List of Fisheries for 2015, 77919-77942 [2014-30375]
Download as PDF
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
incorporation by reference in
accordance with 5 U.S.C 552(a) and 1
CFR part 51. Copies of this standard can
be inspected at the Federal
Communications Commission, 445 12th
Street SW., Washington, DC (Reference
Information Center) or at the National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA). For information on the
availability of this material at NARA,
call 202–741–6030, or go to: https://
www.archives.gov/federal_register/
code_of_federal_regulations/ibr_
locations.html. Copies of the RTCA
standards also may be obtained from the
Radio Technical Commission for
Aeronautics, Inc., 1150 18th Street NW.,
Suite 910, Washington, DC 20036.
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(e) An identification code, issued by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), the United
States Program Manager for the 406.0–
406.1 MHz COSPAS/SARSAT satellite
system, must be programmed in each
ELT unit to establish a unique
identification for each ELT station. With
each marketable ELT unit the
manufacturer or grantee must include a
postage pre-paid registration card
printed with the ELT identification code
addressed to: NOAA/SARSAT Beacon
Registration, NSOF, E/SPO53, 1315 East
West Hwy, Silver Spring, MD 20910–
9684. The registration card must request
the owner’s name, address, telephone,
type of aircraft, alternate emergency
contact, and other information as
required by NOAA. The registration
card must also contain information
regarding the availability to register the
ELT at NOAA’s online Web-based
registration database at: https://
www.beaconregistration.noaa.gov.
Further, the following statement must
be included: ‘‘WARNING—failure to
register this ELT with NOAA before
installation could result in a monetary
forfeiture being issued to the owner.’’
(f) To enhance protection of life and
property, it is mandatory that each
406.0–406.1 MHz ELT must be
registered with NOAA before
installation and that information be kept
up-to-date. In addition to the
identification plate or label
requirements contained in §§ 2.925 and
2.926 of this chapter, each 406.0–406.1
MHz ELT must be provided on the
outside with a clearly discernable
permanent plate or label containing the
following statement: ‘‘The owner of this
406.0–406.1 MHz ELT must register the
NOAA identification code contained on
this label with the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
whose address is: NOAA/SARSAT
Beacon Registration, NSOF, E/SPO53,
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1315 East West Hwy, Silver Spring, MD
20910–9684.’’ Aircraft owners shall
advise NOAA in writing upon change of
aircraft or ELT ownership, or any other
change in registration information. Fleet
operators must notify NOAA upon
transfer of ELT to another aircraft
outside of the owner’s control, or any
other change in registration information.
NOAA will provide registrants with
proof of registration and change of
registration postcards.
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PART 95—PERSONAL RADIO
SERVICES
6. The authority citation for part 95
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 4, 303, 48 Stat. 1066,
1082, as amended; 47 U.S.C. 154, 303.
7. Section 95.1402 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a), (e), and (f) to
read as follows:
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§ 95.1402 Special requirements for 406
MHz PLBs.
(a) All 406 MHz PLBs must meet all
the technical and performance
standards contained in the Radio
Technical Commission for Maritime
(RTCM) Service document ‘‘RTCM
Recommended Standards for 406 MHz
Satellite Personal Locator Beacons
(PLBs),’’ Version 1.1, RTCM Paper 76–
2002/SC110–STD, dated June 19, 2002.
This RTCM document is incorporated
by reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552(a), and 1 CFR part 51. Copies of the
document are available and may be
obtained from the Radio Technical
Commission for Maritime Services, 1611
N. Kent Street, Suite 605, Arlington, VA
22209; www.rtcm.org; telephone (703)
527–2000; email information@rtcm.org.
The document is available for
inspection at Commission headquarters
at 445 12th Street SW., Washington, DC
20554. Copies may also be inspected at
the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030,
or go to: https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/code_of_federal_
regulations/ibr_locations.html.
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(e) An identification code, issued by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), the United
States Program Manager for the 406
MHz COSPAS/SARSAT satellite system,
must be programmed in each PLB unit
to establish a unique identification for
each PLB station. With each marketable
PLB unit, the manufacturer or grantee
must include a postage pre-paid
registration card printed with the PLB
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identification code addressed to:
NOAA/SARSAT Beacon Registration,
NSOF, E/SPO53, 1315 East West Hwy,
Silver Spring, MD 20910–9684. The
registration card must request the
owner’s name, address, telephone
number, alternate emergency contact
and include the following statement:
‘‘WARNING—failure to register this PLB
with NOAA could result in a monetary
forfeiture order being issued to the
owner.’’
(f) To enhance protection of life and
property, it is mandatory that each 406
MHz PLB be registered with NOAA and
that information be kept up-to-date. In
addition to the identification plate or
label requirements contained in §§ 2.925
and 2.926 of this chapter, each 406 MHz
PLB must be provided on the outside
with a clearly discernable permanent
plate or label containing the following
statement: ‘‘The owner of this 406 MHz
PLB must register the NOAA
identification code contained on this
label with the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
whose address is: NOAA/SARSAT
Beacon Registration, NSOF, E/SPO53,
1315 East West Hwy, Silver Spring, MD
20910–9684.’’ Owners shall advise
NOAA in writing upon change of PLB
ownership, or any other change in
registration information. NOAA will
provide registrants with proof of
registration and change of registration
postcards.
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[FR Doc. 2014–30381 Filed 12–24–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 229
[Docket No. 1140325271–4999–02]
RIN 0648–BE13
List of Fisheries for 2015
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS) publishes its
final List of Fisheries (LOF) for 2015, as
required by the Marine Mammal
Protection Act (MMPA). The final LOF
for 2015 reflects new information on
interactions between commercial
fisheries and marine mammals. NMFS
must classify each commercial fishery
SUMMARY:
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on the LOF into one of three categories
under the MMPA based upon the level
of mortality and serious injury of marine
mammals that occurs incidental to each
fishery. The classification of a fishery on
the LOF determines whether
participants in that fishery are subject to
certain provisions of the MMPA, such as
registration, observer coverage, and take
reduction plan (TRP) requirements.
DATES: The effective date of this final
rule is January 28, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Chief, Marine Mammal and
Sea Turtle Conservation Division, Office
of Protected Resources, NMFS, 1315
East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD
20910.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lisa
White, Office of Protected Resources,
301–427–8494; Allison Rosner, Greater
Atlantic Region, 978–281–9328; Jessica
Powell, Southeast Region, 727–824–
5312; Elizabeth Petras, West Coast
Region (CA), 562–980–3238; Brent
Norberg, West Coast Region (WA/OR),
206–526–6550; Kim Rivera, Alaska
Region, 907–586–7424; Nancy Young,
Pacific Islands Region, 808–725–5156.
Individuals who use a
telecommunications device for the
hearing impaired may call the Federal
Information Relay Service at 1–800–
877–8339 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Eastern time, Monday through Friday,
excluding Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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What is the list of fisheries?
Section 118 of the MMPA requires
NMFS to place all U.S. commercial
fisheries into one of three categories
based on the level of incidental
mortality and serious injury of marine
mammals occurring in each fishery (16
U.S.C. 1387(c)(1)). The classification of
a fishery on the LOF determines
whether participants in that fishery may
be required to comply with certain
provisions of the MMPA, such as
registration, observer coverage, and take
reduction plan requirements. NMFS
must reexamine the LOF annually,
considering new information in the
Marine Mammal Stock Assessment
Reports (SARs) and other relevant
sources, and publish in the Federal
Register any necessary changes to the
LOF after notice and opportunity for
public comment (16 U.S.C. 1387
(c)(1)(C)).
How does NMFS determine in which
category a fishery is placed?
The definitions for the fishery
classification criteria can be found in
the implementing regulations for section
118 of the MMPA (50 CFR 229.2). The
criteria are also summarized here.
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Fishery Classification Criteria
The fishery classification criteria
consist of a two-tiered, stock-specific
approach that first addresses the total
impact of all fisheries on each marine
mammal stock and then addresses the
impact of individual fisheries on each
stock. This approach is based on
consideration of the rate, in numbers of
animals per year, of incidental
mortalities and serious injuries of
marine mammals due to commercial
fishing operations relative to the
potential biological removal (PBR) level
for each marine mammal stock. The
MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1362 (20)) defines the
PBR level as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural
mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing
that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population. This
definition can also be found in the
implementing regulations for section
118 of the MMPA (50 CFR 229.2).
Tier 1: If the total annual mortality
and serious injury of a marine mammal
stock, across all fisheries, is less than or
equal to 10 percent of the PBR level of
the stock, all fisheries interacting with
the stock will be placed in Category III
(unless those fisheries interact with
other stock(s) in which total annual
mortality and serious injury is greater
than 10 percent of PBR). Otherwise,
these fisheries are subject to the next
tier (Tier 2) of analysis to determine
their classification.
Tier 2, Category I: Annual mortality
and serious injury of a stock in a given
fishery is greater than or equal to 50
percent of the PBR level (i.e., frequent
incidental mortality and serious injury
of marine mammals).
Tier 2, Category II: Annual mortality
and serious injury of a stock in a given
fishery is greater than 1 percent and less
than 50 percent of the PBR level (i.e.,
occasional incidental mortality and
serious injury of marine mammals).
Tier 2, Category III: Annual mortality
and serious injury of a stock in a given
fishery is less than or equal to 1 percent
of the PBR level (i.e., a remote
likelihood of or no known incidental
mortality and serious injury of marine
mammals).
While Tier 1 considers the cumulative
fishery mortality and serious injury for
a particular stock, Tier 2 considers
fishery-specific mortality and serious
injury for a particular stock. Additional
details regarding how the categories
were determined are provided in the
preamble to the final rule implementing
section 118 of the MMPA (60 FR 45086,
August 30, 1995).
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Because fisheries are classified on a
per-stock basis, a fishery may qualify as
one Category for one marine mammal
stock and another Category for a
different marine mammal stock. A
fishery is typically classified on the LOF
at its highest level of classification (e.g.,
a fishery qualifying for Category III for
one marine mammal stock and for
Category II for another marine mammal
stock will be listed under Category II).
Stocks driving a fishery’s classification
are denoted with a superscript ‘‘1’’ in
Tables 1 and 2.
Other Criteria That May Be Considered
The tier analysis requires a minimum
amount of data, and NMFS does not
have sufficient data to perform a tier
analysis on certain fisheries. Therefore,
NMFS has classified certain fisheries by
analogy to other Category I or II fisheries
that use similar fishing techniques or
gear that are known to cause mortality
or serious injury of marine mammals, or
according to factors discussed in the
final LOF for 1996 (60 FR 67063,
December 28, 1995) and listed in the
regulatory definition of a Category II
fishery: ‘‘In the absence of reliable
information indicating the frequency of
incidental mortality and serious injury
of marine mammals by a commercial
fishery, NMFS will determine whether
the incidental mortality or serious
injury is ‘frequent,’ ‘occasional,’ or
‘remote’ by evaluating other factors such
as fishing techniques, gear used,
methods used to deter marine mammals,
target species, seasons and areas fished,
qualitative data from logbooks or fisher
reports, stranding data, and the species
and distribution of marine mammals in
the area, or at the discretion of the
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries’’
(50 CFR 229.2).
Further, eligible commercial fisheries
not specifically identified on the LOF
are deemed to be Category II fisheries
until the next LOF is published (50 CFR
229.2).
How does NMFS determine which
species or stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a
fishery?
The LOF includes a list of marine
mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in each
commercial fishery. The list of species
and/or stocks incidentally killed or
injured includes ‘‘serious’’ and ‘‘nonserious’’ documented injuries as
described later in the List of Species
and/or Stocks Incidentally Killed or
Injured in the Pacific Ocean and the
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean sections. To determine which
species and stocks are included as
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incidentally killed or injured in a
fishery, NMFS annually reviews the
information presented in the current
SARs. The SARs are based upon the best
available scientific information and
provide the most current and inclusive
information on each stock’s PBR level
and level of interaction with
commercial fishing operations. The best
available scientific information used in
the SARs reviewed for the 2015 LOF
generally summarizes data from 2007–
2011. NMFS also reviews other sources
of new information, including injury
determination reports, bycatch
estimation reports, observer data,
logbook data, stranding data,
disentanglement network data, fisher
self-reports (i.e. MMPA reports), and
anecdotal reports from that time period.
Where does NMFS obtain information
on the level of observer coverage in a
fishery on the LOF?
The best available information on the
level of observer coverage and the
spatial and temporal distribution of
observed marine mammal interactions is
presented in the SARs. Data obtained
from the observer program and observer
coverage levels are important tools in
estimating the level of marine mammal
mortality and serious injury in
commercial fishing operations. Starting
with the 2005 SARs, each SAR includes
an appendix with detailed descriptions
of each Category I and II fishery on the
LOF, including the observer coverage in
those fisheries. The SARs generally do
not provide detailed information on
observer coverage in Category III
fisheries because, under the MMPA,
Category III fisheries are generally not
required to accommodate observers
aboard vessels due to the remote
likelihood of mortality and serious
injury of marine mammals. Fishery
information presented in the SARs’
appendices and other resources
referenced during the tier analysis may
include: Level of observer coverage,
target species, levels of fishing effort,
spatial and temporal distribution of
fishing effort, characteristics of fishing
gear and operations, management and
regulations, and interactions with
marine mammals. Copies of the SARs
are available on the NMFS Office of
Protected Resources Web site at:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/.
Information on observer coverage levels
in Category I and II fisheries can also be
found in the Category I and II fishery
fact sheets on the NMFS Office of
Protected Resources’ Web site: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/
lof/. Additional information on observer
programs in commercial fisheries can be
found on the NMFS National Observer
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Program’s Web site: https://
www.st.nmfs.gov/st4/nop/.
How do I find out if a specific fishery
is in category I, II, or III?
This rule includes three tables that
list all U.S. commercial fisheries by LOF
Category. Table 1 lists all of the
commercial fisheries in the Pacific
Ocean (including Alaska); Table 2 lists
all of the commercial fisheries in the
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean; and Table 3 lists all U.S.authorized commercial fisheries on the
high seas. A fourth table, Table 4, lists
all commercial fisheries managed under
applicable TRPs or take reduction teams
(TRTs).
Are high seas fisheries included on the
LOF?
Beginning with the 2009 LOF, NMFS
includes high seas fisheries in Table 3
of the LOF, along with the number of
valid High Seas Fishing Compliance Act
(HSFCA) permits in each fishery. As of
2004, NMFS issues HSFCA permits only
for high seas fisheries analyzed in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The
authorized high seas fisheries are broad
in scope and encompass multiple
specific fisheries identified by gear type.
For the purposes of the LOF, the high
seas fisheries are subdivided based on
gear type (e.g., trawl, longline, purse
seine, gillnet, troll, etc.) to provide more
detail on composition of effort within
these fisheries. Many fisheries operate
in both U.S. waters and on the high
seas, creating some overlap between the
fisheries listed in Tables 1 and 2 and
those in Table 3. In these cases, the high
seas component of the fishery is not
considered a separate fishery, but an
extension of a fishery operating within
U.S. waters (listed in Table 1 or 2).
NMFS designates those fisheries in
Tables 1, 2, and 3 by a ‘‘*’’ after the
fishery’s name. The number of HSFCA
permits listed in Table 3 for the high
seas components of these fisheries
operating in U.S. waters does not
necessarily represent additional effort
that is not accounted for in Tables 1 and
2. Many vessels/participants holding
HSFCA permits also fish within U.S.
waters and are included in the number
of vessels and participants operating
within those fisheries in Tables 1 and 2.
HSFCA permits are valid for five
years, during which time FMPs can
change. Therefore, some vessels/
participants may possess valid HSFCA
permits without the ability to fish under
the permit because it was issued for a
gear type that is no longer authorized
under the most current FMP. For this
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reason, the number of HSFCA permits
displayed in Table 3 is likely higher
than the actual U.S. fishing effort on the
high seas. For more information on how
NMFS classifies high seas fisheries on
the LOF, see the preamble text in the
final 2009 LOF (73 FR 73032; December
1, 2008). Additional information about
HSFCA permits can be found at:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/permits/
highseas.html.
Where can I find specific information
on fisheries listed on the LOF?
Starting with the 2010 LOF, NMFS
developed summary documents, or
fishery fact sheets, for each Category I
and II fishery on the LOF. These fishery
fact sheets provide the full history of
each Category I and II fishery, including:
When the fishery was added to the LOF,
the basis for the fishery’s initial
classification, classification changes to
the fishery, changes to the list of species
and/or stocks incidentally killed or
injured in the fishery, fishery gear and
methods used, observer coverage levels,
fishery management and regulation, and
applicable TRPs or TRTs, if any. These
fishery fact sheets are updated after each
final LOF and can be found under ‘‘How
Do I Find Out if a Specific Fishery is in
Category I, II, or III?’’ on the NMFS
Office of Protected Resources’ Web site:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
interactions/lof/, linked to the ‘‘List of
Fisheries by Year’’ table. NMFS is
developing similar fishery fact sheets for
each Category III fishery on the LOF.
However, due to the large number of
Category III fisheries on the LOF and the
lack of accessible and detailed
information on many of these fisheries,
the development of these fishery fact
sheets is taking significant time to
complete. NMFS will begin posting
Category III fishery fact sheets online
with the final 2015 LOF.
Am I required to register under the
MMPA?
Owners of vessels or gear engaging in
a Category I or II fishery are required
under the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1387(c)(2)),
as described in 50 CFR 229.4, to register
with NMFS and obtain a marine
mammal authorization to lawfully take
non-endangered and non-threatened
marine mammals incidental to
commercial fishing operations. Owners
of vessels or gear engaged in a Category
III fishery are not required to register
with NMFS or obtain a marine mammal
authorization.
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How do I register and receive my
authorization certificate and mortality/
injury reporting forms?
NMFS has integrated the MMPA
registration process, implemented
through the Marine Mammal
Authorization Program (MMAP), with
existing state and Federal fishery
license, registration, or permit systems
for Category I and II fisheries on the
LOF. Participants in these fisheries are
automatically registered under the
MMAP and are not required to submit
registration or renewal materials
directly under the MMAP. In the Pacific
Islands, West Coast, and Alaska regions,
NMFS will issue vessel or gear owners
an authorization certificate and/or
mortality/injury reporting forms via U.S.
mail or with their state or Federal
license at the time of renewal. In the
Greater Atlantic Region, NMFS will
issue vessel or gear owners an
authorization certificate via U.S. mail
automatically at the beginning of each
calendar year; but vessel or gear owners
must request or print mortality/injury
reporting forms by contacting the NMFS
Greater Atlantic Regional Office at 978–
281–9328 or by visiting the Greater
Atlantic Regional Office Web site
(https://www.nero.noaa.gov/mmap). In
the Southeast region, NMFS will issue
vessel or gear owners notification of
registry and vessel or gear owners may
receive their authorization certificate
and/or mortality/injury reporting form
by contacting the Southeast Regional
Office at 727–209–5952 or by visiting
the Southeast Regional Office Web site
(https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/protected_
resources/marine_mammal_
authorization_program/) and following
the instructions for printing the
necessary documents. Mortality/injury
forms are also available online at
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/
interactions/mmap_reporting_form.pdf.
The authorization certificate, or a
copy, must be on board the vessel while
it is operating in a Category I or II
fishery, or for non-vessel fisheries, in
the possession of the person in charge
of the fishing operation (50 CFR
229.4(e)). Although efforts are made to
limit the issuance of authorization
certificates to only those vessel or gear
owners that participate in Category I or
II fisheries, not all state and Federal
permit systems distinguish between
fisheries as classified by the LOF.
Therefore, some vessel or gear owners in
Category III fisheries may receive
authorization certificates even though
they are not required for Category III
fisheries. Individuals fishing in Category
I and II fisheries for which no state or
Federal permit is required must register
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with NMFS by contacting their
appropriate Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES).
How do I renew my registration under
the MMAP?
In Alaska regional and Greater
Atlantic Regional fisheries, registrations
of vessel or gear owners are
automatically renewed and participants
should receive an authorization
certificate by January 1 of each new
year. In Pacific Islands regional
fisheries, vessel or gear owners receive
an authorization certificate by January 1
for state fisheries and with their permit
renewal for federal fisheries. In West
Coast regional fisheries, vessel or gear
owners receive authorization with each
renewed state fishing license, the timing
of which varies based on target species.
Vessel or gear owners who participate in
fisheries in these regions and have not
received authorization certificates by
January 1 or with renewed fishing
licenses must contact the appropriate
NMFS Regional Office (see ADDRESSES).
In Southeast regional fisheries, vessel
or gear owners’ registrations are
automatically renewed and participants
will receive a letter in the mail by
January 1 instructing them to contact
the Southeast Regional Office to have an
authorization certificate mailed to them
or to visit the Southeast Regional Office
Web site (https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/
protected_resources/marine_mammal_
authorization_program/) to print their
own certificate.
Am I required to submit reports when
I kill or injure a marine mammal
during the course of commercial fishing
operations?
In accordance with the MMPA (16
U.S.C. 1387(e)) and 50 CFR 229.6, any
vessel owner or operator, or gear owner
or operator (in the case of non-vessel
fisheries), participating in a fishery
listed on the LOF must report to NMFS
all incidental mortalities and injuries of
marine mammals that occur during
commercial fishing operations,
regardless of the category in which the
fishery is placed (I, II, or III) within 48
hours of the end of the fishing trip or,
in the case of non-vessel fisheries,
fishing activity. ‘‘Injury’’ is defined in
50 CFR 229.2 as a wound or other
physical harm. In addition, any animal
that ingests fishing gear or any animal
that is released with fishing gear
entangling, trailing, or perforating any
part of the body is considered injured,
regardless of the presence of any wound
or other evidence of injury, and must be
reported. Mortality/injury reporting
forms and instructions for submitting
forms to NMFS can be downloaded
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from: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
pdfs/interactions/mmap_reporting_
form.pdf or by contacting the
appropriate Regional office (see
ADDRESSES). Forms may be faxed
directly to the NMFS Office of Protected
Resources at 301–713–4060 or 301–713–
0376. Reporting requirements and
procedures can be found in 50 CFR
229.6.
Am I required to take an observer
aboard my vessel?
Individuals participating in a
Category I or II fishery are required to
accommodate an observer aboard their
vessel(s) upon request from NMFS.
MMPA section 118 states that the
Secretary is not required to place an
observer on a vessel if the facilities for
quartering an observer or performing
observer functions are inadequate or
unsafe; thereby authorizing the
exemption of vessels too small to
accommodate an observer from this
requirement. However, vessels will not
be exempted from observer
requirements regardless of their size, for
U.S. Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, or Gulf
of Mexico large pelagics longline vessels
operating in special areas designated by
the Pelagic Longline Take Reduction
Plan implementing regulations (50 CFR
229.36(d)). Observer requirements can
be found in 50 CFR 229.7.
Am I required to comply with any
marine mammal take reduction plan
regulations?
Table 4 in this rule provides a list of
fisheries affected by TRPs and TRTs.
TRP regulations can be found at 50 CFR
229.30 through 229.37. A description of
each TRT and copies of each TRP can
be found at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
pr/interactions/trt/. It is the
responsibility of fishery participants to
comply with applicable take reduction
regulations.
Where can I find more information
about the LOF and the MMAP?
