Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Application for an Exempted Fishing Permit, 52882-52884 [2017-24716]
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52882
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 15, 2017 / Notices
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Katherine Cheney; NFMS West Coast
Region; 503–231–6730; email:
Katherine.Cheney@noaa.gov.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Notice is
hereby given of a meeting of MAFAC’s
CBP Task Force. The MAFAC was
established by the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary) and, since 1971,
advises the Secretary on all living
marine resource matters that are the
responsibility of the Department of
Commerce. The complete MAFAC
charter and summaries of prior MAFAC
meetings are located online at https://
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ocs/mafac/. The
CBP Task Force reports to MAFAC and
is being convened to discuss and
develop recommendations for long-term
goals to meet Columbia Basin salmon
recovery, conservation needs, and
harvest opportunities. These goals will
be developed in the context of habitat
capacity and other factors that affect
salmon mortality. More information is
available at the CBP Task Force Web
page: https://
www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/
columbia_river/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Matters To Be Considered
The meeting time and agenda are
subject to change. Updated information
will be available on the CBP Task Force
Web page above. Meeting topics include
progress reports on applying the
analytical framework to example species
as prototypes and updates on
quantitative goal setting, guiding
principles, and vision. The meeting is
open to the public as observers, and
public input will be accepted on
December 6, 2017, from 3:30 to 4 p.m.,
limited to the time available.
Special Accommodations
The meeting is physically accessible
to people with disabilities. Requests for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to
Katherine Cheney; 503–231–6730, by
November 28, 2017.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Dated: November 9, 2017.
Jennifer Lukens,
Director for the Office of Policy, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–24721 Filed 11–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
RIN 0648–XF799
Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
Application for an Exempted Fishing
Permit
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of exempted
fishing permit applications; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS announces the receipt
of two exempted fishing permit (EFP)
applications. The first application was
received from The Nature Conservancy
(TNC) for an EFP to test commercial pot
fishing gear for selective harvest of
lingcod. The lingcod pot gear EFP is
intended to provide for the selective
harvest of lingcod with fixed gear inside
the non-trawl rockfish conservation area
(RCA), allowing harvest of lingcod
within existing annual catch limits
(ACLs) while keeping catch of cooccurring overfished species (e.g.
yelloweye rockfish) within rebuilding
ACLs. The second application was
received from the West Coast Seafood
Processors Association, Environmental
Defense Fund, Oregon Trawl
Commission, and Midwater Trawlers
Cooperative for an EFP to test if and
how the removal of certain trawl gear,
time, and area restrictions for the
Shorebased Individual Fishing Quota
(IFQ) Program may impact the nature
and extent of bycatch of prohibited
species. This EFP is intended to allow
participating limited entry groundfish
bottom trawl and midwater trawl
vessels more flexibility in 2018 to target
pelagic rockfish species, such as widow,
chilipepper, and yellowtail rockfish.
The NMFS West Coast Region’s
Assistant Regional Administrator for
Sustainable Fisheries has made a
preliminary determination that the
subject EFP applications contain all the
required information and warrant
further consideration. Therefore, NMFS
announces that the Assistant Regional
Administrator for Sustainable Fisheries
proposes to recommend that EFPs be
issued.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received no
later than 5 p.m., local time on
November 30, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by 0648–XF799, by any one of
the following methods:
DATES:
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• Email: nmfs_gf_efp2018.wcr@
noaa.gov.
• Mail: Barry Thom, Regional
Administrator, West Coast Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115–0070, Attn: Karen
Palmigiano.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and would generally be posted for
public viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender
would be publicly accessible. NMFS
would accept anonymous comments
(enter ‘‘N/A’’ in the required fields if
you wish to remain anonymous).
Attachments to electronic comments
would be accepted in Microsoft Word,
Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
Information relevant to this notice or
the EFP applications are available for
public review during business hours at
the NMFS West Coast Regional Office at
7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA
98115, or by requesting them via phone
or the email address listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen Palmigiano at (206) 526–4491 or
karen.palmigiano@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
action is authorized by the Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) and implementing regulations at
50 CFR 600.745, which states that EFPs
may be used to authorize fishing
activities that would otherwise be
prohibited.
