Fisheries of the United States Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Fisheries of the Arctic Management Area; Bering Sea Subarea, 27498-27504 [E9-13628]
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27498
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 10, 2009 / Proposed Rules
PRELIMINARY REPORT OF THEFT RATES FOR MODEL YEAR 2007 PASSENGER MOTOR VEHICLES STOLEN IN CALENDAR
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Issued on: June 4, 2009.
Stephen R. Kratzke,
Associate Administrator for Rulemaking.
[FR Doc. E9–13530 Filed 6–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 090218204–9956–03]
RIN 0648–AX71
Fisheries of the United States
Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska;
Fisheries of the Arctic Management
Area; Bering Sea Subarea
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AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a proposed rule
that would implement the Fishery
Management Plan for Fish Resources of
the Arctic Management Area (Arctic
FMP) and Amendment 29 to the Fishery
Management Plan for Bering Sea/
Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs
(Crab FMP). The Arctic FMP and
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, if
approved, would establish sustainable
management of commercial fishing in
the Arctic Management Area and move
the northern boundary of the Crab FMP
out of the Arctic Management Area
south to Bering Strait. This action is
necessary to establish a management
framework for commercial fishing and
to provide consistent management of
fish resources in the Arctic Management
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Area before the potential onset of
unregulated commercial fishing in the
area. This action is intended to promote
the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, the
FMPs, and other applicable laws.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by July 27, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Sue
Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. You may submit
comments, identified for this action by
0648–AX71 (PR), by any one of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal website at
https://www.regulations.gov.
• Mail: P. O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802.
• Fax: (907) 586–7557.
• Hand delivery to the Federal
Building: 709 West 9th Street, Room
420A, Juneau, AK.
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 (e.g., name, address)
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). Attachments to electronic
comments will be accepted in Microsoft
Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe
portable document file (pdf) formats
only.
Copies of the Arctic FMP,
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, maps
of the action area and essential fish
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habitat, and the Environmental
Assessment/Regulatory Impact Review/
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(EA/RIR/IRFA) for this action may be
obtained from the Alaska Region at the
mailing address above or from the
Alaska Region website at https://
www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Melanie Brown, 907–586–7228.
The
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands King
and Tanner crab fisheries are managed
under the Crab FMP. The Arctic
Management Area fisheries would be
managed under the Arctic FMP. The
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) prepared the Crab
FMP and has developed and adopted
the proposed Arctic FMP under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Regulations implementing the FMPs
appear at 50 CFR parts 679 and 680.
General regulations governing U.S.
fisheries also appear at 50 CFR part 600.
The Council submitted the Arctic
FMP and Amendment 29 to the Crab
FMP for review by the Secretary of
Commerce, and a notice of availability
of the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29
was published in the Federal Register
on Mary 26, 2009 (74 FR 24757), with
comments on the Arctic FMP and
Amendment 29 invited through July 27,
2009. Comments may address the Arctic
FMP, Amendment 29, the proposed
rule, or all actions, but must be received
by July 27, 2009, to be considered in the
approval/disapproval decision on the
Arctic FMP and Amendment 29. All
comments received by that time,
whether specifically directed to the
Arctic FMP, to Amendment 29, or to the
proposed rule, will be considered in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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approval/disapproval decision on the
Arctic FMP and Amendment 29.
Background
If approved by NMFS, the Arctic FMP
and Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP
would provide for sustainable
management of commercial fishing in
the Arctic Management Area and
eliminate management authority over
the Arctic Management Area from the
Crab FMP. The Arctic FMP would
establish a management framework to
sustainably manage future commercial
fishing in the Arctic Management Area
and would initially prohibit commercial
fishing until new information regarding
Arctic fish resources allows for
authorization of a sustainable
commercial fishery in the area.
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP would
ensure consistent management of all
crab species in the Arctic Management
Area under the Arctic FMP.
In February 2009, the Council
recommended the adoption of the Arctic
FMP to implement a management
framework that will protect the fish
resources of the Arctic Management
Area against the potential onset of
unregulated commercial fishing by
initially prohibiting commercial fishing
until sufficient information is available
to enable a sustainable commercial
fishery to proceed, consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act . Global climate
change is reducing the extent of sea ice
in the Arctic Ocean, providing greater
access to Arctic marine resources and
increasing human activity in this
sensitive marine environment of the
U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act
(section 306(a)(3)), the State of Alaska
may regulate commercial fishing in the
adjacent EEZ waters if no FMP is in
place. No FMP is yet in place for the
Arctic Management Area, and the State
does not allow state licensed vessels to
commercially fish in the Arctic
Management Area. However, the state
authority for management in the EEZ
pertains only to vessels registered under
the law of the State of Alaska. Thus,
absent an FMP, it is possible that
unregistered vessels could commercially
fish in the Arctic Management Area
without any limitation or regulatory
oversight. The Council chose to prevent
this from occurring in the future; the
proposed Arctic FMP would eliminate
the potential for unregulated
commercial fishing in the Arctic
Management Area. This action would
prevent potential adverse effects on the
Arctic marine environment from
unregulated commercial fishing. The
Arctic FMP would be a precautionary,
ecosystem-based approach to fisheries
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management in the Arctic Management
Area.
The proposed Arctic FMP contains all
required provisions and appropriate
discretionary provisions for an FMP
contained in sections 303(a), 303(b), and
313 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The
conservation and management
provisions in the Arctic FMP were
developed in consideration of the
National Standard guidelines. The
following provides a summary of the
main provisions of the proposed Arctic
FMP that provide the authority for
conservation and management of fish
resources and for the provisions in this
proposed rule.
The Arctic FMP would apply to
commercial harvests of most fish
resources in the waters of the Arctic
Management Area (Figure 24 in this
proposed rule). The geographic extent of
the Arctic Management Area would be
all marine waters in the U.S. EEZ of the
Chukchi and Beaufort Seas from 3
nautical miles off the coast of Alaska or
its baseline to 200 nautical miles
offshore, north of Bering Strait (from
Cape Prince of Wales to Cape Dezhneva)
and westward to the 1990 U.S./Russia
maritime boundary line and eastward to
the U.S./Canada maritime boundary.
This proposed rule will not affect
non-commercial fishing in the Arctic
Management Area or commercial
harvest of certain species that are
managed pursuant to other legal
authorities. This action would have no
effect on subsistence harvest of marine
resources in the Arctic Management
Area. It also would have no effect on the
commercial harvest of Pacific salmon
and Pacific halibut. The commercial
harvest of Pacific salmon in the Arctic
Management Area is managed under the
FMP for Salmon Fisheries in the EEZ off
the Coast of Alaska (Salmon FMP),
which prohibits commercial salmon
fishing in the Arctic Management Area.
Pacific halibut commercial fishing is
managed by the International Pacific
Halibut Commission (IPHC), which does
not allow harvest of Pacific halibut in
the Arctic Management Area.
The proposed Arctic FMP would
establish two categories of species:
target species and ecosystem component
species. Target species are those that are
most likely to be targeted in a
foreseeable commercial fishery based on
potential markets and available biomass
in the Arctic Management Area. Arctic
cod (Boreogadus saida), saffron cod
(Eleginus gracilis), and snow crab
(Chionoecetes opilio) are target species
in the proposed Arctic FMP. The
remainder of fish occurring in the Arctic
Management Area are classified as
ecosystem component species. As used
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in the FMP, fish are defined by section
3 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act as
finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all
other forms of marine plant and animal
life other than marine mammals and
birds.
The proposed Arctic FMP would
provide the maximum sustainable yield
(MSY) and optimum yield (OY) for
commercial fishing for each target
species. MSY is specified for each target
species using the MSY control rule
described in the proposed Arctic FMP.
The OY for each target species is
determined by reductions from MSY
based on uncertainty, economic
considerations, and ecosystem
considerations. The MSYs for Arctic
cod, saffron cod, and snow crab would
be reduced by 100 percent based on
economic costs of fishing. Uncertainty
would reduce the MSY for each target
species by an amount ranging from 36
to 61 percent. MSYs for Arctic cod and
saffron cod also would be reduced based
on ecosystem considerations. Arctic cod
is a keystone species in the Arctic
marine environment, with many higher
trophic level predators (i.e., certain
marine mammals and seabirds)
dependent on Arctic cod as a principal
prey species. The harvest of saffron cod
likely would result in very high levels
of Arctic cod bycatch (two tons of Arctic
cod for each ton of saffron cod);
therefore, the harvest of saffron cod
likely would result in impacts on Arctic
cod and on those species that depend on
Arctic cod as prey. Because of the
importance of Arctic cod to the Arctic
food web, the lack of knowledge of the
Arctic cod biomass needed to support
commercial fishing and Arctic
predators, and the potential high levels
of bycatch of Arctic cod in a saffron cod
fishery, the MSYs for Arctic cod and
saffron cod would be reduced 100
percent based on ecosystem concerns.