Information regarding the LOF and
the Marine Mammal Authorization
Program, including registration
procedures and forms, current and past
LOFs, information on each Category I
and II fishery, observer requirements,
and marine mammal mortality/injury
reporting forms and submittal
procedures, may be obtained at: https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/
lof/, or from any NMFS Regional Office
at the addresses listed below:
NMFS, Greater Atlantic Regional
Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930–2298,
Attn: Allison Rosner;
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NMFS, Southeast Region, 263 13th
Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701,
Attn: Jessica Powell;
NMFS, West Coast Region, Long
Beach Office, 501 W. Ocean Blvd., Suite
4200, Long Beach, CA 90802–4213,
Attn: Elizabeth Petras;
NMFS, West Coast Region, Seattle
Office, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115, Attn: Brent Norberg,
Protected Resources Division;
NMFS, Alaska Region, Protected
Resources, P.O. Box 22668, 709 West
9th Street, Juneau, AK 99802, Attn: Kim
Rivera; or
NMFS, Pacific Islands Regional
Office, Protected Resources Division,
1845 Wasp Blvd., Building 176,
Honolulu, HI 96818, Attn: Nancy
Young.
Sources of Information Reviewed for
the 2015 LOF
NMFS reviewed the marine mammal
incidental mortality and serious injury
information presented in the SARs for
all fisheries to determine whether
changes in fishery classification are
warranted. The SARs are based on the
best scientific information available at
the time of preparation, including the
level of mortality and serious injury of
marine mammals that occurs incidental
to commercial fishery operations and
the PBR levels of marine mammal
stocks. The information contained in the
SARs is reviewed by regional Scientific
Review Groups (SRGs) representing
Alaska, the Pacific (including Hawaii),
and the U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico,
and Caribbean. The SRGs were created
by the MMPA to review the science that
informs the SARs, and to advise NMFS
on marine mammal population status,
trends, and stock structure,
uncertainties in the science, research
needs, and other issues.
NMFS also reviewed other sources of
new information, including marine
mammal stranding data, observer
program data, fisher self-reports through
the Marine Mammal Authorization
Program, reports to the SRGs,
conference papers, FMPs, and ESA
documents.
The LOF for 2015 was based on,
among other things, information
provided in the NEPA and ESA
documents analyzing authorized high
seas fisheries; stranding data; fishermen
self-reports through the MMAP; and
SARs, primarily the 2013 SARs, which
are generally based on data from 2007–
2011. The final SARs referenced in this
LOF include: 2007 (73 FR 21111, April
18, 2008), 2008 (74 FR 19530, April 29,
2009), 2009 (75 FR 12498, March 16,
2010), 2010 (76 FR 34054, June 10,
2011), 2011 (77 FR 29969, May 21,
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2012), and 2012 (78 FR 19446, April, 1
2013), and 2013 (79 FR 49053, August
19, 2014). The SARs are available at:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received four comment letters
on the proposed LOF for 2015 (79 FR
50589, August 25, 2014). Comments
were received from the Center for
Biological Diversity (CBD), Hawaii
Department of Land and Natural
Resources (DLNR), Hawaii Longline
Association (HLA), and Oceana.
Comments on issues outside of the
scope of the LOF were noted, but
generally without response.
General Comments
Comment 1: CBD states that the List
of Fisheries is the first step in fisheries’
registration and authorization and asks
NMFS to re-examine its practice of
registering and authorizing fisheries
under section 118 without also
authorizing take of threatened and
endangered marine mammals under
section 101(a)(5)(E).
Response: The List of Fisheries
categorizes each commercial fishery
based on the definitions of Category I,
II, and III fisheries set forth at 50 CFR
229.2. Publication of the List of
Fisheries does not authorize take of
threatened or endangered marine
mammals incidental to commercial
fishing. Under section 101(a)(5)(E) of the
MMPA, NMFS issues permits for the
incidental taking of threatened or
endangered species listed under the
Endangered Species Act, if it can be
determined that (1) mortality and
serious injury incidental to commercial
fisheries would have a negligible impact
on the affected species or stock, (2) a
recovery plan for that species or stock
has been developed or is being
developed, and (3) where required
under section 118, a monitoring
program has been established, vessels
are registered, and a take reduction plan
has been developed or is being
developed. NMFS publishes a separate
list of fisheries that have met these
conditions in the Federal Register.
Participants in fisheries that are not
included on that list remain subject to
the ESA prohibition against taking
marine mammals from endangered or
threatened stocks.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in
the Pacific Ocean
Comment 2: HLA contends that the
Hawaii-based deep-set longline fishery
does not interact with Main Hawaiian
Islands (MHI) insular false killer whales.
HLA commented that there has never
been a documented interaction between
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the fishery and an animal from the MHI
insular stock, and there are no data or
other scientific information to support
attribution of MHI insular false killer
whale interactions to the deep-set
fishery. HLA opposes including the
stock on the list of marine mammals
killed or injured in the deep-set fishery.
Response: NMFS determines which
species or stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a
fishery by annually reviewing the
information presented in the current
stock assessment reports (SARs), among
other relevant sources. The SARs are
based on the best available scientific
information and provide the most
current and inclusive information on
each stock, including range, abundance,
PBR, and level of interaction with
commercial fishing operations. The LOF
does not separately evaluate the data
and calculations contained within the
SARs.
The 2015 LOF is based on the 2013
SARs, which report fishery interactions
from 2007–2011. During that time
period, observers recorded one
interaction with an unidentified
blackfish (i.e., identified as either a
short-finned pilot whale or a false killer
whale) within the overlap zone shared
by pelagic and MHI insular false killer
whales (40–140 km from the main
Hawaiian Islands). Based on NMFS’
proration models (for blackfish and for
false killer whales of unknown stock
identity), and an expansion of observed
interactions to fleet-wide estimates,
NMFS estimates a 5-year average
mortality and serious injury level of 0.1
MHI insular false killer whales per year
incidental to the Hawaii-based deep-set
longline fishery from 2007–2011
(Carretta et al., 2014).
NMFS is retaining the stock on the list
of marine mammal stocks incidentally
killed or injured in the Hawaii deep-set
longline fishery. For a more complete
analysis of the methodology for
determining mortality and serious
injury of MHI insular false killer whales,
the commenter is referred to the 2013
SAR.
Comment 3: HLA opposes the
continued inclusion of short-finned
pilot whales on the list of species killed
or injured in the Hawaii-based shallowset longline fishery because it is not
supported by the available data. NMFS
has included the species because of a
single interaction on the high seas
involving an unidentified cetacean that
‘‘may have’’ been a short-finned pilot
whale. There have been no confirmed
short-finned pilot whale interactions in
the shallow-set fishery. HLA states that
in the absence of data confirming that
the fishery is interacting with short-
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finned pilot whales, NMFS may not add
the species to the list of species or
stocks that are incidentally killed or
injured by the fishery.
Response: The 2013 SAR for the
Hawaii stock of short-finned pilot
whales states that two unidentified
cetaceans, known to be either false killer
whales or short-finned pilot whales (i.e.,
‘‘blackfish’’), were observed seriously
injured in the shallow-set longline
fishery on the high seas from 2007–2011
(Carretta et al., 2014). When the species
of a blackfish cannot be positively
identified, NMFS prorates the
interaction to each species based on
distance from shore (McCracken, 2010).
Until all animals that are taken can be
identified to either species (e.g., using
photos, tissue samples), this prorating
approach constitutes the best available
information and ensures that potential
impacts to all species and stocks are
assessed. Based on this approach, the
estimated average annual mortality and
serious injury of short-finned pilot
whales in the fishery on the high seas
from 2007–2011 is 0.1 (Carretta et al.,
2014). The Western Pacific Pelagic
longline (HI shallow-set) fishery is the
high seas component of the HI shallowset longline fishery. Because the fishery
operating in U.S. waters and the high
seas component of the fishery pose the
same risk to marine mammals, NMFS
maintains identical lists of marine
mammals killed or injured in the
fisheries. Therefore, NMFS is retaining
short-finned pilot whales on the list of
species or stocks that are incidentally
killed or injured by the fishery.
Comment 4: HLA commented that
pygmy or dwarf sperm whales should
not be included in the list of species
killed or injured in the Hawaii shallowset longline fishery, because the MMPA
requires NMFS to list the species in the
LOF that are killed or seriously injured
by a fishery. HLA cites the 2013 SAR,
which reports a single interaction with
a pygmy or dwarf sperm whale in 2008
that was classified as a non-serious
injury.
Response: As described in the
preamble to this final rule and in the
MMPA implementing regulations (50
CFR 299.8(b)(2)), the LOF includes a list
of marine mammal species or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in each
commercial fishery. While fishery
classifications on the LOF are
determined via the tier analysis process,
which, as described in the preamble to
the proposed LOF, evaluates the level of
mortality and serious injury of marine
mammals relative to the stocks’ PBR
levels, the list of species and/or stocks
killed or injured is more inclusive, and
also includes those that have been non-
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seriously injured. Therefore, it is
appropriate to include Kogia species
whale (pygmy or dwarf sperm whale) in
the list for the Hawaii shallow-set
longline fishery, given the documented
non-serious injury in 2008 (Carretta et
al., 2014).
Comment 5: HLA notes that for
fisheries that operate both in the U.S.
EEZ and on the high seas, marine
mammal species for which an
interaction has occurred in either the
EEZ or the high seas are included on the
lists of species killed or injured in both
the EEZ and the high seas (i.e., on both
Tables 1 or 2 and Table 3). This results
in a mistaken implication that a given
fishery may interact with a certain
species in one geographic area (e.g.,
within the EEZ) when that fishery has
only been observed to interact with the
species in another geographic area (e.g.,
on the high seas). HLA requests that
NMFS correct the LOF to only attribute
species interactions in transboundary
fisheries to those geographic regions
where interactions are actually
observed. This change would not result
in underreporting of species killed or
injured, but would avoid the arbitrary
result of takes being attributed to
fisheries in areas in which no take has
ever been observed.
Response: As described in the
preamble, NMFS has included high seas
fisheries in Table 3 of the LOF since
2009. Several fisheries operate in both
U.S. waters and on the high seas,
creating some overlap between the
fisheries listed in Tables 1 and 2 and
those in Table 3. In these cases, the high
seas component of the fishery is not
considered a separate fishery, but an
extension of a fishery operating within
U.S. waters. For these fisheries, the lists
of species and/or stocks killed or
injured in Table 3 are identical to their
Table 1 or 2 counterparts, except for
those species or stocks with
distributions known to occur on only
one side of the EEZ boundary. Because
the fisheries and the marine mammal
lists are the same, takes of these animals
are not being attributed to one
geographic area or the other, even when
that information may be available. This
parallel list structure is explained in the
footnotes for each table.
Comment 6: CBD recommends that
NMFS conduct a Tier 2 analysis for the
HI crab trap fishery because the total
fishery-related mortality and serious
injury (M/SI) of Central North Pacific
(CNP) humpback whales (7.45 per year,
as cited in Allen and Angliss, 2013; or
9.35 per year, as cited in NMFS’ draft
Negligible Impact Determination (79 FR
33726, June 12, 2014) exceeds 10% of
the stock’s PBR level. Further, CBD
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recommends that NMFS reclassify the
HI crab trap fishery as Category II
because reported entanglements of CNP
humpback whales likely underestimate
actual entanglements, and M/SI in the
fishery likely exceeds 1% of the stock’s
PBR level. Given that the HI crab trap’s
5-year annual average M/SI (0.55/yr)
based on reported entanglements is just
barely below 1% of PBR, if only one
CNP humpback whale entanglement
went unreported, M/SI would exceed
1% of PBR, necessitating a Category II
classification.
Response: The level of commercial
fishery-related M/SI of CNP humpback
whales evaluated in the proposed LOF
(1.1/year) was based on the number of
confirmed commercial fishery-related
M/SI presented in the draft 2013 Alaska
SAR (0.55 from observer data in Alaska
(0.40) and Hawaii (0.15); Allen and
Angliss, 2013), plus unpublished values
for M/SI attributed to the HI crab trap
fishery (0.55). Using these values, a Tier
1 analysis indicated total commercial
fishery-related M/SI was less than 10%
of PBR, so a Tier 2 analysis was not
necessary.
The commenter cites two alternative
values for total commercial fisheriesrelated M/SI for CNP humpback whales.
The first, 7.45 M/SI per year, is also
from Allen and Angliss (2013), but
includes not only the 0.55 M/SI per year
described above from observer data in
Alaska and Hawaii fisheries, but also
2.15 and 4.75 M/SI per year from Alaska
and Hawaii stranding response
networks, respectively. The interactions
reported from stranding networks and
responses cannot or have not been
confirmed to be from commercial
fisheries, and are thus not appropriate to
be included in the tier analysis.
The second alternative M/SI value
cited by the commenter, 9.35 M/SI per
year, is described in NMFS’ draft
Negligible Impact Determination for
CNP humpbacks, Hawaii sperm whales,
and MHI insular false killer whales. The
page of the NID cited by the commenter
(p. 38) notes that this value includes
both commercial and recreational takes.
The value of 9.35 M/SI per year is not
appropriate to include in the LOF tier
analysis, which focuses exclusively on
M/SI in commercial fisheries. If, in the
future, the responsible fishery or
fisheries involved in the interactions
can be identified and M/SI attributed to
commercial fisheries, they will be
considered in future tier analyses. Effort
is ongoing in both regions to identify
fisheries from the entangling gear.
Although we do not accept the
accuracy of the commenter’s values, we
find that even if we apply them to the
tier analysis the Category III
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classification remains unchanged. In
both cases, total fisheries-related M/SI
would exceed 10% of PBR (7.45/61.2 is
12.1% of PBR, and 9.35/61.2 is 15.3%
of PBR). A Tier 2 analysis finds that the
HI crab trap fishery’s 5-year average M/
SI from 2007–2011 is 0.55 per year,
which is 0.9% of the stock’s PBR. This
is less than 1% of the stock’s PBR level,
so a Category III classification is
warranted. At this time, we cannot
speculate on the likely impacts of
unreported or unobserved interactions,
and instead rely on the data described
above.
Comment 7: DLNR provided
information regarding measures of
participation in various fisheries,
including that the State of Hawaii does
not issue fishery-specific licenses for
commercial fisheries. DLNR commented
that it may be misleading to list in the
LOF the number of licensed commercial
fishers who reported using the gear type
at least once during the fishing year
period, without considering how many
times that person used the gear.
Response: Section 118(c)(1) of the
Marine Mammal Protection Act states
that the Secretary shall include ‘‘the
approximate number of vessels or
persons actively involved in, each such
fishery.’’ NMFS acknowledges that the
Hawaii commercial fishing license is
not specific to a fishery or gear type, and
that the state-reported estimation of
vessels/persons reflects the number of
licensed fishermen who reported using
the gear at least once during the fishing
year period. The estimated number of
vessels or persons column is intended to
provide the best available
approximation of active participation in
the fishery for descriptive purposes and
will not be used in determining current
or future management of fisheries or
observer coverage designations, if
applicable.
Comment 8: DLNR commented that
several fisheries managed by DLNR pose
little to no risk to marine mammals,
including the Hawaii Kona crab loop net
fishery, Hawaii fish pond, Hawaii
handpick, and Hawaii lobster diving
fisheries. In these cases, DLNR urges
NMFS to make it abundantly clear that
there is a high degree of certainty that
these fisheries pose minimal risk to
marine mammals, and urges NMFS to
delineate clear criteria with respect to
when a commercial fishery should be
removed from the LOF.
Response: NMFS recognizes that the
fisheries referenced by DAR have a
remote likelihood of incidental
mortality or serious injury of marine
mammals and maintains their
classification as Category III on the Final
LOF for 2015. The LOF is a complete
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list of all U.S. commercial fisheries.
Fisheries are not removed from the LOF
based on their posing a minimal risk to
marine mammals. Instead, fisheries are
removed from the LOF when there are
no active permit/license holders, the
gear is no longer authorized and permits
are no longer given, or when a name
change incorporates the fishery under a
different name on the LOF.
Comment 9: DLNR supported several
proposed changes to the LOF, including
the addition of the Hawaii aquarium
collecting fishery, removal of the Hawaii
lobster tangle net fishery, removal of
Hawaii charter vessel fishery, splitting
of the Hawaii troll fishery into the troll
and rod and reel fisheries, addition of
the Central North Pacific stock of
humpback whale to the list of species
killed or injured in the Hawaii crab trap
fishery, and removal of the Hawaiian
monk seal from the list of species killed
or injured in the Hawaii lobster trap
fishery. DLNR also provided a
description of the Hawaii aquarium
collecting fishery.
Response: NMFS appreciates DLNR’s
support and collaboration in developing
these changes. NMFS is finalizing the
changes mentioned by the commenter,
as proposed. NMFS will also use the
information provided by DLNR in the
description of the Hawaii aquarium
collecting fishery in the fishery’s fact
sheet, which is being developed for
release with a future LOF.
Comment 10: DLNR requested that
NMFS continue to work with DLNR to
review humpback whale interactions to
more fully understand them, to
accurately identify the fishery, and to
develop possible mitigation measures.
Response: NMFS will continue to
consult and work with DLNR to
evaluate and address humpback whale
entanglements.
Comment 11: Oceana recommends
that NMFS add the CA/OR/WA stock of
short-finned pilot whales and the
Eastern North Pacific stock of gray
whales to the list of species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured in
the CA thresher shark/swordfish drift
gillnet fishery based on a 2013/2014
fishing season observer report.
Response: To determine which
species and stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a
fishery, NMFS annually reviews the
information presented in the current
SARs. The SARs are based upon the best
available scientific information and
provide the most current and inclusive
information on each stock’s PBR level
and level of interaction with
commercial fishing operations. The best
available scientific information used in
the SARs reviewed for the 2015 LOF
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generally summarizes data from 2007–
2011. NMFS also reviews other sources
of new information, including injury
determination reports, bycatch
estimation reports, observer data,
logbook data, stranding data,
disentanglement network data, fisher
self-reports (i.e. MMPA reports), and
anecdotal reports from that time period.
The observed interactions referenced by
the commenter will be evaluated in a
future LOF.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in
the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean
Comment 12: CBD recommends that
NMFS add the Gulf of Maine stock of
humpback whales to the list of species/
stocks incidentally killed or injured in
the Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark
gillnet fishery based on a March 2012
self-report.
Response: The humpback whale
entanglement in March 2012 occurred
in a gillnet targeting smooth dogfish
(also known as smooth hound)
approximately two miles offshore of
Hatteras, North Carolina. The smooth
dogfish gillnet fishery is included in the
larger Category I Mid-Atlantic Gillnet
fishery, which already lists the Gulf of
Maine stock of humpback whales as a
marine mammal stock that is
incidentally killed or injured in this
fishery (see: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
pr/pdfs/fisheries/lof2012/midatlantic_
gillnet.pdf). Therefore, we are not
adding the Gulf of Maine humpback
whale stock to the Southeastern U.S.
Atlantic shark gillnet fishery.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in
the High Seas
Comment 13: CBD recommends that
the Pacific Highly Migratory Species
(HMS) drift gillnet fishery be listed as
Category I because it includes an
extension of the Category I CA thresher
shark/swordfish drift gillnet (≥14 in
mesh) fishery. CBD also recommends
that NMFS revise the number of HSFCA
permits based on a 2013 biological
opinion that reports no observed drift
gillnet effort on the high seas since 2001
(NMFS, 2013).
Response: NMFS agrees that when the
CA thresher shark/swordfish drift
gillnet (≥14 in mesh) fishery was
reclassified as Category I on Table 1 in
2013, the Pacific HMS drift gillnet
fishery should have also been elevated
to Category I in Table 3 because it is an
extension of the Table 1 fishery.
Therefore, NMFS corrects this
administrative error and clarifies that
the Pacific HMS drift gillnet is a
Category I fishery. NMFS finds no error
in the number of HSFCA permits listed
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on Table 3. As stated in the preamble,
HSFCA permits are valid for five years,
during which time FMPs can change.
Therefore, some vessels/participants
may possess valid HSFCA permits
without the ability to fish under the
permit because it was issued for a gear
type that is no longer authorized under
the most current FMP. For this reason,
the number of HSFCA permits
displayed in Table 3 is likely higher
than the actual U.S. fishing effort on the
high seas.
Summary of Changes From the
Proposed Rule
NMFS corrects an administrative error
and elevates the Pacific HMS drift
gillnet fishery from Category II to
Category I. As an extension of the
Category I CA thresher shark/swordfish
drift gillnet (≥14 in mesh) fishery,
Pacific HMS should have been moved to
Category I in 2013 when the CA thresher
shark/swordfish drift gillnet (≥14 in
mesh) fishery was reclassified.
Summary of Changes to the LOF for
2015
The following summarizes changes to
the LOF for 2015, including the fisheries
listed in the LOF, the estimated number
of vessels/persons in a particular
fishery, and the species and/or stocks
that are incidentally killed or injured in
a particular fishery. As described above
(see ‘‘Summary of Changes From the
Proposed Rule’’), the LOF for 2015
corrects an administrative error and
moves the Pacific HMS drift gillnet
fishery to Category I. Additionally,
NMFS adds 7 Category III fisheries to
the LOF and removes 6 fisheries from
the LOF. The LOF for 2015 does not
include any other changes to fishery
classifications or to fisheries that are
subject to a take reduction plan. NMFS
makes changes to the list of species and/
or stocks killed or injured in certain
fisheries and the estimated number of
vessels/persons in certain fisheries, as
well as certain administrative changes.
The classifications and definitions of
U.S. commercial fisheries for 2015 are
identical to those provided in the LOF
for 2014 with the exception of those
changes discussed below. State and
regional abbreviations used in the
following paragraphs include: AK
(Alaska), CA (California), DE (Delaware),
FL (Florida), GMX (Gulf of Mexico), HI
(Hawaii), MA (Massachusetts), ME
(Maine), NC (North Carolina), NY (New
York), OR (Oregon), RI (Rhode Island),
SC (South Carolina), VA (Virginia), WA
(Washington), and WNA (Western North
Atlantic).
Commercial Fisheries in the Pacific
Ocean
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds ‘‘HI aquarium collecting’’
as a Category III fishery.
Removal of Fisheries
NMFS removes the following
Category III fisheries from the LOF: ‘‘OR
salmon ranch,’’ ‘‘WA herring brush
weir,’’ ‘‘WA herring spawn on kelp,’’
‘‘CA abalone,’’ ‘‘HI lobster tangle net,’’
and ‘‘HI charter vessel.’’
Fishery Name and Organizational
Changes and Clarification
NMFS renames the Category II ‘‘WA
coastal Dungeness crab pot/trap’’ fishery
to ‘‘WA coastal Dungeness crab pot.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘WA/
OR North Pacific halibut longline/
setline’’ to the ‘‘WA/OR Pacific halibut
longline.’’
NMFS renames the Category III
‘‘Coastwide scallop dredge’’ fishery to
the ‘‘Alaska scallop dredge.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘OR/
CA hagfish pot or trap’’ to the ‘‘WA/OR/
CA hagfish pot.’’
NMFS renames the Category I ‘‘HI
deep-set (tuna target) longline/set line’’
fishery to ‘‘HI deep-set longline.’’
NMFS renames the Category II ‘‘HI
shallow-set (swordfish target) longline/
set line’’ fishery to ‘‘HI shallow-set
longline.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘HI
opelu/akule net’’ fishery to ‘‘HI lift net.’’
NMFS renames Category III ‘‘HI
hukilau net’’ fishery to ‘‘HI seine net.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘HI
vertical longline’’ fishery to ‘‘HI vertical
line.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘HI
MHI deep-sea bottomfish handline’’
fishery to ‘‘HI bottomfish handline.’’
NMFS renames the Category III ‘‘HI
tuna handline’’ fishery to ‘‘HI pelagic
handline.’’
NMFS splits the Category III ‘‘CA
coonstripe shrimp, rock crab, tanner
crab pot or trap’’ fishery into two
Category III fisheries, ‘‘CA/OR
coonstripe shrimp pot’’ and ‘‘CA rock
crab pot’’, and eliminates the tanner
crab component of the pot fishery.
NMFS splits the Category III ‘‘HI
trolling, rod and reel’’ fishery into two
separate Category III fisheries, the ‘‘HI
troll’’ and ‘‘HI rod and reel’’ fisheries.