Lingcod Pot Gear EFP
At its June 2016 meeting, the Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council)
received an EFP application from TNC
for the use of pot gear to target lingcod
within the non-trawl RCA offshore of
Washington and Oregon. An initial
opportunity for public comment was
provided during this meeting. At that
time, the Council recommended that
NMFS consider issuing the EFP for a
period of two years (i.e., 2017 and 2018).
The two-year duration was intended to
coincide with the 2017–18 biennial
harvest specifications and management
measures process. However, due to
unforeseen delays, NMFS was unable to
issue this EFP for 2017, and is
proposing to issue the EFP described
below beginning in 2018. The EFP
would expire no later than December
31, 2018.
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sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 15, 2017 / Notices
In 2014, during preliminary gear
testing conducted by TNC and their
research partners, catch of lingcod was
lower than anticipated. During testing,
the gear was only fished in areas open
to non-trawl groundfish fishing, which
included the area seaward of the nontrawl RCA, in depths ranging from
approximately 100–200 fathoms (fm)
(54.7–109.4 meters). Applicants
hypothesize that low catch of lingcod
was primarily due to the non-trawl RCA
(a depth-based area closure prohibiting
fishing for lingcod with pot gear from
approximately 30 fathoms to 100
fathoms), closing depths where lingcod
are most commonly found (i.e.,
shallower than 100 fm). Subsequently,
TNC proposed and the Council
recommended to NMFS an EFP which
would provide an exemption to
participating vessels to target lingcod
with pot gear inside the non-trawl RCA
off Washington and Oregon. This EFP is
necessary to allow activities that are
otherwise prohibited by Federal
regulations. As the RCAs were
implemented to reduce incidental catch
of overfished species, it is not
uncommon for the Council to
recommend to NMFS the permitting of
fishing opportunities to occur inside a
RCA when the gear is highly selective,
with low bycatch of non-target and
overfished groundfish species.
Entanglement of humpback whales in
pot gear buoy lines is a concern,
particularly in the West Coast sablefish
pot fishery, which is designated as a
Category II fishery in the 2017 List of
Fisheries (82 FR 9690, February 8, 2017)
due to its occasional interactions with
humpback whales; the last of which was
documented in 2006. Concerns with
regards to the pot gear, similar to
sablefish pot gear with regards to the
buoy lines, being employed in the
proposed EFP are mitigated because the
magnitude of the fishing effort
permitted under this EFP would be
minimal and occur off Oregon, where
fewer documented interactions between
pot gear and humpback whales has
occurred. Therefore, NMFS is proposing
to approve the EFP consistent with
general requirements following the
conclusion of the public comment
period. Subsequently, NMFS would
issue the actual permits for the EFP to
individual participants and TNC as the
entity coordinating EFP-related fishing
activities as appropriate. NMFS intends
to use an adaptive management
approach for this EFP in which NMFS
may revise requirements and protocols
to improve the EFP without issuing
another Federal Register Notice,
provided that the modifications fall
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19:58 Nov 14, 2017
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within the scope of the Council’s
original intent. Such changes may be
granted without further public notice if
they are deemed essential to facilitate
completion of the proposed research
and result in only a minimal change in
the scope or impacts of the initially
approved EFP request.
In accordance with NOAA
Administrative Order (NAO) 216–6, a
Categorical Exclusion or other
appropriate National Environmental
Policy Act document would be
completed prior to the issuance of any
permits under this EFP. Further review
and consultation may be necessary
before a final determination is made to
issue the permits. After publication of
this document in the Federal Register,
the EFP, if approved by NMFS, may be
implemented following the public
comment period. NMFS would consider
comments submitted, as well as the
Council’s discussion at their June 2016
Council meeting, in deciding whether to
approve the application as requested.
NMFS may approve the application in
its entirety or may make any alterations
needed to achieve the goals of the EFP.
