Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2011 Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Specifications; 2011 Research Set-Aside Projects, 70192-70198 [2010-29000]
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70192
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 221 / Wednesday, November 17, 2010 / Proposed Rules
specifications are identical to the status
quo alternative.
This proposed rule contains a
collection-of-information requirement
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA), which was previously approved
by OMB under OMB Control Number
0648–0601. The public reporting burden
for the phone call to declare a Loligo
fishing trip is estimated to average 2
min per call per trip. Public burden for
the phone call to cancel a Loligo trip is
estimated to average 1 min. Send
comments regarding these burden
estimates or any other aspect of this data
collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to NMFS (see
ADDRESSES) and by e-mail to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax
to 202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
subject to penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB Control Number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Recordkeeping and
reporting requirements.
Dated: November 12, 2010.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 648—FISHERIES OF THE
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 648
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 648.21, paragraph (f)(2) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 648.21 Procedures for determining initial
annual amounts.
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(f) * * *
(2) Any underages of commercial
period quota for Trimester I that are
greater than 25 percent of the Trimester
I quota will be reallocated to Trimesters
II and III of the same year. The
reallocation of quota from Trimester I to
Trimester II is limited, such that the
Trimester II quota may only be
increased by 50 percent; the remaining
portion of the underage will be
reallocated to Trimester III. Any
underages of commercial period quota
for Trimester I that are less than 25
percent of the Trimester I quota will be
applied to Trimester III of the same year.
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Any overages of commercial quota for
Trimesters I and II will be subtracted
from Trimester III of the same year.
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3. In § 648.22, paragraph (a)(2)(i) is
revised to read as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
§ 648.22
[Docket No. 101029427–0427–01]
Closure of the fishery.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) If the Regional Administrator
determines that the Trimester I closure
threshold has been underharvested by
25 percent or more, then the amount of
the underharvest shall be reallocated to
Trimesters II and III, as specified at
§ 648.21(f)(2), through notice in the
Federal Register.
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4. Section 648.26 as amended at 75 FR
11450, March 11, 2010, effective January
1, 2011, and is further amended by
revising paragraphs (a) and (d) to read
as follows:
§ 648.26 Observer requirements for the
Loligo fishery.
(a) A vessel issued a Loligo and
butterfish moratorium permit, as
specified at § 648.4(a)(5)(i), must, for the
purposes of observer deployment, have
a representative provide notice to NMFS
of the vessel name, vessel permit
number, contact name for coordination
of observer deployment, telephone
number or email address for contact;
and the date, time, port of departure,
and approximate trip duration, at least
72 hr, but no more than 10 days prior
to beginning any fishing trip, unless it
complies with the possession
restrictions in paragraph (c) of this
section.
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(d) If a vessel issued a Loligo and
butterfish moratorium permit, as
specified at § 648.4(a)(5)(i), intends to
possess, harvest, or land 2,500 lb (1.13
mt) or more of Loligo per trip or per
calendar day, has a representative notify
NMFS of an upcoming trip, is selected
by NMFS to carry an observer, and then
cancels that trip, then the representative
is required to provide notice to NMFS
of the vessel name, vessel permit
number, contact name for coordination
of observer deployment, and telephone
number or email for contact, and the
intended date, time, and port of
departure for the cancelled trip prior to
the planned departure time. In addition,
if a trip selected for observer coverage
is canceled, then that vessel is required
to carry an observer, provided an
observer is available, on its next trip.
[FR Doc. 2010–29002 Filed 11–16–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
RIN 0648–XY82
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2011
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black
Sea Bass Specifications; 2011
Research Set-Aside Projects
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed specifications; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes specifications
for the 2011 summer flounder, scup,
and black sea bass fisheries and
provides notice of three projects that
may be requesting Exempted Fishing
Permits (EFPs) as part of the MidAtlantic 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), 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq., 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 2011 specifications for the
summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass fisheries, and to provide notice of
EFP requests, in accordance with the
FMP and Magnuson-Stevens Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before December 2, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 0648–XY82, by any
one of the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal https://
www.regulations.gov.
• Fax: (978) 281–9135.
• Mail and Hand Delivery: Patricia A.
Kurkul, Regional Administrator, NMFS,
Northeast Regional Office, 55 Great
Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Mark the outside of the envelope:
‘‘Comments on 2011 Summer Flounder,
SUMMARY:
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Scup, and Black Sea Bass
Specifications.’’
Instructions: No comments will be
posted for public viewing until after the
comment period has closed. 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 and Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (EA/IRFA) and
other supporting documents for the
specifications are available from Dr.
Christopher M. Moore, Executive
Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council, Suite 201, 800
North State Street, Dover, DE 19901.
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). 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 35E13.3’ 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).
Specifications, as referred to in this
proposed rule, are the combined suite of
catch levels established for one or more
fishing years. These catch levels include
the commercial fishery quota,
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recreational harvest limit, and RSA. The
specification process also allows for
modification of a select number of
management measures such as
minimum size for commercially caught
fish and minimum trawl net mesh sizes.
The Council’s process for establishing
specifications relies on provisions
within the FMP and its implementing
regulations as well as requirements
established by the Maguson-Stevens
Act. Specifically, section 302(g)(1)(B) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act states that a
Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) for each Regional Fishery
Management Council shall provide its
Council ongoing scientific advice for
fishery management decisions,
including recommendations for
acceptable biological catch (ABC),
preventing overfishing, maximum
sustainable yield (MSY), and achieving
rebuilding targets. The ABC is a level of
catch that accounts for the scientific
uncertainty in the estimate of that
stock’s defined overfishing level. The
Council’s SSC met on July 28 and 29,
2010, to recommend ABCs for the 2011
summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass specifications.
The FMP’s implementing regulations
require the involvement of a monitoring
committee in the specification process
for each species. Since the MagnusonStevens Act requirements for the SSC to
recommend ABC became effective, the
monitoring committees’ role has largely
been to recommend any reduction in
catch limits from the SSC-recommended
ABCs to offset management uncertainty,
and to recommend other management
measures (e.g., mesh requirements,
minimum commercial fish sizes, gear
restrictions, possession restrictions, and
area restrictions) needed for the efficient
management of these three species’
fisheries. The Summer Flounder
Monitoring Committee, Scup
Monitoring Committee, and Black Sea
Bass Monitoring Committee met on July
30, 2010, to discuss specification-related
recommendations for the 2011 fisheries.
Following the above meetings, the
Council and the Commission’s Summer
Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass
Management Board (Board) considered
the recommendations of the SSC and
the three monitoring committees’ and
public comments, and made their
specification recommendations. The
Council and Board made their
recommendations at a meeting held
August 18, 2010. While the Board action
on specifications was finalized at the
August meeting, the Council’s
recommendations must be reviewed by
NMFS to assure that they comply with
the FMP and applicable law. NMFS also
must conduct notice-and-comment
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rulemaking to propose and implement
the final specifications.
The FMP also contains formulas to
divide the specification catch limits into
commercial and recreational fishery
allocations, state-by-state quotas, and
quota periods, depending on the species
in question. The FMP allocation
provisions cannot be modified through
the specification process. Rather, the
Council would be required to develop
and recommend allocation changes by
amending the FMP. This proposed rule
outlines the application of the existing
allocation provisions for each species
and provides the resulting allocations,
by state and sector, as appropriate, for
each species.
