Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Gulf of Alaska; Proposed 2011 and 2012 Harvest Specifications for Groundfish, 76352-76372 [2010-30686]
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76352
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form blooms commonly referred to as
red tides, or harmful algal blooms
(HABs), and can produce toxins that
accumulate in water column filterfeeding shellfish. Shellfish
contaminated with the toxin, if eaten in
large enough quantity, can cause illness
or death in humans.
Due to inadequate testing or
monitoring of the GB Closed Area for
the presence of PSP-causing toxins, the
closure was made permanent in 1999,
under Amendment 12 to the Atlantic
Surfclam and Ocean Quahog Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). Since the
implementation of the permanent
closure, NOAA’s National Ocean
Service (NOS) has provided grants to
the FDA; the States of Maine, New
Hampshire, and Massachusetts; and a
clam industry representative to collect
water and shellfish samples from
Federal waters off of southern New
England. The FDA, in consultation with
NMFS and several States, also
developed the Protocol for Onboard
Screening and Dockside Testing in
Molluscan Shellfish (Protocol), which is
designed to test and verify that clams
harvested from GB are safe. NMFS first
issued an Exempted Fishing Permit
(EFP) on January 9, 2008, to Truex
Enterprises of New Bedford, MA, to
allow for testing the efficacy of
harvesting surfclams and ocean quahogs
from a portion of the GB Closed Area
using the Protocol. The EFP was
subsequently renewed on January 22,
2009, and December 10, 2009.
On January 21, 2010, NMFS received
a letter from the FDA requesting that
NMFS open a portion of the GB Closed
Area, as specified at 648.73(a), to the
harvest of surfclams and ocean quahogs
for human consumption. The FDA
indicated that testing of clams from the
portion of the GB Closed Area known as
Cultivator Shoal had demonstrated that
PSP toxin levels were well below the
regulatory limit established for public
health and safety. This information
contributed to the FDA’s determination
that harvesting of surfclams and ocean
quahogs from this area is once again
safe. In response to the FDA’ s request,
NMFS published the aforementioned
proposed rule to solicit public
comments on the FDA’s request to open
a portion of the GB Closed Area.
Basis for Withdrawal
During the public comment period,
NMFS received substantive comments
from leading experts in PSP, who
questioned the validity of the data on
which the proposed re-opening is based,
and strongly cautioned against reopening the area without a rigorous
testing protocol designed to protect the
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public health. Several other comments
were also received in support of a reopening, but with the use of the FDAapproved Protocol.
Upon review of public comments,
NMFS agrees that testing is necessary to
ensure clams harvested from the area
are safe for human consumption. The
proposed rule did not propose any
additional requirements such as a
testing protocol. The Regional
Administrator does not have the
authority to implement a testing
protocol under the existing regulations
for the FMP. Therefore, NMFS is
withdrawing the proposed rule.
Comments and Responses
During the public comment period on
the proposed rule, 11 comments were
received. Two comments were in
support of the re-opening; six comments
supported the re-opening, but with the
use of the FDA-approved Protocol; two
comments were opposed to the action,
due to lack of a monitoring requirement;
and one comment was opposed to the
re-opening but did not supply any
significant rationale for the opposition.
Comment 1: Two experts questioned
the validity of the data on which the
proposed opening of the GB Closed Area
is based, and strongly cautioned NMFS
against re-reopening the area without a
rigorous testing protocol to ensure the
clams harvested from the area are safe.
Six comments were in support of the reopening, but with the use of the FDA
approved Protocol.
Response: NMFS agrees that testing is
necessary; however, the proposed rule
only proposed to re-open an area, and
did not propose any additional
requirements such as a testing protocol.
The Regional Administrator does not
have the authority to implement a
monitoring requirement under the
existing regulations implementing the
FMP.
Comment 2: One commenter
supported the re-opening, since the FDA
determined that clams from the area
were safe. This commenter stated that
the industry should be permitted to
harvest clams from the area. The
commenter further supported the reopening because a large portion, roughly
50 percent of the surfclam and ocean
quahog biomass, is located in GB and
opening a portion of the GB Closed Area
would alleviate fishing pressure on
areas that are experiencing declines in
landings per unit of effort.
Response: NMFS recognizes that reopening a portion of the GB Closed Area
may help address problems associated
with localized depletion. However,
given the significant health risk
associated with opening the area
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without a sufficient monitoring program
to ensure that clams harvested from the
area are safe for human consumption,
NMFS will not take action to re-open
the area. NMFS does not have the
authority to implement a monitoring
requirement under the existing
regulations implementing the FMP.
NMFS would consider supporting a
Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management
Council action to open the area,
provided a sufficient monitoring
program was included as part of the
action.
Comment 3: One commenter
supported the proposed opening, but
expressed concern as to whether there
were enough data to support the finding
that ocean quahogs harvested from GB
are safe.
Response: NMFS agrees this is a valid
concern. Based on the significant
comments received on this action, and
given the significant risk associated
with opening the area without a testing
protocol, NMFS is withdrawing the
proposed rule.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: December 2, 2010.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–30874 Filed 12–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 101126522–0522–02 ]
RIN 0648–XZ89
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Gulf of Alaska;
Proposed 2011 and 2012 Harvest
Specifications for Groundfish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes 2011 and
2012 harvest specifications,
apportionments, and Pacific halibut
prohibited species catch limits for the
groundfish fishery of the Gulf of Alaska
(GOA). This action is necessary to
establish harvest limits for groundfish
during the 2011 and 2012 fishing years
and to accomplish the goals and
objectives of the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Alaska. The intended effect of this
action is to conserve and manage the
groundfish resources in the GOA in
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act.
Comments must be received by
January 7, 2011.
DATES:
Send comment to Sue
Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. You may submit
comments, identified by RIN 0648–
XZ89, by any one of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal 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. No comments will be
posted to https://www.regulations.gov for
public viewing until after the comment
period has closed. Comment will
generally be posted without change. All
Personal Identifying Information (for
example, 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). You may submit
attachments to electronic comments in
Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or
Adobe PDF file formats only.
Electronic copies of the Alaska
Groundfish Harvest Specifications Final
Environmental Impact Statement (Final
EIS), the Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA), and the Supplemental
IRFA prepared for this action may be
obtained from https://
www.regulations.gov or from the Alaska
Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov. Copies of the
final 2009 Stock Assessment and
Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) report for the
groundfish resources of the GOA, dated
November 2009, are available from the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) at 605 West 4th
Avenue, Suite 306, Anchorage, AK
99510–2252, phone 907–271–2809, or
from the Council’s Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/npfmc. The
draft 2010 SAFE report for the GOA will
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ADDRESSES:
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be available from the same sources in
November 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom
Pearson, 907–481–1780, or Obren Davis,
907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the GOA groundfish fisheries
in the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of
the GOA under the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of
Alaska (FMP). The Council prepared the
FMP under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), 16 U.S.C.
1801, et seq. Regulations governing U.S.
fisheries and implementing the FMP
appear at 50 CFR parts 600, 679, and
680.
These proposed specifications are
based in large part on the 2009 SAFE
report (see ADDRESSES). In December
2010, the Council will consider the draft
2010 SAFE report to develop its
recommendations for the final 2011 and
2012 acceptable biological catch (ABC)
amounts and total allowable catch
(TAC) limits. In addition to the
proposed specifications, this proposed
rule identifies anticipated changes to
the proposed specifications that might
result from the Council’s review of the
2010 SAFE report for public review.
The FMP and its implementing
regulations require NMFS, after
consultation with the Council, to
specify the TACs for each target species,
the sum of which must be within the
optimum yield (OY) range of 116,000 to
800,000 metric tons (mt). Section
679.20(c)(1) further requires NMFS to
publish and solicit public comment on
proposed annual TACs, halibut
prohibited species catch (PSC) amounts,
and seasonal allowances of pollock and
inshore/offshore Pacific cod. The
proposed specifications in Tables 1
through 18 of this document satisfy
these requirements. For 2011 and 2012,
the sum of the proposed TAC amounts
is 330,746 mt. Under § 679.20(c)(3),
NMFS will publish the final 2011 and
2012 specifications after (1) considering
comments received within the comment
period (see DATES), (2) consulting with
the Council at its December 2010
meeting, and (3) considering
information presented in the Final EIS
(see ADDRESSES) and the final 2010
SAFE report prepared for the 2011 and
2012 groundfish fisheries.
Other Actions Potentially Affecting the
2011 and 2012 Harvest Specifications
NMFS published a final rule to
implement Amendment 87 to the FMP
on October 6, 2010 (75 FR 61639),
effective November 5, 2010.
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Amendment 87 moves sharks, sculpins,
squids, and octopuses from the ‘‘other
species’’ category to the ‘‘target species’’
category in the GOA and eliminates the
‘‘other species’’ category in the GOA
FMP. Amendment 87 revises the FMP to
meet the National Standard 1 guidelines
for annual catch limits and
accountability measures and requires
that overfishing levels (OFLs), ABCs,
and TACs be established for sharks,
sculpins, squids, and octopuses as part
of the annual groundfish harvest
specifications process. Based on the
2009 SAFE report, NMFS proposes
ABCs, TACs, and OFLs for sharks,
sculpins, octopuses, and squids listed in
Table 1.
Implementation of Amendment 87 to
the FMP was necessary to comply with
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements
associated with annual catch limits and
accountability measures and will result
in revisions to how total annual
groundfish mortality is estimated and
accounted for in the annual SAFE
reports. These revisions may affect the
OFLs and ABCs for certain groundfish
species. Specifically, NMFS will
attempt to identify additional sources of
mortality to groundfish stocks not
currently reported or considered by the
groundfish stock assessments in
recommending OFLs, ABCs, and TACs
for certain groundfish species. These
additional sources of mortality result
from recreational fishing, subsistence
fishing, trawl and hook-and-line
surveys, exempted fishing permits,
research, commercial halibut fisheries,
crab bait, sablefish catch predation by
whales, or other sources of mortality not
yet identified. Many of the sources of
this mortality have been identified,
some of which are currently unreported
due to the absence of formal reporting
protocols.
NMFS intends to develop a single
database that stock assessment authors
can access through a single source such
as the Alaska Fisheries Information
Network. The development of this data
base will require the cooperation of
several agencies including NMFS, the
Alaska Department of Fish and Game,
and the International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC). At its October 2010
meeting, the Council’s groundfish Plan
Teams recommended the formation of a
total catch accounting working group to
assist NMFS in developing a
methodology to estimate total catch of
groundfish. While much of the
information is currently available and
will be incorporated into the final 2010
SAFE report, the development of an
adequate methodology is ongoing and
not fully ready for use in the final SAFE
report. NMFS intends to have this
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information fully available for the 2011
assessment cycle.
In conjunction with the
implementation of Amendment 87,
during its October 2010 meeting, the
Council made additional
recommendations with respect to the
management of octopuses. The Council,
in response to the fishing industry’s
concerns that new requirements for
ACLs for octopuses may constrain
commercial fisheries, initiated an
analysis for amendments to the FMP
that would consider moving octopuses
into the ecosystem category or create
octopus discard mortality rates. Initial
review and final action are scheduled
tentatively for April and June 2011,
respectively. The intent is for the
amendments to be implemented for the
2012 fisheries.
The Council, at its December 2009
meeting, took final action to recommend
a Pacific cod sector split in the Western
and Central GOA. If approved by the
Secretary of Commerce, the Pacific cod
TAC would be allocated in the Western
GOA among trawl catcher/processors
(C/Ps), trawl catcher vessels (CVs),
hook-and-line C/Ps, hook-and-line CVs,
combined CP and CV pot vessels, and
jig vessels; and in the Central GOA
among trawl C/Ps, trawl catcher vessels
(CVs), hook-and-line C/Ps, hook-andline CVs less than 50 feet length overall,
hook-and-line CVs equal to or greater
than 50 feet length overall, combined C/
P and CV pot vessels, and jig vessels.
Sector allocations may provide stability
to long-term participants in the fishery
by reducing competition among sectors
for access to the GOA Pacific cod
resource. NMFS intends to publish
proposed and final rulemaking for this
action during 2011. If these sector
allocations are approved and
implemented for the 2012 Pacific cod
fishery in the Western and Central GOA,
the allocations of the Pacific cod TAC
between the inshore and offshore
components in the Western and Central
GOA would be discontinued and
replaced by allocations to each sector
noted above.
Proposed ABC and TAC Specifications
The amounts proposed for the 2011
and 2012 harvest specifications are
based on the 2009 SAFE report. The
proposed ABCs and TACs could be
changed in the final harvest
specifications depending on the most
recent scientific information contained
in the final 2010 SAFE report. The
SAFE report contains a review of the
latest scientific analyses and estimates
of each species’ biomass and other
biological parameters, as well as
summaries of the available information
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on the GOA ecosystem and the
economic condition of the groundfish
fisheries off Alaska. From these data and
analyses, the GOA Groundfish Plan
Team (Plan Team) estimates an ABC for
each species category.
At the October 2010 Council meeting,
the Council, the Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC), and the
Advisory Panel (AP) reviewed most
recent biological and harvest
information about the condition of
groundfish stocks in the GOA. This
information was initially compiled by
the Plan Team and presented in the
final 2009 SAFE report for the GOA
groundfish fisheries, dated November
2009 (see ADDRESSES). In November
2010, the Plan Team will update the
2009 SAFE report to include new
information collected during 2010, such
as revised stock assessments and catch
data. The Plan Team will compile this
information and produce the draft 2010
SAFE report in time for the Council to
review it during the December 2010
Council meeting. Upon completing its
review, the Council will formally
approve the draft 2010 SAFE report.
Once this approval occurs, the draft
2010 SAFE report will be considered
final. The Council also will consider
information contained in the draft 2010
SAFE report, the recommendations
made by the Plan Team during its
November 2010 meeting, information
from the December 2010 SSC and AP
meetings, public testimony, and
relevant written public comments in
making its recommendations for the
final 2011 and 2012 harvest
specifications.
In previous years the largest changes
from the proposed to the final harvest
specifications have been based on the
most recent NMFS stock surveys, which
provide updated estimates of stock
biomass and spatial distribution, and
changes to the models used for making
stock assessments. NMFS scientists
presented updated and new survey
results, changes to assessment models,
and accompanying stock estimates at
the September Plan Team meeting, and
the SSC reviewed this information at the
October 2010 Council meeting. In
November 2010, the Plan Team
considered updated stock assessments
for pollock, Pacific cod, sablefish,
sharks, squids, sculpins, and octopuses
which were included in the draft 2010
SAFE report. For the other groundfish
stocks without recent surveys or other
new scientific information, NMFS will
update the assessments to include any
other available, recent information, such
as 2010 catch. Thus, NMFS does not
expect the final harvest specification
amounts for the latter group of stocks
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(i.e., those without recent surveys) to
vary greatly from the proposed
specification amounts published here.
If the draft 2010 SAFE report
indicates that the stock biomass trend is
increasing for a species, then the final
2011 and 2012 harvest specifications for
that species may reflect an increase from
the proposed harvest specifications. The
draft 2010 SAFE reports indicate that
the biomass trend for pollock, Pacific
cod, Rex sole, arrowtooth flounder,
northern rockfish, and demersal shelf
rockfish may be increasing. Conversely,
if the draft 2010 SAFE report indicates
that the stock biomass trend is
decreasing for a species, then the final
2011 and 2012 harvest specifications
may reflect a decrease from the
proposed harvest specifications. The
draft 2010 SAFE reports indicate that
the biomass trend for flathead sole,
pelagic shelf rockfish, and sharks may
be decreasing. Notwithstanding the
apparent decrease in the shark biomass,
the Plan Team will be recommending an
alternative method for calculating shark
OFL to the SSC at the December 2010
Council meeting. If the SSC concurs
with this method, the final harvest
specifications may reflect an increasing
OFL, ABC, and TAC for sharks.
The biomass trends for species
otherwise not listed above are relatively
level and stable. However, with respect
to octopuses, the Plan Team also will
recommend an alternative method to
calculate the octopus OFL to the SSC at
the December 2010 Council meeting.
This method varies from the default
method of using Tier 6 methodology as
specified in the FMP. The new method
would incorporate octopus biomass
estimates from recent GOA groundfish
trawl surveys, in combination with
historical catch data, to calculate the
OFL for octopuses. If accepted by the
SSC, this change could result in an
increasing OFL, ABC, and TAC for
octopuses.
The proposed ABCs and TACs are
based on the best available biological
and socioeconomic data, including
projected biomass trends, information
on assumed distribution of stock
biomass, and revised methods used to
calculate stock biomass. The FMP
specifies the formulas, or tiers, to be
used to compute ABCs and OFLs.
Fisheries scientists determine formulas
applicable to a particular stock or stock
complex based on the level of available,
reliable information. This information is
categorized in the FMP into a successive
series of six tiers to define OFL and ABC
amounts, with tier one representing the
highest level of information quality
available and tier six representing the
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lowest level of information quality
available.
The SSC adopted the proposed 2011
and 2012 OFLs and ABCs recommended
by the Plan Team for all groundfish
species. The Council adopted the SSC’s
OFL and ABC recommendations and the
AP’s TAC recommendations. These
amounts are unchanged from the final
2011 harvest specifications published in
the Federal Register on March 12, 2010
(75 FR 11749) . The exceptions to this
are the establishment of individual ABC
and TAC amounts for sculpins, sharks,
squid, and octopuses per the adoption
of Amendment 87 to the FMP, as
previously described. For 2011 and
2012, the Council recommended and
NMFS proposes the OFLs, ABCs, and
TACs listed in Table 1. The proposed
ABCs reflect harvest amounts that are
less than the specified overfishing
amounts. The sum of the proposed 2011
and 2012 ABCs for all assessed
groundfish is 605,086 mt, which is
higher than the final 2010 ABC total of
565,499 mt (75 FR 11749, March 12,
2010).