2018 Trawl Gear EFP
In September 2017, the Council
received an application for an EFP from
the West Coast Seafood Processors
Association, Environmental Defense
Fund, Oregon Trawl Commission, and
Midwater Trawlers Cooperative to test if
and how the removal of certain gear,
time, and area restrictions for the
Shorebased IFQ Program may impact
the nature and extent of prohibited
species bycatch, particularly salmon
and eulachon. This EFP is intended to
allow participating limited entry
groundfish bottom trawl and midwater
trawl vessels more flexibility in 2018 to
target pelagic rockfish species, such as
widow, chilipepper, and yellowtail
rockfish. An opportunity for public
testimony was provided during the
Council meeting, after which the
Council recommended the EFP with
several changes. Specifically, the
Council narrowed the number of
exemptions they recommended to
include in the EFP. After the Council
meeting, the applicants updated their
application based on the Council’s
recommendations and resubmitted a
final version of the application to NMFS
on October 4, 2017. Copies of the final
version of the application are available
from NMFS. (See ADDRESSES for how to
obtain this information).
In late 2016, industry members
proposed a trawl gear EFP for 2017
(later known as the 2017 trawl gear EFP)
to provide them exemptions to the
minimum mesh size requirement and
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52883
exemptions to the requirement to use
selective flatfish trawl shoreward of the
trawl RCA north of 42° North latitude
(N. lat) for limited entry bottom trawl
vessels. Since implementation of the
2017 trawl gear EFP in March 2017,
limited entry groundfish bottom trawl
vessels have been testing their new gear
configurations by targeting midwater
pelagic rockfish (primarily widow
rockfish and yellowtail rockfish) using
modified bottom trawl gear north of 42°
N. lat. shoreward of the trawl RCA with
minimal impacts on Chinook salmon.
As of the end of October 2017, there
have been 50 trips taken by 10 vessels,
and they have caught a total of four
Chinook salmon. Information on gear
configurations has been collected, and
the data would helpful information any
potential modifications or elimination
of current gear restrictions.
To continue collecting information on
impacts to salmon and eulachon that
may arise from the modification or
elimination of gear, time, and area
regulations, the applicants have
requested a 2018 trawl gear EFP that
expands upon the 2017 trawl gear EFP.
The trawl gear EFP in 2018 would
provide participating vessels with
several exemptions regarding the
required minimum mesh size, the
requirement to use selective flatfish
trawl gear shoreward of the trawl RCA
and north of 42° N. lat., the prohibition
on fishing with midwater groundfish
trawl gear north of 40°10′ N. lat. in all
areas prior to May 15th each year, the
prohibition on fishing with midwater
groundfish trawl gear south of 40°10′ N.
lat. within the boundaries of the trawl
RCA (midwater groundfish trawling
would still be prohibited shoreward of
the RCA and south of 40°10′ N. lat.), the
prohibition on bringing a new haul
onboard before a previous haul is
stowed, and the prohibition on carrying
and fishing more than one type of
groundfish trawl gear (midwater and
bottom trawl gear) on the same trip.
If approved, vessels fishing on an EFP
trip with bottom trawl gear would be
permitted to use any small footrope gear
that meets the definition in regulations
at § 660.11 shoreward of the RCA and
north of 42° N. lat. similar to what is
required south of 40°10′ N. lat. Vessels
fishing on an EFP trip with limited
entry midwater trawl vessels would be
permitted to fish within all areas north
of 40°10′ N. lat. and within the
boundaries and seaward of the RCA
south of 40°10′ N. lat. for the duration
of this EFP. These vessels would not be
constrained to the primary whiting
season dates. All participating
groundfish bottom trawl and midwater
trawl vessels on an EFP trip would be
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52884
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 15, 2017 / Notices
permitted to carry and fish both
groundfish trawl gear types (bottom
trawl and midwater trawl) on the same
trip, assuming the proper declarations
are made, and bring a new haul on
board before a previous haul is stowed.
Finally, vessels fishing on an EFP trip
would not be constrained by the mesh
requirements regarding size or how it is
measured. Participating vessels would
carry observers or use a NMFS-approved
electronic monitoring system on 100percent of trips, as is currently required
in the IFQ program.