The involvement of the SSC in the
specifications process and the evolving
role of the monitoring committees has
substantially modified the manner in
which specifications are developed and
considered by the Council. There is
increased discussion and
documentation regarding each species’
stock status, scientific uncertainty
associated with the stock and/or stock
assessment, the risk of overfishing,
management issues, and the derivation
of each group’s respective
recommendation to the Council. In
previous years’ specification process,
NMFS often provided extensive
summarization of these issues in the
proposed specification rule; however,
doing so duplicates the extensive record
established by the Council process. As
such, only a nominal overview of each
step of the specification process is
provided in this proposed rule. Persons
seeking more detailed information on
the Council-related aspects of the
specifications process, including the
issues considered by the SSC and
monitoring committees, are encouraged
to obtain documents on these subjects,
which are available from the Council or
by consulting the Council’s EA/IRFA
(see ADDRESSES section). NMFS has
participated in and relied on the
documentation from the updated stock
assessment proceedings, SSC and
monitoring committee meetings and
recommendations, and Council meeting
in completing this proposed rule.
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 in support of
scientific research. For the 2011 fishing
year, NMFS published a Federal
Register notice soliciting research
proposals based upon research priorities
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identified by the Council (75 FR 3092,
January 19, 2010).
NMFS intends to conditionally
approve three research projects for the
harvest of the portion of the set-aside
quota that has been recommended by
the Council and the Commission. In
anticipation of receiving applications
for EFPs to conduct this research and
harvest set-aside quota, 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
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
likely 2011 Mid-Atlantic RSA projects,
including exemptions that will likely be
required to conduct the proposed
research. The RSA amounts may be
adjusted, following consultation with
RSA applicants, in the final rule
establishing the 2011 specifications for
the summer flounder, scup, black sea
bass, Loligo squid, butterfish, and
Atlantic bluefish 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 2011, the conditionally approved
projects may collectively be awarded
the following amounts of RSA: 884,400
lb (401 mt) of summer flounder; 600,000
lb (272 mt) of scup; 108,000 lb (49 mt)
of black sea bass; 727,527 lb (330 mt) of
Loligo squid; 818,790 lb (371 mt) of
bluefish; and 33,069 lb (15 mt) of
butterfish. The harvest of RSA quota
would occur January 1–December 31,
2011, by vessels conducting
compensation fishing. Vessels
harvesting research quota in support of
approved research projects would be
issued EFPs authorizing them to exceed
Federal possession limits and to fish
during Federal quota closures. These
exemptions are necessary to facilitate
compensation fishing and to allow
project investigators to recover research
expenses, as well as to adequately
compensate fishing industry
participants harvesting research quota.
Vessels harvesting research quota would
operate under all other regulations that
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govern the fishery, unless specifically
exempted in a separate EFP.
2011 RSA Proposal Summaries:
Project number 1 would conduct a
fishery-independent scup and black sea
bass survey that would utilize unvented
fish pots fished on hard bottom areas in
southern New England waters to
characterize the size composition of the
scup and black sea bass populations.
Survey activities would be conducted
June 15–October 15, 2011, at 15 hard
bottom study sites. Up to two vessels
would conduct the research survey.
Sampling would occur off the coasts of
Rhode Island and southern
Massachusetts, with the furthest west
site off of Block Island near Southwest
Shoals. To achieve the research
objectives, the principal investigators
would require exemptions from gear
requirements (excluding marine
mammal avoidance and/or release
devices) in order to sample small scup
and black sea bass, and from minimum
fish sizes and possession limits for data
collection purposes.
Project number 2 would conduct a
near-shore trawl survey between
Aquinnah, Massachusetts, and Cape
Hatteras, North Carolina, including both
Block Island and Rhode Island Sounds.
Two survey cruises would occur (spring
and fall) with stratified random
sampling of approximately 150 stations
in depths between 18–120 feet (8–37 m).
The function of the survey would be to
provide stock assessment data for
summer flounder, scup, black sea bass,
Loligo squid, butterfish, bluefish, several
species managed by the Commission
such as weakfish and Atlantic croaker,
and unmanaged forage species. The
research aspects of the trawl survey
would be conducted by one scientific
research vessel, which could operate
under a Letter of Acknowledgment
(LOA), as established by experimental
fishing regulations found at 50 CFR
600.745.
Project number 3 would conduct a
black sea bass mark-recapture study
using commercial pot and hook-and-line
fishing gear to monitor changes in the
size at age and sex distribution of black
sea bass at three sites off New Jersey
during the spawning season (May
through August). Sampling would be
conducted on the following three
artificial reef sites off southern New
Jersey: Ocean City; Wildwood; and Cape
May reefs. Vessels conducting research
trips would tag black sea bass with
conventional and acoustic tags, and
clustered hydrophones would be placed
in the study area for 2.5 months.
Subsequent research trips would
conduct fishing with commercial pots
and hook and line gear to re-capture
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tagged fish, and to monitor the
movement of fish with the acoustic tags.
One commercial pot vessel and several
party boats would conduct the research.
Vessels conducting research activities
would require exemption from
commercial and recreational black sea
bass quota closures to ensure the ability
to sample during such closures, and
exemption from black sea bass
minimum fish size and possession
limits for the purpose of collecting
scientific data.
Summer Flounder
The summer flounder stock is
currently under a rebuilding program,
and rebuilding must be complete by
January 1, 2013. The stock assessment
update utilized to derive specification
recommendations indicates that
summer flounder were not overfished
and that overfishing did not occur in
2009, the most recent year of available
data. Furthermore, stock projections in
the assessment update indicate that the
rebuilding objective is likely to be
attained ahead of schedule.
Based on this information, the SSC
recommended to the Council that the
2011 ABC for summer flounder be set
no higher than 33.95 million lb (15,399
mt). This results in a Total Allowable
Catch (TAC; combined landings and
discards) established at the ABC level
(i.e, 33.95 million lb, 15,399 mt).
Estimated commercial and recreational
discards of 4.47 million lb (2,028 mt) are
removed from the TAC to produce a
2011 TAL of 29.48 million lb (13,372
mt). This TAL is projected to have a 50percent probability of achieving the
FTARGET = F40 percent = 0.255 in 2011, and
is projected to have a 98-percent
probability of preventing overfishing of
the stock (i.e., preventing an F higher
than FTHRESHOLD = F35 percent = 0.310).
The Summer Flounder Monitoring
Committee concurred with the SSC’s
ABC recommendation, and did not
recommend any additional changes to
either the TAC or to the 2011 summer
flounder management measures that
may be modified through the
specification process.
The Council and Board considered
the SSC and Summer Flounder
Monitoring Committee
recommendations before concurring
with ABC/TAC and TAL of 29.48
million lb (13,372 mt) that results after
removal of estimated discards. Fishing
under this TAC/TAL level in 2011 is not
expected to compromise summer
flounder stock rebuilding, nor will
fishing at this level present a high
likelihood of overfishing the stock. The
proposed TAL would be a 33.2-percent
increase from the 2009 TAL of 22.13
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million lb (10,038 mt). All other
management measures were
recommended by the Council to remain
status quo.
The summer flounder regulations at
50 CFR 648.100 (a) 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).
Framework Adjustment 7 to the FMP
(Framework 7) was implemented on
October 1, 2007 (72 FR 55704), to allow
the best available scientific information
be adopted without delay by the
Council for use in managing summer
flounder. The updated SDWG
assessment recommended FMSY = F35
percent as the best available fishing
mortality rate estimate to produce the
optimum yield per recruit and this
assessment is now the threshold value
for determining 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 29.48
million lb (13,372 mt) has a 98-percent
probability of constraining fishing
mortality below the overfishing
threshold, and a 50-percent probability
of achieving the assessmentrecommended management target.
NMFS therefore proposes to implement
a TAL of 29.48 million lb (13,372 mt) for
2011, consistent with the Council’s and
Board’s recommendation.