Based on these reductions of the
MSYs for the target species, the OY for
commercial fishing in the Arctic
Management Area for each target
species is proposed to be zero. With an
OY of zero for each target species, no
quantity of target species is available for
commercial harvest. The proposed
Arctic FMP specifies the OY for each
target species as the lowest amount of
catch sufficient to allow for bycatch of
Arctic cod, saffron cod, and snow crab
in subsistence fisheries for other
species.
Because the OYs for commercial
fisheries for each target species are zero
and because of the lack of information
to manage sustainable fisheries for
ecosystem component species, the
Arctic FMP would prohibit commercial
fishing on target and ecosystem
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component species, except Pacific
salmon and Pacific halibut for which
other authorities prohibit commercial
fishing, as explained above. Prohibiting
commercial harvest of ecosystem
component species would prevent
adverse effects on the Arctic marine
ecosystem, including the target species,
that may result from unregulated
commercial fishing on any ecosystem
component species. This prohibition is
a precautionary approach to fisheries
management because little information
is available to NMFS to determine either
the ability of these species to support
commercial fishing or the potential
impacts from such fishing on the Arctic
marine environment, including the
target species.
Consistent with the Council’s stated
management policy and objectives, the
proposed Arctic FMP includes nontarget species in the ecosystem
component category to ensure that the
Arctic marine ecosystem is adequately
protected and out of concern that
unregulated commercial fishing for
these species could detrimentally affect
the target fishery. The inclusion of all
non-target species in the Arctic
Management Area in the ecosystem
component category is consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act which:
recognizes the increased importance of
habitat conservation; calls for
development of conservation and
management measures to avoid
irreversible or long-term adverse effects
to the marine environment and to
minimize bycatch to the extent
practicable; permits inclusion in an
FMP of management measures to
conserve non-target species and
habitats, considering the variety of
ecological factors affecting fishery
populations; and requires consideration
of ecological factors and protection of
the marine ecosystem in setting OY for
stocks in the fishery. The National
Standard 1 guidelines (50 CFR
600.310(d)(5)(i)) further encourage an
ecosystem-based approach to
management of fisheries, providing the
Council and NMFS with broad
discretion to determine whether stocks
should be classified and included in an
FMP as ecosystem component species
for a series of reasons, including
specifying OY and developing
conservation and management measures
for the associated fishery to address
other ecosystem issues and to protect
their associated role in the ecosystem
with which the fishery interacts. Due to
the lack of commercial fishing in the
Arctic, these species are non-target
species and are not generally retained
for sale or for personal use. Moreover,
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these species are not likely to be
overfished or be subject to overfishing
in the absence of commercial fishing or
conservation and management
measures.
The Council’s decision to create an
ecosystem component category that
includes all fish species in the Arctic
Management Area, except the potential
target species, and to prohibit
commercial fishing for such species
other than Pacific salmon and Pacific
halibut, is based on ecosystem
considerations and is intended to
conserve target and non-target species
and their habitats. The stated
management objectives of the Arctic
FMP provide a benchmark for NMFS’
evaluation of the Council’s proposed
management measures. These objectives
include a ‘‘Biological Conservation
Objective’’ that seeks to ensure the longterm viability of fish populations by,
among other things, preventing
unregulated fishing and ‘‘incorporating
ecosystem-based considerations into
fishery management decisions, as
appropriate . . . .’’ The prohibition on
commercial fishing for ecosystem
component species reflects such
appropriate ecosystem-based
considerations and does not constitute
required conservation and management
for purposes of including such species
in the fishery.
The OY for each of the three potential
target fisheries is de minimis and
sufficient only to support subsistence
fishing. NMFS shares the Council’s
concern that if the target species are
caught as bycatch during unregulated
commercial fishing for other species,
removal of those target species could
surpass OY. Similarly, NMFS shares the
Council’s concern that unregulated
commercial fishing for ecosystem
component species may affect the Arctic
marine ecosystem in ways that are
detrimental to the potential target
fishery as well as non-target species and
their habitats. For example, large-scale
removal of biomass of important prey
species for one or more target species,
or removal of species that are otherwise
ecologically connected to one or more
target species, could adversely affect the
target fishery populations. At present,
the scientific understanding of the
interdependence and trophic
relationships between particular species
in the Arctic marine ecosystem is
rudimentary, relative to other marine
ecosystems, as is the knowledge of
particular habitats in the region that
may be important to the continued
health of the ecosystem and its various
species. In particular, NMFS is
concerned about the potential adverse
effects of unregulated commercial
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fishing for non-target species on Arctic
cod, which is found throughout the
Arctic Management Area and is a
keystone species that provides a crucial
trophic link between the sea ice food
web and marine mammals and birds.
These limitations on NMFS’
understanding of ecological processes in
the Arctic are compounded by the
ongoing climatic changes in the region
and physical changes in the marine
environment. Global climate change is
anticipated to continue altering the
Arctic environment in fundamental
ways, and before long may lead to a
seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean. As a
result, there is great uncertainty
regarding the ways in which current
ecological relationships may change,
irrespective of fishing pressure.
Consistent with the Council’s
ecosystem-based management policy,
NMFS believes it is appropriate to adopt
management measures that will
maximize the resilience of the target
species and afford the greatest
protection to the integrity of the Arctic
ecosystem in the face of a changing
climate. The prohibition on commercial
fishing for ecosystem component
species represents such a management
measure.
Although there is uncertainty as to
whether commercial fishing for
ecosystem component species would
diminish target fishery populations to
an unacceptable degree, either due to
bycatch of target species or impacts on
the ecosystem, NMFS has determined
that the Council appropriately adopted
a precautionary approach that proposes
prohibiting commercial fishing for any
species of Arctic fish in the Arctic
Management Area. Given the limited
knowledge of ecological relationships
and considerable uncertainty regarding
the future, this will ensure that fishing
does not interfere with important
ecological relationships in the Arctic
marine environment and thereby avoids
the risk of harm to the potential target
species, the broader ecosystem, and the
habitat of fish species that may
otherwise result from unregulated
commercial fishing for ecosystem
component species. NMFS will
periodically review the status of
ecosystem component species based on
the best available scientific information
to determine whether or not such
species should be classified for active
conservation and management as
species or stocks in the fishery.
The proposed Arctic FMP prescribes
the process the Council will follow and
the criteria it will evaluate before
authorizing a future commercial fishery.
Consideration of a future commercial
fishery would include the Council’s
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review of an analysis of the biological
information on the potential target
species and potential impacts from
commercial fishing on the Arctic marine
environment and on communities. An
Arctic FMP amendment would be
required to authorize a commercial
fishery in the Arctic Management Area
and to implement the specific
conservation and management measures
for the fishery.
If a commercial fishery is authorized
in the Arctic Management Area, the
proposed Arctic FMP would provide the
general conservation and management
measures to ensure sustainable fishing
and to prevent overfishing of any target
species. Determination criteria for
overfishing levels (OFL) and acceptable
biological catch levels (ABC) would be
based on the type and quantity of
information available.
The OFLs and ABCs would guide the
Council and NMFS in setting harvest
specifications for fishery management in
the Arctic Management Area. The
process for specifying OFLs, ABCs, and
total allowable catch amounts (TACs)
would include the development of a
Stock Assessment and Fishery
Evaluation report for the Council’s
consideration in recommending OFLs,
ABCs, and TACs to the Secretary. At the
time a commercial fishery is authorized
by the amended Arctic FMP, the harvest
specification regulations under § 679.20
would be revised to include the Arctic
Management Area. This would ensure
the latest method of determining harvest
specifications would be used at the time
the Arctic Management Area
commercial fishery is authorized.
The National Standard 1 guidelines
(74 FR 3178, January 16, 2009) require
accountability measures and
mechanisms to prevent overfishing.
Because the proposed Arctic FMP
initially prohibits commercial fishing in
the Arctic Management Area, the
prohibition on commercial fishing that
would be implemented by this proposed
rule would satisfy this requirement. If a
commercial fishery is authorized in the
future, the FMP would be amended to
include specific accountability
measures and mechanisms to prevent
overfishing.
