Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; 2012 Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Quota Specifications, 44161-44168 [2012-18404]
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[FR Doc. 2012–17923 Filed 7–26–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 635
[Docket No. 120306154–2241–02]
RIN 0648–XA920
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species;
2012 Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Quota
Specifications
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
NMFS establishes 2012 quota
specifications for the Atlantic bluefin
tuna (BFT) fisheries. This action is
necessary to implement binding
SUMMARY:
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recommendations of the International
Commission for the Conservation of
Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), as required by
the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act
(ATCA), and to achieve domestic
management objectives under the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act).
DATES: Effective August 27, 2012
through December 31, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Supporting documents,
including the 2011 Environmental
Assessment, Regulatory Impact Review,
and Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis, as well as others, such as the
Fishery Management Plans and the
scoping document described below may
be downloaded from the HMS Web site
at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/sfa/hms/. These
documents also are available by request
to Sarah McLaughlin at the telephone
number below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah McLaughlin or Brad McHale,
978–281–9260.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Atlantic
bluefin tuna (BFT) are managed under
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75
150
250
$42 per document.
250
1,100
1,500
5,200
500
75
75
75
75
150
250
33 per delivery.
25 per list.
150
$48 per party.
400
$48 per party.
150
25
$250 per year.
$112 per hour.
the dual authority of the MagnusonStevens Act and ATCA. The United
States is an active member of ICCAT,
which implements binding conservation
and management recommendations for
species including bluefin tuna. ATCA
authorizes the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary) to promulgate regulations, as
may be necessary and appropriate, to
implement ICCAT recommendations.
The authority to issue regulations under
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and ATCA
has been delegated from the Secretary to
the Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NMFS.
Background
ICCAT Recommendation 10–03
(Supplemental Recommendation by
ICCAT concerning Western Atlantic
Bluefin Tuna) established the total
allowable catch for western Atlantic
bluefin tuna for 2011 and 2012,
including the United States’ bluefin
tuna quota. Through a final rule (76 FR
39019, July 5, 2011), NMFS
implemented the United States’ baseline
quota and set domestic BFT fishing
category quotas per the allocations
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established in the 2006 Consolidated
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species
Fishery Management Plan (Consolidated
HMS FMP) and as allowed in
implementing regulations (71 FR 58058,
October 2, 2006) (See Table 1, first
column). The baseline quota and
category subquotas are codified (See
Table 1, second column) and will be
effective until changed. Additionally,
consistent with the Consolidated HMS
FMP and NMFS implementing
regulations, and as allowed by ICCAT
recommendation, certain adjustments
are made to the baseline quotas for
underharvest from the previous year.
This final action adjusts the quota as
appropriate and allowable for the 2012
fishing year. Further background
information, including the need for the
2012 BFT quota specifications, was
provided in the preamble to the
proposed rule (77 FR 15712, March 16,
2012) and is not repeated here.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS determines the amount of BFT
quota actually available for the year by
adjusting the ICCAT-recommended
baseline BFT quota for overharvest or
underharvest from the previous fishing
year and any accounting for dead
discards. At the time the proposed rule
was prepared, NMFS used the 2010
estimate of 122.3 mt as a proxy for
potential 2012 dead discards because
the BFT dead discard estimate for 2011
was not yet available. The more recent
2011 dead discard estimate, 145.2 mt,
became available from the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center in
mid-June 2012. As anticipated and
explained to the public at the proposed
rule stage, NMFS is using the more
recent dead discard estimate as a proxy
in this final rule because it is the best
available and most complete
information NMFS currently has
regarding dead discards.
Based on data available as of June 5,
2012, landings for 2011 totaled 738.5
mt. Adding the 2011 dead discard
estimate (145.2 mt) results in a
preliminary 2011 total catch of 883.7
mt, which is 159.9 mt less than the
amount of quota (inclusive of dead
discards) allowed under ICCAT
Recommendation 10–03 (948.7 mt plus
94.9 mt of 2010 underharvest carried
forward to 2011, totaling 1,043.6 mt).
Thus, the underharvest for 2011 is
approximately 160 mt. The current
ICCAT recommendation limits the
amount of underharvest the United
States may carry forward to 2012 to 10
percent of the total U.S. quota or 94.9
mt.
As proposed, NMFS is accounting up
front (i.e., at the beginning of the fishing
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year) for half of the expected dead
discards for 2012, using the best
available estimate of dead discards
(2011), and deducting that portion
directly from the Longline category
subquota. This is the same approach
that NMFS took for the final 2011 BFT
quota specifications. Accounting for
dead discards in the Longline category
in this way may provide further
incentive for pelagic longline fishermen
to reduce interactions that can result in
dead discards.
Regarding the unharvested 2011 BFT
quota, NMFS had proposed to carry the
94.9 mt of available underharvest
forward to 2012 and distribute that
amount in the same manner as specified
for 2011 (i.e., half to the Longline
category and half to the Reserve
category), and stated that any necessary
adjustments to the 2012 specifications
would be made in the final rule after
considering updated 2011 landings
information and the 2011 dead discard
estimate. NMFS also stated that it could
allocate the amount carried forward in
another manner after considering
domestic management needs for 2012.
During preparation of the final rule,
NMFS closed the southern area
incidental Longline bluefin tuna fishery
on May 29, 2012 (77 FR 31546), and the
northern area incidental Longline
bluefin tuna fishery on June 30, 2012
(77 FR 38011), for the remainder of the
year, because landings had met the
codified subquotas for those areas.
While pelagic longline fishing for
swordfish and other target species may
continue in the northern and southern
Longline areas (with the separation at
31° N. lat., around the Georgia/Florida
border), BFT may no longer be retained,
possessed, or landed by longline vessels
in those areas. Given that the incidental
Longline fishery for bluefin tuna in
these areas is over, accounting for these
landings now is appropriate and allows
for greater transparency than year-end
accounting. The incidental Longline
fishery for bluefin tuna in the Northeast
Distant gear restricted area, an area far
offshore the northeastern United States,
remains open at this time under a
separate, ICCAT-recommended
allocation of 25 mt.
Taking all of this information into
consideration, NMFS is deducting half
of the estimated dead discards up front,
is applying 76.2 of the 94.9 mt (the
available underharvest) to the Longline
category, and is maintaining the
remaining underharvest (18.7 mt) in the
Reserve category. Providing this amount
to the Longline category adjusts the
Longline South and Longline North
subquotas to the amount actually taken
in those areas this year, as detailed
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below. Consistent with determination
criteria at § 635.27(a)(8), NMFS may
allocate any portion of the Reserve
category quota for inseason or annual
adjustments to any other quota category.
In the proposed rule, NMFS anticipated
the possibility of such moderate
alterations between the proposed and
final amounts and distribution, based on
updated information and management
objectives.
The incidental Longline fishery for
bluefin tuna in the Northeast Distant
gear restricted area, an area far offshore
the northeastern United States, remains
open at this time under a separate,
ICCAT-recommended allocation of 25
mt.
2012 Quota Specifications
Specifically, NMFS in this final rule
deducts half of the 2011 dead discard
estimate of 145.2 mt (i.e., 72.6 mt)
directly from the baseline Longline
category quota of 74.8 mt and applies
76.2 of the 94.9 mt allowed to be carried
forward to 2012 to the Longline category
(i.e., 74.8 ¥ 72.6 + 76.2 = 78.4 mt
adjusted Longline subquota, not
including the 25-mt allocation set aside
by ICCAT for the Northeast Distant gear
restricted area (NED)). NMFS adds the
remainder of the 2011 underharvest that
can be carried forward to 2012 (18.7 mt)
to the Reserve category’s baseline
allocation of 23.1 mt, for an adjusted
Reserve category quota of 41.8 mt for
2012. For the directed fishing categories
(i.e., the Angling, General, Harpoon,
Purse Seine categories) as well as the
Trap category, NMFS is not adjusting
the codified baseline BFT quotas and
subquotas that were established in July
2011 (76 FR 39019, July 5, 2011).
