Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2009 Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Specifications; 2009 Research Set-Aside Projects, 63934-63941 [E8-25707]
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63934
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 209 / Tuesday, October 28, 2008 / Proposed Rules
nautical miles along the 40–fathom
contour, and covers 390 nautical square
miles. It would be closed to all fishing
under the Council’s jurisdiction from
January 1 through April 30 each year.
Amendment 30B also proposes to
extend indefinitely the MadisonSwanson and Steamboat Lumps marine
reserves that are set to expire June 16,
2010. Should ‘‘The Edges’’ restricted
fishing area be implemented, the current
commercial February 15 to March 15
closed season for gag, black grouper and
red grouper would be repealed.
Proposed SWG Provisions of
Amendment 30B
The SWG fishery includes eight
species: gag, red grouper, black grouper,
scamp (until the commercial SWG quota
is reached, at which time scamp in
considered a deep-water grouper),
yellowfin grouper, rock hind, red hind,
and yellowmouth grouper. Amendment
30B would set the commercial SWG
quota as the sum of the gag and red
grouper quotas with an allowance for
other SWG species. Should the gag, red
grouper, or SWG quotas be met, the
entire SWG commercial fishery would
be closed. It is likely the gag quota
would be met prior to the red grouper
or SWG quotas; therefore, Amendment
30B would establish an incidental
harvest trip limit of 200 lb (91 kg) gutted
weight for either gag or red grouper once
either species reaches 80 percent of its
quota. This would allow the SWG
fishery to remain open until one of the
three quotas was met. Proposed ACLs
and AMs for the commercial SWG
fishery would be similar to those
developed for gag and red grouper,
except the commercial SWG fishery
would be closed once the gag, red
grouper, or commercial SWG quota is
met. Should the commercial SWG ACLs
be exceeded despite the closure, the
subsequent year’s quota would be equal
to the previous years.
For the recreational fishery,
Amendment 30B would limit the overall
recreational harvest of SWG species by
instituting a reduced aggregate grouper
bag limit from 5 to 4 fish and a season
closure from February 1 through March
31 for all SWG species.
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1 to 2 red grouper in a reduced 4–fish
grouper aggregate bag limit and prohibit
the recreational harvest of red grouper
and other SWG species from February 1
to March 31. Overall, these measures
should allow the recreational harvest of
red grouper to increase by 17 percent.
To prevent the possibility of red grouper
overfishing, proposed AMs would give
the AA the authority to shorten the
following recreational fishing season
should the ACL be exceeded. The
application of the red grouper AMs
would be the same as those described
above for the gag recreational fishery.
Proposed Federal Compliance
Provisions of Amendment 30B
Proposed Season and Area Closure
Provisions of Amendment 30B
Amendment 30B proposes a new
restricted fishing area called ‘‘The
Edges’’ that would remain in place until
terminated through a subsequent
amendment. This proposed restricted
area is located between the existing
Madison-Swanson and Steamboat
Lumps marine reserves, spans 37
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To improve the effectiveness of the
Federal regulations when there are less
restrictive regulations in state waters,
Amendment 30B proposes to require all
vessels with Federal commercial or forhire reef fish permits comply with the
more restrictive of state or Federal reef
fish regulations when fishing in state
waters.
Proposed Rule for Amendment 30B
A proposed rule that would
implement measures outlined in
Amendment 30B has been received from
the Council. In accordance with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, NMFS is
evaluating Amendment 30B to
determine whether it is consistent with
the FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
and other applicable law. If that
determination is affirmative, NMFS will
publish the proposed rule in the Federal
Register for public review and
comment.
Consideration of Public Comments
Comments received by December 29,
2008, whether specifically directed to
the amendment or the proposed rule,
will be considered by NMFS in its
decision to approve, disapprove, or
partially approve the amendment.
Comments received after that date will
not be considered by NMFS in this
decision. All comments received by
NMFS on the amendment or the
proposed rule during their respective
comment periods will be addressed in
the final rule.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: October 22, 2008.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E8–25711 Filed 10–27–08; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No.0909251266–81274–01]
RIN 0648–XJ96
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2009
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black
Sea Bass Specifications; 2009
Research Set-Aside Projects
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed specifications; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes specifications
for the 2009 summer flounder, scup,
and black sea bass fisheries and
provides notice of three conditionally
approved projects that will be
requesting Exempted Fishing Permits
(EFPs) as part of the Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Council’s
(Council) Research Set-Aside (RSA)
program. The implementing regulations
for the Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Fishery Management
Plan (FMP) require NMFS to publish
specifications for the upcoming fishing
year for each of these species and to
provide an opportunity for public
comment. Furthermore, regulations
under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act) require a notice
to be published to provide interested
parties the opportunity to comment on
applications for EFPs. The intent of this
action is to establish harvest levels that
assure that the target fishing mortality
rates (F) or exploitation rates specified
for these species in the FMP are not
exceeded and to allow for rebuilding of
the stocks as well as to provide notice
of EFP requests, all in accordance with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before November 12, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 0648–XJ96, by any
one of the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal https://
www.regulations.gov.
• Mail and hand delivery: Patricia A.
Kurkul, Regional Administrator, NMFS,
Northeast Regional Office, One
Blackburn Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Mark the outside of the envelope:
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‘‘Comments on 2009 Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass
Specifications.’’
• Fax: (978) 281–9135.
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 (enter N/A in the required
fields, if you wish to remain
anonymous). You may submit
attachments to electronic comments in
Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or
Adobe PDF file formats only.
Copies of the specifications
document, including the Environmental
Assessment, Regulatory Impact Review,
and Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (EA/RIR/IRFA) and other
supporting documents for the
specifications are available from Daniel
Furlong, Executive Director, MidAtlantic Fishery Management Council,
Room 2115, Federal Building, 300 South
Street, Dover, DE 19901–6790. These
documents are also accessible via the
Internet at https://www.nero.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Ruccio, Fishery Policy Analyst,
(978) 281–9104.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Background
The summer flounder, scup, and
black sea bass fisheries are managed
cooperatively by the Council and the
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission (Commission), in
consultation with the New England and
South Atlantic Fishery Management
Councils. The management units
specified in the FMP include summer
flounder (Paralichthys dentatus) in U.S.
waters of the Atlantic Ocean from the
southern border of North Carolina
northward to the U.S./Canada border,
and scup (Stenotomus chrysops) and
black sea bass (Centropristis striata) in
U.S. waters of the Atlantic Ocean from
35°13.3′ N. lat. (the latitude of Cape
Hatteras Lighthouse, Buxton, North
Carolina) northward to the U.S./Canada
border. Implementing regulations for
these fisheries are found at 50 CFR part
648, subpart A (General Provisions),
subpart G (summer flounder), subpart H
(scup), and subpart I (black sea bass).
The summer flounder, scup, and
black sea bass regulations outline the
process for specifying the annual
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commercial quotas and recreational
harvest limits for the summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries, as
well as other management measures
(e.g., mesh requirements, minimum
commercial fish sizes, gear restrictions,
possession restrictions, and area
restrictions) for these fisheries. The
measures are intended to achieve the
annual targets set forth for each species
in the FMP, specified either as an F or
an exploitation rate (the proportion of
fish available at the beginning of the
year that are removed by fishing during
the year). Once the catch limits are
established, they are divided into quotas
based on formulas contained within the
FMP.
The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management
Reauthorization Act of 2006 (MSRA),
signed into law by President Bush on
January 12, 2007, added new
requirements to involve the Council’s
Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) in the specification-setting
process. Specifically, section
302(g)(1)(B) of the MSRA states that an
SSC for each Regional Fishery
Management Council ’’shall provide its
Council ongoing scientific advice for
fishery management decisions,
including recommendations for
acceptable biological catch, preventing
overfishing, maximum sustainable
yield, and achieving rebuilding targets,
and reports on stock status and health,
bycatch, habitat status, social and
economic impacts of management
measures, and sustainability of fishing
practices.’’ The Acceptable Biological
Catch (ABC) is a level of a stock catch
that accounts for the scientific
uncertainty in estimate of that stock’s
defined overfishing level. This new
requirement implemented by the MSRA
was put into practice by the Council for
the first time in the 2009 specification
setting process. The SSC met on July 31,
2008.
The FMP’s implementing regulations
also require that a Monitoring
Committee for each species review the
best available scientific information and
recommend catch limits and other
management measures that will mitigate
management uncertainty and/or
implementation imprecision to ensure
the target F or exploitation rate for each
fishery is not exceeded. The Monitoring
Committees met on August 1, 2008.
The Council and the Commission’s
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea
Bass Management Board (Board)
consider the SSC and Monitoring
Committees’ recommendations and any
public comment and make their own
recommendations. While the Board
action is final, the Council’s
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recommendations must be reviewed by
NMFS to assure that they comply with
FMP objectives and applicable law. The
Council and Board made their
recommendations at a joint meeting
held August 5–7, 2008.
Explanation of RSA
Background: In 2001, regulations
were implemented under Framework
Adjustment 1 to the FMP to allow up to
3 percent of the Total Allowable
Landings (TAL) for each species to be
set aside each year for scientific
research purposes. For the 2009 fishing
year, a Request for Proposals was
published to solicit research proposals
based upon the research priorities that
were identified by the Council (73 FR
7528, February 8, 2008).
NMFS has conditionally approved
three research projects for the harvest of
the portion of the quota that has been
recommended by the Council to be set
aside for research purposes. In
anticipation of receiving applications
for EFPs to conduct this research, the
Assistant Regional Administrator for
Sustainable Fisheries, Northeast Region,
NMFS (Assistant Regional
Administrator), has made a preliminary
determination that the activities
authorized under the EFPs issued in
response to the approved RSA projects
would be consistent with the goals and
objectives of the FMP. However, further
review and consultation may be
necessary before a final determination is
made to issue any EFP.
