Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic Region; Amendment 41, 1305-1310 [2018-00313]
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2. Amend § 506.4 by revising
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For the reasons stated in the
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PART 506—CIVIL MONETARY
PENALTY INFLATION ADJUSTMENT
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Authority: 28 U.S.C. 2461.
§ 506.4 Cost of living adjustments of civil
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By the Commission.
Rachel E. Dickon,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–00319 Filed 1–10–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6731–AA–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 170324313–7999–02]
RIN 0648–BG77
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; SnapperGrouper Fishery of the South Atlantic
Region; Amendment 41
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS implements
management measures described in
Amendment 41 to the Fishery
Management Plan for the SnapperGrouper Fishery of the South Atlantic
Region (Snapper-Grouper FMP), as
prepared and submitted by the South
Atlantic Fishery Management Council
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SUMMARY:
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(South Atlantic Council). This final rule
revises commercial and recreational
annual catch limits (ACLs), the
minimum size limit, commercial trip
limits, and the recreational bag limit for
mutton snapper in the South Atlantic
based on the results of the most recent
stock assessment update. The purpose
of this final rule is to ensure that mutton
snapper is managed based on the best
scientific information available to
achieve optimum yield (OY) and to
prevent overfishing, while minimizing
adverse social and economic effects to
the extent practicable.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
February 10, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 41 may be obtained from
www.regulations.gov or the Southeast
Regional Office website at https://https://
sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sustainable_
fisheries/s_atl/sg/2016/am41/
index.html. Amendment 41 includes an
environmental assessment, regulatory
impact review, Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA) analysis, and fishery impact
statement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Vara, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727–824–5305, or
email: mary.vara@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
snapper-grouper fishery in the South
Atlantic region includes mutton snapper
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Maximum
penalty
as of
January 15,
2018
2,011,061
57,391
2,052,107
58,562
11,478
11,712
114,782
9,054
1,810,706
90,535
22,868
762
22,868
762
10,957
10,957
117,125
9,239
1,847,663
92,383
23,335
778
23,335
778
11,181
11,181
and is managed under the SnapperGrouper FMP. The Snapper-Grouper
FMP was prepared by the South
Atlantic Council and is implemented by
NMFS through regulations at 50 CFR
part 622 under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act).
On September 26, 2017, NMFS
published the notice of availability for
Amendment 41 in the Federal Register
and requested public comment (82 FR
44756). On October 24, 2017, NMFS
published a proposed rule for
Amendment 41 in the Federal Register
and requested public comment (82 FR
49167). Amendment 41 and the
proposed rule outline the rationale for
the actions contained in this final rule.
A summary of the management
measures described in Amendment 41
and implemented by this final rule is
provided below.
Management Measures Contained in
This Final Rule
This final rule revises the mutton
snapper ACLs for the commercial and
recreational sectors in the South
Atlantic, increases the minimum size
limit for mutton snapper in the
commercial and recreational sectors,
and modifies the commercial trip limit
and the recreational bag limit. Unless
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otherwise noted, all weights described
in this final rule are in round weight.
Commercial and Recreational ACLs
The 2015 updated stock assessment
for mutton snapper in the South
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico (Southeast
Data, Assessment, and Review (SEDAR)
15A Update) concluded that the mutton
snapper stock in the South Atlantic and
Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) is neither
overfished nor undergoing overfishing.
The South Atlantic Council’s and Gulf
of Mexico Fishery Management
Council’s (Gulf Council) Scientific and
Statistical Committees (SSCs) reviewed
the assessment and provided an
acceptable biological catch (ABC)
recommendation to their Councils. The
ABC for the mutton snapper stock in the
South Atlantic and Gulf is apportioned
between the South Atlantic Council and
the Gulf Council in the SnapperGrouper FMP and the FMP for the Reef
Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico.
The South Atlantic Council set their
portion of the ABC for mutton snapper
equal to the OY and the total ACL. The
South Atlantic Council then further
allocated the total ACL between the
commercial sector (17.02 percent) and
recreational sector (82.98 percent). The
catch reference points and sector
allocations for South Atlantic mutton
snapper were implemented by the final
rule for the South Atlantic Council’s
Comprehensive ACL Amendment (77
FR 15916, March 16, 2012).
Amendment 41 and this final rule
revise the ABC and the commercial and
recreational mutton snapper ACLs in
the South Atlantic for the 2017 through
the 2020 and subsequent fishing years,
consistent with the existing
apportionment of the ABC between the
South Atlantic Council and Gulf
Council, and the existing sector
allocations of the total ACL in the South
Atlantic.
As described in Amendment 41, the
South Atlantic Council’s SSC
recommended that the South Atlantic
portion of the ABC be specified in
numbers of fish, based on landing
projections from the SEDAR 15A
Update. The South Atlantic Council
agreed with this recommendation for
the ABC, but specified the commercial
ACL in pounds and the recreational
ACL in numbers of fish because
commercial landings are already tracked
in pounds, while recreational landings
are tracked in numbers of fish. In
addition, because this final rule
increases the minimum size limit for
mutton snapper, the South Atlantic
Council was concerned that specifying
the recreational ACL in pounds could
increase the risk of exceeding the
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recreational ACL if the method for
converting the ACL in numbers to
pounds does not sufficiently address the
change in average weight of larger,
heavier fish. Therefore, the South
Atlantic Council determined that there
would be a reduced risk of exceeding
the recreational ACL as a result of an
increase in the minimum size limit if
the ABC and recreational ACL were
specified in numbers of fish. As a
reference for comparing numbers of fish
to pounds of fish, the average weight of
a recreationally harvested mutton
snapper in 2017 is approximately 4.2 lb
(1.9 kg) per fish. The average weight of
a commercially harvested mutton
snapper is 7.68 lb (3.5 kg) per fish.
To determine the commercial ACL in
pounds, the commercial sector
allocation of 17.02 percent was applied
to the total ACL in pounds (which
equals the South Atlantic portion of the
mutton snapper ABC). The commercial
ACLs for mutton snapper will be
100,015 lb (45,366 kg) for 2017, 104,231
lb (47,278 kg) for 2018, 107,981 lb
(48,979 kg) for 2019, and 111,354 lb
(50,509 kg) for 2020 and subsequent
fishing years.
To determine the recreational ACL in
numbers, the recreational sector ACL of
82.98 percent was applied to the total
ACL in pounds. That value was divided
by approximately 4.2 lb (1.9 kg) per fish
to determine the recreational ACL in
numbers of fish. The recreational ACLs
for mutton snapper will be 116,127 fish
for 2017, 121,318 fish for 2018, 124,766
fish for 2019, and 127,115 fish for 2020
and subsequent fishing years.