Specification and Apportionment of
TAC Amounts
The Council recommended proposed
TACs for 2011 and 2012 that are equal
to proposed ABCs for pollock, deepwater flatfish, rex sole, sablefish, Pacific
ocean perch, shortraker rockfish,
rougheye rockfish, northern rockfish,
pelagic shelf rockfish, thornyhead
rockfish, demersal shelf rockfish, skates,
sharks, sculpins, squids, and octopuses.
The Council recommended other
proposed TACs for 2011 and 2012 that
are less than the proposed ABCs for
certain species: Pacific cod, flathead
sole, shallow-water flatfish, arrowtooth
flounder, and other rockfish. The Pacific
cod TACs are set to accommodate the
State of Alaska’s (State) GHLs for Pacific
cod so that the ABC is not exceeded.
The flathead sole, shallow-water
flatfish, and arrowtooth flounder TACs
are set to conserve the halibut PSC limit
for use in other fisheries. The other
rockfish TACs are set to reduce the
amount of discards in the Southeast
Outside (SEO) District. The Atka
mackerel TAC is set to accommodate
incidental catch amounts.
The ABC for the pollock stock in the
combined Western, Central, and West
Yakutat Regulatory Areas (W/C/WYK)
has been adjusted to reflect the
Guideline Harvest Level (GHL)
established by the State for the Prince
William Sound (PWS) pollock fishery
since its inception in 1995. Genetic
studies revealed that the pollock in PWS
was not a separate stock from the
combined W/C/WYK population.
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Accordingly, the Council recommended
decreasing the W/C/WYK pollock ABC
to account for the State’s PWS GHL. For
2011, the PWS GHL for pollock is 1,650
mt.
The apportionment of annual pollock
TAC among the Western and Central
Regulatory Areas of the GOA reflects the
seasonal biomass distribution and is
discussed in greater detail below. The
annual pollock TAC in the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA is
apportioned among Statistical Areas
610, 620, and 630, and divided equally
among each of the following four
seasons: The A season (January 20
through March 10), the B season (March
10 through May 31), the C season
(August 25 through October 1), and the
D season (October 1 through November
1) (50 CFR 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv),
and 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(A), (B)).
As in 2010, the SSC and Council
recommended that the method of
apportioning the sablefish ABC among
management areas in 2011 and 2012
include commercial fishery and survey
data. NMFS stock assessment scientists
believe that unbiased commercial
fishery catch-per-unit-effort data are
useful for stock distribution
assessments. NMFS evaluates annually
the use of commercial fishery data to
ensure that unbiased information is
included in stock distribution models.
The Council’s recommendation for
sablefish area apportionments also takes
into account the prohibition on the use
of trawl gear in the SEO District of the
Eastern Regulatory Area and makes
available five percent of the combined
Eastern Regulatory Area TACs to trawl
gear for use as incidental catch in other
directed groundfish fisheries in the
WYK District (§ 679.20(a)(4)(i)).
The AP, SSC, and Council
recommended apportionment of the
ABC for Pacific cod in the GOA among
regulatory areas based on the three most
recent NMFS summer trawl surveys.
The proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod
TACs are affected by the State’s fishery
for Pacific cod in State waters in the
Western and Central Regulatory Areas,
as well as in PWS. The Plan Team, SSC,
AP, and Council recommended that the
sum of all State and Federal water
Pacific cod removals from the GOA not
exceed ABC recommendations.
Accordingly, the Council recommended
reducing the proposed 2011 and 2012
Pacific cod TACs in the proposed ABCs
for the Eastern, Central, and Western
Regulatory Areas to account for State
GHLs. Therefore, the proposed 2011 and
2012 Pacific cod TACs are less than the
proposed ABCs by the following
amounts: (1) Eastern GOA, 734 mt; (2)
Central GOA, 15,174 mt; and (3)
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Western GOA, 8,566 mt. These amounts
reflect the sum of the State’s 2011 and
2012 guideline harvest levels in these
areas, which are 25 percent of the
Eastern, Central, and Western GOA
proposed ABCs. In 2011, the State
waters Pacific cod GHL in PWS was
increased from 15 to 25 percent of the
Eastern GOA Pacific cod ABC, per the
recommendations of State of Alaska
Department of Fish and Game fisheries
managers. Thus, the corresponding 2011
and 2012 Eastern GOA Pacific cod TAC
may decrease in final harvest
specifications to accommodate the
increased State GHL in that area.
NMFS also is proposing seasonal
apportionments of the annual Pacific
cod TACs in the Western and Central
Regulatory Areas. Sixty percent of the
annual TAC is apportioned to the A
season for hook-and-line, pot, or jig gear
from January 1 through June 10, and for
trawl gear from January 20 through June
10. Forty percent of the annual TAC is
apportioned to the B season for hookand-line, pot, or jig gear from September
1 through December 31, and for trawl
gear from September 1 through
November 1 (§§ 679.23(d)(3) and
679.20(a)(12)).
As in 2010, NMFS proposes to
establish for 2011 and 2012 an A season
directed fishing allowance (DFA) for the
Pacific cod fisheries in the GOA based
on the management area TACs minus
the recent average A season incidental
catch of Pacific cod in each management
area before June 10 (§ 679.20(d)(1)). The
DFA and incidental catch before June 10
will be managed such that total catch in
the A season will be no more than 60
percent of the annual TAC. Incidental
catch taken after June 10 will continue
to accrue against the B season TAC. This
action meets the intent of the Steller sea
lion protection measures by achieving
temporal dispersion of the Pacific cod
removals and reducing the likelihood of
catch exceeding 60 percent of the
annual TAC in the A season.
The sum of the proposed TACs for all
GOA groundfish is 330,746 mt for 2011
and 2012, which is within the OY range
specified by the FMP. The sums of the
proposed 2011 and 2012 TACs are
higher than the sum of the 2010 TACs
of 292,087 mt, but are unchanged from
the 2011 TACs currently specified for
the GOA groundfish fisheries (75 FR
11788, March 12, 2010), with the
exception of the Eastern GOA Pacific
Cod TAC and the TACs for the major
taxonomic groups (sharks, squids,
octopuses, and sculpins), which used to
compose the ‘‘other species’’ category.
Table 1 lists the proposed 2011 and
2012 ABCs, TACs, and OFLs and area
apportionments of groundfish in the
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GOA. These amounts are consistent
with the biological condition of
groundfish stocks as described in the
2009 SAFE report, and adjusted for
other biological and socioeconomic
considerations, including maintaining
the total TAC within the required OY
range. These proposed amounts are
subject to change pending the
completion of the draft 2010 SAFE
report and the Council’s
recommendations for the final 2011 and
2012 harvest specifications during its
December 2010 meeting.
TABLE 1—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 ABCS, TACS, AND OFLS OF GROUNDFISH FOR THE WESTERN/CENTRAL/WEST
YAKUTAT (W/C/WYK), WESTERN (W), CENTRAL (C), EASTERN (E) REGULATORY AREAS, AND IN THE WEST YAKUTAT
(WYK), SOUTHEAST OUTSIDE (SEO), AND GULFWIDE (GW) DISTRICTS OF THE GULF OF ALASKA
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Species
Area 1
Pollock 2 ....................................................
Shumagin (610) ........................................
Chirikof (620) ............................................
Kodiak (630) .............................................
WYK (640) ................................................
34,728
37,159
25,287
2,686
34,728
37,159
25,287
2,686
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
W/C/WYK (subtotal) ..........................
SEO (650) ................................................
Total ..................................................
99,860
9,245
109,105
99,860
9,245
109,105
135,010
12,326
147,336
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
34,265
60,698
2,937
25,699
45,524
2,203
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
97,900
73,426
116,700
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
E (WYK and SEO) (subtotal) ............
1,488
4,042
1,450
2,320
3,770
1,488
4,042
1,450
2,320
3,770
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
9,300
9,300
11,008
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
23,681
29,999
1,228
1,334
4,500
13,000
1,228
1,334
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
56,242
20,062
67,768
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
530
2,928
2,089
778
530
2,928
2,089
778
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
6,325
6,325
7,847
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
1,521
6,312
871
888
1,521
6,312
871
888
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
9,592
9,592
12,534
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
34,263
144,262
22,501
11,693
8,000
30,000
2,500
2,500
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
212,719
43,000
250,559
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
17,520
28,190
2,068
1,508
2,000
5,000
2,068
1,508
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
49,286
10,576
61,601
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
2,797
10,377
1,937
1,882
2,797
10,377
1,937
1,882
3,220
11,944
n/a
n/a
Pacific cod 3 ..............................................
Sablefish 4 .................................................
Shallow-water flatfish 6 ..............................
Deep-water flatfish 5 ..................................
Rex sole ....................................................
Arrowtooth flounder ..................................
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Flathead sole ............................................
Pacific ocean perch 7 ................................
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76357
TABLE 1—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 ABCS, TACS, AND OFLS OF GROUNDFISH FOR THE WESTERN/CENTRAL/WEST
YAKUTAT (W/C/WYK), WESTERN (W), CENTRAL (C), EASTERN (E) REGULATORY AREAS, AND IN THE WEST YAKUTAT
(WYK), SOUTHEAST OUTSIDE (SEO), AND GULFWIDE (GW) DISTRICTS OF THE GULF OF ALASKA—Continued
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Species
ABC
Area 1
TAC
OFL
E (WYK and SEO) (subtotal) ............
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Total ...................................................
n/a
n/a
n/a
4,808
4,808
5,730
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
134
325
455
134
325
455
n/a
n/a
n/a
914
914
1,219
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
212
507
273
2,757
212
507
273
200
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
3,749
1,192
4,881
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
WYK .........................................................
SEO ..........................................................
607
3,035
405
680
607
3,035
405
680
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
4,727
4,727
5,739
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
81
869
363
81
869
363
n/a
n/a
n/a
1,313
1,313
1,581
SEO ..........................................................
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
295
425
637
708
295
425
637
708
472
n/a
n/a
n/a
1,770
1,770
2,360
GW ...........................................................
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
4,700
598
2,049
681
2,000
598
2,049
681
6,200
n/a
n/a
n/a
3,328
3,328
4,438
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
81
2,009
762
81
2,009
762
n/a
n/a
n/a
Total ..................................................
Other skates 17 ..........................................
Sharks .......................................................
Squids .......................................................
Octopuses .................................................
Sculpins ....................................................
2,549
2,259
0
Total ..................................................
Longnose skate 16 .....................................
2,549
2,259
0
Total ..................................................
Atka mackerel ...........................................
Big skate 15 ...............................................
W ..............................................................
C ...............................................................
E ...............................................................
Total ..................................................
Demersal shelf rockfish 14 .........................
Thornyhead rockfish .................................
19,560
Total ..................................................
Rougheye and Blackspotted rockfish 10 ...
16,993
Total ..................................................
Pelagic shelf rockfish 13 ............................
16,993
Total ..................................................
Other rockfish 9 12 ......................................
4,396
Total ..................................................
Shortraker rockfish 11 ................................
3,819
Total ..................................................
Northern rockfish 8 9 ..................................
3,819
2,852
2,852
3,803
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
...........................................................
2,093
957
1,148
224
4,746
2,093
957
1,148
224
4,746
2,791
1,276
1,530
298
6,328
...................................................................
605,086
330,746
743,559
GW
GW
GW
GW
GW
1 Regulatory
areas and districts are defined at § 679.2. (W=Western Gulf of Alaska; C=Central Gulf of Alaska; E=Eastern Gulf of Alaska;
WYK=West Yakutat District; SEO=Southeast Outside District; GW=Gulf-wide).
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2 Pollock is apportioned in the Western/Central Regulatory Areas among three statistical areas. During the A season, the apportionment is
based on an adjusted estimate of the relative distribution of pollock biomass of approximately 30%, 46%, and 24% in Statistical Areas 610, 620,
and 630, respectively. During the B season, the apportionment is based on the relative distribution of pollock biomass at 30%, 54%, and 16% in
Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, respectively. During the C and D seasons, the apportionment is based on the relative distribution of pollock
biomass at 41%, 27%, and 32% in Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, respectively. Table 4 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012 pollock seasonal
apportionments. In the West Yakutat and Southeast Outside Districts of the Eastern Regulatory Area, pollock is not divided into seasonal allowances.
3 The annual Pacific cod TAC is apportioned 60% to the A season and 40% to the B season in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas of
the GOA. Pacific cod is allocated 90% for processing by the inshore component and 10% for processing by the offshore component. Table 5 lists
the proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod seasonal apportionments.
4 Sablefish is allocated to trawl and hook-and-line gears for 2011 and to trawl gear in 2012. Tables 2 and 3 list the proposed 2011 and 2012
sablefish TACs.
5 ‘‘Deep-water flatfish’’ means Dover sole, Greenland turbot, and deepsea sole.
6 ‘‘Shallow-water flatfish’’ means flatfish not including ‘‘deep-water flatfish,’’ flathead sole, rex sole, or arrowtooth flounder.
7 ‘‘Pacific ocean perch’’ means Sebastes alutus.
8 ‘‘Northern rockfish’’ means Sebastes polyspinous. For management purposes the 2 mt apportionment of ABC to the Eastern Gulf of Alaska
has been included in the slope rockfish complex.
9 ‘‘Slope rockfish’’ means Sebastes aurora (aurora), S. melanostomus (blackgill), S. paucispinis (bocaccio), S. goodei (chilipepper), S. crameri
(darkblotch), S. elongatus (greenstriped), S. variegatus (harlequin), S. wilsoni (pygmy), S. babcocki (redbanded), S. proriger (redstripe), S.
zacentrus (sharpchin), S. jordani (shortbelly), S. brevispinis (silvergrey), S. diploproa (splitnose), S. saxicola (stripetail), S. miniatus (vermilion),
and S. reedi (yellowmouth). In the Eastern GOA only, slope rockfish also includes northern rockfish, S. polyspinous.
10 ‘‘Rougheye rockfish’’ means Sebastes aleutianus (rougheye) and Sebastes melanostictus (blackspotted).
11 ‘‘Shortraker rockfish’’ means Sebastes borealis.
12 ‘‘Other rockfish’’ in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas and in the West Yakutat District means slope rockfish and demersal shelf
rockfish. The category ‘‘other rockfish’’ in the SEO District means slope rockfish.
13 ‘‘Pelagic shelf rockfish’’ means, S. variabilis (dusky), S. entomelas (widow), and S. flavidus (yellowtail).
14 ‘‘Demersal shelf rockfish’’ means Sebastes pinniger (canary), S. nebulosus (china), S. caurinus (copper), S. maliger (quillback), S.
helvomaculatus (rosethorn), S. nigrocinctus (tiger), and S. ruberrimus (yelloweye).
15 ‘‘Big skate’’ means Raja binoculata.
16 ‘‘Longnose skate’’ means Raja rhina.
17 ‘‘Other skates’’ means Bathyraja spp.
Proposed Apportionment of Reserves
Section 679.20(b)(2) requires that 20
percent of each TAC for pollock, Pacific
cod, flatfish, skates, sharks, squids,
sculpins, and octopuses be set aside in
reserves for possible apportionment at a
later date during the fishing year. In
2010, NMFS apportioned all of the
reserves in the final harvest
specifications. For 2011 and 2012,
NMFS proposes reapportionment of all
the reserves for pollock, Pacific cod,
flatfish, skates, sharks, squids, sculpins,
and octopuses. Table 1 reflects the
apportionment of reserve amounts for
these species and species groups. Each
proposed TAC for the above mentioned
species categories contains the full TAC
recommended by the Council, since no
reserve was created from the relevant
species categories.
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Proposed Allocations of the Sablefish
TAC Amounts to Vessels Using Hookand-Line and Trawl Gear
Section 679.20(a)(4)(i) and (ii) require
allocations of sablefish TACs for each of
the regulatory areas and districts to
hook-and-line and trawl gear. In the
Western and Central Regulatory Areas,
80 percent of each TAC is allocated to
hook-and-line gear, and 20 percent of
each TAC is allocated to trawl gear. In
the Eastern Regulatory Area, 95 percent
of the TAC is allocated to hook-and-line
gear and five percent is allocated to
trawl gear. The trawl gear allocation in
the Eastern GOA may only be used to
support incidental catch of sablefish in
directed fisheries for other target species
(§ 679.20(a)(4)(i)). In recognition of the
trawl ban in the SEO District of the
Eastern Regulatory Area, the Council
recommended and NMFS proposes the
allocation of five percent of the
combined Eastern Regulatory Area
sablefish TAC to trawl gear in the WYK
District and the remainder of the WYK
sablefish TAC be available to vessels
using hook-and-line gear. As a result,
NMFS proposes to allocate 100 percent
of the sablefish TAC in the SEO District
to vessels using hook-and-line gear. This
recommendation results in a proposed
2011 allocation of 189 mt to trawl gear
and 3,581 mt to hook-and-line gear in
the Eastern GOA. Table 2 lists the
allocations of the proposed 2011
sablefish TACs to hook-and-line and
trawl gear. Table 3 lists the allocations
of the proposed 2012 sablefish TACs to
trawl gear.
The Council recommended that the
hook-and-line sablefish TAC be
established annually to ensure that the
Individual Fishery Quota (IFQ) fishery
is conducted concurrent with the
halibut IFQ fishery and is based on the
most recent survey information. The
Council also recommended that only a
trawl sablefish TAC be established for
two years so that retention of incidental
catch of sablefish by trawl gear could
commence in January in the second year
of the groundfish harvest specifications.
However, since there is an annual
assessment for sablefish and the final
harvest specifications are expected to be
published before the IFQ season begins
(typically, in early March), the Council
recommended that the sablefish TAC be
set on an annual basis so that the best
and most recent scientific information
could be considered in recommending
the ABCs and TACs. Since sablefish is
on bycatch status for trawl gear during
the entire fishing year, and given that
fishing for groundfish with trawl gear is
prohibited prior to January 20, it is not
likely that the sablefish allocation to
trawl gear would be reached before the
effective date of the final harvest
specifications.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED 2011 SABLEFISH TAC AMOUNTS IN THE GULF OF ALASKA AND ALLOCATIONS TO HOOK-AND-LINE
AND TRAWL GEAR
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Area/district
Western ......................................................................................................................