Thus, in accordance with ICCAT
Recommendation 10–03, the domestic
category allocations established in the
Consolidated HMS FMP, and
regulations regarding annual
adjustments at § 635.27(a)(10), NMFS
establishes BFT quota specifications for
the 2012 fishing year as follows, and as
shown in the fifth column of Table 1):
General category—435.1 mt; Harpoon
category—36 mt; Purse Seine category—
171.8 mt; Angling category—182 mt;
Longline category—78.4 mt; and Trap
category—0.9 mt. The Longline category
quota of 78.4 mt is subdivided as
follows: 27.6 mt to pelagic longline
vessels landing BFT north of 31° N.
latitude, and 50.8 mt to pelagic longline
vessels landing BFT south of 31° N.
latitude. NMFS accounts for landings
under the 25-mt NED allocation
separately from other Longline category
landings. The amount allocated to the
Reserve category for inseason
adjustments, scientific research
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collection, potential overharvest in any
category except the Purse Seine
category, and potential quota transfers is
41.8 mt.
As described in the proposed rule,
NMFS considers the deduction of half of
the dead discard estimate from the
Longline category a transitional
approach from the method used for
2007 through 2010—in which the full
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dead discard estimate was deducted
from the Longline category quota up
front—that is appropriate to use again
for 2012 as NMFS begins developing
Amendment 7 to the Consolidated HMS
FMP (Amendment 7) (77 FR 24161,
April 23, 2012). Several potential
management measures included in the
Amendment 7 scoping document (see
ADDRESSES) are intended to reduce and
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account for bluefin tuna dead discards.
After public scoping on Amendment 7
has been completed, NMFS will prepare
a draft Environmental Impact Statement
and proposed rule. Management of the
BFT fisheries continues under the
current Consolidated HMS FMP,
implementing regulations, and ICCAT
recommendations.
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Comments and Responses
NMFS received five written
comments on the proposed rule, and
oral comments from the 13 participants
who attended the two public hearings
that NMFS held in Gloucester, MA, and
Silver Spring, MD. Few of the comments
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NMFS received were focused
specifically on the proposed quota
specifications. The majority of those
comments generally supported the
proposed adjustment of the baseline
BFT quota and subquotas. Below, NMFS
summarizes and responds to all
comments made specifically on the
proposed rule received during the
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comment period. In addition, NMFS
received comments on issues that were
not part of this rulemaking. These
comments are summarized under
‘‘Other Issues’’ below. Finally, NMFS
addresses a comment received after the
end of the comment period from the
Center for Biological Diversity, the
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Plaintiff in an ongoing legal case
regarding bluefin tuna management.
A. 2012 Quota Specifications
Comment 1: One commenter stated
that NMFS’ proposed methodology to
allocate the quotas is appropriate
because it is the same methodology used
in 2011 and it allows for continued
participation by all of the fishery’s user
groups. Another stated that NMFS
should hold each category directly
accountable for its own overharvests.
Response: The approach used for
these final 2012 quota specifications is
an appropriate continuation of the
approach used in 2011 as a transition
from the method used from 2007
through 2010. Changes in ICCAT’s
approach to western Atlantic bluefin
tuna management in 2006 (i.e.,
discontinuation of the dead discard
allowance and a new provision that the
western BFT Total Allowable Catch
include dead discards) have had
implications for NMFS’s domestic
management of the fishery quota
subcategories, as now the total of U.S.
landings and dead discards is limited by
the U.S. quota. Through this interim
approach, NMFS is balancing the needs
of the pelagic longline fishery to
continue fishing for swordfish and
Atlantic tunas with the needs of
directed bluefin tuna fisheries
participants. This action may provide
some incentive for pelagic longline
fishermen to reduce BFT interactions
that can result in dead discards.
Regarding the comment that NMFS
should hold each subcategory
accountable for its own dead discard, at
this time there are no estimates of dead
discards in other categories upon which
to hold them accountable. NMFS is
considering how best to modify data
collection programs to provide dead
discard estimates in the future in
Amendment 7.
Comment 2: One commenter
requested that if, based on final 2011
dead discard information, the amount of
2011 underharvest that the United
States could carry forward to 2012 is
less than the amount anticipated in the
proposed rule (94.9 mt), NMFS should
deduct the difference from the Longline
category quota. Another commenter
requested that NMFS take any
difference from the Reserve category
quota and asked that NMFS not give out
extra quota for directed fisheries to land
as that could result in an overharvest of
the U.S. BFT quota.
Response: Because final landings and
dead discard information for 2011
indicates that the amount of 2011
underharvest is greater than 94.9 mt, the
full 94.9 will be available as anticipated
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in the proposed rule, and no adjustment
is necessary. Therefore, the question of
how to divide a reduced amount of
underharvest between the Longline
category and the Reserve is moot.
However, after considering the updated
2011 BFT landings information and
final dead discard estimate, NMFS has
decided to apply 76.2 of the 94.9 mt (the
available underharvest) to the Longline
category and maintain the remainder
(18.7 mt) in the Reserve category.
Comment 3: One commenter
expressed concern that NMFS may, in
order to stay within the ICCATrecommended U.S. quota, close directed
BFT fisheries in the event that unused
quota, including the Reserve quota, is
insufficient to account for Longline
category landings overharvests and dead
discards.
Response: The United States must
account for dead discards, regardless of
which fishery they occur in, to comply
with ICCAT recommendations. It is
important to consider that the BFT
quota allocations in the Consolidated
HMS FMP were based on historic
landings and were established initially
in 1992. Baseline quotas were modified
in 1995 and 1997, but have remained
the same since implementation of the
1999 FMP, when a separate discard
allowance was provided for in the
ICCAT BFT recommendation. Following
ICCAT’s elimination of the dead discard
allowance and change to include dead
discards within TACs in 2006, NMFS
has not modified the allocation scheme
to include dead discards in the baseline
quotas. The United States has accounted
for this mortality as part of the domestic
specification calculation process for the
last several years and reports dead
discard estimates to ICCAT annually.
Regarding the concern about potential
closure, NMFS manages each fishing
category to its landings quota for a given
year, and it is highly unlikely that
NMFS would close a fishery prior to the
available quota for that category being
met.
As indicated above and below,
through Amendment 7, NMFS is
considering how best to reduce and
account for BFT dead discards and
methods to improve reporting and
monitoring of discards and landings.
Comment 4: NMFS should add to the
Reserve category quota the shares of the
two purse seine vessels that historically
have participated in the BFT Purse
Seine category fishery but that have
recently been sold and are involved in
non-tuna fisheries.
Response: The current BFT quota
regulations, which implement the
allocation shares set out in the
Consolidated HMS FMP, require that
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NMFS make equal allocations of the
available Purse Seine category quota to
the Purse Seine category permit holders
that request allocation for a given
fishing year (§ 635.27(a)(4)(iii)). Thus,
current regulations do not allow NMFS
to initially allocate the Purse Seine
category quota the way the commenter
requests. Any change to the procedures
for initially allocating Purse Seine
category quota would require
amendment to the Consolidated HMS
FMP. NMFS is currently in the scoping
process of Amendment 7, with
comments on the scoping document (see
ADDRESSES) being accepted through July
15, 2012.