Number of Vessels/Persons
NMFS updates the estimated number
of vessels/persons in the Pacific Ocean
(Table 1) as follows. Fisheries are
labeled with their name on the 2015
LOF:
Number of
vessels/persons
(final 2014 LOF)
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Category
Fishery
I .....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
HI deep-set longline .....................................................................................................
AK Bristol Bay salmon drift gillnet ...............................................................................
AK Bristol Bay salmon set gillnet .................................................................................
AK Cook Inlet salmon set gillnet ..................................................................................
AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon drift gillnet ......................................................
AK Yakutat salmon set gillnet ......................................................................................
AK Cook Inlet salmon purse seine ..............................................................................
AK Kodiak salmon purse seine ....................................................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands flatfish trawl .............................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands pollock trawl ............................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish trawl ...........................................................
HI shallow-set longline .................................................................................................
American Samoa longline ............................................................................................
HI shortline ...................................................................................................................
AK Kuskokwim, Yukon, Norton Sound, Kotzebue salmon gillnet ...............................
AK miscellaneous finfish set gillnet .............................................................................
AK Prince William Sound salmon set gillnet ...............................................................
AK roe herring and food/bait herring gillnet .................................................................
HI inshore gillnet ..........................................................................................................
AK Southeast salmon purse seine ..............................................................................
AK miscellaneous finfish beach seine .........................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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E:\FR\FM\29DER1.SGM
129
1,863
982
738
114
167
82
379
34
95
10
20
24
11
1,702
2
30
990
36
415
1
29DER1
Number of
vessels/persons
(final 2015 LOF)
128
1,862
979
736
113
168
83
376
32
102
17
18
25
6
1,778
54
29
920
42
315
2
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Number of
vessels/persons
(final 2014 LOF)
Category
Fishery
III ...................
III ...................
III ...................
AK roe herring and food/bait herring beach seine ......................................................
AK roe herring and food/bait herring purse seine .......................................................
AK salmon purse seine (excluding salmon purse seine fisheries listed as Category
II).
HI lift net .......................................................................................................................
HI throw net, cast net ...................................................................................................
HI seine net ..................................................................................................................
AK North Pacific halibut, AK bottom fish, WA/OR/CA albacore, groundfish, bottom
fish, CA halibut non-salmonid troll fisheries.
AK salmon troll .............................................................................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod longline .................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish longline ......................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Greenland turbot longline ........................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands sablefish longline .....................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska halibut longline ...............................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod longline ........................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish longline .............................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska sablefish longline ............................................................................
AK halibut longline/set line (state and Federal waters) ...............................................
AK octopus/squid longline ............................................................................................
AK state-managed waters longline/setline (including sablefish, rockfish, lingcod, and
miscellaneous finfish).
HI kaka line ..................................................................................................................
HI vertical line ..............................................................................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Atka mackerel trawl .................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod trawl ......................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska flatfish trawl ....................................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod trawl .............................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska pollock trawl ...................................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish trawl ..................................................................................
AK shrimp otter trawl and beam trawl (statewide and Cook Inlet) ..............................
AK statewide miscellaneous finfish pot .......................................................................
AK Aleutian Islands sablefish pot ................................................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod pot .........................................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands crab pot ...................................................................
AK Bering Sea sablefish pot ........................................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska crab pot ..........................................................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod pot ................................................................................
AK Southeast Alaska crab pot .....................................................................................
AK Southeast Alaska shrimp pot .................................................................................
AK shrimp pot, except Southeast ................................................................................
HI crab trap ..................................................................................................................
HI fish trap ....................................................................................................................
HI shrimp trap ..............................................................................................................
HI crab net ...................................................................................................................
HI Kona crab loop net ..................................................................................................
AK octopus/squid handline ..........................................................................................
American Samoa bottomfish handline .........................................................................
HI aku boat, pole and line ............................................................................................
HI bottomfish handline .................................................................................................
HI inshore handline ......................................................................................................
HI pelagic handline ......................................................................................................
AK herring spawn on kelp pound net ..........................................................................
AK Southeast herring roe/food/bait pound net ............................................................
AK scallop dredge ........................................................................................................
AK clam ........................................................................................................................
AK herring spawn on kelp ............................................................................................
AK urchin and other fish/shellfish ................................................................................
HI fish pond ..................................................................................................................
HI handpick ..................................................................................................................
HI lobster diving ...........................................................................................................
HI spearfishing .............................................................................................................
...................
...................
...................
...................
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
III
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
III
III
III
III
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
List of Species and/or Stocks
Incidentally Killed or Injured in the
Pacific Ocean
NMFS updates the list of species and/
or stocks incidentally killed or injured
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:05 Dec 24, 2014
Jkt 235001
by fisheries in the Pacific Ocean (Table
1) as follows:
NMFS adds the Central North Pacific
stock of humpback whales to the list of
species and/or stocks killed or injured
in the Category III HI crab trap fishery.
PO 00000
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77927
Number of
vessels/persons
(final 2015 LOF)
6
367
935
10
356
936
22
29
26
1,320 (120 AK)
21
20
21
1,320 (180 AK)
2,008
154
0
36
28
1,302
107
0
291
2,280
2
1,323
1,908
45
3
4
22
855
92
25
295
2,197
3
464
17
9
9
93
41
62
62
34
33
243
8
68
296
6
389
154
415
274
210
9
9
4
6
48
0
12
3
567
378
459
411
4
108 (12 AK)
156
266
521
16
57
29
143
24
6
13
72
36
55
67
43
38
4
4
59
540
2
381
128
41
269
236
7
5
6
4
35
7
14
<3
578
376
484
409
2
108 (5 AK)
130
339
398
5
58
23
159
NMFS adds the South Central Alaska
stock of northern sea otters to the list of
species and/or stocks killed or injured
in the Category II AK Cook Inlet salmon
set gillnet fishery and the Category III
E:\FR\FM\29DER1.SGM
29DER1
77928
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
AK Prince William Sound set gillnet
fishery.
NMFS adds the Alaska stock of ringed
seals to the list of species and/or stocks
killed or injured in the Category III AK
Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod
trawl fishery and the Category III AK
Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod
longline fishery.
NMFS removes the Hawaiian monk
seal from the list of species and/or
stocks killed or injured in the Category
III HI bottomfish handline fishery
(formerly ‘‘HI Main Hawaiian Islands
deep-sea bottomfish handline’’) and the
Category III HI lobster trap fishery.
Commercial Fisheries in the Atlantic
Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds the following Category III
fisheries to the LOF: ‘‘Gulf of Maine sea
urchin dredge,’’ ‘‘Mid-Atlantic blue crab
dredge,’’ ‘‘Mid-Atlantic whelk dredge,’’
and ‘‘Mid-Atlantic soft shell clam
dredge’’.
List of Species and/or Stocks
Incidentally Killed or Injured in the
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean
NMFS updates the list of marine
mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in
commercial fisheries in the Atlantic,
Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean (Table 2)
as follows:
NMFS adds the Canadian East Coast
stock of minke whales, the Western
North Atlantic stock of Kogia species
whale (pygmy or dwarf sperm whale),
and the Western North Atlantic stock of
false killer whale and removes the
Western North Atlantic stock of
Northern bottlenose whale on the list of
species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured by the Category I Atlantic
Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico large
pelagics longline fishery.
NMFS adds the Florida stock of West
Indian manatee to the list of species
and/or stocks incidentally killed or
injured by the Category II Southeastern
U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shrimp
trawl fishery.
NMFS adds the Northern South
Carolina estuarine system stock of
bottlenose dolphins to the list of the
species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured in the Category II Atlantic
blue crab trap/pot fishery.
NMFS adds unknown stocks of
bottlenose dolphin and renames the
Central Florida coastal stock and
Northern Florida coastal stocks as
‘‘Bottlenose dolphin, unknown stocks’’
on the list of the species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the
Category II Southeastern U.S. Atlantic
shark gillnet fishery.
NMFS adds unknown stocks and the
Northern North Carolina estuarine
system stock of bottlenose dolphin and
renames the Southern North Carolina
estuarine system stock and the Southern
migratory coastal stock as ‘‘Bottlenose
dolphin, unknown stock’’ on the list of
the species and/or stocks incidentally
killed or injured in the Category II North
Carolina roe mullet stop net fishery.
NMFS adds two stocks of bottlenose
dolphins, Charleston estuarine system
and Southern migratory coastal, to the
list of the species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the
Category II Southeastern U.S. Atlantic,
Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl fishery.
NMFS adds the Northern South
Carolina estuarine system stock of
bottlenose dolphins to the list of species
and/or stocks incidentally killed or
injured in the Category III Southeast
Atlantic inshore gillnet fishery.
NMFS adds two stocks of bottlenose
dolphins, Choctawhatchee Bay and
Florida Bay, to the list of species and/
or stocks incidentally killed or injured
in the Category III Atlantic Ocean, Gulf
of Mexico, Caribbean commercial
passenger fishing vessel fishery.
NMFS removes the Western North
Atlantic stock of gray seal from the list
of species and/or stocks incidentally
killed or injured in the Category III Gulf
of Maine herring and Atlantic mackerel
stop seine/weir fishery.
NMFS removes the Western North
Atlantic stock of long-finned and shortfinned pilot whales from the list of
species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured in the Category I Mid-Atlantic
gillnet fishery.
NMFS makes the following
typographical corrections to the list of
marine mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured: Remove
Northern migratory coastal stock of
bottlenose dolphin from the NC roe
mullet stop net fishery; add Northern
migratory coastal stock of bottlenose
dolphin to, and remove Southern North
Carolina estuarine system stock of
bottlenose dolphin from, the VA pound
net fishery; add Gulf of Mexico stock of
Gervais beaked whale to the Atlantic
Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico large
pelagics longline; and corrects a stock
name listed under the Category III
Georgia cannonball jellyfish trawl
fishery from ‘‘Southern South Carolina/
Georgia’’ stock of bottlenose dolphins to
‘‘SC/GA coastal’’ stock.
Commercial Fisheries on the High Seas
Fishery Name and Organizational
Changes and Clarification
NMFS corrects an administrative error
and moves the Pacific HMS drift gillnet
fishery to Category I. As an extension of
the Category I CA thresher shark/
swordfish drift gillnet (≥14 in mesh)
fishery, Pacific HMS should have been
moved to Category I in 2013 when the
CA fishery was reclassified.
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds the following Category III
fisheries to the LOF: ‘‘Northwest
Atlantic trawl’’ and ‘‘Northwest Atlantic
bottom longline.’’
Number of Vessels/Persons
NMFS updates the estimated number
of HSFCA permits (Table 3) as follows:
Number of
HSFCA permits
(final 2014 LOF)
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Category
Fishery
I .....................
I .....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
II ....................
III ...................
III ...................
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Longline .................................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Deep-set component) .....................................................
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries Purse Seine ..................................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Shallow-set component) .................................................
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Handline/Pole and Line .........................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species Handline/Pole and Line ...........................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll Handline/Pole and Line ..................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic Handline/Pole and Line ........................................................
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Troll ........................................................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll .........................................................................................
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries Troll ...............................................................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species Liners Nei ................................................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species Longline ...................................................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species Purse Seine ............................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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E:\FR\FM\29DER1.SGM
84
124
40
28
3
46
9
5
4
33
2
3
101
8
29DER1
Number of
HSFCA permits
(final 2015 LOF)
83
128
38
18
2
41
8
3
2
35
3
1
100
5
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Number of
HSFCA permits
(final 2014 LOF)
Category
Fishery
III ...................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species Troll .........................................................................
List of Species and/or Stocks
Incidentally Killed or Injured in High
Seas Fisheries
NMFS updates the list of species and/
or stocks incidentally killed or injured
by fisheries in high seas fisheries (Table
3) as follows:
NMFS adds the Canadian East Coast
stock of minke whales, Kogia species
whale (pygmy or dwarf sperm whale),
Western North Atlantic stock of false
killer whales, Gulf of Mexico stock of
Risso’s dolphins, Gulf of Mexico
oceanic stock of killer whales, and
Western North Atlantic stock of
Pantropical spotted dolphins to the list
of species incidentally killed or injured
by the Category I Atlantic highly
migratory species longline fishery.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
List of Fisheries
The following tables set forth the list
of U.S. commercial fisheries according
to their classification under section 118
of the MMPA. Table 1 lists commercial
fisheries in the Pacific Ocean (including
Alaska); Table 2 lists commercial
fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of
Mexico, and Caribbean; Table 3 lists
commercial fisheries on the high seas;
and Table 4 lists fisheries affected by
TRPs or TRTs.
In Tables 1 and 2, the estimated
number of vessels or persons
participating in fisheries operating
within U.S. waters is expressed in terms
of the number of active participants in
the fishery, when possible. If this
information is not available, the
estimated number of vessels or persons
licensed for a particular fishery is
provided. If no recent information is
available on the number of participants,
vessels, or persons licensed in a fishery,
then the number from the most recent
LOF is used for the estimated number of
vessels or persons in the fishery. NMFS
acknowledges that, in some cases, these
estimates may be inflations of actual
effort, such as for many of the MidAtlantic and New England fisheries.
However, in these cases, the numbers
represent the potential effort for each
fishery, given the multiple gear types for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:05 Dec 24, 2014
Jkt 235001
which several state permits may allow.
Changes made to Mid-Atlantic and New
England fishery participants will not
affect observer coverage or bycatch
estimates, as observer coverage and
bycatch estimates are based on vessel
trip reports and landings data. Table 1
and 2 serve to provide a description of
the fishery’s potential effort (state and
Federal). If NMFS is able to extract more
accurate information on the gear types
used by state permit holders in the
future, the numbers will be updated to
reflect this change. For additional
information on fishing effort in fisheries
found on Table 1 or 2, contact the
relevant regional office (contact
information included above in
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION).
For high seas fisheries, Table 3 lists
the number of valid HSFCA permits
currently held. Although this likely
overestimates the number of active
participants in many of these fisheries,
the number of valid HSFCA permits is
the most reliable data on the potential
effort in high seas fisheries at this time.
As noted previously in this rule, the
number of HSFCA permits listed in
Table 3 for the high seas components of
fisheries that also operate within U.S.
waters does not necessarily represent
additional effort that is not accounted
for in Tables 1 and 2. Many vessels
holding HSFCA permits also fish within
U.S. waters and are included in the
number of vessels and participants
operating within those fisheries in
Tables 1 and 2.
Tables 1, 2, and 3 also list the marine
mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured (seriously
or non-seriously) in each fishery based
on SARs, injury determination reports,
bycatch estimation reports, observer
data, logbook data, stranding data,
disentanglement network data, fisher
self-reports (i.e. MMPA reports), and
anecdotal reports. The best available
scientific information included in these
reports is based on data through 2011.
This list includes all species and/or
stocks known to be killed or injured in
a given fishery but also includes species
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262
77929
Number of
HSFCA permits
(final 2015 LOF)
253
and/or stocks for which there are
anecdotal records of a mortality or
injury. Additionally, species identified
by logbook entries, stranding data, or
fishermen self-reports (i.e., MMPA
reports) may not be verified. In Tables
1 and 2, NMFS has designated those
species/stocks driving a fishery’s
classification (i.e., the fishery is
classified based on mortalities and
serious injuries of a marine mammal
stock that are greater than or equal to 50
percent [Category I], or greater than 1
percent and less than 50 percent
[Category II], of a stock’s PBR) by a ‘‘1’’
after the stock’s name.
In Tables 1 and 2, there are several
fisheries classified as Category II that
have no recent documented mortalities
or serious injuries of marine mammals,
or fisheries that did not result in a
mortality or serious injury rate greater
than 1 percent of a stock’s PBR level
based on known interactions. NMFS has
classified these fisheries by analogy to
other Category I or II fisheries that use
similar fishing techniques or gear that
are known to cause mortality or serious
injury of marine mammals, as discussed
in the final LOF for 1996 (60 FR 67063,
December 28, 1995), and according to
factors listed in the definition of a
‘‘Category II fishery’’ in 50 CFR 229.2
(i.e., fishing techniques, gear used,
methods used to deter marine mammals,
target species, seasons and areas fished,
qualitative data from logbooks or fisher
reports, stranding data, and the species
and distribution of marine mammals in
the area). NMFS has designated those
fisheries listed by analogy in Tables 1
and 2 by a ‘‘2’’ after the fishery’s name.
There are several fisheries in Tables 1,
2, and 3 in which a portion of the
fishing vessels cross the EEZ boundary
and therefore operate both within U.S.
waters and on the high seas. These
fisheries, though listed separately
between Table 1 or 2 and Table 3, are
considered the same fishery on either
side of the EEZ boundary. NMFS has
designated those fisheries in each table
by a ‘‘*’’ after the fishery’s name.
E:\FR\FM\29DER1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
CATEGORY I
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
HI deep-set longline * ∧ .......................................................
128
GILLNET FISHERIES:
CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet (≥14 in mesh) * ....
19
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, MHI Insular.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.1
False killer whale, Palmyra Atoll.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
Risso’s dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Sperm whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
Bottlenose dolphin, CA/OR/WA offshore.
California sea lion, U.S.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Minke whale, CA/OR/WA.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
Northern right-whale dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Risso’s dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Sperm Whale, CA/OR/WA.1
CATEGORY II
50
CA yellowtail, barracuda, and white seabass drift gillnet
(mesh size ≥3.5 in and <14 in) 2.
30
AK Bristol Bay salmon drift gillnet 2 ....................................
1,862
AK Bristol Bay salmon set gillnet 2 ......................................
979
AK Kodiak salmon set gillnet ..............................................
188
AK Cook Inlet salmon set gillnet .........................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
GILLNET FISHERIES:
CA halibut/white seabass and other species set gillnet
(>3.5 in mesh).
736
AK Cook Inlet salmon drift gillnet ........................................
569
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:05 Dec 24, 2014
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California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, CA.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
Sea otter, CA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
California sea lion, U.S.
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Beluga whale, Bristol Bay.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Beluga whale, Bristol Bay.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Spotted seal, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.1
Harbor seal, GOA.
Sea otter, Southwest AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Beluga whale, Cook Inlet.
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.1
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Beluga whale, Cook Inlet.
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.1
Harbor seal, GOA.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
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TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN—Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon drift gillnet 2 ...........
162
AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon set gillnet 2 .............
113
AK Prince William Sound salmon drift gillnet .....................
537
AK Southeast salmon drift gillnet ........................................
474
AK Yakutat salmon set gillnet 2 ...........................................
168
WA Puget Sound Region salmon drift gillnet (includes all
inland waters south of US-Canada border and eastward
of the Bonilla-Tatoosh line-Treaty Indian fishing is excluded).
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
AK Cook Inlet salmon purse seine .....................................
AK Kodiak salmon purse seine ...........................................
TRAWL FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands flatfish trawl ....................
210
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.1
Harbor seal, GOA.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.1
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, Southeast AK.
Harbor seal, Southeast AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.1
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor Porpoise, Southeastern AK.
Harbor seal, Southeast AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific (Southeast AK).
Dall’s porpoise, CA/OR/WA.
Harbor porpoise, inland WA.1
Harbor seal, WA inland.
83
376
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.1
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.1
32
Bearded seal, AK.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Humpback whale, Western North Pacific.1
Killer whale, AK resident.1
Killer whale, GOA, AI, BS transient.1
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ringed seal, AK.
Ribbon seal, AK.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.1
Walrus, AK.
Bearded Seal, AK.
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Harbor seal, AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Humpback whale, Western North Pacific.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ribbon seal, AK.
Ringed seal, AK.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.1
Killer whale, ENP AK resident.1
Killer whale, GOA, AI, BS transient.1
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands pollock trawl ....................
102
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish trawl ..................
17
POT, RING NET, AND TRAP FISHERIES:
CA spot prawn pot ..............................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
28
CA Dungeness crab pot ......................................................
570
OR Dungeness crab pot .....................................................
433
WA/OR/CA sablefish pot .....................................................
WA coastal Dungeness crab pot ........................................
309
228
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.1
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN—Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
HI shallow-set longline * ∧ ...................................................
18
American Samoa longline 2 .................................................
25
HI shortline 2 ........................................................................
6
Blainville’s beaked whale, HI.
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.1
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), HI.
Risso’s dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
Bottlenose dolphin, unknown.
Cuvier’s beaked whale, unknown.
False killer whale, American Samoa.
Rough-toothed dolphin, American Samoa.
Short-finned pilot whale, unknown.
None documented.
CATEGORY III
GILLNET FISHERIES:
AK Kuskokwim, Yukon, Norton Sound, Kotzebue salmon
gillnet.
AK miscellaneous finfish set gillnet .....................................
AK Prince William Sound salmon set gillnet .......................
1,778
Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
54
29
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
None documented.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, HI.
Spinner dolphin, HI.
Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
AK roe herring and food/bait herring gillnet ........................
CA set gillnet (mesh size <3.5 in) .......................................
HI inshore gillnet .................................................................
920
304
42
WA Grays Harbor salmon drift gillnet (excluding treaty
Tribal fishing).
WA/OR herring, smelt, shad, sturgeon, bottom fish, mullet,
perch, rockfish gillnet.
WA/OR lower Columbia River (includes tributaries) drift
gillnet.
WA Willapa Bay drift gillnet .................................................
24
913
110
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
CA tuna purse seine * .........................................................
WA/OR sardine purse seine ...............................................
WA (all species) beach seine or drag seine .......................
WA/OR herring, smelt, squid purse seine or lampara ........
WA salmon purse seine ......................................................
WA salmon reef net ............................................................
HI lift net ..............................................................................
HI inshore purse seine ........................................................
HI throw net, cast net ..........................................................
HI seine net .........................................................................
DIP NET FISHERIES:
CA squid dip net ..................................................................
WA/OR smelt, herring dip net .............................................
MARINE AQUACULTURE FISHERIES:
CA marine shellfish aquaculture .........................................
CA salmon enhancement rearing pen ................................
CA white seabass enhancement net pens .........................
HI offshore pen culture ........................................................
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California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
82
MISCELLANEOUS NET FISHERIES:
AK Southeast salmon purse seine ......................................
AK Metlakatla salmon purse seine .....................................
AK miscellaneous finfish beach seine ................................
AK miscellaneous finfish purse seine .................................
AK octopus/squid purse seine ............................................
AK roe herring and food/bait herring beach seine ..............
AK roe herring and food/bait herring purse seine ..............
AK salmon beach seine ......................................................
AK salmon purse seine (excluding salmon purse seine
fisheries listed as Category II).
CA anchovy, mackerel, sardine purse seine ......................
CA squid purse seine ..........................................................
None documented.
315
10
2
2
0
10
356
31
936
65
80
........................
10
42
235
130
75
11
21
<3
20
21
115
119
Unknown
>1
13
2
Fmt 4700
None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
Harbor seal, GOA.
California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, CA.
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
California sea lion, U.S.
None documented.
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TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN—Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
WA/OR salmon net pens ....................................................
14
TROLL FISHERIES:
AK North Pacific halibut, AK bottom fish, WA/OR/CA albacore, groundfish, bottom fish, CA halibut non-salmonid
troll fisheries *.
AK salmon troll ....................................................................
1,320
(180 AK)
1,908
California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, WA inland waters.
None documented.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
None documented.
None documented.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
7
4,300
1,755
221
40
432
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish longline ..............
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Greenland turbot longline
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands sablefish longline ............
AK Gulf of Alaska halibut longline ......................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod longline ...............................
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish longline .....................................
AK Gulf of Alaska sablefish longline ...................................
AK halibut longline/set line (state and Federal waters) ......
AK octopus/squid longline ...................................................