Central .......................................................................................................................
West Yakutat 1 ...........................................................................................................
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1,488
4,042
1,450
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1,190
3,234
1,261
08DEP1
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298
808
189
76359
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2—PROPOSED 2011 SABLEFISH TAC AMOUNTS IN THE GULF OF ALASKA AND ALLOCATIONS TO HOOK-AND-LINE
AND TRAWL GEAR—Continued
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Area/district
Hook-and-line
allocation
TAC
Trawl allocation
Southeast Outside .....................................................................................................
2,320
2,320
0
Total ....................................................................................................................
9,300
8,005
1,295
1 Represents
an allocation of 5 percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area sablefish TAC to trawl gear in the WYK District.
TABLE 3—PROPOSED 2012 SABLEFISH TAC AMOUNTS IN THE GULF OF ALASKA AND ALLOCATION TO TRAWL GEAR 1
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Area/district
Hook-and-line
allocation
TAC
Trawl allocation
Western ......................................................................................................................
Central .......................................................................................................................
West Yakutat 2 ...........................................................................................................
Southeast Outside .....................................................................................................
1,488
4,042
1,450
2,320
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
298
808
189
0
Total ....................................................................................................................
9,300
n/a
1,295
1 The Council recommended that harvest specifications for the hook-and-line gear sablefish Individual Fishing Quota fisheries be limited to 1
year.
2 Represents an allocation of 5 percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area sablefish TAC to trawl gear in the WYK District.
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Proposed Apportionments of Pollock
TAC Among Seasons and Regulatory
Areas, and Allocations for Processing
by Inshore and Offshore Components
In the GOA, pollock is apportioned by
season and area, and is further allocated
between inshore and offshore
processing components. Pursuant to
§ 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B), the annual pollock
TAC specified for the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA is
apportioned into four equal seasonal
allowances of 25 percent. As established
by § 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv), the A,
B, C, and D season allowances are
available from January 20 through
March 10, March 10 through May 31,
August 25 through October 1, and
October 1 through November 1,
respectively.
Pollock TACs in the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA are
apportioned among Statistical Areas
610, 620, and 630, pursuant to
§ 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(A). In the A and B
seasons, the apportionments are in
proportion to the distribution of pollock
biomass based on the four most recent
NMFS winter surveys. In the C and D
seasons, the apportionments are in
proportion to the distribution of pollock
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Jkt 223001
biomass based on the four most recent
NMFS summer surveys. For 2011 and
2012, the Council recommends, and
NMFS proposes, averaging the winter
and summer distribution of pollock in
the Central Regulatory Area for the A
season. The average is intended to
reflect the distribution of pollock and
the performance of the fishery in the
area during the A season for the 2011
and 2012 fishing years. Within any
fishing year, the amount by which a
seasonal allowance is underharvested or
overharvested may be added to, or
subtracted from, subsequent seasonal
allowances in a manner to be
determined by the Regional
Administrator (§ 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B)).
The rollover amount is limited to 20
percent of the unharvested seasonal
apportionment for the statistical area.
Any unharvested pollock above the 20
percent limit could be further
distributed to the other statistical areas,
in proportion to the estimated biomass
in the subsequent season in those
statistical areas (§ 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B)).
The proposed pollock TACs in the WYK
District of 2,686 mt and SEO District of
9,245 mt for 2011 and 2012 are not
allocated by season.
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Section 679.20(a)(6)(i) requires the
allocation of 100 percent of the pollock
TAC in all regulatory areas and all
seasonal allowances to vessels catching
pollock for processing by the inshore
component after subtraction of amounts
that are projected by the Regional
Administrator to be caught by, or
delivered to, the offshore component
incidental to directed fishing for other
groundfish species. Thus, the amount of
pollock available for harvest by vessels
harvesting pollock for processing by the
offshore component is that amount that
will be taken as incidental catch during
directed fishing for groundfish species
other than pollock, up to the maximum
retainable amounts allowed under
§ 679.20(e) and (f). At this time, these
incidental catch amounts of pollock are
unknown and will be determined
during the fishing year.
Table 4 lists the proposed 2011 and
2012 seasonal biomass distribution of
pollock in the Western and Central
Regulatory Areas, area apportionments,
and seasonal allowances. The amounts
of pollock for processing by the inshore
and offshore components are not shown.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 DISTRIBUTION OF POLLOCK IN THE CENTRAL AND WESTERN REGULATORY AREAS
OF THE GULF OF ALASKA; SEASONAL BIOMASS DISTRIBUTION, AREA APPORTIONMENTS; AND SEASONAL ALLOWANCES
OF ANNUAL TAC
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Season 1
Shumagin
(Area 610)
Chirikof
(Area 620)
Total 2
Kodiak
(Area 630)
A (Jan 20–Mar 10) .......
B (Mar 10–May 31) ......
C (Aug 25–Oct 1) .........
D (Oct 1–Nov1) ............
7,342
7,342
10,022
10,022
(30.22%)
(30.22%)
(41.25%)
(41.25%)
11,129
13,128
6,451
6,451
(45.81%)
(54.04%)
(26.55%)
(26.55%)
5,823
3,824
7,820
7,820
(23.97%)
(15.74%)
(32.19%)
(32.19%)
Annual Total ..........
34,728
........................
37,159
........................
25,287
24,294
24,294
24,293
24,293
........................
(100%)
(100%)
(100%)
(100%)
97,174
1 As
established by § 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv), the A, B, C, and D season allowances are available from January 20 to March 10, March 10
to May 31, August 25 to October 1, and October 1 to November 1, respectively. The amounts of pollock for processing by the inshore and offshore components are not shown in this table.
2 The WYK and SEO District pollock TACs are not allocated by season and are not included in the total pollock TACs shown in this table.
Proposed Seasonal Apportionments of
Pacific Cod TAC and Allocations for
Processing of Pacific Cod TAC Between
Inshore and Offshore Components
Pacific cod fishing is divided into two
seasons in the Western and Central
Regulatory Areas of the GOA. For hookand-line, pot, and jig gear, the A season
is January 1 through June 10, and the B
season is September 1 through
December 31. For trawl gear, the A
season is January 20 through June 10,
and the B season is September 1 through
November 1 (§ 679.23(d)(3)(i)). After
subtraction of incidental catch from the
A season, 60 percent of the annual TAC
will be available as a DFA during the A
season for the inshore and offshore
components. The remaining 40 percent
of the annual TAC will be available for
harvest during the B season. Under
§ 679.20(a)(12)(ii), any overage or
underage of the Pacific cod allowance
from the A season will be subtracted
from, or added to, the subsequent B
season allowance.
Section 679.20(a)(6)(ii) requires the
allocation of the TAC apportionment of
Pacific cod in all regulatory areas to
vessels catching Pacific cod for
processing by the inshore and offshore
components. Ninety percent of the
Pacific cod TAC in each regulatory area
is allocated to vessels catching Pacific
cod for processing by the inshore
component. The remaining 10 percent
of the TAC is allocated to vessels
catching Pacific cod for processing by
the offshore component. Table 5 lists
the seasonal apportionments and
allocations of the proposed 2011 and
2012 Pacific cod TAC amounts.
TABLE 5—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 SEASONAL APPORTIONMENTS AND ALLOCATIONS OF PACIFIC COD TAC AMOUNTS
IN THE GULF OF ALASKA AND ALLOCATIONS FOR PROCESSING BY THE INSHORE AND OFFSHORE COMPONENTS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Component allocation
Regulatory area
Season
TAC
Inshore (90%)
Western ....................................................
Offshore (10%)
Eastern .....................................................
Annual .......................................................
A season (60%) ........................................
B season (40%) ........................................
Annual .......................................................
A season (60%) ........................................
B season (40%) ........................................
Annual .......................................................
25,699
15,419
10,280
45,524
27,314
18,210
2,203
23,129
13,877
9,252
40,972
24,583
16,389
1,983
2,570
1,542
1,028
4,552
2,731
1,821
220
Total ...................................................
..............................................................
73,426
66,084
7,342
Central ......................................................
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Proposed Apportionments to the
Central GOA Rockfish Pilot Program
Section 679.81(a)(1) and (2) requires
the allocation of the primary rockfish
species TACs in the Central Regulatory
Area, after deducting incidental catch
needs in other directed groundfish
fisheries, to participants in the Central
GOA Rockfish Program (Rockfish
Program). Five percent (2.5 percent to
trawl gear and 2.5 percent to fixed gear)
of the proposed TACs for Pacific ocean
perch, northern rockfish, and pelagic
shelf rockfish in the Central Regulatory
Area are allocated to the entry level
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rockfish fishery; and the remaining 95
percent are allocated to those vessels
eligible to participate in the Rockfish
Program. The Rockfish Program will
expire in December 2011, although the
Council has proposed a new program to
supersede the existing Rockfish Program
by 2012. NMFS is developing a
proposed rule to implement the
Council’s revised program and
anticipates that it will be published in
the Federal Register for public review
and comment early in 2011.
NMFS proposes setting aside 2011
incidental catch amounts of 100 mt for
northern rockfish, 100 mt for pelagic
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shelf rockfish, and 500 mt for Pacific
ocean perch for other directed
groundfish fisheries in the Central
Regulatory Area. These proposed
amounts are based on recent average
incidental catch in the Central
Regulatory Area by other groundfish
fisheries.
Section 679.83(a)(1)(i) requires that
allocations to the trawl entry level
fishery must be made first from the
allocation of Pacific ocean perch
available to the rockfish entry level
fishery. If the amount of Pacific ocean
perch available for allocation is less
than the total allocation allowable for
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trawl CVs in the rockfish entry level
fishery, then northern rockfish and
pelagic shelf rockfish must be allocated
to trawl CVs. Allocations of Pacific
ocean perch, northern rockfish, and
pelagic shelf rockfish to longline gear
vessels must be made after the
allocations to trawl gear.
Table 6 lists the proposed 2011
allocations of rockfish in the Central
GOA to trawl and longline gear in the
entry level rockfish fishery. Allocations
of primary rockfish species TACs among
participants in the Rockfish Program are
not included in the proposed harvest
specifications because applications for
C/P and CV cooperatives are due to
76361
NMFS on March 1 of each calendar
year, thereby preventing NMFS from
calculating proposed 2011 allocations.
NMFS will post these allocations on the
Alaska Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/
sustainablefisheries/goarat/default.htm
when they become available in March
2011.
TABLE 6—PROPOSED 2011 ALLOCATIONS OF ROCKFISH IN THE CENTRAL GULF OF ALASKA TO TRAWL AND LONGLINE
GEAR1 IN THE ENTRY LEVEL ROCKFISH FISHERY
[Values are rounded to the nearest mt]
Species
Incidental
catch
allowance
Proposed TAC
TAC minus
ICA
5% TAC
2.5% TAC
Entry level
trawl allocation
Entry level
longline
allocation
Pacific ocean perch .....
Northern rockfish ..........
Pelagic shelf rockfish ...
10,377
2,259
3,035
500
100
100
9,877
2,159
2,935
494
108
147
247
54
74
375
0
0
119
108
147
Total ......................
15,671
700
14,971
749
375
375
374
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
1 Longline
gear includes jig and hook-and-line gear.
Proposed Halibut Prohibited Species
Catch (PSC) Limits
Section 679.21(d) establishes annual
halibut PSC limit apportionments to
trawl and hook-and-line gear, and
permits the establishment of
apportionments for pot gear. In October
2010, the Council recommended that
NMFS maintain the 2010 halibut PSC
limits of 2,000 mt for the trawl fisheries
and 300 mt for the hook-and-line
fisheries. The Alaska Department of
Fish and Game sets the GHL after
estimates of incidental catch in all
fisheries (including halibut and
subsistence) and allocation to the sport
fish fishery have been deducted.
Ten mt of the hook-and-line limit is
further allocated to the demersal shelf
rockfish (DSR) fishery in the SEO
District. The DSR fishery is defined at
§ 679.21(d)(4)(iii)(A). This fishery has
been apportioned 10 mt in recognition
of its small scale harvests. Most vessels
in the DSR fishery are less than 60 ft
(18.3 m) length overall and are exempt
from observer coverage. Therefore,
observer data are not available to verify
actual bycatch amounts. NMFS
estimates low halibut bycatch in the
DSR fishery because: the duration of the
DSR fisheries and the gear soak times
are short; the DSR fishery occurs in the
winter when less overlap occurs in the
distribution of DSR and halibut; and,
the directed commercial DSR fishery
has a low DSR TAC. Of the 295 mt TAC
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for DSR in 2010, 100 mt were available
for the directed commercial fishery, of
which 30 mt were harvested.
The FMP authorizes the Council to
exempt specific gear from the halibut
PSC limit. NMFS, after consultation
with the Council, proposes to exempt
pot gear, jig gear, and the sablefish IFQ
hook-and-line gear fishery categories
from the non-trawl halibut PSC limit for
2011 and 2012. The Council
recommended and NMFS is proposing
these exemptions because (1) the pot
gear fisheries have low annual halibut
bycatch mortality (averaging 18 mt
annually from 2001 through 2009); (2)
the IFQ program regulations prohibit
discard of halibut if any halibut IFQ
permit holder on board a CV holds
unused halibut IFQ (§ 679.7(f)(11)); (3)
Sablefish IFQ fishermen typically hold
halibut IFQ permits and are therefore
required to retain the halibut they catch
while fishing sablefish IFQ; and (4)
NMFS estimates negligible halibut
mortality for the jig gear fisheries.
Halibut mortality is assumed to be
negligible in the jig gear fisheries given
the small amount of groundfish
harvested by jig gear (averaging 261 mt
annually from 2001 through 2009), the
selective nature of jig gear, and the high
survival rates of halibut caught and
released with jig gear.
Section 679.21(d)(5) authorizes NMFS
to seasonally apportion the halibut PSC
limits after consultation with the
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Council. The FMP and regulations
require that the Council and NMFS
consider the following information in
seasonally apportioning halibut PSC
limits: (1) Seasonal distribution of
halibut; (2) seasonal distribution of
target groundfish species relative to
halibut distribution; (3) expected
halibut bycatch needs on a seasonal
basis relative to changes in halibut
biomass and expected catch of target
groundfish species; (4) expected bycatch
rates on a seasonal basis; (5) expected
changes in directed groundfish fishing
seasons; (6) expected actual start of
fishing effort; and (7) economic effects
of establishing seasonal halibut
allocations on segments of the target
groundfish industry.
The final 2010 and 2011 harvest
specifications for halibut PSC (75 FR
11749, March 12, 2010) summarized the
Council’s and NMFS’ findings with
respect to each of these FMP
considerations. The Council’s and
NMFS’ findings for 2011 and 2012 are
unchanged from 2010. Table 7 lists the
proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific halibut
PSC limits, allowances, and
apportionments. Section
679.21(d)(5)(iii) and (iv), respectively,
specify that any underages or overages
of a seasonal apportionment of a PSC
limit will be added to, or removed from,
the next respective seasonal
apportionment within the fishing year.
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TABLE 7—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 PACIFIC HALIBUT PSC LIMITS, ALLOWANCES, AND APPORTIONMENTS
[Values are in metric tons]
Hook-and-line gear 1
Trawl gear
Other than DSR
Season
Percent
DSR
Amount
Season
Percent
Amount
January 20–April 1 ...............................
27.5
550
January 1–June 10
86
250
April 1–July 1 .......................................
20
400
2
30
600
12
35
September 1–October 1 ......................
October 1–December 31 .....................
7.5
15
150
300
Total ..............................................
..................
2,000
................
290
Amount
5
July 1–September 1 .............................
June 10–September 1.
September 1–December 31.
Season
...............................
January 1–December 31.
10
...............................
10
1 The
Pacific halibut PSC limit for hook-and-line gear is allocated to the demersal shelf rockfish (DSR) fishery and fisheries other than DSR.
The hook-and-line IFQ sablefish fishery is exempt from halibut PSC limits, as are pot and jig gear fisheries for all groundfish species.
Section 679.21(d)(3)(ii) authorizes
further apportionment of the trawl
halibut PSC limit to trawl fishery
categories. The annual apportionments
are based on each category’s
proportional share of the anticipated
halibut bycatch mortality during a
fishing year and optimization of the
total amount of groundfish harvest
under the halibut PSC limit. The fishery
categories for the trawl halibut PSC
limits are (1) a deep-water species
category, composed of sablefish,
rockfish, deep-water flatfish, rex sole,
and arrowtooth flounder; and (2) a
shallow-water species category,
comprised of pollock, Pacific cod,
shallow-water flatfish, flathead sole,
Atka mackerel, skates, sharks, squids,
sculpins, and octopuses
(§ 679.21(d)(3)(iii)). Table 8 lists the
proposed 2011 and 2012 seasonal
apportionments of Pacific halibut PSC
trawl limits between the deep-water and
the shallow-water species categories.
Based on public comment and
information contained in the final 2010
SAFE report, the Council may
recommend or NMFS may make
changes to the seasonal, gear-type, or
fishery category apportionments of
halibut PSC limits for the final 2011 and
2012 harvest specifications.
TABLE 8—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 SEASONAL APPORTIONMENTS OF THE PACIFIC HALIBUT PSC LIMIT APPORTIONED
BETWEEN THE TRAWL GEAR SHALLOW-WATER SPECIES AND DEEP-WATER SPECIES CATEGORIES
[Values are in metric tons]
Season
Deep-water 1
Shallow-water
January 20–April 1 ....................................................................
April 1–July 1 ............................................................................
July 1–September 1 ..................................................................
September 1–October 1 ...........................................................
..........................................
..........................................
..........................................
remainder ........................
550
400
600
150
900 ..........................................
800 ..........................................
1,700
........................................................
.................................................