NMFS has some concerns with the
potential impacts these exemptions may
have on protected and prohibited
species. The best available data suggests
that bycatch rates of Endangered
Species Act listed salmon, eulachon,
and green sturgeon could increase as a
result of the increased effort resulting
from this EFP. However, because a
targeted fishery for chilipepper, widow,
and yellowtail rockfish has not existed
in more than a decade and the fishery
has changed a lot since this data was
collected, this data may not reflect
current bycatch rates resulting in its
limited utility for predicting current
impacts to protected and prohibited
species. Thus, NMFS has been working
with the applicant to develop an EFP
that would meet the applicants’
objectives to better target pelagic
rockfish species while collecting
information about bycatch and
minimizing bycatch to the extent
practicable. To address NMFS’s
concerns, the applicants included in
their application a requirement to
collect bycatch information at the haul
level and genetic samples on all salmon
caught. Additionally, the applicants
proposed and the Council
recommended that all salmon caught by
vessels participating in this EFP would
be subject to a total salmon harvest
guideline of 3,547 Chinook salmon. In
addition, the Council recommend two
sub-harvest guidelines to further help
mitigate against potential impacts:
• Prior to May 15th—All vessels
fishing on an EFP trip north of 42° N.
lat. would be subject to a sub-harvest
guideline of 720 Chinook salmon (out of
the 3,547 Chinook salmon total harvest
guideline) for this area, including
seaward, within, and shoreward of the
trawl RCA, from the inception of this
EFP until 12:01 a.m. on May 15th which
corresponds to the start of the Primary
whiting season for the Shorebased IFQ
fishery. From May 15th through the end
of this EFP, all EFP trips taken north of
42° N. lat. would be subject to the
remainder of total harvest guideline
(3,547 Chinook salmon) for the EFP.
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• South of 42° N. lat.—All vessels
fishing on an EFP trip south of 42° N.
lat. would be subject to a sub-harvest
guideline of 80 Chinook salmon (out of
the 3,547 Chinook salmon harvest
guideline) for this area for the duration
of this EFP.
If the overall harvest guideline of
3,547 Chinook salmon for the EFP is
reached, the EFP would be shut down.
Additionally, if a sub-harvest guideline
is reached EFP trips for which that subharvest guideline apply would be shut
down. For example, if vessels fishing
north of 42° N. lat. prior to May 15th
catch more than 720 Chinook salmon,
the EFP would be shut down until May
15th when it would open back up in
this area under the 3,547 Chinook
salmon harvest guideline. For the area
south of 42° N. lat., if any time during
the EFP vessels fishing in this area catch
more than 80 Chinook salmon, the EFP
activity in the area south of 42° N. lat.
would be shut down and would not
reopen for the remainder of the EFP.
The applicants have not proposed a
specific list of participating vessels, as
is traditionally the case, but rather are
proposing that NMFS publish a public
notice to gauge interest from limited
entry groundfish midwater and bottom
trawl vessels. Depending on the amount
of interest and where vessels may be
fishing, NMFS may need to limit
participation by time and area to
mitigate against potential impacts.
Participating vessels that enroll in the
EFP would be required to declare into
and out of the EFP on a monthly basis
by notifying NMFS.
Information collected under the EFP
could be used to support the analysis for
potential new and modifications to
existing gear regulations. With many of
the current gear regulations having been
in place for more than ten years, it is
difficult for NMFS, the Council, and
industry to predict the impacts of
removing these regulations. In the past
ten years, the industry has changed
significantly. Reduction in capacity,
innovations in gear technologies, and
changes in management have all
contributed to these changes. This EFP
would help demonstrate what potential
impacts, if any, today’s fleet may have
if some of the current gear, area, and
time regulations are modified from what
is currently in regulation.