AK state-managed waters longline/setline (including sablefish, rockfish, lingcod, and miscellaneous finfish).
WA/OR/CA groundfish, bottomfish longline/set line ...........
WA/OR Pacific halibut longline ...........................................
CA pelagic longline .............................................................
HI kaka line .........................................................................
HI vertical line ......................................................................
TRAWL FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Atka mackerel trawl ........
3
4
22
855
92
25
295
2,197
3
464
Dall’s Porpoise, AK.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ringed seal, AK.
None documented.
Killer whale, AK resident.
None documented.
None documented.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
None documented.
Sperm whale, North Pacific.
None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
None documented.
None documented.
367
350
1
24
6
Bottlenose dolphin, CA/OR/WA offshore.
None documented.
None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
None documented.
None documented.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod trawl .............
72
AK Gulf of Alaska flatfish trawl ...........................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod trawl ....................................
AK Gulf of Alaska pollock trawl ...........................................
36
55
67
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish trawl .........................................
AK food/bait herring trawl ....................................................
AK miscellaneous finfish otter/beam trawl ..........................
AK shrimp otter trawl and beam trawl (statewide and
Cook Inlet).
AK state-managed waters of Cook Inlet, Kachemak Bay,
Prince William Sound, Southeast AK groundfish trawl.
CA halibut bottom trawl .......................................................
WA/OR/CA shrimp trawl ......................................................
WA/OR/CA groundfish trawl ................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
American Samoa tuna troll ..................................................
CA/OR/WA salmon troll .......................................................
HI troll ..................................................................................
HI rod and reel ....................................................................
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands tuna troll
Guam tuna troll ....................................................................
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod longline ........
43
4
282
38
53
300
160–180
POT, RING NET, AND TRAP FISHERIES:
AK statewide miscellaneous finfish pot ...............................
AK Aleutian Islands sablefish pot .......................................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod pot ................
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands crab pot ..........................
AK Bering Sea sablefish pot ...............................................
AK Gulf of Alaska crab pot .................................................
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod pot .......................................
AK Southeast Alaska crab pot ............................................
4
4
59
540
2
381
128
41
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Ribbon seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Ringed seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Northern elephant seal, North Pacific.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
Dall’s porpoise, AK.
Fin whale, Northeast Pacific.
Northern elephant seal, North Pacific.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
California sea lion, U.S.
Dall’s porpoise, CA/OR/WA.
Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
None documented.
None documented.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific (Southeast AK).
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77934
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN—Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
269
236
26
1
10
CA rock crab pot .................................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
AK Southeast Alaska shrimp pot ........................................
AK shrimp pot, except Southeast .......................................
AK octopus/squid pot ..........................................................
AK snail pot .........................................................................
CA/OR coonstripe shrimp pot .............................................
150
CA spiny lobster ..................................................................
WA/OR/CA hagfish pot .......................................................
WA/OR shrimp pot/trap .......................................................
WA Puget Sound Dungeness crab pot/trap ........................
HI crab trap .........................................................................
HI fish trap ...........................................................................
HI lobster trap ......................................................................
HI shrimp trap ......................................................................
HI crab net ...........................................................................
HI Kona crab loop net .........................................................
HOOK-AND-LINE, HANDLINE, AND JIG FISHERIES:
AK miscellaneous finfish handline/hand troll and mechanical jig.
AK North Pacific halibut handline/hand troll and mechanical jig.
AK octopus/squid handline ..................................................
American Samoa bottomfish ...............................................
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
bottomfish.
Guam bottomfish .................................................................
HI aku boat, pole, and line ..................................................
HI bottomfish handline ........................................................
HI inshore handline .............................................................
HI pelagic handline ..............................................................
WA groundfish, bottomfish jig .............................................
Western Pacific squid jig .....................................................
HARPOON FISHERIES:
CA swordfish harpoon .........................................................
POUND NET/WEIR FISHERIES:
AK herring spawn on kelp pound net .................................
AK Southeast herring roe/food/bait pound net ...................
HI bullpen trap .....................................................................
BAIT PENS:
WA/OR/CA bait pens ..........................................................
DREDGE FISHERIES:
Alaska scallop dredge .........................................................
DIVE, HAND/MECHANICAL COLLECTION FISHERIES:
AK abalone ..........................................................................
AK clam ...............................................................................
AK Dungeness crab ............................................................
AK herring spawn on kelp ...................................................
AK urchin and other fish/shellfish .......................................
CA sea urchin ......................................................................
HI black coral diving ............................................................
HI fish pond .........................................................................
HI handpick .........................................................................
HI lobster diving ..................................................................
HI spearfishing ....................................................................
WA/CA kelp .........................................................................
WA/OR sea urchin, other clam, octopus, oyster, sea cucumber, scallop, ghost shrimp hand, dive, or mechanical collection.
WA shellfish aquaculture .....................................................
COMMERCIAL PASSENGER FISHING VESSEL (CHARTER
BOAT) FISHERIES:
AK/WA/OR/CA commercial passenger fishing vessel ........
198
54
254
249
7
5
<3
6
4
35
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific (Southeast AK).
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Harbor seal, CA.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Harbor seal, CA.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
None documented.
None documented in recent years.
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
456
None documented.
180
None documented.
7
14
28
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
>300
<3
578
376
484
679
<3
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documented.
documented.
documented in recent years.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
30
None documented.
409
2
<3
None documented.
None documented.
None documented.
13
108 (5 AK)
California sea lion, U.S.
None documented.
0
130
2
339
398
583
<3
5
58
23
159
4
637
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
684
None documented.
>7,000
(2,702 AK)
LIVE FINFISH/SHELLFISH FISHERIES:
CA nearshore finfish live trap/hook-and-line .......................
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None
None
None
None
None
None
None
93
Fmt 4700
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
Killer whale, unknown.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
None documented.
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TABLE 1—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN—Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
HI aquarium collecting .........................................................
90
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
None documented.
List of Abbreviations and Symbols Used in Table 1: AI—Aleutian Islands; AK—Alaska; BS—Bering Sea; CA—California; ENP—Eastern North
Pacific; GOA—Gulf of Alaska; HI—Hawaii; MHI—Main Hawaiian Islands; OR—Oregon; WA—Washington; 1 Fishery classified based on mortalities and serious injuries of this stock, which are greater than or equal to 50 percent (Category I) or greater than 1 percent and less than 50 percent (Category II) of the stock’s PBR; 2 Fishery classified by analogy; * Fishery has an associated high seas component listed in Table 3; ∧ The
list of marine mammal species and/or stocks killed or injured in this fishery is identical to the list of species and/or stocks killed or injured in high
seas component of the fishery, minus species and/or stocks have geographic ranges exclusively on the high seas. The species and/or stocks are
found, and the fishery remains the same, on both sides of the EEZ boundary. Therefore, the EEZ components of these fisheries pose the same
risk to marine mammals as the components operating on the high seas.
TABLE 2—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND CARIBBEAN
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
CATEGORY I
5,509
Northeast sink gillnet ...........................................................
4,375
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic American lobster trap/pot ...............
11,693
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico large pelagics
longline *.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic gillnet ...............................................................
420
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Fin whale, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.1
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Hooded seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Long-finned Pilot whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned Pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.1
Atlantic spotted dolphin, GMX continental and oceanic.
Atlantic spotted dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Cuvier’s beaked whale, WNA.
False killer whale, WNA.
Gervais beaked whale, GMX.
Killer whale, GMX oceanic.
Kogia spp. (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
Mesoplodon beaked whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East coast.
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77936
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND CARIBBEAN—
Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
Pantropical spotted dolphin, Northern GMX.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, WNA.
Risso’s dolphin, Northern GMX.
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, Northern GMX.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
Sperm whale, GMX oceanic.
CATEGORY II
1,126
724
NC inshore gillnet ................................................................
1,323
Northeast anchored float gillnet.2 ........................................
421
Northeast drift gillnet 2 .........................................................
Southeast Atlantic gillnet 2 ...................................................
311
357
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet .............................
30
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic mid-water trawl (including pair trawl) ..............
322
Mid-Atlantic bottom trawl .....................................................
631
Northeast mid-water trawl (including pair trawl) .................
1,103
Northeast bottom trawl ........................................................
2,987
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl ....
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Chesapeake Bay inshore gillnet 2 .......................................
Gulf of Mexico gillnet 2 ........................................................
4,950
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None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, and estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine system.1
Harbor seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, unknown (Central FL, Northern FL, SC/GA
coastal, or Southern migratory coastal).
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.1
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.1
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.1
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.1
Common dolphin, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East Coast.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.1
Atlantic spotted dolphin, GMX continental and oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, Charleston estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine.1
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX continental shelf.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.1
West Indian manatee, Florida.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND CARIBBEAN—
Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico stone crab
trap/pot 2.
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
1,282
Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, FL Bay.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine (FL west coast
portion).
Bottlenose dolphin, Indian River Lagoon estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Jacksonville estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Fin whale, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Charleston estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Indian River Lagoon estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Jacksonville estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern FL coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GA/Southern SC estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern SC estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern GA estuarine system.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory coastal.1
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine system.1
West Indian manatee, FL.1
Atlantic mixed species trap/pot 2 .........................................
3,467
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot ...................................................
8,557
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
Gulf of Mexico menhaden purse seine ...............................
40–42
Mid-Atlantic menhaden purse seine 2 .................................
5
HAUL/BEACH SEINE FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic haul/beach seine .............................................
565
NC long haul seine ..............................................................
372
STOP NET FISHERIES:
NC roe mullet stop net ........................................................
13
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, unknown (Southern migratory coastal or
Southern NC estuarine system).
POUND NET FISHERIES:
VA pound net ......................................................................
67
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory coastal.1
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Northern GMX coastal.1
Western GMX coastal.1
Northern Migratory coastal.
Southern Migratory coastal.
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
Northern Migratory coastal.1
Northern NC estuarine system.1
Southern Migratory coastal.1
Northern NC estuarine system.1
Southern NC estuarine system.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
CATEGORY III
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Caribbean gillnet .................................................................
DE River inshore gillnet ......................................................
Long Island Sound inshore gillnet .......................................
RI, southern MA (to Monomoy Island), and NY Bight
(Raritan and Lower NY Bays) inshore gillnet.
Southeast Atlantic inshore gillnet ........................................
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Atlantic shellfish bottom trawl ..............................................
Gulf of Mexico butterfish trawl ............................................
Gulf of Mexico mixed species trawl ....................................
GA cannonball jellyfish trawl ...............................................
MARINE AQUACULTURE FISHERIES:
Finfish aquaculture ..............................................................
Shellfish aquaculture ...........................................................
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
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Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
None
None
None
None
Unknown
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern SC estuarine system.
>58
2
20
1
48
Unknown
Fmt 4700
documented
documented
documented
documented
in
in
in
in
the
the
the
the
most
most
most
most
recent
recent
recent
recent
5
5
5
5
years
years
years
years
of
of
of
of
data.
data.
data.
data.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX continental shelf.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.
Harbor seal, WNA.
None documented.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND CARIBBEAN—
Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
Gulf of Maine Atlantic herring purse seine .........................
>7
Gulf of Maine menhaden purse seine .................................
FL West Coast sardine purse seine ...................................
U.S. Atlantic tuna purse seine * ..........................................
>2
10
5
LONGLINE/HOOK-AND-LINE FISHERIES:
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic bottom longline/hook-and-line .........
Gulf of Maine, U.S. Mid-Atlantic tuna, shark swordfish
hook-and-line/harpoon.
>1,207
428
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
snapper-grouper and other reef fish bottom longline/
hook-and-line.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shark bottom
longline/hook-and-line.
>5,000
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX continental shelf.
<125
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
pelagic hook-and-line/harpoon.
U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico trotline ...................................
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Caribbean mixed species trap/pot ......................................
Caribbean spiny lobster trap/pot .........................................
FL spiny lobster trap/pot .....................................................
1,446
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX continental shelf.
None documented.
Unknown
None documented.
4,113
Gulf of Mexico mixed species trap/pot ................................
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico golden crab
trap/pot.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic eel trap/pot ..............................................
STOP SEINE/WEIR/POUND NET/FLOATING TRAP FISHERIES:
Gulf of Maine herring and Atlantic mackerel stop seine/
weir.
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Gulf of Mexico blue crab trap/pot ........................................
Unknown
10
None documented.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, FL Bay estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.
West Indian manatee, FL.
None documented.
None documented.
Unknown
None documented.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic crab stop seine/weir ................................
U.S. Mid-Atlantic mixed species stop seine/weir/pound net
(except the NC roe mullet stop net).
RI floating trap .....................................................................
DREDGE FISHERIES:
Gulf of Maine sea urchin dredge ........................................
Gulf of Maine mussel dredge ..............................................
Gulf of Maine, U.S. Mid-Atlantic sea scallop dredge ..........
Mid-Atlantic blue crab dredge .............................................
Mid-Atlantic soft-shell clam dredge .....................................
Mid-Atlantic whelk dredge ...................................................
U.S. Mid-Atlantic/Gulf of Mexico oyster dredge ..................
U.S. Mid-Atlantic offshore surf clam and quahog dredge ...
HAUL/BEACH SEINE FISHERIES:
Caribbean haul/beach seine ...............................................
Gulf of Mexico haul/beach seine .........................................
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic haul/beach seine .....................
DIVE, HAND/MECHANICAL COLLECTION FISHERIES:
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean shellfish dive,
hand/mechanical collection.
Gulf of Maine urchin dive, hand/mechanical collection ......
Gulf of Mexico, Southeast Atlantic, Mid-Atlantic, and Caribbean cast net.
COMMERCIAL PASSENGER FISHING VESSEL (CHARTER
BOAT) FISHERIES:
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>197
1,268
Harbor seal, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
>1
2,600
Unknown
9
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
Atlantic white-sided dolphin, WNA.
None documented.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine system.
None documented.
Unknown
Unknown
>403
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
7,000
Unknown
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
documented.
15
Unknown
25
None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
None documented.
None documented.
20,000
None documented.
Unknown
Unknown
None documented.
None documented.
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77939
TABLE 2—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES IN THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND CARIBBEAN—
Continued
Estimated
Number of
vessels/
persons
Fishery description
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean commercial
passenger fishing vessel.
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
4,000
Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine.
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
Bottlenose
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
dolphin,
Central FL coastal.
Choctawhatchee Bay.
Eastern GMX coastal.
FL Bay.
GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Indian River Lagoon estuarine system.
Jacksonville estuarine system.
Northern FL coastal.
Northern GA/Southern SC estuarine.
Northern GMX coastal.
Northern migratory coastal.
Northern NC estuarine.
Southern migratory coastal.
Southern NC estuarine system.
Southern SC/GA coastal.
Western GMX coastal.
List of Abbreviations and Symbols Used in Table 2: DE—Delaware; FL—Florida; GA—Georgia; GME/BF—Gulf of Maine/Bay of Fundy; GMX—
Gulf of Mexico; MA—Massachusetts; NC—North Carolina; NY—New York; RI—Rhode Island; SC—South Carolina; VA—Virginia; WNA—Western North Atlantic; 1Fishery classified based on mortalities and serious injuries of this stock, which are greater than or equal to 50 percent (Category I) or greater than 1 percent and less than 50 percent (Category II) of the stock’s PBR; 2Fishery classified by analogy; * Fishery has an associated high seas component listed in Table 3.
TABLE 3—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES ON THE HIGH SEAS
Number of
HSFCA
permits
Fishery description
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
CATEGORY I
83
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Deep-set component) * ∧ .......
128
DRIFT GILLNET FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * ∧ ...................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species * .....................................
4
Atlantic spotted dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Cuvier’s beaked whale, WNA.
False killer whale, WNA.
Killer whale, GMX oceanic.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Mesoplodon beaked whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East coast.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, WNA.
Risso’s dolphin, GMX.
Risso’s dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
Risso’s dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Sperm whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.
Northern right-whale dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Risso’s dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA
CATEGORY II
DRIFT GILLNET FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species .......................................
TRAWL FISHERIES:
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Undetermined.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 3—LIST OF FISHERIES—COMMERCIAL FISHERIES ON THE HIGH SEAS—Continued
Number of
HSFCA
permits
Fishery description
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species ** ....................................
CCAMLR .............................................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic ......................................................
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries ..............................................
Western Pacific Pelagic ......................................................
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
CCAMLR .............................................................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll ................................................
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries ** ..........................................
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Shallow-set component) * ∧ ..
Marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured
1
0
0
Undetermined.
Antarctic fur seal.
Undetermined.
38
3
0
13
8
18
None documented.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Blainville’s beaked whale, HI.
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), HI.
Risso’s dolphin, HI.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
2
41
8
3
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
2
35
3
19
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
1
1
1
HANDLINE/POLE AND LINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species .......................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species .........................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll ................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic ......................................................
TROLL FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species .......................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll ................................................
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries ** ...........................................
Western Pacific Pelagic ......................................................
LINERS NEI FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species ** .....................................
South Pacific Albacore Troll ................................................
Western Pacific Pelagic ......................................................
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
Undetermined.
CATEGORY III
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Northwest Atlantic Bottom Longline ....................................
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * .......................................
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * ∧ ...................................
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Northwest Atlantic ...............................................................
TROLL FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * .......................................
1
100
None documented.
None documented in the most recent 5 years of data.
8
None documented.
1
None documented.
253
None documented.
List of Terms, Abbreviations, and Symbols Used in Table 3:
CA—California; GMX—Gulf of Mexico; HI—Hawaii; OR—Oregon; WA—Washington; WNA—Western North Atlantic.
* Fishery is an extension/component of an existing fishery operating within U.S. waters listed in Table 1 or 2. The number of permits listed in
Table 3 represents only the number of permits for the high seas component of the fishery.
** These gear types are not authorized under the Pacific HMS FMP (2004), the Atlantic HMS FMP (2006), or without a South Pacific Tuna
Treaty license (in the case of the South Pacific Tuna fisheries). Because HSFCA permits are valid for five years, permits obtained in past years
exist in the HSFCA permit database for gear types that are now unauthorized. Therefore, while HSFCA permits exist for these gear types, it
does not represent effort. In order to land fish species, fishers must be using an authorized gear type. Once these permits for unauthorized gear
types expire, the permit-holder will be required to obtain a permit for an authorized gear type.
∧ The list of marine mammal species and/or stocks killed or injured in this fishery is identical to the list of marine mammal species and/or
stocks killed or injured in U.S. waters component of the fishery, minus species and/or stocks that have geographic ranges exclusively in coastal
waters, because the marine mammal species and/or stocks are also found on the high seas and the fishery remains the same on both sides of
the EEZ boundary. Therefore, the high seas components of these fisheries pose the same risk to marine mammals as the components of these
fisheries operating in U.S. waters.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
TABLE 4—FISHERIES AFFECTED BY TAKE REDUCTION TEAMS AND PLANS
Take reduction plans
Affected fisheries
Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP)—50 CFR 229.32
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Category I
Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic American lobster trap/pot.
Northeast sink gillnet.
Category II
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot.
Atlantic mixed species trap/pot.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
77941
TABLE 4—FISHERIES AFFECTED BY TAKE REDUCTION TEAMS AND PLANS—Continued
Take reduction plans
Affected fisheries
Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan (BDTRP)—50 CFR 229.35 .....
False Killer Whale Take Reduction Plan (FKWTRP)—50 CFR 229.37 ...
Harbor Porpoise Take Reduction Plan (HPTRP)—50 CFR 229.33 (New
England) and 229.34 (Mid-Atlantic).
Pelagic Longline Take Reduction Plan (PLTRP)—50 CFR 229.36 .........
Pacific Offshore Cetacean Take Reduction Plan (POCTRP)—50 CFR
229.31.
Atlantic Trawl Gear Take Reduction Team (ATGTRT) ............................
Northeast anchored float gillnet.
Northeast drift gillnet.
Southeast Atlantic gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet *.
Southeastern, U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico stone crab trap/pot ∧.
Category I
Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
Category II
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot.
Chesapeake Bay inshore gillnet fishery.
Mid-Atlantic haul/beach seine.
Mid-Atlantic menhaden purse seine.
NC inshore gillnet.
NC long haul seine.
NC roe mullet stop net.
Southeast Atlantic gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl ∧.
Southeastern, U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico stone crab trap/pot ∧.
VA pound net.
Category I
HI deep-set longline.
Category II
HI shallow-set longline.
Category I
Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
Northeast sink gillnet.
Category I
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico large pelagics longline.
Category I
CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet (≥14 in mesh).
Category II
Mid-Atlantic bottom trawl.
Mid-Atlantic mid-water trawl (including pair trawl).
Northeast bottom trawl.
Northeast mid-water trawl (including pair trawl).
* Only applicable to the portion of the fishery operating in U.S. waters;
∧ Only applicable to the portion of the fishery operating in the Atlantic Ocean.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Classification
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA) at
the proposed rule stage that this rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. No comments were received on
that certification, and no new
information has been discovered to
change that conclusion. Accordingly, no
regulatory flexibility analysis is
required, and none has been prepared.
This rule contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act. The
collection of information for the
registration of individuals under the
MMPA has been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
under OMB control number 0648–0293
(0.15 hours per report for new
registrants and 0.09 hours per report for
renewals). The requirement for
reporting marine mammal mortalities or
injuries has been approved by OMB
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:05 Dec 24, 2014
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under OMB control number 0648–0292
(0.15 hours per report). These estimates
include the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
Send comments regarding these
reporting burden estimates or any other
aspect of the collections of information,
including suggestions for reducing
burden, to NMFS and OMB (see
ADDRESSES and SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION).
Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, no person is required to respond
to nor shall a person be subject to a
penalty for failure to comply with a
collection of information subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
This rule has been determined to be
not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
An environmental assessment (EA)
was prepared under the National
PO 00000
Frm 00109
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in
1995 and 2005. The 1995 EA examined
the effects of regulations implementing
section 118 of the 1994 Amendments of
the MMPA on the affected environment.
The 2005 EA analyzed the
environmental impacts of continuing
the existing scheme (as described in the
1995 EA) for classifying fisheries on the
LOF. The 1995 EA and the 2005 EA
concluded that implementation of
MMPA section 118 regulations would
not have a significant impact on the
human environment. NMFS reviewed
the 2005 EA in 2009. NMFS concluded
that because there were no changes to
the process used to develop the LOF
and implement section 118 of the
MMPA, there was no need to update the
2005 EA. NMFS initiated an EA for the
LOF in 2013 but did not finalize it
because the no action alternative
described in the 2005 EA is still the
preferred alternative. This rule would
not change NMFS’ current process for
classifying fisheries on the LOF;
therefore, this rule is not expected to
change the analysis or conclusion of the
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 248 / Monday, December 29, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
2005 EA and FONSI, and no update is
needed. If NMFS takes a management
action, for example, through the
development of a TRP, NMFS would
first prepare an environmental
document, as required under NEPA,
specific to that action.
This rule would not affect species
listed as threatened or endangered
under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) or their associated critical habitat.
The impacts of numerous fisheries have
been analyzed in various biological
opinions, and this rule will not affect
the conclusions of those opinions. The
classification of fisheries on the LOF is
not considered to be a management
action that would adversely affect
threatened or endangered species. If
NMFS takes a management action, for
example, through the development of a
TRP, NMFS would consult under ESA
section 7 on that action.
This rule would have no adverse
impacts on marine mammals and may
have a positive impact on marine
mammals by improving knowledge of
marine mammals and the fisheries
interacting with marine mammals
through information collected from
observer programs, stranding and
sighting data, or take reduction teams.
This rule would not affect the land or
water uses or natural resources of the
coastal zone, as specified under section
307 of the Coastal Zone Management
Act.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
References
Allen, B.M. and R.P. Angliss, editors. 2014.