B. Other Issues
NMFS received comments on issues
beyond the scope of this rulemaking, as
outlined under seven subheadings
below. NMFS has included several of
these topics in the scoping document for
Amendment 7. NMFS has also
requested comments and/or suggestions
on any of the Consolidated HMS FMP
management objectives, as well as any
potential management measures that
may achieve those objectives so they
can be incorporated for future public
input. Potential management measures
include, but are not limited to: revision
of baseline quota allocations, reduction
of and accounting for dead discards;
new and/or modified time and area
closures; and methods to improve
reporting and monitoring of discards
and landings. The potential measures
listed in the scoping document are
intended to be catalysts for scoping, and
should not be viewed as the entire range
of options NMFS is taking into
consideration.
(1) BFT Baseline Quotas and Allocations
NMFS received various requests to
consider catch data rather than just
landings data to establish a more
effective distribution of quota, enabling
better quota utilization and fewer
discards; to provide all categories with
more quota if the Total Allowable Catch
increases; and to reduce all BFT quotas
by 50 percent.
(2) Bycatch and Dead Discards
NMFS received a request to use the
term ‘‘regulatory discards’’ rather than
‘‘dead discards,’’ to provide a clear
explanation of the dead discards
estimation methodology that is
understandable by laypersons, to
require observer coverage and logbook
use for all permit categories, and to
calculate the anticipated reduction in
dead discards from weak hook use in
the Gulf of Mexico when considering a
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proxy for the 2011 dead discard
estimate.
(3) Permits
NMFS received a request to change all
BFT permits from open access to limited
access. The commenter stated that the
open access nature of the fishery
compounds the quota allocation issue.
(4) Data
NMFS received a comment that the
Angling category landings are
completely estimated and may be
significantly incorrect, and a comment
that NMFS should collect more
information on all BFT (commercial and
recreational), whether landed or
discarded dead.
(5) ICCAT
NMFS received a comment that the
stock assessment science considered by
ICCAT lags behind what the U.S.
fishermen are seeing on the water,
resulting in U.S. fishermen fighting
among themselves while eastern
Atlantic and Mediterranean BFT
fishermen benefit. Some commenters
stated that the U.S. delegation to ICCAT
should renegotiate the BFT
recommendation to increase quotas and
the amount of underharvest allowed to
be carried forward from one year to the
next and should pursue two-year
balancing periods for increased
flexibility.
(6) Inseason BFT Fishery Management
NMFS received requests to set the
General category daily retention limit
for June through August at four fish, to
close the Longline category southern
area BFT fishery as soon as the quota is
met, and to carefully monitor pelagic
longline activity on the east coast of
Florida.
(7) Public Hearings
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NMFS received a request to hold
hearings in all areas, despite budget
restraints, so that all affected fishermen
have the opportunity to present their
perspectives on any rule that may affect
them. Another commenter requested
that NMFS hold more meetings
generally, with at least half being
conducted in metropolitan areas rather
than specifically in areas where
participants profit from fisheries.
C. Comment From the Center for
Biological Diversity
On May 4, 2012, 18 days after the
comment period for this proposed rule
ended, the Center for Biological
Diversity (Center) submitted comments
on the rule, including a request that
NMFS supplement the Environmental
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Assessment prepared for the final 2011
quota rule (76 FR 39019, July 5, 2011)
to consider information about the
Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill and
alleged illegal fishing on the eastern
Atlantic and Mediterranean BFT stock,
due to the potential effects of mixing on
western Atlantic BFT stock recovery.
The Center claims that the proposed
2012 quota specifications would violate
National Standards 1 and 2 by carrying
forward any of the 2011 bluefin tuna
underharvest to 2012 and allocating it to
fishermen, because they argue that the
proposed rule fails to prevent
overfishing and use the best available
science on the effects of the Deepwater
Horizon/BP oil spill and the effects of
mixing of eastern and western BFT
stocks. Under National Standard 1,
conservation and management measures
shall prevent overfishing while
achieving, on a continuing basis, the
optimum yield from each fishery for the
U.S. fishing industry. Under National
Standard 2, conservation and
management measures shall be based
upon the best scientific information
available. In December 2011, the Center
filed a complaint against the Secretary
of Commerce, NOAA, and NMFS,
regarding a November 2011 final rule
implementing Adjustments to the
Atlantic Bluefin Tuna General and
Harpoon Category Regulations (76 FR
74003, November 30, 2011). The Center
claims that the rule violated the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the National
Environmental Policy Act, and the
Administrative Procedure Act.
NMFS is not required under the
Administrative Procedure Act to
respond to comments received
following the end of a rule’s comment
period. NMFS typically takes late
comments ‘‘into consideration’’ without
formally responding to those comments,
but has the option of formally
addressing such comment in a final
rule. Nonetheless, NMFS will respond
to the Center’s comments. Below, NMFS
addresses the portions of the Center’s
comment that are relevant to this
rulemaking.
Deepwater Horizon/BP Oil Spill
In 2010, in response to a petition to
list BFT under the Endangered Species
Act submitted by the Center, NMFS
convened a status review team (Team)
to review the status of western BFT. As
described on pages 48 through 50 of the
BFT Status Review Report (available at:
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/stories/2011/05/
docs/bft_srr_final.pdf) the Team
modeled the potential effect of the
Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill on the
future abundance of BFT. The Team
compared projections made by the
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ICCAT Standing Committee on Research
and Statistics (SCRS) in 2010 with
similar projections that assume the
number of BFT yearlings (one-year-old
fish) in 2011 would be reduced by 20
percent. The value of 20 percent was
based on a report by the European Space
Agency that suggested that about 20
percent of the spawning habitat was
oiled. The Team noted that another
study suggested that considerably less
than 20 percent of the spawning habitat
for western BFT was affected by the
spill. However, given other factors, the
Team regarded 20 percent as a
reasonable upper bound for the
mortality rate of BFT larvae owing to the
spill event. The 20 percent reduction in
the 2010 year-class (2011 yearlings)
results in less than a 4 percent reduction
in spawning biomass when future
catches are within the range historically
allowed under ICCAT management (i.e.,
2,500 mt or less). This result is not
surprising because BFT are a relatively
long-lived species and the 2010 year
class is only one of multiple year classes
that will contribute to the spawning
biomass in any given year. If the TAC
remains less than 2,500 mt, as is
expected, then the western BFT stock
would be expected to continue to
increase despite the Deepwater Horizon/
BP oil spill; if however, catches are
allowed to exceed 2,500 mt, then the
western stock would be expected to
decline and any reduction in the 2010
year class would hasten that decline.
The Team also conducted projections
using the ‘MAST’ model (Multistock
Age-Structured Tag-Integrated
assessment model), which uses
electronic tagging data in an effort to
account for intermixing between the
eastern and western stocks, under the
assumption that future catches in the
western Atlantic would be 1,800 mt and
future catches in the east would be
13,500 mt (slightly greater than allowed
by the current management plans). The
results of these modeling projections
were very similar to those above. In this
case, a 20-percent reduction in the 2010
year-class would be projected to cause
only a 3-percent reduction in spawning
biomass.
The Team also considered the
potential impacts of scenarios in which
20 percent of the adult BFT were also
killed in 2010, in which case the
spawning biomass would be
immediately reduced by 20 percent,
which might lead to additional
reductions in the 2011 and subsequent
year-classes (relative to what they
would have been in the absence of the
spill), and in turn, reductions in future
spawning biomass levels. The Team
noted, however, the absence of any
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evidence that any portion of adults were
actually deleteriously affected, and
noted that all of the electronicallytagged bluefin tuna that were known to
have spent time in the Gulf of Mexico
during the actual spill event (8 fish)
survived long after leaving the Gulf of
Mexico.