For informational purposes, these
proposed specifications include a
statement indicating the amount of
quota that has been preliminarily set
aside for research purposes (a
percentage of the TAL for each fishery,
not to exceed 3 percent, as
recommended by the Council and
Board), and a brief description of the
RSA projects, including exemptions
requested, and the amount of RSA
requested for each project. The RSA
amounts may be adjusted, following
consultation with RSA applicants, in
the final rule establishing the 2009
specifications for the summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries. If the
total amount of RSA is not awarded,
NMFS will publish a document in the
Federal Register to restore the unused
amount to the applicable TAL.
For 2008, the conditionally approved
projects may collectively be awarded
the following amounts of RSA: 553,500
lb (251 mt) of summer flounder; 220,200
lb (100 mt) of scup; and 69,000 lb (31
mt) of black sea bass. The projects may
also be collectively awarded up to 1.3
million lb (590 mt) of Loligo squid;
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844,680 (383 mt) of Atlantic bluefish;
and 33,069 lb (15 mt) of butterfish.
2009 RSA Proposal Summaries:
Project number 1 would conduct a
fishery-independent scup survey that
would utilize unvented fish traps fished
on hard bottom areas in southern New
England waters to characterize the size
composition of the scup population.
Survey activities would be conducted
June 15–October 15, 2009, at 10 rocky
bottom study sites located offshore,
where there is a minimal scup pot
fishery and no active trawl fishery, and
at two scup spawning ground sites. Up
to two vessels would conduct the
research survey. Sampling would occur
off the coasts of Rhode Island and
southern Massachusetts. Up to four
vessels would harvest the RSA during
the period January 1–December 31,
2009. The principal investigators have
requested exemptions from trip limits,
gear requirements (excluding marine
mammal avoidance and/or release
devices), and closed seasons for harvest
of RSA species. The preliminary RSA
awarded for this project is 2,000 lb (0.9
mt) of summer flounder; 51,172 lb (23
mt) of scup; and 28,000 lb (13 mt) of
black sea bass.
Project number 2 would conduct a
near-shore trawl survey in Mid-Atlantic
waters between Gay Head,
Massachusetts, and Cape Hatteras,
North Carolina, including both Block
Island and Rhode Island Sounds. A
stratified random sampling of
approximately 200 stations will occur in
depths between 18–60 feet (8–18 m).
The function of the survey would be to
provide stock assessment data for
summer flounder, scup, black sea bass,
Loligo squid, butterfish, Atlantic
bluefish, several species managed by the
Commission such as weakfish and
Atlantic croaker, and unmanaged forage
species. The research aspects of the
trawl survey will be conducted by one
scientific research vessel. This vessel
will operate under a Letter of
Authorization (LOA) as provided for by
the specific exemption for scientific
research activities found at 50 CFR
600.745. Up to 35 vessels will harvest
the RSA January 1–December 31, 2009,
during commercial fishing operations,
except that these vessels have requested
exemptions for closed seasons and trip
limits to harvest the RSA allocated to
the project. The preliminary RSA
awarded to this project is 367,768 lb
(167 mt) of summer flounder; 169,028 lb
(77 mt) of scup; 41,000 lb (19 mt) of
black sea bass; 97,750 lb (44 mt) of
Atlantic bluefish; and 276,827 lb (126
mt) of Loligo squid.
Project number 3 would conduct an
evaluation of discard mortality for
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summer flounder in trawl fisheries.
Combined sources of mortality and
injury quantification that occur as part
of trawling, tracking and tagging, and
scuba diver observation will be utilized
to provide an estimate of trawl-related
mortality. Research sampling will be
conducted adjacent to Little Egg Inlet off
the New Jersey coast. Sampling would
occur on the winter offshore fishing
grounds south and east of Long Island,
New York, between Veatch Canyon and
Hudson Canyon during February-April
2009 and November-December 2009. Up
to six vessels of opportunity will
conduct the research activities and may
simultaneously participate in harvesting
RSA, if the season for summer flounder
is closed or if more fish, above those
needed for the research activities, are
caught than are permitted by possession
limits. The principal investigators have
requested exemption from the
commercial summer flounder minimum
size so that fish smaller than 14 inches
(35.5 cm) may be temporarily retained
to assess viability and to affix tags and
data transmitters. Up to 35 vessels will
harvest the RSA January 1–December
31, 2009, during commercial fishing
operations, except that these vessels
have requested exemptions for closed
seasons and trip limits to harvest the
RSA allocated to the project. The
preliminary RSA awarded to this project
is 183,732 lb (83 mt) of summer
flounder. Regulations under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act require
publication of this notification to
provide interested parties the
opportunity to comment on applications
for proposed EFPs.
Explanation of Quota Adjustments Due
to Quota Overages
This action proposes commercial
quotas based on the proposed TALs and
Total Allowable Catches (TACs) and the
formulas for allocation contained in the
FMP. In 2002, NMFS published final
regulations to implement a regulatory
amendment (67 FR 6877, February 14,
2002) that revised the way in which the
commercial quotas for summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass are
adjusted if landings in any fishing year
exceed the quota allocated (thus
resulting in a quota overage). If NMFS
approves a different TAL or TAC at the
final specifications stage (i.e., in the
final rule), the commercial quotas will
be recalculated based on the formulas in
the FMP. Likewise, if new information
indicates that overages have occurred
and deductions are necessary, NMFS
will publish notice of the adjusted
quotas in the Federal Register. NMFS
anticipates that the information
necessary to determine whether overage
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deductions are necessary will be
available by the time the final
specifications are published. The
commercial quotas contained in these
proposed specifications for summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass are
not adjusted for any overages that have
occurred. The final specifications will
contain quotas that have been fully
adjusted consistent with the procedures
described above.
Summer Flounder
The timeline for completion of the
summer flounder rebuilding program
was extended from January 1, 2010, to
no later than January 1, 2013, by section
120(a) of the MSRA. The Southern
Demersal Working Group (SDWG), a
technical stock assessment group
composed of personnel from the
Northeast Fisheries Science Center
(NEFSC), NMFS Northeast Regional
Office, Council, Commission, state
marine fisheries agencies, academia,
and independently-hired scientists,
conducted a benchmark stock
assessment of summer flounder in 2008.
The recommendations of the SDWG
were externally peer reviewed by
scientists provided by the Center for
Independent Experts (CIE) through the
NEFSC Stock Assessment Workshop
(SAW)/Stock Assessment Review
Committee (SARC) process. The 47th
SARC, which peer reviewed the
benchmark assessment conducted by
the SDWG, upheld the
recommendations of the SDWG
described in the stock assessment,
resulting in changes to the modeling
approach used, adoption of revised F
threshold and F management target
values, and a change in assumed natural
mortality. These changes resulted in
modifications to the stock status
determination criteria. Information
regarding the results of the benchmark
assessment, including summary
information, reports provided by
individual peer reviewers, and the
detailed final assessment document can
be found on the NEFSC SAW/SARC
web page at: https://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/
nefsc/saw/.
The 2008 SDWG benchmark
assessment shows that summer flounder
were not overfished and that overfishing
did not occur in 2007, the year for
which the most recent, complete
fishery-dependent data are available.
The fishing mortality rate in 2007 was
estimated to be 0.288, below the
benchmark assessment’s overfishing
threshold (FMSY=FTHRESHOLD=F35 percentA
A The fishing mortality rate which reduces the
spawning stock biomass per recruit (SSB/R) to 35
percent of the amount present in the absence of
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=0.310) but above the assessmentrecommended management target
(FTARGET=F40 percent=0.255). FMSY is the
fishing mortality rate that, if applied
constantly, would result in maximum
sustainable yield (MSY) from the
summer flounder stock. When
F>FTHRESHOLD, overfishing is considered
to be occurring. Fishing year 2007 is the
first year of the rebuilding program in
which overfishing did not occur on
summer flounder. Spawning stock
biomass (SSB) was estimated to be 95.6
million lbs (43,363 mt) in 2007, about
72 percent of the SSB35 percent (SSBMSY
target proxy reference point) = 132.4
million lbs (60,056 mt). The benchmark
assessment shows that the summer
flounder stock has not been overfished
since 2001. The average recruitment
from 1982 to 2007 is 41.6 million fish.
The 2007 year class is considered
slightly below average at approximately
40.0 million fish.
The SSC, using the updated
assessment information, recommended
to the Council that the 2009 TAL be set
no higher than 19.02 million lb (8,627
mt). Their recommendation was based
on utilizing the benchmark assessmentrecommended FTARGET and related
assessment information and
methodology to derive an ABC that
accounts for scientific uncertainty
within the assessment. The Monitoring
Committee considered the SSC’s ABC
recommendation, the assessment
results, and management uncertainty.
The Monitoring Committee
recommended that the TAL could be set
within a range of 19.02–17.87 million lb
(8,627–8,105 mt) to account for
imprecision associated with
implementation of the management
program.
The Council and Board considered
the SSC and Monitoring Committee
recommendations before adopting a
2009 TAL of 18.45 million lb (8,368 mt)
to recommend to NMFS. This TAL is
the mid-point in the range
recommended by the Monitoring
Committee and is lower than the SSC’s
recommendation for ABC. This TAL has
a 63–percent probability of not
exceeding the F target in 2009 and a 97–
percent probability of constraining
fishing mortality below the overfishing
threshold (FMSY = F35 percent), and is thus
expected to achieve the required stock
rebuilding for summer flounder to
exceed the BMSY target by the January 1,
2013, deadline. This would be a 17–
percent increase from the 2008 TAL of
15.77 million lb (7,153 mt). All other
management measures were
recommended to remain status quo.
The regulations state that the Council
shall recommend, and NMFS shall
implement, measures (including the
TAL) necessary to achieve, with at least
a 50–percent probability of success, a
fishing mortality rate that produces the
maximum yield per recruit (FMAX).