Based on the allocation scheme
contained in the FMP, the TAL is
divided 60 percent to the commercial
fishery and 40 percent to the
recreational fishery. This division
results in an initial commercial quota of
17.69 million lb (8,024 mt), and a
recreational harvest limit of 11.79
70195
million lb (5,349 mt); however, the FMP
also specifies that up to 3 percent of the
TAL may be set aside for research
activities before the remaining TAL is
allocated to the commercial and
recreational sectors. The Council and
Board agreed to set aside up to 3 percent
of the TAL, or 884,400 lb (401 mt). After
deducting 3 percent of the 2011 TAL as
RSA, the resulting sector allocations
would be a commercial quota of 17.2
million lb (7,782 mt) and a recreational
harvest limit of 11.4 million lb (5,188
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. Any commercial quota
adjustments to account for overages will
be included in the final rule
implementing the 2011 specifications.
TABLE 1—2011 PROPOSED INITIAL SUMMER FLOUNDER STATE COMMERCIAL QUOTAS
Initial commercial quota
State
Commercial quota less RSA 1
Percent share
kg 2
lb
ME ........................................................................................
NH ........................................................................................
MA ........................................................................................
RI ..........................................................................................
CT ........................................................................................
NY ........................................................................................
NJ .........................................................................................
DE ........................................................................................
MD ........................................................................................
VA ........................................................................................
NC ........................................................................................
Total 3 ............................................................................
0.04756
0.00046
6.82046
15.68298
2.25708
7.64699
16.72499
0.01779
2.03910
21.31676
27.44584
100.00001
8,412
81
1,206,403
2,774,006
399,232
1,352,600
2,958,316
3,147
360,676
3,770,509
4,854,620
17,688,002
lb
3,816
37
547,224
1,258,289
181,092
613,539
1,341,892
1,427
163,603
1,710,303
2,202,056
8,023,278
8,160
79
1,170,211
2,690,785
387,255
1,312,022
2,869,567
3,052
349,856
3,657,393
4,708,982
17,157,362
kg 2
3,701
36
530,808
1,220,540
175,659
595,133
1,301,635
1,385
158,695
1,658,994
2,135,994
7,782,579
1 Preliminary
2 Kilograms
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3 Rounding
Research Set-Aside amount is 884,400 lb (401 mt).
are as converted from pounds and do not sum to the converted total due to rounding.
of quotas results in totals exceeding 100 percent.
The Commission is maintaining in
place the voluntary measures to reduce
regulatory discards that occur as a result
of landing limits established by the
states. The Commission established a
system whereby a 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 Federal FMP
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and NMFS does not have authority to
implement them.
Scup
The scup stock is not subject to a
rebuilding plan at this time. The
updated scup stock assessment
indicates that the stock was not
overfished nor subject to overfishing in
2009, the most recent year of complete
data available in the assessment update.
The SSC recommended an ABC for
scup based on 75 percent of FMSY (F =
0.133), resulting in an ABC/TAC of 51.7
million lb (23,451 mt). The SSC also
conveyed concern about rapid increases
in catches to achieve the MSY value for
the scup stock. The cautionary
statement to not increase catches to the
full MSY quickly was originally issued
by the peer review panel that reviewed
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a 2009 Data Poor Stocks Working Group
assessment of the scup stock.
The Scup Monitoring Committee
proposed a range of TACs derived from
the ABC recommendation. The range
spanned from the landings associated
with the MSY value for the scup stock
of 35.1 million lb (15,921 mt) to the
status quo TAC of 17.09 million lb
(7,752 mt). The Scup Monitoring
Committee also shared the concerns of
the SSC and the assessment peer review
panel that had cautioned against rapidly
increasing scup catches to meet the
MSY value of 35.1 million lb (15,921
mt).
The Council adopted a TAC for scup
of 24.1 million lb (10,932 mt) as their
recommendation for 2011. In turn,
NMFS is proposing this TAC as the
2011 catch level for scup. This TAC
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scup possession limits, i.e., 30,000 lb
(13,608 kg) per trip for Winter I, to be
reduced to 1,000 lb (454 kg) per trip
when 80 percent of the quota is
projected to be reached, and 2,000 lb
(907 kg) per trip for Winter II.
Table 2 presents the 2011 commercial
allocation recommended by the Council,
with and without the preliminary RSA
deduction. These 2010 allocations are
preliminary and may be adjusted in the
final rule implementing these
specifications due to previously
unaccounted for overages, based on the
procedures for calculating overages.
and Winter II (November–December)—
15.94 percent.
The proposed TAL would be
subdivided into an initial commercial
quota of 15.6 million lb (7,076 mt) and
a recreational harvest limit of 4.4
million lb (1,996 mt). The Council voted
to set up to 3 percent of the TAL or
600,000 lb (272 mt), aside for 2011 RSA.
If it is, the commercial quota would be
reduced to 15.1 million lb (6,864 mt),
with a recreational harvest limit of 4.3
million lb (1,936 mt).
The proposed 2011 specifications
would maintain the status quo base
level would provide for a 20.0 million
lb TAL (9,072 mt), and would be
divided into the commercial and
recreational allocations as outlined in
the scup regulations. The FMP specifies
that the established TAC be allocated 78
percent to the commercial sector and 22
percent to the recreational sector. The
commercial TAC, discards, and TAL
(i.e., final commercial quota, after
reduced for any RSA) 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;
TABLE 2—2011 PROPOSED INITIAL TAC, INITIAL COMMERCIAL SCUP QUOTA, AND POSSESSION LIMITS
Period
Percent
Winter I ...........................................................
45.11
Summer ..........................................................
38.95
Winter II ..........................................................
15.94
Total 2 ......................................................
100.00
TAC
in lb (mt)
Initial
commercial
quota
in lb
(mt)
Discards
in lb (mt)
Commercial
quota less
RSA in lb
(mt)
Possession
limits
in lb (kg)
8,479,778
(3,846)
7,321,821
(3,321)
2,996,401
(1,359)
1,442,618
(654)
1,245,621
(565)
509,761
(231)
7,037,160
(3,192)
6,076,200
(2,756)
2,486,640
(1,128)
6,826,045
(3,096)
5,893,914
(2,673)
2,412,041
(1,094)
1 30,000
(13,608)
n/a
18,798,000
(8,527)
3,198,000
(1,451)
15,600,000
(7,076)
15,132,000
(6,864)
n/a
2,000
(907)
1 The
Winter I landing limit would drop to 1,000 lb (454 kg) upon attainment of 80 percent of the seasonal allocation.
subject to rounding error.
n/a—Not applicable.
2 Totals
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 UNHARVESTED 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
Increase in initial Winter II
possession limit
mt
lb
Final Winter II
possession limit after
rollover from
Winter I to Winter II
kg
lb
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2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
907
907
907
907
907
0–499,999
500,000–999,999
1,000,000–1,499,999
1,500,000–1,999,999
2,000,000–2,500,000
Black Sea Bass
Black sea bass are not subject to a
stock rebuilding program. The updated
stock assessment indicates that black
sea bass were not overfished and
overfishing did not occur in 2009.
The SSC recommended that ABC for
black sea bass remain at the status quo
level of 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt) for
2011. The SSC stated that there remains
a high degree of uncertainty
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Jkt 223001
0–227
227–454
454–680
680–907
907–1,134
surrounding the overfishing limit
estimate for the black sea bass stock, as
well as considerable uncertainties about
the black sea bass stock structure, life
history, and retrospective patterns
within the stock assessment.
The Black Sea Bass Monitoring
Committee concurred with the ABC
recommendation, and recommended a
TAC of 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt) to the
Council.