Therefore, NMFS is proposing to
approve a 2018 trawl gear EFP, covering
all the exemptions stated above
following the conclusion of the public
comment period, review of public
comment, and completion of an analysis
of the potential impacts. Pending
approval, NMFS would issue the
permits for the EFP to the vessel owner
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
or designated representative as the ‘‘EFP
holder.’’ NMFS intends to use an
adaptive management approach in
which NMFS may revise requirements
and protocols to improve the program
without issuing another Federal
Register Notice, provided that the
modifications fall within the scope of
the original EFP. In addition, the
applicants may request minor
modifications and extensions to the EFP
throughout the course of research. EFP
modifications and extensions may be
granted without further public notice if
they are determined essential to
facilitate completion of the proposed
research and result in only a minimal
change in the scope or impacts of the
initially approved EFP request.
In accordance with NAO
Administrative Order 216–6, a
Categorical Exclusion or other
appropriate National Environmental
Policy Act document would be
completed prior to the issuance of any
permits under this EFP. After
publication of this document in the
Federal Register, the EFP, if approved
by NMFS, may be implemented
following the public comment period.
NMFS would consider comments
submitted, as well as the Council’s
discussion at their September 2017
Council meeting, in deciding whether to
approve the application as requested.
NMFS may approve the application in
its entirety or may make any alterations
needed to achieve the goals of the EFP.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16
U.S.C. 773 et seq., and 16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
Dated: November 9, 2017.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–24716 Filed 11–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XF811
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Take of Anadromous Fish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Applications for four new
scientific research permits, two permit
modifications, and eight permit
renewals.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
NMFS has received 14 scientific
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 219 (Wednesday, November 15, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 52882-52884]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-24716]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XF799
Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery; Application for an Exempted Fishing Permit
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of exempted fishing permit applications;
request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS announces the receipt of two exempted fishing permit
(EFP) applications. The first application was received from The Nature
Conservancy (TNC) for an EFP to test commercial pot fishing gear for
selective harvest of lingcod. The lingcod pot gear EFP is intended to
provide for the selective harvest of lingcod with fixed gear inside the
non-trawl rockfish conservation area (RCA), allowing harvest of lingcod
within existing annual catch limits (ACLs) while keeping catch of co-
occurring overfished species (e.g. yelloweye rockfish) within
rebuilding ACLs. The second application was received from the West
Coast Seafood Processors Association, Environmental Defense Fund,
Oregon Trawl Commission, and Midwater Trawlers Cooperative for an EFP
to test if and how the removal of certain trawl gear, time, and area
restrictions for the Shorebased Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program
may impact the nature and extent of bycatch of prohibited species. This
EFP is intended to allow participating limited entry groundfish bottom
trawl and midwater trawl vessels more flexibility in 2018 to target
pelagic rockfish species, such as widow, chilipepper, and yellowtail
rockfish. The NMFS West Coast Region's Assistant Regional Administrator
for Sustainable Fisheries has made a preliminary determination that the
subject EFP applications contain all the required information and
warrant further consideration. Therefore, NMFS announces that the
Assistant Regional Administrator for Sustainable Fisheries proposes to
recommend that EFPs be issued.
DATES: Comments must be received no later than 5 p.m., local time on
November 30, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by 0648-XF799, by any
one of the following methods:
Email: nmfs_gf_efp2018.wcr@noaa.gov.
Mail: Barry Thom, Regional Administrator, West Coast
Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115-0070, Attn:
Karen Palmigiano.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and would generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender would be publicly accessible. NMFS would accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments would be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
Information relevant to this notice or the EFP applications are
available for public review during business hours at the NMFS West
Coast Regional Office at 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115, or
by requesting them via phone or the email address listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen Palmigiano at (206) 526-4491 or
karen.palmigiano@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This action is authorized by the Pacific
Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP) and implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 600.745, which states that EFPs may be used to
authorize fishing activities that would otherwise be prohibited.
Lingcod Pot Gear EFP
At its June 2016 meeting, the Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) received an EFP application from TNC for the use of pot gear
to target lingcod within the non-trawl RCA offshore of Washington and
Oregon. An initial opportunity for public comment was provided during
this meeting. At that time, the Council recommended that NMFS consider
issuing the EFP for a period of two years (i.e., 2017 and 2018). The
two-year duration was intended to coincide with the 2017-18 biennial
harvest specifications and management measures process. However, due to
unforeseen delays, NMFS was unable to issue this EFP for 2017, and is
proposing to issue the EFP described below beginning in 2018. The EFP
would expire no later than December 31, 2018.