.................................................
300
Total ...................................................................................
.................................................
.................................................
2,000
Subtotal January 20–October 1 .........................................
October 1–December
31 2
450
100
200
150
..........................................
..........................................
..........................................
..........................................
100
300
400
Any
Total
1 Vessels
participating in cooperatives in the Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Program will receive a portion of the third season (July 1–September 1) deep-water category halibut PSC apportionment. At this time, this amount is not known but will be posted later on the Alaska Region
Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov when it becomes available.
2 There is no apportionment between shallow-water and deep-water trawl fishery categories during the fifth season (October 1 through December 31).
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Estimated Halibut Bycatch in Prior
Years
The best available information on
estimated halibut bycatch is data
collected by observers during 2010. The
calculated halibut bycatch mortality by
trawl, hook-and-line, and pot gears
through October 2, 2010, is 1,276 mt,
214 mt, and 26 mt, respectively, for a
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total halibut mortality of 1,516 mt. This
mortality was calculated using
groundfish and halibut catch data from
the NMFS Alaska Region’s catch
accounting system. This system
contains historical and recent catch
information compiled from each Alaska
groundfish fishery.
Halibut bycatch restrictions
seasonally constrained trawl gear
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fisheries during the 2010 fishing year.
Table 9 displays the closure dates for
fisheries that resulted from the
attainment of seasonal or annual halibut
PSC limits. NMFS does not know the
amount of groundfish that trawl gear
might have harvested if halibut PSC
limits had not restricted some 2010
GOA groundfish fisheries.
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76363
TABLE 9—2010 FISHERY CLOSURES DUE TO ATTAINMENT OF PACIFIC HALIBUT PSC LIMITS
Fishery category
Opening date
Closure date
Federal Register citation
Trawl Deep-water, season 2 ........
Trawl Shallow-water,season 4 1 ...
Trawl, Shallow-water,season 4 ....
Hook-and-line gear, all targets 2 ...
January 20, 2010 .........................
September 1, 2010 ......................
September 11, 2010 ....................
January 1, 2010 ...........................
April 28, 2010 ..............................
September 3, 2010 ......................
Unknown ......................................
Unknown.
75 FR 23189, May 3, 2010.
75 FR 54290, September 7, 2010.
75 FR 56017, September 15, 2010.
1 With
2 With
the exception of vessels participating in the Central GOA Rockfish Program.
the exception of sablefish, open March 6, 2010, through November 15, 2010.
Comparison of Final 2010 ABC
Amounts With Proposed 2011 and 2012
ABC Amounts
Proposed 2011 and 2012 ABCs for
pollock, Pacific cod, deep-water flatfish,
rougheye rockfish, and flathead sole are
higher than the final specifications
established for 2010, while the proposed
2011 and 2012 ABCs for sablefish, rex
sole, Pacific ocean perch, northern
rockfish, and pelagic shelf rockfish are
lower than those established for 2010.
These differences reflect the stock
projections and trends made for these
species during the final GOA groundfish
harvest specifications process in
November 2009. For the remaining
target species, the Council
recommended and NMFS proposes ABC
levels that are unchanged from 2010. As
previously described, the ‘‘other
species’’ category has been dissolved
into its component species categories
(sharks, octopuses, squids, and
sculpins). The Council recommended
individual TAC limits for each of these
new categories for 2011 and 2012. More
information on these changes is
included in the final 2009 SAFE report
(see ADDRESSES) and will be updated
with the 2010 SAFE report, which will
be available for Council approval at its
December 2010 meeting.
In the GOA, the total proposed 2011
and 2012 TAC amounts are 330,746 mt,
an increase of 13 percent from the 2010
TAC total of 292,087 mt. Table 10
compares the final 2010 TACs to the
proposed 2011 and 2012 TACs.
TABLE 10—COMPARISON OF FINAL 2010 AND PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 TOTAL ALLOWABLE CATCH (TAC) AMOUNTS IN
THE GULF OF ALASKA
[Values are in metric tons]
Final 2010
TACs
Species
Proposed 2011
and 2012 TACS
Pollock .............................................................................................................................................................
Pacific cod .......................................................................................................................................................
Sablefish ..........................................................................................................................................................
Shallow water flatfish .......................................................................................................................................
Deep-water flatfish ...........................................................................................................................................
Rex sole ...........................................................................................................................................................
Arrowtooth flounder .........................................................................................................................................
Flathead sole ...................................................................................................................................................
Pacific ocean perch .........................................................................................................................................
Northern rockfish .............................................................................................................................................
Rougheye rockfish ...........................................................................................................................................
Shortraker rockfish ...........................................................................................................................................
Other rockfish ..................................................................................................................................................
Pelagic shelf rockfish .......................................................................................................................................
Demersal shelf rockfish ...................................................................................................................................
Thornyhead rockfish ........................................................................................................................................
Atka mackerel ..................................................................................................................................................
Big skates ........................................................................................................................................................
Longnose skates ..............................................................................................................................................
Other skates ....................................................................................................................................................
Other species 1 ................................................................................................................................................
Sharks ..............................................................................................................................................................
Squids ..............................................................................................................................................................
Octopuses ........................................................................................................................................................
Sculpins ...........................................................................................................................................................
84,745
59,563
10,370
20,062
6,190
9,729
43,000
10,411
17,584
5,098
1,302
914
1,192
5,059
295
1,770
2,000
3,328
2,852
2,093
4,500
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
109,105
73,426
9,300
20,062
6,325
9,592
43,000
10,576
16,993
4,808
1,313
914
1,192
4,727
295
1,770
2,000
3,328
2,852
2,093
n/a
957
1,148
224
4,746
Total ..........................................................................................................................................................
292,087
330,746
1 The
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
other species category, for the purpose of the annual harvest specifications, was dissolved in 2010 into its major taxonomic components;
sharks, squid, octopuses, and sculpins (75 FR 61639, October 6, 2010).
Current Estimates of Halibut Biomass
and Stock Condition
The most recent halibut stock
assessment was developed by the IPHC
staff in December 2009 for the 2010
commercial fishery; this assessment was
considered by the IPHC at its annual
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January 2010 meeting. Since 2006, the
IPHC stock assessment has been fitted to
a coastwide data set (including the
United States and Canada) to estimate
total exploitable biomass. Coastwide
exploitable biomass at the beginning of
2010 is estimated to be 334 million
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pounds. The assessment revised last
year’s estimate of 325 million pounds at
the start of 2009 downwards to 291
million pounds and projects an increase
of 14 percent over that value to arrive
at the 2010 value of 334 million pounds.
At least part, if not most, of the
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downward revision for 2009 is believed
to be caused by the ongoing decline in
size and age, which continues for all
ages in all areas. Projections based on
the currently estimated age
compositions suggest that the
exploitable and female spawning
biomasses will continue to increase over
the next several years as a sequence of
strong year classes recruit to the legalsized component of the population. The
coastwide exploitable biomass was
apportioned among regulatory areas in
accordance with survey estimates of
relative abundance and other
considerations. The assessment
recommends a coastwide harvest rate of
20 percent of the exploitable biomass
overall, but a lower harvest rate of 15
percent for Areas 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and
4E and 3B.
The halibut resource is fully utilized.
Recent catches, over the last 16 years
(1994–2009) in the commercial halibut
fisheries in Alaska, have averaged
32,850 mt round weight. In January
2010, the IPHC recommended Alaska
commercial catch limits totaling 24,372
mt round weight for 2010, a 7.5 percent
decrease from 26,338 mt in 2009.
Through November 15, 2010,
commercial hook-and-line harvests of
halibut off Alaska totaled 25,286 mt
round weight.
Additional information on the Pacific
halibut stock assessment may be found
in the IPHC’s 2009 Pacific halibut stock
assessment (December 2009), available
on the IPHC Web site at https://
www.iphc.washington.edu. The IPHC
will consider the 2010 Pacific halibut
assessment for 2011 at its January 2011
annual meeting when it will set the
2011 commercial halibut fishery catch
limits.
Other Factors
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
The IPHC will adjust the allowable
commercial catch of halibut to account
for the overall halibut PSC limit
established for groundfish fisheries. The
2011 and 2012 groundfish fisheries are
expected to use the entire proposed
annual halibut PSC limit of 2,300 mt.
The allowable directed commercial
catch is determined by first accounting
for recreational and subsistence catch,
waste, and bycatch mortality, and then
provides the remainder to the directed
fishery. Groundfish fishing is not
expected to affect adversely the halibut
stocks. Methods available for reducing
halibut bycatch include (1) consistent
monitoring through publication of
individual vessel bycatch rates on the
NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, (2)
modifications to gear, (3) changes in
groundfish fishing seasons, (4)
individual transferable quota programs,
and (5) time/area closures.
With respect to fishing gear
modifications, various regulations have
been implemented to address halibut
bycatch concerns that are associated
with different gear types. The
definitions of the various gear types
defined at § 679.2 under ‘‘Authorized
fishing gear’’ delineate a variety of
different requirements and restrictions
by gear type. Many of these
requirements are intended to decrease
or minimize halibut bycatch by pot,
trawl, and hook-and-line gear types.
For example, groundfish pots must be
constructed with biodegradable panels
and tunnel openings in order to reduce
halibut bycatch, thereby reducing
halibut mortality in the groundfish pot
fisheries. Further, the definition of
‘‘pelagic trawl gear’’ includes specific
construction parameters and
performance characteristics that
distinguish it from nonpelagic trawl
gear, which is designed for use in
proximity to the seafloor. Because
halibut bycatch by pelagic trawl gear is
minimal, directed fishing for pollock
with pelagic gear may continue even
when the halibut PSC limit for the
shallow-water species complex is
reached (see § 679.7(d)(7)(i)). Finally, all
hook-and-line vessel operators are
required to employ careful release
measures when handling halibut
bycatch (§ 679.7(a)(13)). These measures
are intended to reduce handling
mortality, thereby lowering overall
halibut bycatch mortality in the
groundfish fisheries, and to increase the
amount of groundfish harvested under
the available halibut mortality bycatch
limits.
The FMP requires that the Council
review recent halibut bycatch data and
recommend proposed halibut PSC limits
in conjunction with developing
proposed groundfish harvest levels.
NMFS and the Council will review the
methods available for reducing halibut
bycatch listed here to determine their
effectiveness and will initiate changes,
as necessary, in response to this review
or to public testimony and comment. At
its December 2010 meeting, the Council
is scheduled to review a discussion
paper on GOA halibut PSC and
potentially consider alternatives for
analysis that would change how GOA
halibut PSC limits currently are
established.
Halibut Discard Mortality Rates
To monitor halibut bycatch mortality
allowances and apportionments, the
Regional Administrator uses observed
halibut bycatch rates, discard mortality
rates (DMR), and estimates of
groundfish catch to project when a
fishery’s halibut bycatch mortality
allowance or seasonal apportionment is
reached. The DMRs are based on the
best information available, including
information contained in the annual
SAFE report.
NMFS proposes the Council’s
recommendation that the halibut DMRs
developed and recommended by the
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) for the 2010 GOA
groundfish fisheries be used for
monitoring the proposed 2011 and 2012
halibut bycatch mortality allowances
(see Table 11). The IPHC developed the
DMRs for the 2010 GOA groundfish
fisheries using the 10-year mean DMRs
for those fisheries. Long-term average
DMRs were not available for some
fisheries, so rates from the most recent
years were used. For the squid, shark,
sculpin, octopus, and skate fisheries,
where insufficient mortality data are
available, the mortality rate of halibut
caught in the Pacific cod fishery for that
gear type was recommended as a default
rate. The IPHC will analyze observer
data annually and recommend changes
to the DMRs when a fishery DMR shows
large variation from the mean. A
discussion of the DMRs and their
justification is presented in Appendix 2
to the 2009 SAFE report (see
ADDRESSES). Table 11 lists the proposed
2011 and 2012 DMRs.
TABLE 11—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 HALIBUT DISCARD MORTALITY RATES FOR VESSELS FISHING IN THE GULF OF
ALASKA
[Values are percent of halibut assumed to be dead]
Mortality
rate (%)
Gear
Target fishery
Hook-and-line ..............................................................................
Other fisheries 1 .........................................................................
Skates ........................................................................................
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76365
TABLE 11—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 HALIBUT DISCARD MORTALITY RATES FOR VESSELS FISHING IN THE GULF OF
ALASKA—Continued
[Values are percent of halibut assumed to be dead]
Gear
Trawl ...........................................................................................
Pot ...............................................................................................
1 Other
Mortality
rate (%)
Target fishery
Pacific cod ..................................................................................
Rockfish .....................................................................................
Arrowtooth flounder ....................................................................
Deep-water flatfish .....................................................................
Flathead sole .............................................................................
Non-pelagic pollock ....................................................................
Other fisheries ............................................................................
Pacific cod ..................................................................................
Pelagic pollock ...........................................................................
Rex sole .....................................................................................
Rockfish .....................................................................................
Sablefish ....................................................................................
Shallow-water flatfish .................................................................
Other fisheries ............................................................................
Pacific cod ..................................................................................
12
9
72
48
65
59
62
62
76
64
67
65
71
17
17
fisheries includes all gear types for Atka mackerel, sculpin, shark, skate, squids, octopuses, and hook-and-line sablefish.
American Fisheries Act (AFA) Catcher/
Processor and Catcher Vessel
Groundfish Sideboard Limits
Section 679.64 establishes groundfish
harvesting and processing sideboard
limits on AFA C/Ps and CVs in the
GOA. These sideboard limits are
necessary to protect the interests of
fishermen and processors who do not
directly benefit from the AFA from
those fishermen and processors who
receive exclusive harvesting and
processing privileges under the AFA.
Section 679.7(k)(1)(ii) prohibits listed
AFA C/Ps from harvesting any species
of fish in the GOA. Additionally,
§ 679.7(k)(1)(iv) prohibits listed AFA C/
Ps from processing any pollock
harvested in a directed pollock fishery
in the GOA and any groundfish
harvested in Statistical Area 630 of the
GOA.
AFA CVs that are less than 125 ft
(38.1 m) length overall, have annual
landings of pollock in the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands of less than 5,100
mt, and have made at least 40 landings
of GOA groundfish from 1995 through
1997 are exempt from GOA sideboard
limits under § 679.64(b)(2)(ii).
Sideboard limits for non-exempt AFA
CVs operating in the GOA are based on
their traditional harvest levels of TAC in
groundfish fisheries covered by the
FMP. Section 679.64(b)(3)(iii)
establishes the groundfish sideboard
limitations in the GOA based on the
retained catch of non-exempt AFA CVs
of each sideboard species from 1995
through 1997 divided by the TAC for
that species over the same period. Table
12 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012
groundfish sideboard limits for nonexempt AFA CVs. NMFS will deduct all
targeted or incidental catch of sideboard
species made by non-exempt AFA CVs
from the sideboard limits listed in Table
12.
TABLE 12—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 GOA NON-EXEMPT AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT CATCHER VESSEL (CV)
GROUNDFISH HARVEST SIDEBOARD LIMITS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Species
Apportionments by season/
gear
Area/component
Pollock ...................................
A Season ..............................
January 20–March 10 ...........
Shumagin (610) ....................
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
WYK (640) ............................
SEO (650) .............................
W inshore ..............................
W offshore ............................
C inshore ..............................
C offshore .............................
W inshore ..............................
W offshore ............................
B Season ..............................
March 10–May 31 .................
C Season ..............................
August 25–October 1 ............
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
D Season ..............................
October 1–November 1 ........
Annual ...................................
Pacific cod .............................
A Season 1 ............................
January 1–June 10 ...............
B Season2 .............................
September 1–December 31
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Ratio of 1995–
1997 non-exempt AFA CV
catch to 1995–
1997 TAC
0.6047
0.1167
0.2028
0.6047
0.1167
0.2028
0.6047
0.1167
0.2028
0.6047
0.1167
0.2028
0.3495
0.3495
0.1365
0.1026
0.0689
0.0721
0.1365
0.1026
E:\FR\FM\08DEP1.SGM
08DEP1
Proposed
2011 and
2012 TACs
7,342
11,129
5,823
7,342
13,128
3,824
10,022
6,451
7,820
10,022
6,451
7,820
2,686
9,245
13,877
1,542
24,583
2,731
9,252
1,028
Proposed
2011 and
2012 non-exempt AFA CV
sideboard limit
4,440
1,299
1,181
4,440
1,532
776
6,060
753
1,586
6,060
753
1,586
939
3,231
1,894
158
1,694
197
1,263
105
76366
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 12—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 GOA NON-EXEMPT AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT CATCHER VESSEL (CV)
GROUNDFISH HARVEST SIDEBOARD LIMITS—Continued
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Species
Apportionments by season/
gear
Annual ...................................
Sablefish ...............................
Annual, trawl gear .................
Flatfish, deep-water ..............
Annual ...................................
Flatfish, shallow-water ..........
Annual ...................................
Rex sole ................................
Annual ...................................
Arrowtooth flounder ...............
Annual ...................................
Flathead sole ........................
Annual ...................................
Pacific ocean perch ..............
Annual ...................................
Northern rockfish ...................
Annual ...................................
Rougheye rockfish ................
Annual ...................................
Shortraker rockfish ................
Annual ...................................
Other rockfish ........................
Annual ...................................
Pelagic shelf rockfish ............
Annual ...................................
Demersal shelf rockfish ........
Thornyhead rockfish .............
Annual ...................................
Annual ...................................
Atka mackerel .......................
Big skates .............................
Annual ...................................
Annual ...................................
Longnose skates ...................
Annual ...................................
Other skates ..........................
Sharks ...................................
Squids ...................................
Sculpin ..................................
Octopuses .............................
Annual
Annual
Annual
Annual
Annual
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
1 The
2 The
...................................
...................................
...................................
...................................
...................................
Area/component
C inshore ..............................
C offshore .............................
E inshore ...............................