The South Atlantic portion of the
mutton snapper ABC (equal to the total
ACL) in numbers of fish is the sum of
the commercial and recreational ACLs
in numbers of fish. To determine the
ABC in numbers of fish, the commercial
ACL in pounds was divided by 7.68 lb
(3.5 kg) per fish and added to the
recreational ACL in numbers. Based on
results from the SEDAR 15A Update and
ABC recommendations from the South
Atlantic and Gulf Councils’ SSCs,
Amendment 41 decreases the ABC for
mutton snapper in the South Atlantic to
129,150 fish for the 2017 fishing year,
134,890 fish for 2018, 138,826 fish for
2019, and 141,614 fish for 2020 and
subsequent fishing years.
Minimum Size Limit
This final rule increases the minimum
size limit from 16 inches (40.6 cm), total
length (TL), to 18 inches (45.7 cm), TL.
Recent scientific information indicates
that the size at which 50 percent of
mutton snapper are sexually mature is
16 inches (40.6 cm), TL, for males and
18 inches (45.7 cm), TL, for females.
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Increasing the minimum size limit to 18
inches (45.7 cm), TL, allows more
individual mutton snapper to reach
reproductive maturity before being
susceptible to harvest, and is also
projected to increase the average size
and the corresponding average weight of
fish harvested.
Commercial Trip Limits
This final rule replaces the previous
seasonal harvest limitation (equivalent
to a commercial trip limit) for the
commercial sector each year in May and
June, and implements commercial trip
limits for the purposes of maintaining a
year-round commercial fishing season
and reducing harvest on mutton snapper
when they aggregate to spawn. During
the mutton snapper spawning months of
April through June, this final rule
establishes a commercial trip limit of 5
fish per person per day or 5 fish per
person per trip, whichever is more
restrictive, for the possession of mutton
snapper in or from the exclusive
economic zone on board a vessel that
has a Federal commercial permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper. For the
remainder of the year (January through
March and July through December), this
final rule establishes a 500-lb (227-kg)
commercial trip limit.
Recreational Bag Limit
Through this final rule, mutton
snapper remains within the existing 10snapper aggregate recreational bag limit
in the South Atlantic, but a reduced
recreational bag limit of 5 mutton
snapper per person per day applies
within the overall 10-snapper aggregate
bag limit, year-round. The bag limit is
reduced for the purposes of maintaining
a year-round recreational fishing season
and reducing harvest on mutton snapper
spawning aggregations.
Management Measures Contained in
Amendment 41 but Not Codified
Through This Final Rule
In addition to the management
measures codified through this final
rule, and the ABC that was previously
described, Amendment 41 specifies the
maximum sustainable yield (MSY),
minimum stock size threshold (MSST),
and recreational annual catch targets
(ACTs) for mutton snapper, as well as
designating spawning months.
Maximum Sustainable Yield and
Minimum Stock Size Threshold
Amendment 41 changes the MSY
definition to the yield produced by the
fishing mortality rate at MSY (FMSY) or
the FMSY proxy (where F equals fishing
mortality that, if applied constantly,
would achieve MSY under equilibrium
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conditions), with the MSY and FMSY
proxy recommended by the SEDAR 15A
Update. The FMSY proxy is F30%SPR, or
the fishing mortality that will produce
a static spawning per recruit equal to 30
percent. The MSY definition in
Amendment 41, allows future MSY
numerical values to be updated
following a stock assessment, SSC
review and recommendation, and
acceptance of that recommendation by
the South Atlantic Council. Based on
the SEDAR 15A Update and the new
MSY definition, the resulting MSY for
mutton snapper in the South Atlantic is
912,500 lb (413,903 kg).
Amendment 41 changes the MSST
definition to 75 percent of the spawning
stock biomass at MSY, which results in
an MSST of 3,486,900 lb (1,581,631 kg).
The SEDAR 15A Update estimated the
natural mortality for mutton snapper at
0.17, and the MSST for mutton snapper
in Amendment 41 is consistent with
how the South Atlantic Council has
defined MSST for other snapper-grouper
stocks with similarly low natural
mortality estimates.
Recreational ACTs
For mutton snapper in the South
Atlantic, Amendment 41 specifies a
revised recreational ACT (equal to 85
percent of the recreational ACL) of
98,708 fish for 2017. The recreational
ACT is 103,121 fish for 2018, 106,051
fish for 2019, and 108,048 fish for 2020
and subsequent fishing years. NMFS
notes that the revised recreational ACTs
are used only for monitoring purposes
and do not trigger a recreational
accountability measure.
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Spawning Months
Amendment 41 designates April
through June as ‘‘spawning months’’ for
mutton snapper in the South Atlantic.
The rest of the year is the ‘‘regular
season.’’ To protect spawning fish
during April through June each year, the
commercial trip limits apply to vessels
with a Federal commercial permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper. The
South Atlantic Council considered
additional recreational management
measures specific to the spawning
months but chose to reduce the bag
limit year-round instead.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 10 comments from
individuals, commercial, private
recreational, and charter vessel/
headboat (for-hire) recreational fishing
entities during the public comment
period on the notice of availability and
proposed rule for Amendment 41. Eight
of the comments were in support of the
actions in the proposed rule, with
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commenters specifically citing the
increase in the minimum size limit to 18
inches (45.7 cm), TL, and the reduced
recreational bag limit of 5 fish per
person per day within the 10-snapper
aggregate bag limit. Comments that were
beyond the scope of the proposed rule
and comments that agreed with the
proposed actions are not responded to
in this final rule. Comments that
specifically relate to the actions
contained in Amendment 41 and the
proposed rule, as well as NMFS’
respective responses, are summarized
below.
Comment 1: NMFS should not reduce
the commercial trip limit to 5 fish per
person or per trip during the spawning
months of April through June, because
it is too restrictive and economically
burdensome. The commercial sector
will not meet its ACL under current
regulations, and instead a commercial
trip limit of 25 or 30 fish per vessel
should be implemented to limit
commercial harvest.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Although
mutton snapper is not overfished and is
not undergoing overfishing, and
commercial landings have not reached
the commercial ACL in recent years, the
SEDAR 15A Update, completed in 2015,
concluded that the mutton snapper
population is smaller than estimated in
the original mutton snapper stock
assessment, completed in 2008 (SEDAR
15A). Because the population is smaller,
the South Atlantic and Gulf Councils’
SSCs recommended a lower ABC. The
Councils agreed with their SSCs’
recommendation, and this final rule
modifies management measures in the
South Atlantic consistent with that
lower ABC, including restricting
commercial harvest during the critical
spawning months for mutton snapper to
5 fish per person per day or per trip,
whichever is more restrictive, during
April through June each year.