[[Page 52883]]
In 2014, during preliminary gear testing conducted by TNC and their
research partners, catch of lingcod was lower than anticipated. During
testing, the gear was only fished in areas open to non-trawl groundfish
fishing, which included the area seaward of the non-trawl RCA, in
depths ranging from approximately 100-200 fathoms (fm) (54.7-109.4
meters). Applicants hypothesize that low catch of lingcod was primarily
due to the non-trawl RCA (a depth-based area closure prohibiting
fishing for lingcod with pot gear from approximately 30 fathoms to 100
fathoms), closing depths where lingcod are most commonly found (i.e.,
shallower than 100 fm). Subsequently, TNC proposed and the Council
recommended to NMFS an EFP which would provide an exemption to
participating vessels to target lingcod with pot gear inside the non-
trawl RCA off Washington and Oregon. This EFP is necessary to allow
activities that are otherwise prohibited by Federal regulations. As the
RCAs were implemented to reduce incidental catch of overfished species,
it is not uncommon for the Council to recommend to NMFS the permitting
of fishing opportunities to occur inside a RCA when the gear is highly
selective, with low bycatch of non-target and overfished groundfish
species.
Entanglement of humpback whales in pot gear buoy lines is a
concern, particularly in the West Coast sablefish pot fishery, which is
designated as a Category II fishery in the 2017 List of Fisheries (82
FR 9690, February 8, 2017) due to its occasional interactions with
humpback whales; the last of which was documented in 2006. Concerns
with regards to the pot gear, similar to sablefish pot gear with
regards to the buoy lines, being employed in the proposed EFP are
mitigated because the magnitude of the fishing effort permitted under
this EFP would be minimal and occur off Oregon, where fewer documented
interactions between pot gear and humpback whales has occurred.
Therefore, NMFS is proposing to approve the EFP consistent with general
requirements following the conclusion of the public comment period.
Subsequently, NMFS would issue the actual permits for the EFP to
individual participants and TNC as the entity coordinating EFP-related
fishing activities as appropriate. NMFS intends to use an adaptive
management approach for this EFP in which NMFS may revise requirements
and protocols to improve the EFP without issuing another Federal
Register Notice, provided that the modifications fall within the scope
of the Council's original intent. Such changes may be granted without
further public notice if they are deemed essential to facilitate
completion of the proposed research and result in only a minimal change
in the scope or impacts of the initially approved EFP request.
In accordance with NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6, a
Categorical Exclusion or other appropriate National Environmental
Policy Act document would be completed prior to the issuance of any
permits under this EFP. Further review and consultation may be
necessary before a final determination is made to issue the permits.
After publication of this document in the Federal Register, the EFP, if
approved by NMFS, may be implemented following the public comment
period. NMFS would consider comments submitted, as well as the
Council's discussion at their June 2016 Council meeting, in deciding
whether to approve the application as requested. NMFS may approve the
application in its entirety or may make any alterations needed to
achieve the goals of the EFP.
2018 Trawl Gear EFP
In September 2017, the Council received an application for an EFP
from the West Coast Seafood Processors Association, Environmental
Defense Fund, Oregon Trawl Commission, and Midwater Trawlers
Cooperative to test if and how the removal of certain gear, time, and
area restrictions for the Shorebased IFQ Program may impact the nature
and extent of prohibited species bycatch, particularly salmon and
eulachon. This EFP is intended to allow participating limited entry
groundfish bottom trawl and midwater trawl vessels more flexibility in
2018 to target pelagic rockfish species, such as widow, chilipepper,
and yellowtail rockfish. An opportunity for public testimony was
provided during the Council meeting, after which the Council
recommended the EFP with several changes. Specifically, the Council
narrowed the number of exemptions they recommended to include in the
EFP. After the Council meeting, the applicants updated their
application based on the Council's recommendations and resubmitted a
final version of the application to NMFS on October 4, 2017. Copies of
the final version of the application are available from NMFS. (See
ADDRESSES for how to obtain this information).