Best Available Science
In the 2011 SCRS Executive Summary
(Section 8.5 of the recent ICCAT
biennial report, which can be found at
www.iccat.int/Documents/BienRep/
REP_EN_10-11_II_2.pdf), the SCRS
acknowledges that the conclusions of
the 2010 assessment do not capture the
full degree of uncertainty in the
assessments and projections, and that an
important factor contributing to
uncertainty is mixing between fish of
eastern and western origin. Limited
analyses were conducted of the two
stocks with mixing in 2008, but little
new information was available in 2010.
The SCRS states that management
actions taken in the eastern Atlantic and
Mediterranean are likely to influence
recovery in the western Atlantic,
because even small rates of mixing from
East to West can have significant effects
on the West due to the fact that the
Eastern plus Mediterranean resource is
much larger than that of the West.
However, the extent of mixing is
currently unknown, and is currently the
subject of significant research.
Regarding impacts of the Deepwater
Horizon/BP oil spill, NMFS considers
the information summarized in the BFT
Status Review to be the best scientific
information of the effect of the
Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill on
bluefin tuna on which to base
management actions at this time and no
additional information is available upon
which to change that basis. Regarding
catch levels in the eastern Atlantic and
Mediterranean on western Atlantic BFT,
NMFS considers the information
summarized in the reports of the SCRS
to be the best scientific information to
serve as the basis of management
actions at this time, both internationally
and domestically, but notes that a new
scientific paper on the MAST model is
available. NMFS expects this new
information will be reviewed and
incorporated by the SCRS in the
upcoming 2012 BFT stock assessments,
as appropriate. Until that time, however,
the SCRS assessments remain the best
scientific information available.
NMFS continues to rely upon the
2010 SCRS stock assessment as the best
scientific information available. That
stock assessment was subject to rigorous
analysis and review by a panel of
experts from participating ICCAT
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14:46 Jul 26, 2012
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countries. A new stock assessment is
expected in fall 2012, along with a new
ICCAT recommendation on total
allowable catch and country quotas and
other bluefin conservation and
management measures. The newly
available MAST that addresses mixing
of eastern and western Atlantic bluefin
tuna stocks will be reviewed and
incorporated as appropriate in that
upcoming assessment process. Thus,
while the MAST model is available for
review, it has not been subject to the
rigorous analysis and review by ICCAT’s
panel of experts. Therefore, NMFS’
actions in implementing the ICCAT
quota consistent with the ICCAT
Rebuilding Program and the 2010 stock
assessment are consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act’s National
Standard 2 to utilize the best available
scientific information.
The 2010 SCRS stock assessment
analyzed the status of the western
Atlantic bluefin tuna stock using two
recruitment scenarios: a ‘‘high
recruitment’’ and ‘‘low recruitment’’
scenario. SCRS concluded that there
was no basis for choosing one scenario
over the other (i.e., both scenarios are
equally likely). Under the low
recruitment scenario, the stock is
considered rebuilt, overfishing is not
occurring, and a total allowable catch of
up to 2,500 metric tons would maintain
the stock biomass above the level that
can support MSY. Under the high
recruitment scenario, the stock remains
overfished with overfishing occurring
and will not rebuild by the end of 2018
(under the 20-year rebuilding period
that began in 1999) even with no catch.
The SCRS indicated that a total
allowable catch of 1,800 metric tons
would allow the stock to grow under
both recruitment scenarios. ICCAT
adopted a total allowable catch of 1,750
mt, which was a reduction of 50 mt
from the TAC for 2011.
The quotas as implemented remain
consistent with the ICCAT Rebuilding
Program that was adopted domestically
in the rule implementing the 1999 FMP
and that was continued in regulations
under the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP.
The main objective of the ICCAT
Rebuilding Program is to maintain
western Atlantic bluefin tuna
populations at levels that will support
MSY. Therefore, NMFS’ actions are
consistent with National Standard 1 of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, which states
that conservation and management
measures shall prevent overfishing
while achieving, on a continuing basis,
the optimum yield (OY) for the fishery.
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Carrying Underharvest Forward
NMFS maintains that the
carryforward of underhavest is
consistent with ICCAT
Recommendation 10–03, ATCA, and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. Beginning with
the 2011 fishing year, ICCAT
Recommendation 10–03 limits the
amount of underharvest that may be
carried forward from one year to the
next to no more than 10 percent of a
country’s quota. This amount was
reduced from the 50-percent limit in the
2006 ICCAT western Atlantic BFT
recommendation (06–06), which was in
effect for 2007 through 2010. Prior to
2007, a country could carry forward the
full amount of its underharvest to the
following year. The United States has
supported ICCAT’s efforts to control
quota stockpiling as part of bluefin tuna
management recommendations, such as
establishing limits on the amount of
unused quota that can be carried from
one year to the next, for fairness and
conservation reasons.
Under ATCA, NMFS is authorized to
promulgate such regulations as may be
necessary and appropriate to carry out
ICCAT recommendations. Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act (16 U.S.C.
1854(g)(1)(D)), NMFS is required to
provide U.S. fishing vessels with ‘‘a
reasonable opportunity to harvest’’ any
allocation or quota to which the United
States has agreed under ICCAT. To meet
the multiple goals for the BFT fisheries,
NMFS considers the importance of all of
the national standards when making
fishery management decisions,
including those intended to provide
reasonable fishing opportunities to a
wide range of users and gear types,
coastwide, throughout the calendar
year.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator
has determined that this final rule is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, ATCA, and other applicable law,
and is necessary to achieve domestic
management objectives under the
Consolidated HMS FMP.
This final rule is exempt from the
procedures of E.O. 12866 because this
action contains no implementing
regulations.
The Chief Council for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Council for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the
certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
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No comments were received regarding
this certification. As a result, a
regulatory flexibility analysis was not
required and none was prepared.
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules. As part of this
rulemaking process, NMFS has prepared
a brochure summarizing fishery
information and regulations for Atlantic
tuna fisheries for 2012. This brochure
also serves as the small entity
compliance guide. Copies of the
compliance guide are available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq. and 1801
et seq.
Dated: July 24, 2012.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries,
performing the functions and duties of the
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2012–18404 Filed 7–26–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 640
[Docket No. 110908576–2240–02]
RIN 0648–BB44
Spiny Lobster Fishery of the Gulf of
Mexico and South Atlantic;
Amendment 11
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues this final rule to
implement Amendment 11 to the
Fishery Management Plan for the Spiny
Lobster Fishery in the Gulf of Mexico
and South Atlantic (FMP), as prepared
and submitted by the Gulf of Mexico
and South Atlantic Fishery Management
Councils (Councils). This final rule
limits spiny lobster trap fishing in
certain areas in the exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) off the Florida Keys to
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SUMMARY:
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protect threatened species of corals and
addresses the requirements of a 2009
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
biological opinion on the spiny lobster
fishery.
DATES: This rule is effective August 27,
2012.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 11, which includes a
supplemental environmental impact
statement and a regulatory flexibility
analysis, may be obtained from the
Southeast Regional Office Web site at
https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sf/pdfs/Final_
Spiny_Lobster_Amend_11_April_05_
2012.pdf.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Susan Gerhart, telephone: 727–824–
5305, or email: Susan.Gerhart@noaa.
gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The spiny
lobster fishery of the Gulf of Mexico
(Gulf) and the South Atlantic is
managed under the FMP. The FMP was
prepared by the Councils and
implemented through regulations at 50
CFR parts 622 and 640 under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
A 2009 ESA biological opinion on the
continued authorization of the spiny
lobster fishery contained specific terms
and conditions required to implement
the prescribed reasonable and prudent
measures and requires NMFS and the
Councils to work together to protect
areas of staghorn and elkhorn coral.