Alaska Marine Mammal Stock
Assessments, 2013. NOAA Tech. Memo.
NMFS–AFSC–277. 294 p.
Carretta, J.V., E. Oleson, D.W. Weller, A.R.
Lang, K.A. Forney, J. Baker, B. Hanson,
K Martien, M.M. Muto, M.S. Lowry, J.
Barlow, D. Lynch, L. Carswell, R.L.
Brownell Jr., D.K. Mattila, and M.C. Hill.
2014. U.S. Pacific Marine Mammal Stock
Assessments: 2013. NOAA Technical
Memorandum NOAA–TM–NMFS–
SWFSC–532. 406 p.
McCracken, M.L. 2010. Adjustments to false
killer whale and short-finned pilot whale
bycatch estimates. NMFS, Pacific Islands
Fisheries Science Center Working paper
WP–10–007. 23 p.
NMFS. 2013. Biological Opinion on the
continued management of the drift
gillnet fishery under the Fishery
Management Plan for U.S. West Coast
Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species
2012/03020:DDL, dated May 2, 2013, at
10–11, n.7.
Waring, G.T., E. Josephson, K. Maze-Foley,
and P.E. Rosel, editors. 2014. U.S.
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Marine
Mammal Stocks Assessments, 2013.
NOAA Technical Memorandum NOAA–
NE–228. 464 p.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:05 Dec 24, 2014
Jkt 235001
Dated: December 19, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014–30375 Filed 12–24–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 140710571–4977–02]
RIN 0648–BE36
International Fisheries; Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species; Restrictions on the
Use of Fish Aggregating Devices in
Purse Seine Fisheries for 2015;
Correction
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
AGENCY:
NMFS published in the
Federal Register of December 2, 2014,
with an effective date of January 1,
2015, a final rule to establish
restrictions on the use of fish
aggregating devices (FADs) by U.S.
purse seine vessels in the western and
central Pacific Ocean (‘‘International
Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific
Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species;
Restrictions on the Use of Fish
Aggregating Devices in Purse Seine
Fisheries for 2015’’). The final rule also
included a requirement for the owners
and operators of such vessels to submit
‘‘daily FAD reports’’ to NMFS. As
indicated in the December 2, 2014, final
rule, some of the FAD restrictions are to
go into effect only if NMFS publishes a
notice in the Federal Register
announcing that they are in effect.
NMFS intended to make the
requirement to submit daily FAD
reports also contingent on issuance of a
Federal Register notice, but
inadvertently wrote the final rule such
that the reporting requirement would go
into effect on January 1, 2015,
irrespective of issuance by NMFS of a
Federal Register notice. This document
corrects that error in the final rule by
making the requirement to submit daily
FAD reports contingent on NMFS
issuing a Federal Register notice
announcing that it is in effect.
DATES: Effective January 1, 2015.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00110
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Tom
Graham, NMFS Pacific Islands Regional
Office, 808–725–5032.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
published in the Federal Register of
December 2, 2014 (79 FR 71327), a final
rule to establish restrictions on the use
of fish aggregating devices by U.S. purse
seine vessels in the western and central
Pacific Ocean (WCPO) during 2015.
Some of the FAD restrictions in the final
rule, specifically the FAD prohibitions
during January and February and the
limit of 3,061 FAD sets with associated
prohibitions, were made contingent on
NMFS issuing a subsequent Federal
Register notice announcing that those
restrictions are in effect. NMFS would
issue such a Federal Register notice
only if it determined that the
Commission for the Conservation and
Management of Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks in the Western and Central
Pacific Ocean (Commission) adopted
particular arrangements at its Eleventh
Regular Session, which took place
December 1–5, 2014. The Commission
did not adopt such arrangements at that
session.
The final rule also included a
requirement for vessel owners and
operators to submit ‘‘daily FAD reports’’
to NMFS. The reports would be used by
NMFS to estimate and project the
number of sets on FADs with respect to
the limit of 3,061 FAD sets. NMFS
intended the daily FAD reporting
requirement to be effective only if the
limit of 3,061 FAD sets were put in
effect. However, NMFS inadvertently
wrote the final rule such that the daily
FAD report requirement would go into
effect on January 1, 2015, irrespective of
the Commission decision or a
subsequent Federal Register notice.
This document corrects that error in the
final rule by making the requirement to
submit daily FAD reports contingent on
NMFS issuing a Federal Register notice
announcing that the reporting
requirement is in effect.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Classification
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
NMFS has determined that good
cause exists to waive public notice and
comment under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B)
because it would be unnecessary and
contrary to the public interest. It is
unnecessary and contrary to the public
interest because delaying this rule
would only serve to place an
unwarranted burden on the regulated
community. If this correction to the
final rule is not effective by January 1,
2015, then owners and operators of U.S.
purse seine vessels in the WCPO would
E:\FR\FM\29DER1.SGM
29DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 248 (Monday, December 29, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 77919-77942]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-30375]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 229
[Docket No. 1140325271-4999-02]
RIN 0648-BE13
List of Fisheries for 2015
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) publishes its
final List of Fisheries (LOF) for 2015, as required by the Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The final LOF for 2015 reflects new
information on interactions between commercial fisheries and marine
mammals. NMFS must classify each commercial fishery
[[Page 77920]]
on the LOF into one of three categories under the MMPA based upon the
level of mortality and serious injury of marine mammals that occurs
incidental to each fishery. The classification of a fishery on the LOF
determines whether participants in that fishery are subject to certain
provisions of the MMPA, such as registration, observer coverage, and
take reduction plan (TRP) requirements.
DATES: The effective date of this final rule is January 28, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Chief, Marine Mammal and Sea Turtle Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver
Spring, MD 20910.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lisa White, Office of Protected
Resources, 301-427-8494; Allison Rosner, Greater Atlantic Region, 978-
281-9328; Jessica Powell, Southeast Region, 727-824-5312; Elizabeth
Petras, West Coast Region (CA), 562-980-3238; Brent Norberg, West Coast
Region (WA/OR), 206-526-6550; Kim Rivera, Alaska Region, 907-586-7424;
Nancy Young, Pacific Islands Region, 808-725-5156. Individuals who use
a telecommunications device for the hearing impaired may call the
Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339 between 8 a.m. and
4 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through Friday, excluding Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
What is the list of fisheries?
Section 118 of the MMPA requires NMFS to place all U.S. commercial
fisheries into one of three categories based on the level of incidental
mortality and serious injury of marine mammals occurring in each
fishery (16 U.S.C. 1387(c)(1)). The classification of a fishery on the
LOF determines whether participants in that fishery may be required to
comply with certain provisions of the MMPA, such as registration,
observer coverage, and take reduction plan requirements. NMFS must
reexamine the LOF annually, considering new information in the Marine
Mammal Stock Assessment Reports (SARs) and other relevant sources, and
publish in the Federal Register any necessary changes to the LOF after
notice and opportunity for public comment (16 U.S.C. 1387 (c)(1)(C)).
How does NMFS determine in which category a fishery is placed?
The definitions for the fishery classification criteria can be
found in the implementing regulations for section 118 of the MMPA (50
CFR 229.2). The criteria are also summarized here.
Fishery Classification Criteria
The fishery classification criteria consist of a two-tiered, stock-
specific approach that first addresses the total impact of all
fisheries on each marine mammal stock and then addresses the impact of
individual fisheries on each stock. This approach is based on
consideration of the rate, in numbers of animals per year, of
incidental mortalities and serious injuries of marine mammals due to
commercial fishing operations relative to the potential biological
removal (PBR) level for each marine mammal stock. The MMPA (16 U.S.C.
1362 (20)) defines the PBR level as the maximum number of animals, not
including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a marine mammal
stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its optimum
sustainable population. This definition can also be found in the
implementing regulations for section 118 of the MMPA (50 CFR 229.2).
Tier 1: If the total annual mortality and serious injury of a
marine mammal stock, across all fisheries, is less than or equal to 10
percent of the PBR level of the stock, all fisheries interacting with
the stock will be placed in Category III (unless those fisheries
interact with other stock(s) in which total annual mortality and
serious injury is greater than 10 percent of PBR). Otherwise, these
fisheries are subject to the next tier (Tier 2) of analysis to
determine their classification.
Tier 2, Category I: Annual mortality and serious injury of a stock
in a given fishery is greater than or equal to 50 percent of the PBR
level (i.e., frequent incidental mortality and serious injury of marine
mammals).
Tier 2, Category II: Annual mortality and serious injury of a stock
in a given fishery is greater than 1 percent and less than 50 percent
of the PBR level (i.e., occasional incidental mortality and serious
injury of marine mammals).
Tier 2, Category III: Annual mortality and serious injury of a
stock in a given fishery is less than or equal to 1 percent of the PBR
level (i.e., a remote likelihood of or no known incidental mortality
and serious injury of marine mammals).
While Tier 1 considers the cumulative fishery mortality and serious
injury for a particular stock, Tier 2 considers fishery-specific
mortality and serious injury for a particular stock. Additional details
regarding how the categories were determined are provided in the
preamble to the final rule implementing section 118 of the MMPA (60 FR
45086, August 30, 1995).
Because fisheries are classified on a per-stock basis, a fishery
may qualify as one Category for one marine mammal stock and another
Category for a different marine mammal stock. A fishery is typically
classified on the LOF at its highest level of classification (e.g., a
fishery qualifying for Category III for one marine mammal stock and for
Category II for another marine mammal stock will be listed under
Category II). Stocks driving a fishery's classification are denoted
with a superscript ``1'' in Tables 1 and 2.
Other Criteria That May Be Considered
The tier analysis requires a minimum amount of data, and NMFS does
not have sufficient data to perform a tier analysis on certain
fisheries. Therefore, NMFS has classified certain fisheries by analogy
to other Category I or II fisheries that use similar fishing techniques
or gear that are known to cause mortality or serious injury of marine
mammals, or according to factors discussed in the final LOF for 1996
(60 FR 67063, December 28, 1995) and listed in the regulatory
definition of a Category II fishery: ``In the absence of reliable
information indicating the frequency of incidental mortality and
serious injury of marine mammals by a commercial fishery, NMFS will
determine whether the incidental mortality or serious injury is
`frequent,' `occasional,' or `remote' by evaluating other factors such
as fishing techniques, gear used, methods used to deter marine mammals,
target species, seasons and areas fished, qualitative data from
logbooks or fisher reports, stranding data, and the species and
distribution of marine mammals in the area, or at the discretion of the
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries'' (50 CFR 229.2).
Further, eligible commercial fisheries not specifically identified
on the LOF are deemed to be Category II fisheries until the next LOF is
published (50 CFR 229.2).
How does NMFS determine which species or stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a fishery?
The LOF includes a list of marine mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in each commercial fishery. The list of
species and/or stocks incidentally killed or injured includes
``serious'' and ``non-serious'' documented injuries as described later
in the List of Species and/or Stocks Incidentally Killed or Injured in
the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
sections. To determine which species and stocks are included as
[[Page 77921]]
incidentally killed or injured in a fishery, NMFS annually reviews the
information presented in the current SARs. The SARs are based upon the
best available scientific information and provide the most current and
inclusive information on each stock's PBR level and level of
interaction with commercial fishing operations. The best available
scientific information used in the SARs reviewed for the 2015 LOF
generally summarizes data from 2007-2011. NMFS also reviews other
sources of new information, including injury determination reports,
bycatch estimation reports, observer data, logbook data, stranding
data, disentanglement network data, fisher self-reports (i.e. MMPA
reports), and anecdotal reports from that time period.
Where does NMFS obtain information on the level of observer coverage in
a fishery on the LOF?
The best available information on the level of observer coverage
and the spatial and temporal distribution of observed marine mammal
interactions is presented in the SARs. Data obtained from the observer
program and observer coverage levels are important tools in estimating
the level of marine mammal mortality and serious injury in commercial
fishing operations. Starting with the 2005 SARs, each SAR includes an
appendix with detailed descriptions of each Category I and II fishery
on the LOF, including the observer coverage in those fisheries. The
SARs generally do not provide detailed information on observer coverage
in Category III fisheries because, under the MMPA, Category III
fisheries are generally not required to accommodate observers aboard
vessels due to the remote likelihood of mortality and serious injury of
marine mammals. Fishery information presented in the SARs' appendices
and other resources referenced during the tier analysis may include:
Level of observer coverage, target species, levels of fishing effort,
spatial and temporal distribution of fishing effort, characteristics of
fishing gear and operations, management and regulations, and
interactions with marine mammals. Copies of the SARs are available on
the NMFS Office of Protected Resources Web site at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/. Information on observer coverage levels in
Category I and II fisheries can also be found in the Category I and II
fishery fact sheets on the NMFS Office of Protected Resources' Web
site: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/lof/ lof/. Additional
information on observer programs in commercial fisheries can be found
on the NMFS National Observer Program's Web site: https://www.st.nmfs.gov/st4/nop/.
How do I find out if a specific fishery is in category I, II, or III?
This rule includes three tables that list all U.S. commercial
fisheries by LOF Category. Table 1 lists all of the commercial
fisheries in the Pacific Ocean (including Alaska); Table 2 lists all of
the commercial fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean; and Table 3 lists all U.S.-authorized commercial fisheries
on the high seas. A fourth table, Table 4, lists all commercial
fisheries managed under applicable TRPs or take reduction teams (TRTs).
Are high seas fisheries included on the LOF?
Beginning with the 2009 LOF, NMFS includes high seas fisheries in
Table 3 of the LOF, along with the number of valid High Seas Fishing
Compliance Act (HSFCA) permits in each fishery. As of 2004, NMFS issues
HSFCA permits only for high seas fisheries analyzed in accordance with
the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Endangered Species
Act (ESA). The authorized high seas fisheries are broad in scope and
encompass multiple specific fisheries identified by gear type. For the
purposes of the LOF, the high seas fisheries are subdivided based on
gear type (e.g., trawl, longline, purse seine, gillnet, troll, etc.) to
provide more detail on composition of effort within these fisheries.
Many fisheries operate in both U.S. waters and on the high seas,
creating some overlap between the fisheries listed in Tables 1 and 2
and those in Table 3. In these cases, the high seas component of the
fishery is not considered a separate fishery, but an extension of a
fishery operating within U.S. waters (listed in Table 1 or 2). NMFS
designates those fisheries in Tables 1, 2, and 3 by a ``*'' after the
fishery's name. The number of HSFCA permits listed in Table 3 for the
high seas components of these fisheries operating in U.S. waters does
not necessarily represent additional effort that is not accounted for
in Tables 1 and 2. Many vessels/participants holding HSFCA permits also
fish within U.S. waters and are included in the number of vessels and
participants operating within those fisheries in Tables 1 and 2.
HSFCA permits are valid for five years, during which time FMPs can
change. Therefore, some vessels/participants may possess valid HSFCA
permits without the ability to fish under the permit because it was
issued for a gear type that is no longer authorized under the most
current FMP. For this reason, the number of HSFCA permits displayed in
Table 3 is likely higher than the actual U.S. fishing effort on the
high seas. For more information on how NMFS classifies high seas
fisheries on the LOF, see the preamble text in the final 2009 LOF (73
FR 73032; December 1, 2008). Additional information about HSFCA permits
can be found at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ia/permits/highseas.html.
Where can I find specific information on fisheries listed on the LOF?
Starting with the 2010 LOF, NMFS developed summary documents, or
fishery fact sheets, for each Category I and II fishery on the LOF.
These fishery fact sheets provide the full history of each Category I
and II fishery, including: When the fishery was added to the LOF, the
basis for the fishery's initial classification, classification changes
to the fishery, changes to the list of species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the fishery, fishery gear and methods
used, observer coverage levels, fishery management and regulation, and
applicable TRPs or TRTs, if any. These fishery fact sheets are updated
after each final LOF and can be found under ``How Do I Find Out if a
Specific Fishery is in Category I, II, or III?'' on the NMFS Office of
Protected Resources' Web site: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/lof/, linked to the ``List of Fisheries by Year'' table.
NMFS is developing similar fishery fact sheets for each Category III
fishery on the LOF. However, due to the large number of Category III
fisheries on the LOF and the lack of accessible and detailed
information on many of these fisheries, the development of these
fishery fact sheets is taking significant time to complete. NMFS will
begin posting Category III fishery fact sheets online with the final
2015 LOF.
Am I required to register under the MMPA?
Owners of vessels or gear engaging in a Category I or II fishery
are required under the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1387(c)(2)), as described in 50
CFR 229.4, to register with NMFS and obtain a marine mammal
authorization to lawfully take non-endangered and non-threatened marine
mammals incidental to commercial fishing operations. Owners of vessels
or gear engaged in a Category III fishery are not required to register
with NMFS or obtain a marine mammal authorization.
[[Page 77922]]
How do I register and receive my authorization certificate and
mortality/injury reporting forms?
NMFS has integrated the MMPA registration process, implemented
through the Marine Mammal Authorization Program (MMAP), with existing
state and Federal fishery license, registration, or permit systems for
Category I and II fisheries on the LOF. Participants in these fisheries
are automatically registered under the MMAP and are not required to
submit registration or renewal materials directly under the MMAP. In
the Pacific Islands, West Coast, and Alaska regions, NMFS will issue
vessel or gear owners an authorization certificate and/or mortality/
injury reporting forms via U.S. mail or with their state or Federal
license at the time of renewal. In the Greater Atlantic Region, NMFS
will issue vessel or gear owners an authorization certificate via U.S.
mail automatically at the beginning of each calendar year; but vessel
or gear owners must request or print mortality/injury reporting forms
by contacting the NMFS Greater Atlantic Regional Office at 978-281-9328
or by visiting the Greater Atlantic Regional Office Web site (https://www.nero.noaa.gov/mmap). In the Southeast region, NMFS will issue
vessel or gear owners notification of registry and vessel or gear
owners may receive their authorization certificate and/or mortality/
injury reporting form by contacting the Southeast Regional Office at
727-209-5952 or by visiting the Southeast Regional Office Web site
(https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/protected_resources/marine_mammal_authorization_program/) and following the instructions
for printing the necessary documents. Mortality/injury forms are also
available online at https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/interactions/mmap_reporting_form.pdf.
The authorization certificate, or a copy, must be on board the
vessel while it is operating in a Category I or II fishery, or for non-
vessel fisheries, in the possession of the person in charge of the
fishing operation (50 CFR 229.4(e)). Although efforts are made to limit
the issuance of authorization certificates to only those vessel or gear
owners that participate in Category I or II fisheries, not all state
and Federal permit systems distinguish between fisheries as classified
by the LOF. Therefore, some vessel or gear owners in Category III
fisheries may receive authorization certificates even though they are
not required for Category III fisheries. Individuals fishing in
Category I and II fisheries for which no state or Federal permit is
required must register with NMFS by contacting their appropriate
Regional Office (see ADDRESSES).
How do I renew my registration under the MMAP?
In Alaska regional and Greater Atlantic Regional fisheries,
registrations of vessel or gear owners are automatically renewed and
participants should receive an authorization certificate by January 1
of each new year. In Pacific Islands regional fisheries, vessel or gear
owners receive an authorization certificate by January 1 for state
fisheries and with their permit renewal for federal fisheries. In West
Coast regional fisheries, vessel or gear owners receive authorization
with each renewed state fishing license, the timing of which varies
based on target species. Vessel or gear owners who participate in
fisheries in these regions and have not received authorization
certificates by January 1 or with renewed fishing licenses must contact
the appropriate NMFS Regional Office (see ADDRESSES).
In Southeast regional fisheries, vessel or gear owners'
registrations are automatically renewed and participants will receive a
letter in the mail by January 1 instructing them to contact the
Southeast Regional Office to have an authorization certificate mailed
to them or to visit the Southeast Regional Office Web site (https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/protected_resources/marine_mammal_authorization_program/) to print their own certificate.
Am I required to submit reports when I kill or injure a marine mammal
during the course of commercial fishing operations?
In accordance with the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1387(e)) and 50 CFR 229.6,
any vessel owner or operator, or gear owner or operator (in the case of
non-vessel fisheries), participating in a fishery listed on the LOF
must report to NMFS all incidental mortalities and injuries of marine
mammals that occur during commercial fishing operations, regardless of
the category in which the fishery is placed (I, II, or III) within 48
hours of the end of the fishing trip or, in the case of non-vessel
fisheries, fishing activity. ``Injury'' is defined in 50 CFR 229.2 as a
wound or other physical harm. In addition, any animal that ingests
fishing gear or any animal that is released with fishing gear
entangling, trailing, or perforating any part of the body is considered
injured, regardless of the presence of any wound or other evidence of
injury, and must be reported. Mortality/injury reporting forms and
instructions for submitting forms to NMFS can be downloaded from:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/interactions/mmap_reporting_form.pdf
or by contacting the appropriate Regional office (see ADDRESSES). Forms
may be faxed directly to the NMFS Office of Protected Resources at 301-
713-4060 or 301-713-0376. Reporting requirements and procedures can be
found in 50 CFR 229.6.
Am I required to take an observer aboard my vessel?
Individuals participating in a Category I or II fishery are
required to accommodate an observer aboard their vessel(s) upon request
from NMFS. MMPA section 118 states that the Secretary is not required
to place an observer on a vessel if the facilities for quartering an
observer or performing observer functions are inadequate or unsafe;
thereby authorizing the exemption of vessels too small to accommodate
an observer from this requirement. However, vessels will not be
exempted from observer requirements regardless of their size, for U.S.
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, or Gulf of Mexico large pelagics longline
vessels operating in special areas designated by the Pelagic Longline
Take Reduction Plan implementing regulations (50 CFR 229.36(d)).
Observer requirements can be found in 50 CFR 229.7.
Am I required to comply with any marine mammal take reduction plan
regulations?
Table 4 in this rule provides a list of fisheries affected by TRPs
and TRTs. TRP regulations can be found at 50 CFR 229.30 through 229.37.
A description of each TRT and copies of each TRP can be found at:
https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/trt/. It is the responsibility
of fishery participants to comply with applicable take reduction
regulations.
Where can I find more information about the LOF and the MMAP?
Information regarding the LOF and the Marine Mammal Authorization
Program, including registration procedures and forms, current and past
LOFs, information on each Category I and II fishery, observer
requirements, and marine mammal mortality/injury reporting forms and
submittal procedures, may be obtained at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/interactions/lof/ lof/, or from any NMFS Regional Office at the addresses
listed below:
NMFS, Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930-2298, Attn: Allison Rosner;
[[Page 77923]]
NMFS, Southeast Region, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL
33701, Attn: Jessica Powell;
NMFS, West Coast Region, Long Beach Office, 501 W. Ocean Blvd.,
Suite 4200, Long Beach, CA 90802-4213, Attn: Elizabeth Petras;
NMFS, West Coast Region, Seattle Office, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115, Attn: Brent Norberg, Protected Resources Division;
NMFS, Alaska Region, Protected Resources, P.O. Box 22668, 709 West
9th Street, Juneau, AK 99802, Attn: Kim Rivera; or
NMFS, Pacific Islands Regional Office, Protected Resources
Division, 1845 Wasp Blvd., Building 176, Honolulu, HI 96818, Attn:
Nancy Young.
Sources of Information Reviewed for the 2015 LOF
NMFS reviewed the marine mammal incidental mortality and serious
injury information presented in the SARs for all fisheries to determine
whether changes in fishery classification are warranted. The SARs are
based on the best scientific information available at the time of
preparation, including the level of mortality and serious injury of
marine mammals that occurs incidental to commercial fishery operations
and the PBR levels of marine mammal stocks. The information contained
in the SARs is reviewed by regional Scientific Review Groups (SRGs)
representing Alaska, the Pacific (including Hawaii), and the U.S.
Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean. The SRGs were created by the
MMPA to review the science that informs the SARs, and to advise NMFS on
marine mammal population status, trends, and stock structure,
uncertainties in the science, research needs, and other issues.
