]46'00'' N. lat.) at the following number:
541-867-0300 Ext. 271. Vessels must land and deliver their fish within
24 hours of any closure of this fishery. Under state law, vessels must
report their catch on a state fish receiving ticket. Vessels fishing or
in possession of salmon while fishing north of Leadbetter Point must
land and deliver their fish within the area and north of Leadbetter
Point. Vessels fishing or in possession of salmon while fishing south
of Leadbetter Point must land and deliver their fish within the area
and south of Leadbetter Point, except that Oregon permitted vessels may
also land their fish in Garibaldi, Oregon. Oregon State regulations
require that all fishers landing salmon into Oregon from any fishery
between Leadbetter Point, Washington and Cape Falcon, Oregon must
notify ODFW within one hour of delivery or prior to transport away from
the port of landing by calling 541-867-0300 Ext. 271. Notification
shall include vessel name and number, number of salmon by species, port
of landing and location of delivery, and estimated time of delivery.
Inseason actions may modify harvest guidelines in later fisheries to
achieve or prevent exceeding the overall allowable troll harvest
impacts (c.8).
South of Cape Falcon, OR Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
Closed in 2008. In 2009, the season will open March 15 for all
salmon except coho. This opening could be modified following Council
review at its March 2009 meeting.
Humbug Mountain to Oregon/California Border
Closed in 2008. In 2009, the season will open March 15 for all
salmon except coho. This opening could be modified following Council
review at its March 2009 meeting.
Oregon/California Border to U.S./Mexico Border Closed.
B. Minimum Size (Inches) (See C.1)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chinook Coho
Area (when open) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Pink
Total length Head-off Total length Head-off
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon, OR........... 28.0 21.5 16.0 12.0 None
Cape Falcon to OR-CA Border........ 28.0 21.5 16.0 12.0 ...........
OR-CA Border to US-Mexico Border... .............. .............. .............. .............. ...........
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 28.0 in = 71.1 cm, 27.0 in = 68.6 cm, 26.0 in = 66.0 cm, 21.5 in = 54.6 cm, 19.5 in = 49.5
cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0 in = 30.5 cm.
C. Special Requirements, Definitions, Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Compliance with Minimum Size or Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special requirements for the area being
fished and the area in which they are landed if the area is open.
Salmon may be landed in an area that has been closed more than 96 hours
only if they meet the minimum size, landing/possession limit, or other
special requirements for the area in which they were caught. Salmon may
be landed in an area that has been closed less than 96 hours only if
they meet the minimum size, landing/possession limit, or other special
requirements for the areas in which they were caught and landed.
States may require fish landing/receiving tickets to be kept on
board the vessel for 90 days after landing to account for all previous
salmon landings.
C.2. Gear Restrictions: Salmon May Be Taken Only by Hook and Line Using
Barbless Hooks
a. Single point, single shank, barbless hooks are required in all
fisheries.
b. Cape Falcon, Oregon, to the OR/CA border: No more than 4 spreads
are allowed per line.
c. OR/CA border to U.S./Mexico border: No more than 6 lines are
allowed per vessel, and barbless circle hooks are required when fishing
with bait by any means other than trolling.
C.3. Gear Definitions
Trolling defined: Fishing from a boat or floating device that is
making way by means of a source of power, other than drifting by means
of the prevailing water current or weather conditions.
Troll fishing gear defined: One or more lines that drag hooks
behind a moving fishing vessel. In that portion of the fishery
management area (FMA) off Oregon and Washington, the line or lines must
be affixed to the vessel and must not be intentionally disengaged from
the vessel at any time during the fishing operation.
Spread defined: A single leader connected to an individual lure or
bait.
Circle hook defined: A hook with a generally circular shape and a
point which turns inward, pointing directly to the shank at a 90[deg]
angle.
C.4. Transit Through Closed Areas with Salmon on Board
It is unlawful for a vessel to have troll or recreational gear in
the water while transiting any area closed to fishing for a certain
species of salmon, while possessing that species of salmon; however,
fishing for species other than salmon is not prohibited if the area is
open for such species, and no salmon are in possession.