However, Framework Adjustment 7 to
the FMP (Framework 7) was
implemented October 1, 2007 (72 FR
55704), to ensure that the best available
scientific information could be adopted
without delay by the Council for use in
managing summer flounder. As such,
the SDWG benchmark assessment
recommended FMSY=F35 percent is now
the best available fishing mortality rate
that produces the optimum yield per
recruit and is the threshold value for
assessing whether overfishing is
occurring on summer flounder,
replacing FMAX. A 2000 Federal Court
Order (Natural Resources Defense
Council v. Daley, Civil No. 1:99 CV
00221 (JLG)) also requires the annual
summer flounder TAL to have at least
a 50–percent probability of success. As
previously stated, the Council and
Board’s recommended TAL of 18.45
million lb (8,368 mt) has a 97–percent
probability of constraining fishing
mortality below the overfishing
threshold of FMSY=F35 percent and a 63–
percent probability of constraining
fishing mortality below the assessmentrecommended management target of F40
percent. This TAL also has a 83–percent
probability of constraining fishing
mortality below the fishing mortality
level (FREBUILD=0.274) that is expected
to achieve the exact biomass target
(BMSY) required under the rebuilding
plan by January 1, 2013. In the past two
years, TALs with a 75–percent
probability of achieving FREBUILD have
been implemented for the summer
flounder fishery. NMFS is proposing to
implement a TAL of 18.45 million lb
(8,368 mt) for 2009, consistent with the
Council’s and Board’s recommendation.
The FMP specifies that the TAL is to
be allocated 60 percent to the
commercial sector and 40 percent to the
recreational sector; therefore, the initial
TAL would be allocated 11.07 million lb
(5,021 mt) to the commercial sector and
7.38 million lb (3,348 mt) to the
recreational sector. The Council and
Board also agreed to set aside up to 3
percent (553,500 lb (251 mt)) of the
summer flounder TAL for research
activities. After deducting the RSA, the
TAL would be divided into a
commercial quota of 10,737,900 lb
(4,871 mt) and a recreational harvest
limit of 7,158,600 lb (3,247 mt).
Table 1 presents the proposed
allocations by state with and without
the commercial portion of the RSA
deduction. These state quota allocations
are preliminary and are subject to
reductions if there are overages of states
quotas carried over from a previous
fishing year (using the landings
information and procedures described
earlier). Any commercial quota
adjustments to account for overages will
be included in the final rule
implementing these specifications.
TABLE 1—2009 PROPOSED INITIAL SUMMER FLOUNDER STATE COMMERCIAL QUOTAS
Commercial Quota less RSA1
Commercial Quota
State
Percent Share
kg2
lb
kg2
lb
0.04756
5,265
2,388
5,107
2,317
NH
0.00046
51
23
49
22
MA
6.82046
755,025
342,479
732,374
332,205
RI
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ME
15.68298
1,736,106
787,498
1,684,023
763,873
CT
2.25708
249,859
113,336
242,363
109,936
NY
7.64699
846,522
383,982
821,126
372,463
fishing. More generally, FX percent is the fishing
mortality rate that reduces the SSB/R to x percent
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of the level that would exist in the absence of
fishing.
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TABLE 1—2009 PROPOSED INITIAL SUMMER FLOUNDER STATE COMMERCIAL QUOTAS—Continued
Commercial Quota less RSA1
Commercial Quota
State
Percent Share
kg2
lb
kg2
lb
NJ
16.72499
1,851,456
839,821
1,795,913
814,626
DE
0.01779
1,969
893
1,910
866
MD
2.03910
225,728
102,390
218,957
99,319
VA
21.31676
2,359,765
1,070,390
2,288,972
1,038,278
NC
27.44584
3,038,254
1,378,152
2,947,107
1,336,808
100.00001
11,070,001
5,021,353
10,737,901
4,870,712
Total3
1
2
3
Preliminary Research Set-Aside amount is 553,500 lb (251 mt).
Kilograms are as converted from pounds and do not sum to the converted total due to rounding.
Rounding of quotas results in totals exceeding 100 percent.
ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with PROPOSALS
The Commission is expected to
maintain the voluntary measures
currently in place to reduce regulatory
discards that occur as a result of landing
limits established by the states. The
Commission established a system
whereby 15 percent of each state’s quota
would be voluntarily set aside each year
to enable vessels to land an incidental
catch allowance after the directed
fishery has been closed. The intent of
the incidental catch set-aside is to
reduce discards by allowing fishermen
to land summer flounder caught
incidentally in other fisheries during the
year, while also ensuring that the state’s
overall quota is not exceeded. These
Commission set-asides are not included
in these proposed specifications because
these measures are not authorized by
the FMP and NMFS does not have
authority to implement them.
Scup
The scup stock is considered
overfished when the 3-year average of
scup SSB is less than the biomass
threshold (2.77 kg/tow; the maximum
NEFSC spring survey 3-year average of
SSB). In 2005, the NEFSC 3-year SSB
index value decreased to 0.69 kg/tow,
indicating that the stock was again
below the minimum biomass threshold
and considered overfished. Fishing year
2009 is the second year of the scup
rebuilding program implemented in
Amendment 14 to the FMP (72 FR
40077, July 23, 2007). The Amendment
14 rebuilding plan applies a constant F
of 0.10 in each year of the 7-year
rebuilding period.
The 2007 NEFSC Spring SSB 3-year
average (2006–2008) index value of 1.16
kg/tow remains below the minimum
biomass threshold of 2.77 kg/tow. While
this is a 52–percent increase from the
2006 value of 0.76 kg/tow, the scup
stock is considered overfished. The SSC,
Monitoring Committee, Council, and
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14:56 Oct 27, 2008
Jkt 214001
Board recommended a status quo initial
TAL of 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt). Using
the F=0.10 target exploitation rate
specified in the Amendment 14 scup
rebuilding plan would result in an
initial TAL of 11.18 million lb (5,384
mt), a 52–percent increase from the
2008 TAL/status quo. The updated 3year index value of 1.16 kg/tow is below
the rebuilding plan projected value for
2006–2008 of 2.08 kg/tow, indicating
rebuilding progress is currently behind
the schedule established in Amendment
14. The SSC, Monitoring Committee,
Council, and Board cited the need to
ensure that rebuilding objectives are met
in the early years of the program to
avoid possible significant impacts in
later years, as has occurred with a
number of rebuilding efforts for other
species that have fallen behind
schedule. These groups also raised the
issue of uncertainty surrounding the
scup stock status, discard estimates, and
survey inter-annual variation as a
rationale for recommending status quo
for 2009.
Scup discard estimates are deducted
from both sectors’ TACs to establish
TALs for each sector, i.e., TAC minus
discards equals TAL. The FMP specifies
that the TAC associated with a given
exploitation rate be allocated 78 percent
to the commercial sector and 22 percent
to the recreational sector. The
commercial TAC, discards, and TAL
(commercial quota) are then allocated
on a percentage basis to three quota
periods, as specified in the FMP: Winter
I (January-April)--45.11 percent;
Summer (May-October)--38.95 percent;
and Winter II (November-December)-15.94 percent.
The discard estimates used in the
2009 TAC calculations were based on
the average discards of 2006 and 2007
for the commercial and recreational
fisheries. This discard estimate is 4.36
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
million lb (1,978 mt), resulting in a TAC
of 11.70 million lb (5,339 mt). NMFS is
proposing to implement the Council and
Board recommendation for an initial
TAL of 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt) and
an 11.70 million-lb (5,339 mt) TAC.
The commercial TAC would be
9,126,000 lb (4,140 mt) and the
recreational TAC would be 2,574,000 lb
(1,168 mt). After deducting estimated
discards (3.58 million lb (1,624 mt) for
the commercial sector and 0.78 million
lb (353 mt) for the recreational sector),
the initial commercial quota would be
5.546 million lb (2,516 mt) and the
recreational harvest limit would be 1.79
million lb (813 mt). The Council and
Board agreed to set aside the maximum
3 percent (220,200 lb (100 mt)) of the
TAL for research activities. Deducting
this RSA would result in a commercial
quota of 5,378,648 lb (2,006 mt) and a
recreational harvest limit of 1,741,152
million lb (649 mt).
The TAC and TAL (commercial quota
and recreational harvest limit)
calculation methodology is the same as
utilized in 2008 and previous years.
However, it should be noted that
because the discard estimates used for
2009 are different than those utilized in
2008, the final commercial quota and
recreational harvest limits are not status
quo; only the initial TAL of 7.354
million lb (3,329 mt) is the same as
2008.
The proposed 2009 specifications
would maintain the status quo base
scup possession limits, i.e., 30,000 lb
(13,608 kg) for Winter I, to be reduced
to 1,000 lb (454 kg) when 80 percent of
the quota is projected to be reached, and
2,000 lb (907 kg) for Winter II.
Table 2 presents the 2009 commercial
allocation recommended by the Council,
with and without the preliminary RSA
deduction. These 2009 allocations are
preliminary and may be subject to
downward adjustment in the final rule
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implementing these specifications due
to 2008 or other previously unaccounted
for overages, based on the procedures
for calculating overages described
earlier.
TABLE 2—2009 PROPOSED INITIAL TAC, INITIAL COMMERCIAL SCUP QUOTA, AND POSSESSION LIMITS
Percent
TAC in lb (mt)
Discards in lb (mt)
Commercial
Quota in lb (mt)
Commercial
Quota less RSA
in lb (mt)
Possession Limits
in lb (kg)
Winter I
45.11
4,116,739 (1,867)
1,614,938 (732)
2,501,801 (1,134)
2,426,308 (1,100)
30,0001 (13,608)
Summer
38.95
3,554,577 (1,612)
1,394,410 (632)
2,160,167 (980)
2,094,983 (950)
n/a
Winter II
15.94
1,454,684 (660)
570,652 (259)
884,032 (401)
857,356 (389)
2,000 (907)
Total2
100.00
9,126,000 (3,139)
3,580,000 (1,623)
5,546,000 (2,516)
5,378,648 (2,440)
Period
1The
Winter I landing limit would drop to 1,000 lb (454 kg) upon attainment of 80 percent of the seasonal allocation.