This final rule addresses the required
measure to create new or expand
existing closed areas for lobster trap
fishing where colonies of these
threatened species are present.
On September 19, 2011, NMFS
published a notice of intent to prepare
a supplemental environmental impact
statement for Amendment 11 and
requested public comment (76 FR
57958). On April 27, 2012, NMFS
published a notice of availability for
Amendment 11 and requested public
comment (77 FR 25116). On May 15,
2012, NMFS published a proposed rule
for Amendment 11 and requested
comment (77 FR 28560). The proposed
rule and Amendment 11 outline the
rationale for the action contained in this
final rule. A summary of the action
being implemented by this final rule is
provided below.
This final rule prohibits spiny lobster
trap fishing in 60 closed areas that cover
a total of 5.9 mi2 (15.3 km2), distributed
throughout the South Atlantic EEZ off
the Florida Keys. These areas were
chosen to protect threatended coral
colonies with high conservation value
and areas of high coral density. The
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
closed areas meet the applicable
requirements of the 2009 ESA biological
opinion.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received five public comment
submissions on Amendment 11 and the
proposed rule, including three
comments from individuals. Two
Federal agencies stated they had no
comment on the rule. Specific
comments related to the actions
contained in Amendment 11 and the
proposed rule, as well as NMFS’
respective responses, are summarized
below.
Comment 1: Lobster trapping destroys
reefs and should be prohibited.
Response: Amendment 11 does not
address the general use of traps in the
lobster fishery. The purpose of
Amendment 11 is to implement the
specific terms and conditions of the
2009 ESA biological opinion, one of
which is to create new or expand
existing closed areas to protect elkhorn
and staghorn coral. The purpose of this
final rule is to implement Amendment
11 and is not intended to address all
possible management measures for the
lobster fishery as a whole. The
prohibition of lobster trap fishing in the
60 areas implemented through
Amendment 11 will help protect reefs
in the designated areas. As explained in
Amendment 11, these areas were
selected by identifying elkhorn and
staghorn coral colonies and applying six
general criteria to choose the areas that
will provide the greatest benefit. In
consultation with various stakeholders,
NMFS and the Councils selected areas
to be closed to lobster trap fishing that
protect threatened coral colonies with
high conservation value and areas of
high coral density.
Comment 2: Closing areas to lobster
trap fishing is long overdue.
Response: The measures contained in
this final rule were developed to meet
specific terms and conditions of the
2009 ESA biological opinion. NMFS and
the Councils gathered data on identified
elkhorn and staghorn coral colonies,
then worked with fishermen, scientists,
and managers to select areas to close to
lobster trap fishing. This colloborative
and deliberative process took time, but
is intended to ensure that the areas
selected will protect elkhorn and
staghorn coral with the highest
conservation value without overly
restricting access to lobster fishing
areas.
Classification
The Regional Administrator,
Southeast Region, NMFS has
determined that this final rule is
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 145 (Friday, July 27, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 44161-44168]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-18404]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 635
[Docket No. 120306154-2241-02]
RIN 0648-XA920
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; 2012 Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
Quota Specifications
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS establishes 2012 quota specifications for the Atlantic
bluefin tuna (BFT) fisheries. This action is necessary to implement
binding recommendations of the International Commission for the
Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), as required by the Atlantic
Tunas Convention Act (ATCA), and to achieve domestic management
objectives under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
DATES: Effective August 27, 2012 through December 31, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Supporting documents, including the 2011 Environmental
Assessment, Regulatory Impact Review, and Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis, as well as others, such as the Fishery Management Plans and
the scoping document described below may be downloaded from the HMS Web
site at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/sfa/hms/. These documents also are available
by request to Sarah McLaughlin at the telephone number below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah McLaughlin or Brad McHale, 978-
281-9260.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Atlantic bluefin tuna (BFT) are managed
under the dual authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and ATCA. The
United States is an active member of ICCAT, which implements binding
conservation and management recommendations for species including
bluefin tuna. ATCA authorizes the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) to
promulgate regulations, as may be necessary and appropriate, to
implement ICCAT recommendations. The authority to issue regulations
under the Magnuson-Stevens Act and ATCA has been delegated from the
Secretary to the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NMFS.
Background
ICCAT Recommendation 10-03 (Supplemental Recommendation by ICCAT
concerning Western Atlantic Bluefin Tuna) established the total
allowable catch for western Atlantic bluefin tuna for 2011 and 2012,
including the United States' bluefin tuna quota. Through a final rule
(76 FR 39019, July 5, 2011), NMFS implemented the United States'
baseline quota and set domestic BFT fishing category quotas per the
allocations
[[Page 44162]]
established in the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory Species
Fishery Management Plan (Consolidated HMS FMP) and as allowed in
implementing regulations (71 FR 58058, October 2, 2006) (See Table 1,
first column). The baseline quota and category subquotas are codified
(See Table 1, second column) and will be effective until changed.
Additionally, consistent with the Consolidated HMS FMP and NMFS
implementing regulations, and as allowed by ICCAT recommendation,
certain adjustments are made to the baseline quotas for underharvest
from the previous year. This final action adjusts the quota as
appropriate and allowable for the 2012 fishing year. Further background
information, including the need for the 2012 BFT quota specifications,
was provided in the preamble to the proposed rule (77 FR 15712, March
16, 2012) and is not repeated here.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS determines the amount of BFT quota actually available for the
year by adjusting the ICCAT-recommended baseline BFT quota for
overharvest or underharvest from the previous fishing year and any
accounting for dead discards. At the time the proposed rule was
prepared, NMFS used the 2010 estimate of 122.3 mt as a proxy for
potential 2012 dead discards because the BFT dead discard estimate for
2011 was not yet available. The more recent 2011 dead discard estimate,
145.2 mt, became available from the NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science
Center in mid-June 2012. As anticipated and explained to the public at
the proposed rule stage, NMFS is using the more recent dead discard
estimate as a proxy in this final rule because it is the best available
and most complete information NMFS currently has regarding dead
discards.
Based on data available as of June 5, 2012, landings for 2011
totaled 738.5 mt. Adding the 2011 dead discard estimate (145.2 mt)
results in a preliminary 2011 total catch of 883.7 mt, which is 159.9
mt less than the amount of quota (inclusive of dead discards) allowed
under ICCAT Recommendation 10-03 (948.7 mt plus 94.9 mt of 2010
underharvest carried forward to 2011, totaling 1,043.6 mt). Thus, the
underharvest for 2011 is approximately 160 mt. The current ICCAT
recommendation limits the amount of underharvest the United States may
carry forward to 2012 to 10 percent of the total U.S. quota or 94.9 mt.
As proposed, NMFS is accounting up front (i.e., at the beginning of
the fishing year) for half of the expected dead discards for 2012,
using the best available estimate of dead discards (2011), and
deducting that portion directly from the Longline category subquota.
This is the same approach that NMFS took for the final 2011 BFT quota
specifications. Accounting for dead discards in the Longline category
in this way may provide further incentive for pelagic longline
fishermen to reduce interactions that can result in dead discards.
Regarding the unharvested 2011 BFT quota, NMFS had proposed to
carry the 94.9 mt of available underharvest forward to 2012 and
distribute that amount in the same manner as specified for 2011 (i.e.,
half to the Longline category and half to the Reserve category), and
stated that any necessary adjustments to the 2012 specifications would
be made in the final rule after considering updated 2011 landings
information and the 2011 dead discard estimate. NMFS also stated that
it could allocate the amount carried forward in another manner after
considering domestic management needs for 2012.