E offshore .............................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
SEO ......................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
Gulfwide ................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Ratio of 1995–
1997 non-exempt AFA CV
catch to 1995–
1997 TAC
0.0689
0.0721
0.0079
0.0078
0.0000
0.0642
0.0433
0.0000
0.0647
0.0128
0.0156
0.0587
0.0126
0.0007
0.0384
0.0029
0.0021
0.0280
0.0002
0.0036
0.0213
0.0009
0.0023
0.0748
0.0466
0.0003
0.0277
0.0000
0.0237
0.0124
0.0000
0.0218
0.0110
0.0034
0.1699
0.0000
0.0001
0.0000
0.0067
0.0020
0.0280
0.0280
0.0280
0.0309
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
0.0063
Proposed
2011 and
2012 TACs
16,389
1,821
1,983
220
298
808
189
530
2,928
2,867
4,500
13,000
2,562
1,521
6,312
1,759
8,000
30,000
5,000
2,000
5,000
3,576
2,797
10,377
3,819
2,549
2,259
81
869
363
134
325
455
212
507
473
607
3,035
1,085
295
425
637
708
2,000
598
2,049
681
81
2,009
762
2,093
957
1,148
4,746
224
Proposed
2011 and
2012 non-exempt AFA CV
sideboard limit
1,129
131
16
2
0
52
8
0
189
37
70
763
32
1
242
5
17
840
1
7
107
3
6
776
178
1
63
0
21
5
0
7
5
1
86
0
0
0
7
1
12
18
20
62
4
13
4
0
13
5
13
6
7
30
1
Pacific cod A season for trawl gear does not open until January 20.
Pacific cod B season for trawl gear closes November 1.
Non-Exempt AFA Catcher Vessel
Halibut PSC Limits
The halibut PSC sideboard limits for
non-exempt AFA CVs in the GOA are
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based on the aggregate retained
groundfish catch by non-exempt AFA
CVs in each PSC target category from
1995 through 1997 divided by the
retained catch of all vessels in that
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fishery from 1995 through 1997
(§ 679.64(b)(4)). Table 13 lists the
proposed 2011 and 2012 non-exempt
AFA CV halibut PSC limits for vessels
using trawl gear in the GOA.
E:\FR\FM\08DEP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
76367
TABLE 13—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 NON-EXEMPT AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT CATCHER VESSEL HALIBUT PROHIBITED
SPECIES CATCH (PSC) LIMITS FOR VESSELS USING TRAWL GEAR IN THE GOA
[Values are in metric tons]
Ratio of 1995–
1997 non-exempt
AFA CV retained
catch to total
retained catch
Season
Season dates
Target fishery
1 ........................
January 20–April 1 ....................
2 ........................
April 1–July 1 ............................
3 ........................
July 1–September 1 ..................
4 ........................
September 1–October 1 ...........
5 ........................
October 1–December 31 ..........
shallow-water ............................
deep-water ................................
shallow-water ............................
deep-water ................................
shallow-water ............................
deep-water ................................
shallow-water ............................
deep-water ................................
all targets ..................................
Non-AFA Crab Vessel Groundfish
Sideboard Limits
Section 680.22 establishes groundfish
catch limits for vessels with a history of
participation in the Bering Sea snow
crab fishery to prevent these vessels
from using the increased flexibility
provided by the Crab Rationalization
Program to expand their level of
participation in the GOA groundfish
fisheries. Sideboard limits restrict these
vessels’ catch to their collective
historical landings in all GOA
groundfish fisheries (except the fixedgear sablefish fishery). Sideboard limits
also apply to landings made using a
License Limitation Program (LLP)
license derived from the history of a
restricted vessel, even if that LLP is
used on another vessel.
Sideboard limits for non-AFA crab
vessels operating in the GOA are based
on their traditional harvest levels of
TAC in groundfish fisheries covered by
the FMP. Section 680.22(d) and (e) base
the groundfish sideboard limits in the
GOA on the retained catch by non-AFA
crab vessels of each sideboard species
from 1996 through 2000 divided by the
total retained harvest of that species
over the same period. Table 14 lists
these proposed 2011 and 2012
groundfish sideboard limitations for
Proposed 2011
and 2012 PSC
limit
0.340
0.070
0.340
0.070
0.340
0.070
0.340
0.070
0.205
Proposed 2011
and 2012 nonexempt AFA CV
PSC limit
450
100
100
300
200
400
150
0
300
153
7
34
21
68
28
51
0
62
non-AFA crab vessels. All targeted or
incidental catch of sideboard species
made by non-AFA crab vessels will be
deducted from the sideboard limits in
Table 14.
Vessels exempt from Pacific cod
sideboards are those that landed less
than 45,359 kilograms of Bering Sea
snow crab and more than 500 mt of
groundfish (in round weight
equivalents) from the GOA between
January 1, 1996, and December 31, 2000,
and any vessel named on an LLP that
was based in whole or in part on the
fishing history of a vessel meeting the
criteria in § 680.22(a)(3).
TABLE 14—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 GOA NON-AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT CRAB VESSEL GROUNDFISH HARVEST
SIDEBOARD LIMITS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Ratio of 1996–
2000 non-AFA
crab vessel
catch to 1996–
2000 total
harvest
Proposed
2011 and
2012 TACs
Proposed
2011 and
2012 non-AFA
crab vessel
sideboard limit
Species
Season/gear
Area/component
Pollock ...................................
A Season ..............................
January 20–March 10 ...........
Shumagin (610) ....................
0.0098
7,342
72
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
0.0031
0.0002
0.0098
11,129
5,823
7,342
34
1
72
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
0.0031
0.0002
0.0098
13,128
3,824
10,022
41
1
98
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
Shumagin (610) ....................
0.0031
0.0002
0.0098
6,451
7,820
10,022
20
2
98
Chirikof (620) ........................
Kodiak (630) .........................
WYK (640) ............................
SEO (650) .............................
W inshore ..............................
0.0031
0.0002
0.0000
0.0000
0.0902
6,451
7,820
2,686
9,245
13,877
20
2
0
0
1,252
W offshore ............................
C inshore ..............................
C offshore .............................
0.2046
0.0383
0.2074
1,542
24,583
2,731
315
942
566
B Season ..............................
March 10–May 31 .................
C Season ..............................
August 25–October 1 ............
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
D Season ..............................
October 1–November 1 ........
Annual ...................................
Pacific cod .............................
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17:01 Dec 07, 2010
A Season1 .............................
January 1–June 10 ...............
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76368
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 14—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 GOA NON-AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT CRAB VESSEL GROUNDFISH HARVEST
SIDEBOARD LIMITS—Continued
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Species
Ratio of 1996–
2000 non-AFA
crab vessel
catch to 1996–
2000 total
harvest
Proposed
2011 and
2012 TACs
Proposed
2011 and
2012 non-AFA
crab vessel
sideboard limit
Season/gear
Area/component
B Season2 .............................
September 1–December 31
W inshore ..............................
0.0902
9,252
835
W offshore ............................
C inshore ..............................
C offshore .............................
E inshore ...............................
E offshore .............................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
SEO ......................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
Gulfwide ................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
W ...........................................
C ...........................................
E ............................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
Gulfwide ................................
0.2046
0.0383
0.2074
0.0110
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0035
0.0000
0.0000
0.0059
0.0001
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0004
0.0001
0.0000
0.0002
0.0004
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0005
0.0000
0.0067
0.0047
0.0008
0.0013
0.0012
0.0009
0.0035
0.0033
0.0000
0.0017
0.0000
0.0000
0.0000
0.0047
0.0066
0.0045
0.0000
0.0392
0.0159
0.0000
0.0392
0.0159
0.0000
0.0176
0.0176
0.0176
0.0176
0.0176
1,028
16,389
1,821
1,983
220
298
808
188
530
2,928
2,867
4,500
13,000
2,562
1,521
6,312
1,759
8,000
30,000
5,000
2,000
5,000
3,576
2,797
10,377
3,819
2,549
2,259
81
869
363
134
325
455
212
507
473
607
3,035
1,085
295
425
637
708
2,000
598
2,049
681
81
2,009
762
2,093
957
1,148
224
4,746
210
628
378
22
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
27
1
0
0
0
0
3
3
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
4
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
1
0
0
0
2
4
3
0
23
33
0
3
32
0
37
17
20
4
84
Annual ...................................
Annual, trawl gear .................
Flatfish, deep-water ..............
Annual ...................................
Flatfish, shallow-water ..........
Annual ...................................
Rex sole ................................
Annual ...................................
Arrowtooth flounder ...............
Annual ...................................
Flathead sole ........................
Annual ...................................
Pacific ocean perch ..............
Annual ...................................
Northern rockfish ...................
Annual ...................................
Rougheye rockfish ................
Annual ...................................
Shortraker rockfish ................
Annual ...................................
Other rockfish ........................
Annual ...................................
Pelagic shelf rockfish ............
Annual ...................................
Demersal shelf rockfish ........
Thornyhead rockfish .............
Annual ...................................
Annual ...................................
Atka mackerel .......................
Big skate ...............................
Annual ...................................
Annual ...................................
Longnose skate .....................
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Sablefish ...............................
Annual ...................................
Other skates ..........................
Sharks ...................................
Squids ...................................
Octopuses .............................
Sculpins .................................
Annual
Annual
Annual
Annual
Annual
1 The
2 The
...................................
...................................
...................................
...................................
...................................
Pacific cod A season for trawl gear does not open until January 20.
Pacific cod B season for trawl gear closes November 1.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Rockfish Program Groundfish
Sideboard Limitations and Halibut
Mortality Limitations
Section 679.82(d) establishes
sideboards to limit the ability of
participants eligible for the Rockfish
Program to harvest fish in fisheries other
than the Central GOA rockfish fisheries.
The Rockfish Program provides
harvesters with certain economic
advantages, which could be used to
increase their participation in other
fisheries and possibly adversely affect
the existing participants in those
fisheries. Traditionally, the Central GOA
rockfish fisheries opened in July. The
sideboards are designed to restrict
fishing during the historical season for
the fishery, but allow eligible rockfish
harvesters to participate in fisheries
before or after the historical rockfish
season.
The proposed sideboards for 2011
limit the total amount of catch that
could be taken by eligible harvesters
and limit the amount of halibut
mortality to historic levels. The
sideboard measures are in effect only
during the month of July. Table 15 lists
the proposed 2011 Rockfish Program
harvest limits in the WYK District and
the Western GOA. Table 16 lists the
proposed 2011 Rockfish Program
halibut mortality limits for C/Ps and
CVs.
76369
As discussed earlier in this preamble,
the Rockfish Program will expire in
December 2011. The Council has
proposed a new, revised program and
associated FMP amendment. NMFS is
developing a rulemaking to implement
the program, if approved by the
Secretary. The proposed rule and, if
approved, the final rule for the new
Rockfish Program will include revised
groundfish sideboards and halibut
mortality limits for 2012. Because the
current Rockfish Program expires at the
end of 2011, these harvest specifications
propose groundfish sideboards and
halibut mortality limits only for 2011.
TABLE 15—PROPOSED 2011 ROCKFISH PROGRAM HARVEST LIMITS BY SECTOR FOR WEST YAKUTAT DISTRICT AND
WESTERN GOA BY THE CATCHER/PROCESSOR (CP) AND CATCHER VESSEL (CV) SECTORS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
CP sector
(% of TAC)
Area
Fishery
West Yakutat District ....................
Pelagic shelf rockfish ....................
Pacific ocean perch ......................
Pelagic shelf rockfish ....................
Pacific ocean perch ......................
Northern rockfish ..........................
Western GOA ...............................
CV sector
(% of TAC)
Proposed
2011 and
2012 TACs
72.4
76.0
63.3
61.1
78.9
1.7
2.9
0
0
0
405
1,937
607
2,797
2,549
Proposed
2011 and
2012 CP
limit
Proposed
2011 and
2012 CV
limit
293
1,472
384
1,709
2,011
7
56
0
0
0
TABLE 16—PROPOSED 2011 ROCKFISH PROGRAM HALIBUT MORTALITY LIMITS FOR THE CATCHER/PROCESSOR AND
CATCHER VESSEL SECTORS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Shallowwater
complex
halibut PSC
sideboard
ratio
(percent)
Sector
Catcher/processor ....................................................................................
Catcher vessel .........................................................................................
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
GOA Amendment 80 Vessel Groundfish
Harvest and PSC Limits
Amendment 80 to the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area (Amendment 80
program) established a limited access
privilege program for the non-AFA trawl
CP sector. To limit the ability of
participants eligible for the Amendment
80 program to expand their harvest
efforts in the GOA, the Amendment 80
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:01 Dec 07, 2010
Jkt 223001
Deep-water
complex
halibut PSC
sideboard
ratio
(percent)
0.54
6.32
3.99
1.08
program established groundfish and
halibut PSC limits for Amendment 80
program participants.
Section 679.92 establishes groundfish
harvesting sideboard limits on all
Amendment 80 program vessels, other
than the F/V GOLDEN FLEECE, to
amounts no greater than the limits
shown in Table 37 to part 679. Under
regulations at § 679.92(d), the F/V
GOLDEN FLEECE is prohibited from
directed fishing for pollock, Pacific cod,
Pacific ocean perch, pelagic shelf
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Annual
halibut
mortality
limit
(mt)
2,000
2,000
Annual
shallowwater complex halibut
PSC
sideboard
limit
(mt)
Annual
deepwater complex halibut
PSC
sideboard
limit
(mt)
11
126
80
22
rockfish, and northern rockfish in the
GOA.
Groundfish sideboard limits for
Amendment 80 program vessels
operating in the GOA are based on their
average aggregate harvests from 1998 to
2004. Table 17 lists the proposed 2011
and 2012 sideboard limits for
Amendment 80 program vessels. All
targeted or incidental catch of sideboard
species made by Amendment 80
program vessels will be deducted from
the sideboard limits in Table 17.
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TABLE 17—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 GOA GROUNDFISH SIDEBOARD LIMITS FOR AMENDMENT 80 VESSELS
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
Ratio of
Amendment 80
sector vessels
1998–2004
catch to TAC
Proposed 2011
and 2012 TAC
(mt)
Proposed 2011
and 2012
Amendment 80
vessel
sideboards (mt)
Species
Apportionments and
allocations by season
Area
Pollock ...............................
A Season ..........................
January 20–February 25 ..
Shumagin (610) ................
Chirikof (620) ....................
Kodiak (630) .....................
Shumagin (610) ................
Chirikof (620) ....................
Kodiak (630) .....................
Shumagin (610) ................
Chirikof (620) ....................
Kodiak (630) .....................
Shumagin (610) ................
Chirikof (620) ....................
Kodiak (630) .....................
WYK (640) ........................
W ......................................
C .......................................
W ......................................
C .......................................
0.003
0.002
0.002
0.003
0.002
0.002
0.003
0.002
0.002
0.003
0.002
0.002
0.002
0.020
0.044
0.020
0.044
7,342
11,129
5,823
7,342
13,128
3,824
10,022
6,451
7,820
10,022
6,451
7,820
2,686
15,419
27,314
10,280
18,210
22
22
12
22
26
8
30
13
16
30
13
16
5
308
1,202
206
801
WYK .................................
W ......................................
WYK .................................
W ......................................
W ......................................
WYK .................................
0.034
0.994
0.961
1.000
0.764
0.896
2,203
2,797
1,937
2,549
607
405
75
2,780
1,861
2,549
464
363
B Season ..........................
March 10–May 31 ............
C Season ..........................
August 25–September 15
D Season ..........................
October 1–November 1 ....
Pacific ocean perch ...........
Annual ..............................
A Season 1 ........................
January 1–June 10 ...........
B Season 2 ........................
September 1–December
31.
Annual ..............................
Annual ..............................
Northern rockfish ...............
Pelagic shelf rockfish .........
Annual ..............................
Annual ..............................
Pacific cod .........................
1 The
2 The
Pacific cod A season for trawl gear does not open until January 20.
Pacific cod B season for trawl gear closes November 1.
The PSC sideboard limits for
Amendment 80 program vessels in the
GOA are based on the historic use of
halibut PSC by Amendment 80 program
vessels in each PSC target category from
1998 through 2004. These values are
slightly lower than the average historic
use to accommodate two factors:
Allocation of halibut PSC cooperative
quota under the Central GOA Rockfish
Program and the exemption of the F/V
GOLDEN FLEECE from this restriction.
Table 18 lists the proposed 2011 and
2012 halibut PSC limits for Amendment
80 program vessels, as proscribed at
Table 38 to 50 CFR part 679.
TABLE 18—PROPOSED 2011 AND 2012 HALIBUT PROHIBITED SPECIES CATCH (PSC) LIMITS FOR AMENDMENT 80
VESSELS IN THE GOA
[Values are rounded to nearest metric ton]
Historic amendment 80 use of
the annual halibut PSC limit
catch (ratio)
Season dates
Target fishery
1 ....................................
January 20–April 1 ....................
2 ....................................
April 1–July 1 .............................
3 ....................................
July 1–September 1 ..................
4 ....................................
September 1–October 1 ............
5 ....................................
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Season
October 1–December 31 ...........
shallow-water ................
deep-water ....................
shallow-water ................
deep-water ....................
shallow-water ................
deep-water ....................
shallow-water ................
deep-water ....................
shallow-water ................
deep-water ....................
Classification
NMFS has determined that the
proposed harvest specifications are
consistent with the FMP and
preliminarily determined that the
proposed harvest specifications are
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17:01 Dec 07, 2010
Jkt 223001
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act and other applicable laws.
This action is authorized under 50
CFR 679.20 and is exempt from review
under Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared an EIS for this action
and made it available to the public on
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Sfmt 4702
Proposed 2011
and 2012 annual
PSC limit (mt)
Proposed 2011
and 2012
Amendment 80
vessel PSC limit
(mt)
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
10
23
38
214
29
104
15
3
45
74
0.0048
0.0115
0.0189
0.1072
0.0146
0.0521
0.0074
0.0014
0.0227
0.0371
January 12, 2007 (72 FR 1512). On
February 13, 2007, NMFS issued the
Record of Decision for the EIS. Copies
of the EIS and Record of Decision for
this action are available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). The EIS analyzes the
environmental consequences of the
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proposed groundfish harvest
specifications and its alternatives on
resources in the action area. The EIS
found no significant environmental
consequences from the proposed action
or its alternatives.