The process and criteria for issuing
exempted fishing permits (EFPs) that
would be implemented by this proposed
rule will be found at 50 CFR part 679.
EFPs provide exemptions to fishing
regulations to allow commercial fishing
in a manner not otherwise authorized.
EFPs are granted for the purpose of
allowing studies that provide
information useful to the management
of fisheries and are effective for a
limited time. More information
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regarding EFPs is available from the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://
www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram/
efp.htm.
Essential fish habitat (EFH) is
described for each target species in the
proposed Arctic FMP. Once EFH is
established, NMFS must be consulted
on any federal action that may adversely
impact EFH (Magnuson-Stevens Act
section 305(b)(2)). The proposed EFH
description for Arctic cod includes
waters of the entire Arctic Management
Area. Proposed EFH locations for snow
crab and saffron cod are primarily in the
Chukchi Sea. A description of nonfishing impacts on EFH is appended to
the proposed Arctic FMP. This
appendix describes potential adverse
impacts of a variety of human activities
that may occur in the Arctic
Management Area and identifies
possible mitigation measures to reduce
such impacts.
To assist in the ecosystem approach to
fisheries management, the proposed
Arctic FMP includes habitat
descriptions for several ecosystem
component species. The species
selected for habitat descriptions
represent forage species and potential
future target species based on Bering
Sea commercial fishing.
The proposed Arctic FMP includes
the latest information on the Arctic
ecosystem and Chukchi and Beaufort
Seas survey data. This information
provides the basis for the MSY and OY
specifications and informed the
Council’s decision to recommend
adoption of the Arctic FMP.
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP
would move the northern boundary of
the Crab FMP management area to
Bering Strait. The Crab FMP northern
boundary is currently located at Point
Hope, north of Bering Strait and within
the Arctic Management Area (Figure 24
in this proposed rule). This change in
the Crab FMP northern boundary would
allow the management of all crab
species in the Arctic Management Area
to be under the Arctic FMP. This change
in the geographic scope of management
authority under the Crab FMP would
ensure consistent management authority
and application of the conservation and
management measures in the Arctic
FMP to crab throughout the Arctic
Management Area. The Crab FMP defers
crab management to the State of Alaska
with federal oversight. The management
of crab stocks in the Bering Sea is based
on survey and catch information, which
is not available in the Arctic
Management Area. The Arctic FMP’s
conservation and management measures
were designed to address the unique
Arctic marine environment and the
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paucity of information available for
sustainable crab fisheries management.
Proposed Regulatory Amendments
The Council recommended, and the
Secretary proposes, the following
regulatory changes and additions to 50
CFR part 679 to implement the Arctic
FMP.
1. Section 679.1 would be revised to
add the title of the Arctic FMP and to
describe the scope of the FMP as
governing commercial fishing for Arctic
fish in the Arctic Management Area by
vessels of the United States. This
addition would be necessary to expand
the scope of the 50 CFR part 679
regulations to include implementation
of the Arctic FMP.
2. Section 679.2 would be amended to
add and revise definitions for the Arctic
FMP and for Amendment 29 to the Crab
FMP. A definition for ‘‘Arctic fish’’
would be added to distinguish in
regulations the species under the
authority of the Arctic FMP. The Arctic
fish definition would include all fish as
defined by the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
excluding Pacific halibut and Pacific
salmon. The Magnuson-Stevens Act
defines ‘‘fish’’ as finfish, mollusks,
crustaceans, and all other forms of
marine animal and plant life other than
marine mammals and birds. Commercial
fishing for Pacific halibut and Pacific
salmon in the EEZ off Alaska is
authorized by the IPHC and under the
Salmon FMP, respectively, and would
not be managed under the Arctic FMP.
Creating this definition would allow for
the initial prohibition of commercial
fishing for Arctic fish, as would be
prescribed by the Arctic FMP.
A definition for the ‘‘Arctic
Management Area’’ as described by the
Arctic FMP would be added. The area
would be described by text and would
refer to Figure 24 in part 679. This
definition is necessary to define the area
within which the proposed Arctic FMP
will manage commercial fishing.
The definition for the ‘‘Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Area’’ for the purposes
of king and Tanner crab management
would be revised. This revision would
implement Amendment 29 to the Crab
FMP by moving the northern boundary
of the Crab FMP fishery management
area from Point Hope southward to
Bering Strait. This revision is necessary
to eliminate management authority in
the Arctic Management Area from the
Crab FMP so that all crab that occur
within the Arctic Management Area
would be managed under the Arctic
FMP.
The definition of ‘‘commercial
fishing’’ would be revised to include the
catch of Arctic fish which is or is
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intended to be sold or bartered,
excluding subsistence fishing. This
revision is necessary to manage, and
initially prohibit, commercial fishing for
Arctic fish and to ensure subsistence
fishing is not affected by such
management of commercial fishing.
The definition of ‘‘management area’’
would be revised to add the Arctic
Management Area. This revision is
necessary to list the Arctic Management
Area with the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Management Area and the Gulf
of Alaska. This revision would allow for
fishery management within the scope of
the regulations at § 679.1.
The definition of ‘‘optimum yield’’
would be revised by adding Arctic fish
and referencing § 679.20(a)(1) where the
optimum yield for target species
identified in the Arctic FMP would be
specified. This revision is necessary to
establish the optimum yield for the
target species and to support the
prohibition on commercial fishing of
target species.
The definition of ‘‘subsistence
fishing’’ would be added to describe
subsistence harvests in the Arctic
Management Area of Arctic fish and
Pacific salmon. Subsistence in terms of
Pacific halibut is defined under
regulations at 50 CFR 300.61 and would
not be changed by this proposed
definition. Subsistence fishing in the
Arctic would be the harvest of Arctic
fish and Pacific salmon for noncommercial, long-term, customary and
traditional use necessary to maintain the
life of the taker or those who depend
upon the taker to provide them with
such subsistence. This definition is
consistent with the definition of
subsistence in the Marine Mammal
Protection Act. Adding this definition to
50 CFR part 679 would allow the
subsistence harvest practices to be
differentiated from commercial harvest
practices, which would be prohibited.
This addition is necessary to ensure the
continued subsistence harvest of Arctic
fish and Pacific salmon in the Arctic
Management Area while differentiating
such activity from commercial fishing.
NMFS is requesting comments specific
to this definition and any suggestions on
how subsistence fishing may be better
defined.
3. The introductory paragraph to
§ 679.6 addressing EFPs would be
revised to add Arctic fish. EFPs
currently are available for only
groundfish exempted fishing. Because
the Arctic FMP includes species other
than groundfish and the Council
intended that EFPs may be available for
any type of fish resource occurring in
the Arctic Management Area, the
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application of EFPs would be revised to
include Arctic fish.
4. In § 679.7, a prohibition would be
added to prevent commercial fishing for
Arctic fish in the Arctic Management
Area. A prohibition on commercial
fishing for Arctic fish would be
necessary to implement the Arctic FMP
prohibition on commercial fishing on
either target or ecosystem component
species. NMFS currently works with the
U.S. Coast Guard in surveillance of
vessel activities in the Arctic
Management Area. U.S. fishing vessels
transiting Canadian waters are required
to stow gear in a manner that makes the
gear not readily available for fishing and
easily visible during surveillance flights.
NMFS may, in the future, consider this
or other procedures that could facilitate
enforcement of the commercial fishing
prohibition in the Arctic Management
Area and is interested in any public
comment on possible future
enforcement procedures.
5. In § 679.20(a), the OY for
commercial fishing for Arctic
Management Area target species would
be added. The OY for commercial
fishing would be set at zero mt for each
of the target species, as provided in the
Arctic FMP. This revision is necessary
to implement the OYs specified in the
Arctic FMP.
6. Figure 24 to part 679 would be
added to show the Arctic Management
Area as established by the Arctic FMP.
This addition is necessary to clarify in
the regulations the location of the Arctic
Management Area and to differentiate
the boundary of the Arctic Management
Area from the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Management Area boundary
shown in Figure 1 to part 679. The
Chukchi Sea statistical area 400 would
remain with the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands statistical and
reporting areas in Figure 1 to part 679
until the Arctic FMP is amended to
authorize a commercial fishery in the
Arctic Management Area. The Council
recommended not establishing subareas
for fisheries management in the Arctic
Management Area at this time due to the
lack of information to inform the
boundaries of such subareas.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b)(1)(A) and
305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Acting Assistant Administrator
has determined that this proposed rule
is consistent with and necessary to
implement the Arctic FMP, and
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, and in
accordance with other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
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This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA), as required
by section 603 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA). The IRFA
describes the economic impact this
proposed rule, if adopted, would have
on small entities. Descriptions of the
action, the reasons it is under
consideration, and its objectives and
legal basis, are contained at the
beginning of this section in the
preamble and in the SUMMARY section
of the preamble. A summary of the
analysis follows. A copy of this analysis
is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
This action would regulate
commercial fishing for fish resources
and not regulate subsistence,
recreational, or personal use fishing in
the action area. There is only one
unverified, small, and poorly
documented commercial fishery for red
king crab in a portion of the Arctic
Management Area in Kotzebue Sound.