C.5. Control Zone Definitions
a. Cape Flattery Control Zone--The area from Cape Flattery
(48[deg]23'00'' N. lat.) to the northern boundary of the U.S. EEZ; and
the area from Cape Flattery south to Cape Alava (48[deg]10'00'' N.
lat.) and east of 125[deg]05'00'' W. long.
b. Mandatory Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area--The area in
Washington Marine Catch Area 3 from 48[deg]00.00' N. lat.;
125[deg]14.00' W. long. to
[[Page 23976]]
48[deg]02.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]14.00' W. long. to 48[deg]02.00' N.
lat.; 125[deg]16.50' W. long. to 48[deg]00.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]16.50'
W. long. and connecting back to 48[deg]00.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]14.00'
W. long.
c. Columbia Control Zone--An area at the Columbia River mouth,
bounded on the west by a line running northeast/southwest between the
red lighted Buoy 4 (46[deg]13'35'' N. lat., 124[deg]06'50'' W.
long.) and the green lighted Buoy 7 (46[deg]15'09'' N. lat.,
124[deg]06'16'' W. long.); on the east, by the Buoy 10 line
which bears north/south at 357[deg] true from the south jetty at
46[deg]14'00'' N. lat., 124[deg]03'07'' W. long. to its intersection
with the north jetty; on the north, by a line running northeast/
southwest between the green lighted Buoy 7 to the tip of the
north jetty (46[deg]15'48'' N. lat., 124[deg]05'20'' W. long.), and
then along the north jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy
10 line; and, on the south, by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy 4 and tip of the south
jetty (46[deg]14'03'' N. lat., 124[deg]04'05'' W. long.), and then
along the south jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy
10 line.
d. Bandon High Spot Control Zone--The area west of a line between
43[deg]07'00'' N. lat.; 124[deg]37'00'' W. long. and 42[deg]40'30'' N.
lat; 124[deg] 52'0'' W. long. extending to the western edge of the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
e. Klamath Control Zone--The ocean area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41[deg]38'48'' N. lat. (approximately six
nautical miles north of the Klamath River mouth); on the west, by
124[deg]23'00'' W. long. (approximately 12 nautical miles off shore);
and on the south, by 41[deg]26'48'' N. lat. (approximately six nautical
miles south of the Klamath River mouth).
C.6. Notification When Unsafe Conditions Prevent Compliance With
Regulations
If prevented by unsafe weather conditions or mechanical problems
from meeting special management area landing restrictions, vessels must
notify the U.S. Coast Guard and receive acknowledgment of such
notification prior to leaving the area. This notification shall include
the name of the vessel, port where delivery will be made, approximate
amount of salmon (by species) on board, and the estimated time of
arrival.
C.7. Incidental Halibut Harvest
During authorized periods, the operator of a vessel that has been
issued an incidental halibut harvest license may retain Pacific halibut
caught incidentally in Area 2A while trolling for salmon. Halibut
retained must be no less than 32 inches (81.28 cm) in total length,
measured from the tip of the lower jaw with the mouth closed to the
extreme end of the middle of the tail, and must be landed with the head
on. License applications for incidental harvest must be obtained from
the International Pacific Halibut Commission (phone: 206-634-1838).
Applicants must apply prior to April 1 of each year. Incidental harvest
is authorized only during May and June troll seasons and after June 30
if quota remains and if announced on the NMFS hotline (phone: 800-662-
9825). ODFW and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) will
monitor landings. If the landings are projected to exceed the 37,707
pound preseason allocation or the total Area 2A non-Indian commercial
halibut allocation, NMFS will take inseason action to close the
incidental halibut fishery.
Beginning May 1, license holders may land no more than one Pacific
halibut per each two Chinook, except one Pacific halibut may be landed
without meeting the ratio requirement, and no more than 35 halibut may
be landed per open period. Pacific halibut retained must be no less
than 32 inches in total length (with head on).