2Totals subject to rounding error.
n/a-Not applicable
The final rule to implement
Framework 3 to the FMP (68 FR 62250,
November 3, 2003) implemented a
process, for years in which the full
Winter I commercial scup quota is not
harvested, to allow unused quota from
the Winter I period to be rolled over to
the quota for the Winter II period. As
shown in Table 3, the proposed
specifications would maintain the status
quo Winter II possession limit-torollover amount ratios (i.e., 1,500 lb
(0.68 mt) per 500,000 lb (227 mt) of
unused Winter I period quota).
TABLE 3—POTENTIAL INCREASE IN WINTER II POSSESSION LIMITS BASED ON THE AMOUNT OF SCUP ROLLED OVER FROM
WINTER I TO WINTER II PERIOD
Initial Winter II Possession Limit
lb
Rollover from Winter I to Winter II
kg
lb
mt
Increase in Initial Winter II Possession Limit
Final Winter II Possession Limit
after Rollover from Winter I to
Winter II
lb
kg
lb
kg
2,000
907
0-499,999
0-227
0
0
2,000
907
2,000
907
500,000999,999
227-454
1,500
680
3,500
1,588
2,000
907
1,000,0001,499,999
454-680
3,000
1,361
5,000
2,268
2,000
907
1,500,0001,999,999
680-907
4,500
2,041
6,500
2,948
2,000
907
2,000,0002,500,000
907-1,134
6,000
2,722
8,000
3,629
ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with PROPOSALS
Black Sea Bass
Amendment 12 to the FMP indicated
that the black sea bass stock, which was
determined by SARC 27 to be overfished
in 1998, could be rebuilt to the target
biomass within a 10-year period, i.e., by
2010. The current target exploitation
rate is based on the current estimate of
FMAX=FMSY=FREBUILD, or 0.33 (25.6
percent). The northern stock of black sea
bass was last assessed at the 43rd SAW
in June 2006. The SARC 43 Panel did
not consider the stock assessment to
provide an adequate basis to evaluate
stock status against the biological
reference points, but did not
recommend any other reference points
to replace them.
The most recent NEFSC spring survey
results indicate that the exploitable
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14:56 Oct 27, 2008
Jkt 214001
biomass of black sea bass decreased in
2007. The 2007 biomass index, i.e., the
3-year average exploitable biomass for
2005 through 2007, is estimated to be
0.29 kg/tow, below the threshold
biomass value of 0.976 kg/tow. Based on
these results, if the biological reference
points in the FMP are applied, black sea
bass once again would be considered to
be overfished.
The SSC, Monitoring Committee,
Council, and Board recommended a
2009 TAL of 2.30 million lb (1,043 mt)
for 2009, as calculated using the
methodology in the rebuilding plan.
This would be a 45–percent decrease
from the 2008 TAL of 4.22 million lb
(1,914 mt).
NMFS proposes to implement a 2009
black sea bass TAL of 2.3 million lb
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(1,043 mt), consistent with the Council
and Board recommendations. The FMP
specifies that the TAL associated with a
given exploitation rate be allocated 49
percent to the commercial sector and 51
percent to the recreational sector;
therefore, the initial TAL would be
allocated 1.127 million lb (511 mt) to
the commercial sector and 1.173 million
lb (532 mt) to the recreational sector.
The Council and Board also agreed to
set aside up to 3 percent (69,000 lb (31
mt)) of the black sea bass TAL for
research activities. After deducting the
RSA, the TAL would be divided into a
commercial quota of 1,093,190 lb (456
mt) and a recreational harvest limit of
1,137,810 lb (516 mt), as specified in the
FMP.
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ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with PROPOSALS
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent
with the Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass FMP, other provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
These proposed specifications are
exempt from review under Executive
Order 12866.
An IRFA was prepared, as required by
section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA). The IRFA describes the
economic impact these proposed
specifications, if adopted, would have
on small entities. A description of the
action, why it is being considered, and
the legal basis for this action are
contained in the preamble to this
proposed rule. A copy of this analysis
is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). A summary of the analysis
follows.
The total gross revenue for the
individual vessels that would be
directly regulated by this action is less
than $4.0 million for commercial fishing
and $6.5 million for recreational fishing
activities. All vessels that would be
impacted by this proposed rulemaking
are therefore considered to be small
entities and, thus, there would be no
disproportionate impacts between large
and small entities as a result of the
proposed rule. The categories of small
entities likely to be affected by this
action include commercial and charter/
party vessel owners holding an active
Federal permit for summer flounder,
scup, or black sea bass, as well as
owners of vessels that fish for any of
these species in state waters. The
Council estimates that the proposed
2009 specifications could affect 2,263
vessels that held a Federal summer
flounder, scup, and/or black sea bass
permit in 2007 (the most recent year of
complete permit data). However, the
more immediate impact of this rule will
likely be felt by the 891 vessels that
actively participated in these fisheries
(i.e., landed these species) in 2007.
There are no new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements contained
in any of the alternatives considered for
this action. In addition, NMFS is not
aware of any relevant Federal rules that
may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
this proposed rule.
If the Council took no action
regarding the 2009 specifications the
following would occur: (1) No
specifications for the 2009 summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass
fisheries; (2) the indefinite management
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:56 Oct 27, 2008
Jkt 214001
measures (minimum mesh sizes,
minimum sizes, possession limits,
permit and reporting requirements, etc.)
would remain unchanged; (3) there
would be no quota set-aside allocated to
research in 2009; and (4) there would be
no specific cap on the allowable annual
landings in these fisheries (i.e., there
would be no quotas). Implementation of
the no action alternative would be
inconsistent with the goals and
objectives of the FMP, its implementing
regulations, and the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. Under the no action alternative, the
fisheries would operate without an
identified cap on allowable landings
because the quotas implemented for
2008 expire on December 31, 2008, and
there are no provisions to roll-over those
quota provisions into 2009 if
specifications are not published for the
year. Therefore, the no action alternative
is not considered to be a reasonable
alternative to the preferred action.The
Council analyzed three TAL alternatives
for 2009. Of these, one alternative,
labeled Alternative 2, contained the
most restrictive TAL options (i.e.,
lowest catch levels). While this
alternative would achieve the objectives
of the proposed action for all three
species, it has the highest potential
economic impact on small entities in
the form of potential foregone fishing
opportunities. Alternative 2 was not
preferred by the Council because other
alternatives considered have lower
impacts on small entities while
achieving the stated objectives of this
proposed rule.
The Council analyzed two TAL
alternatives that would accomplish the
stated objectives of the proposed action,
consistent with applicable statutes, and
that would minimize significant
economic impact of the proposed rule
on small entities. Alternative 1
(Council’s preferred) would implement
the following TALs in 2009: Summer
flounder, 18.45 million lb (8,369 mt);
scup, 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt); and
black sea bass, 2.30 million lb (1,043
mt). Alternative 3 (least restrictive/
highest quota levels) would implement
the following TALs in 2009: Summer
flounder, 19.02 million lb (8,627 mt);
scup, 11.18 million lb (5,071 mt); and
black sea bass, 4.22 million lb (1,914
mt).
Council staff conducted preliminary
analysis on the potential economic
impact of changes in recreational
harvest limits associated with the
alternatives. For the purposes of the
RFA, the only entities affected by the
proposed changes to the recreational
harvest limit are owners and operators
of recreational party/charter (for hire)
vessels. These analyses indicate that it
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
is possible that adverse economic
impacts could occur under Alternative 1
but would not be likely under
Alternative 3. The methods utilized in
the analysis compare 2007 recreational
landings to the respective alternative’s
recreational harvest limit and make
inferences on possible negative impacts
to the demand for party/charter vessel
trips and angler participation. While
useful for a general statement on
potential impacts, demand for party/
charter trips has remained relatively
stable for many years regardless of
increases or decreases in the
recreational harvest limit and
ascertaining angler satisfaction relative
to a total recreational harvest limit is
subjective. More thorough analysis of
recreational fisheries impacts will be
conducted following the Council’s
recommendations for recreational
management measures in December
2008. Once actual 2009 recreational
management measures
recommendations are known, more
detailed analysis, including an IRFA,
will be prepared by the Council.
To assess the impact of the
alternatives on commercial fisheries, the
Council conducted both threshold
analysis and analysis of potential
changes in ex-vessel gross revenue that
would result from Alternatives 1 and 3.
Some degree of caution should be
utilized when interpreting the economic
impact data as a host of variations could
influence the outcomes of the analyses.
Vessels have permits for multiple
fisheries and may supplement income
by landing other species; economic
dependence on a particular species may
be masked by vessels landing multiple
species; ex-vessel value of the three
species may change from the estimated
values utilized in the analysis; revenues
may increase or decrease as a result of
changes to possession limits or seasons
set by individual states; and reduction
in commercial quota to account for
previous years’ overages may still occur
in the specifications final rule.
Under Alternative 1 (Council’s
preferred), analysis indicates that 224
vessels out of the 891 (25 percent) that
participated in 2007 summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries would
be expected to incur revenue reductions
of 5 percent or more. The reductions are
attributable to the reduction in black sea
bass TAL and affect vessels that landed
solely black sea bass or black sea bass
in combination with the other two
species. The Alternative 1 IRFA analysis
indicated that 647 of the 891 vessels (75
percent) that landed summer flounder
and scup or some combination of both
in 2007 would be expected to
experience revenue increases in 2009 as
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ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with PROPOSALS
a result of the 16–percent increase in
summer flounder and the 15–percent
increase in scup allowable commercial
landings in 2009.
Utilizing ex-vessel information from
2007, the Council estimated that
Alternative 1 would increase
cumulative summer flounder and scup
vessel revenues by $3.32 and $0.57
million, respectively. Black sea bass
vessel revenues are projected to
decrease by $2.85 million compared to
2008. If these increases and decreases
are distributed equally among the
vessels that landed summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass in 2007, the
resulting increase in revenue per vessel
would be $4,770 for summer flounder
and $1,360 for scup. Individual vessel
revenue would decrease by $5,053 for
vessels landing black sea bass.