A survey of the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game fish ticket database back
to 1985 identified a single fish ticket for
this fishery. The ticket was for a very
small amount of red king crab delivered
in the summer of 2005. However, to the
extent that fishing has occurred,
landings in this fishery may not always
have been reported on official state
landings records (i.e., not legally
recorded). The waters in which this
fishery may have occurred were set
apart from other waters for reporting
purposes in 2005. From 2005 to 2007,
three or four persons acquired the State
of Alaska K09X permits that are
required to fish commercially in this
area. With the exception of the single
anomalous fish ticket cited above, there
have been no commercial fish tickets
from the action area during 2005
through 2007. Thus, the number of
permit holders, rather than the number
of operations with fish tickets, is
assumed to best represent the potential
number of entities directly regulated by
this action. All of these operations are
believed to be small entities with annual
gross revenues under $4 million.
The Council considered four
alternatives and three options for this
proposed action. The options have no
effect on directly regulated small
entities as the options are limited to
different scientific and administrative
processes for developing management
measures for fisheries. Each option
resulted in the same effect, because each
would implement a management
framework that initially prohibits
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commercial fishing in the Arctic
Management Area.
Alternative 1 is the status quo which
would allow for the potential for
unregulated commercial fishing to occur
in the Arctic Management Area.
Alternative 1 does not meet the
objectives of the action to sustainably
manage commercial fisheries in the
Arctic Management Area.
Alternatives 3 and 4 would provide
different mechanisms to provide for
sustainable management of fish
resources in the Arctic Management
Area, but each alternative would
exclude the small red king crab fishery
in Kotzebue Sound from Arctic FMP
management. Alternative 3 would have
exempted the red king crab fishery from
the Arctic FMP and from the Crab FMP
while Alternative 4 would have
provided for the continued management
of the small red king crab fishery under
the Crab FMP. Neither Alternative 3 nor
Alternative 4 were chosen based on the
lack of evidence of a currently existing
small red king crab fishery in the
Kotzebue Sound area and on the lack of
information to ensure sustainable
management of the potential red king
crab stock in the Kotzebue Sound while
not affecting subsistence use of the
resource. Alternatives 1, 3, and 4 have
no known impacts on directly regulated
small entities.
Alternative 2 was chosen as the
preferred alternative as it fully meets the
objective to provide sustainable
management for all fish resources of the
Arctic Management Area. Alternative 2,
which implements a management
framework that initially prohibits all
commercial fishing in the Arctic
Management Area, initially would
prohibit future crab fishing that may
otherwise take place in the small and
poorly documented fishery in Kotzebue
Sound, until stocks have been assessed
and harvest specifications (e.g., OFL,
ABC, TAC) are established. At that time,
an amendment to the Arctic FMP could
be proposed to authorize commercial
fishing. Based on permit issuance, it is
possible that two to four small entities
may fish in the small red king crab
fishery in Kotzebue Sound in a year.
Permit issuance does not necessarily
indicate fishing activity, and only one
fish ticket exists from this fishery since
1985. Income from this fishery is likely
to be small.
This regulation does not impose new
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements on the regulated small
entities.
The IRFA did not reveal any federal
rules that duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposed action.
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Executive Order (E.O.) 13175 of
November 6, 2000 (25 U.S.C. 450 note),
the Executive Memorandum of April 29,
1994 (25 U.S.C. 450 note), and the
American Indian and Alaska Native
Policy of the U.S. Department of
Commerce (March 30, 1995) outline the
responsibilities of NMFS in matters
affecting tribal interests. Section 161 of
Public Law (P.L.) 108–199 (188 Stat.
452), as amended by section 518 of P.L.
109–447 (118 Stat. 3267), extends the
consultation requirements of E.O. 13175
to Alaska Native corporations. NMFS
will contact tribal governments and
Alaska Native corporations which may
be affected by the proposed action,
provide them with a copy of this
proposed rule, and offer them an
opportunity to consult.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and
reporting requirements.
Dated: June 5, 2009.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Assistant Administrator For Regulatory
Programs, National Marine Fisheries Service.
For reasons set out in the preamble,
NMFS proposes to amend 50 CFR part
679 as follows:
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
1. The authority citation for part 679
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et
seq.; 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108 447.
2. In § 679.1, add paragraph (l) to read
as follows:
§ 679.1
Purpose and scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Fishery Management Plan for Fish
Resources of the Arctic Management
Area. Regulations in this part govern
commercial fishing for Arctic fish in the
Arctic Management Area by vessels of
the United States (see this subpart and
subpart B of this part).
3. In § 679.2, add in alphabetical order
definitions for ≥Arctic fish’’, ‘‘Arctic
Management Area’’, and ‘‘Subsistence
fishing’’ and revise the definitions for
the ‘‘Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Area’’, ‘‘Management area’’, and
paragraph (2) of the definition of
‘‘Optimum yield’’ and paragraph (3) to
the definition of ‘‘Commercial fishing’’
to read as follows:
§ 679.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Arctic fish means finfish, mollusks,
crustaceans, and all other forms of
marine animal and plant life other than
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27503
marine mammals, birds, Pacific salmon,
and Pacific halibut.
Arctic Management Area, for
purposes of regulations governing the
Arctic Management Area fisheries,
means all marine waters in the U.S. EEZ
of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas from
3 nautical miles off the coast of Alaska
or its baseline to 200 nautical miles
offshore, north of Bering Strait (from
Cape Prince of Wales to Cape Dezhneva)
and westward to the 1990 U.S./Russia
maritime boundary line and eastward to
the U.S./Canada maritime boundary (see
Figure 24 to this part).
*
*
*
*
*
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Area,
for purposes of regulations governing
the commercial king and Tanner crab
fisheries in part 680 of this Chapter,
means those waters of the EEZ off the
west coast of Alaska lying south of the
Chukchi Sea statistical area as described
in the coordinates listed for Figure 1 to
this part, and extending south of the
Aleutian Islands for 200 nm west of
Scotch Cap Light (164° 44′36″ W. long).
*
*
*
*
*
Commercial fishing means:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) For purposes of Arctic fish, the
resulting catch of fish in the Arctic
Management Area which either is, or is
intended to be, sold or bartered but does
not include subsistence fishing for
Arctic fish, as defined in this
subsection.
*
*
*
*
*
Management area means any district,
regulatory area, subpart, part, or the
entire GOA, BSAI, or Arctic
Management Area.
*
*
*
*
*
Optimum yield means:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) With respect to the groundfish and
Arctic fisheries, see § 679.20(a)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
Subsistence fishing for purposes of
fishing in the Arctic Management Area
means the harvest of Arctic fish and
Pacific salmon for non-commercial,
long-term, customary and traditional
use necessary to maintain the life of the
taker or those who depend upon the
taker to provide them with such
subsistence.
*
*
*
*
*
4. In § 679.6, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 679.6
Exempted fisheries.
(a) General. For limited experimental
purposes, the Regional Administrator
may authorize, after consulting with the
Council, fishing for groundfish or
fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic
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Management Area in a manner that
would otherwise be prohibited. No
exempted fishing may be conducted
unless authorized by an exempted
fishing permit issued by the Regional
Administrator to the participating vessel
owner in accordance with the criteria
and procedures specified in this section.
Exempted fishing permits will be issued
without charge and will expire at the
end of a calendar year unless otherwise
provided for under paragraph (e) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
5. In § 679.7, add paragraph (p) to
read as follows:
§ 679.7
Prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
(p) Arctic Management Area. Conduct
commercial fishing for any Arctic fish in
the Arctic Management Area.
§ 679.20
General limitations.
This section applies to vessels
engaged in directed fishing for
groundfish in the GOA and/or the BSAI
and to vessels engaged in commercial
fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic
Management Area.