A ``C-shaped'' yelloweye rockfish conservation area (YRCA) is an
area to be voluntarily avoided for salmon trolling. NMFS and the
Council request salmon trollers voluntarily avoid this area in order to
protect yelloweye rockfish. The area is defined in the Pacific Council
Halibut Catch Sharing Plan in the North Coast subarea (Washington
marine area 3), with the following coordinates in the order listed:
48[deg]18' N. lat.; 125[deg]18' W. long.;
48[deg]18' N. lat.; 124[deg]59' W. long.;
48[deg]11' N. lat.; 124[deg]59' W. long.;
48[deg]11' N. lat.; 125[deg]11' W. long.;
48[deg]04' N. lat.; 125[deg]11' W. long.;
48[deg]04' N. lat.; 124[deg]59' W. long.;
48[deg]00' N. lat.; 124[deg]59' W. long.;
48[deg]00' N. lat.; 125[deg]18' W. long.;
and connecting back to 48[deg]18' N. lat.; 125[deg]18' W. long.
C.8. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason actions or modifications already
noted under the season description, the following inseason guidance is
provided to NMFS:
a. Chinook remaining from the May through June non-Indian
commercial troll harvest guideline north of Cape Falcon may be
transferred to the July through September harvest guideline on a
fishery impact equivalent basis.
b. NMFS may transfer fish between the recreational and commercial
fisheries north of Cape Falcon if there is agreement among the areas'
representatives on the Salmon Advisory Subpanel (SAS).
c. At the March 2009 meeting, the Council will consider inseason
recommendations for special regulations for any experimental fisheries
(proposals must meet Council protocol and be received in November
2008).
d. If retention of unmarked coho is permitted in the area from the
U.S./Canada border to Cape Falcon, Oregon, by inseason action, the
allowable coho quota will be adjusted to ensure preseason projected
mortality of critical stocks is not exceeded.
C.9. Consistent with Council Management Objectives
a. The State of Oregon may establish additional late-season
fisheries in state waters. Check state regulations for details.
b. The State of California may establish limited fisheries in
selected state waters.
C.10. For the purposes of California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG)
Code, section 8232.5, the definition of the Klamath Management Zone
(KMZ) for the ocean salmon season shall be that area from Humbug Mt.,
Oregon, to Horse Mt., California.
Section 2. Recreational Management Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in parts A, B, and C
that must be followed for lawful participation in the fishery. Each
fishing area identified in part A specifies the fishing area by
geographic boundaries from north to south, the open seasons for the
area, the salmon species allowed to be caught during the seasons,
and any other special restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C specifies special
requirements, definitions, restrictions and exceptions.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR U.S./Canada Border to Leadbetter Point
June 1 through earlier of June 28 or a quota of 8,200 Chinook
(c.5). Tuesday through Saturday north of the Queets River (Neah Bay and
La Push Subareas) and Sunday through Thursday south of the Queets River
(Westport subarea). Chinook only, one fish per day. Chinook 24-inch
(60.96 cm) total length minimum size limit (B). See gear restrictions
(c.2). Inseason management may be used to sustain season length and
keep harvest within the overall
[[Page 23977]]
Chinook recreational TAC for north of Cape Falcon (c.5).
Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon (Columbia River Subarea)
June 1 through earlier of June 28 or a subarea guideline of 5,300
Chinook (c.5). Seven days per week. Chinook only, one fish per day.
Chinook 24-inch (60.96 cm) total length minimum size limit (B). See
gear restrictions (c.2). Inseason management may be used to sustain
season length and keep harvest within the overall Chinook recreational
TAC for north of Cape Falcon (c.5).
U.S./Canada Border to Cape Alava (Neah Bay)
July 1 through earlier of September 13 or 2,060 marked coho subarea
quota with a subarea guideline of 950 Chinook (c.5). Tuesday through
Saturday. All salmon two fish per day, no more than one of which can be
a Chinook and no chum retention August 1 through Sept. 13. Chinook 24-
inch total length minimum size limit (B). All retained coho must be
marked with a healed adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions (c.2).