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0
1,500
3,000
4,500
6,000
0
680
1,361
2,041
2,722
2,000
3,500
5,000
6,500
8,000
kg
907
1,588
2,268
2,948
3,629
The Council and Board considered
the SSC and Black Sea Bass Monitoring
Committee recommendations at their
August meeting. The Council and Board
concurred with the ABC/TAC
recommendation of 4.5 million lb (2,041
mt) for 2011. After estimated
commercial fishery and recreational
landings are removed from the ABC/
TAC, the TAL for black sea bass would
be 3.6 million lb (1,633 mt).
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NMFS is proposing a 2011 TAC of 4.5
million lb (2,041 mt) and TAL of 3.6
million lb (1,633 mt) for the 2011 black
sea bass fisheries, consistent with the
recommendations of the Council and
Board. The FMP specifies that the TAL
is to be allocated 49 percent to the
commercial sector and 51 percent to the
recreational sector; therefore, the initial
TAL would be allocated 1.76 million lb
(798 mt) to the commercial sector as a
commercial quota and 1.84 million lb
(835 mt) to the recreational sector as a
recreational harvest limit. The Council
and Board voted to set aside up to 3
percent of the TAL, or 108,000 lb (49
mt), as RSA. This would adjust the
commercial quota to 1.7 million lb (776
mt) and the recreational harvest limit to
1.8 million lb (808 mt). Only the ABC/
TAC is the same as last year, the overall
TAL being proposed for 2011 (3.6
million lb (1,633 mt)) is 100,000 lb (45
mt) less than the status quo because the
updated discard estimate is higher for
2011 than for 2010.
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Summary of NMFS’ Proposed 2011
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea
Bass Specifications
Summer Flounder: TAL of 29.48
million lb (13,372 mt); RSA of 884,400
lb (401 mt); commercial quota of
17,157,360 lb (7,782 mt); and a
recreational harvest limit of 11,438,240
lb (5,188 mt).
Scup: 20.0 million lb TAL (9,072 mt);
RSA of 600,000 lb (272 mt); commercial
quota to 15,132,000 lb (6,864 mt); and
a recreational harvest limit of 4,268,000
lb (1,936 mt).
Black Sea Bass: TAL of 3,600,000 lb
(1,633 mt); RSA of 108,000 lb (49 mt);
commercial quota 1,711,080 lb (776 mt);
and recreational harvest limit of
1,780,920 (808 mt).
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 by the
Council, as required by section 603 of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), to
examine the impacts of these proposed
specifications on small business
entities, if adopted. A description of the
specifications, why they are being
considered, and the legal basis for
proposing and implementing
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specifications for the summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries are
contained in the preamble to this
proposed rule. A copy of the detailed
RFA analysis is available from NMFS or
the Council (see ADDRESSES). The
Council’s analysis made use of
quantitative approaches when possible.
Where quantitative data on revenues or
other business-related metrics that
would provide insight to potential
impacts were not available to inform the
analyses, qualitative analyses were
conducted. A summary of the 2011
specifications RFA analysis follows.
Small businesses operating in
commercial and recreational (i.e., party
and charter vessel operations) fisheries
have been defined by the Small
Business Administration as firms with
gross revenues of up to $4.0 and $6.5
million, respectively. 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. All
federally permitted vessels fall into the
definition of small businesses; thus,
there would be no disproportionate
impacts between large and small entities
as a result of the proposed rule.
The Council estimates that the
proposed 2011 specifications could
affect 2,206 vessels that held a Federal
summer flounder, scup, and/or black
sea bass permit in 2009 (the most recent
year of complete permit data). However,
the more immediate impact of this rule
will likely be realized by the 810 vessels
that actively participated in these
fisheries (i.e., landed these species) in
2009.
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 2011 specifications,
several indefinite measures would
remain in effect until otherwise
changed; however, many components of
the 2010 specifications expire on
December 31, 2010. These include TALs
for all three species and TAC for scup.
There are no roll-over provisions for the
2010 quotas if the 2011 specifications
are not made effective, and so, without
specified quotas, NMFS would have no
mechanism to close fisheries if
management limits were exceeded. This
would give rise to a situation in which
the goals and objectives of the FMP, its
implementing regulations, and the
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
70197
Magnuson-Stevens Act would all be
violated. Therefore, the no action
alternative is not considered to be a
reasonable alternative to the preferred
action of developing and implementing
2011 specifications and, as such, it was
excluded from detailed analysis in the
Council’s EA/RFA analyses.
The Council analyzed three sets of
combined TAL alternatives for the 2010
summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass fisheries. Of these, one alternative,
labeled Alternative 2 for each species,
contained the most restrictive TAL
options (i.e., lowest total landing
levels—summer flounder, 22.13 million
lb (10,038 mt); scup, 14.11 million lb
(6,400 mt); black sea bass, 2.30 million
lb (1,043 mt)). While the Alternative 2
measures would achieve the objectives
of the proposed action for each of three
species, they have the highest potential
adverse economic impacts on small
entities in the form of potential foregone
fishing opportunities. Alternative 2 was
not preferred by the Council because the
other alternatives considered are
expected have lower adverse impacts on
small entities while achieving the stated
objectives of rebuilding the summer
flounder stock and sustaining the scup
and black sea bass stocks, consistent
with the FMP and Magnuson-Stevens
Act. Accordingly, Alternative 2 was
excluded from this analysis.
The Council analyzed two sets of TAL
alternatives for the three species that
would accomplish the stated objectives
of the proposed action, and that would
minimize the adverse economic impacts
of the proposed rule on small entities.
Alternative 1 (Council’s preferred)
would implement the following TALs in
2011: Summer Flounder, 29.48 million
lb (13,372 mt); scup, 20.0 million lb
(9,072 mt); and black sea bass, 3.6
million lb (1,633 mt). Alternative 3
(least restrictive/highest quota levels)
would implement the following TALs in
2011: Summer flounder, 35.05 million
lb (15,898 mt); scup, 28.96 million lb
(13,136 mt); and black sea bass, 4.35
million lb (1,973 mt).
Commercial Fishery Impacts
To analyze the potential impacts of
the proposed alternatives, the Council
examined the total revenue earned by an
individual vessel in 2009 (as a proxy for
2010), and compared the potential
revenue in 2011 given the changes in
fishing opportunity available through
changes in harvest levels from 2010 to
2011. While there are caveats to such an
approach—for example a vessel may
hold multiple permits and supplement
losses of opportunity in one fishery with
another comparable species; or ex-vessel
prices may change from levels utilized
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erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with PROPOSALS-1
in the analysis—the approach taken
provides a rational basis for explaining
the potential financial impact to
participating vessels. It is important to
note that actual impacts to individual
vessels will likely differ as a product of
the many variables that cannot be easily
accounted for in the Council’s analyses.
Under Alternative 1 (Council’s
preferred), assuming the increase in
total ex-vessel gross revenues associated
with the increased commercial quota for
summer flounder is equally distributed
among the 673 vessels that landed
summer flounder in 2009, the potential
average revenue could increase by
$12,036 per vessel. For scup, the
expected revenue across the 398 vessels
that landed scup in 2009 could increase
by an average of $8,492 per vessel.
Revenues are projected to decrease by
$304 across the 460 vessels that landed
black sea bass in 2009, due to the slight
commercial quota decrease under
Alternative 1. The Council’s analysis
indicated that this decrease in black sea
bass would comprise less than 5 percent
of these vessels’ expected revenue.