NMFS also prepared an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
as required by section 603 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. The IRFA
evaluated the impacts on small entities
of alternative harvest strategies for the
groundfish fisheries in the EEZ off
Alaska. The IRFA analyzed the
methodology for establishing the
relevant TACs. As set forth in the
methodology, TACs are set to a level
that fall within the range of ABCs
recommended by the SSC; the sum of
the TACs must achieve optimum yield
specified in the FMP. While the specific
numbers that the methodology may
produce vary from year to year, the
methodology itself remains constant.
Accordingly, NMFS is using the IRFA
prepared for the EIS in association with
this action. Pursuant to sections 3.2.3
and 3.2.4 of the FMP, the established
methodology produces ABCs and TACs
within specified ranges and the
numbers in this proposed rule’s
preferred alternative are within those
ranges. NMFS published a notice of the
availability of the IRFA and its summary
in the classification section of the
proposed harvest specifications for the
groundfish fisheries in the GOA in the
Federal Register on December 15, 2006
(71 FR 75460).
A description of the proposed action,
why it is being considered, and the legal
basis for this proposed action are
contained in the preamble above. A
copy of the analysis is available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of
the IFRA prepared in association with
the 2007 harvest specifications EIS
follows.
The action under consideration is a
harvest strategy to govern the catch of
groundfish in the GOA. The preferred
alternative is the existing harvest
strategy in which TACs fall within the
range of ABCs recommended by the
SSC. This action is taken in accordance
with the FMP prepared by the Council
pursuant to the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The directly regulated small entities
include approximately 747 small CVs
and fewer than 20 small C/Ps. The
entities directly regulated by this action
are those that harvest groundfish in the
exclusive economic zone of the GOA,
and in parallel fisheries within State of
Alaska waters. These include entities
operating CVs and C/Ps within the
action area, and entities receiving direct
allocations of groundfish. Catcher
vessels and C/Ps were considered to be
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17:01 Dec 07, 2010
Jkt 223001
small entities if they had annual gross
receipts of $4 million per year or less
from all economic activities, including
the revenue of their affiliated
operations. Data from 2005 were the
most recent available and were used to
determine the number of small entities.
Estimates of first wholesale gross
revenues for the GOA were used as
indices of the potential impacts of the
alternative harvest strategies on small
entities. An index of revenues was
projected to decline under the preferred
alternative due to declines in ABCs for
key species in the GOA. The index of
revenues declined by less than 4 percent
between 2006 and 2007 and by less than
one percent between 2006 and 2008.
The preferred alternative (Alternative
2) was compared to four other
alternatives. These included Alternative
1, which would have set TACs to
generate fishing rates equal to the
maximum permissible ABC (if the full
TAC were harvested), unless the sum of
TACs exceeded the GOA OY, in which
case harvests would be limited to the
OY. Alternative 3 would have set TACs
to produce fishing rates equal to the
most recent five-year average fishing
rate. Alternative 4 would have set TACs
to equal the lower limit of the GOA OY
range. Alternative 5 would have set
TACs equal to zero. Alternative 5 is the
‘‘no action’’, or status quo, alternative.
Alternatives 3, 4, and 5 were all
associated with smaller levels for
important fishery TACs than Alternative
2. Estimated total first wholesale gross
revenues were used as an index of
potential adverse impacts to small
entities. As a consequence of the lower
TAC levels, Alternatives 3, 4, and 5 all
had smaller first wholesale revenue
indices than Alternative 2. Thus,
Alternatives 3, 4, and 5 had greater
adverse impacts on small entities.
Alternative 1 appeared to generate
higher values of the gross revenue index
for fishing operations in the GOA than
Alternative 2. A large part of the
Alternative 1 GOA revenue appeared to
be due to the assumption that the full
Alternative 1 TAC would be harvested.
Much of the larger revenue was due to
increases in flatfish TACs that were
much greater for Alternative 1 than for
Alternative 2. In recent years, halibut
bycatch constraints in these fisheries
have kept actual flatfish catches from
reaching Alternative 1 levels. Therefore,
a large part of the revenues associated
with Alternative 1 are unlikely to occur.
Also, Alternative 2 TACs are
constrained by the ABCs that the Plan
Teams and SSC are likely to recommend
to the Council on the basis of a full
consideration of biological issues. These
ABCs are often less than Alternative 1’s
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
76371
maximum permissible ABCs; therefore
higher TACs under Alternative 1 may
not be consistent with prudent
biological management of the resource.
For these reasons, Alternative 2 is the
preferred alternative.
NMFS also prepared a supplemental
IRFA (SIRFA) to specifically evaluate
the proposed specification of separate
OFLs and TACs for sharks, octopus,
squid, and sculpins in the GOA,
consistent with the previously selected
harvest strategy, the tier system in the
FMP, Amendment 87 to the FMP, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law (see ADDRESSES).
Amendment 87 to the FMP was
approved by NMFS on September 22,
2010. The SIRFA augments the IRFA
prepared in connection with the 2007
Alaska Groundfish Harvest
Specification EIS.
NMFS does not anticipate that the
specification of TACs for sculpins will
have any additional economic impacts
on small entities beyond those impacts
analyzed in the existing harvest
specification IRFA because the
proposed OFL and ABC are relatively
large compared to recent historical
catches.
In contrast, the proposed OFLs and
TACs for sharks, octopuses, and squids
could potentially result in some vessels
choosing to shift the timing or location
of their fishing activity in an effort to
avoid high rates of incidental catch in
an effort to avert the imposition of
inseason management measures by
NMFS to avoid overfishing. The impact
of efforts undertaken by the fleet to
avoid reaching the TAC and the
potential closures that may follow are
difficult to predict and would depend
on the timing and location of incidental
catches and the specific steps taken by
the fleet to reduce the rate of incidental
catch. Generally, however, the impact
on these operations may be some
combination of increased costs and/or
decreased gross revenues as further
described below.
The 2009 Economic Status of
Groundfish Fisheries Off Alaska report,
prepared in conjunction with the 2009
SAFE report (see ADDRESSES), identifies
702 small groundfish entities operating
in the GOA, with average revenues from
all sources of about $600,000. Most of
these (697) are CVs. A majority of the
CVs, 520, use hook-and-line gear and
have average revenues of about
$490,000, 73 are trawlers with average
revenues of about $1.27 million, and
142 are pot vessels with average
revenues of $850,000. There were five
CPs, mostly hook-and-line vessels, with
average gross revenues of about $1.52
million. The 2009 SAFE report may
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 235 / Wednesday, December 8, 2010 / Proposed Rules
overstate the number of small entities,
because it considers individual vessel
gross revenues, but does not capture
affiliations among vessels. All of these
small entities would be directly
regulated by the proposed action. As
described below, however, certain small
entities may be more likely than others
to be adversely affected by the proposed
action as a result of potential impacts
associated with the incidental catch of
sharks, octopus or squid in other target
fisheries.
Sharks are incidentally caught in a
large number of separate groundfish
fisheries, with over half of the catch
reported from fisheries using hook-andline gear. There were an estimated 270
small sablefish hook-and-line vessels
with an estimated average gross revenue
from all sources of $770,000, an
estimated 128 Pacific cod hook-and-line
vessels with an average gross of
$590,000, an estimated 21 small pelagic
pollock trawlers with average gross
revenues of about $1.02 million, five
non-pelagic trawlers targeting
arrowtooth flounder with average gross
revenues of about $580,000, and five
non-pelagic trawlers targeting shallow
water flatfish with average gross
revenues of about $650,000.
Most of the octopus catch occurs in
the pot gear fishery for Pacific cod.
There are an estimated 132 small vessels
in this fishery, with estimated average
gross revenues from all sources of about
$880,000.
Almost all squid is caught in the
pollock trawl fishery. Twenty-one small
pollock vessels participate in this
fishery with average gross revenues of
about $1.02 million.
NMFS considered several alternatives
to the proposed action of specifying
separate OFLs and TACS for GOA
sculpins, sharks, octopus, and squid
species complexes. However, each of
these alternatives has been eliminated
from further consideration because it
either does not minimize significant
economic impacts on a substantial
number of small entities or does not
accomplish the stated objectives of, or is
in conflict with the requirements of,
applicable statutes.
The proposed action is intended to
fulfill the agency’s mandate to establish
catch limits that are based on the best
available scientific information, and
which will achieve optimum yield
while preventing overfishing. The
proposed action is the alternative that is
both consistent with the agency’s
obligations under the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and the FMP and
minimizes the likelihood that the
specification of TACs and OFLs for the
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17:01 Dec 07, 2010
Jkt 223001
sculpins, sharks, octopus, and squid
species complexes will adversely affect
small entities.
NMFS considered dividing the TACs
for each of the species complexes among
different regulatory areas in the GOA.
Any such further division of the TACs
would not change the total TACs for
each species complex in the GOA as a
whole. However, the incidental catch of
fishing vessels that operate within each
of the regulatory areas would be
counted against a reduced TAC and
OFL, which would increase the
likelihood that the TAC or OFL would
be reached and that one or more area
closures may be triggered.
NMFS considered excusing small
entities from compliance with the TACs
for each of the species complexes
evaluated in this SIRFA. However, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires NMFS
to implement conservation and
management measures that prevent
overfishing. Authorizing unlimited
incidental catch of these species
complexes by small entities would
present an unacceptable risk of
overfishing, and would not be
consistent with the agency’s obligations
under Magnuson-Stevens Act, nor with
the requirements of the Council’s FMP.
In order to minimize the economic
impacts of the proposed action, NMFS
considered allocating relatively large
portions of the TACs for each of the
species complexes to potentially
affected small entities. However, any
such allocation, which would be
motivated solely by economic
considerations under the RFA, would
not be consistent with National
Standard 5, which states that ‘‘no
[conservation and management
measure] shall have economic allocation
as its sole purpose.’’ 16 U.S.C.
1851(a)(5).
Finally, NMFS considered
establishing a single group TAC for all
four of the species complexes in the
GOA, which would substantially reduce
the likelihood that incidental catch
would reach or exceed the TAC or OFL
and result in area closures of target
fisheries. However, the establishment of
a stock complex comprised of species
with such disparate life histories would
not be consistent with the statutory
requirement to establish catch limits
that prevent overfishing for stocks in the
fishery, nor with the Council’s intent in
enacting Amendments 87.
This action does not modify
recordkeeping or reporting
requirements, or duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with any Federal rules.
Adverse impacts on marine mammals
resulting from fishing activities
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Frm 00056
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
conducted under this rule are discussed
in the EIS (see ADDRESSES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 16 U.S.C.
1540(f); 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.; 16 U.S.C.
3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 105–277; Pub. L. 106–
31; Pub. L. 106–554; Pub. L. 108–199; Pub.
L. 108–447; Pub. L. 109–241; Pub. L. 109–
479.
Dated: December 2, 2010.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–30686 Filed 12–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No.: 101126521–0521–02]
RIN 0648–XZ90
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands; Proposed 2011 and
2012 Harvest Specifications for
Groundfish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes 2011 and
2012 harvest specifications and
prohibited species catch (PSC)
allowances for the groundfish fisheries
of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
(BSAI) management area. This action is
necessary to establish harvest limits for
groundfish during the 2011 and 2012
fishing years, and to accomplish the
goals and objectives of the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area. The intended effect
of this action is to conserve and manage
the groundfish resources in the BSAI in
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act.
DATES: Comments must be received by
January 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Send comment to Sue
Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. You may submit
comments, identified by RIN 0648–
XZ90, by any one of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\08DEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 235 (Wednesday, December 8, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76352-76372]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-30686]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 101126522-0522-02 ]
RIN 0648-XZ89
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Gulf of
Alaska; Proposed 2011 and 2012 Harvest Specifications for Groundfish
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes 2011 and 2012 harvest specifications,
apportionments, and Pacific halibut prohibited species catch limits for
the groundfish fishery of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). This action is
necessary to establish harvest limits for groundfish during the 2011
and 2012 fishing years and to accomplish the goals and objectives of
the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of
[[Page 76353]]
Alaska. The intended effect of this action is to conserve and manage
the groundfish resources in the GOA in accordance with the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.
DATES: Comments must be received by January 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Send comment to Sue Salveson, Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region, NMFS,
Attn: Ellen Sebastian. You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-
XZ89, by any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal 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. No comments
will be posted to https://www.regulations.gov for public viewing until
after the comment period has closed. Comment will generally be posted
without change. All Personal Identifying Information (for example,
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). You may submit attachments to
electronic comments in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Electronic copies of the Alaska Groundfish Harvest Specifications
Final Environmental Impact Statement (Final EIS), the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA), and the Supplemental IRFA
prepared for this action may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov or from the Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov. Copies of the final 2009 Stock Assessment and
Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) report for the groundfish resources of the
GOA, dated November 2009, are available from the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) at 605 West 4th Avenue, Suite 306,
Anchorage, AK 99510-2252, phone 907-271-2809, or from the Council's Web
site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/npfmc. The draft 2010 SAFE
report for the GOA will be available from the same sources in November
2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom Pearson, 907-481-1780, or Obren
Davis, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS manages the GOA groundfish fisheries in
the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of the GOA under the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (FMP). The Council
prepared the FMP under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), 16 U.S.C. 1801,
et seq. Regulations governing U.S. fisheries and implementing the FMP
appear at 50 CFR parts 600, 679, and 680.
These proposed specifications are based in large part on the 2009
SAFE report (see ADDRESSES). In December 2010, the Council will
consider the draft 2010 SAFE report to develop its recommendations for
the final 2011 and 2012 acceptable biological catch (ABC) amounts and
total allowable catch (TAC) limits. In addition to the proposed
specifications, this proposed rule identifies anticipated changes to
the proposed specifications that might result from the Council's review
of the 2010 SAFE report for public review.
The FMP and its implementing regulations require NMFS, after
consultation with the Council, to specify the TACs for each target
species, the sum of which must be within the optimum yield (OY) range
of 116,000 to 800,000 metric tons (mt). Section 679.20(c)(1) further
requires NMFS to publish and solicit public comment on proposed annual
TACs, halibut prohibited species catch (PSC) amounts, and seasonal
allowances of pollock and inshore/offshore Pacific cod. The proposed
specifications in Tables 1 through 18 of this document satisfy these
requirements. For 2011 and 2012, the sum of the proposed TAC amounts is
330,746 mt. Under Sec. 679.20(c)(3), NMFS will publish the final 2011
and 2012 specifications after (1) considering comments received within
the comment period (see DATES), (2) consulting with the Council at its
December 2010 meeting, and (3) considering information presented in the
Final EIS (see ADDRESSES) and the final 2010 SAFE report prepared for
the 2011 and 2012 groundfish fisheries.
Other Actions Potentially Affecting the 2011 and 2012 Harvest
Specifications
NMFS published a final rule to implement Amendment 87 to the FMP on
October 6, 2010 (75 FR 61639), effective November 5, 2010. Amendment 87
moves sharks, sculpins, squids, and octopuses from the ``other
species'' category to the ``target species'' category in the GOA and
eliminates the ``other species'' category in the GOA FMP. Amendment 87
revises the FMP to meet the National Standard 1 guidelines for annual
catch limits and accountability measures and requires that overfishing
levels (OFLs), ABCs, and TACs be established for sharks, sculpins,
squids, and octopuses as part of the annual groundfish harvest
specifications process. Based on the 2009 SAFE report, NMFS proposes
ABCs, TACs, and OFLs for sharks, sculpins, octopuses, and squids listed
in Table 1.
Implementation of Amendment 87 to the FMP was necessary to comply
with Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements associated with annual catch
limits and accountability measures and will result in revisions to how
total annual groundfish mortality is estimated and accounted for in the
annual SAFE reports. These revisions may affect the OFLs and ABCs for
certain groundfish species. Specifically, NMFS will attempt to identify
additional sources of mortality to groundfish stocks not currently
reported or considered by the groundfish stock assessments in
recommending OFLs, ABCs, and TACs for certain groundfish species. These
additional sources of mortality result from recreational fishing,
subsistence fishing, trawl and hook-and-line surveys, exempted fishing
permits, research, commercial halibut fisheries, crab bait, sablefish
catch predation by whales, or other sources of mortality not yet
identified. Many of the sources of this mortality have been identified,
some of which are currently unreported due to the absence of formal
reporting protocols.
NMFS intends to develop a single database that stock assessment
authors can access through a single source such as the Alaska Fisheries
Information Network. The development of this data base will require the
cooperation of several agencies including NMFS, the Alaska Department
of Fish and Game, and the International Pacific Halibut Commission
(IPHC). At its October 2010 meeting, the Council's groundfish Plan
Teams recommended the formation of a total catch accounting working
group to assist NMFS in developing a methodology to estimate total
catch of groundfish. While much of the information is currently
available and will be incorporated into the final 2010 SAFE report, the
development of an adequate methodology is ongoing and not fully ready
for use in the final SAFE report. NMFS intends to have this
[[Page 76354]]
information fully available for the 2011 assessment cycle.
In conjunction with the implementation of Amendment 87, during its
October 2010 meeting, the Council made additional recommendations with
respect to the management of octopuses. The Council, in response to the
fishing industry's concerns that new requirements for ACLs for
octopuses may constrain commercial fisheries, initiated an analysis for
amendments to the FMP that would consider moving octopuses into the
ecosystem category or create octopus discard mortality rates. Initial
review and final action are scheduled tentatively for April and June
2011, respectively. The intent is for the amendments to be implemented
for the 2012 fisheries.