Closed east of a true north-south line running through Sail Rock in
July. Beginning August 1, Chinook non-retention east of the Bonilla-
Tatoosh line (C.4.a) during Council managed ocean fishery. Inseason
management may be used to sustain season length and keep harvest within
the overall Chinook recreational TAC for north of Cape Falcon (C.5).
Cape Alava to Queets River (La Push Subarea)
July 1 through earlier of September 13 or 540 marked coho subarea
quota with a subarea guideline of 350 Chinook (C5). September 20
through earlier of October 5 or 50 marked coho quota or 100 Chinook
quota (C5): In the area north of 47[deg]50[min]00[sec] N. lat. and
south of 48[deg]00[min]00[sec] N. lat. (C.6). Tuesday through Saturday
through September 13. All salmon, two fish per day, no more than one of
which can be a Chinook. Chinook 24-inch (60.96 cm) total length minimum
size limit (B). All retained coho must be marked with a healed adipose
fin clip. See gear restrictions (C.2). Inseason management may be used
to sustain season length and keep harvest within the overall Chinook
recreational TAC for north of Cape Falcon (C.5).
Queets River to Leadbetter Point (Westport Subarea)
June 29 through earlier of September 13 or 7,520 marked coho
subarea quota with a subarea guideline of 5,100 Chinook (C.5). Sunday
through Thursday. All salmon, two fish per day, no more than one of
which can be a Chinook. Chinook 24-inch total length minimum size limit
(B). All retained coho must be marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See gear restrictions and definitions (C.2, C.3). Grays Harbor Control
Zone closed beginning August 1 (C.4.b). Inseason management may be used
to sustain season length and keep harvest within the overall Chinook
recreational TAC for north of Cape Falcon (C.5).
Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon (Columbia River Subarea)
June 29 through earlier of September 30 or 10,180 marked coho
subarea quota with any remainder of the 5,300 Chinook subarea guideline
from the June Chinook directed fishery (C.5). Sunday through Thursday.
All salmon, two fish per day, no more than one of which can be a
Chinook. Chinook 24-inch (60.96 cm) total length minimum size limit
(B). All retained coho must be marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See gear restrictions and definitions (C.2, C.3). Columbia Control Zone
closed (C.4.c). Inseason management may be used to sustain season
length and keep harvest within the overall Chinook recreational TAC for
north of Cape Falcon (C.5).
South of Cape Falcon, OR Cape Falcon to the Oregon/California Border
June 22 through earlier of August 31 or a landed catch of 9,000
marked coho (C.6). Seven days per week. All salmon except Chinook, two
fish per day (C.1). All retained coho must be marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. Fishing in the Stonewall Bank groundfish conservation
area restricted to trolling only on days the all depth recreational
halibut fishery is open (see 70 FR 20304, June 24, 2005, and call the
halibut fishing hotline 1-800-662-9825 for additional dates) (C.3,
C.4.d). Open days may be adjusted inseason to utilize the available
quota (C.5).
In 2009, the season between Cape Falcon and Humbug Mt. will open
March 15 for all salmon except coho, two fish per day (C.1). Chinook
minimum size limit of 24 inches (60.96 cm) total length (B).
Oregon/California Border to U.S./Mexico Border
Closed.
B. Minimum Size (Total Length in Inches) (See C.1)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area (when open) Chinook Coho Pink
------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon, OR............... 24.0 16.0 None
Cape Falcon to OR-CA Border............ 24.0 16.0 None
OR-CA Border to Horse Mountain......... ......... 16.0 .........
Horse Mt. to U.S.-Mexico Border........ ......... ......... .........
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 26.0 in = 66.0 cm, 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 20.0 in = 50.8
cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm.
C. Special Requirements, Definitions, Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size and Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must meet the minimum size or other
special requirements for the area being fished and the area in which
they are landed if that area is open. Salmon may be landed in an area
that is closed only if they meet the minimum size or other special
requirements for the area in which they were caught.