(a) * * *
(1) OY (i) BSAI and GOA. The OY for
BSAI and GOA target species and the
‘‘other species’’ category is a range or
specific amount that can be harvested
consistently with this part, plus the
amounts of ‘‘nonspecified species’’
taken incidentally to the harvest of
target species and the ‘‘other species’’
category. The species categories are
defined in Table 1 of the specifications
as provided in paragraph (c) of this
section.
(A) The OY for groundfish in the
BSAI regulated by this section and by
part 600 of this chapter is 1.4 million to
2.0 million mt.
(B) The OY for groundfish in the GOA
regulated by this section and by part 600
of this chapter is 116,000 to 800,000 mt.
(ii) Arctic Management Area. The OY
for each target fish species identified in
the Fishery Management Plan for Fish
Resources of the Arctic Management
Area regulated by this section and by
part 600 of this chapter is 0 mt.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Figure 24 is added to part 679 to
read as follows:
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
[FR Doc. E9–13628 Filed 6–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
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*
6. In § 679.20, revise the introductory
paragraph and paragraph (a)(1) to read
as follows:
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 110 (Wednesday, June 10, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27498-27504]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-13628]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 090218204-9956-03]
RIN 0648-AX71
Fisheries of the United States Exclusive Economic Zone Off
Alaska; Fisheries of the Arctic Management Area; Bering Sea Subarea
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a proposed rule that would implement the Fishery
Management Plan for Fish Resources of the Arctic Management Area
(Arctic FMP) and Amendment 29 to the Fishery Management Plan for Bering
Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs (Crab FMP). The Arctic FMP
and Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, if approved, would establish
sustainable management of commercial fishing in the Arctic Management
Area and move the northern boundary of the Crab FMP out of the Arctic
Management Area south to Bering Strait. This action is necessary to
establish a management framework for commercial fishing and to provide
consistent management of fish resources in the Arctic Management Area
before the potential onset of unregulated commercial fishing in the
area. This action is intended to promote the goals and objectives of
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, the FMPs,
and other applicable laws.
DATES: Written comments must be received by July 27, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Sue Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region, NMFS,
Attn: Ellen Sebastian. You may submit comments, identified for this
action by 0648-AX71 (PR), by any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal website at https://www.regulations.gov.
Mail: P. O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802.
Fax: (907) 586-7557.
Hand delivery to the Federal Building: 709 West 9th
Street, Room 420A, Juneau, AK.
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 (e.g., name, address) 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). Attachments to electronic
comments will be accepted in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or
Adobe portable document file (pdf) formats only.
Copies of the Arctic FMP, Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, maps of the
action area and essential fish habitat, and the Environmental
Assessment/Regulatory Impact Review/Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (EA/RIR/IRFA) for this action may be obtained from the Alaska
Region at the mailing address above or from the Alaska Region website
at https://www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Melanie Brown, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands King and
Tanner crab fisheries are managed under the Crab FMP. The Arctic
Management Area fisheries would be managed under the Arctic FMP. The
North Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council) prepared the Crab
FMP and has developed and adopted the proposed Arctic FMP under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). Regulations implementing the FMPs appear at
50 CFR parts 679 and 680. General regulations governing U.S. fisheries
also appear at 50 CFR part 600.
The Council submitted the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29 to the Crab
FMP for review by the Secretary of Commerce, and a notice of
availability of the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29 was published in the
Federal Register on Mary 26, 2009 (74 FR 24757), with comments on the
Arctic FMP and Amendment 29 invited through July 27, 2009. Comments may
address the Arctic FMP, Amendment 29, the proposed rule, or all
actions, but must be received by July 27, 2009, to be considered in the
approval/disapproval decision on the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29. All
comments received by that time, whether specifically directed to the
Arctic FMP, to Amendment 29, or to the proposed rule, will be
considered in the
[[Page 27499]]
approval/disapproval decision on the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29.
Background
If approved by NMFS, the Arctic FMP and Amendment 29 to the Crab
FMP would provide for sustainable management of commercial fishing in
the Arctic Management Area and eliminate management authority over the
Arctic Management Area from the Crab FMP. The Arctic FMP would
establish a management framework to sustainably manage future
commercial fishing in the Arctic Management Area and would initially
prohibit commercial fishing until new information regarding Arctic fish
resources allows for authorization of a sustainable commercial fishery
in the area. Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP would ensure consistent
management of all crab species in the Arctic Management Area under the
Arctic FMP.
In February 2009, the Council recommended the adoption of the
Arctic FMP to implement a management framework that will protect the
fish resources of the Arctic Management Area against the potential
onset of unregulated commercial fishing by initially prohibiting
commercial fishing until sufficient information is available to enable
a sustainable commercial fishery to proceed, consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act . Global climate change is reducing the extent of
sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, providing greater access to Arctic marine
resources and increasing human activity in this sensitive marine
environment of the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act (section 306(a)(3)), the State of Alaska may
regulate commercial fishing in the adjacent EEZ waters if no FMP is in
place. No FMP is yet in place for the Arctic Management Area, and the
State does not allow state licensed vessels to commercially fish in the
Arctic Management Area. However, the state authority for management in
the EEZ pertains only to vessels registered under the law of the State
of Alaska. Thus, absent an FMP, it is possible that unregistered
vessels could commercially fish in the Arctic Management Area without
any limitation or regulatory oversight. The Council chose to prevent
this from occurring in the future; the proposed Arctic FMP would
eliminate the potential for unregulated commercial fishing in the
Arctic Management Area. This action would prevent potential adverse
effects on the Arctic marine environment from unregulated commercial
fishing. The Arctic FMP would be a precautionary, ecosystem-based
approach to fisheries management in the Arctic Management Area.
The proposed Arctic FMP contains all required provisions and
appropriate discretionary provisions for an FMP contained in sections
303(a), 303(b), and 313 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The conservation
and management provisions in the Arctic FMP were developed in
consideration of the National Standard guidelines. The following
provides a summary of the main provisions of the proposed Arctic FMP
that provide the authority for conservation and management of fish
resources and for the provisions in this proposed rule.
The Arctic FMP would apply to commercial harvests of most fish
resources in the waters of the Arctic Management Area (Figure 24 in
this proposed rule). The geographic extent of the Arctic Management
Area would be all marine waters in the U.S. EEZ of the Chukchi and
Beaufort Seas from 3 nautical miles off the coast of Alaska or its
baseline to 200 nautical miles offshore, north of Bering Strait (from
Cape Prince of Wales to Cape Dezhneva) and westward to the 1990 U.S./
Russia maritime boundary line and eastward to the U.S./Canada maritime
boundary.
This proposed rule will not affect non-commercial fishing in the
Arctic Management Area or commercial harvest of certain species that
are managed pursuant to other legal authorities. This action would have
no effect on subsistence harvest of marine resources in the Arctic
Management Area. It also would have no effect on the commercial harvest
of Pacific salmon and Pacific halibut. The commercial harvest of
Pacific salmon in the Arctic Management Area is managed under the FMP
for Salmon Fisheries in the EEZ off the Coast of Alaska (Salmon FMP),
which prohibits commercial salmon fishing in the Arctic Management
Area. Pacific halibut commercial fishing is managed by the
International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC), which does not allow
harvest of Pacific halibut in the Arctic Management Area.
The proposed Arctic FMP would establish two categories of species:
target species and ecosystem component species. Target species are
those that are most likely to be targeted in a foreseeable commercial
fishery based on potential markets and available biomass in the Arctic
Management Area. Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida), saffron cod (Eleginus
gracilis), and snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) are target species in
the proposed Arctic FMP. The remainder of fish occurring in the Arctic
Management Area are classified as ecosystem component species. As used
in the FMP, fish are defined by section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act
as finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all other forms of marine plant
and animal life other than marine mammals and birds.
The proposed Arctic FMP would provide the maximum sustainable yield
(MSY) and optimum yield (OY) for commercial fishing for each target
species. MSY is specified for each target species using the MSY control
rule described in the proposed Arctic FMP. The OY for each target
species is determined by reductions from MSY based on uncertainty,
economic considerations, and ecosystem considerations. The MSYs for
Arctic cod, saffron cod, and snow crab would be reduced by 100 percent
based on economic costs of fishing. Uncertainty would reduce the MSY
for each target species by an amount ranging from 36 to 61 percent.