In late 2016, industry members proposed a trawl gear EFP for 2017
(later known as the 2017 trawl gear EFP) to provide them exemptions to
the minimum mesh size requirement and exemptions to the requirement to
use selective flatfish trawl shoreward of the trawl RCA north of
42[deg] North latitude (N. lat) for limited entry bottom trawl vessels.
Since implementation of the 2017 trawl gear EFP in March 2017, limited
entry groundfish bottom trawl vessels have been testing their new gear
configurations by targeting midwater pelagic rockfish (primarily widow
rockfish and yellowtail rockfish) using modified bottom trawl gear
north of 42[deg] N. lat. shoreward of the trawl RCA with minimal
impacts on Chinook salmon. As of the end of October 2017, there have
been 50 trips taken by 10 vessels, and they have caught a total of four
Chinook salmon. Information on gear configurations has been collected,
and the data would helpful information any potential modifications or
elimination of current gear restrictions.
To continue collecting information on impacts to salmon and
eulachon that may arise from the modification or elimination of gear,
time, and area regulations, the applicants have requested a 2018 trawl
gear EFP that expands upon the 2017 trawl gear EFP. The trawl gear EFP
in 2018 would provide participating vessels with several exemptions
regarding the required minimum mesh size, the requirement to use
selective flatfish trawl gear shoreward of the trawl RCA and north of
42[deg] N. lat., the prohibition on fishing with midwater groundfish
trawl gear north of 40[deg]10' N. lat. in all areas prior to May 15th
each year, the prohibition on fishing with midwater groundfish trawl
gear south of 40[deg]10' N. lat. within the boundaries of the trawl RCA
(midwater groundfish trawling would still be prohibited shoreward of
the RCA and south of 40[deg]10' N. lat.), the prohibition on bringing a
new haul onboard before a previous haul is stowed, and the prohibition
on carrying and fishing more than one type of groundfish trawl gear
(midwater and bottom trawl gear) on the same trip.
If approved, vessels fishing on an EFP trip with bottom trawl gear
would be permitted to use any small footrope gear that meets the
definition in regulations at Sec. 660.11 shoreward of the RCA and
north of 42[deg] N. lat. similar to what is required south of
40[deg]10' N. lat. Vessels fishing on an EFP trip with limited entry
midwater trawl vessels would be permitted to fish within all areas
north of 40[deg]10' N. lat. and within the boundaries and seaward of
the RCA south of 40[deg]10' N. lat. for the duration of this EFP. These
vessels would not be constrained to the primary whiting season dates.
All participating groundfish bottom trawl and midwater trawl vessels on
an EFP trip would be
[[Page 52884]]
permitted to carry and fish both groundfish trawl gear types (bottom
trawl and midwater trawl) on the same trip, assuming the proper
declarations are made, and bring a new haul on board before a previous
haul is stowed. Finally, vessels fishing on an EFP trip would not be
constrained by the mesh requirements regarding size or how it is
measured. Participating vessels would carry observers or use a NMFS-
approved electronic monitoring system on 100-percent of trips, as is
currently required in the IFQ program.
NMFS has some concerns with the potential impacts these exemptions
may have on protected and prohibited species. The best available data
suggests that bycatch rates of Endangered Species Act listed salmon,
eulachon, and green sturgeon could increase as a result of the
increased effort resulting from this EFP. However, because a targeted
fishery for chilipepper, widow, and yellowtail rockfish has not existed
in more than a decade and the fishery has changed a lot since this data
was collected, this data may not reflect current bycatch rates
resulting in its limited utility for predicting current impacts to
protected and prohibited species. Thus, NMFS has been working with the
applicant to develop an EFP that would meet the applicants' objectives
to better target pelagic rockfish species while collecting information
about bycatch and minimizing bycatch to the extent practicable. To
address NMFS's concerns, the applicants included in their application a
requirement to collect bycatch information at the haul level and
genetic samples on all salmon caught. Additionally, the applicants
proposed and the Council recommended that all salmon caught by vessels
participating in this EFP would be subject to a total salmon harvest
guideline of 3,547 Chinook salmon. In addition, the Council recommend
two sub-harvest guidelines to further help mitigate against potential
impacts:
Prior to May 15th--All vessels fishing on an EFP trip
north of 42[deg] N. lat. would be subject to a sub-harvest guideline of
720 Chinook salmon (out of the 3,547 Chinook salmon total harvest
guideline) for this area, including seaward, within, and shoreward of
the trawl RCA, from the inception of this EFP until 12:01 a.m. on May
15th which corresponds to the start of the Primary whiting season for
the Shorebased IFQ fishery. From May 15th through the end of this EFP,
all EFP trips taken north of 42[deg] N. lat. would be subject to the
remainder of total harvest guideline (3,547 Chinook salmon) for the
EFP.