Furthermore, stakeholders and law
enforcement personnel have stated their
concerns to the South Atlantic Council
about overexploitation of mutton
snapper when the species is aggregated
to spawn. The Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission (FWC) has
received similar comments. Therefore,
the South Atlantic Council also
coordinated with the FWC to develop
compatible regulations for mutton
snapper in Florida state waters on the
Atlantic coast and Federal waters to
address those concerns and benefit the
mutton snapper resource. The FWC has
also adopted this change in their
regulations for mutton snapper in
Florida state waters on the Atlantic
coast.
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1307
The South Atlantic Council did not
consider a commercial trip limit of 25
or 30 fish per vessel during April
through June each year in Amendment
41. Prior to this final rule, commercial
harvest was limited to 10 mutton
snapper per person per day or per trip
during the May and June spawning
season and no trip limit during April. In
Amendment 41, the South Atlantic
Council considered commercial trip
limit alternatives ranging from no
commercial retention to 5 fish per
person per day or per trip, whichever
was more restrictive, or 10 to 12 fish per
vessel per day during the spawning
months of April through June. The
commercial trip limits implemented by
this final rule will restrict commercial
harvest during these critical spawning
months for mutton snapper, and will
also be similar to the recreational bag
limit during the spawning months.
Furthermore, the South Atlantic Council
and NMFS determined that reducing the
commercial trip limit to 5 fish per
person or per trip during April through
June each year, along with the other
management measures in this final rule,
best meet the purpose to ensure that
mutton snapper is managed based on
the best scientific information available
to achieve and maintain OY, and to
prevent overfishing, while minimizing
adverse social and economic effects to
the extent practicable.
From 2010 through 2014, the average
commercial trip that landed mutton
snapper harvested less than 5 mutton
snapper per person per trip, and that
average does not change when including
logbook data collected by the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center from
landings and trips during 2015 and
2016. NMFS acknowledges that a
business with a vessel that has landed
more than 5 mutton snapper per person
per trip during April through June could
experience adverse economic impacts
from the spawning season commercial
trip limit, especially if that business has
a history of intensifying effort during
the spawning months. The fleet-wide
decrease in ex-vessel value of mutton
snapper landings expected to occur as a
result of the 5 mutton snapper per
person per trip limit during April
through June is estimated to be $23,567.
Additionally, the reduction of the
commercial trip limit during the
spawning months from April through
June, in combination with the 18-inch
(46-cm), TL, minimum size limit would
be biologically beneficial by reducing
harvest and fishing mortality when the
species is aggregated to spawn and most
vulnerable to harvest. These measures
are necessary to prevent harvest from
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exceeding the commercial ACL in the
future and improve economic benefits
from the resource in the long-term.
Comment 2: The bag limit should be
reduced to 2 or 3 fish per person per day
instead of the 5 fish per person or per
trip recreational limit, whichever is
more restrictive.
Response: The South Atlantic Council
considered a number of specific bag
limit alternatives for mutton snapper,
ranging from no retention to 12 mutton
snapper per vessel per day during the
spawning months. The recreational data
from the Marine Recreational
Information Program (MRIP) and the
NMFS Southeast Region Headboat
Survey during 2010 through 2014 show
that most recreational fishermen
(private and for-hire) in the South
Atlantic region harvested 3 or fewer
mutton snapper per day on recreational
trips, year-round.
Limiting the harvest of mutton
snapper during the spawning season
through recreational bag limits is
expected to be beneficial to mutton
snapper, because they form spawning
aggregations, which are particularly
vulnerable to fishing pressure. The
South Atlantic Council examined the
effect of various bag or vessel limits and
minimum size limit combinations in
limiting recreational harvest of mutton
snapper during the spawning months,
regular season, and year-round. The
analyses indicated that changes to the
recreational bag limit would have little
effect in constraining recreational
harvest without additional measures
being implemented.
The South Atlantic Council
determined that a minimum size limit
greater than the previous minimum size
limit of 16 inches (41 cm), TL, in
addition to a bag limit of 5 fish per
person or per trip, whichever is more
restrictive, would reduce year-round
recreational harvest by approximately
50 percent. The increased minimum
size limit and reduced recreational bag
limit implemented by this final rule
would also control the level of fishing
mortality during the spawning season,
without changing the expected level of
discards. Additionally, setting the bag
limit at 1, 2, or 3 fish per person per day
would be expected to have larger and
unnecessary negative economic effects,
since mutton snapper are not currently
undergoing overfishing and are not
considered to be overfished.
Therefore, the South Atlantic Council
determined that a recreational bag limit
of 5 mutton snapper per person per day
year-round within the existing 10snapper aggregate bag limit, combined
with the 18-inch (45.7-cm), TL,
minimum size limit implemented
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through this final rule, will make
regulations for mutton snapper more
consistent in state and Federal waters,
address stakeholder concerns regarding
overexploitation of the stock, benefit the
mutton snapper resource by reducing
harvest on spawning aggregations, and
extend the recreational fishing season.
Comment 3: The commercial sector
should have its ACL and trip limits
reduced proportionally to align with the
reductions being implemented for the
recreational sector.
Response: The current sector
allocations for mutton are 17.02 percent
commercial and 82.98 percent
recreational, and the South Atlantic
Council revised management measures
for each sector in Amendment 41 and
this final rule. The SEDAR 15A Update
concluded that the mutton snapper
population is smaller than estimated in
the original mutton snapper stock
assessment, SEDAR 15A, and the
SEDAR 15A Update resulted in lower
biological reference point values and
fishing level projections than those from
SEDAR 15A. As a result, the South
Atlantic Council chose a lower ABC for
mutton snapper and modified existing
management measures in both the
commercial and recreational sectors to
be consistent with that lower ABC. The
ABC for mutton snapper in the South
Atlantic initially decreases from
previous levels beginning in 2017, and
then increases annually through 2020,
and then remains in effect at the 2020
level until subsequently modified by the
South Atlantic Council.
The OY and total ACL are set equal
to the South Atlantic portion of the
mutton snapper ABC, and similar to the
ABC values, in 2017, the commercial
and recreational ACLs initially decrease
proportionally from previous levels, and
then the sector ACLs will gradually
increase proportionally through 2020,
and remain at the 2020 levels until
modified by the South Atlantic Council.
This final rule also increases the
minimum size limit for South Atlantic
mutton snapper for both the commercial
and recreational sectors to 18 inches
(45.7 cm), TL. The South Atlantic
Council determined that increasing the
minimum size limit for both sectors is
the most effective change to
management measures needed to
achieve the reduction in overall harvest
and maintain landings within the total
ACL implemented by this final rule.