Ocean Boat Limits: Off the coast of Washington, Oregon, and
California, each fisher aboard a vessel may continue to use angling
gear until the combined daily limits of salmon for all licensed and
juvenile anglers aboard has been attained (additional state
restrictions may apply).
C.2. Gear Restrictions: Salmon May be Taken Only by Hook and Line Using
Barbless Hooks
All persons fishing for salmon, and all persons fishing from a boat
with salmon on board, must meet the gear restrictions listed below for
specific areas or seasons.
a. U.S./Canada Border to Point Conception, California: No more than
one rod may be used per angler; and no more than two single point,
single shank barbless hooks are required for all fishing gear. [Note:
ODFW regulations in the state-water fishery off Tillamook Bay may allow
the use of barbed hooks to be consistent with inside regulations.]
b. Cape Falcon, Oregon, to Point Conception, California: Anglers
must
[[Page 23978]]
use no more than two single point, single shank, barbless hooks.
c. Horse Mt., California, to Point Conception, California: Single
point, single shank, barbless circle hooks (below) are required when
fishing with bait by any means other than trolling, and no more than
two such hooks shall be used. When angling with two hooks, the distance
between the hooks must not exceed five inches when measured from the
top of the eye of the top hook to the inner base of the curve of the
lower hook, and both hooks must be permanently tied in place (hard
tied). Circle hooks are not required when artificial lures are used
without bait.
C.3. Gear Definitions
a. Recreational fishing gear defined: Angling tackle consisting of
a line with no more than one artificial lure or natural bait attached.
Off Oregon and Washington, the line must be attached to a rod and reel
held by hand or closely attended; the rod and reel must be held by hand
while playing a hooked fish. No person may use more than one rod and
line while fishing off Oregon or Washington. Off California, the line
must be attached to a rod and reel held by hand or closely attended.
Weights directly attached to a line may not exceed four pounds (1.8
kg). While fishing off California north of Point Conception, no person
fishing for salmon, and no person fishing from a boat with salmon on
board, may use more than one rod and line. Fishing includes any
activity which can reasonably be expected to result in the catching,
taking, or harvesting of fish.
b. Trolling defined: Angling from a boat or floating device that is
making way by means of a source of power, other than drifting by means
of the prevailing water current or weather conditions.
c. Circle hook defined: A hook with a generally circular shape and
a point which turns inward, pointing directly to the shank at a 90[deg]
angle.
C.4. Control Zone Definitions
a. The Bonilla-Tatoosh Line: A line running from the western end of
Cape Flattery to Tatoosh Island Lighthouse (48[deg]23'30'' N. lat.,
124[deg]44'12'' W. long.) to the buoy adjacent to Duntze Rock
(48[deg]28'00'' N. lat., 124[deg]45'00'' W. long.), then in a straight
line to Bonilla Point (48[deg]35'30'' N. lat., 124[deg]43'00'' W.
long.) on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
b. Grays Harbor Control Zone--The area defined by a line drawn from
the Westport Lighthouse (46[deg]53[min]18[sec] N. lat.,
124[deg]07[min]01[sec] W. long.) to Buoy 2
(46[deg]52[min]42[sec] N. lat., 124[deg]12'42'' W. long.) to Buoy
3 (46[deg]55[min]00[sec] N. lat., 124[deg]14'48'' W. long.) to
the Grays Harbor north jetty (46[deg]36[min]00[sec] N. lat.,
124[deg]10'51'' W. long.).
c. Columbia Control Zone: An area at the Columbia River mouth,
bounded on the west by a line running northeast/southwest between the
red lighted Buoy 4 (46[deg]13'35'' N. lat., 124[deg]06'50'' W.