NMFS also reviewed other sources of new information, including
marine mammal stranding data, observer program data, fisher self-
reports through the Marine Mammal Authorization Program, reports to the
SRGs, conference papers, FMPs, and ESA documents.
The LOF for 2015 was based on, among other things, information
provided in the NEPA and ESA documents analyzing authorized high seas
fisheries; stranding data; fishermen self-reports through the MMAP; and
SARs, primarily the 2013 SARs, which are generally based on data from
2007-2011. The final SARs referenced in this LOF include: 2007 (73 FR
21111, April 18, 2008), 2008 (74 FR 19530, April 29, 2009), 2009 (75 FR
12498, March 16, 2010), 2010 (76 FR 34054, June 10, 2011), 2011 (77 FR
29969, May 21, 2012), and 2012 (78 FR 19446, April, 1 2013), and 2013
(79 FR 49053, August 19, 2014). The SARs are available at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received four comment letters on the proposed LOF for 2015 (79
FR 50589, August 25, 2014). Comments were received from the Center for
Biological Diversity (CBD), Hawaii Department of Land and Natural
Resources (DLNR), Hawaii Longline Association (HLA), and Oceana.
Comments on issues outside of the scope of the LOF were noted, but
generally without response.
General Comments
Comment 1: CBD states that the List of Fisheries is the first step
in fisheries' registration and authorization and asks NMFS to re-
examine its practice of registering and authorizing fisheries under
section 118 without also authorizing take of threatened and endangered
marine mammals under section 101(a)(5)(E).
Response: The List of Fisheries categorizes each commercial fishery
based on the definitions of Category I, II, and III fisheries set forth
at 50 CFR 229.2. Publication of the List of Fisheries does not
authorize take of threatened or endangered marine mammals incidental to
commercial fishing. Under section 101(a)(5)(E) of the MMPA, NMFS issues
permits for the incidental taking of threatened or endangered species
listed under the Endangered Species Act, if it can be determined that
(1) mortality and serious injury incidental to commercial fisheries
would have a negligible impact on the affected species or stock, (2) a
recovery plan for that species or stock has been developed or is being
developed, and (3) where required under section 118, a monitoring
program has been established, vessels are registered, and a take
reduction plan has been developed or is being developed. NMFS publishes
a separate list of fisheries that have met these conditions in the
Federal Register. Participants in fisheries that are not included on
that list remain subject to the ESA prohibition against taking marine
mammals from endangered or threatened stocks.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in the Pacific Ocean
Comment 2: HLA contends that the Hawaii-based deep-set longline
fishery does not interact with Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) insular
false killer whales. HLA commented that there has never been a
documented interaction between the fishery and an animal from the MHI
insular stock, and there are no data or other scientific information to
support attribution of MHI insular false killer whale interactions to
the deep-set fishery. HLA opposes including the stock on the list of
marine mammals killed or injured in the deep-set fishery.
Response: NMFS determines which species or stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a fishery by annually reviewing the
information presented in the current stock assessment reports (SARs),
among other relevant sources. The SARs are based on the best available
scientific information and provide the most current and inclusive
information on each stock, including range, abundance, PBR, and level
of interaction with commercial fishing operations. The LOF does not
separately evaluate the data and calculations contained within the
SARs.
The 2015 LOF is based on the 2013 SARs, which report fishery
interactions from 2007-2011. During that time period, observers
recorded one interaction with an unidentified blackfish (i.e.,
identified as either a short-finned pilot whale or a false killer
whale) within the overlap zone shared by pelagic and MHI insular false
killer whales (40-140 km from the main Hawaiian Islands). Based on
NMFS' proration models (for blackfish and for false killer whales of
unknown stock identity), and an expansion of observed interactions to
fleet-wide estimates, NMFS estimates a 5-year average mortality and
serious injury level of 0.1 MHI insular false killer whales per year
incidental to the Hawaii-based deep-set longline fishery from 2007-2011
(Carretta et al., 2014).
NMFS is retaining the stock on the list of marine mammal stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the Hawaii deep-set longline fishery.
For a more complete analysis of the methodology for determining
mortality and serious injury of MHI insular false killer whales, the
commenter is referred to the 2013 SAR.
Comment 3: HLA opposes the continued inclusion of short-finned
pilot whales on the list of species killed or injured in the Hawaii-
based shallow-set longline fishery because it is not supported by the
available data. NMFS has included the species because of a single
interaction on the high seas involving an unidentified cetacean that
``may have'' been a short-finned pilot whale. There have been no
confirmed short-finned pilot whale interactions in the shallow-set
fishery. HLA states that in the absence of data confirming that the
fishery is interacting with short-
[[Page 77924]]
finned pilot whales, NMFS may not add the species to the list of
species or stocks that are incidentally killed or injured by the
fishery.
Response: The 2013 SAR for the Hawaii stock of short-finned pilot
whales states that two unidentified cetaceans, known to be either false
killer whales or short-finned pilot whales (i.e., ``blackfish''), were
observed seriously injured in the shallow-set longline fishery on the
high seas from 2007-2011 (Carretta et al., 2014). When the species of a
blackfish cannot be positively identified, NMFS prorates the
interaction to each species based on distance from shore (McCracken,
2010). Until all animals that are taken can be identified to either
species (e.g., using photos, tissue samples), this prorating approach
constitutes the best available information and ensures that potential
impacts to all species and stocks are assessed. Based on this approach,
the estimated average annual mortality and serious injury of short-
finned pilot whales in the fishery on the high seas from 2007-2011 is
0.1 (Carretta et al., 2014). The Western Pacific Pelagic longline (HI
shallow-set) fishery is the high seas component of the HI shallow-set
longline fishery. Because the fishery operating in U.S. waters and the
high seas component of the fishery pose the same risk to marine
mammals, NMFS maintains identical lists of marine mammals killed or
injured in the fisheries. Therefore, NMFS is retaining short-finned
pilot whales on the list of species or stocks that are incidentally
killed or injured by the fishery.
Comment 4: HLA commented that pygmy or dwarf sperm whales should
not be included in the list of species killed or injured in the Hawaii
shallow-set longline fishery, because the MMPA requires NMFS to list
the species in the LOF that are killed or seriously injured by a
fishery. HLA cites the 2013 SAR, which reports a single interaction
with a pygmy or dwarf sperm whale in 2008 that was classified as a non-
serious injury.
Response: As described in the preamble to this final rule and in
the MMPA implementing regulations (50 CFR 299.8(b)(2)), the LOF
includes a list of marine mammal species or stocks incidentally killed
or injured in each commercial fishery. While fishery classifications on
the LOF are determined via the tier analysis process, which, as
described in the preamble to the proposed LOF, evaluates the level of
mortality and serious injury of marine mammals relative to the stocks'
PBR levels, the list of species and/or stocks killed or injured is more
inclusive, and also includes those that have been non-seriously
injured. Therefore, it is appropriate to include Kogia species whale
(pygmy or dwarf sperm whale) in the list for the Hawaii shallow-set
longline fishery, given the documented non-serious injury in 2008
(Carretta et al., 2014).
Comment 5: HLA notes that for fisheries that operate both in the
U.S. EEZ and on the high seas, marine mammal species for which an
interaction has occurred in either the EEZ or the high seas are
included on the lists of species killed or injured in both the EEZ and
the high seas (i.e., on both Tables 1 or 2 and Table 3). This results
in a mistaken implication that a given fishery may interact with a
certain species in one geographic area (e.g., within the EEZ) when that
fishery has only been observed to interact with the species in another
geographic area (e.g., on the high seas). HLA requests that NMFS
correct the LOF to only attribute species interactions in transboundary
fisheries to those geographic regions where interactions are actually
observed. This change would not result in underreporting of species
killed or injured, but would avoid the arbitrary result of takes being
attributed to fisheries in areas in which no take has ever been
observed.
Response: As described in the preamble, NMFS has included high seas
fisheries in Table 3 of the LOF since 2009. Several fisheries operate
in both U.S. waters and on the high seas, creating some overlap between
the fisheries listed in Tables 1 and 2 and those in Table 3. In these
cases, the high seas component of the fishery is not considered a
separate fishery, but an extension of a fishery operating within U.S.
waters. For these fisheries, the lists of species and/or stocks killed
or injured in Table 3 are identical to their Table 1 or 2 counterparts,
except for those species or stocks with distributions known to occur on
only one side of the EEZ boundary. Because the fisheries and the marine
mammal lists are the same, takes of these animals are not being
attributed to one geographic area or the other, even when that
information may be available. This parallel list structure is explained
in the footnotes for each table.
Comment 6: CBD recommends that NMFS conduct a Tier 2 analysis for
the HI crab trap fishery because the total fishery-related mortality
and serious injury (M/SI) of Central North Pacific (CNP) humpback
whales (7.45 per year, as cited in Allen and Angliss, 2013; or 9.35 per
year, as cited in NMFS' draft Negligible Impact Determination (79 FR
33726, June 12, 2014) exceeds 10% of the stock's PBR level. Further,
CBD recommends that NMFS reclassify the HI crab trap fishery as
Category II because reported entanglements of CNP humpback whales
likely underestimate actual entanglements, and M/SI in the fishery
likely exceeds 1% of the stock's PBR level. Given that the HI crab
trap's 5-year annual average M/SI (0.55/yr) based on reported
entanglements is just barely below 1% of PBR, if only one CNP humpback
whale entanglement went unreported, M/SI would exceed 1% of PBR,
necessitating a Category II classification.
Response: The level of commercial fishery-related M/SI of CNP
humpback whales evaluated in the proposed LOF (1.1/year) was based on
the number of confirmed commercial fishery-related M/SI presented in
the draft 2013 Alaska SAR (0.55 from observer data in Alaska (0.40) and
Hawaii (0.15); Allen and Angliss, 2013), plus unpublished values for M/
SI attributed to the HI crab trap fishery (0.55). Using these values, a
Tier 1 analysis indicated total commercial fishery-related M/SI was
less than 10% of PBR, so a Tier 2 analysis was not necessary.
The commenter cites two alternative values for total commercial
fisheries-related M/SI for CNP humpback whales. The first, 7.45 M/SI
per year, is also from Allen and Angliss (2013), but includes not only
the 0.55 M/SI per year described above from observer data in Alaska and
Hawaii fisheries, but also 2.15 and 4.75 M/SI per year from Alaska and
Hawaii stranding response networks, respectively. The interactions
reported from stranding networks and responses cannot or have not been
confirmed to be from commercial fisheries, and are thus not appropriate
to be included in the tier analysis.
The second alternative M/SI value cited by the commenter, 9.35 M/SI
per year, is described in NMFS' draft Negligible Impact Determination
for CNP humpbacks, Hawaii sperm whales, and MHI insular false killer
whales. The page of the NID cited by the commenter (p. 38) notes that
this value includes both commercial and recreational takes. The value
of 9.35 M/SI per year is not appropriate to include in the LOF tier
analysis, which focuses exclusively on M/SI in commercial fisheries.
If, in the future, the responsible fishery or fisheries involved in the
interactions can be identified and M/SI attributed to commercial
fisheries, they will be considered in future tier analyses. Effort is
ongoing in both regions to identify fisheries from the entangling gear.
Although we do not accept the accuracy of the commenter's values,
we find that even if we apply them to the tier analysis the Category
III
[[Page 77925]]
classification remains unchanged. In both cases, total fisheries-
related M/SI would exceed 10% of PBR (7.45/61.2 is 12.1% of PBR, and
9.35/61.2 is 15.3% of PBR). A Tier 2 analysis finds that the HI crab
trap fishery's 5-year average M/SI from 2007-2011 is 0.55 per year,
which is 0.9% of the stock's PBR. This is less than 1% of the stock's
PBR level, so a Category III classification is warranted. At this time,
we cannot speculate on the likely impacts of unreported or unobserved
interactions, and instead rely on the data described above.
Comment 7: DLNR provided information regarding measures of
participation in various fisheries, including that the State of Hawaii
does not issue fishery-specific licenses for commercial fisheries. DLNR
commented that it may be misleading to list in the LOF the number of
licensed commercial fishers who reported using the gear type at least
once during the fishing year period, without considering how many times
that person used the gear.
Response: Section 118(c)(1) of the Marine Mammal Protection Act
states that the Secretary shall include ``the approximate number of
vessels or persons actively involved in, each such fishery.'' NMFS
acknowledges that the Hawaii commercial fishing license is not specific
to a fishery or gear type, and that the state-reported estimation of
vessels/persons reflects the number of licensed fishermen who reported
using the gear at least once during the fishing year period. The
estimated number of vessels or persons column is intended to provide
the best available approximation of active participation in the fishery
for descriptive purposes and will not be used in determining current or
future management of fisheries or observer coverage designations, if
applicable.
Comment 8: DLNR commented that several fisheries managed by DLNR
pose little to no risk to marine mammals, including the Hawaii Kona
crab loop net fishery, Hawaii fish pond, Hawaii handpick, and Hawaii
lobster diving fisheries. In these cases, DLNR urges NMFS to make it
abundantly clear that there is a high degree of certainty that these
fisheries pose minimal risk to marine mammals, and urges NMFS to
delineate clear criteria with respect to when a commercial fishery
should be removed from the LOF.
Response: NMFS recognizes that the fisheries referenced by DAR have
a remote likelihood of incidental mortality or serious injury of marine
mammals and maintains their classification as Category III on the Final
LOF for 2015. The LOF is a complete list of all U.S. commercial
fisheries. Fisheries are not removed from the LOF based on their posing
a minimal risk to marine mammals. Instead, fisheries are removed from
the LOF when there are no active permit/license holders, the gear is no
longer authorized and permits are no longer given, or when a name
change incorporates the fishery under a different name on the LOF.
Comment 9: DLNR supported several proposed changes to the LOF,
including the addition of the Hawaii aquarium collecting fishery,
removal of the Hawaii lobster tangle net fishery, removal of Hawaii
charter vessel fishery, splitting of the Hawaii troll fishery into the
troll and rod and reel fisheries, addition of the Central North Pacific
stock of humpback whale to the list of species killed or injured in the
Hawaii crab trap fishery, and removal of the Hawaiian monk seal from
the list of species killed or injured in the Hawaii lobster trap
fishery. DLNR also provided a description of the Hawaii aquarium
collecting fishery.
Response: NMFS appreciates DLNR's support and collaboration in
developing these changes. NMFS is finalizing the changes mentioned by
the commenter, as proposed. NMFS will also use the information provided
by DLNR in the description of the Hawaii aquarium collecting fishery in
the fishery's fact sheet, which is being developed for release with a
future LOF.
Comment 10: DLNR requested that NMFS continue to work with DLNR to
review humpback whale interactions to more fully understand them, to
accurately identify the fishery, and to develop possible mitigation
measures.
Response: NMFS will continue to consult and work with DLNR to
evaluate and address humpback whale entanglements.
Comment 11: Oceana recommends that NMFS add the CA/OR/WA stock of
short-finned pilot whales and the Eastern North Pacific stock of gray
whales to the list of species and/or stocks incidentally killed or
injured in the CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet fishery based
on a 2013/2014 fishing season observer report.
Response: To determine which species and stocks are included as
incidentally killed or injured in a fishery, NMFS annually reviews the
information presented in the current SARs. The SARs are based upon the
best available scientific information and provide the most current and
inclusive information on each stock's PBR level and level of
interaction with commercial fishing operations. The best available
scientific information used in the SARs reviewed for the 2015 LOF
generally summarizes data from 2007-2011. NMFS also reviews other
sources of new information, including injury determination reports,
bycatch estimation reports, observer data, logbook data, stranding
data, disentanglement network data, fisher self-reports (i.e. MMPA
reports), and anecdotal reports from that time period. The observed
interactions referenced by the commenter will be evaluated in a future
LOF.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico,
and Caribbean
Comment 12: CBD recommends that NMFS add the Gulf of Maine stock of
humpback whales to the list of species/stocks incidentally killed or
injured in the Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet fishery based
on a March 2012 self-report.
Response: The humpback whale entanglement in March 2012 occurred in
a gillnet targeting smooth dogfish (also known as smooth hound)
approximately two miles offshore of Hatteras, North Carolina. The
smooth dogfish gillnet fishery is included in the larger Category I
Mid-Atlantic Gillnet fishery, which already lists the Gulf of Maine
stock of humpback whales as a marine mammal stock that is incidentally
killed or injured in this fishery (see: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/fisheries/lof2012/midatlantic_gillnet.pdf). Therefore, we are not
adding the Gulf of Maine humpback whale stock to the Southeastern U.S.
Atlantic shark gillnet fishery.
Comments on Commercial Fisheries in the High Seas
Comment 13: CBD recommends that the Pacific Highly Migratory
Species (HMS) drift gillnet fishery be listed as Category I because it
includes an extension of the Category I CA thresher shark/swordfish
drift gillnet (>=14 in mesh) fishery. CBD also recommends that NMFS
revise the number of HSFCA permits based on a 2013 biological opinion
that reports no observed drift gillnet effort on the high seas since
2001 (NMFS, 2013).
Response: NMFS agrees that when the CA thresher shark/swordfish
drift gillnet (>=14 in mesh) fishery was reclassified as Category I on
Table 1 in 2013, the Pacific HMS drift gillnet fishery should have also
been elevated to Category I in Table 3 because it is an extension of
the Table 1 fishery. Therefore, NMFS corrects this administrative error
and clarifies that the Pacific HMS drift gillnet is a Category I
fishery. NMFS finds no error in the number of HSFCA permits listed
[[Page 77926]]
on Table 3. As stated in the preamble, HSFCA permits are valid for five
years, during which time FMPs can change. Therefore, some vessels/
participants may possess valid HSFCA permits without the ability to
fish under the permit because it was issued for a gear type that is no
longer authorized under the most current FMP. For this reason, the
number of HSFCA permits displayed in Table 3 is likely higher than the
actual U.S. fishing effort on the high seas.
Summary of Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS corrects an administrative error and elevates the Pacific HMS
drift gillnet fishery from Category II to Category I. As an extension
of the Category I CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet (>=14 in
mesh) fishery, Pacific HMS should have been moved to Category I in 2013
when the CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet (>=14 in mesh)
fishery was reclassified.
Summary of Changes to the LOF for 2015
The following summarizes changes to the LOF for 2015, including the
fisheries listed in the LOF, the estimated number of vessels/persons in
a particular fishery, and the species and/or stocks that are
incidentally killed or injured in a particular fishery. As described
above (see ``Summary of Changes From the Proposed Rule''), the LOF for
2015 corrects an administrative error and moves the Pacific HMS drift
gillnet fishery to Category I. Additionally, NMFS adds 7 Category III
fisheries to the LOF and removes 6 fisheries from the LOF. The LOF for
2015 does not include any other changes to fishery classifications or
to fisheries that are subject to a take reduction plan. NMFS makes
changes to the list of species and/or stocks killed or injured in
certain fisheries and the estimated number of vessels/persons in
certain fisheries, as well as certain administrative changes. The
classifications and definitions of U.S. commercial fisheries for 2015
are identical to those provided in the LOF for 2014 with the exception
of those changes discussed below. State and regional abbreviations used
in the following paragraphs include: AK (Alaska), CA (California), DE
(Delaware), FL (Florida), GMX (Gulf of Mexico), HI (Hawaii), MA
(Massachusetts), ME (Maine), NC (North Carolina), NY (New York), OR
(Oregon), RI (Rhode Island), SC (South Carolina), VA (Virginia), WA
(Washington), and WNA (Western North Atlantic).
Commercial Fisheries in the Pacific Ocean
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds ``HI aquarium collecting'' as a Category III fishery.
Removal of Fisheries
NMFS removes the following Category III fisheries from the LOF:
``OR salmon ranch,'' ``WA herring brush weir,'' ``WA herring spawn on
kelp,'' ``CA abalone,'' ``HI lobster tangle net,'' and ``HI charter
vessel.''
Fishery Name and Organizational Changes and Clarification
NMFS renames the Category II ``WA coastal Dungeness crab pot/trap''
fishery to ``WA coastal Dungeness crab pot.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``WA/OR North Pacific halibut
longline/setline'' to the ``WA/OR Pacific halibut longline.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``Coastwide scallop dredge'' fishery
to the ``Alaska scallop dredge.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``OR/CA hagfish pot or trap'' to the
``WA/OR/CA hagfish pot.''
NMFS renames the Category I ``HI deep-set (tuna target) longline/
set line'' fishery to ``HI deep-set longline.''
NMFS renames the Category II ``HI shallow-set (swordfish target)
longline/set line'' fishery to ``HI shallow-set longline.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``HI opelu/akule net'' fishery to
``HI lift net.''
NMFS renames Category III ``HI hukilau net'' fishery to ``HI seine
net.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``HI vertical longline'' fishery to
``HI vertical line.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``HI MHI deep-sea bottomfish
handline'' fishery to ``HI bottomfish handline.''
NMFS renames the Category III ``HI tuna handline'' fishery to ``HI
pelagic handline.''
NMFS splits the Category III ``CA coonstripe shrimp, rock crab,
tanner crab pot or trap'' fishery into two Category III fisheries,
``CA/OR coonstripe shrimp pot'' and ``CA rock crab pot'', and
eliminates the tanner crab component of the pot fishery.
NMFS splits the Category III ``HI trolling, rod and reel'' fishery
into two separate Category III fisheries, the ``HI troll'' and ``HI rod
and reel'' fisheries.
Number of Vessels/Persons
NMFS updates the estimated number of vessels/persons in the Pacific
Ocean (Table 1) as follows. Fisheries are labeled with their name on
the 2015 LOF:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of vessels/ Number of vessels/
Category Fishery persons (final persons (final
2014 LOF) 2015 LOF)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I................................. HI deep-set longline................ 129 128
II................................ AK Bristol Bay salmon drift gillnet. 1,863 1,862
II................................ AK Bristol Bay salmon set gillnet... 982 979
II................................ AK Cook Inlet salmon set gillnet.... 738 736
II................................ AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon 114 113
drift gillnet.
II................................ AK Yakutat salmon set gillnet....... 167 168
II................................ AK Cook Inlet salmon purse seine.... 82 83
II................................ AK Kodiak salmon purse seine........ 379 376
II................................ AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 34 32
flatfish trawl.
II................................ AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 95 102
pollock trawl.
II................................ AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 10 17
rockfish trawl.
II................................ HI shallow-set longline............. 20 18
II................................ American Samoa longline............. 24 25
II................................ HI shortline........................ 11 6
III............................... AK Kuskokwim, Yukon, Norton Sound, 1,702 1,778
Kotzebue salmon gillnet.
III............................... AK miscellaneous finfish set gillnet 2 54
III............................... AK Prince William Sound salmon set 30 29
gillnet.
III............................... AK roe herring and food/bait herring 990 920
gillnet.
III............................... HI inshore gillnet.................. 36 42
III............................... AK Southeast salmon purse seine..... 415 315
III............................... AK miscellaneous finfish beach seine 1 2
[[Page 77927]]
III............................... AK roe herring and food/bait herring 6 10
beach seine.
III............................... AK roe herring and food/bait herring 367 356
purse seine.
III............................... AK salmon purse seine (excluding 935 936
salmon purse seine fisheries listed
as Category II).
III............................... HI lift net......................... 22 21
III............................... HI throw net, cast net.............. 29 20
III............................... HI seine net........................ 26 21
III............................... AK North Pacific halibut, AK bottom 1,320 (120 AK) 1,320 (180 AK)
fish, WA/OR/CA albacore,
groundfish, bottom fish, CA halibut
non-salmonid troll fisheries.
III............................... AK salmon troll..................... 2,008 1,908
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 154 45
Pacific cod longline.
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 0 3
rockfish longline.
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 36 4
Greenland turbot longline.