The Council, at its December 2009 meeting, took final action to
recommend a Pacific cod sector split in the Western and Central GOA. If
approved by the Secretary of Commerce, the Pacific cod TAC would be
allocated in the Western GOA among trawl catcher/processors (C/Ps),
trawl catcher vessels (CVs), hook-and-line C/Ps, hook-and-line CVs,
combined CP and CV pot vessels, and jig vessels; and in the Central GOA
among trawl C/Ps, trawl catcher vessels (CVs), hook-and-line C/Ps,
hook-and-line CVs less than 50 feet length overall, hook-and-line CVs
equal to or greater than 50 feet length overall, combined C/P and CV
pot vessels, and jig vessels. Sector allocations may provide stability
to long-term participants in the fishery by reducing competition among
sectors for access to the GOA Pacific cod resource. NMFS intends to
publish proposed and final rulemaking for this action during 2011. If
these sector allocations are approved and implemented for the 2012
Pacific cod fishery in the Western and Central GOA, the allocations of
the Pacific cod TAC between the inshore and offshore components in the
Western and Central GOA would be discontinued and replaced by
allocations to each sector noted above.
Proposed ABC and TAC Specifications
The amounts proposed for the 2011 and 2012 harvest specifications
are based on the 2009 SAFE report. The proposed ABCs and TACs could be
changed in the final harvest specifications depending on the most
recent scientific information contained in the final 2010 SAFE report.
The SAFE report contains a review of the latest scientific analyses and
estimates of each species' biomass and other biological parameters, as
well as summaries of the available information on the GOA ecosystem and
the economic condition of the groundfish fisheries off Alaska. From
these data and analyses, the GOA Groundfish Plan Team (Plan Team)
estimates an ABC for each species category.
At the October 2010 Council meeting, the Council, the Scientific
and Statistical Committee (SSC), and the Advisory Panel (AP) reviewed
most recent biological and harvest information about the condition of
groundfish stocks in the GOA. This information was initially compiled
by the Plan Team and presented in the final 2009 SAFE report for the
GOA groundfish fisheries, dated November 2009 (see ADDRESSES). In
November 2010, the Plan Team will update the 2009 SAFE report to
include new information collected during 2010, such as revised stock
assessments and catch data. The Plan Team will compile this information
and produce the draft 2010 SAFE report in time for the Council to
review it during the December 2010 Council meeting. Upon completing its
review, the Council will formally approve the draft 2010 SAFE report.
Once this approval occurs, the draft 2010 SAFE report will be
considered final. The Council also will consider information contained
in the draft 2010 SAFE report, the recommendations made by the Plan
Team during its November 2010 meeting, information from the December
2010 SSC and AP meetings, public testimony, and relevant written public
comments in making its recommendations for the final 2011 and 2012
harvest specifications.
In previous years the largest changes from the proposed to the
final harvest specifications have been based on the most recent NMFS
stock surveys, which provide updated estimates of stock biomass and
spatial distribution, and changes to the models used for making stock
assessments. NMFS scientists presented updated and new survey results,
changes to assessment models, and accompanying stock estimates at the
September Plan Team meeting, and the SSC reviewed this information at
the October 2010 Council meeting. In November 2010, the Plan Team
considered updated stock assessments for pollock, Pacific cod,
sablefish, sharks, squids, sculpins, and octopuses which were included
in the draft 2010 SAFE report. For the other groundfish stocks without
recent surveys or other new scientific information, NMFS will update
the assessments to include any other available, recent information,
such as 2010 catch. Thus, NMFS does not expect the final harvest
specification amounts for the latter group of stocks (i.e., those
without recent surveys) to vary greatly from the proposed specification
amounts published here.
If the draft 2010 SAFE report indicates that the stock biomass
trend is increasing for a species, then the final 2011 and 2012 harvest
specifications for that species may reflect an increase from the
proposed harvest specifications. The draft 2010 SAFE reports indicate
that the biomass trend for pollock, Pacific cod, Rex sole, arrowtooth
flounder, northern rockfish, and demersal shelf rockfish may be
increasing. Conversely, if the draft 2010 SAFE report indicates that
the stock biomass trend is decreasing for a species, then the final
2011 and 2012 harvest specifications may reflect a decrease from the
proposed harvest specifications. The draft 2010 SAFE reports indicate
that the biomass trend for flathead sole, pelagic shelf rockfish, and
sharks may be decreasing. Notwithstanding the apparent decrease in the
shark biomass, the Plan Team will be recommending an alternative method
for calculating shark OFL to the SSC at the December 2010 Council
meeting. If the SSC concurs with this method, the final harvest
specifications may reflect an increasing OFL, ABC, and TAC for sharks.
The biomass trends for species otherwise not listed above are
relatively level and stable. However, with respect to octopuses, the
Plan Team also will recommend an alternative method to calculate the
octopus OFL to the SSC at the December 2010 Council meeting. This
method varies from the default method of using Tier 6 methodology as
specified in the FMP. The new method would incorporate octopus biomass
estimates from recent GOA groundfish trawl surveys, in combination with
historical catch data, to calculate the OFL for octopuses. If accepted
by the SSC, this change could result in an increasing OFL, ABC, and TAC
for octopuses.
The proposed ABCs and TACs are based on the best available
biological and socioeconomic data, including projected biomass trends,
information on assumed distribution of stock biomass, and revised
methods used to calculate stock biomass. The FMP specifies the
formulas, or tiers, to be used to compute ABCs and OFLs. Fisheries
scientists determine formulas applicable to a particular stock or stock
complex based on the level of available, reliable information. This
information is categorized in the FMP into a successive series of six
tiers to define OFL and ABC amounts, with tier one representing the
highest level of information quality available and tier six
representing the
[[Page 76355]]
lowest level of information quality available.
The SSC adopted the proposed 2011 and 2012 OFLs and ABCs
recommended by the Plan Team for all groundfish species. The Council
adopted the SSC's OFL and ABC recommendations and the AP's TAC
recommendations. These amounts are unchanged from the final 2011
harvest specifications published in the Federal Register on March 12,
2010 (75 FR 11749) . The exceptions to this are the establishment of
individual ABC and TAC amounts for sculpins, sharks, squid, and
octopuses per the adoption of Amendment 87 to the FMP, as previously
described. For 2011 and 2012, the Council recommended and NMFS proposes
the OFLs, ABCs, and TACs listed in Table 1. The proposed ABCs reflect
harvest amounts that are less than the specified overfishing amounts.
The sum of the proposed 2011 and 2012 ABCs for all assessed groundfish
is 605,086 mt, which is higher than the final 2010 ABC total of 565,499
mt (75 FR 11749, March 12, 2010).
Specification and Apportionment of TAC Amounts
The Council recommended proposed TACs for 2011 and 2012 that are
equal to proposed ABCs for pollock, deep-water flatfish, rex sole,
sablefish, Pacific ocean perch, shortraker rockfish, rougheye rockfish,
northern rockfish, pelagic shelf rockfish, thornyhead rockfish,
demersal shelf rockfish, skates, sharks, sculpins, squids, and
octopuses. The Council recommended other proposed TACs for 2011 and
2012 that are less than the proposed ABCs for certain species: Pacific
cod, flathead sole, shallow-water flatfish, arrowtooth flounder, and
other rockfish. The Pacific cod TACs are set to accommodate the State
of Alaska's (State) GHLs for Pacific cod so that the ABC is not
exceeded. The flathead sole, shallow-water flatfish, and arrowtooth
flounder TACs are set to conserve the halibut PSC limit for use in
other fisheries. The other rockfish TACs are set to reduce the amount
of discards in the Southeast Outside (SEO) District. The Atka mackerel
TAC is set to accommodate incidental catch amounts.
The ABC for the pollock stock in the combined Western, Central, and
West Yakutat Regulatory Areas (W/C/WYK) has been adjusted to reflect
the Guideline Harvest Level (GHL) established by the State for the
Prince William Sound (PWS) pollock fishery since its inception in 1995.
Genetic studies revealed that the pollock in PWS was not a separate
stock from the combined W/C/WYK population. Accordingly, the Council
recommended decreasing the W/C/WYK pollock ABC to account for the
State's PWS GHL. For 2011, the PWS GHL for pollock is 1,650 mt.
The apportionment of annual pollock TAC among the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA reflects the seasonal biomass
distribution and is discussed in greater detail below. The annual
pollock TAC in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA is
apportioned among Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, and divided
equally among each of the following four seasons: The A season (January
20 through March 10), the B season (March 10 through May 31), the C
season (August 25 through October 1), and the D season (October 1
through November 1) (50 CFR 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv), and
679.20(a)(5)(iv)(A), (B)).
As in 2010, the SSC and Council recommended that the method of
apportioning the sablefish ABC among management areas in 2011 and 2012
include commercial fishery and survey data. NMFS stock assessment
scientists believe that unbiased commercial fishery catch-per-unit-
effort data are useful for stock distribution assessments. NMFS
evaluates annually the use of commercial fishery data to ensure that
unbiased information is included in stock distribution models. The
Council's recommendation for sablefish area apportionments also takes
into account the prohibition on the use of trawl gear in the SEO
District of the Eastern Regulatory Area and makes available five
percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area TACs to trawl gear for
use as incidental catch in other directed groundfish fisheries in the
WYK District (Sec. 679.20(a)(4)(i)).
The AP, SSC, and Council recommended apportionment of the ABC for
Pacific cod in the GOA among regulatory areas based on the three most
recent NMFS summer trawl surveys. The proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific
cod TACs are affected by the State's fishery for Pacific cod in State
waters in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas, as well as in PWS.
The Plan Team, SSC, AP, and Council recommended that the sum of all
State and Federal water Pacific cod removals from the GOA not exceed
ABC recommendations. Accordingly, the Council recommended reducing the
proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod TACs in the proposed ABCs for the
Eastern, Central, and Western Regulatory Areas to account for State
GHLs. Therefore, the proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod TACs are less
than the proposed ABCs by the following amounts: (1) Eastern GOA, 734
mt; (2) Central GOA, 15,174 mt; and (3) Western GOA, 8,566 mt. These
amounts reflect the sum of the State's 2011 and 2012 guideline harvest
levels in these areas, which are 25 percent of the Eastern, Central,
and Western GOA proposed ABCs. In 2011, the State waters Pacific cod
GHL in PWS was increased from 15 to 25 percent of the Eastern GOA
Pacific cod ABC, per the recommendations of State of Alaska Department
of Fish and Game fisheries managers. Thus, the corresponding 2011 and
2012 Eastern GOA Pacific cod TAC may decrease in final harvest
specifications to accommodate the increased State GHL in that area.
NMFS also is proposing seasonal apportionments of the annual
Pacific cod TACs in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas. Sixty
percent of the annual TAC is apportioned to the A season for hook-and-
line, pot, or jig gear from January 1 through June 10, and for trawl
gear from January 20 through June 10. Forty percent of the annual TAC
is apportioned to the B season for hook-and-line, pot, or jig gear from
September 1 through December 31, and for trawl gear from September 1
through November 1 (Sec. Sec. 679.23(d)(3) and 679.20(a)(12)).
As in 2010, NMFS proposes to establish for 2011 and 2012 an A
season directed fishing allowance (DFA) for the Pacific cod fisheries
in the GOA based on the management area TACs minus the recent average A
season incidental catch of Pacific cod in each management area before
June 10 (Sec. 679.20(d)(1)). The DFA and incidental catch before June
10 will be managed such that total catch in the A season will be no
more than 60 percent of the annual TAC. Incidental catch taken after
June 10 will continue to accrue against the B season TAC. This action
meets the intent of the Steller sea lion protection measures by
achieving temporal dispersion of the Pacific cod removals and reducing
the likelihood of catch exceeding 60 percent of the annual TAC in the A
season.
The sum of the proposed TACs for all GOA groundfish is 330,746 mt
for 2011 and 2012, which is within the OY range specified by the FMP.
The sums of the proposed 2011 and 2012 TACs are higher than the sum of
the 2010 TACs of 292,087 mt, but are unchanged from the 2011 TACs
currently specified for the GOA groundfish fisheries (75 FR 11788,
March 12, 2010), with the exception of the Eastern GOA Pacific Cod TAC
and the TACs for the major taxonomic groups (sharks, squids, octopuses,
and sculpins), which used to compose the ``other species'' category.
Table 1 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012 ABCs, TACs, and OFLs and
area apportionments of groundfish in the
[[Page 76356]]
GOA. These amounts are consistent with the biological condition of
groundfish stocks as described in the 2009 SAFE report, and adjusted
for other biological and socioeconomic considerations, including
maintaining the total TAC within the required OY range. These proposed
amounts are subject to change pending the completion of the draft 2010
SAFE report and the Council's recommendations for the final 2011 and
2012 harvest specifications during its December 2010 meeting.
Table 1--Proposed 2011 and 2012 ABCs, TACs, and OFLs of Groundfish for the Western/Central/West Yakutat (W/C/
WYK), Western (W), Central (C), Eastern (E) Regulatory Areas, and in the West Yakutat (WYK), Southeast Outside
(SEO), and Gulfwide (GW) Districts of the Gulf of Alaska
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Species Area 1 ABC TAC OFL
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pollock \2\........................ Shumagin (610)....... 34,728 34,728 n/a
Chirikof (620)....... 37,159 37,159 n/a
Kodiak (630)......... 25,287 25,287 n/a
WYK (640)............ 2,686 2,686 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
W/C/WYK (subtotal) 99,860 99,860 135,010
SEO (650)............ 9,245 9,245 12,326
Total............. 109,105 109,105 147,336
=====================================================
Pacific cod \3\.................... W.................... 34,265 25,699 n/a
C.................... 60,698 45,524 n/a
E.................... 2,937 2,203 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 97,900 73,426 116,700
=====================================================
Sablefish \4\...................... W.................... 1,488 1,488 n/a
C.................... 4,042 4,042 n/a
WYK.................. 1,450 1,450 n/a
SEO.................. 2,320 2,320 n/a
E (WYK and SEO) 3,770 3,770 n/a
(subtotal).
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 9,300 9,300 11,008
=====================================================
Shallow-water flatfish \6\......... W.................... 23,681 4,500 n/a
C.................... 29,999 13,000 n/a
WYK.................. 1,228 1,228 n/a
SEO.................. 1,334 1,334 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 56,242 20,062 67,768
=====================================================
Deep-water flatfish \5\............ W.................... 530 530 n/a
C.................... 2,928 2,928 n/a
WYK.................. 2,089 2,089 n/a
SEO.................. 778 778 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 6,325 6,325 7,847
=====================================================
Rex sole........................... W.................... 1,521 1,521 n/a
C.................... 6,312 6,312 n/a
WYK.................. 871 871 n/a
SEO.................. 888 888 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 9,592 9,592 12,534
=====================================================
Arrowtooth flounder................ W.................... 34,263 8,000 n/a
C.................... 144,262 30,000 n/a
WYK.................. 22,501 2,500 n/a
SEO.................. 11,693 2,500 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 212,719 43,000 250,559
=====================================================
Flathead sole...................... W.................... 17,520 2,000 n/a
C.................... 28,190 5,000 n/a
WYK.................. 2,068 2,068 n/a
SEO.................. 1,508 1,508 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 49,286 10,576 61,601
=====================================================
Pacific ocean perch \7\............ W.................... 2,797 2,797 3,220
C.................... 10,377 10,377 11,944
WYK.................. 1,937 1,937 n/a
SEO.................. 1,882 1,882 n/a
[[Page 76357]]
E (WYK and SEO) 3,819 3,819 4,396
(subtotal).
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 16,993 16,993 19,560
=====================================================
Northern rockfish 8 9.............. W.................... 2,549 2,549 n/a
C.................... 2,259 2,259 n/a
E.................... 0 0 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 4,808 4,808 5,730
=====================================================
Shortraker rockfish \11\........... W.................... 134 134 n/a
C.................... 325 325 n/a
E.................... 455 455 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 914 914 1,219
=====================================================
Other rockfish 9 12................ W.................... 212 212 n/a
C.................... 507 507 n/a
WYK.................. 273 273 n/a
SEO.................. 2,757 200 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 3,749 1,192 4,881
=====================================================
Pelagic shelf rockfish \13\........ W.................... 607 607 n/a
C.................... 3,035 3,035 n/a
WYK.................. 405 405 n/a
SEO.................. 680 680 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 4,727 4,727 5,739
=====================================================
Rougheye and Blackspotted rockfish W.................... 81 81 n/a
\10\.
C.................... 869 869 n/a
E.................... 363 363 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 1,313 1,313 1,581
=====================================================
Demersal shelf rockfish \14\....... SEO.................. 295 295 472
Thornyhead rockfish................ W.................... 425 425 n/a
C.................... 637 637 n/a
E.................... 708 708 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 1,770 1,770 2,360
=====================================================
Atka mackerel...................... GW................... 4,700 2,000 6,200
Big skate \15\..................... W.................... 598 598 n/a
C.................... 2,049 2,049 n/a
E.................... 681 681 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 3,328 3,328 4,438
=====================================================
Longnose skate \16\................ W.................... 81 81 n/a
C.................... 2,009 2,009 n/a
E.................... 762 762 n/a
-----------------------------------------------------
Total............. 2,852 2,852 3,803
=====================================================
Other skates \17\.................. GW................... 2,093 2,093 2,791
Sharks............................. GW................... 957 957 1,276
Squids............................. GW................... 1,148 1,148 1,530
Octopuses.......................... GW................... 224 224 298
Sculpins........................... GW................... 4,746 4,746 6,328
-----------------------------------------------------
Total.......................... ..................... 605,086 330,746 743,559
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Regulatory areas and districts are defined at Sec. 679.2. (W=Western Gulf of Alaska; C=Central Gulf of
Alaska; E=Eastern Gulf of Alaska; WYK=West Yakutat District; SEO=Southeast Outside District; GW=Gulf-wide).