Under Alternative 3 (least restrictive
TALs), analysis indicates that the 2011
commercial quotas could increase
revenues per vessel as follows: Summer
flounder, $21,085; scup, $21,432; and
black sea bass, $1,826. The potential
average increase in revenue per vessel
for the combined suite of summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass
landed by 810 vessels in 2009 was
estimated to be $29,086 per vessel.
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Recreational Fishery Impacts
While the specifications proposed
would establish a 2011 recreational
harvest limit for summer flounder, scup,
and black sea bass, the management
measure details for recreational fisheries
will be decided by the Council in
December 2010, followed by NMFS
rulemaking in the first quarter of 2011.
A comprehensive analysis of the
impacts associated with the
recommended recreational management
measures will be provided to NMFS
from the Council to support these
activities.
The Council also examined the
potential impact on the demand for
recreational for-hire party/charter vessel
trips resulting from Alternatives 1 and
3. While impacts are also likely to occur
for individual private recreational
fishery participants and fishing-related
businesses such as bait and tackle
shops, these are neither regulated smallbusiness entities under NMFS’
jurisdiction, nor is there participation
cost or other economic metric data
available to assess potential impact on
such groups. The Council’s analysis
indicates that demand for for-hire trips
and general saltwater recreational angler
participation has trended upward
slightly over the past decade. The
Council’s analysis also indicated that it
was not possible to reasonably predict
behavioral or demand changes in
response to the recreational harvest
limits proposed under any of the three
alternatives. However, under
Alternatives 1 and 3, it is not expected
that, based on current recreational
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
landings data, 2011 management
measures (i.e., minimum fishing size,
possession limits, and fishing seasons)
would need to be made more
constraining, except for potential
restrictions under the Alternative 1
black sea bass recreational harvest limit.
As previously stated, the Council will
undertake additional recreational
management measures development and
analysis in December 2010.
Summary
The Council selected Alternative 1
(preferred) over Alternative 3 (least
restrictive) stating that, while
Alternative 3 measures would provide
higher economic benefits than the
preferred measures of Alternative 1, the
Alternative 3 measures were expected to
result in long-term negative impacts for
the summer flounder, scup, and black
sea bass stocks, and were inconsistent
with the advice provided to the Council
from the SSC and its monitoring
committees. NMFS agrees with the
Council’s IRFA analysis and rationale
for recommending the TALs in
Alternative 1. As such, NMFS is
proposing to implement the Alternative
1 TALs for 2011: Summer flounder,
35.05 million lb (15,898 mt); scup, 28.96
million lb (13,136 mt); and black sea
bass, 4.35 million lb (1,973 mt).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: November 12, 2010.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–29000 Filed 11–16–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 221 (Wednesday, November 17, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 70192-70198]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-29000]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 101029427-0427-01]
RIN 0648-XY82
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fisheries; 2011 Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Specifications; 2011 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 2011 summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries and provides notice of three
projects that may 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), 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq., 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 2011 specifications for the summer flounder,
scup, and black sea bass fisheries, and to provide notice of EFP
requests, in accordance with the FMP and Magnuson-Stevens Act.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before December 2, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-XY82, by any
one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal https://www.regulations.gov.
Fax: (978) 281-9135.
Mail and Hand Delivery: Patricia A. Kurkul, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Northeast Regional Office, 55 Great Republic
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the outside of the envelope:
``Comments on 2011 Summer Flounder,
[[Page 70193]]
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Specifications.''
Instructions: No comments will be posted for public viewing until
after the comment period has closed. 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 and Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/IRFA) and
other supporting documents for the specifications are available from
Dr. Christopher M. Moore, Executive Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council, Suite 201, 800 North State Street, Dover, DE 19901.
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). 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[Egr]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).
Specifications, as referred to in this proposed rule, are the
combined suite of catch levels established for one or more fishing
years. These catch levels include the commercial fishery quota,
recreational harvest limit, and RSA. The specification process also
allows for modification of a select number of management measures such
as minimum size for commercially caught fish and minimum trawl net mesh
sizes. The Council's process for establishing specifications relies on
provisions within the FMP and its implementing regulations as well as
requirements established by the Maguson-Stevens Act. Specifically,
section 302(g)(1)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act states that a
Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC) for each Regional Fishery
Management Council shall provide its Council ongoing scientific advice
for fishery management decisions, including recommendations for
acceptable biological catch (ABC), preventing overfishing, maximum
sustainable yield (MSY), and achieving rebuilding targets. The ABC is a
level of catch that accounts for the scientific uncertainty in the
estimate of that stock's defined overfishing level. The Council's SSC
met on July 28 and 29, 2010, to recommend ABCs for the 2011 summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass specifications.
The FMP's implementing regulations require the involvement of a
monitoring committee in the specification process for each species.
Since the Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements for the SSC to recommend
ABC became effective, the monitoring committees' role has largely been
to recommend any reduction in catch limits from the SSC-recommended
ABCs to offset management uncertainty, and to recommend other
management measures (e.g., mesh requirements, minimum commercial fish
sizes, gear restrictions, possession restrictions, and area
restrictions) needed for the efficient management of these three
species' fisheries. The Summer Flounder Monitoring Committee, Scup
Monitoring Committee, and Black Sea Bass Monitoring Committee met on
July 30, 2010, to discuss specification-related recommendations for the
2011 fisheries.
Following the above meetings, the Council and the Commission's
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Management Board (Board)
considered the recommendations of the SSC and the three monitoring
committees' and public comments, and made their specification
recommendations. The Council and Board made their recommendations at a
meeting held August 18, 2010. While the Board action on specifications
was finalized at the August meeting, the Council's recommendations must
be reviewed by NMFS to assure that they comply with the FMP and
applicable law. NMFS also must conduct notice-and-comment rulemaking to
propose and implement the final specifications.
The FMP also contains formulas to divide the specification catch
limits into commercial and recreational fishery allocations, state-by-
state quotas, and quota periods, depending on the species in question.
The FMP allocation provisions cannot be modified through the
specification process. Rather, the Council would be required to develop
and recommend allocation changes by amending the FMP. This proposed
rule outlines the application of the existing allocation provisions for
each species and provides the resulting allocations, by state and
sector, as appropriate, for each species.
The involvement of the SSC in the specifications process and the
evolving role of the monitoring committees has substantially modified
the manner in which specifications are developed and considered by the
Council. There is increased discussion and documentation regarding each
species' stock status, scientific uncertainty associated with the stock
and/or stock assessment, the risk of overfishing, management issues,
and the derivation of each group's respective recommendation to the
Council. In previous years' specification process, NMFS often provided
extensive summarization of these issues in the proposed specification
rule; however, doing so duplicates the extensive record established by
the Council process. As such, only a nominal overview of each step of
the specification process is provided in this proposed rule. Persons
seeking more detailed information on the Council-related aspects of the
specifications process, including the issues considered by the SSC and
monitoring committees, are encouraged to obtain documents on these
subjects, which are available from the Council or by consulting the
Council's EA/IRFA (see ADDRESSES section). NMFS has participated in and
relied on the documentation from the updated stock assessment
proceedings, SSC and monitoring committee meetings and recommendations,
and Council meeting in completing this proposed rule.
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 in support of
scientific research. For the 2011 fishing year, NMFS published a
Federal Register notice soliciting research proposals based upon
research priorities
[[Page 70194]]
identified by the Council (75 FR 3092, January 19, 2010).