Under Alternative 3 (least restrictive
TALs), analysis indicates that 121
vessels out of the 891 (14 percent) that
participated in 2007 summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries would
be expected to incur revenue reductions
of 5 percent or more. The reductions are
again attributable to the reduction in
black sea bass TAL. The Alternative 3
threshold analysis indicated that 770 of
the 891 vessels (86 percent) of vessels
would be expected to experience
revenue increases in 2009 as a result of
the 19–percent increase in summer
flounder and the 77–percent increase in
scup allowable commercial landings
under the alternative.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:56 Oct 27, 2008
Jkt 214001
The Council estimated that
Alternative 3 would increase
cumulative summer flounder and scup
vessel revenues by $4.08 and $2.98
million, respectively. Black sea bass
vessel revenues are projected to
decrease by $0.06 million compared to
2008. If these increases and decreases
are distributed equally among the
vessels that landed summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass in 2007, the
resulting increase in revenue per vessel
would be $5,268 for summer flounder
and $7,112 for scup. Individual vessel
revenue would decrease by $153 for
vessels landing black sea bass.
The Council selected Alternative 1
(preferred) over Alternative 3 (least
restrictive) because, for summer
flounder, Alterative 1 provides a higher
probability of achieving the FTARGET in
2009 (63 percent) and a higher
likelihood of achieving the rebuilding
target by January 1, 2013, than does
Alternative 3, which provides a 50–
percent probability of achieving the
FTARGET. For scup, Alternative 1 was
preferred by the Council because it
employs a more conservative TAL for
2009 as the rebuilding plan is slightly
behind schedule in the first year of the
7-year rebuilding plan. The Council’s
previous experience with other species’
rebuilding plans indicates that failing to
set harvest levels below the maximum
amount possible (i.e., the TAL in
Alternative 3) in early years of
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
63941
rebuilding plans when progress is slow
or behind schedule has resulted in the
need for more restrictive measures in
late years of rebuilding efforts. The
Council recommended the Alternative 1
TAL for black sea bass to be consistent
with the FREBUILD value prescribed by
the rebuilding plan. The black sea bass
TAL in Alternative 3 is status quo from
2008 and would be inconsistent with
the goals and objectives of the black sea
bass rebuilding plans as it would
produce an F rate higher than FREBUILD.
As such, the IRFA provided by the
Council indicates that the TALs of
Alternative 1 satisfy the objectives of the
applicable statutes and rebuilding
programs and minimize the adverse
impacts of the proposed rule on directly
regulated small entities. NMFS agrees
with the Council’s IRFA analysis and
rationale for recommending TAL
Alternative 1. As such, NMFS is
proposing to implement the TALs
contained in Alternative 1 (Summer
flounder, 18.45 million lb (8,369 mt);
scup, 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt); and
black sea bass, 2.30 million lb (1,043
mt)) for 2009.
Dated: October 22, 2008
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator For
RegulatoryPrograms, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E8–25707 Filed 10–27–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 209 (Tuesday, October 28, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 63934-63941]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-25707]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No.0909251266-81274-01]
RIN 0648-XJ96
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2009 Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Specifications; 2009 Research Set-Aside Projects
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed specifications; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes specifications for the 2009 summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries and provides notice of three
conditionally approved projects that will be requesting Exempted
Fishing Permits (EFPs) as part of the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management
Council's (Council) Research Set-Aside (RSA) program. The implementing
regulations for the Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) require NMFS to publish specifications for the
upcoming fishing year for each of these species and to provide an
opportunity for public comment. Furthermore, regulations under the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act) require a notice to be published to provide interested
parties the opportunity to comment on applications for EFPs. The intent
of this action is to establish harvest levels that assure that the
target fishing mortality rates (F) or exploitation rates specified for
these species in the FMP are not exceeded and to allow for rebuilding
of the stocks as well as to provide notice of EFP requests, all in
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before November 12, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-XJ96, by any
one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal https://www.regulations.gov.
Mail and hand delivery: Patricia A. Kurkul, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Northeast Regional Office, One Blackburn Drive,
Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the outside of the envelope:
[[Page 63935]]
``Comments on 2009 Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass
Specifications.''
Fax: (978) 281-9135.
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 (enter N/A in the required
fields, if you wish to remain anonymous). You may submit attachments to
electronic comments in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Copies of the specifications document, including the Environmental
Assessment, Regulatory Impact Review, and Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (EA/RIR/IRFA) and other supporting documents for
the specifications are available from Daniel Furlong, Executive
Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, Room 2115, Federal
Building, 300 South Street, Dover, DE 19901-6790. These documents are
also accessible via the Internet at https://www.nero.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael Ruccio, Fishery Policy
Analyst, (978) 281-9104.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries are managed
cooperatively by the Council and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission (Commission), in consultation with the New England and South
Atlantic Fishery Management Councils. The management units specified in
the FMP include summer flounder (Paralichthys dentatus) in U.S. waters
of the Atlantic Ocean from the southern border of North Carolina
northward to the U.S./Canada border, and scup (Stenotomus chrysops) and
black sea bass (Centropristis striata) in U.S. waters of the Atlantic
Ocean from 35[deg]13.3' N. lat. (the latitude of Cape Hatteras
Lighthouse, Buxton, North Carolina) northward to the U.S./Canada
border. Implementing regulations for these fisheries are found at 50
CFR part 648, subpart A (General Provisions), subpart G (summer
flounder), subpart H (scup), and subpart I (black sea bass).
The summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass regulations outline
the process for specifying the annual commercial quotas and
recreational harvest limits for the summer flounder, scup, and black
sea bass fisheries, as well as other management measures (e.g., mesh
requirements, minimum commercial fish sizes, gear restrictions,
possession restrictions, and area restrictions) for these fisheries.
The measures are intended to achieve the annual targets set forth for
each species in the FMP, specified either as an F or an exploitation
rate (the proportion of fish available at the beginning of the year
that are removed by fishing during the year). Once the catch limits are
established, they are divided into quotas based on formulas contained
within the FMP.
The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Reauthorization Act of 2006 (MSRA), signed into law by President Bush
on January 12, 2007, added new requirements to involve the Council's
Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC) in the specification-setting
process. Specifically, section 302(g)(1)(B) of the MSRA states that an
SSC for each Regional Fishery Management Council ''shall provide its
Council ongoing scientific advice for fishery management decisions,
including recommendations for acceptable biological catch, preventing
overfishing, maximum sustainable yield, and achieving rebuilding
targets, and reports on stock status and health, bycatch, habitat
status, social and economic impacts of management measures, and
sustainability of fishing practices.'' The Acceptable Biological Catch
(ABC) is a level of a stock catch that accounts for the scientific
uncertainty in estimate of that stock's defined overfishing level. This
new requirement implemented by the MSRA was put into practice by the
Council for the first time in the 2009 specification setting process.
The SSC met on July 31, 2008.
The FMP's implementing regulations also require that a Monitoring
Committee for each species review the best available scientific
information and recommend catch limits and other management measures
that will mitigate management uncertainty and/or implementation
imprecision to ensure the target F or exploitation rate for each
fishery is not exceeded. The Monitoring Committees met on August 1,
2008.
The Council and the Commission's Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black
Sea Bass Management Board (Board) consider the SSC and Monitoring
Committees' recommendations and any public comment and make their own
recommendations. While the Board action is final, the Council's
recommendations must be reviewed by NMFS to assure that they comply
with FMP objectives and applicable law. The Council and Board made
their recommendations at a joint meeting held August 5-7, 2008.
Explanation of RSA
Background: In 2001, regulations were implemented under Framework
Adjustment 1 to the FMP to allow up to 3 percent of the Total Allowable
Landings (TAL) for each species to be set aside each year for
scientific research purposes. For the 2009 fishing year, a Request for
Proposals was published to solicit research proposals based upon the
research priorities that were identified by the Council (73 FR 7528,
February 8, 2008).
NMFS has conditionally approved three research projects for the
harvest of the portion of the quota that has been recommended by the
Council to be set aside for research purposes. In anticipation of
receiving applications for EFPs to conduct this research, the Assistant
Regional Administrator for Sustainable Fisheries, Northeast Region,
NMFS (Assistant Regional Administrator), has made a preliminary
determination that the activities authorized under the EFPs issued in
response to the approved RSA projects would be consistent with the
goals and objectives of the FMP. However, further review and
consultation may be necessary before a final determination is made to
issue any EFP.
For informational purposes, these proposed specifications include a
statement indicating the amount of quota that has been preliminarily
set aside for research purposes (a percentage of the TAL for each
fishery, not to exceed 3 percent, as recommended by the Council and
Board), and a brief description of the RSA projects, including
exemptions requested, and the amount of RSA requested for each project.
The RSA amounts may be adjusted, following consultation with RSA
applicants, in the final rule establishing the 2009 specifications for
the summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries. If the total
amount of RSA is not awarded, NMFS will publish a document in the
Federal Register to restore the unused amount to the applicable TAL.
For 2008, the conditionally approved projects may collectively be
awarded the following amounts of RSA: 553,500 lb (251 mt) of summer
flounder; 220,200 lb (100 mt) of scup; and 69,000 lb (31 mt) of black
sea bass. The projects may also be collectively awarded up to 1.3
million lb (590 mt) of Loligo squid;
[[Page 63936]]
844,680 (383 mt) of Atlantic bluefish; and 33,069 lb (15 mt) of
butterfish.
2009 RSA Proposal Summaries: Project number 1 would conduct a
fishery-independent scup survey that would utilize unvented fish traps
fished on hard bottom areas in southern New England waters to
characterize the size composition of the scup population. Survey
activities would be conducted June 15-October 15, 2009, at 10 rocky
bottom study sites located offshore, where there is a minimal scup pot
fishery and no active trawl fishery, and at two scup spawning ground
sites. Up to two vessels would conduct the research survey. Sampling
would occur off the coasts of Rhode Island and southern Massachusetts.