long.) and the green lighted Buoy 7 (46[deg]15'09'' N. lat.,
124[deg]06'16'' W. long.); on the east, by the Buoy 10 line
which bears north/south at 357[deg] true from the south jetty at
46[deg]14'00'' N. lat., 124[deg]03'07'' W. long. to its intersection
with the north jetty; on the north, by a line running northeast/
southwest between the green lighted Buoy 7 to the tip of the
north jetty (46[deg]15'48'' N. lat., 124[deg]05'20'' W. long. and then
along the north jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy
10 line; and on the south, by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy 4 and tip of the south
jetty (46[deg]14'03'' N. lat., 124[deg]04'05'' W. long.), and then
along the south jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy
10 line.
d. Stonewall Bank Groundfish Conservation Area: The area defined by
the following coordinates in the order listed:
44[deg]37.46' N. lat.; 124[deg]24.92' W. long.;
44[deg]37.46' N. lat.; 124[deg]23.63' W. long.;
44[deg]28.71' N. lat.; 124[deg]21.80' W. long.;
44[deg]28.71' N. lat.; 124[deg]24.10' W. long.;
44[deg]31.42' N. lat.; 124[deg]25.47' W. long.;
and connecting back to 44[deg]37.46' N. lat.; 124[deg]24.92' W. long.
e. Klamath Control Zone: The ocean area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41[deg]38'48[sec] N. lat. (approximately six
nautical miles north of the Klamath River mouth); on the west, by
124[deg]23'00[sec] W. long. (approximately 12 nautical miles off
shore); and, on the south, by 41[deg]26'48[sec] N. lat. (approximately
6 nautical miles south of the Klamath River mouth).
C.5. Inseason Management
Regulatory modifications may become necessary inseason to meet
preseason management objectives such as quotas, harvest guidelines, and
season duration. In addition to standard inseason actions or
modifications already noted under the season description, the following
inseason guidance is provided by NMFS:
a. Actions could include modifications to bag limits, or days open
to fishing, and extensions or reductions in areas open to fishing.
b. Coho may be transferred inseason among recreational subareas
north of Cape Falcon on an impact neutral basis to help meet the
recreational season duration objectives (for each subarea) after
conferring with representatives of the affected ports and the Council's
SAS recreational representatives north of Cape Falcon.
c. Chinook and coho may be transferred between the recreational and
commercial fisheries north of Cape Falcon on an impact neutral basis if
there is agreement among the representatives of the Salmon Advisory
Subpanel (SAS).
d. If retention of unmarked coho is permitted in the area from the
U.S./Canada border to Cape Falcon, Oregon, by inseason action, the
allowable coho quota will be adjusted to ensure preseason projected
mortality of critical stocks is not exceeded.
C.6. Additional Seasons in State Territorial Waters
Consistent with Council management objectives, the States of
Washington, Oregon, and California may establish limited seasons in
state waters. Oregon State-water fisheries are limited to Chinook
salmon. Check state regulations for details.
Section 3. Treaty Indian Management Measures for 2008 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Note: This section contains restrictions in parts A, B, and C
which must be followed for lawful participation in the fishery.
A. Season Descriptions
U.S./Canada Border to Cape Falcon
May 1 through the earlier of June 30 or 20,000 Chinook quota. All
salmon except coho. If the Chinook quota for the May-June fishery is
not fully utilized, the excess fish cannot be transferred into the
later all-salmon season. If the Chinook quota is exceeded, the excess
will be deducted from the later all-salmon season. See size limit (B)
and other restrictions (C).
July 1 through the earlier of September 15, or 17,500 preseason
Chinook quota, or 20,000 coho quota.
All Salmon. See size limit (B) and other restrictions (C).
[[Page 23979]]
B. Minimum Size (Inches)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chinook Coho
Area (when open) -------------------------------------------------------------------- Pink
Total length Head-off Total length Head-off
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon, OR........................................... 24.0 18.0 16.0 12.0 None.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 18.0 in = 45.7 cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0 in = 30.5 cm.
C. Special Requirements, Restrictions, and Exceptions
C.1. Tribe and Area Boundaries
All boundaries may be changed to include such other areas as may
hereafter be authorized by a Federal court for that tribe's treaty
fishery.