NMFS intends to conditionally approve three research projects for
the harvest of the portion of the set-aside quota that has been
recommended by the Council and the Commission. In anticipation of
receiving applications for EFPs to conduct this research and harvest
set-aside quota, 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 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 likely 2011 Mid-Atlantic RSA
projects, including exemptions that will likely be required to conduct
the proposed research. The RSA amounts may be adjusted, following
consultation with RSA applicants, in the final rule establishing the
2011 specifications for the summer flounder, scup, black sea bass,
Loligo squid, butterfish, and Atlantic bluefish 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 2011, the conditionally approved projects may collectively be
awarded the following amounts of RSA: 884,400 lb (401 mt) of summer
flounder; 600,000 lb (272 mt) of scup; 108,000 lb (49 mt) of black sea
bass; 727,527 lb (330 mt) of Loligo squid; 818,790 lb (371 mt) of
bluefish; and 33,069 lb (15 mt) of butterfish. The harvest of RSA quota
would occur January 1-December 31, 2011, by vessels conducting
compensation fishing. Vessels harvesting research quota in support of
approved research projects would be issued EFPs authorizing them to
exceed Federal possession limits and to fish during Federal quota
closures. These exemptions are necessary to facilitate compensation
fishing and to allow project investigators to recover research
expenses, as well as to adequately compensate fishing industry
participants harvesting research quota. Vessels harvesting research
quota would operate under all other regulations that govern the
fishery, unless specifically exempted in a separate EFP.
2011 RSA Proposal Summaries: Project number 1 would conduct a
fishery-independent scup and black sea bass survey that would utilize
unvented fish pots fished on hard bottom areas in southern New England
waters to characterize the size composition of the scup and black sea
bass populations. Survey activities would be conducted June 15-October
15, 2011, at 15 hard bottom study sites. Up to two vessels would
conduct the research survey. Sampling would occur off the coasts of
Rhode Island and southern Massachusetts, with the furthest west site
off of Block Island near Southwest Shoals. To achieve the research
objectives, the principal investigators would require exemptions from
gear requirements (excluding marine mammal avoidance and/or release
devices) in order to sample small scup and black sea bass, and from
minimum fish sizes and possession limits for data collection purposes.
Project number 2 would conduct a near-shore trawl survey between
Aquinnah, Massachusetts, and Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, including
both Block Island and Rhode Island Sounds. Two survey cruises would
occur (spring and fall) with stratified random sampling of
approximately 150 stations in depths between 18-120 feet (8-37 m). The
function of the survey would be to provide stock assessment data for
summer flounder, scup, black sea bass, Loligo squid, butterfish,
bluefish, several species managed by the Commission such as weakfish
and Atlantic croaker, and unmanaged forage species. The research
aspects of the trawl survey would be conducted by one scientific
research vessel, which could operate under a Letter of Acknowledgment
(LOA), as established by experimental fishing regulations found at 50
CFR 600.745.
Project number 3 would conduct a black sea bass mark-recapture
study using commercial pot and hook-and-line fishing gear to monitor
changes in the size at age and sex distribution of black sea bass at
three sites off New Jersey during the spawning season (May through
August). Sampling would be conducted on the following three artificial
reef sites off southern New Jersey: Ocean City; Wildwood; and Cape May
reefs. Vessels conducting research trips would tag black sea bass with
conventional and acoustic tags, and clustered hydrophones would be
placed in the study area for 2.5 months. Subsequent research trips
would conduct fishing with commercial pots and hook and line gear to
re-capture tagged fish, and to monitor the movement of fish with the
acoustic tags. One commercial pot vessel and several party boats would
conduct the research. Vessels conducting research activities would
require exemption from commercial and recreational black sea bass quota
closures to ensure the ability to sample during such closures, and
exemption from black sea bass minimum fish size and possession limits
for the purpose of collecting scientific data.
Summer Flounder
The summer flounder stock is currently under a rebuilding program,
and rebuilding must be complete by January 1, 2013. The stock
assessment update utilized to derive specification recommendations
indicates that summer flounder were not overfished and that overfishing
did not occur in 2009, the most recent year of available data.
Furthermore, stock projections in the assessment update indicate that
the rebuilding objective is likely to be attained ahead of schedule.
Based on this information, the SSC recommended to the Council that
the 2011 ABC for summer flounder be set no higher than 33.95 million lb
(15,399 mt). This results in a Total Allowable Catch (TAC; combined
landings and discards) established at the ABC level (i.e, 33.95 million
lb, 15,399 mt). Estimated commercial and recreational discards of 4.47
million lb (2,028 mt) are removed from the TAC to produce a 2011 TAL of
29.48 million lb (13,372 mt). This TAL is projected to have a 50-
percent probability of achieving the FTARGET =
F40 percent = 0.255 in 2011, and is projected to have a 98-
percent probability of preventing overfishing of the stock (i.e.,
preventing an F higher than FTHRESHOLD =
F35 percent = 0.310). The Summer Flounder Monitoring
Committee concurred with the SSC's ABC recommendation, and did not
recommend any additional changes to either the TAC or to the 2011
summer flounder management measures that may be modified through the
specification process.
The Council and Board considered the SSC and Summer Flounder
Monitoring Committee recommendations before concurring with ABC/TAC and
TAL of 29.48 million lb (13,372 mt) that results after removal of
estimated discards. Fishing under this TAC/TAL level in 2011 is not
expected to compromise summer flounder stock rebuilding, nor will
fishing at this level present a high likelihood of overfishing the
stock. The proposed TAL would be a 33.2-percent increase from the 2009
TAL of 22.13
[[Page 70195]]
million lb (10,038 mt). All other management measures were recommended
by the Council to remain status quo.
The summer flounder regulations at 50 CFR 648.100 (a) 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). Framework Adjustment 7 to
the FMP (Framework 7) was implemented on October 1, 2007 (72 FR 55704),
to allow the best available scientific information be adopted without
delay by the Council for use in managing summer flounder. The updated
SDWG assessment recommended FMSY = F35 percent as
the best available fishing mortality rate estimate to produce the
optimum yield per recruit and this assessment is now the threshold
value for determining 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 29.48 million lb (13,372 mt) has a 98-
percent probability of constraining fishing mortality below the
overfishing threshold, and a 50-percent probability of achieving the
assessment-recommended management target. NMFS therefore proposes to
implement a TAL of 29.48 million lb (13,372 mt) for 2011, consistent
with the Council's and Board's recommendation.
Based on the allocation scheme contained in the FMP, the TAL is
divided 60 percent to the commercial fishery and 40 percent to the
recreational fishery. This division results in an initial commercial
quota of 17.69 million lb (8,024 mt), and a recreational harvest limit
of 11.79 million lb (5,349 mt); however, the FMP also specifies that up
to 3 percent of the TAL may be set aside for research activities before
the remaining TAL is allocated to the commercial and recreational
sectors. The Council and Board agreed to set aside up to 3 percent of
the TAL, or 884,400 lb (401 mt). After deducting 3 percent of the 2011
TAL as RSA, the resulting sector allocations would be a commercial
quota of 17.2 million lb (7,782 mt) and a recreational harvest limit of
11.4 million lb (5,188 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.
Any commercial quota adjustments to account for overages will be
included in the final rule implementing the 2011 specifications.