During preparation of the final rule, NMFS closed the southern area
incidental Longline bluefin tuna fishery on May 29, 2012 (77 FR 31546),
and the northern area incidental Longline bluefin tuna fishery on June
30, 2012 (77 FR 38011), for the remainder of the year, because landings
had met the codified subquotas for those areas. While pelagic longline
fishing for swordfish and other target species may continue in the
northern and southern Longline areas (with the separation at 31[deg] N.
lat., around the Georgia/Florida border), BFT may no longer be
retained, possessed, or landed by longline vessels in those areas.
Given that the incidental Longline fishery for bluefin tuna in these
areas is over, accounting for these landings now is appropriate and
allows for greater transparency than year-end accounting. The
incidental Longline fishery for bluefin tuna in the Northeast Distant
gear restricted area, an area far offshore the northeastern United
States, remains open at this time under a separate, ICCAT-recommended
allocation of 25 mt.
Taking all of this information into consideration, NMFS is
deducting half of the estimated dead discards up front, is applying
76.2 of the 94.9 mt (the available underharvest) to the Longline
category, and is maintaining the remaining underharvest (18.7 mt) in
the Reserve category. Providing this amount to the Longline category
adjusts the Longline South and Longline North subquotas to the amount
actually taken in those areas this year, as detailed below. Consistent
with determination criteria at Sec. 635.27(a)(8), NMFS may allocate
any portion of the Reserve category quota for inseason or annual
adjustments to any other quota category. In the proposed rule, NMFS
anticipated the possibility of such moderate alterations between the
proposed and final amounts and distribution, based on updated
information and management objectives.
The incidental Longline fishery for bluefin tuna in the Northeast
Distant gear restricted area, an area far offshore the northeastern
United States, remains open at this time under a separate, ICCAT-
recommended allocation of 25 mt.
2012 Quota Specifications
Specifically, NMFS in this final rule deducts half of the 2011 dead
discard estimate of 145.2 mt (i.e., 72.6 mt) directly from the baseline
Longline category quota of 74.8 mt and applies 76.2 of the 94.9 mt
allowed to be carried forward to 2012 to the Longline category (i.e.,
74.8 - 72.6 + 76.2 = 78.4 mt adjusted Longline subquota, not including
the 25-mt allocation set aside by ICCAT for the Northeast Distant gear
restricted area (NED)). NMFS adds the remainder of the 2011
underharvest that can be carried forward to 2012 (18.7 mt) to the
Reserve category's baseline allocation of 23.1 mt, for an adjusted
Reserve category quota of 41.8 mt for 2012. For the directed fishing
categories (i.e., the Angling, General, Harpoon, Purse Seine
categories) as well as the Trap category, NMFS is not adjusting the
codified baseline BFT quotas and subquotas that were established in
July 2011 (76 FR 39019, July 5, 2011).
Thus, in accordance with ICCAT Recommendation 10-03, the domestic
category allocations established in the Consolidated HMS FMP, and
regulations regarding annual adjustments at Sec. 635.27(a)(10), NMFS
establishes BFT quota specifications for the 2012 fishing year as
follows, and as shown in the fifth column of Table 1): General
category--435.1 mt; Harpoon category--36 mt; Purse Seine category--
171.8 mt; Angling category--182 mt; Longline category--78.4 mt; and
Trap category--0.9 mt. The Longline category quota of 78.4 mt is
subdivided as follows: 27.6 mt to pelagic longline vessels landing BFT
north of 31[deg] N. latitude, and 50.8 mt to pelagic longline vessels
landing BFT south of 31[deg] N. latitude. NMFS accounts for landings
under the 25-mt NED allocation separately from other Longline category
landings. The amount allocated to the Reserve category for inseason
adjustments, scientific research
[[Page 44163]]
collection, potential overharvest in any category except the Purse
Seine category, and potential quota transfers is 41.8 mt.
As described in the proposed rule, NMFS considers the deduction of
half of the dead discard estimate from the Longline category a
transitional approach from the method used for 2007 through 2010--in
which the full dead discard estimate was deducted from the Longline
category quota up front--that is appropriate to use again for 2012 as
NMFS begins developing Amendment 7 to the Consolidated HMS FMP
(Amendment 7) (77 FR 24161, April 23, 2012). Several potential
management measures included in the Amendment 7 scoping document (see
ADDRESSES) are intended to reduce and account for bluefin tuna dead
discards. After public scoping on Amendment 7 has been completed, NMFS
will prepare a draft Environmental Impact Statement and proposed rule.
Management of the BFT fisheries continues under the current
Consolidated HMS FMP, implementing regulations, and ICCAT
recommendations.
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR27JY12.001
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
Comments and Responses
NMFS received five written comments on the proposed rule, and oral
comments from the 13 participants who attended the two public hearings
that NMFS held in Gloucester, MA, and Silver Spring, MD. Few of the
comments NMFS received were focused specifically on the proposed quota
specifications. The majority of those comments generally supported the
proposed adjustment of the baseline BFT quota and subquotas. Below,
NMFS summarizes and responds to all comments made specifically on the
proposed rule received during the comment period. In addition, NMFS
received comments on issues that were not part of this rulemaking.
These comments are summarized under ``Other Issues'' below. Finally,
NMFS addresses a comment received after the end of the comment period
from the Center for Biological Diversity, the
[[Page 44165]]
Plaintiff in an ongoing legal case regarding bluefin tuna management.
A. 2012 Quota Specifications
Comment 1: One commenter stated that NMFS' proposed methodology to
allocate the quotas is appropriate because it is the same methodology
used in 2011 and it allows for continued participation by all of the
fishery's user groups. Another stated that NMFS should hold each
category directly accountable for its own overharvests.
Response: The approach used for these final 2012 quota
specifications is an appropriate continuation of the approach used in
2011 as a transition from the method used from 2007 through 2010.
Changes in ICCAT's approach to western Atlantic bluefin tuna management
in 2006 (i.e., discontinuation of the dead discard allowance and a new
provision that the western BFT Total Allowable Catch include dead
discards) have had implications for NMFS's domestic management of the
fishery quota subcategories, as now the total of U.S. landings and dead
discards is limited by the U.S. quota. Through this interim approach,
NMFS is balancing the needs of the pelagic longline fishery to continue
fishing for swordfish and Atlantic tunas with the needs of directed
bluefin tuna fisheries participants. This action may provide some
incentive for pelagic longline fishermen to reduce BFT interactions
that can result in dead discards. Regarding the comment that NMFS
should hold each subcategory accountable for its own dead discard, at
this time there are no estimates of dead discards in other categories
upon which to hold them accountable. NMFS is considering how best to
modify data collection programs to provide dead discard estimates in
the future in Amendment 7.
Comment 2: One commenter requested that if, based on final 2011
dead discard information, the amount of 2011 underharvest that the
United States could carry forward to 2012 is less than the amount
anticipated in the proposed rule (94.9 mt), NMFS should deduct the
difference from the Longline category quota. Another commenter
requested that NMFS take any difference from the Reserve category quota
and asked that NMFS not give out extra quota for directed fisheries to
land as that could result in an overharvest of the U.S. BFT quota.
Response: Because final landings and dead discard information for
2011 indicates that the amount of 2011 underharvest is greater than
94.9 mt, the full 94.9 will be available as anticipated in the proposed
rule, and no adjustment is necessary. Therefore, the question of how to
divide a reduced amount of underharvest between the Longline category
and the Reserve is moot. However, after considering the updated 2011
BFT landings information and final dead discard estimate, NMFS has
decided to apply 76.2 of the 94.9 mt (the available underharvest) to
the Longline category and maintain the remainder (18.7 mt) in the
Reserve category.