South of 42[deg] N. lat.--All vessels fishing on an EFP
trip south of 42[deg] N. lat. would be subject to a sub-harvest
guideline of 80 Chinook salmon (out of the 3,547 Chinook salmon harvest
guideline) for this area for the duration of this EFP.
If the overall harvest guideline of 3,547 Chinook salmon for the
EFP is reached, the EFP would be shut down. Additionally, if a sub-
harvest guideline is reached EFP trips for which that sub-harvest
guideline apply would be shut down. For example, if vessels fishing
north of 42[deg] N. lat. prior to May 15th catch more than 720 Chinook
salmon, the EFP would be shut down until May 15th when it would open
back up in this area under the 3,547 Chinook salmon harvest guideline.
For the area south of 42[deg] N. lat., if any time during the EFP
vessels fishing in this area catch more than 80 Chinook salmon, the EFP
activity in the area south of 42[deg] N. lat. would be shut down and
would not reopen for the remainder of the EFP.
The applicants have not proposed a specific list of participating
vessels, as is traditionally the case, but rather are proposing that
NMFS publish a public notice to gauge interest from limited entry
groundfish midwater and bottom trawl vessels. Depending on the amount
of interest and where vessels may be fishing, NMFS may need to limit
participation by time and area to mitigate against potential impacts.
Participating vessels that enroll in the EFP would be required to
declare into and out of the EFP on a monthly basis by notifying NMFS.
Information collected under the EFP could be used to support the
analysis for potential new and modifications to existing gear
regulations. With many of the current gear regulations having been in
place for more than ten years, it is difficult for NMFS, the Council,
and industry to predict the impacts of removing these regulations. In
the past ten years, the industry has changed significantly. Reduction
in capacity, innovations in gear technologies, and changes in
management have all contributed to these changes. This EFP would help
demonstrate what potential impacts, if any, today's fleet may have if
some of the current gear, area, and time regulations are modified from
what is currently in regulation.
Therefore, NMFS is proposing to approve a 2018 trawl gear EFP,
covering all the exemptions stated above following the conclusion of
the public comment period, review of public comment, and completion of
an analysis of the potential impacts. Pending approval, NMFS would
issue the permits for the EFP to the vessel owner or designated
representative as the ``EFP holder.'' NMFS intends to use an adaptive
management approach in which NMFS may revise requirements and protocols
to improve the program without issuing another Federal Register Notice,
provided that the modifications fall within the scope of the original
EFP. In addition, the applicants may request minor modifications and
extensions to the EFP throughout the course of research. EFP
modifications and extensions may be granted without further public
notice if they are determined essential to facilitate completion of the
proposed research and result in only a minimal change in the scope or
impacts of the initially approved EFP request.
In accordance with NAO Administrative Order 216-6, a Categorical
Exclusion or other appropriate National Environmental Policy Act
document would be completed prior to the issuance of any permits under
this EFP. After publication of this document in the Federal Register,
the EFP, if approved by NMFS, may be implemented following the public
comment period. NMFS would consider comments submitted, as well as the
Council's discussion at their September 2017 Council meeting, in
deciding whether to approve the application as requested. NMFS may
approve the application in its entirety or may make any alterations
needed to achieve the goals of the EFP.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., and
16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
Dated: November 9, 2017.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-24716 Filed 11-14-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P