Table 1--2011 Proposed Initial Summer Flounder State Commercial Quotas
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial commercial quota Commercial quota less RSA \1\
State Percent share ---------------------------------------------------------------
lb kg \2\ lb kg \2\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ME.............................. 0.04756 8,412 3,816 8,160 3,701
NH.............................. 0.00046 81 37 79 36
MA.............................. 6.82046 1,206,403 547,224 1,170,211 530,808
RI.............................. 15.68298 2,774,006 1,258,289 2,690,785 1,220,540
CT.............................. 2.25708 399,232 181,092 387,255 175,659
NY.............................. 7.64699 1,352,600 613,539 1,312,022 595,133
NJ.............................. 16.72499 2,958,316 1,341,892 2,869,567 1,301,635
DE.............................. 0.01779 3,147 1,427 3,052 1,385
MD.............................. 2.03910 360,676 163,603 349,856 158,695
VA.............................. 21.31676 3,770,509 1,710,303 3,657,393 1,658,994
NC.............................. 27.44584 4,854,620 2,202,056 4,708,982 2,135,994
Total \3\................... 100.00001 17,688,002 8,023,278 17,157,362 7,782,579
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Preliminary Research Set-Aside amount is 884,400 lb (401 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 maintaining in place the voluntary measures to
reduce regulatory discards that occur as a result of landing limits
established by the states. The Commission established a system whereby
a 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 Federal FMP and NMFS
does not have authority to implement them.
Scup
The scup stock is not subject to a rebuilding plan at this time.
The updated scup stock assessment indicates that the stock was not
overfished nor subject to overfishing in 2009, the most recent year of
complete data available in the assessment update.
The SSC recommended an ABC for scup based on 75 percent of
FMSY (F = 0.133), resulting in an ABC/TAC of 51.7 million lb
(23,451 mt). The SSC also conveyed concern about rapid increases in
catches to achieve the MSY value for the scup stock. The cautionary
statement to not increase catches to the full MSY quickly was
originally issued by the peer review panel that reviewed a 2009 Data
Poor Stocks Working Group assessment of the scup stock.
The Scup Monitoring Committee proposed a range of TACs derived from
the ABC recommendation. The range spanned from the landings associated
with the MSY value for the scup stock of 35.1 million lb (15,921 mt) to
the status quo TAC of 17.09 million lb (7,752 mt). The Scup Monitoring
Committee also shared the concerns of the SSC and the assessment peer
review panel that had cautioned against rapidly increasing scup catches
to meet the MSY value of 35.1 million lb (15,921 mt).
The Council adopted a TAC for scup of 24.1 million lb (10,932 mt)
as their recommendation for 2011. In turn, NMFS is proposing this TAC
as the 2011 catch level for scup. This TAC
[[Page 70196]]
level would provide for a 20.0 million lb TAL (9,072 mt), and would be
divided into the commercial and recreational allocations as outlined in
the scup regulations. The FMP specifies that the established TAC be
allocated 78 percent to the commercial sector and 22 percent to the
recreational sector. The commercial TAC, discards, and TAL (i.e., final
commercial quota, after reduced for any RSA) 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 proposed TAL would be subdivided into an initial commercial
quota of 15.6 million lb (7,076 mt) and a recreational harvest limit of
4.4 million lb (1,996 mt). The Council voted to set up to 3 percent of
the TAL or 600,000 lb (272 mt), aside for 2011 RSA. If it is, the
commercial quota would be reduced to 15.1 million lb (6,864 mt), with a
recreational harvest limit of 4.3 million lb (1,936 mt).
The proposed 2011 specifications would maintain the status quo base
scup possession limits, i.e., 30,000 lb (13,608 kg) per trip for Winter
I, to be reduced to 1,000 lb (454 kg) per trip when 80 percent of the
quota is projected to be reached, and 2,000 lb (907 kg) per trip for
Winter II.
Table 2 presents the 2011 commercial allocation recommended by the
Council, with and without the preliminary RSA deduction. These 2010
allocations are preliminary and may be adjusted in the final rule
implementing these specifications due to previously unaccounted for
overages, based on the procedures for calculating overages.
Table 2--2011 Proposed Initial TAC, Initial Commercial Scup Quota, and Possession Limits
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial
Discards in lb commercial Commercial Possession
Period Percent TAC in lb (mt) (mt) quota in lb quota less RSA limits in lb
(mt) in lb (mt) (kg)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Winter I.................................................... 45.11 8,479,778 1,442,618 7,037,160 6,826,045 \1\ 30,000
(3,846) (654) (3,192) (3,096) (13,608)
Summer...................................................... 38.95 7,321,821 1,245,621 6,076,200 5,893,914 n/a
(3,321) (565) (2,756) (2,673)
Winter II................................................... 15.94 2,996,401 509,761 2,486,640 2,412,041 2,000
(1,359) (231) (1,128) (1,094) (907)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total \2\............................................... 100.00 18,798,000 3,198,000 15,600,000 15,132,000 n/a
(8,527) (1,451) (7,076) (6,864)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\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 Unharvested Scup Rolled Over
From Winter I to Winter II Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Winter II Rollover from Winter I to Winter II Increase in initial Final Winter II
possession limit ------------------------------------------- Winter II possession possession limit
----------------------- limit after rollover from
------------------------ Winter I to Winter II
lb kg lb mt ----------------------
lb kg lb kg
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,000 907 0-499,999 0-227 0 0 2,000 907
2,000 907 500,000-999,999 227-454 1,500 680 3,500 1,588
2,000 907 1,000,000-1,499,999 454-680 3,000 1,361 5,000 2,268
2,000 907 1,500,000-1,999,999 680-907 4,500 2,041 6,500 2,948
2,000 907 2,000,000-2,500,000 907-1,134 6,000 2,722 8,000 3,629
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Sea Bass
Black sea bass are not subject to a stock rebuilding program. The
updated stock assessment indicates that black sea bass were not
overfished and overfishing did not occur in 2009.
The SSC recommended that ABC for black sea bass remain at the
status quo level of 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt) for 2011. The SSC stated
that there remains a high degree of uncertainty surrounding the
overfishing limit estimate for the black sea bass stock, as well as
considerable uncertainties about the black sea bass stock structure,
life history, and retrospective patterns within the stock assessment.
The Black Sea Bass Monitoring Committee concurred with the ABC
recommendation, and recommended a TAC of 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt) to
the Council.
The Council and Board considered the SSC and Black Sea Bass
Monitoring Committee recommendations at their August meeting. The
Council and Board concurred with the ABC/TAC recommendation of 4.5
million lb (2,041 mt) for 2011. After estimated commercial fishery and
recreational landings are removed from the ABC/TAC, the TAL for black
sea bass would be 3.6 million lb (1,633 mt).
[[Page 70197]]
NMFS is proposing a 2011 TAC of 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt) and TAL
of 3.6 million lb (1,633 mt) for the 2011 black sea bass fisheries,
consistent with the recommendations of the Council and Board. The FMP
specifies that the TAL is to be allocated 49 percent to the commercial
sector and 51 percent to the recreational sector; therefore, the
initial TAL would be allocated 1.76 million lb (798 mt) to the
commercial sector as a commercial quota and 1.84 million lb (835 mt) to
the recreational sector as a recreational harvest limit. The Council
and Board voted to set aside up to 3 percent of the TAL, or 108,000 lb
(49 mt), as RSA. This would adjust the commercial quota to 1.7 million
lb (776 mt) and the recreational harvest limit to 1.8 million lb (808
mt). Only the ABC/TAC is the same as last year, the overall TAL being
proposed for 2011 (3.6 million lb (1,633 mt)) is 100,000 lb (45 mt)
less than the status quo because the updated discard estimate is higher
for 2011 than for 2010.
Summary of NMFS' Proposed 2011 Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea
Bass Specifications
Summer Flounder: TAL of 29.48 million lb (13,372 mt); RSA of
884,400 lb (401 mt); commercial quota of 17,157,360 lb (7,782 mt); and
a recreational harvest limit of 11,438,240 lb (5,188 mt).
Scup: 20.0 million lb TAL (9,072 mt); RSA of 600,000 lb (272 mt);
commercial quota to 15,132,000 lb (6,864 mt); and a recreational
harvest limit of 4,268,000 lb (1,936 mt).