Amendment 41 designates April
through June as spawning months for
management purposes in both sectors.
The rest of the year is the regular
season. Prior to this final rule, the
possession limit for the commercial
sector was 10 per person per day or per
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trip, whichever was more restrictive,
only during May and June each year.
This final rule implements a 500-lb
(227-kg) commercial trip limit during
the regular season, and a limit of 5 fish
per person per day or per trip,
whichever is more restrictive, during
the spawning months of April through
June. Prior to this final rule, the
recreational bag limit for mutton
snapper was 10 fish within the 10snapper aggregate bag limit. This final
rule implements a recreational bag limit
of 5 fish per person per day within the
10-snapper aggregate bag limit, yearround. The revised management
measures implemented by this final rule
for both the commercial and
recreational sectors will limit harvest of
mutton snapper during the spawning
months of April through June each year,
as well as year-round, while meeting the
objectives of the Snapper-Grouper FMP.
Amendment 41 and the measures
implemented by this final rule are based
on the best scientific information
available and will effectively achieve
and maintain OY and prevent
overfishing while minimizing, to the
extent practicable, adverse social and
economic effects.
Comment 4: The harvest of mutton
snapper should be prohibited during the
spawning season, so fish have time to
reproduce before they are caught.
Response: In Amendment 41, the
South Atlantic Council evaluated
numerous alternatives for commercial
trip limits, and recreational bag and
vessel limits, including no retention of
mutton snapper during spawning
months for the commercial and
recreational sectors. The South Atlantic
Council determined that choosing the
no retention alternative was
unnecessary. Prohibiting harvest during
the spawning months would be
biologically beneficial to the mutton
snapper stock, since fish would not be
subject to fishing mortality while they
are in spawning condition. However, as
stated in the response to Comment 1,
mutton snapper is not overfished and is
not undergoing overfishing. Prohibiting
harvest during April through June each
year was the most restrictive alternative
considered by the South Atlantic
Council and it would have resulted in
the greatest negative socio-economic
effects. In addition, recent commercial
and recreational landings have been
highest during the spawning months, on
average, so prohibiting all harvest
during these months could result in
increased regulatory discards of mutton
snapper when fishermen target other
snapper-grouper species. Additionally,
through Amendment 41, the South
Atlantic Council coordinated with the
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FWC to develop and recommend
compatible regulations for mutton
snapper in Florida state waters and
Federal waters in the South Atlantic
that address stakeholder concerns about
the overexploitation of mutton snapper
during spawning aggregations, and
benefit the mutton snapper resource.
Comment 5: The 2015 assessment of
mutton snapper indicated that the
mutton snapper stock is not overfished
or undergoing overfishing; therefore, the
final rule should not be implemented.
Response: NMFS disagrees.
Amendment 41 and this final rule
respond to the SEDAR 15A Update,
which NMFS has determined is the best
scientific information available. While
the SEDAR 15A Update indicated that
the mutton snapper stock is neither
overfished nor undergoing overfishing,
improvements to the modeling approach
indicated that the population size is
smaller than previously estimated.
Amendment 41 and this final rule
update the ABC, MSST, MSY, OY, ACL,
and revise management measures for
mutton snapper, based on the results of
the SEDAR 15A Update.
Additionally, as stated in the response
to Comment 4, there is stakeholder
concern about fishing effort on mutton
snapper spawning aggregations despite
the healthy status of the mutton snapper
stock, and this final rule implements
additional protections for mutton
snapper during the spawning season
and year-round. As explained in the
response to Comment 1, these
management measures are needed to
maintain sustainable harvest levels and
economic benefits in the long-term.
Classification
The Regional Administrator for the
NMFS Southeast Region has determined
that this final rule is consistent with
Amendment 41, the Snapper-Grouper
FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and
other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides
the statutory basis for this rule. No
duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting
Federal rules have been identified. In
addition, no new reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance
requirements are introduced by this
final rule.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed rule stage that this rule
would not have a significant adverse
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The factual
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basis for this determination was
published in the proposed rule and is
not repeated here. No changes to this
final rule were made in response to
public comments. As a result, a final
regulatory flexibility analysis was not
required and none was prepared.
NMFS did not receive any comments
specific to the certification that there
would not be a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. However, NMFS received one
public comment related to the economic
impact of the commercial trip limit
reduction to 5 mutton snapper per
person per day or per trip, whichever is
more restrictive, during the mutton
snapper spawning months of April
through June. That comment, also
addressed in Comment 1 of the
Comments and Responses section,
stated the commercial trip limit
reduction would be too restrictive and
economically burdensome. Prior to this
final rule, there was a commercial trip
limit of 10 mutton snapper per person
per day or per trip, whichever was more
restrictive, during May and June each
year, and no trip limit in April. From
2010 through 2014, the average
commercial trip that landed mutton
snapper harvested less than 5 mutton
snapper per person per trip, and that
figure does not change when landings
and trips from 2015 through 2016 are
included. NMFS acknowledges that a
business with a vessel that has landed
more than 5 mutton snapper per person
during a trip in April through June
could experience adverse economic
impacts from the commercial trip limit
in this final rule, especially if that
business has a history of increased effort
during these spawning months.
However, that would not change the
determination that this rule will not
have a significant adverse economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
1309
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
§ 622.184
[Amended]
2. In § 622.184, remove and reserve
paragraph (b).
■
3. In § 622.185, revise paragraph (a)(4)
to read as follows:
■
§ 622.185
Size limits.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(4) Mutton snapper—18 inches (45.7
cm), TL.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 622.187, revise paragraph (b)(4)
to read as follows:
§ 622.187
Bag and possession limits.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) Snappers, combined—10.
(i) Within the 10-fish bag limit, no
more than 5 fish may be mutton
snapper.
(ii) Excluded from this 10-fish bag
limit are cubera snapper, measuring 30
inches (76.2 cm), TL, or larger, in the
South Atlantic off Florida, and red
snapper and vermilion snapper. (See
§ 622.181(b)(2) for the prohibitions on
harvest or possession of red snapper,
except during a limited recreational
fishing season, and § 622.181(c)(1) for
limitations on cubera snapper
measuring 30 inches (76.2 cm), TL, or
larger, in or from the South Atlantic EEZ
off Florida.)
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 622.191, add paragraph (a)(13)
to read as follows:
§ 622.191
Commercial trip limits.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(13) Mutton snapper. The following
commercial trip limits apply until the
applicable commercial ACL in
§ 622.193(o)(1)(iii) is reached. See
§ 622.193(o)(1) for the limitations
regarding mutton snapper after the
commercial ACL is reached.