S'KLALLAM--Washington State Statistical Area 4B (All).
MAKAH--Washington State Statistical Area 4B and that portion of the FMA
north of 48[deg]02'15'' N. lat. (Norwegian Memorial) and east of
125[deg]44'00'' W. long.
QUILEUTE--That portion of the FMA between 48[deg]07'36'' N. lat. (Sand
Pt.) and 47[deg]31'42'' N. lat. (Queets River) and east of
125[deg]44'00'' W. long.
HOH--That portion of the FMA between 47[deg]54'18'' N. lat. (Quillayute
River) and 47[deg]21'00'' N. lat. (Quinault River) and east of
125[deg]44'00'' W. long.
QUINAULT--That portion of the FMA between 47[deg]40'06'' N. lat.
(Destruction Island) and 46[deg]53'18'' N. lat. (Point Chehalis) and
east of 125[deg]44'00'' W. long.
C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Single point, single shank, barbless hooks are required in all
fisheries.
b. No more than eight fixed lines per boat.
c. No more than four hand held lines per person in the Makah area
fishery (Washington State Statistical Area 4B and that portion of the
FMA north of 48[deg]02'15'' N. lat. (Norwegian Memorial) and east of
125[deg]44'00'' W. long.)
C.3. Quotas
a. The quotas include troll catches by the S'Klallam and Makah
tribes in Washington State Statistical Area 4B from May 1 through
September 15.
b. The Quileute Tribe will continue a ceremonial and subsistence
fishery during the time frame of September 15 through October 15 in the
same manner as in 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Fish taken during this
fishery are to be counted against treaty troll quotas established for
the 2008 season (estimated harvest during the October ceremonial and
subsistence fishery: 100 Chinook; 200 coho).
C.4. Area Closures
a. The area within a six nautical mile radius of the mouths of the
Queets River (47[deg]31'42'' N. lat.) and the Hoh River (47[deg]45'12''
N. lat.) will be closed to commercial fishing.
b. A closure within two nautical miles of the mouth of the Quinault
River (47[deg]21'00'' N. lat.) may be enacted by the Quinault Nation
and/or the State of Washington and will not adversely affect the
Secretary of Commerce's management regime.
Section 4. Halibut Retention
Under the authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act, NMFS
promulgated regulations governing the Pacific halibut fishery which
appear at 50 CFR part 300, subpart E. On March 7, 2008, NMFS published
a final rule (73 FR 12280) to implement the International Pacific
Halibut Commission's (IPHC) recommendations, to announce fishery
regulations for U.S. waters off Alaska and fishery regulations for
treaty commercial and ceremonial and subsistence fisheries, some
regulations for non-treaty commercial fisheries for U.S. waters off the
West Coast, and approval of and implementation of the Area 2A Pacific
halibut Catch Sharing Plan and the Area 2A management measures for
2008. The regulations and management measures provide that vessels
participating in the salmon troll fishery in Area 2A (all waters off
the States of Washington, Oregon, and California), which have obtained
the appropriate IPHC license, may retain halibut caught incidentally
during authorized periods in conformance with provisions published with
the annual salmon management measures. A salmon troller may participate
in the halibut incidental catch fishery during the salmon troll season
or in the directed commercial fishery targeting halibut, but not both.
The following measures have been approved by the IPHC, and
implemented by NMFS. During authorized periods, the operator of a
vessel that has been issued an incidental halibut harvest license may
retain Pacific halibut caught incidentally in Area 2A while trolling
for salmon. Halibut retained must be no less than 32 inches (81.28 cm)
in total length, measured from the tip of the lower jaw with the mouth
closed to the extreme end of the middle of the tail, and must be landed
with the head on. License applications for incidental harvest must be
obtained from the International Pacific Halibut Commission (phone: 206-
634-1838). Applicants must apply prior to April 1 of each year.