Up to four vessels would harvest the RSA during the period January 1-
December 31, 2009. The principal investigators have requested
exemptions from trip limits, gear requirements (excluding marine mammal
avoidance and/or release devices), and closed seasons for harvest of
RSA species. The preliminary RSA awarded for this project is 2,000 lb
(0.9 mt) of summer flounder; 51,172 lb (23 mt) of scup; and 28,000 lb
(13 mt) of black sea bass.
Project number 2 would conduct a near-shore trawl survey in Mid-
Atlantic waters between Gay Head, Massachusetts, and Cape Hatteras,
North Carolina, including both Block Island and Rhode Island Sounds. A
stratified random sampling of approximately 200 stations will occur in
depths between 18-60 feet (8-18 m). The function of the survey would be
to provide stock assessment data for summer flounder, scup, black sea
bass, Loligo squid, butterfish, Atlantic bluefish, several species
managed by the Commission such as weakfish and Atlantic croaker, and
unmanaged forage species. The research aspects of the trawl survey will
be conducted by one scientific research vessel. This vessel will
operate under a Letter of Authorization (LOA) as provided for by the
specific exemption for scientific research activities found at 50 CFR
600.745. Up to 35 vessels will harvest the RSA January 1-December 31,
2009, during commercial fishing operations, except that these vessels
have requested exemptions for closed seasons and trip limits to harvest
the RSA allocated to the project. The preliminary RSA awarded to this
project is 367,768 lb (167 mt) of summer flounder; 169,028 lb (77 mt)
of scup; 41,000 lb (19 mt) of black sea bass; 97,750 lb (44 mt) of
Atlantic bluefish; and 276,827 lb (126 mt) of Loligo squid.
Project number 3 would conduct an evaluation of discard mortality
for summer flounder in trawl fisheries. Combined sources of mortality
and injury quantification that occur as part of trawling, tracking and
tagging, and scuba diver observation will be utilized to provide an
estimate of trawl-related mortality. Research sampling will be
conducted adjacent to Little Egg Inlet off the New Jersey coast.
Sampling would occur on the winter offshore fishing grounds south and
east of Long Island, New York, between Veatch Canyon and Hudson Canyon
during February-April 2009 and November-December 2009. Up to six
vessels of opportunity will conduct the research activities and may
simultaneously participate in harvesting RSA, if the season for summer
flounder is closed or if more fish, above those needed for the research
activities, are caught than are permitted by possession limits. The
principal investigators have requested exemption from the commercial
summer flounder minimum size so that fish smaller than 14 inches (35.5
cm) may be temporarily retained to assess viability and to affix tags
and data transmitters. Up to 35 vessels will harvest the RSA January 1-
December 31, 2009, during commercial fishing operations, except that
these vessels have requested exemptions for closed seasons and trip
limits to harvest the RSA allocated to the project. The preliminary RSA
awarded to this project is 183,732 lb (83 mt) of summer flounder.
Regulations under the Magnuson-Stevens Act require publication of this
notification to provide interested parties the opportunity to comment
on applications for proposed EFPs.
Explanation of Quota Adjustments Due to Quota Overages
This action proposes commercial quotas based on the proposed TALs
and Total Allowable Catches (TACs) and the formulas for allocation
contained in the FMP. In 2002, NMFS published final regulations to
implement a regulatory amendment (67 FR 6877, February 14, 2002) that
revised the way in which the commercial quotas for summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass are adjusted if landings in any fishing year
exceed the quota allocated (thus resulting in a quota overage). If NMFS
approves a different TAL or TAC at the final specifications stage
(i.e., in the final rule), the commercial quotas will be recalculated
based on the formulas in the FMP. Likewise, if new information
indicates that overages have occurred and deductions are necessary,
NMFS will publish notice of the adjusted quotas in the Federal
Register. NMFS anticipates that the information necessary to determine
whether overage deductions are necessary will be available by the time
the final specifications are published. The commercial quotas contained
in these proposed specifications for summer flounder, scup, and black
sea bass are not adjusted for any overages that have occurred. The
final specifications will contain quotas that have been fully adjusted
consistent with the procedures described above.
Summer Flounder
The timeline for completion of the summer flounder rebuilding
program was extended from January 1, 2010, to no later than January 1,
2013, by section 120(a) of the MSRA. The Southern Demersal Working
Group (SDWG), a technical stock assessment group composed of personnel
from the Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC), NMFS Northeast
Regional Office, Council, Commission, state marine fisheries agencies,
academia, and independently-hired scientists, conducted a benchmark
stock assessment of summer flounder in 2008. The recommendations of the
SDWG were externally peer reviewed by scientists provided by the Center
for Independent Experts (CIE) through the NEFSC Stock Assessment
Workshop (SAW)/Stock Assessment Review Committee (SARC) process. The
47th SARC, which peer reviewed the benchmark assessment conducted by
the SDWG, upheld the recommendations of the SDWG described in the stock
assessment, resulting in changes to the modeling approach used,
adoption of revised F threshold and F management target values, and a
change in assumed natural mortality. These changes resulted in
modifications to the stock status determination criteria. Information
regarding the results of the benchmark assessment, including summary
information, reports provided by individual peer reviewers, and the
detailed final assessment document can be found on the NEFSC SAW/SARC
web page at: https://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/nefsc/saw/.
The 2008 SDWG benchmark assessment shows that summer flounder were
not overfished and that overfishing did not occur in 2007, the year for
which the most recent, complete fishery-dependent data are available.
The fishing mortality rate in 2007 was estimated to be 0.288, below the
benchmark assessment's overfishing threshold
(FMSY=FTHRESHOLD=F35!percent\A\
[[Page 63937]]
=0.310) but above the assessment-recommended management target
(FTARGET=F40!percent=0.255). FMSY is
the fishing mortality rate that, if applied constantly, would result in
maximum sustainable yield (MSY) from the summer flounder stock. When
F>FTHRESHOLD, overfishing is considered to be occurring.
Fishing year 2007 is the first year of the rebuilding program in which
overfishing did not occur on summer flounder. Spawning stock biomass
(SSB) was estimated to be 95.6 million lbs (43,363 mt) in 2007, about
72 percent of the SSB35!percent (SSBMSY target
proxy reference point) = 132.4 million lbs (60,056 mt). The benchmark
assessment shows that the summer flounder stock has not been overfished
since 2001. The average recruitment from 1982 to 2007 is 41.6 million
fish. The 2007 year class is considered slightly below average at
approximately 40.0 million fish.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\A\ The fishing mortality rate which reduces the spawning stock
biomass per recruit (SSB/R) to 35 percent of the amount present in
the absence of fishing. More generally, FX percent is the fishing
mortality rate that reduces the SSB/R to x percent of the level that
would exist in the absence of fishing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SSC, using the updated assessment information, recommended to
the Council that the 2009 TAL be set no higher than 19.02 million lb
(8,627 mt). Their recommendation was based on utilizing the benchmark
assessment-recommended FTARGET and related assessment
information and methodology to derive an ABC that accounts for
scientific uncertainty within the assessment. The Monitoring Committee
considered the SSC's ABC recommendation, the assessment results, and
management uncertainty. The Monitoring Committee recommended that the
TAL could be set within a range of 19.02-17.87 million lb (8,627-8,105
mt) to account for imprecision associated with implementation of the
management program.
The Council and Board considered the SSC and Monitoring Committee
recommendations before adopting a 2009 TAL of 18.45 million lb (8,368
mt) to recommend to NMFS. This TAL is the mid-point in the range
recommended by the Monitoring Committee and is lower than the SSC's
recommendation for ABC. This TAL has a 63-percent probability of not
exceeding the F target in 2009 and a 97-percent probability of
constraining fishing mortality below the overfishing threshold
(FMSY = F35!percent), and is thus expected to
achieve the required stock rebuilding for summer flounder to exceed the
BMSY target by the January 1, 2013, deadline. This would be
a 17-percent increase from the 2008 TAL of 15.77 million lb (7,153 mt).
All other management measures were recommended to remain status quo.
The regulations state that the Council shall recommend, and NMFS
shall implement, measures (including the TAL) necessary to achieve,
with at least a 50-percent probability of success, a fishing mortality
rate that produces the maximum yield per recruit (FMAX).
However, Framework Adjustment 7 to the FMP (Framework 7) was
implemented October 1, 2007 (72 FR 55704), to ensure that the best
available scientific information could be adopted without delay by the
Council for use in managing summer flounder. As such, the SDWG
benchmark assessment recommended FMSY=F35!percent
is now the best available fishing mortality rate that produces the
optimum yield per recruit and is the threshold value for assessing
whether overfishing is occurring on summer flounder, replacing
FMAX. A 2000 Federal Court Order (Natural Resources Defense
Council v. Daley, Civil No. 1:99 CV 00221 (JLG)) also requires the
annual summer flounder TAL to have at least a 50-percent probability of
success. As previously stated, the Council and Board's recommended TAL
of 18.45 million lb (8,368 mt) has a 97-percent probability of
constraining fishing mortality below the overfishing threshold of
FMSY=F35!percent and a 63-percent probability of
constraining fishing mortality below the assessment-recommended
management target of F40!percent. This TAL also has a 83-
percent probability of constraining fishing mortality below the fishing
mortality level (FREBUILD=0.274) that is expected to achieve
the exact biomass target (BMSY) required under the rebuilding plan by
January 1, 2013. In the past two years, TALs with a 75-percent
probability of achieving FREBUILD have been implemented for
the summer flounder fishery. NMFS is proposing to implement a TAL of
18.45 million lb (8,368 mt) for 2009, consistent with the Council's and
Board's recommendation.
The FMP specifies that the TAL is to be allocated 60 percent to the
commercial sector and 40 percent to the recreational sector; therefore,
the initial TAL would be allocated 11.07 million lb (5,021 mt) to the
commercial sector and 7.38 million lb (3,348 mt) to the recreational
sector. The Council and Board also agreed to set aside up to 3 percent
(553,500 lb (251 mt)) of the summer flounder TAL for research
activities. After deducting the RSA, the TAL would be divided into a
commercial quota of 10,737,900 lb (4,871 mt) and a recreational harvest
limit of 7,158,600 lb (3,247 mt).