(i) From January 1 through March 31,
and July 1 through December 31—500 lb
(227 kg), round weight.
(ii) From April 1 through June 30—5
fish per person per day or 5 fish per
person per trip, whichever is more
restrictive.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. In § 622.193, revise paragraph (o) to
read as follows:
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND
SOUTH ATLANTIC
§ 622.193 Annual catch limits (ACLs),
annual catch targets (ACTs), and
accountability measures (AMs).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Fisheries, Fishing, Mutton snapper,
South Atlantic.
Dated: January 5, 2018.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
*
*
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
■
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
*
*
*
*
(o) Mutton snapper—(1) Commercial
sector. (i) If commercial landings for
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mutton snapper, as estimated by the
SRD, reach or are projected to reach the
applicable commercial ACL specified in
paragraph (o)(1)(iii) of this section, the
AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register to close
the commercial sector for the remainder
of the fishing year. On and after the
effective date of such a notification, all
sale or purchase of mutton snapper is
prohibited and harvest or possession of
mutton snapper in or from the South
Atlantic EEZ is limited to the bag and
possession limits. These bag and
possession limits apply in the South
Atlantic on board a vessel for which a
valid Federal commercial or charter
vessel/headboat permit for South
Atlantic snapper-grouper has been
issued, without regard to where such
species were harvested, i.e., in state or
Federal waters.
(ii) If commercial landings for mutton
snapper, as estimated by the SRD,
exceed the applicable commercial ACL
specified in paragraph (o)(1)(iii) of this
section, and the applicable combined
commercial and recreational ACL
specified in paragraph (o)(3) of this
section is exceeded during the same
fishing year, and the species is
overfished based on the most recent
Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to
Congress, the AA will file a notification
with the Office of the Federal Register
to reduce the commercial ACL in the
following fishing year by the amount of
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16:45 Jan 10, 2018
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the commercial ACL overage in the
prior fishing year.
(iii) The commercial ACLs for the
following fishing years are given in
round weight. For 2017—100,015 lb
(45,366 kg); for 2018—104,231 lb
(47,278 kg); for 2019—107,981 lb
(48,979 kg); for 2020 and subsequent
fishing years—111,354 lb (50,509 kg).
(2) Recreational sector. (i) If
recreational landings for mutton
snapper, as estimated by the SRD, reach
or are projected to reach the applicable
recreational ACL specified in paragraph
(o)(2)(iii) of this section, the AA will file
a notification with the Office of the
Federal Register to close the recreational
sector for the remainder of the fishing
year regardless if the stock is overfished,
unless NMFS determines that no closure
is necessary based on the best scientific
information available. On and after the
effective date of such a notification, the
bag and possession limits for mutton
snapper in or from the South Atlantic
EEZ are zero.
(ii) If recreational landings for mutton
snapper, as estimated by the SRD,
exceed the applicable recreational ACL
specified in paragraph (o)(2)(iii) of this
section, then during the following
fishing year recreational landings will
be monitored for a persistence in
increased landings, and if necessary, the
AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register to reduce
the length of the recreational fishing
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
season and the recreational ACL by the
amount of the recreational ACL overage,
if the species is overfished based on the
most recent Status of U.S. Fisheries
Report to Congress, and if the applicable
combined commercial and recreational
ACL specified in paragraph (o)(3) of this
section is exceeded during the same
fishing year. NMFS will use the best
scientific information available to
determine if reducing the length of the
recreational fishing season and
recreational ACL is necessary. When the
recreational sector is closed as a result
of NMFS reducing the length of the
recreational fishing season and ACL, the
bag and possession limits for mutton
snapper in or from the South Atlantic
EEZ are zero.
(iii) The recreational ACLs for the
following fishing years are given in
numbers of fish. For 2017—116,127; for
2018—121,318; for 2019—124,766; for
2020 and subsequent fishing years—
127,115.
(3) Combined commercial and
recreational ACL. The combined
commercial and recreational ACLs for
the following fishing years are given in
round weight. For 2017—587,633 lb
(266,546 kg); for 2018—612,401 lb
(277,780 kg); for 2019—634,435 lb
(287,775 kg); for 2020 and subsequent
fishing years—654,257 lb (296,766 kg).
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2018–00313 Filed 1–10–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\11JAR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 8 (Thursday, January 11, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1305-1310]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-00313]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 170324313-7999-02]
RIN 0648-BG77
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic Region; Amendment 41
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS implements management measures described in Amendment 41
to the Fishery Management Plan for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the
South Atlantic Region (Snapper-Grouper FMP), as prepared and submitted
by the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council (South Atlantic
Council). This final rule revises commercial and recreational annual
catch limits (ACLs), the minimum size limit, commercial trip limits,
and the recreational bag limit for mutton snapper in the South Atlantic
based on the results of the most recent stock assessment update. The
purpose of this final rule is to ensure that mutton snapper is managed
based on the best scientific information available to achieve optimum
yield (OY) and to prevent overfishing, while minimizing adverse social
and economic effects to the extent practicable.
DATES: This final rule is effective on February 10, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of Amendment 41 may be obtained from
www.regulations.gov or the Southeast Regional Office website at https://
https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sustainable_fisheries/s_atl/sg/2016/am41/. Amendment 41 includes an environmental assessment,
regulatory impact review, Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) analysis,
and fishery impact statement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary Vara, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727-824-5305, or email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The snapper-grouper fishery in the South
Atlantic region includes mutton snapper and is managed under the
Snapper-Grouper FMP. The Snapper-Grouper FMP was prepared by the South
Atlantic Council and is implemented by NMFS through regulations at 50
CFR part 622 under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
On September 26, 2017, NMFS published the notice of availability
for Amendment 41 in the Federal Register and requested public comment
(82 FR 44756). On October 24, 2017, NMFS published a proposed rule for
Amendment 41 in the Federal Register and requested public comment (82
FR 49167). Amendment 41 and the proposed rule outline the rationale for
the actions contained in this final rule. A summary of the management
measures described in Amendment 41 and implemented by this final rule
is provided below.
Management Measures Contained in This Final Rule
This final rule revises the mutton snapper ACLs for the commercial
and recreational sectors in the South Atlantic, increases the minimum
size limit for mutton snapper in the commercial and recreational
sectors, and modifies the commercial trip limit and the recreational
bag limit. Unless
[[Page 1306]]
otherwise noted, all weights described in this final rule are in round
weight.