Incidental harvest is authorized only during May and June troll seasons
and after June 30 if quota remains and if announced on the NMFS hotline
(phone: 800-662-9825). ODFW and WDFW will monitor landings. If the
landings are projected to exceed the 37,707 pound preseason allocation
or the total Area 2A non-Indian commercial halibut allocation, NMFS
will take inseason action to close the incidental halibut fishery.
Beginning May 1, license holders may land no more than one Pacific
halibut per each two Chinook, except one Pacific halibut may be landed
without meeting the ratio requirement, and no more than 35 halibut may
be landed per open period. Pacific halibut retained must be no less
than 32 inches in total length (with head on).
NMFS and the Council request that salmon trollers voluntarily avoid
a ``C-shaped'' YRCA (North Coast Recreational YRCA) in order to protect
yelloweye rockfish. The area is defined in the Pacific Council Halibut
Catch Sharing Plan in the North Coast subarea (WA marine area 3)(See
section 1.C.7. for the coordinates).
Section 5. Geographical Landmarks
Wherever the words ``nautical miles off shore'' are used in this
document, the distance is measured from the baseline from which the
territorial sea is measured.
Geographical landmarks referenced in this document are at the
following locations:
Cape Flattery, WA--48[deg]23'00'' N. lat.
Cape Alava, WA--48[deg]10'00'' N. lat.
Queets River, WA--47[deg]31'42'' N. lat.
Leadbetter Point, WA--46[deg]38'10'' N. lat.
Cape Falcon, OR--45[deg]46'00'' N. lat.
Florence South Jetty, OR--44[deg]00'54'' N. lat.
Humbug Mountain, OR--42[deg]40'30'' N. lat.
Oregon-California Border--42[deg]00'00'' N. lat.
Humboldt South Jetty, CA--40[deg]45'53'' N. lat.
Horse Mountain, CA--40[deg]05'00'' N. lat.
Point Arena, CA--38[deg]57'30'' N. lat.
Point Reyes, CA--37[deg]59'44'' N. lat.
Point San Pedro, CA--37[deg]35'40'' N. lat.
Pigeon Point, CA--37[deg]11'00'' N. lat.
[[Page 23980]]
Point Sur, CA--36[deg]18'00'' N. lat.
Point Conception, CA--34[deg]27'00'' N. lat.
Section 6. Inseason Notice Procedures
Actual notice of inseason management actions will be provided by a
telephone hotline administered by the Northwest Region, NMFS, 206-526-
6667 or 800-662-9825, and by U.S. Coast Guard Notice to Mariners
broadcasts. These broadcasts are announced on Channel 16 VHF-FM and
2182 KHz at frequent intervals. The announcements designate the channel
or frequency over which the Notice to Mariners will be immediately
broadcast. Inseason actions will also be filed with the Federal
Register as soon as practicable. Since provisions of these management
measures may be altered by inseason actions, fishermen should monitor
either the telephone hotline or Coast Guard broadcasts for current
information for the area in which they are fishing.
Classification
This rule is necessary for conservation and management and is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The emergency rule temporarily modifying the conservation objective
for Sacramento River fall Chinook is consistent with the agency's
policy on use of emergency actions under the Magnuson-Stevens Act
published at 62 FR 44422 (Thursday, August 21, 1997). The emergency, in
this case, is a consequence of a predicted run size that is less than
the lower end of the 122,000-180,000 spawner escapement range. The run
size forecast was not available until February of 2008 and was thus
unforeseen. These emergency circumstances present serious conservation
and management problems. The emergency regulations provide the
opportunity to address the conservation problem consistent with the
requirement to manage, on a continuing basis, for maximum sustained
yield, and still provide some limited harvest opportunity. Without use
of emergency regulations, the Pacific Coast Salmon Fishery Management
Plan (Salmon FMP) would require closure of all salmon fishing south of
Cape Falcon, Oregon, causing severe social and economic hardship in the
coastal communities. The limited mark-selective recreational coho
fishery off Oregon that will require the emergency regulations to
implement will result in a marginal decrease in the SRFC escapement
while alleviating some adverse effects to the fishing