Table 1 presents the proposed allocations by state with and without
the commercial portion of the RSA deduction. These state quota
allocations are preliminary and are subject to reductions if there are
overages of states quotas carried over from a previous fishing year
(using the landings information and procedures described earlier). Any
commercial quota adjustments to account for overages will be included
in the final rule implementing these specifications.
Table 1--2009 Proposed Initial Summer Flounder State Commercial Quotas
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commercial Quota Commercial Quota less RSA\1\
State Percent Share -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
lb kg\2\ lb kg\2\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ME 0.04756 5,265 2,388 5,107 2,317
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NH 0.00046 51 23 49 22
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MA 6.82046 755,025 342,479 732,374 332,205
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RI 15.68298 1,736,106 787,498 1,684,023 763,873
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CT 2.25708 249,859 113,336 242,363 109,936
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NY 7.64699 846,522 383,982 821,126 372,463
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 63938]]
NJ 16.72499 1,851,456 839,821 1,795,913 814,626
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DE 0.01779 1,969 893 1,910 866
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MD 2.03910 225,728 102,390 218,957 99,319
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VA 21.31676 2,359,765 1,070,390 2,288,972 1,038,278
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NC 27.44584 3,038,254 1,378,152 2,947,107 1,336,808
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total\3\ 100.00001 11,070,001 5,021,353 10,737,901 4,870,712
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Preliminary Research Set-Aside amount is 553,500 lb (251 mt).
\2\ Kilograms are as converted from pounds and do not sum to the converted total due to rounding.
\3\ Rounding of quotas results in totals exceeding 100 percent.
The Commission is expected to maintain the voluntary measures
currently in place to reduce regulatory discards that occur as a result
of landing limits established by the states. The Commission established
a system whereby 15 percent of each state's quota would be voluntarily
set aside each year to enable vessels to land an incidental catch
allowance after the directed fishery has been closed. The intent of the
incidental catch set-aside is to reduce discards by allowing fishermen
to land summer flounder caught incidentally in other fisheries during
the year, while also ensuring that the state's overall quota is not
exceeded. These Commission set-asides are not included in these
proposed specifications because these measures are not authorized by
the FMP and NMFS does not have authority to implement them.
Scup
The scup stock is considered overfished when the 3-year average of
scup SSB is less than the biomass threshold (2.77 kg/tow; the maximum
NEFSC spring survey 3-year average of SSB). In 2005, the NEFSC 3-year
SSB index value decreased to 0.69 kg/tow, indicating that the stock was
again below the minimum biomass threshold and considered overfished.
Fishing year 2009 is the second year of the scup rebuilding program
implemented in Amendment 14 to the FMP (72 FR 40077, July 23, 2007).
The Amendment 14 rebuilding plan applies a constant F of 0.10 in each
year of the 7-year rebuilding period.
The 2007 NEFSC Spring SSB 3-year average (2006-2008) index value of
1.16 kg/tow remains below the minimum biomass threshold of 2.77 kg/tow.
While this is a 52-percent increase from the 2006 value of 0.76 kg/tow,
the scup stock is considered overfished. The SSC, Monitoring Committee,
Council, and Board recommended a status quo initial TAL of 7.34 million
lb (3,329 mt). Using the F=0.10 target exploitation rate specified in
the Amendment 14 scup rebuilding plan would result in an initial TAL of
11.18 million lb (5,384 mt), a 52-percent increase from the 2008 TAL/
status quo. The updated 3-year index value of 1.16 kg/tow is below the
rebuilding plan projected value for 2006-2008 of 2.08 kg/tow,
indicating rebuilding progress is currently behind the schedule
established in Amendment 14. The SSC, Monitoring Committee, Council,
and Board cited the need to ensure that rebuilding objectives are met
in the early years of the program to avoid possible significant impacts
in later years, as has occurred with a number of rebuilding efforts for
other species that have fallen behind schedule. These groups also
raised the issue of uncertainty surrounding the scup stock status,
discard estimates, and survey inter-annual variation as a rationale for
recommending status quo for 2009.
Scup discard estimates are deducted from both sectors' TACs to
establish TALs for each sector, i.e., TAC minus discards equals TAL.
The FMP specifies that the TAC associated with a given exploitation
rate be allocated 78 percent to the commercial sector and 22 percent to
the recreational sector. The commercial TAC, discards, and TAL
(commercial quota) are then allocated on a percentage basis to three
quota periods, as specified in the FMP: Winter I (January-April)--45.11
percent; Summer (May-October)--38.95 percent; and Winter II (November-
December)--15.94 percent.
The discard estimates used in the 2009 TAC calculations were based
on the average discards of 2006 and 2007 for the commercial and
recreational fisheries. This discard estimate is 4.36 million lb (1,978
mt), resulting in a TAC of 11.70 million lb (5,339 mt). NMFS is
proposing to implement the Council and Board recommendation for an
initial TAL of 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt) and an 11.70 million-lb
(5,339 mt) TAC.
The commercial TAC would be 9,126,000 lb (4,140 mt) and the
recreational TAC would be 2,574,000 lb (1,168 mt). After deducting
estimated discards (3.58 million lb (1,624 mt) for the commercial
sector and 0.78 million lb (353 mt) for the recreational sector), the
initial commercial quota would be 5.546 million lb (2,516 mt) and the
recreational harvest limit would be 1.79 million lb (813 mt). The
Council and Board agreed to set aside the maximum 3 percent (220,200 lb
(100 mt)) of the TAL for research activities. Deducting this RSA would
result in a commercial quota of 5,378,648 lb (2,006 mt) and a
recreational harvest limit of 1,741,152 million lb (649 mt).
The TAC and TAL (commercial quota and recreational harvest limit)
calculation methodology is the same as utilized in 2008 and previous
years. However, it should be noted that because the discard estimates
used for 2009 are different than those utilized in 2008, the final
commercial quota and recreational harvest limits are not status quo;
only the initial TAL of 7.354 million lb (3,329 mt) is the same as
2008.
The proposed 2009 specifications would maintain the status quo base
scup possession limits, i.e., 30,000 lb (13,608 kg) for Winter I, to be
reduced to 1,000 lb (454 kg) when 80 percent of the quota is projected
to be reached, and 2,000 lb (907 kg) for Winter II.
Table 2 presents the 2009 commercial allocation recommended by the
Council, with and without the preliminary RSA deduction. These 2009
allocations are preliminary and may be subject to downward adjustment
in the final rule
[[Page 63939]]
implementing these specifications due to 2008 or other previously
unaccounted for overages, based on the procedures for calculating
overages described earlier.
Table 2--2009 Proposed Initial TAC, Initial Commercial Scup Quota, and Possession Limits
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commercial Quota
Period Percent TAC in lb (mt) Discards in lb (mt) Commercial Quota less RSA in lb Possession Limits
in lb (mt) (mt) in lb (kg)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Winter I 45.11 4,116,739 (1,867) 1,614,938 (732) 2,501,801 (1,134) 2,426,308 (1,100) 30,000\1\ (13,608)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summer 38.95 3,554,577 (1,612) 1,394,410 (632) 2,160,167 (980) 2,094,983 (950) n/a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Winter II 15.94 1,454,684 (660) 570,652 (259) 884,032 (401) 857,356 (389) 2,000 (907)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total\2\ 100.00 9,126,000 (3,139) 3,580,000 (1,623) 5,546,000 (2,516) 5,378,648 (2,440) ..................
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\The Winter I landing limit would drop to 1,000 lb (454 kg) upon attainment of 80 percent of the seasonal allocation.
\2\Totals subject to rounding error.
n/a-Not applicable
The final rule to implement Framework 3 to the FMP (68 FR 62250,
November 3, 2003) implemented a process, for years in which the full
Winter I commercial scup quota is not harvested, to allow unused quota
from the Winter I period to be rolled over to the quota for the Winter
II period. As shown in Table 3, the proposed specifications would
maintain the status quo Winter II possession limit-to-rollover amount
ratios (i.e., 1,500 lb (0.68 mt) per 500,000 lb (227 mt) of unused
Winter I period quota).
Table 3--Potential Increase in Winter II Possession Limits Based on the Amount of Scup Rolled Over from Winter I
to Winter II Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Winter II Possession Limit Rollover from Winter I Increase in Initial Final Winter II
--------------------------------------------- to Winter II Winter II Possession Possession Limit
------------------------ Limit after Rollover from
---------------------- Winter I to Winter
lb kg II
lb mt lb kg ---------------------
lb kg
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 0-499,999 0-227 0 0 2,000 907
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 500,000- 227-454 1,500 680 3,500 1,588
999,999
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 1,000,000- 454-680 3,000 1,361 5,000 2,268
1,499,999
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 1,500,000- 680-907 4,500 2,041 6,500 2,948
1,999,999
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 2,000,000- 907-1,134 6,000 2,722 8,000 3,629
2,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Sea Bass
Amendment 12 to the FMP indicated that the black sea bass stock,
which was determined by SARC 27 to be overfished in 1998, could be
rebuilt to the target biomass within a 10-year period, i.e., by 2010.
The current target exploitation rate is based on the current estimate
of FMAX=FMSY=FREBUILD, or 0.33 (25.6
percent). The northern stock of black sea bass was last assessed at the
43rd SAW in June 2006. The SARC 43 Panel did not consider the stock
assessment to provide an adequate basis to evaluate stock status
against the biological reference points, but did not recommend any
other reference points to replace them.
The most recent NEFSC spring survey results indicate that the
exploitable biomass of black sea bass decreased in 2007. The 2007
biomass index, i.e., the 3-year average exploitable biomass for 2005
through 2007, is estimated to be 0.29 kg/tow, below the threshold
biomass value of 0.976 kg/tow. Based on these results, if the
biological reference points in the FMP are applied, black sea bass once
again would be considered to be overfished.