Commercial and Recreational ACLs
The 2015 updated stock assessment for mutton snapper in the South
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico (Southeast Data, Assessment, and Review
(SEDAR) 15A Update) concluded that the mutton snapper stock in the
South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) is neither overfished nor
undergoing overfishing. The South Atlantic Council's and Gulf of Mexico
Fishery Management Council's (Gulf Council) Scientific and Statistical
Committees (SSCs) reviewed the assessment and provided an acceptable
biological catch (ABC) recommendation to their Councils. The ABC for
the mutton snapper stock in the South Atlantic and Gulf is apportioned
between the South Atlantic Council and the Gulf Council in the Snapper-
Grouper FMP and the FMP for the Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of
Mexico. The South Atlantic Council set their portion of the ABC for
mutton snapper equal to the OY and the total ACL. The South Atlantic
Council then further allocated the total ACL between the commercial
sector (17.02 percent) and recreational sector (82.98 percent). The
catch reference points and sector allocations for South Atlantic mutton
snapper were implemented by the final rule for the South Atlantic
Council's Comprehensive ACL Amendment (77 FR 15916, March 16, 2012).
Amendment 41 and this final rule revise the ABC and the commercial
and recreational mutton snapper ACLs in the South Atlantic for the 2017
through the 2020 and subsequent fishing years, consistent with the
existing apportionment of the ABC between the South Atlantic Council
and Gulf Council, and the existing sector allocations of the total ACL
in the South Atlantic.
As described in Amendment 41, the South Atlantic Council's SSC
recommended that the South Atlantic portion of the ABC be specified in
numbers of fish, based on landing projections from the SEDAR 15A
Update. The South Atlantic Council agreed with this recommendation for
the ABC, but specified the commercial ACL in pounds and the
recreational ACL in numbers of fish because commercial landings are
already tracked in pounds, while recreational landings are tracked in
numbers of fish. In addition, because this final rule increases the
minimum size limit for mutton snapper, the South Atlantic Council was
concerned that specifying the recreational ACL in pounds could increase
the risk of exceeding the recreational ACL if the method for converting
the ACL in numbers to pounds does not sufficiently address the change
in average weight of larger, heavier fish. Therefore, the South
Atlantic Council determined that there would be a reduced risk of
exceeding the recreational ACL as a result of an increase in the
minimum size limit if the ABC and recreational ACL were specified in
numbers of fish. As a reference for comparing numbers of fish to pounds
of fish, the average weight of a recreationally harvested mutton
snapper in 2017 is approximately 4.2 lb (1.9 kg) per fish. The average
weight of a commercially harvested mutton snapper is 7.68 lb (3.5 kg)
per fish.
To determine the commercial ACL in pounds, the commercial sector
allocation of 17.02 percent was applied to the total ACL in pounds
(which equals the South Atlantic portion of the mutton snapper ABC).
The commercial ACLs for mutton snapper will be 100,015 lb (45,366 kg)
for 2017, 104,231 lb (47,278 kg) for 2018, 107,981 lb (48,979 kg) for
2019, and 111,354 lb (50,509 kg) for 2020 and subsequent fishing years.
To determine the recreational ACL in numbers, the recreational
sector ACL of 82.98 percent was applied to the total ACL in pounds.
That value was divided by approximately 4.2 lb (1.9 kg) per fish to
determine the recreational ACL in numbers of fish. The recreational
ACLs for mutton snapper will be 116,127 fish for 2017, 121,318 fish for
2018, 124,766 fish for 2019, and 127,115 fish for 2020 and subsequent
fishing years.
The South Atlantic portion of the mutton snapper ABC (equal to the
total ACL) in numbers of fish is the sum of the commercial and
recreational ACLs in numbers of fish. To determine the ABC in numbers
of fish, the commercial ACL in pounds was divided by 7.68 lb (3.5 kg)
per fish and added to the recreational ACL in numbers. Based on results
from the SEDAR 15A Update and ABC recommendations from the South
Atlantic and Gulf Councils' SSCs, Amendment 41 decreases the ABC for
mutton snapper in the South Atlantic to 129,150 fish for the 2017
fishing year, 134,890 fish for 2018, 138,826 fish for 2019, and 141,614
fish for 2020 and subsequent fishing years.
Minimum Size Limit
This final rule increases the minimum size limit from 16 inches
(40.6 cm), total length (TL), to 18 inches (45.7 cm), TL. Recent
scientific information indicates that the size at which 50 percent of
mutton snapper are sexually mature is 16 inches (40.6 cm), TL, for
males and 18 inches (45.7 cm), TL, for females. Increasing the minimum
size limit to 18 inches (45.7 cm), TL, allows more individual mutton
snapper to reach reproductive maturity before being susceptible to
harvest, and is also projected to increase the average size and the
corresponding average weight of fish harvested.
Commercial Trip Limits
This final rule replaces the previous seasonal harvest limitation
(equivalent to a commercial trip limit) for the commercial sector each
year in May and June, and implements commercial trip limits for the
purposes of maintaining a year-round commercial fishing season and
reducing harvest on mutton snapper when they aggregate to spawn. During
the mutton snapper spawning months of April through June, this final
rule establishes a commercial trip limit of 5 fish per person per day
or 5 fish per person per trip, whichever is more restrictive, for the
possession of mutton snapper in or from the exclusive economic zone on
board a vessel that has a Federal commercial permit for South Atlantic
snapper-grouper. For the remainder of the year (January through March
and July through December), this final rule establishes a 500-lb (227-
kg) commercial trip limit.
Recreational Bag Limit
Through this final rule, mutton snapper remains within the existing
10-snapper aggregate recreational bag limit in the South Atlantic, but
a reduced recreational bag limit of 5 mutton snapper per person per day
applies within the overall 10-snapper aggregate bag limit, year-round.
The bag limit is reduced for the purposes of maintaining a year-round
recreational fishing season and reducing harvest on mutton snapper
spawning aggregations.
Management Measures Contained in Amendment 41 but Not Codified Through
This Final Rule
In addition to the management measures codified through this final
rule, and the ABC that was previously described, Amendment 41 specifies
the maximum sustainable yield (MSY), minimum stock size threshold
(MSST), and recreational annual catch targets (ACTs) for mutton
snapper, as well as designating spawning months.
Maximum Sustainable Yield and Minimum Stock Size Threshold
Amendment 41 changes the MSY definition to the yield produced by
the fishing mortality rate at MSY (FMSY) or the
FMSY proxy (where F equals fishing mortality that, if
applied constantly, would achieve MSY under equilibrium
[[Page 1307]]
conditions), with the MSY and FMSY proxy recommended by the
SEDAR 15A Update. The FMSY proxy is F30%SPR, or
the fishing mortality that will produce a static spawning per recruit
equal to 30 percent. The MSY definition in Amendment 41, allows future
MSY numerical values to be updated following a stock assessment, SSC
review and recommendation, and acceptance of that recommendation by the
South Atlantic Council. Based on the SEDAR 15A Update and the new MSY
definition, the resulting MSY for mutton snapper in the South Atlantic
is 912,500 lb (413,903 kg).