Black Sea Bass: TAL of 3,600,000 lb (1,633 mt); RSA of 108,000 lb
(49 mt); commercial quota 1,711,080 lb (776 mt); and recreational
harvest limit of 1,780,920 (808 mt).
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 by the Council, as required by section 603 of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), to examine the impacts of these
proposed specifications on small business entities, if adopted. A
description of the specifications, why they are being considered, and
the legal basis for proposing and implementing specifications for the
summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries are contained in
the preamble to this proposed rule. A copy of the detailed RFA analysis
is available from NMFS or the Council (see ADDRESSES). The Council's
analysis made use of quantitative approaches when possible. Where
quantitative data on revenues or other business-related metrics that
would provide insight to potential impacts were not available to inform
the analyses, qualitative analyses were conducted. A summary of the
2011 specifications RFA analysis follows.
Small businesses operating in commercial and recreational (i.e.,
party and charter vessel operations) fisheries have been defined by the
Small Business Administration as firms with gross revenues of up to
$4.0 and $6.5 million, respectively. 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. All federally permitted
vessels fall into the definition of small businesses; thus, there would
be no disproportionate impacts between large and small entities as a
result of the proposed rule.
The Council estimates that the proposed 2011 specifications could
affect 2,206 vessels that held a Federal summer flounder, scup, and/or
black sea bass permit in 2009 (the most recent year of complete permit
data). However, the more immediate impact of this rule will likely be
realized by the 810 vessels that actively participated in these
fisheries (i.e., landed these species) in 2009.
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 2011 specifications,
several indefinite measures would remain in effect until otherwise
changed; however, many components of the 2010 specifications expire on
December 31, 2010. These include TALs for all three species and TAC for
scup. There are no roll-over provisions for the 2010 quotas if the 2011
specifications are not made effective, and so, without specified
quotas, NMFS would have no mechanism to close fisheries if management
limits were exceeded. This would give rise to a situation in which the
goals and objectives of the FMP, its implementing regulations, and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act would all be violated. Therefore, the no action
alternative is not considered to be a reasonable alternative to the
preferred action of developing and implementing 2011 specifications
and, as such, it was excluded from detailed analysis in the Council's
EA/RFA analyses.
The Council analyzed three sets of combined TAL alternatives for
the 2010 summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries. Of these,
one alternative, labeled Alternative 2 for each species, contained the
most restrictive TAL options (i.e., lowest total landing levels--summer
flounder, 22.13 million lb (10,038 mt); scup, 14.11 million lb (6,400
mt); black sea bass, 2.30 million lb (1,043 mt)). While the Alternative
2 measures would achieve the objectives of the proposed action for each
of three species, they have the highest potential adverse economic
impacts on small entities in the form of potential foregone fishing
opportunities. Alternative 2 was not preferred by the Council because
the other alternatives considered are expected have lower adverse
impacts on small entities while achieving the stated objectives of
rebuilding the summer flounder stock and sustaining the scup and black
sea bass stocks, consistent with the FMP and Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Accordingly, Alternative 2 was excluded from this analysis.
The Council analyzed two sets of TAL alternatives for the three
species that would accomplish the stated objectives of the proposed
action, and that would minimize the adverse economic impacts of the
proposed rule on small entities. Alternative 1 (Council's preferred)
would implement the following TALs in 2011: Summer Flounder, 29.48
million lb (13,372 mt); scup, 20.0 million lb (9,072 mt); and black sea
bass, 3.6 million lb (1,633 mt). Alternative 3 (least restrictive/
highest quota levels) would implement the following TALs in 2011:
Summer flounder, 35.05 million lb (15,898 mt); scup, 28.96 million lb
(13,136 mt); and black sea bass, 4.35 million lb (1,973 mt).
Commercial Fishery Impacts
To analyze the potential impacts of the proposed alternatives, the
Council examined the total revenue earned by an individual vessel in
2009 (as a proxy for 2010), and compared the potential revenue in 2011
given the changes in fishing opportunity available through changes in
harvest levels from 2010 to 2011. While there are caveats to such an
approach--for example a vessel may hold multiple permits and supplement
losses of opportunity in one fishery with another comparable species;
or ex-vessel prices may change from levels utilized
[[Page 70198]]
in the analysis--the approach taken provides a rational basis for
explaining the potential financial impact to participating vessels. It
is important to note that actual impacts to individual vessels will
likely differ as a product of the many variables that cannot be easily
accounted for in the Council's analyses.
Under Alternative 1 (Council's preferred), assuming the increase in
total ex-vessel gross revenues associated with the increased commercial
quota for summer flounder is equally distributed among the 673 vessels
that landed summer flounder in 2009, the potential average revenue
could increase by $12,036 per vessel. For scup, the expected revenue
across the 398 vessels that landed scup in 2009 could increase by an
average of $8,492 per vessel. Revenues are projected to decrease by
$304 across the 460 vessels that landed black sea bass in 2009, due to
the slight commercial quota decrease under Alternative 1. The Council's
analysis indicated that this decrease in black sea bass would comprise
less than 5 percent of these vessels' expected revenue.
Under Alternative 3 (least restrictive TALs), analysis indicates
that the 2011 commercial quotas could increase revenues per vessel as
follows: Summer flounder, $21,085; scup, $21,432; and black sea bass,
$1,826. The potential average increase in revenue per vessel for the
combined suite of summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass landed by
810 vessels in 2009 was estimated to be $29,086 per vessel.
Recreational Fishery Impacts
While the specifications proposed would establish a 2011
recreational harvest limit for summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass, the management measure details for recreational fisheries will be
decided by the Council in December 2010, followed by NMFS rulemaking in
the first quarter of 2011. A comprehensive analysis of the impacts
associated with the recommended recreational management measures will
be provided to NMFS from the Council to support these activities.
The Council also examined the potential impact on the demand for
recreational for-hire party/charter vessel trips resulting from
Alternatives 1 and 3. While impacts are also likely to occur for
individual private recreational fishery participants and fishing-
related businesses such as bait and tackle shops, these are neither
regulated small-business entities under NMFS' jurisdiction, nor is
there participation cost or other economic metric data available to
assess potential impact on such groups. The Council's analysis
indicates that demand for for-hire trips and general saltwater
recreational angler participation has trended upward slightly over the
past decade. The Council's analysis also indicated that it was not
possible to reasonably predict behavioral or demand changes in response
to the recreational harvest limits proposed under any of the three
alternatives. However, under Alternatives 1 and 3, it is not expected
that, based on current recreational landings data, 2011 management
measures (i.e., minimum fishing size, possession limits, and fishing
seasons) would need to be made more constraining, except for potential
restrictions under the Alternative 1 black sea bass recreational
harvest limit. As previously stated, the Council will undertake
additional recreational management measures development and analysis in
December 2010.
Summary
The Council selected Alternative 1 (preferred) over Alternative 3
(least restrictive) stating that, while Alternative 3 measures would
provide higher economic benefits than the preferred measures of
Alternative 1, the Alternative 3 measures were expected to result in
long-term negative impacts for the summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass stocks, and were inconsistent with the advice provided to the
Council from the SSC and its monitoring committees. NMFS agrees with
the Council's IRFA analysis and rationale for recommending the TALs in
Alternative 1. As such, NMFS is proposing to implement the Alternative
1 TALs for 2011: Summer flounder, 35.05 million lb (15,898 mt); scup,
28.96 million lb (13,136 mt); and black sea bass, 4.35 million lb
(1,973 mt).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: November 12, 2010.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2010-29000 Filed 11-16-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P