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 28 22
sablefish longline.
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska halibut longline.. 1,302 855
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod 107 92
longline.
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish longline. 0 25
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska sablefish longline 291 295
III............................... AK halibut longline/set line (state 2,280 2,197
and Federal waters).
III............................... AK octopus/squid longline........... 2 3
III............................... AK state-managed waters longline/ 1,323 464
setline (including sablefish,
rockfish, lingcod, and
miscellaneous finfish).
III............................... HI kaka line........................ 17 24
III............................... HI vertical line.................... 9 6
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Atka 9 13
mackerel trawl.
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 93 72
Pacific cod trawl.
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska flatfish trawl.... 41 36
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod trawl. 62 55
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska pollock trawl..... 62 67
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish trawl.... 34 43
III............................... AK shrimp otter trawl and beam trawl 33 38
(statewide and Cook Inlet).
III............................... AK statewide miscellaneous finfish 243 4
pot.
III............................... AK Aleutian Islands sablefish pot... 8 4
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands 68 59
Pacific cod pot.
III............................... AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands crab 296 540
pot.
III............................... AK Bering Sea sablefish pot......... 6 2
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska crab pot.......... 389 381
III............................... AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod pot... 154 128
III............................... AK Southeast Alaska crab pot........ 415 41
III............................... AK Southeast Alaska shrimp pot...... 274 269
III............................... AK shrimp pot, except Southeast..... 210 236
III............................... HI crab trap........................ 9 7
III............................... HI fish trap........................ 9 5
III............................... HI shrimp trap...................... 4 6
III............................... HI crab net......................... 6 4
III............................... HI Kona crab loop net............... 48 35
III............................... AK octopus/squid handline........... 0 7
III............................... American Samoa bottomfish handline.. 12 14
III............................... HI aku boat, pole and line.......... 3 < 3
III............................... HI bottomfish handline.............. 567 578
III............................... HI inshore handline................. 378 376
III............................... HI pelagic handline................. 459 484
III............................... AK herring spawn on kelp pound net.. 411 409
III............................... AK Southeast herring roe/food/bait 4 2
pound net.
III............................... AK scallop dredge................... 108 (12 AK) 108 (5 AK)
III............................... AK clam............................. 156 130
III............................... AK herring spawn on kelp............ 266 339
III............................... AK urchin and other fish/shellfish.. 521 398
III............................... HI fish pond........................ 16 5
III............................... HI handpick......................... 57 58
III............................... HI lobster diving................... 29 23
III............................... HI spearfishing..................... 143 159
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Species and/or Stocks Incidentally Killed or Injured in the
Pacific Ocean
NMFS updates the list of species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured by fisheries in the Pacific Ocean (Table 1) as follows:
NMFS adds the Central North Pacific stock of humpback whales to the
list of species and/or stocks killed or injured in the Category III HI
crab trap fishery.
NMFS adds the South Central Alaska stock of northern sea otters to
the list of species and/or stocks killed or injured in the Category II
AK Cook Inlet salmon set gillnet fishery and the Category III
[[Page 77928]]
AK Prince William Sound set gillnet fishery.
NMFS adds the Alaska stock of ringed seals to the list of species
and/or stocks killed or injured in the Category III AK Bering Sea,
Aleutian Islands Pacific cod trawl fishery and the Category III AK
Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod longline fishery.
NMFS removes the Hawaiian monk seal from the list of species and/or
stocks killed or injured in the Category III HI bottomfish handline
fishery (formerly ``HI Main Hawaiian Islands deep-sea bottomfish
handline'') and the Category III HI lobster trap fishery.
Commercial Fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Caribbean
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds the following Category III fisheries to the LOF: ``Gulf
of Maine sea urchin dredge,'' ``Mid-Atlantic blue crab dredge,'' ``Mid-
Atlantic whelk dredge,'' and ``Mid-Atlantic soft shell clam dredge''.
List of Species and/or Stocks Incidentally Killed or Injured in the
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
NMFS updates the list of marine mammal species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in commercial fisheries in the Atlantic,
Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean (Table 2) as follows:
NMFS adds the Canadian East Coast stock of minke whales, the
Western North Atlantic stock of Kogia species whale (pygmy or dwarf
sperm whale), and the Western North Atlantic stock of false killer
whale and removes the Western North Atlantic stock of Northern
bottlenose whale on the list of species and/or stocks incidentally
killed or injured by the Category I Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico large pelagics longline fishery.
NMFS adds the Florida stock of West Indian manatee to the list of
species and/or stocks incidentally killed or injured by the Category II
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl fishery.
NMFS adds the Northern South Carolina estuarine system stock of
bottlenose dolphins to the list of the species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the Category II Atlantic blue crab
trap/pot fishery.
NMFS adds unknown stocks of bottlenose dolphin and renames the
Central Florida coastal stock and Northern Florida coastal stocks as
``Bottlenose dolphin, unknown stocks'' on the list of the species and/
or stocks incidentally killed or injured in the Category II
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet fishery.
NMFS adds unknown stocks and the Northern North Carolina estuarine
system stock of bottlenose dolphin and renames the Southern North
Carolina estuarine system stock and the Southern migratory coastal
stock as ``Bottlenose dolphin, unknown stock'' on the list of the
species and/or stocks incidentally killed or injured in the Category II
North Carolina roe mullet stop net fishery.
NMFS adds two stocks of bottlenose dolphins, Charleston estuarine
system and Southern migratory coastal, to the list of the species and/
or stocks incidentally killed or injured in the Category II
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl fishery.
NMFS adds the Northern South Carolina estuarine system stock of
bottlenose dolphins to the list of species and/or stocks incidentally
killed or injured in the Category III Southeast Atlantic inshore
gillnet fishery.
NMFS adds two stocks of bottlenose dolphins, Choctawhatchee Bay and
Florida Bay, to the list of species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured in the Category III Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico,
Caribbean commercial passenger fishing vessel fishery.
NMFS removes the Western North Atlantic stock of gray seal from the
list of species and/or stocks incidentally killed or injured in the
Category III Gulf of Maine herring and Atlantic mackerel stop seine/
weir fishery.
NMFS removes the Western North Atlantic stock of long-finned and
short-finned pilot whales from the list of species and/or stocks
incidentally killed or injured in the Category I Mid-Atlantic gillnet
fishery.
NMFS makes the following typographical corrections to the list of
marine mammal species and/or stocks incidentally killed or injured:
Remove Northern migratory coastal stock of bottlenose dolphin from the
NC roe mullet stop net fishery; add Northern migratory coastal stock of
bottlenose dolphin to, and remove Southern North Carolina estuarine
system stock of bottlenose dolphin from, the VA pound net fishery; add
Gulf of Mexico stock of Gervais beaked whale to the Atlantic Ocean,
Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico large pelagics longline; and corrects a stock
name listed under the Category III Georgia cannonball jellyfish trawl
fishery from ``Southern South Carolina/Georgia'' stock of bottlenose
dolphins to ``SC/GA coastal'' stock.
Commercial Fisheries on the High Seas
Fishery Name and Organizational Changes and Clarification
NMFS corrects an administrative error and moves the Pacific HMS
drift gillnet fishery to Category I. As an extension of the Category I
CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet (>=14 in mesh) fishery,
Pacific HMS should have been moved to Category I in 2013 when the CA
fishery was reclassified.
Addition of Fisheries
NMFS adds the following Category III fisheries to the LOF:
``Northwest Atlantic trawl'' and ``Northwest Atlantic bottom
longline.''
Number of Vessels/Persons
NMFS updates the estimated number of HSFCA permits (Table 3) as
follows:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of HSFCA Number of HSFCA
Category Fishery permits (final permits (final
2014 LOF) 2015 LOF)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I................................. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species 84 83
Longline.
I................................. Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Deep-set 124 128
component).
II................................ South Pacific Tuna Fisheries Purse 40 38
Seine.
II................................ Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Shallow- 28 18
set component).
II................................ Atlantic Highly Migratory Species 3 2
Handline/Pole and Line.
II................................ Pacific Highly Migratory Species 46 41
Handline/Pole and Line.
II................................ South Pacific Albacore Troll 9 8
Handline/Pole and Line.
II................................ Western Pacific Pelagic Handline/ 5 3
Pole and Line.
II................................ Atlantic Highly Migratory Species 4 2
Troll.
II................................ South Pacific Albacore Troll........ 33 35
II................................ South Pacific Tuna Fisheries Troll.. 2 3
II................................ Pacific Highly Migratory Species 3 1
Liners Nei.
III............................... Pacific Highly Migratory Species 101 100
Longline.
III............................... Pacific Highly Migratory Species 8 5
Purse Seine.
[[Page 77929]]
III............................... Pacific Highly Migratory Species 262 253
Troll.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Species and/or Stocks Incidentally Killed or Injured in High
Seas Fisheries
NMFS updates the list of species and/or stocks incidentally killed
or injured by fisheries in high seas fisheries (Table 3) as follows:
NMFS adds the Canadian East Coast stock of minke whales, Kogia
species whale (pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), Western North Atlantic
stock of false killer whales, Gulf of Mexico stock of Risso's dolphins,
Gulf of Mexico oceanic stock of killer whales, and Western North
Atlantic stock of Pantropical spotted dolphins to the list of species
incidentally killed or injured by the Category I Atlantic highly
migratory species longline fishery.
List of Fisheries
The following tables set forth the list of U.S. commercial
fisheries according to their classification under section 118 of the
MMPA. Table 1 lists commercial fisheries in the Pacific Ocean
(including Alaska); Table 2 lists commercial fisheries in the Atlantic
Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean; Table 3 lists commercial
fisheries on the high seas; and Table 4 lists fisheries affected by
TRPs or TRTs.
In Tables 1 and 2, the estimated number of vessels or persons
participating in fisheries operating within U.S. waters is expressed in
terms of the number of active participants in the fishery, when
possible. If this information is not available, the estimated number of
vessels or persons licensed for a particular fishery is provided. If no
recent information is available on the number of participants, vessels,
or persons licensed in a fishery, then the number from the most recent
LOF is used for the estimated number of vessels or persons in the
fishery. NMFS acknowledges that, in some cases, these estimates may be
inflations of actual effort, such as for many of the Mid-Atlantic and
New England fisheries. However, in these cases, the numbers represent
the potential effort for each fishery, given the multiple gear types
for which several state permits may allow. Changes made to Mid-Atlantic
and New England fishery participants will not affect observer coverage
or bycatch estimates, as observer coverage and bycatch estimates are
based on vessel trip reports and landings data. Table 1 and 2 serve to
provide a description of the fishery's potential effort (state and
Federal). If NMFS is able to extract more accurate information on the
gear types used by state permit holders in the future, the numbers will
be updated to reflect this change. For additional information on
fishing effort in fisheries found on Table 1 or 2, contact the relevant
regional office (contact information included above in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION).
For high seas fisheries, Table 3 lists the number of valid HSFCA
permits currently held. Although this likely overestimates the number
of active participants in many of these fisheries, the number of valid
HSFCA permits is the most reliable data on the potential effort in high
seas fisheries at this time. As noted previously in this rule, the
number of HSFCA permits listed in Table 3 for the high seas components
of fisheries that also operate within U.S. waters does not necessarily
represent additional effort that is not accounted for in Tables 1 and
2. Many vessels holding HSFCA permits also fish within U.S. waters and
are included in the number of vessels and participants operating within
those fisheries in Tables 1 and 2.
Tables 1, 2, and 3 also list the marine mammal species and/or
stocks incidentally killed or injured (seriously or non-seriously) in
each fishery based on SARs, injury determination reports, bycatch
estimation reports, observer data, logbook data, stranding data,
disentanglement network data, fisher self-reports (i.e. MMPA reports),
and anecdotal reports. The best available scientific information
included in these reports is based on data through 2011. This list
includes all species and/or stocks known to be killed or injured in a
given fishery but also includes species and/or stocks for which there
are anecdotal records of a mortality or injury. Additionally, species
identified by logbook entries, stranding data, or fishermen self-
reports (i.e., MMPA reports) may not be verified. In Tables 1 and 2,
NMFS has designated those species/stocks driving a fishery's
classification (i.e., the fishery is classified based on mortalities
and serious injuries of a marine mammal stock that are greater than or
equal to 50 percent [Category I], or greater than 1 percent and less
than 50 percent [Category II], of a stock's PBR) by a ``\1\'' after the
stock's name.
In Tables 1 and 2, there are several fisheries classified as
Category II that have no recent documented mortalities or serious
injuries of marine mammals, or fisheries that did not result in a
mortality or serious injury rate greater than 1 percent of a stock's
PBR level based on known interactions. NMFS has classified these
fisheries by analogy to other Category I or II fisheries that use
similar fishing techniques or gear that are known to cause mortality or
serious injury of marine mammals, as discussed in the final LOF for
1996 (60 FR 67063, December 28, 1995), and according to factors listed
in the definition of a ``Category II fishery'' in 50 CFR 229.2 (i.e.,
fishing techniques, gear used, methods used to deter marine mammals,
target species, seasons and areas fished, qualitative data from
logbooks or fisher reports, stranding data, and the species and
distribution of marine mammals in the area). NMFS has designated those
fisheries listed by analogy in Tables 1 and 2 by a ``\2\'' after the
fishery's name.
There are several fisheries in Tables 1, 2, and 3 in which a
portion of the fishing vessels cross the EEZ boundary and therefore
operate both within U.S. waters and on the high seas. These fisheries,
though listed separately between Table 1 or 2 and Table 3, are
considered the same fishery on either side of the EEZ boundary. NMFS
has designated those fisheries in each table by a ``*'' after the
fishery's name.
[[Page 77930]]
Table 1--List of Fisheries--Commercial Fisheries in the Pacific Ocean
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
Number of Marine mammal species and/or stocks
Fishery description vessels/ incidentally killed or injured
persons
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY I
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
HI deep-set longline * [caret]............. 128 Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, MHI Insular.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.\1\
False killer whale, Palmyra Atoll.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
Risso's dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Sperm whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
GILLNET FISHERIES:
CA thresher shark/swordfish drift gillnet 19 Bottlenose dolphin, CA/OR/WA offshore.
(>=14 in mesh) *. California sea lion, U.S.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Minke whale, CA/OR/WA.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
Northern right-whale dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Risso's dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Sperm Whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY II
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GILLNET FISHERIES:
CA halibut/white seabass and other species 50 California sea lion, U.S.
set gillnet (>3.5 in mesh). Harbor seal, CA.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
Sea otter, CA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
CA yellowtail, barracuda, and white seabass 30 California sea lion, U.S.
drift gillnet (mesh size >=3.5 in and <14 Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
in) \2\. Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
AK Bristol Bay salmon drift gillnet \2\.... 1,862 Beluga whale, Bristol Bay.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Bristol Bay salmon set gillnet \2\...... 979 Beluga whale, Bristol Bay.
Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Spotted seal, AK.
AK Kodiak salmon set gillnet............... 188 Harbor porpoise, GOA.\1\
Harbor seal, GOA.
Sea otter, Southwest AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Cook Inlet salmon set gillnet........... 736 Beluga whale, Cook Inlet.
Dall's porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.\1\
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Cook Inlet salmon drift gillnet......... 569 Beluga whale, Cook Inlet.
Dall's porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, GOA.\1\
Harbor seal, GOA.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
[[Page 77931]]
AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon drift 162 Dall's porpoise, AK.
gillnet \2\. Harbor porpoise, GOA.
Harbor seal, GOA.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
AK Peninsula/Aleutian Islands salmon set 113 Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
gillnet \2\. Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Prince William Sound salmon drift 537 Dall's porpoise, AK.
gillnet. Harbor porpoise, GOA.\1\
Harbor seal, GOA.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.\1\
AK Southeast salmon drift gillnet.......... 474 Dall's porpoise, AK.
Harbor porpoise, Southeast AK.
Harbor seal, Southeast AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.\1\
Pacific white-sided dolphin, North Pacific.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
AK Yakutat salmon set gillnet \2\.......... 168 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor Porpoise, Southeastern AK.
Harbor seal, Southeast AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific
(Southeast AK).
WA Puget Sound Region salmon drift gillnet 210 Dall's porpoise, CA/OR/WA.
(includes all inland waters south of US- Harbor porpoise, inland WA.\1\
Canada border and eastward of the Bonilla- Harbor seal, WA inland.
Tatoosh line-Treaty Indian fishing is
excluded).
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
AK Cook Inlet salmon purse seine........... 83 Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.\1\
AK Kodiak salmon purse seine............... 376 Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.\1\
TRAWL FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands flatfish 32 Bearded seal, AK.
trawl. Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
Harbor seal, Bering Sea.
Humpback whale, Western North Pacific.\1\
Killer whale, AK resident.\1\
Killer whale, GOA, AI, BS transient.\1\
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ringed seal, AK.
Ribbon seal, AK.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.\1\
Walrus, AK.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands pollock 102 Bearded Seal, AK.
trawl. Dall's porpoise, AK.
Harbor seal, AK.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Humpback whale, Western North Pacific.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ribbon seal, AK.
Ringed seal, AK.
Spotted seal, AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.\1\
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish 17 Killer whale, ENP AK resident.\1\
trawl. Killer whale, GOA, AI, BS transient.\1\
POT, RING NET, AND TRAP FISHERIES:
CA spot prawn pot.......................... 28 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
CA Dungeness crab pot...................... 570 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
OR Dungeness crab pot...................... 433 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
WA/OR/CA sablefish pot..................... 309 Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
WA coastal Dungeness crab pot.............. 228 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.\1\
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
[[Page 77932]]
HI shallow-set longline * [caret].......... 18 Blainville's beaked whale, HI.
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.\1\
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale),
HI.
Risso's dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
American Samoa longline \2\................ 25 Bottlenose dolphin, unknown.
Cuvier's beaked whale, unknown.
False killer whale, American Samoa.
Rough-toothed dolphin, American Samoa.
Short-finned pilot whale, unknown.
HI shortline \2\........................... 6 None documented.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY III
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GILLNET FISHERIES:
AK Kuskokwim, Yukon, Norton Sound, Kotzebue 1,778 Harbor porpoise, Bering Sea.
salmon gillnet.
AK miscellaneous finfish set gillnet....... 54 Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Prince William Sound salmon set gillnet. 29 Harbor seal, GOA.
Sea otter, South Central AK.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK roe herring and food/bait herring 920 None documented.
gillnet.
CA set gillnet (mesh size <3.5 in)......... 304 None documented.
HI inshore gillnet......................... 42 Bottlenose dolphin, HI.
Spinner dolphin, HI.
WA Grays Harbor salmon drift gillnet 24 Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
(excluding treaty Tribal fishing).
WA/OR herring, smelt, shad, sturgeon, 913 None documented.
bottom fish, mullet, perch, rockfish
gillnet.
WA/OR lower Columbia River (includes 110 California sea lion, U.S.
tributaries) drift gillnet. Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
WA Willapa Bay drift gillnet............... 82 Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
Northern elephant seal, CA breeding.
MISCELLANEOUS NET FISHERIES:
AK Southeast salmon purse seine............ 315 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
AK Metlakatla salmon purse seine........... 10 None documented.
AK miscellaneous finfish beach seine....... 2 None documented.
AK miscellaneous finfish purse seine....... 2 None documented.
AK octopus/squid purse seine............... 0 None documented.
AK roe herring and food/bait herring beach 10 None documented.
seine.
AK roe herring and food/bait herring purse 356 None documented.
seine.
AK salmon beach seine...................... 31 None documented.
AK salmon purse seine (excluding salmon 936 Harbor seal, GOA.
purse seine fisheries listed as Category
II).
CA anchovy, mackerel, sardine purse seine.. 65 California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, CA.
CA squid purse seine....................... 80 Long-beaked common dolphin, CA
.............. Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
CA tuna purse seine *...................... 10 None documented.
WA/OR sardine purse seine.................. 42 None documented.
WA (all species) beach seine or drag seine. 235 None documented.
WA/OR herring, smelt, squid purse seine or 130 None documented.
lampara.
WA salmon purse seine...................... 75 None documented.
WA salmon reef net......................... 11 None documented.
HI lift net................................ 21 None documented.
HI inshore purse seine..................... <3 None documented.
HI throw net, cast net..................... 20 None documented.
HI seine net............................... 21 None documented.
DIP NET FISHERIES:
CA squid dip net........................... 115 None documented.
WA/OR smelt, herring dip net............... 119 None documented.
MARINE AQUACULTURE FISHERIES:
CA marine shellfish aquaculture............ Unknown None documented.
CA salmon enhancement rearing pen.......... >1 None documented.
CA white seabass enhancement net pens...... 13 California sea lion, U.S.
HI offshore pen culture.................... 2 None documented.
[[Page 77933]]
WA/OR salmon net pens...................... 14 California sea lion, U.S.
Harbor seal, WA inland waters.
TROLL FISHERIES:
AK North Pacific halibut, AK bottom fish, 1,320 None documented.
WA/OR/CA albacore, groundfish, bottom (180 AK)
fish, CA halibut non-salmonid troll
fisheries *.
AK salmon troll............................ 1,908 Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
American Samoa tuna troll.................. 7 None documented.
CA/OR/WA salmon troll...................... 4,300 None documented.
HI troll................................... 1,755 Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
HI rod and reel............................ 221 None documented.
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 40 None documented.
Islands tuna troll.
Guam tuna troll............................ 432 None documented.
LONGLINE/SET LINE FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod 45 Dall's Porpoise, AK.
longline. Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Ringed seal, AK.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands rockfish 3 None documented.
longline.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Greenland 4 Killer whale, AK resident.
turbot longline.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands sablefish 22 None documented.
longline.
AK Gulf of Alaska halibut longline......... 855 None documented.
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod longline..... 92 Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish longline........ 25 None documented.
AK Gulf of Alaska sablefish longline....... 295 Sperm whale, North Pacific.
AK halibut longline/set line (state and 2,197 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
Federal waters). data.
AK octopus/squid longline.................. 3 None documented.
AK state-managed waters longline/setline 464 None documented.
(including sablefish, rockfish, lingcod,
and miscellaneous finfish).
WA/OR/CA groundfish, bottomfish longline/ 367 Bottlenose dolphin, CA/OR/WA offshore.
set line.
WA/OR Pacific halibut longline............. 350 None documented.
CA pelagic longline........................ 1 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
HI kaka line............................... 24 None documented.
HI vertical line........................... 6 None documented.
TRAWL FISHERIES:
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Atka 13 Ribbon seal, AK.
mackerel trawl. Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod 72 Ringed seal, AK.
trawl. Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Gulf of Alaska flatfish trawl........... 36 Northern elephant seal, North Pacific.
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod trawl........ 55 Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Gulf of Alaska pollock trawl............ 67 Dall's porpoise, AK.
Fin whale, Northeast Pacific.
Northern elephant seal, North Pacific.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
AK Gulf of Alaska rockfish trawl........... 43 None documented.
AK food/bait herring trawl................. 4 None documented.
AK miscellaneous finfish otter/beam trawl.. 282 None documented.
AK shrimp otter trawl and beam trawl 38 None documented.
(statewide and Cook Inlet).
AK state-managed waters of Cook Inlet, 2 None documented.
Kachemak Bay, Prince William Sound,
Southeast AK groundfish trawl.
CA halibut bottom trawl.................... 53 None documented.
WA/OR/CA shrimp trawl...................... 300 None documented.
WA/OR/CA groundfish trawl.................. 160-180 California sea lion, U.S.
Dall's porpoise, CA/OR/WA.
Harbor seal, OR/WA coast.
Northern fur seal, Eastern Pacific.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
POT, RING NET, AND TRAP FISHERIES:
AK statewide miscellaneous finfish pot..... 4 None documented.
AK Aleutian Islands sablefish pot.......... 4 None documented.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands Pacific cod 59 None documented.
pot.