Amendment 41 changes the MSST definition to 75 percent of the
spawning stock biomass at MSY, which results in an MSST of 3,486,900 lb
(1,581,631 kg). The SEDAR 15A Update estimated the natural mortality
for mutton snapper at 0.17, and the MSST for mutton snapper in
Amendment 41 is consistent with how the South Atlantic Council has
defined MSST for other snapper-grouper stocks with similarly low
natural mortality estimates.
Recreational ACTs
For mutton snapper in the South Atlantic, Amendment 41 specifies a
revised recreational ACT (equal to 85 percent of the recreational ACL)
of 98,708 fish for 2017. The recreational ACT is 103,121 fish for 2018,
106,051 fish for 2019, and 108,048 fish for 2020 and subsequent fishing
years. NMFS notes that the revised recreational ACTs are used only for
monitoring purposes and do not trigger a recreational accountability
measure.
Spawning Months
Amendment 41 designates April through June as ``spawning months''
for mutton snapper in the South Atlantic. The rest of the year is the
``regular season.'' To protect spawning fish during April through June
each year, the commercial trip limits apply to vessels with a Federal
commercial permit for South Atlantic snapper-grouper. The South
Atlantic Council considered additional recreational management measures
specific to the spawning months but chose to reduce the bag limit year-
round instead.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 10 comments from individuals, commercial, private
recreational, and charter vessel/headboat (for-hire) recreational
fishing entities during the public comment period on the notice of
availability and proposed rule for Amendment 41. Eight of the comments
were in support of the actions in the proposed rule, with commenters
specifically citing the increase in the minimum size limit to 18 inches
(45.7 cm), TL, and the reduced recreational bag limit of 5 fish per
person per day within the 10-snapper aggregate bag limit. Comments that
were beyond the scope of the proposed rule and comments that agreed
with the proposed actions are not responded to in this final rule.
Comments that specifically relate to the actions contained in Amendment
41 and the proposed rule, as well as NMFS' respective responses, are
summarized below.
Comment 1: NMFS should not reduce the commercial trip limit to 5
fish per person or per trip during the spawning months of April through
June, because it is too restrictive and economically burdensome. The
commercial sector will not meet its ACL under current regulations, and
instead a commercial trip limit of 25 or 30 fish per vessel should be
implemented to limit commercial harvest.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Although mutton snapper is not overfished
and is not undergoing overfishing, and commercial landings have not
reached the commercial ACL in recent years, the SEDAR 15A Update,
completed in 2015, concluded that the mutton snapper population is
smaller than estimated in the original mutton snapper stock assessment,
completed in 2008 (SEDAR 15A). Because the population is smaller, the
South Atlantic and Gulf Councils' SSCs recommended a lower ABC. The
Councils agreed with their SSCs' recommendation, and this final rule
modifies management measures in the South Atlantic consistent with that
lower ABC, including restricting commercial harvest during the critical
spawning months for mutton snapper to 5 fish per person per day or per
trip, whichever is more restrictive, during April through June each
year. Furthermore, stakeholders and law enforcement personnel have
stated their concerns to the South Atlantic Council about
overexploitation of mutton snapper when the species is aggregated to
spawn. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) has
received similar comments. Therefore, the South Atlantic Council also
coordinated with the FWC to develop compatible regulations for mutton
snapper in Florida state waters on the Atlantic coast and Federal
waters to address those concerns and benefit the mutton snapper
resource. The FWC has also adopted this change in their regulations for
mutton snapper in Florida state waters on the Atlantic coast.
The South Atlantic Council did not consider a commercial trip limit
of 25 or 30 fish per vessel during April through June each year in
Amendment 41. Prior to this final rule, commercial harvest was limited
to 10 mutton snapper per person per day or per trip during the May and
June spawning season and no trip limit during April. In Amendment 41,
the South Atlantic Council considered commercial trip limit
alternatives ranging from no commercial retention to 5 fish per person
per day or per trip, whichever was more restrictive, or 10 to 12 fish
per vessel per day during the spawning months of April through June.
The commercial trip limits implemented by this final rule will restrict
commercial harvest during these critical spawning months for mutton
snapper, and will also be similar to the recreational bag limit during
the spawning months. Furthermore, the South Atlantic Council and NMFS
determined that reducing the commercial trip limit to 5 fish per person
or per trip during April through June each year, along with the other
management measures in this final rule, best meet the purpose to ensure
that mutton snapper is managed based on the best scientific information
available to achieve and maintain OY, and to prevent overfishing, while
minimizing adverse social and economic effects to the extent
practicable.
From 2010 through 2014, the average commercial trip that landed
mutton snapper harvested less than 5 mutton snapper per person per
trip, and that average does not change when including logbook data
collected by the NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science Center from landings
and trips during 2015 and 2016. NMFS acknowledges that a business with
a vessel that has landed more than 5 mutton snapper per person per trip
during April through June could experience adverse economic impacts
from the spawning season commercial trip limit, especially if that
business has a history of intensifying effort during the spawning
months. The fleet-wide decrease in ex-vessel value of mutton snapper
landings expected to occur as a result of the 5 mutton snapper per
person per trip limit during April through June is estimated to be
$23,567. Additionally, the reduction of the commercial trip limit
during the spawning months from April through June, in combination with
the 18-inch (46-cm), TL, minimum size limit would be biologically
beneficial by reducing harvest and fishing mortality when the species
is aggregated to spawn and most vulnerable to harvest. These measures
are necessary to prevent harvest from
[[Page 1308]]
exceeding the commercial ACL in the future and improve economic
benefits from the resource in the long-term.
Comment 2: The bag limit should be reduced to 2 or 3 fish per
person per day instead of the 5 fish per person or per trip
recreational limit, whichever is more restrictive.
Response: The South Atlantic Council considered a number of
specific bag limit alternatives for mutton snapper, ranging from no
retention to 12 mutton snapper per vessel per day during the spawning
months. The recreational data from the Marine Recreational Information
Program (MRIP) and the NMFS Southeast Region Headboat Survey during
2010 through 2014 show that most recreational fishermen (private and
for-hire) in the South Atlantic region harvested 3 or fewer mutton
snapper per day on recreational trips, year-round.
Limiting the harvest of mutton snapper during the spawning season
through recreational bag limits is expected to be beneficial to mutton
snapper, because they form spawning aggregations, which are
particularly vulnerable to fishing pressure. The South Atlantic Council
examined the effect of various bag or vessel limits and minimum size
limit combinations in limiting recreational harvest of mutton snapper
during the spawning months, regular season, and year-round. The
analyses indicated that changes to the recreational bag limit would
have little effect in constraining recreational harvest without
additional measures being implemented.