MSYs for Arctic cod and saffron cod also would be reduced based on
ecosystem considerations. Arctic cod is a keystone species in the
Arctic marine environment, with many higher trophic level predators
(i.e., certain marine mammals and seabirds) dependent on Arctic cod as
a principal prey species. The harvest of saffron cod likely would
result in very high levels of Arctic cod bycatch (two tons of Arctic
cod for each ton of saffron cod); therefore, the harvest of saffron cod
likely would result in impacts on Arctic cod and on those species that
depend on Arctic cod as prey. Because of the importance of Arctic cod
to the Arctic food web, the lack of knowledge of the Arctic cod biomass
needed to support commercial fishing and Arctic predators, and the
potential high levels of bycatch of Arctic cod in a saffron cod
fishery, the MSYs for Arctic cod and saffron cod would be reduced 100
percent based on ecosystem concerns.
Based on these reductions of the MSYs for the target species, the
OY for commercial fishing in the Arctic Management Area for each target
species is proposed to be zero. With an OY of zero for each target
species, no quantity of target species is available for commercial
harvest. The proposed Arctic FMP specifies the OY for each target
species as the lowest amount of catch sufficient to allow for bycatch
of Arctic cod, saffron cod, and snow crab in subsistence fisheries for
other species.
Because the OYs for commercial fisheries for each target species
are zero and because of the lack of information to manage sustainable
fisheries for ecosystem component species, the Arctic FMP would
prohibit commercial fishing on target and ecosystem
[[Page 27500]]
component species, except Pacific salmon and Pacific halibut for which
other authorities prohibit commercial fishing, as explained above.
Prohibiting commercial harvest of ecosystem component species would
prevent adverse effects on the Arctic marine ecosystem, including the
target species, that may result from unregulated commercial fishing on
any ecosystem component species. This prohibition is a precautionary
approach to fisheries management because little information is
available to NMFS to determine either the ability of these species to
support commercial fishing or the potential impacts from such fishing
on the Arctic marine environment, including the target species.
Consistent with the Council's stated management policy and
objectives, the proposed Arctic FMP includes non-target species in the
ecosystem component category to ensure that the Arctic marine ecosystem
is adequately protected and out of concern that unregulated commercial
fishing for these species could detrimentally affect the target
fishery. The inclusion of all non-target species in the Arctic
Management Area in the ecosystem component category is consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act which: recognizes the increased importance of
habitat conservation; calls for development of conservation and
management measures to avoid irreversible or long-term adverse effects
to the marine environment and to minimize bycatch to the extent
practicable; permits inclusion in an FMP of management measures to
conserve non-target species and habitats, considering the variety of
ecological factors affecting fishery populations; and requires
consideration of ecological factors and protection of the marine
ecosystem in setting OY for stocks in the fishery. The National
Standard 1 guidelines (50 CFR 600.310(d)(5)(i)) further encourage an
ecosystem-based approach to management of fisheries, providing the
Council and NMFS with broad discretion to determine whether stocks
should be classified and included in an FMP as ecosystem component
species for a series of reasons, including specifying OY and developing
conservation and management measures for the associated fishery to
address other ecosystem issues and to protect their associated role in
the ecosystem with which the fishery interacts. Due to the lack of
commercial fishing in the Arctic, these species are non-target species
and are not generally retained for sale or for personal use. Moreover,
these species are not likely to be overfished or be subject to
overfishing in the absence of commercial fishing or conservation and
management measures.
The Council's decision to create an ecosystem component category
that includes all fish species in the Arctic Management Area, except
the potential target species, and to prohibit commercial fishing for
such species other than Pacific salmon and Pacific halibut, is based on
ecosystem considerations and is intended to conserve target and non-
target species and their habitats. The stated management objectives of
the Arctic FMP provide a benchmark for NMFS' evaluation of the
Council's proposed management measures. These objectives include a
``Biological Conservation Objective'' that seeks to ensure the long-
term viability of fish populations by, among other things, preventing
unregulated fishing and ``incorporating ecosystem-based considerations
into fishery management decisions, as appropriate . . . .'' The
prohibition on commercial fishing for ecosystem component species
reflects such appropriate ecosystem-based considerations and does not
constitute required conservation and management for purposes of
including such species in the fishery.
The OY for each of the three potential target fisheries is de
minimis and sufficient only to support subsistence fishing. NMFS shares
the Council's concern that if the target species are caught as bycatch
during unregulated commercial fishing for other species, removal of
those target species could surpass OY. Similarly, NMFS shares the
Council's concern that unregulated commercial fishing for ecosystem
component species may affect the Arctic marine ecosystem in ways that
are detrimental to the potential target fishery as well as non-target
species and their habitats. For example, large-scale removal of biomass
of important prey species for one or more target species, or removal of
species that are otherwise ecologically connected to one or more target
species, could adversely affect the target fishery populations. At
present, the scientific understanding of the interdependence and
trophic relationships between particular species in the Arctic marine
ecosystem is rudimentary, relative to other marine ecosystems, as is
the knowledge of particular habitats in the region that may be
important to the continued health of the ecosystem and its various
species. In particular, NMFS is concerned about the potential adverse
effects of unregulated commercial fishing for non-target species on
Arctic cod, which is found throughout the Arctic Management Area and is
a keystone species that provides a crucial trophic link between the sea
ice food web and marine mammals and birds.
These limitations on NMFS' understanding of ecological processes in
the Arctic are compounded by the ongoing climatic changes in the region
and physical changes in the marine environment. Global climate change
is anticipated to continue altering the Arctic environment in
fundamental ways, and before long may lead to a seasonally ice-free
Arctic Ocean. As a result, there is great uncertainty regarding the
ways in which current ecological relationships may change, irrespective
of fishing pressure. Consistent with the Council's ecosystem-based
management policy, NMFS believes it is appropriate to adopt management
measures that will maximize the resilience of the target species and
afford the greatest protection to the integrity of the Arctic ecosystem
in the face of a changing climate. The prohibition on commercial
fishing for ecosystem component species represents such a management
measure.
Although there is uncertainty as to whether commercial fishing for
ecosystem component species would diminish target fishery populations
to an unacceptable degree, either due to bycatch of target species or
impacts on the ecosystem, NMFS has determined that the Council
appropriately adopted a precautionary approach that proposes
prohibiting commercial fishing for any species of Arctic fish in the
Arctic Management Area. Given the limited knowledge of ecological
relationships and considerable uncertainty regarding the future, this
will ensure that fishing does not interfere with important ecological
relationships in the Arctic marine environment and thereby avoids the
risk of harm to the potential target species, the broader ecosystem,
and the habitat of fish species that may otherwise result from
unregulated commercial fishing for ecosystem component species. NMFS
will periodically review the status of ecosystem component species
based on the best available scientific information to determine whether
or not such species should be classified for active conservation and
management as species or stocks in the fishery.
The proposed Arctic FMP prescribes the process the Council will
follow and the criteria it will evaluate before authorizing a future
commercial fishery. Consideration of a future commercial fishery would
include the Council's
[[Page 27501]]
review of an analysis of the biological information on the potential
target species and potential impacts from commercial fishing on the
Arctic marine environment and on communities. An Arctic FMP amendment
would be required to authorize a commercial fishery in the Arctic
Management Area and to implement the specific conservation and
management measures for the fishery.
If a commercial fishery is authorized in the Arctic Management
Area, the proposed Arctic FMP would provide the general conservation
and management measures to ensure sustainable fishing and to prevent
overfishing of any target species. Determination criteria for
overfishing levels (OFL) and acceptable biological catch levels (ABC)
would be based on the type and quantity of information available.
The OFLs and ABCs would guide the Council and NMFS in setting
harvest specifications for fishery management in the Arctic Management
Area. The process for specifying OFLs, ABCs, and total allowable catch
amounts (TACs) would include the development of a Stock Assessment and
Fishery Evaluation report for the Council's consideration in
recommending OFLs, ABCs, and TACs to the Secretary. At the time a
commercial fishery is authorized by the amended Arctic FMP, the harvest
specification regulations under Sec. 679.20 would be revised to
include the Arctic Management Area. This would ensure the latest method
of determining harvest specifications would be used at the time the
Arctic Management Area commercial fishery is authorized.
The National Standard 1 guidelines (74 FR 3178, January 16, 2009)
require accountability measures and mechanisms to prevent overfishing.
Because the proposed Arctic FMP initially prohibits commercial fishing
in the Arctic Management Area, the prohibition on commercial fishing
that would be implemented by this proposed rule would satisfy this
requirement. If a commercial fishery is authorized in the future, the
FMP would be amended to include specific accountability measures and
mechanisms to prevent overfishing.