AK Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands crab pot... 540 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
AK Bering Sea sablefish pot................ 2 None documented.
AK Gulf of Alaska crab pot................. 381 None documented.
AK Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod pot.......... 128 Harbor seal, GOA.
AK Southeast Alaska crab pot............... 41 Humpback whale, Central North Pacific
(Southeast AK).
[[Page 77934]]
AK Southeast Alaska shrimp pot............. 269 Humpback whale, Central North Pacific
(Southeast AK).
AK shrimp pot, except Southeast............ 236 None documented.
AK octopus/squid pot....................... 26 None documented.
AK snail pot............................... 1 None documented.
CA/OR coonstripe shrimp pot................ 10 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Harbor seal, CA.
CA rock crab pot........................... 150 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific
Harbor seal, CA.
CA spiny lobster........................... 198 Gray whale, Eastern North Pacific.
WA/OR/CA hagfish pot....................... 54 None documented.
WA/OR shrimp pot/trap...................... 254 None documented.
WA Puget Sound Dungeness crab pot/trap..... 249 None documented.
HI crab trap............................... 7 Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
HI fish trap............................... 5 None documented.
HI lobster trap............................ <3 None documented in recent years.
HI shrimp trap............................. 6 None documented.
HI crab net................................ 4 None documented.
HI Kona crab loop net...................... 35 None documented.
HOOK-AND-LINE, HANDLINE, AND JIG FISHERIES:
AK miscellaneous finfish handline/hand 456 None documented.
troll and mechanical jig.
AK North Pacific halibut handline/hand 180 None documented.
troll and mechanical jig.
AK octopus/squid handline.................. 7 None documented.
American Samoa bottomfish.................. 14 None documented.
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 28 None documented.
Islands bottomfish.
Guam bottomfish............................ >300 None documented.
HI aku boat, pole, and line................ <3 None documented.
HI bottomfish handline..................... 578 None documented in recent years.
HI inshore handline........................ 376 None documented.
HI pelagic handline........................ 484 None documented.
WA groundfish, bottomfish jig.............. 679 None documented.
Western Pacific squid jig.................. <3 None documented.
HARPOON FISHERIES:
CA swordfish harpoon....................... 30 None documented.
POUND NET/WEIR FISHERIES:
AK herring spawn on kelp pound net......... 409 None documented.
AK Southeast herring roe/food/bait pound 2 None documented.
net.
HI bullpen trap............................ <3 None documented.
BAIT PENS:
WA/OR/CA bait pens......................... 13 California sea lion, U.S.
DREDGE FISHERIES:
Alaska scallop dredge...................... 108 (5 AK) None documented.
DIVE, HAND/MECHANICAL COLLECTION FISHERIES:
AK abalone................................. 0 None documented.
AK clam.................................... 130 None documented.
AK Dungeness crab.......................... 2 None documented.
AK herring spawn on kelp................... 339 None documented.
AK urchin and other fish/shellfish......... 398 None documented
CA sea urchin.............................. 583 None documented.
HI black coral diving...................... <3 None documented.
HI fish pond............................... 5 None documented.
HI handpick................................ 58 None documented.
HI lobster diving.......................... 23 None documented.
HI spearfishing............................ 159 None documented.
WA/CA kelp................................. 4 None documented.
WA/OR sea urchin, other clam, octopus, 637 None documented.
oyster, sea cucumber, scallop, ghost
shrimp hand, dive, or mechanical
collection.
WA shellfish aquaculture................... 684 None documented.
COMMERCIAL PASSENGER FISHING VESSEL (CHARTER
BOAT) FISHERIES:
AK/WA/OR/CA commercial passenger fishing >7,000 Killer whale, unknown.
vessel. (2,702 AK) Steller sea lion, Eastern U.S.
Steller sea lion, Western U.S.
LIVE FINFISH/SHELLFISH FISHERIES:
CA nearshore finfish live trap/hook-and- 93 None documented.
line.
[[Page 77935]]
HI aquarium collecting..................... 90 None documented.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Abbreviations and Symbols Used in Table 1: AI--Aleutian Islands; AK--Alaska; BS--Bering Sea; CA--
California; ENP--Eastern North Pacific; GOA--Gulf of Alaska; HI--Hawaii; MHI--Main Hawaiian Islands; OR--
Oregon; WA--Washington; \1\ Fishery classified based on mortalities and serious injuries of this stock, which
are greater than or equal to 50 percent (Category I) or greater than 1 percent and less than 50 percent
(Category II) of the stock's PBR; \2\ Fishery classified by analogy; * Fishery has an associated high seas
component listed in Table 3; [caret] The list of marine mammal species and/or stocks killed or injured in this
fishery is identical to the list of species and/or stocks killed or injured in high seas component of the
fishery, minus species and/or stocks have geographic ranges exclusively on the high seas. The species and/or
stocks are found, and the fishery remains the same, on both sides of the EEZ boundary. Therefore, the EEZ
components of these fisheries pose the same risk to marine mammals as the components operating on the high
seas.
Table 2--List of Fisheries--Commercial Fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
Number of Marine mammal species and/or stocks
Fishery description vessels/ incidentally killed or injured
persons
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY I
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic gillnet....................... 5,509 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory
coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory
coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
Risso's dolphin, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Northeast sink gillnet..................... 4,375 Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Fin whale, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.\1\
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Hooded seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Long-finned Pilot whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.
Risso's dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned Pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic American lobster 11,693 Harbor seal, WNA.
trap/pot.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.\1\
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico 420 Atlantic spotted dolphin, GMX continental and
large pelagics longline *. oceanic.
Atlantic spotted dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Cuvier's beaked whale, WNA.
False killer whale, WNA.
Gervais beaked whale, GMX.
Killer whale, GMX oceanic.
Kogia spp. (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale), WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
Mesoplodon beaked whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East coast.
[[Page 77936]]
Pantropical spotted dolphin, Northern GMX.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, WNA.
Risso's dolphin, Northern GMX.
Risso's dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, Northern GMX.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
Sperm whale, GMX oceanic.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY II
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Chesapeake Bay inshore gillnet \2\......... 1,126 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
Gulf of Mexico gillnet \2\................. 724 Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, and
estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.
NC inshore gillnet......................... 1,323 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Northeast anchored float gillnet.\2\....... 421 Harbor seal, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Northeast drift gillnet \2\................ 311 None documented.
Southeast Atlantic gillnet \2\............. 357 Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern migratory coastal.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark gillnet... 30 Bottlenose dolphin, unknown (Central FL,
Northern FL, SC/GA coastal, or Southern
migratory coastal).
North Atlantic right whale, WNA.
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic mid-water trawl (including 322 Common dolphin, WNA.
pair trawl).
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Risso's dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.\1\
Mid-Atlantic bottom trawl.................. 631 Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.\1\
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
Risso's dolphin, WNA.\1\
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Northeast mid-water trawl (including pair 1,103 Gray seal, WNA.
trawl).
Harbor seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.\1\
Common dolphin, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.
Northeast bottom trawl..................... 2,987 Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Harbor porpoise, GME/BF
Harbor seal, WNA.
Harp seal, WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East Coast.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
White-sided dolphin, WNA.\1\
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico 4,950 Atlantic spotted dolphin, GMX continental and
shrimp trawl. oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, Charleston estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound,
estuarine.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX continental shelf.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.\1\
West Indian manatee, Florida.
[[Page 77937]]
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico 1,282 Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine.
stone crab trap/pot \2\.
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, FL Bay.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine
(FL west coast portion).
Bottlenose dolphin, Indian River Lagoon
estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Jacksonville estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Atlantic mixed species trap/pot \2\........ 3,467 Fin whale, WNA.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot................ 8,557 Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Charleston estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Indian River Lagoon
estuarine system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Jacksonville estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern FL coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GA/Southern SC
estuarine system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory
coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern SC estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern GA estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory
coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine
system.\1\
West Indian manatee, FL.\1\
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
Gulf of Mexico menhaden purse seine........ 40-42 Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.\1\
Mid-Atlantic menhaden purse seine \2\...... 5 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory coastal.
HAUL/BEACH SEINE FISHERIES:
Mid-Atlantic haul/beach seine.............. 565 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern Migratory
coastal.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory
coastal.\1\
NC long haul seine......................... 372 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.\1\
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine
system.
STOP NET FISHERIES:
NC roe mullet stop net..................... 13 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, unknown (Southern migratory
coastal or Southern NC estuarine system).
POUND NET FISHERIES:
VA pound net............................... 67 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern Migratory
coastal.\1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY III
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GILLNET FISHERIES:
Caribbean gillnet.......................... >991 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
DE River inshore gillnet................... Unknown None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
Long Island Sound inshore gillnet.......... Unknown None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
RI, southern MA (to Monomoy Island), and NY Unknown None documented in the most recent 5 years of
Bight (Raritan and Lower NY Bays) inshore data.
gillnet.
Southeast Atlantic inshore gillnet......... Unknown Bottlenose dolphin, Northern SC estuarine
system.
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Atlantic shellfish bottom trawl............ >58 None documented.
Gulf of Mexico butterfish trawl............ 2 Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX continental
shelf.
Gulf of Mexico mixed species trawl......... 20 None documented.
GA cannonball jellyfish trawl.............. 1 Bottlenose dolphin, SC/GA coastal.
MARINE AQUACULTURE FISHERIES:
Finfish aquaculture........................ 48 Harbor seal, WNA.
Shellfish aquaculture...................... Unknown None documented.
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
[[Page 77938]]
Gulf of Maine Atlantic herring purse seine. >7 Harbor seal, WNA.
Gray seal, WNA.
Gulf of Maine menhaden purse seine......... >2 None documented.
FL West Coast sardine purse seine.......... 10 Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
U.S. Atlantic tuna purse seine *........... 5 Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
LONGLINE/HOOK-AND-LINE FISHERIES:
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic bottom longline/hook- >1,207 None documented.
and-line.
Gulf of Maine, U.S. Mid-Atlantic tuna, 428 Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
shark swordfish hook-and-line/harpoon.
Humpback whale, Gulf of Maine.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, >5,000 Bottlenose dolphin, GMX continental shelf.
and Caribbean snapper-grouper and other
reef fish bottom longline/hook-and-line.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico <125 Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
shark bottom longline/hook-and-line.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX continental
shelf.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, 1,446 None documented.
and Caribbean pelagic hook-and-line/
harpoon.
U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico trotline..... Unknown None documented.
TRAP/POT FISHERIES:
Caribbean mixed species trap/pot........... >501 None documented.
Caribbean spiny lobster trap/pot........... >197 None documented.
FL spiny lobster trap/pot.................. 1,268 Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, FL Bay estuarine.
Gulf of Mexico blue crab trap/pot.......... 4,113 Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.
West Indian manatee, FL.
Gulf of Mexico mixed species trap/pot...... Unknown None documented.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico 10 None documented.
golden crab trap/pot.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic eel trap/pot............. Unknown None documented.
STOP SEINE/WEIR/POUND NET/FLOATING TRAP
FISHERIES:
Gulf of Maine herring and Atlantic mackerel >1 Harbor porpoise, GME/BF.
stop seine/weir.
Harbor seal, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian east coast.
Atlantic white-sided dolphin, WNA.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic crab stop seine/weir..... 2,600 None documented.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic mixed species stop seine/ Unknown Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine
weir/pound net (except the NC roe mullet system.
stop net).
RI floating trap........................... 9 None documented.
DREDGE FISHERIES:
Gulf of Maine sea urchin dredge............ Unknown None documented.
Gulf of Maine mussel dredge................ Unknown None documented.
Gulf of Maine, U.S. Mid-Atlantic sea >403 None documented.
scallop dredge.
Mid-Atlantic blue crab dredge.............. Unknown None documented.
Mid-Atlantic soft-shell clam dredge........ Unknown None documented.
Mid-Atlantic whelk dredge.................. Unknown None documented.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic/Gulf of Mexico oyster 7,000 None documented.
dredge.
U.S. Mid-Atlantic offshore surf clam and Unknown None documented.
quahog dredge.
HAUL/BEACH SEINE FISHERIES:
Caribbean haul/beach seine................. 15 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
Gulf of Mexico haul/beach seine............ Unknown None documented.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic haul/beach seine 25 None documented.
DIVE, HAND/MECHANICAL COLLECTION FISHERIES:
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean 20,000 None documented.
shellfish dive, hand/mechanical collection.
Gulf of Maine urchin dive, hand/mechanical Unknown None documented.
collection.
Gulf of Mexico, Southeast Atlantic, Mid- Unknown None documented.
Atlantic, and Caribbean cast net.
COMMERCIAL PASSENGER FISHING VESSEL (CHARTER
BOAT) FISHERIES:
[[Page 77939]]
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean 4,000 Bottlenose dolphin, Biscayne Bay estuarine.
commercial passenger fishing vessel.
Bottlenose dolphin, Central FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Choctawhatchee Bay.
Bottlenose dolphin, Eastern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, FL Bay.
Bottlenose dolphin, GMX bay, sound, estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Indian River Lagoon
estuarine system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Jacksonville estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern FL coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GA/Southern SC
estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern NC estuarine.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern migratory coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern NC estuarine
system.
Bottlenose dolphin, Southern SC/GA coastal.
Bottlenose dolphin, Western GMX coastal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Abbreviations and Symbols Used in Table 2: DE--Delaware; FL--Florida; GA--Georgia; GME/BF--Gulf of Maine/
Bay of Fundy; GMX--Gulf of Mexico; MA--Massachusetts; NC--North Carolina; NY--New York; RI--Rhode Island; SC--
South Carolina; VA--Virginia; WNA--Western North Atlantic; \1\Fishery classified based on mortalities and
serious injuries of this stock, which are greater than or equal to 50 percent (Category I) or greater than 1
percent and less than 50 percent (Category II) of the stock's PBR; \2\Fishery classified by analogy; * Fishery
has an associated high seas component listed in Table 3.
Table 3--List of Fisheries--Commercial Fisheries on the High Seas
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Marine mammal species and/or stocks
Fishery description HSFCA permits incidentally killed or injured
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY I
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species *........ 83 Atlantic spotted dolphin, WNA.
Bottlenose dolphin, Northern GMX oceanic.
Bottlenose dolphin, WNA offshore.
Common dolphin, WNA.
Cuvier's beaked whale, WNA.
False killer whale, WNA.
Killer whale, GMX oceanic.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale),
WNA.
Long-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Mesoplodon beaked whale, WNA.
Minke whale, Canadian East coast.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, WNA.
Risso's dolphin, GMX.
Risso's dolphin, WNA.
Short-finned pilot whale, WNA.
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Deep-set 128 Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
component) * [caret].
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.
Pantropical spotted dolphin, HI.
Risso's dolphin, HI.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Sperm whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
DRIFT GILLNET FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * [caret]. 4 Long-beaked common dolphin, CA.
Humpback whale, CA/OR/WA.
Northern right-whale dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Pacific white-sided dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Risso's dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY II
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DRIFT GILLNET FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species.......... 1 Undetermined.
TRAWL FISHERIES:
[[Page 77940]]
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species **....... 1 Undetermined.
CCAMLR..................................... 0 Antarctic fur seal.
Western Pacific Pelagic.................... 0 Undetermined.
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES:
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries............... 38 Undetermined.
Western Pacific Pelagic.................... 3 Undetermined.
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
CCAMLR..................................... 0 None documented.
South Pacific Albacore Troll............... 13 Undetermined.
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries **............ 8 Undetermined.
Western Pacific Pelagic (HI Shallow-set 18 Blainville's beaked whale, HI.
component) * [caret].
Bottlenose dolphin, HI Pelagic.
False killer whale, HI Pelagic.
Humpback whale, Central North Pacific.
Kogia spp. whale (Pygmy or dwarf sperm whale),
HI.
Risso's dolphin, HI.
Short-beaked common dolphin, CA/OR/WA.
Short-finned pilot whale, HI.
Striped dolphin, HI.
HANDLINE/POLE AND LINE FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species.......... 2 Undetermined.
Pacific Highly Migratory Species........... 41 Undetermined.
South Pacific Albacore Troll............... 8 Undetermined.
Western Pacific Pelagic.................... 3 Undetermined.
TROLL FISHERIES:
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species.......... 2 Undetermined.
South Pacific Albacore Troll............... 35 Undetermined.
South Pacific Tuna Fisheries **............ 3 Undetermined.
Western Pacific Pelagic.................... 19 Undetermined.
LINERS NEI FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species **........ 1 Undetermined.
South Pacific Albacore Troll............... 1 Undetermined.
Western Pacific Pelagic.................... 1 Undetermined.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CATEGORY III
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LONGLINE FISHERIES:
Northwest Atlantic Bottom Longline......... 1 None documented.
Pacific Highly Migratory Species *......... 100 None documented in the most recent 5 years of
data.
PURSE SEINE FISHERIES
Pacific Highly Migratory Species * [caret]. 8 None documented.
TRAWL FISHERIES:
Northwest Atlantic......................... 1 None documented.
TROLL FISHERIES:
Pacific Highly Migratory Species *......... 253 None documented.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Terms, Abbreviations, and Symbols Used in Table 3:
CA--California; GMX--Gulf of Mexico; HI--Hawaii; OR--Oregon; WA--Washington; WNA--Western North Atlantic.
* Fishery is an extension/component of an existing fishery operating within U.S. waters listed in Table 1 or 2.
The number of permits listed in Table 3 represents only the number of permits for the high seas component of
the fishery.
** These gear types are not authorized under the Pacific HMS FMP (2004), the Atlantic HMS FMP (2006), or without
a South Pacific Tuna Treaty license (in the case of the South Pacific Tuna fisheries). Because HSFCA permits
are valid for five years, permits obtained in past years exist in the HSFCA permit database for gear types
that are now unauthorized. Therefore, while HSFCA permits exist for these gear types, it does not represent
effort. In order to land fish species, fishers must be using an authorized gear type. Once these permits for
unauthorized gear types expire, the permit-holder will be required to obtain a permit for an authorized gear
type.
[caret] The list of marine mammal species and/or stocks killed or injured in this fishery is identical to the
list of marine mammal species and/or stocks killed or injured in U.S. waters component of the fishery, minus
species and/or stocks that have geographic ranges exclusively in coastal waters, because the marine mammal
species and/or stocks are also found on the high seas and the fishery remains the same on both sides of the
EEZ boundary. Therefore, the high seas components of these fisheries pose the same risk to marine mammals as
the components of these fisheries operating in U.S. waters.
Table 4--Fisheries Affected by Take Reduction Teams and Plans
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Take reduction plans Affected fisheries
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Category I
Plan (ALWTRP)--50 CFR 229.32. Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic American
lobster trap/pot.
Northeast sink gillnet.
Category II
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot.
Atlantic mixed species trap/pot.
[[Page 77941]]
Northeast anchored float gillnet.
Northeast drift gillnet.
Southeast Atlantic gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark
gillnet *.
Southeastern, U.S. Atlantic, Gulf
of Mexico stone crab trap/pot
[caret].
Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Category I
Plan (BDTRP)--50 CFR 229.35. Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
Category II
Atlantic blue crab trap/pot.
Chesapeake Bay inshore gillnet
fishery.
Mid-Atlantic haul/beach seine.
Mid-Atlantic menhaden purse seine.
NC inshore gillnet.
NC long haul seine.
NC roe mullet stop net.
Southeast Atlantic gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic shark
gillnet.
Southeastern U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of
Mexico shrimp trawl [caret].
Southeastern, U.S. Atlantic, Gulf
of Mexico stone crab trap/pot
[caret].
VA pound net.
False Killer Whale Take Reduction Category I
Plan (FKWTRP)--50 CFR 229.37. HI deep-set longline.
Category II
HI shallow-set longline.
Harbor Porpoise Take Reduction Plan Category I
(HPTRP)--50 CFR 229.33 (New Mid-Atlantic gillnet.
England) and 229.34 (Mid-Atlantic).
Northeast sink gillnet.
Pelagic Longline Take Reduction Category I
Plan (PLTRP)--50 CFR 229.36. Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico large pelagics longline.
Pacific Offshore Cetacean Take Category I
Reduction Plan (POCTRP)--50 CFR CA thresher shark/swordfish drift
229.31. gillnet (>=14 in mesh).
Atlantic Trawl Gear Take Reduction Category II
Team (ATGTRT). Mid-Atlantic bottom trawl.
Mid-Atlantic mid-water trawl
(including pair trawl).
Northeast bottom trawl.
Northeast mid-water trawl
(including pair trawl).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Only applicable to the portion of the fishery operating in U.S.
waters;
[caret] Only applicable to the portion of the fishery operating in the
Atlantic Ocean.
Classification
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) at the proposed rule stage that this rule would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. No comments were received on that certification, and no new
information has been discovered to change that conclusion. Accordingly,
no regulatory flexibility analysis is required, and none has been
prepared.
This rule contains collection-of-information requirements subject
to the Paperwork Reduction Act. The collection of information for the
registration of individuals under the MMPA has been approved by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under OMB control number 0648-
0293 (0.15 hours per report for new registrants and 0.09 hours per
report for renewals). The requirement for reporting marine mammal
mortalities or injuries has been approved by OMB under OMB control
number 0648-0292 (0.15 hours per report). These estimates include the
time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources,
gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection of information. Send comments regarding these reporting
burden estimates or any other aspect of the collections of information,
including suggestions for reducing burden, to NMFS and OMB (see
ADDRESSES and SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION).
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required
to respond to nor shall a person be subject to a penalty for failure to
comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act unless that collection of information
displays a currently valid OMB control number.
This rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
An environmental assessment (EA) was prepared under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in 1995 and 2005. The 1995 EA examined
the effects of regulations implementing section 118 of the 1994
Amendments of the MMPA on the affected environment. The 2005 EA
analyzed the environmental impacts of continuing the existing scheme
(as described in the 1995 EA) for classifying fisheries on the LOF. The
1995 EA and the 2005 EA concluded that implementation of MMPA section
118 regulations would not have a significant impact on the human
environment. NMFS reviewed the 2005 EA in 2009. NMFS concluded that
because there were no changes to the process used to develop the LOF
and implement section 118 of the MMPA, there was no need to update the
2005 EA. NMFS initiated an EA for the LOF in 2013 but did not finalize
it because the no action alternative described in the 2005 EA is still
the preferred alternative. This rule would not change NMFS' current
process for classifying fisheries on the LOF; therefore, this rule is
not expected to change the analysis or conclusion of the
[[Page 77942]]
2005 EA and FONSI, and no update is needed. If NMFS takes a management
action, for example, through the development of a TRP, NMFS would first
prepare an environmental document, as required under NEPA, specific to
that action.
This rule would not affect species listed as threatened or
endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) or their associated
critical habitat. The impacts of numerous fisheries have been analyzed
in various biological opinions, and this rule will not affect the
conclusions of those opinions. The classification of fisheries on the
LOF is not considered to be a management action that would adversely
affect threatened or endangered species. If NMFS takes a management
action, for example, through the development of a TRP, NMFS would
consult under ESA section 7 on that action.
This rule would have no adverse impacts on marine mammals and may
have a positive impact on marine mammals by improving knowledge of
marine mammals and the fisheries interacting with marine mammals
through information collected from observer programs, stranding and
sighting data, or take reduction teams.
This rule would not affect the land or water uses or natural
resources of the coastal zone, as specified under section 307 of the
Coastal Zone Management Act.
References
Allen, B.M. and R.P. Angliss, editors. 2014. Alaska Marine Mammal
Stock Assessments, 2013. NOAA Tech. Memo. NMFS-AFSC-277. 294 p.
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Dated: December 19, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014-30375 Filed 12-24-14; 8:45 am]
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