[[Page 76358]]
\2\ Pollock is apportioned in the Western/Central Regulatory Areas among three statistical areas. During the A
season, the apportionment is based on an adjusted estimate of the relative distribution of pollock biomass of
approximately 30%, 46%, and 24% in Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, respectively. During the B season, the
apportionment is based on the relative distribution of pollock biomass at 30%, 54%, and 16% in Statistical
Areas 610, 620, and 630, respectively. During the C and D seasons, the apportionment is based on the relative
distribution of pollock biomass at 41%, 27%, and 32% in Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, respectively.
Table 4 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012 pollock seasonal apportionments. In the West Yakutat and Southeast
Outside Districts of the Eastern Regulatory Area, pollock is not divided into seasonal allowances.
\3\ The annual Pacific cod TAC is apportioned 60% to the A season and 40% to the B season in the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA. Pacific cod is allocated 90% for processing by the inshore component and
10% for processing by the offshore component. Table 5 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod seasonal
apportionments.
\4\ Sablefish is allocated to trawl and hook-and-line gears for 2011 and to trawl gear in 2012. Tables 2 and 3
list the proposed 2011 and 2012 sablefish TACs.
\5\ ``Deep-water flatfish'' means Dover sole, Greenland turbot, and deepsea sole.
\6\ ``Shallow-water flatfish'' means flatfish not including ``deep-water flatfish,'' flathead sole, rex sole, or
arrowtooth flounder.
\7\ ``Pacific ocean perch'' means Sebastes alutus.
\8\ ``Northern rockfish'' means Sebastes polyspinous. For management purposes the 2 mt apportionment of ABC to
the Eastern Gulf of Alaska has been included in the slope rockfish complex.
\9\ ``Slope rockfish'' means Sebastes aurora (aurora), S. melanostomus (blackgill), S. paucispinis (bocaccio),
S. goodei (chilipepper), S. crameri (darkblotch), S. elongatus (greenstriped), S. variegatus (harlequin), S.
wilsoni (pygmy), S. babcocki (redbanded), S. proriger (redstripe), S. zacentrus (sharpchin), S. jordani
(shortbelly), S. brevispinis (silvergrey), S. diploproa (splitnose), S. saxicola (stripetail), S. miniatus
(vermilion), and S. reedi (yellowmouth). In the Eastern GOA only, slope rockfish also includes northern
rockfish, S. polyspinous.
\10\ ``Rougheye rockfish'' means Sebastes aleutianus (rougheye) and Sebastes melanostictus (blackspotted).
\11\ ``Shortraker rockfish'' means Sebastes borealis.
\12\ ``Other rockfish'' in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas and in the West Yakutat District means slope
rockfish and demersal shelf rockfish. The category ``other rockfish'' in the SEO District means slope
rockfish.
\13\ ``Pelagic shelf rockfish'' means, S. variabilis (dusky), S. entomelas (widow), and S. flavidus
(yellowtail).
\14\ ``Demersal shelf rockfish'' means Sebastes pinniger (canary), S. nebulosus (china), S. caurinus (copper),
S. maliger (quillback), S. helvomaculatus (rosethorn), S. nigrocinctus (tiger), and S. ruberrimus (yelloweye).
\15\ ``Big skate'' means Raja binoculata.
\16\ ``Longnose skate'' means Raja rhina.
\17\ ``Other skates'' means Bathyraja spp.
Proposed Apportionment of Reserves
Section 679.20(b)(2) requires that 20 percent of each TAC for
pollock, Pacific cod, flatfish, skates, sharks, squids, sculpins, and
octopuses be set aside in reserves for possible apportionment at a
later date during the fishing year. In 2010, NMFS apportioned all of
the reserves in the final harvest specifications. For 2011 and 2012,
NMFS proposes reapportionment of all the reserves for pollock, Pacific
cod, flatfish, skates, sharks, squids, sculpins, and octopuses. Table 1
reflects the apportionment of reserve amounts for these species and
species groups. Each proposed TAC for the above mentioned species
categories contains the full TAC recommended by the Council, since no
reserve was created from the relevant species categories.
Proposed Allocations of the Sablefish TAC Amounts to Vessels Using
Hook-and-Line and Trawl Gear
Section 679.20(a)(4)(i) and (ii) require allocations of sablefish
TACs for each of the regulatory areas and districts to hook-and-line
and trawl gear. In the Western and Central Regulatory Areas, 80 percent
of each TAC is allocated to hook-and-line gear, and 20 percent of each
TAC is allocated to trawl gear. In the Eastern Regulatory Area, 95
percent of the TAC is allocated to hook-and-line gear and five percent
is allocated to trawl gear. The trawl gear allocation in the Eastern
GOA may only be used to support incidental catch of sablefish in
directed fisheries for other target species (Sec. 679.20(a)(4)(i)). In
recognition of the trawl ban in the SEO District of the Eastern
Regulatory Area, the Council recommended and NMFS proposes the
allocation of five percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area
sablefish TAC to trawl gear in the WYK District and the remainder of
the WYK sablefish TAC be available to vessels using hook-and-line gear.
As a result, NMFS proposes to allocate 100 percent of the sablefish TAC
in the SEO District to vessels using hook-and-line gear. This
recommendation results in a proposed 2011 allocation of 189 mt to trawl
gear and 3,581 mt to hook-and-line gear in the Eastern GOA. Table 2
lists the allocations of the proposed 2011 sablefish TACs to hook-and-
line and trawl gear. Table 3 lists the allocations of the proposed 2012
sablefish TACs to trawl gear.
The Council recommended that the hook-and-line sablefish TAC be
established annually to ensure that the Individual Fishery Quota (IFQ)
fishery is conducted concurrent with the halibut IFQ fishery and is
based on the most recent survey information. The Council also
recommended that only a trawl sablefish TAC be established for two
years so that retention of incidental catch of sablefish by trawl gear
could commence in January in the second year of the groundfish harvest
specifications. However, since there is an annual assessment for
sablefish and the final harvest specifications are expected to be
published before the IFQ season begins (typically, in early March), the
Council recommended that the sablefish TAC be set on an annual basis so
that the best and most recent scientific information could be
considered in recommending the ABCs and TACs. Since sablefish is on
bycatch status for trawl gear during the entire fishing year, and given
that fishing for groundfish with trawl gear is prohibited prior to
January 20, it is not likely that the sablefish allocation to trawl
gear would be reached before the effective date of the final harvest
specifications.
Table 2--Proposed 2011 Sablefish TAC Amounts in the Gulf of Alaska and Allocations to Hook-and-Line and Trawl
Gear
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hook-and-line
Area/district TAC allocation Trawl allocation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Western................................................ 1,488 1,190 298
Central................................................ 4,042 3,234 808
West Yakutat \1\....................................... 1,450 1,261 189
[[Page 76359]]
Southeast Outside...................................... 2,320 2,320 0
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 9,300 8,005 1,295
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Represents an allocation of 5 percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area sablefish TAC to trawl gear in
the WYK District.
Table 3--Proposed 2012 Sablefish TAC Amounts in the Gulf of Alaska and Allocation to Trawl Gear \1\
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hook-and-line
Area/district TAC allocation Trawl allocation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Western................................................ 1,488 n/a 298
Central................................................ 4,042 n/a 808
West Yakutat \2\....................................... 1,450 n/a 189
Southeast Outside...................................... 2,320 n/a 0
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 9,300 n/a 1,295
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Council recommended that harvest specifications for the hook-and-line gear sablefish Individual Fishing
Quota fisheries be limited to 1 year.
\2\ Represents an allocation of 5 percent of the combined Eastern Regulatory Area sablefish TAC to trawl gear in
the WYK District.
Proposed Apportionments of Pollock TAC Among Seasons and Regulatory
Areas, and Allocations for Processing by Inshore and Offshore
Components
In the GOA, pollock is apportioned by season and area, and is
further allocated between inshore and offshore processing components.
Pursuant to Sec. 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B), the annual pollock TAC specified
for the Western and Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA is apportioned
into four equal seasonal allowances of 25 percent. As established by
Sec. 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv), the A, B, C, and D season
allowances are available from January 20 through March 10, March 10
through May 31, August 25 through October 1, and October 1 through
November 1, respectively.
Pollock TACs in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA
are apportioned among Statistical Areas 610, 620, and 630, pursuant to
Sec. 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(A). In the A and B seasons, the apportionments
are in proportion to the distribution of pollock biomass based on the
four most recent NMFS winter surveys. In the C and D seasons, the
apportionments are in proportion to the distribution of pollock biomass
based on the four most recent NMFS summer surveys. For 2011 and 2012,
the Council recommends, and NMFS proposes, averaging the winter and
summer distribution of pollock in the Central Regulatory Area for the A
season. The average is intended to reflect the distribution of pollock
and the performance of the fishery in the area during the A season for
the 2011 and 2012 fishing years. Within any fishing year, the amount by
which a seasonal allowance is underharvested or overharvested may be
added to, or subtracted from, subsequent seasonal allowances in a
manner to be determined by the Regional Administrator (Sec.
679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B)). The rollover amount is limited to 20 percent of
the unharvested seasonal apportionment for the statistical area. Any
unharvested pollock above the 20 percent limit could be further
distributed to the other statistical areas, in proportion to the
estimated biomass in the subsequent season in those statistical areas
(Sec. 679.20(a)(5)(iv)(B)). The proposed pollock TACs in the WYK
District of 2,686 mt and SEO District of 9,245 mt for 2011 and 2012 are
not allocated by season.
Section 679.20(a)(6)(i) requires the allocation of 100 percent of
the pollock TAC in all regulatory areas and all seasonal allowances to
vessels catching pollock for processing by the inshore component after
subtraction of amounts that are projected by the Regional Administrator
to be caught by, or delivered to, the offshore component incidental to
directed fishing for other groundfish species. Thus, the amount of
pollock available for harvest by vessels harvesting pollock for
processing by the offshore component is that amount that will be taken
as incidental catch during directed fishing for groundfish species
other than pollock, up to the maximum retainable amounts allowed under
Sec. 679.20(e) and (f). At this time, these incidental catch amounts
of pollock are unknown and will be determined during the fishing year.
Table 4 lists the proposed 2011 and 2012 seasonal biomass
distribution of pollock in the Western and Central Regulatory Areas,
area apportionments, and seasonal allowances. The amounts of pollock
for processing by the inshore and offshore components are not shown.
[[Page 76360]]
Table 4--Proposed 2011 and 2012 Distribution of Pollock in the Central and Western Regulatory Areas of the Gulf of Alaska; Seasonal Biomass
Distribution, Area Apportionments; and Seasonal Allowances of Annual TAC
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Season \1\ Shumagin
Chirikof
Kodiak Total \2\
(Area 610)
(Area 620)
(Area 630)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A (Jan 20-Mar 10)....................... 7,342 (30.22%) 11,129 (45.81%) 5,823 (23.97%) 24,294 (100%)
B (Mar 10-May 31)....................... 7,342 (30.22%) 13,128 (54.04%) 3,824 (15.74%) 24,294 (100%)
C (Aug 25-Oct 1)........................ 10,022 (41.25%) 6,451 (26.55%) 7,820 (32.19%) 24,293 (100%)
D (Oct 1-Nov1).......................... 10,022 (41.25%) 6,451 (26.55%) 7,820 (32.19%) 24,293 (100%)
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Annual Total........................ 34,728 .............. 37,159 .............. 25,287 .............. 97,174
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\1\ As established by Sec. 679.23(d)(2)(i) through (iv), the A, B, C, and D season allowances are available from January 20 to March 10, March 10 to
May 31, August 25 to October 1, and October 1 to November 1, respectively. The amounts of pollock for processing by the inshore and offshore
components are not shown in this table.
\2\ The WYK and SEO District pollock TACs are not allocated by season and are not included in the total pollock TACs shown in this table.
Proposed Seasonal Apportionments of Pacific Cod TAC and Allocations for
Processing of Pacific Cod TAC Between Inshore and Offshore Components
Pacific cod fishing is divided into two seasons in the Western and
Central Regulatory Areas of the GOA. For hook-and-line, pot, and jig
gear, the A season is January 1 through June 10, and the B season is
September 1 through December 31. For trawl gear, the A season is
January 20 through June 10, and the B season is September 1 through
November 1 (Sec. 679.23(d)(3)(i)). After subtraction of incidental
catch from the A season, 60 percent of the annual TAC will be available
as a DFA during the A season for the inshore and offshore components.
The remaining 40 percent of the annual TAC will be available for
harvest during the B season. Under Sec. 679.20(a)(12)(ii), any overage
or underage of the Pacific cod allowance from the A season will be
subtracted from, or added to, the subsequent B season allowance.
Section 679.20(a)(6)(ii) requires the allocation of the TAC
apportionment of Pacific cod in all regulatory areas to vessels
catching Pacific cod for processing by the inshore and offshore
components. Ninety percent of the Pacific cod TAC in each regulatory
area is allocated to vessels catching Pacific cod for processing by the
inshore component. The remaining 10 percent of the TAC is allocated to
vessels catching Pacific cod for processing by the offshore component.
Table 5 lists the seasonal apportionments and allocations of the
proposed 2011 and 2012 Pacific cod TAC amounts.
Table 5--Proposed 2011 and 2012 Seasonal Apportionments and Allocations of Pacific Cod TAC Amounts in the Gulf
of Alaska and Allocations for Processing by the Inshore and Offshore Components
[Values are rounded to the nearest metric ton]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Component allocation
Regulatory area Season TAC -----------------------------------
Inshore (90%) Offshore (10%)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Western............................ Annual............... 25,699 23,129 2,570
A season (60%)....... 15,419 13,877 1,542
B season (40%)....... 10,280 9,252 1,028
Central............................ Annual............... 45,524 40,972 4,552
A season (60%)....... 27,314 24,583 2,731
B season (40%)....... 18,210 16,389 1,821
Eastern............................ Annual............... 2,203 1,983 220
-----------------------------------------------------
Total.......................... ..................... 73,426 66,084 7,342
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Apportionments to the Central GOA Rockfish Pilot Program
Section 679.81(a)(1) and (2) requires the allocation of the primary
rockfish species TACs in the Central Regulatory Area, after deducting
incidental catch needs in other directed groundfish fisheries, to
participants in the Central GOA Rockfish Program (Rockfish Program).
Five percent (2.5 percent to trawl gear and 2.5 percent to fixed gear)
of the proposed TACs for Pacific ocean perch, northern rockfish, and
pelagic shelf rockfish in the Central Regulatory Area are allocated to
the entry level rockfish fishery; and the remaining 95 percent are
allocated to those vessels eligible to participate in the Rockfish
Program. The Rockfish Program will expire in December 2011, although
the Council has proposed a new program to supersede the existing
Rockfish Program by 2012. NMFS is developing a proposed rule to
implement the Council's revised program and anticipates that it will be
published in the Federal Register for public review and comment early
in 2011.
NMFS proposes setting aside 2011 incidental catch amounts of 100 mt
for northern rockfish, 100 mt for pelagic shelf rockfish, and 500 mt
for Pacific ocean perch for other directed groundfish fisheries in the
Central Regulatory Area. These proposed amounts are based on recent
average incidental catch in the Central Regulatory Area by other
groundfish fisheries.
Section 679.83(a)(1)(i) requires that allocations to the trawl
entry level fishery must be made first from the allocation of Pacific
ocean perch available to the rockfish entry level fishery. If the
amount of Pacific ocean perch available for allocation is less than the
total allocation allowable for
[[Page 76361]]
trawl CVs in the rockfish entry level fishery, then northern rockfish
and pelagic shelf rockfish must be allocated to trawl CVs. Allocations
of Pacific ocean perch, northern rockfish, and pelagic shelf rockfish
to longline gear vessels must be made after the allocations to trawl
gear.
Table 6 lists the proposed 2011 allocations of rockfish in the
Central GOA to trawl and longline gear in the entry level rockfish
fishery. Allocations of primary rockfish species TACs among
participants in the Rockfish Program are not included in the proposed
harvest specifications because applications for C/P and CV cooperatives
are due to NMFS on March 1 of each calendar year, thereby preventing
NMFS from calculating proposed 2011 allocations. NMFS will post these
allocations on the Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sustainablefisheries/goarat/default.htm when
they become available in March 2011.
Table 6--Proposed 2011 Allocations of Rockfish in the Central Gulf of Alaska to Trawl and Longline Gear\1\ in the Entry Level Rockfish Fishery
[Values are rounded to the nearest mt]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incidental Entry level Entry level
Species Proposed TAC catch TAC minus ICA 5% TAC 2.5% TAC trawl longline
allowance allocation allocation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pacific ocean perch..................... 10,377 500 9,877 494 247 375 119
Northern rockfish....................... 2,259 100 2,159 108 54 0 108
Pelagic shelf rockfish.................. 3,035 100 2,935 147 74 0 147
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................... 15,671 700 14,971 749 375 375 374
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\1\ Longline gear includes jig and hook-and-line gear.
Proposed Halibut Prohibited Species Catch (PSC) Limits
Section 679.21(d) establishes annual halibut PSC limit
apportionments to trawl and hook-and-line gear, and permits the
establishment of apportionments for pot gear. In October 2010, the
Council recommended that NMFS maintain the 2010 halibut PSC limits of
2,000 mt for the trawl fisheries and 300 mt for the hook-and-line
fisheries. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game sets the GHL after
estimates of incidental catch in all fisheries (including halibut and
subsistence) and allocation to the sport fish fishery have been
deducted.
Ten mt of the hook-and-line limit is further allocated to the
demersal shelf rockfish (DSR) fishery in the SEO District. The DSR
fishery is defined at Sec. 679.21(d)(4)(iii)(A). This fishery has been
apportioned 10 mt in recognition of its small scale harvests. Most
vessels in the DSR fishery are less than 60 ft (18.3 m) length overall
and are exempt from observer coverage. Therefore, observer data are not
available to verify actual bycatch amounts. NMFS estimates low halibut
bycatch in the DSR fishery because: the duration of the DSR fish