The process and criteria for issuing exempted fishing permits
(EFPs) that would be implemented by this proposed rule will be found at
50 CFR part 679. EFPs provide exemptions to fishing regulations to
allow commercial fishing in a manner not otherwise authorized. EFPs are
granted for the purpose of allowing studies that provide information
useful to the management of fisheries and are effective for a limited
time. More information regarding EFPs is available from the NMFS Alaska
Region website at https://www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram/efp.htm.
Essential fish habitat (EFH) is described for each target species
in the proposed Arctic FMP. Once EFH is established, NMFS must be
consulted on any federal action that may adversely impact EFH
(Magnuson-Stevens Act section 305(b)(2)). The proposed EFH description
for Arctic cod includes waters of the entire Arctic Management Area.
Proposed EFH locations for snow crab and saffron cod are primarily in
the Chukchi Sea. A description of non-fishing impacts on EFH is
appended to the proposed Arctic FMP. This appendix describes potential
adverse impacts of a variety of human activities that may occur in the
Arctic Management Area and identifies possible mitigation measures to
reduce such impacts.
To assist in the ecosystem approach to fisheries management, the
proposed Arctic FMP includes habitat descriptions for several ecosystem
component species. The species selected for habitat descriptions
represent forage species and potential future target species based on
Bering Sea commercial fishing.
The proposed Arctic FMP includes the latest information on the
Arctic ecosystem and Chukchi and Beaufort Seas survey data. This
information provides the basis for the MSY and OY specifications and
informed the Council's decision to recommend adoption of the Arctic
FMP.
Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP would move the northern boundary of
the Crab FMP management area to Bering Strait. The Crab FMP northern
boundary is currently located at Point Hope, north of Bering Strait and
within the Arctic Management Area (Figure 24 in this proposed rule).
This change in the Crab FMP northern boundary would allow the
management of all crab species in the Arctic Management Area to be
under the Arctic FMP. This change in the geographic scope of management
authority under the Crab FMP would ensure consistent management
authority and application of the conservation and management measures
in the Arctic FMP to crab throughout the Arctic Management Area. The
Crab FMP defers crab management to the State of Alaska with federal
oversight. The management of crab stocks in the Bering Sea is based on
survey and catch information, which is not available in the Arctic
Management Area. The Arctic FMP's conservation and management measures
were designed to address the unique Arctic marine environment and the
paucity of information available for sustainable crab fisheries
management.
Proposed Regulatory Amendments
The Council recommended, and the Secretary proposes, the following
regulatory changes and additions to 50 CFR part 679 to implement the
Arctic FMP.
1. Section 679.1 would be revised to add the title of the Arctic
FMP and to describe the scope of the FMP as governing commercial
fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic Management Area by vessels of the
United States. This addition would be necessary to expand the scope of
the 50 CFR part 679 regulations to include implementation of the Arctic
FMP.
2. Section 679.2 would be amended to add and revise definitions for
the Arctic FMP and for Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP. A definition for
``Arctic fish'' would be added to distinguish in regulations the
species under the authority of the Arctic FMP. The Arctic fish
definition would include all fish as defined by the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, excluding Pacific halibut and Pacific salmon. The Magnuson-Stevens
Act defines ``fish'' as finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all other
forms of marine animal and plant life other than marine mammals and
birds. Commercial fishing for Pacific halibut and Pacific salmon in the
EEZ off Alaska is authorized by the IPHC and under the Salmon FMP,
respectively, and would not be managed under the Arctic FMP. Creating
this definition would allow for the initial prohibition of commercial
fishing for Arctic fish, as would be prescribed by the Arctic FMP.
A definition for the ``Arctic Management Area'' as described by the
Arctic FMP would be added. The area would be described by text and
would refer to Figure 24 in part 679. This definition is necessary to
define the area within which the proposed Arctic FMP will manage
commercial fishing.
The definition for the ``Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Area'' for
the purposes of king and Tanner crab management would be revised. This
revision would implement Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP by moving the
northern boundary of the Crab FMP fishery management area from Point
Hope southward to Bering Strait. This revision is necessary to
eliminate management authority in the Arctic Management Area from the
Crab FMP so that all crab that occur within the Arctic Management Area
would be managed under the Arctic FMP.
The definition of ``commercial fishing'' would be revised to
include the catch of Arctic fish which is or is
[[Page 27502]]
intended to be sold or bartered, excluding subsistence fishing. This
revision is necessary to manage, and initially prohibit, commercial
fishing for Arctic fish and to ensure subsistence fishing is not
affected by such management of commercial fishing.
The definition of ``management area'' would be revised to add the
Arctic Management Area. This revision is necessary to list the Arctic
Management Area with the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management
Area and the Gulf of Alaska. This revision would allow for fishery
management within the scope of the regulations at Sec. 679.1.
The definition of ``optimum yield'' would be revised by adding
Arctic fish and referencing Sec. 679.20(a)(1) where the optimum yield
for target species identified in the Arctic FMP would be specified.
This revision is necessary to establish the optimum yield for the
target species and to support the prohibition on commercial fishing of
target species.
The definition of ``subsistence fishing'' would be added to
describe subsistence harvests in the Arctic Management Area of Arctic
fish and Pacific salmon. Subsistence in terms of Pacific halibut is
defined under regulations at 50 CFR 300.61 and would not be changed by
this proposed definition. Subsistence fishing in the Arctic would be
the harvest of Arctic fish and Pacific salmon for non-commercial, long-
term, customary and traditional use necessary to maintain the life of
the taker or those who depend upon the taker to provide them with such
subsistence. This definition is consistent with the definition of
subsistence in the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Adding this definition
to 50 CFR part 679 would allow the subsistence harvest practices to be
differentiated from commercial harvest practices, which would be
prohibited. This addition is necessary to ensure the continued
subsistence harvest of Arctic fish and Pacific salmon in the Arctic
Management Area while differentiating such activity from commercial
fishing. NMFS is requesting comments specific to this definition and
any suggestions on how subsistence fishing may be better defined.
3. The introductory paragraph to Sec. 679.6 addressing EFPs would
be revised to add Arctic fish. EFPs currently are available for only
groundfish exempted fishing. Because the Arctic FMP includes species
other than groundfish and the Council intended that EFPs may be
available for any type of fish resource occurring in the Arctic
Management Area, the application of EFPs would be revised to include
Arctic fish.
4. In Sec. 679.7, a prohibition would be added to prevent
commercial fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic Management Area. A
prohibition on commercial fishing for Arctic fish would be necessary to
implement the Arctic FMP prohibition on commercial fishing on either
target or ecosystem component species. NMFS currently works with the
U.S. Coast Guard in surveillance of vessel activities in the Arctic
Management Area. U.S. fishing vessels transiting Canadian waters are
required to stow gear in a manner that makes the gear not readily
available for fishing and easily visible during surveillance flights.
NMFS may, in the future, consider this or other procedures that could
facilitate enforcement of the commercial fishing prohibition in the
Arctic Management Area and is interested in any public comment on
possible future enforcement procedures.
5. In Sec. 679.20(a), the OY for commercial fishing for Arctic
Management Area target species would be added. The OY for commercial
fishing would be set at zero mt for each of the target species, as
provided in the Arctic FMP. This revision is necessary to implement the
OYs specified in the Arctic FMP.
6. Figure 24 to part 679 would be added to show the Arctic
Management Area as established by the Arctic FMP. This addition is
necessary to clarify in the regulations the location of the Arctic
Management Area and to differentiate the boundary of the Arctic
Management Area from the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management
Area boundary shown in Figure 1 to part 679. The Chukchi Sea
statistical area 400 would remain with the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands statistical and reporting areas in Figure 1 to part 679 until
the Arctic FMP is amended to authorize a commercial fishery in the
Arctic Management Area. The Council recommended not establishing
subareas for fisheries management in the Arctic Management Area at this
time due to the lack of information to inform the boundaries of such
subareas.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b)(1)(A) and 305(d) of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, the NMFS Acting Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent with and necessary to implement
the Arctic FMP, and Amendment 29 to the Crab FMP, and in accordance
with other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable
law, subject to further consideration after public comment.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared an initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA), as
required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA). The
IRFA describes the economic impact this proposed rule, if adopted,
would have on small entities. Descriptions of the action, the reasons
it is under consideration, and its objectives and legal basis, are
contained at the beginning of this section in the preamble and in the
SUMMARY section of the preamble. A summary of the analysis follows. A
copy of this analysis is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
This action would regulate commercial fishing for fish resources
and not regulate subsistence, recreational, or personal use fishing in
the action area. There is only one unverified, small, and poorly
documented commercial fishery for red king crab in a portion of the
Arctic Management Area in Kotzebue Sound.