Comment 3: One commenter expressed concern that NMFS may, in order
to stay within the ICCAT-recommended U.S. quota, close directed BFT
fisheries in the event that unused quota, including the Reserve quota,
is insufficient to account for Longline category landings overharvests
and dead discards.
Response: The United States must account for dead discards,
regardless of which fishery they occur in, to comply with ICCAT
recommendations. It is important to consider that the BFT quota
allocations in the Consolidated HMS FMP were based on historic landings
and were established initially in 1992. Baseline quotas were modified
in 1995 and 1997, but have remained the same since implementation of
the 1999 FMP, when a separate discard allowance was provided for in the
ICCAT BFT recommendation. Following ICCAT's elimination of the dead
discard allowance and change to include dead discards within TACs in
2006, NMFS has not modified the allocation scheme to include dead
discards in the baseline quotas. The United States has accounted for
this mortality as part of the domestic specification calculation
process for the last several years and reports dead discard estimates
to ICCAT annually. Regarding the concern about potential closure, NMFS
manages each fishing category to its landings quota for a given year,
and it is highly unlikely that NMFS would close a fishery prior to the
available quota for that category being met.
As indicated above and below, through Amendment 7, NMFS is
considering how best to reduce and account for BFT dead discards and
methods to improve reporting and monitoring of discards and landings.
Comment 4: NMFS should add to the Reserve category quota the shares
of the two purse seine vessels that historically have participated in
the BFT Purse Seine category fishery but that have recently been sold
and are involved in non-tuna fisheries.
Response: The current BFT quota regulations, which implement the
allocation shares set out in the Consolidated HMS FMP, require that
NMFS make equal allocations of the available Purse Seine category quota
to the Purse Seine category permit holders that request allocation for
a given fishing year (Sec. 635.27(a)(4)(iii)). Thus, current
regulations do not allow NMFS to initially allocate the Purse Seine
category quota the way the commenter requests. Any change to the
procedures for initially allocating Purse Seine category quota would
require amendment to the Consolidated HMS FMP. NMFS is currently in the
scoping process of Amendment 7, with comments on the scoping document
(see ADDRESSES) being accepted through July 15, 2012.
B. Other Issues
NMFS received comments on issues beyond the scope of this
rulemaking, as outlined under seven subheadings below. NMFS has
included several of these topics in the scoping document for Amendment
7. NMFS has also requested comments and/or suggestions on any of the
Consolidated HMS FMP management objectives, as well as any potential
management measures that may achieve those objectives so they can be
incorporated for future public input. Potential management measures
include, but are not limited to: revision of baseline quota
allocations, reduction of and accounting for dead discards; new and/or
modified time and area closures; and methods to improve reporting and
monitoring of discards and landings. The potential measures listed in
the scoping document are intended to be catalysts for scoping, and
should not be viewed as the entire range of options NMFS is taking into
consideration.
(1) BFT Baseline Quotas and Allocations
NMFS received various requests to consider catch data rather than
just landings data to establish a more effective distribution of quota,
enabling better quota utilization and fewer discards; to provide all
categories with more quota if the Total Allowable Catch increases; and
to reduce all BFT quotas by 50 percent.
(2) Bycatch and Dead Discards
NMFS received a request to use the term ``regulatory discards''
rather than ``dead discards,'' to provide a clear explanation of the
dead discards estimation methodology that is understandable by
laypersons, to require observer coverage and logbook use for all permit
categories, and to calculate the anticipated reduction in dead discards
from weak hook use in the Gulf of Mexico when considering a
[[Page 44166]]
proxy for the 2011 dead discard estimate.
(3) Permits
NMFS received a request to change all BFT permits from open access
to limited access. The commenter stated that the open access nature of
the fishery compounds the quota allocation issue.
(4) Data
NMFS received a comment that the Angling category landings are
completely estimated and may be significantly incorrect, and a comment
that NMFS should collect more information on all BFT (commercial and
recreational), whether landed or discarded dead.
(5) ICCAT
NMFS received a comment that the stock assessment science
considered by ICCAT lags behind what the U.S. fishermen are seeing on
the water, resulting in U.S. fishermen fighting among themselves while
eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean BFT fishermen benefit. Some
commenters stated that the U.S. delegation to ICCAT should renegotiate
the BFT recommendation to increase quotas and the amount of
underharvest allowed to be carried forward from one year to the next
and should pursue two-year balancing periods for increased flexibility.
(6) Inseason BFT Fishery Management
NMFS received requests to set the General category daily retention
limit for June through August at four fish, to close the Longline
category southern area BFT fishery as soon as the quota is met, and to
carefully monitor pelagic longline activity on the east coast of
Florida.
(7) Public Hearings
NMFS received a request to hold hearings in all areas, despite
budget restraints, so that all affected fishermen have the opportunity
to present their perspectives on any rule that may affect them. Another
commenter requested that NMFS hold more meetings generally, with at
least half being conducted in metropolitan areas rather than
specifically in areas where participants profit from fisheries.
C. Comment From the Center for Biological Diversity
On May 4, 2012, 18 days after the comment period for this proposed
rule ended, the Center for Biological Diversity (Center) submitted
comments on the rule, including a request that NMFS supplement the
Environmental Assessment prepared for the final 2011 quota rule (76 FR
39019, July 5, 2011) to consider information about the Deepwater
Horizon/BP oil spill and alleged illegal fishing on the eastern
Atlantic and Mediterranean BFT stock, due to the potential effects of
mixing on western Atlantic BFT stock recovery. The Center claims that
the proposed 2012 quota specifications would violate National Standards
1 and 2 by carrying forward any of the 2011 bluefin tuna underharvest
to 2012 and allocating it to fishermen, because they argue that the
proposed rule fails to prevent overfishing and use the best available
science on the effects of the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill and the
effects of mixing of eastern and western BFT stocks. Under National
Standard 1, conservation and management measures shall prevent
overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield
from each fishery for the U.S. fishing industry. Under National
Standard 2, conservation and management measures shall be based upon
the best scientific information available. In December 2011, the Center
filed a complaint against the Secretary of Commerce, NOAA, and NMFS,
regarding a November 2011 final rule implementing Adjustments to the
Atlantic Bluefin Tuna General and Harpoon Category Regulations (76 FR
74003, November 30, 2011). The Center claims that the rule violated the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the
Administrative Procedure Act.
NMFS is not required under the Administrative Procedure Act to
respond to comments received following the end of a rule's comment
period. NMFS typically takes late comments ``into consideration''
without formally responding to those comments, but has the option of
formally addressing such comment in a final rule. Nonetheless, NMFS
will respond to the Center's comments. Below, NMFS addresses the
portions of the Center's comment that are relevant to this rulemaking.
Deepwater Horizon/BP Oil Spill
In 2010, in response to a petition to list BFT under the Endangered
Species Act submitted by the Center, NMFS convened a status review team
(Team) to review the status of western BFT. As described on pages 48
through 50 of the BFT Status Review Report (available at:
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/stories/2011/05/docs/bft_srr_final.pdf) the Team
modeled the potential effect of the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill on
the future abundance of BFT. The Team compared projections made by the
ICCAT Standing Committee on Research and Statistics (SCRS) in 2010 with
similar projections that assume the number of BFT yearlings (one-year-
old fish) in 2011 would be reduced by 20 percent. The value of 20
percent was based on a report by the European Space Agency that
suggested that about 20 percent of the spawning habitat was oiled. The
Team noted that another study suggested that considerably less than 20
percent of the spawning habitat for western BFT was affected by the
spill. However, given other factors, the Team regarded 20 percent as a
reasonable upper bound for the mortality rate of BFT larvae owing to
the spill event. The 20 percent reduction in the 2010 year-class (2011
yearlings) results in less than a 4 percent reduction in spawning
biomass when future catches are within the range historically allowed
under ICCAT management (i.e., 2,500 mt or less). This result is not
surprising because BFT are a relatively long-lived species and the 2010
year class is only one of multiple year classes that will contribute to
the spawning biomass in any given year. If the TAC remains less than
2,500 mt, as is expected, then the western BFT stock would be expected
to continue to increase despite the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill; if
however, catches are allowed to exceed 2,500 mt, then the western stock
would be expected to decline and any reduction in the 2010 year class
would hasten that decline.