The SSC, Monitoring Committee, Council, and Board recommended a
2009 TAL of 2.30 million lb (1,043 mt) for 2009, as calculated using
the methodology in the rebuilding plan. This would be a 45-percent
decrease from the 2008 TAL of 4.22 million lb (1,914 mt).
NMFS proposes to implement a 2009 black sea bass TAL of 2.3 million
lb (1,043 mt), consistent with the Council and Board recommendations.
The FMP specifies that the TAL associated with a given exploitation
rate be allocated 49 percent to the commercial sector and 51 percent to
the recreational sector; therefore, the initial TAL would be allocated
1.127 million lb (511 mt) to the commercial sector and 1.173 million lb
(532 mt) to the recreational sector. The Council and Board also agreed
to set aside up to 3 percent (69,000 lb (31 mt)) of the black sea bass
TAL for research activities. After deducting the RSA, the TAL would be
divided into a commercial quota of 1,093,190 lb (456 mt) and a
recreational harvest limit of 1,137,810 lb (516 mt), as specified in
the FMP.
[[Page 63940]]
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is
consistent with the Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass FMP,
other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law,
subject to further consideration after public comment.
These proposed specifications are exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
An IRFA was prepared, as required by section 603 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA). The IRFA describes the economic impact these
proposed specifications, if adopted, would have on small entities. A
description of the action, why it is being considered, and the legal
basis for this action are contained in the preamble to this proposed
rule. A copy of this analysis is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A
summary of the analysis follows.
The total gross revenue for the individual vessels that would be
directly regulated by this action is less than $4.0 million for
commercial fishing and $6.5 million for recreational fishing
activities. All vessels that would be impacted by this proposed
rulemaking are therefore considered to be small entities and, thus,
there would be no disproportionate impacts between large and small
entities as a result of the proposed rule. The categories of small
entities likely to be affected by this action include commercial and
charter/party vessel owners holding an active Federal permit for summer
flounder, scup, or black sea bass, as well as owners of vessels that
fish for any of these species in state waters. The Council estimates
that the proposed 2009 specifications could affect 2,263 vessels that
held a Federal summer flounder, scup, and/or black sea bass permit in
2007 (the most recent year of complete permit data). However, the more
immediate impact of this rule will likely be felt by the 891 vessels
that actively participated in these fisheries (i.e., landed these
species) in 2007.
There are no new reporting or recordkeeping requirements contained
in any of the alternatives considered for this action. In addition,
NMFS is not aware of any relevant Federal rules that may duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with this proposed rule.
If the Council took no action regarding the 2009 specifications the
following would occur: (1) No specifications for the 2009 summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries; (2) the indefinite
management measures (minimum mesh sizes, minimum sizes, possession
limits, permit and reporting requirements, etc.) would remain
unchanged; (3) there would be no quota set-aside allocated to research
in 2009; and (4) there would be no specific cap on the allowable annual
landings in these fisheries (i.e., there would be no quotas).
Implementation of the no action alternative would be inconsistent with
the goals and objectives of the FMP, its implementing regulations, and
the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Under the no action alternative, the
fisheries would operate without an identified cap on allowable landings
because the quotas implemented for 2008 expire on December 31, 2008,
and there are no provisions to roll-over those quota provisions into
2009 if specifications are not published for the year. Therefore, the
no action alternative is not considered to be a reasonable alternative
to the preferred action.The Council analyzed three TAL alternatives for
2009. Of these, one alternative, labeled Alternative 2, contained the
most restrictive TAL options (i.e., lowest catch levels). While this
alternative would achieve the objectives of the proposed action for all
three species, it has the highest potential economic impact on small
entities in the form of potential foregone fishing opportunities.
Alternative 2 was not preferred by the Council because other
alternatives considered have lower impacts on small entities while
achieving the stated objectives of this proposed rule.
The Council analyzed two TAL alternatives that would accomplish the
stated objectives of the proposed action, consistent with applicable
statutes, and that would minimize significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities. Alternative 1 (Council's preferred)
would implement the following TALs in 2009: Summer flounder, 18.45
million lb (8,369 mt); scup, 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt); and black sea
bass, 2.30 million lb (1,043 mt). Alternative 3 (least restrictive/
highest quota levels) would implement the following TALs in 2009:
Summer flounder, 19.02 million lb (8,627 mt); scup, 11.18 million lb
(5,071 mt); and black sea bass, 4.22 million lb (1,914 mt).
Council staff conducted preliminary analysis on the potential
economic impact of changes in recreational harvest limits associated
with the alternatives. For the purposes of the RFA, the only entities
affected by the proposed changes to the recreational harvest limit are
owners and operators of recreational party/charter (for hire) vessels.
These analyses indicate that it is possible that adverse economic
impacts could occur under Alternative 1 but would not be likely under
Alternative 3. The methods utilized in the analysis compare 2007
recreational landings to the respective alternative's recreational
harvest limit and make inferences on possible negative impacts to the
demand for party/charter vessel trips and angler participation. While
useful for a general statement on potential impacts, demand for party/
charter trips has remained relatively stable for many years regardless
of increases or decreases in the recreational harvest limit and
ascertaining angler satisfaction relative to a total recreational
harvest limit is subjective. More thorough analysis of recreational
fisheries impacts will be conducted following the Council's
recommendations for recreational management measures in December 2008.
Once actual 2009 recreational management measures recommendations are
known, more detailed analysis, including an IRFA, will be prepared by
the Council.
To assess the impact of the alternatives on commercial fisheries,
the Council conducted both threshold analysis and analysis of potential
changes in ex-vessel gross revenue that would result from Alternatives
1 and 3. Some degree of caution should be utilized when interpreting
the economic impact data as a host of variations could influence the
outcomes of the analyses. Vessels have permits for multiple fisheries
and may supplement income by landing other species; economic dependence
on a particular species may be masked by vessels landing multiple
species; ex-vessel value of the three species may change from the
estimated values utilized in the analysis; revenues may increase or
decrease as a result of changes to possession limits or seasons set by
individual states; and reduction in commercial quota to account for
previous years' overages may still occur in the specifications final
rule.
Under Alternative 1 (Council's preferred), analysis indicates that
224 vessels out of the 891 (25 percent) that participated in 2007
summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries would be expected
to incur revenue reductions of 5 percent or more. The reductions are
attributable to the reduction in black sea bass TAL and affect vessels
that landed solely black sea bass or black sea bass in combination with
the other two species. The Alternative 1 IRFA analysis indicated that
647 of the 891 vessels (75 percent) that landed summer flounder and
scup or some combination of both in 2007 would be expected to
experience revenue increases in 2009 as
[[Page 63941]]
a result of the 16-percent increase in summer flounder and the 15-
percent increase in scup allowable commercial landings in 2009.
Utilizing ex-vessel information from 2007, the Council estimated
that Alternative 1 would increase cumulative summer flounder and scup
vessel revenues by $3.32 and $0.57 million, respectively. Black sea
bass vessel revenues are projected to decrease by $2.85 million
compared to 2008. If these increases and decreases are distributed
equally among the vessels that landed summer flounder, scup, and black
sea bass in 2007, the resulting increase in revenue per vessel would be
$4,770 for summer flounder and $1,360 for scup. Individual vessel
revenue would decrease by $5,053 for vessels landing black sea bass.
Under Alternative 3 (least restrictive TALs), analysis indicates
that 121 vessels out of the 891 (14 percent) that participated in 2007
summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries would be expected
to incur revenue reductions of 5 percent or more. The reductions are
again attributable to the reduction in black sea bass TAL. The
Alternative 3 threshold analysis indicated that 770 of the 891 vessels
(86 percent) of vessels would be expected to experience revenue
increases in 2009 as a result of the 19-percent increase in summer
flounder and the 77-percent increase in scup allowable commercial
landings under the alternative.
The Council estimated that Alternative 3 would increase cumulative
summer flounder and scup vessel revenues by $4.08 and $2.98 million,
respectively. Black sea bass vessel revenues are projected to decrease
by $0.06 million compared to 2008. If these increases and decreases are
distributed equally among the vessels that landed summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass in 2007, the resulting increase in revenue per
vessel would be $5,268 for summer flounder and $7,112 for scup.
Individual vessel revenue would decrease by $153 for vessels landing
black sea bass.
The Council selected Alternative 1 (preferred) over Alternative 3
(least restrictive) because, for summer flounder, Alterative 1 provides
a higher probability of achieving the FTARGET in 2009 (63
percent) and a higher likelihood of achieving the rebuilding target by
January 1, 2013, than does Alternative 3, which provides a 50-percent
probability of achieving the FTARGET. For scup, Alternative
1 was preferred by the Council because it employs a more conservative
TAL for 2009 as the rebuilding plan is slightly behind schedule in the
first year of the 7-year rebuilding plan. The Council's previous
experience with other species' rebuilding plans indicates that failing
to set harvest levels below the maximum amount possible (i.e., the TAL
in Alternative 3) in early years of rebuilding plans when progress is
slow or behind schedule has resulted in the need for more restrictive
measures in late years of rebuilding efforts. The Council recommended
the Alternative 1 TAL for black sea bass to be consistent with the
FREBUILD value prescribed by the rebuilding plan. The black
sea bass TAL in Alternative 3 is status quo from 2008 and would be
inconsistent with the goals and objectives of the black sea bass
rebuilding plans as it would produce an F rate higher than
FREBUILD. As such, the IRFA provided by the Council
indicates that the TALs of Alternative 1 satisfy the objectives of the
applicable statutes and rebuilding programs and minimize the adverse
impacts of the proposed rule on directly regulated small entities. NMFS
agrees with the Council's IRFA analysis and rationale for recommending
TAL Alternative 1. As such, NMFS is proposing to implement the TALs
contained in Alternative 1 (Summer flounder, 18.45 million lb (8,369
mt); scup, 7.34 million lb (3,329 mt); and black sea bass, 2.30 million
lb (1,043 mt)) for 2009.
Dated: October 22, 2008
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator For RegulatoryPrograms, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E8-25707 Filed 10-27-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S