A survey of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game fish ticket
database back to 1985 identified a single fish ticket for this fishery.
The ticket was for a very small amount of red king crab delivered in
the summer of 2005. However, to the extent that fishing has occurred,
landings in this fishery may not always have been reported on official
state landings records (i.e., not legally recorded). The waters in
which this fishery may have occurred were set apart from other waters
for reporting purposes in 2005. From 2005 to 2007, three or four
persons acquired the State of Alaska K09X permits that are required to
fish commercially in this area. With the exception of the single
anomalous fish ticket cited above, there have been no commercial fish
tickets from the action area during 2005 through 2007. Thus, the number
of permit holders, rather than the number of operations with fish
tickets, is assumed to best represent the potential number of entities
directly regulated by this action. All of these operations are believed
to be small entities with annual gross revenues under $4 million.
The Council considered four alternatives and three options for this
proposed action. The options have no effect on directly regulated small
entities as the options are limited to different scientific and
administrative processes for developing management measures for
fisheries. Each option resulted in the same effect, because each would
implement a management framework that initially prohibits
[[Page 27503]]
commercial fishing in the Arctic Management Area.
Alternative 1 is the status quo which would allow for the potential
for unregulated commercial fishing to occur in the Arctic Management
Area. Alternative 1 does not meet the objectives of the action to
sustainably manage commercial fisheries in the Arctic Management Area.
Alternatives 3 and 4 would provide different mechanisms to provide
for sustainable management of fish resources in the Arctic Management
Area, but each alternative would exclude the small red king crab
fishery in Kotzebue Sound from Arctic FMP management. Alternative 3
would have exempted the red king crab fishery from the Arctic FMP and
from the Crab FMP while Alternative 4 would have provided for the
continued management of the small red king crab fishery under the Crab
FMP. Neither Alternative 3 nor Alternative 4 were chosen based on the
lack of evidence of a currently existing small red king crab fishery in
the Kotzebue Sound area and on the lack of information to ensure
sustainable management of the potential red king crab stock in the
Kotzebue Sound while not affecting subsistence use of the resource.
Alternatives 1, 3, and 4 have no known impacts on directly regulated
small entities.
Alternative 2 was chosen as the preferred alternative as it fully
meets the objective to provide sustainable management for all fish
resources of the Arctic Management Area. Alternative 2, which
implements a management framework that initially prohibits all
commercial fishing in the Arctic Management Area, initially would
prohibit future crab fishing that may otherwise take place in the small
and poorly documented fishery in Kotzebue Sound, until stocks have been
assessed and harvest specifications (e.g., OFL, ABC, TAC) are
established. At that time, an amendment to the Arctic FMP could be
proposed to authorize commercial fishing. Based on permit issuance, it
is possible that two to four small entities may fish in the small red
king crab fishery in Kotzebue Sound in a year. Permit issuance does not
necessarily indicate fishing activity, and only one fish ticket exists
from this fishery since 1985. Income from this fishery is likely to be
small.
This regulation does not impose new recordkeeping and reporting
requirements on the regulated small entities.
The IRFA did not reveal any federal rules that duplicate, overlap,
or conflict with the proposed action.
Executive Order (E.O.) 13175 of November 6, 2000 (25 U.S.C. 450
note), the Executive Memorandum of April 29, 1994 (25 U.S.C. 450 note),
and the American Indian and Alaska Native Policy of the U.S. Department
of Commerce (March 30, 1995) outline the responsibilities of NMFS in
matters affecting tribal interests. Section 161 of Public Law (P.L.)
108-199 (188 Stat. 452), as amended by section 518 of P.L. 109-447 (118
Stat. 3267), extends the consultation requirements of E.O. 13175 to
Alaska Native corporations. NMFS will contact tribal governments and
Alaska Native corporations which may be affected by the proposed
action, provide them with a copy of this proposed rule, and offer them
an opportunity to consult.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
Dated: June 5, 2009.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Assistant Administrator For Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50 CFR
part 679 as follows:
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
1. The authority citation for part 679 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et seq.; 3631 et seq.;
Pub. L. 108 447.
2. In Sec. 679.1, add paragraph (l) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.1 Purpose and scope.
* * * * *
(l) Fishery Management Plan for Fish Resources of the Arctic
Management Area. Regulations in this part govern commercial fishing for
Arctic fish in the Arctic Management Area by vessels of the United
States (see this subpart and subpart B of this part).
3. In Sec. 679.2, add in alphabetical order definitions for
Arctic fish'', ``Arctic Management Area'', and ``Subsistence
fishing'' and revise the definitions for the ``Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Area'', ``Management area'', and paragraph (2) of the
definition of ``Optimum yield'' and paragraph (3) to the definition of
``Commercial fishing'' to read as follows:
Sec. 679.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Arctic fish means finfish, mollusks, crustaceans, and all other
forms of marine animal and plant life other than marine mammals, birds,
Pacific salmon, and Pacific halibut.
Arctic Management Area, for purposes of regulations governing the
Arctic Management Area fisheries, means all marine waters in the U.S.
EEZ of the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas from 3 nautical miles off the
coast of Alaska or its baseline to 200 nautical miles offshore, north
of Bering Strait (from Cape Prince of Wales to Cape Dezhneva) and
westward to the 1990 U.S./Russia maritime boundary line and eastward to
the U.S./Canada maritime boundary (see Figure 24 to this part).
* * * * *
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Area, for purposes of regulations
governing the commercial king and Tanner crab fisheries in part 680 of
this Chapter, means those waters of the EEZ off the west coast of
Alaska lying south of the Chukchi Sea statistical area as described in
the coordinates listed for Figure 1 to this part, and extending south
of the Aleutian Islands for 200 nm west of Scotch Cap Light (164[deg]
44'36'' W. long).
* * * * *
Commercial fishing means:
* * * * *
(3) For purposes of Arctic fish, the resulting catch of fish in the
Arctic Management Area which either is, or is intended to be, sold or
bartered but does not include subsistence fishing for Arctic fish, as
defined in this subsection.
* * * * *
Management area means any district, regulatory area, subpart, part,
or the entire GOA, BSAI, or Arctic Management Area.
* * * * *
Optimum yield means:
* * * * *
(2) With respect to the groundfish and Arctic fisheries, see Sec.
679.20(a)(1).
* * * * *
Subsistence fishing for purposes of fishing in the Arctic
Management Area means the harvest of Arctic fish and Pacific salmon for
non-commercial, long-term, customary and traditional use necessary to
maintain the life of the taker or those who depend upon the taker to
provide them with such subsistence.
* * * * *
4. In Sec. 679.6, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.6 Exempted fisheries.
(a) General. For limited experimental purposes, the Regional
Administrator may authorize, after consulting with the Council, fishing
for groundfish or fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic
[[Page 27504]]
Management Area in a manner that would otherwise be prohibited. No
exempted fishing may be conducted unless authorized by an exempted
fishing permit issued by the Regional Administrator to the
participating vessel owner in accordance with the criteria and
procedures specified in this section. Exempted fishing permits will be
issued without charge and will expire at the end of a calendar year
unless otherwise provided for under paragraph (e) of this section.
* * * * *
5. In Sec. 679.7, add paragraph (p) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.7 Prohibitions.
* * * * *
(p) Arctic Management Area. Conduct commercial fishing for any
Arctic fish in the Arctic Management Area.
6. In Sec. 679.20, revise the introductory paragraph and paragraph
(a)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.20 General limitations.
This section applies to vessels engaged in directed fishing for
groundfish in the GOA and/or the BSAI and to vessels engaged in
commercial fishing for Arctic fish in the Arctic Management Area.
(a) * * *
(1) OY (i) BSAI and GOA. The OY for BSAI and GOA target species and
the ``other species'' category is a range or specific amount that can
be harvested consistently with this part, plus the amounts of
``nonspecified species'' taken incidentally to the harvest of target
species and the ``other species'' category. The species categories are
defined in Table 1 of the specifications as provided in paragraph (c)
of this section.
(A) The OY for groundfish in the BSAI regulated by this section and
by part 600 of this chapter is 1.4 million to 2.0 million mt.
(B) The OY for groundfish in the GOA regulated by this section and
by part 600 of this chapter is 116,000 to 800,000 mt.
(ii) Arctic Management Area. The OY for each target fish species
identified in the Fishery Management Plan for Fish Resources of the
Arctic Management Area regulated by this section and by part 600 of
this chapter is 0 mt.
* * * * *
7. Figure 24 is added to part 679 to read as follows:
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