The Team also conducted projections using the `MAST' model
(Multistock Age-Structured Tag-Integrated assessment model), which uses
electronic tagging data in an effort to account for intermixing between
the eastern and western stocks, under the assumption that future
catches in the western Atlantic would be 1,800 mt and future catches in
the east would be 13,500 mt (slightly greater than allowed by the
current management plans). The results of these modeling projections
were very similar to those above. In this case, a 20-percent reduction
in the 2010 year-class would be projected to cause only a 3-percent
reduction in spawning biomass.
The Team also considered the potential impacts of scenarios in
which 20 percent of the adult BFT were also killed in 2010, in which
case the spawning biomass would be immediately reduced by 20 percent,
which might lead to additional reductions in the 2011 and subsequent
year-classes (relative to what they would have been in the absence of
the spill), and in turn, reductions in future spawning biomass levels.
The Team noted, however, the absence of any
[[Page 44167]]
evidence that any portion of adults were actually deleteriously
affected, and noted that all of the electronically-tagged bluefin tuna
that were known to have spent time in the Gulf of Mexico during the
actual spill event (8 fish) survived long after leaving the Gulf of
Mexico.
Best Available Science
In the 2011 SCRS Executive Summary (Section 8.5 of the recent ICCAT
biennial report, which can be found at www.iccat.int/Documents/BienRep/REP_EN_10-11_II_2.pdf), the SCRS acknowledges that the conclusions
of the 2010 assessment do not capture the full degree of uncertainty in
the assessments and projections, and that an important factor
contributing to uncertainty is mixing between fish of eastern and
western origin. Limited analyses were conducted of the two stocks with
mixing in 2008, but little new information was available in 2010. The
SCRS states that management actions taken in the eastern Atlantic and
Mediterranean are likely to influence recovery in the western Atlantic,
because even small rates of mixing from East to West can have
significant effects on the West due to the fact that the Eastern plus
Mediterranean resource is much larger than that of the West. However,
the extent of mixing is currently unknown, and is currently the subject
of significant research.
Regarding impacts of the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill, NMFS
considers the information summarized in the BFT Status Review to be the
best scientific information of the effect of the Deepwater Horizon/BP
oil spill on bluefin tuna on which to base management actions at this
time and no additional information is available upon which to change
that basis. Regarding catch levels in the eastern Atlantic and
Mediterranean on western Atlantic BFT, NMFS considers the information
summarized in the reports of the SCRS to be the best scientific
information to serve as the basis of management actions at this time,
both internationally and domestically, but notes that a new scientific
paper on the MAST model is available. NMFS expects this new information
will be reviewed and incorporated by the SCRS in the upcoming 2012 BFT
stock assessments, as appropriate. Until that time, however, the SCRS
assessments remain the best scientific information available.
NMFS continues to rely upon the 2010 SCRS stock assessment as the
best scientific information available. That stock assessment was
subject to rigorous analysis and review by a panel of experts from
participating ICCAT countries. A new stock assessment is expected in
fall 2012, along with a new ICCAT recommendation on total allowable
catch and country quotas and other bluefin conservation and management
measures. The newly available MAST that addresses mixing of eastern and
western Atlantic bluefin tuna stocks will be reviewed and incorporated
as appropriate in that upcoming assessment process. Thus, while the
MAST model is available for review, it has not been subject to the
rigorous analysis and review by ICCAT's panel of experts. Therefore,
NMFS' actions in implementing the ICCAT quota consistent with the ICCAT
Rebuilding Program and the 2010 stock assessment are consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act's National Standard 2 to utilize the best
available scientific information.
The 2010 SCRS stock assessment analyzed the status of the western
Atlantic bluefin tuna stock using two recruitment scenarios: a ``high
recruitment'' and ``low recruitment'' scenario. SCRS concluded that
there was no basis for choosing one scenario over the other (i.e., both
scenarios are equally likely). Under the low recruitment scenario, the
stock is considered rebuilt, overfishing is not occurring, and a total
allowable catch of up to 2,500 metric tons would maintain the stock
biomass above the level that can support MSY. Under the high
recruitment scenario, the stock remains overfished with overfishing
occurring and will not rebuild by the end of 2018 (under the 20-year
rebuilding period that began in 1999) even with no catch. The SCRS
indicated that a total allowable catch of 1,800 metric tons would allow
the stock to grow under both recruitment scenarios. ICCAT adopted a
total allowable catch of 1,750 mt, which was a reduction of 50 mt from
the TAC for 2011.
The quotas as implemented remain consistent with the ICCAT
Rebuilding Program that was adopted domestically in the rule
implementing the 1999 FMP and that was continued in regulations under
the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP. The main objective of the ICCAT
Rebuilding Program is to maintain western Atlantic bluefin tuna
populations at levels that will support MSY. Therefore, NMFS' actions
are consistent with National Standard 1 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
which states that conservation and management measures shall prevent
overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield
(OY) for the fishery.
Carrying Underharvest Forward
NMFS maintains that the carryforward of underhavest is consistent
with ICCAT Recommendation 10-03, ATCA, and the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Beginning with the 2011 fishing year, ICCAT Recommendation 10-03 limits
the amount of underharvest that may be carried forward from one year to
the next to no more than 10 percent of a country's quota. This amount
was reduced from the 50-percent limit in the 2006 ICCAT western
Atlantic BFT recommendation (06-06), which was in effect for 2007
through 2010. Prior to 2007, a country could carry forward the full
amount of its underharvest to the following year. The United States has
supported ICCAT's efforts to control quota stockpiling as part of
bluefin tuna management recommendations, such as establishing limits on
the amount of unused quota that can be carried from one year to the
next, for fairness and conservation reasons.
Under ATCA, NMFS is authorized to promulgate such regulations as
may be necessary and appropriate to carry out ICCAT recommendations.
Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act (16 U.S.C. 1854(g)(1)(D)), NMFS is
required to provide U.S. fishing vessels with ``a reasonable
opportunity to harvest'' any allocation or quota to which the United
States has agreed under ICCAT. To meet the multiple goals for the BFT
fisheries, NMFS considers the importance of all of the national
standards when making fishery management decisions, including those
intended to provide reasonable fishing opportunities to a wide range of
users and gear types, coastwide, throughout the calendar year.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this final
rule is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, ATCA, and other
applicable law, and is necessary to achieve domestic management
objectives under the Consolidated HMS FMP.
This final rule is exempt from the procedures of E.O. 12866 because
this action contains no implementing regulations.
The Chief Council for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Council for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
[[Page 44168]]
No comments were received regarding this certification. As a result, a
regulatory flexibility analysis was not required and none was prepared.
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, NMFS has prepared a brochure summarizing
fishery information and regulations for Atlantic tuna fisheries for
2012. This brochure also serves as the small entity compliance guide.
Copies of the compliance guide are available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq. and 1801 et seq.
Dated: July 24, 2012.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, performing the functions and
duties of the Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2012-18404 Filed 7-26-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P