The South Atlantic Council determined that a minimum size limit
greater than the previous minimum size limit of 16 inches (41 cm), TL,
in addition to a bag limit of 5 fish per person or per trip, whichever
is more restrictive, would reduce year-round recreational harvest by
approximately 50 percent. The increased minimum size limit and reduced
recreational bag limit implemented by this final rule would also
control the level of fishing mortality during the spawning season,
without changing the expected level of discards. Additionally, setting
the bag limit at 1, 2, or 3 fish per person per day would be expected
to have larger and unnecessary negative economic effects, since mutton
snapper are not currently undergoing overfishing and are not considered
to be overfished.
Therefore, the South Atlantic Council determined that a
recreational bag limit of 5 mutton snapper per person per day year-
round within the existing 10-snapper aggregate bag limit, combined with
the 18-inch (45.7-cm), TL, minimum size limit implemented through this
final rule, will make regulations for mutton snapper more consistent in
state and Federal waters, address stakeholder concerns regarding
overexploitation of the stock, benefit the mutton snapper resource by
reducing harvest on spawning aggregations, and extend the recreational
fishing season.
Comment 3: The commercial sector should have its ACL and trip
limits reduced proportionally to align with the reductions being
implemented for the recreational sector.
Response: The current sector allocations for mutton are 17.02
percent commercial and 82.98 percent recreational, and the South
Atlantic Council revised management measures for each sector in
Amendment 41 and this final rule. The SEDAR 15A Update concluded that
the mutton snapper population is smaller than estimated in the original
mutton snapper stock assessment, SEDAR 15A, and the SEDAR 15A Update
resulted in lower biological reference point values and fishing level
projections than those from SEDAR 15A. As a result, the South Atlantic
Council chose a lower ABC for mutton snapper and modified existing
management measures in both the commercial and recreational sectors to
be consistent with that lower ABC. The ABC for mutton snapper in the
South Atlantic initially decreases from previous levels beginning in
2017, and then increases annually through 2020, and then remains in
effect at the 2020 level until subsequently modified by the South
Atlantic Council.
The OY and total ACL are set equal to the South Atlantic portion of
the mutton snapper ABC, and similar to the ABC values, in 2017, the
commercial and recreational ACLs initially decrease proportionally from
previous levels, and then the sector ACLs will gradually increase
proportionally through 2020, and remain at the 2020 levels until
modified by the South Atlantic Council. This final rule also increases
the minimum size limit for South Atlantic mutton snapper for both the
commercial and recreational sectors to 18 inches (45.7 cm), TL. The
South Atlantic Council determined that increasing the minimum size
limit for both sectors is the most effective change to management
measures needed to achieve the reduction in overall harvest and
maintain landings within the total ACL implemented by this final rule.
Amendment 41 designates April through June as spawning months for
management purposes in both sectors. The rest of the year is the
regular season. Prior to this final rule, the possession limit for the
commercial sector was 10 per person per day or per trip, whichever was
more restrictive, only during May and June each year. This final rule
implements a 500-lb (227-kg) commercial trip limit during the regular
season, and a limit of 5 fish per person per day or per trip, whichever
is more restrictive, during the spawning months of April through June.
Prior to this final rule, the recreational bag limit for mutton snapper
was 10 fish within the 10-snapper aggregate bag limit. This final rule
implements a recreational bag limit of 5 fish per person per day within
the 10-snapper aggregate bag limit, year-round. The revised management
measures implemented by this final rule for both the commercial and
recreational sectors will limit harvest of mutton snapper during the
spawning months of April through June each year, as well as year-round,
while meeting the objectives of the Snapper-Grouper FMP.
Amendment 41 and the measures implemented by this final rule are
based on the best scientific information available and will effectively
achieve and maintain OY and prevent overfishing while minimizing, to
the extent practicable, adverse social and economic effects.
Comment 4: The harvest of mutton snapper should be prohibited
during the spawning season, so fish have time to reproduce before they
are caught.
Response: In Amendment 41, the South Atlantic Council evaluated
numerous alternatives for commercial trip limits, and recreational bag
and vessel limits, including no retention of mutton snapper during
spawning months for the commercial and recreational sectors. The South
Atlantic Council determined that choosing the no retention alternative
was unnecessary. Prohibiting harvest during the spawning months would
be biologically beneficial to the mutton snapper stock, since fish
would not be subject to fishing mortality while they are in spawning
condition. However, as stated in the response to Comment 1, mutton
snapper is not overfished and is not undergoing overfishing.
Prohibiting harvest during April through June each year was the most
restrictive alternative considered by the South Atlantic Council and it
would have resulted in the greatest negative socio-economic effects. In
addition, recent commercial and recreational landings have been highest
during the spawning months, on average, so prohibiting all harvest
during these months could result in increased regulatory discards of
mutton snapper when fishermen target other snapper-grouper species.
Additionally, through Amendment 41, the South Atlantic Council
coordinated with the
[[Page 1309]]
FWC to develop and recommend compatible regulations for mutton snapper
in Florida state waters and Federal waters in the South Atlantic that
address stakeholder concerns about the overexploitation of mutton
snapper during spawning aggregations, and benefit the mutton snapper
resource.
Comment 5: The 2015 assessment of mutton snapper indicated that the
mutton snapper stock is not overfished or undergoing overfishing;
therefore, the final rule should not be implemented.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Amendment 41 and this final rule respond
to the SEDAR 15A Update, which NMFS has determined is the best
scientific information available. While the SEDAR 15A Update indicated
that the mutton snapper stock is neither overfished nor undergoing
overfishing, improvements to the modeling approach indicated that the
population size is smaller than previously estimated. Amendment 41 and
this final rule update the ABC, MSST, MSY, OY, ACL, and revise
management measures for mutton snapper, based on the results of the
SEDAR 15A Update.
Additionally, as stated in the response to Comment 4, there is
stakeholder concern about fishing effort on mutton snapper spawning
aggregations despite the healthy status of the mutton snapper stock,
and this final rule implements additional protections for mutton
snapper during the spawning season and year-round. As explained in the
response to Comment 1, these management measures are needed to maintain
sustainable harvest levels and economic benefits in the long-term.
Classification
The Regional Administrator for the NMFS Southeast Region has
determined that this final rule is consistent with Amendment 41, the
Snapper-Grouper FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable
law.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the statutory basis for this
rule. No duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting Federal rules have
been identified. In addition, no new reporting, record-keeping, or
other compliance requirements are introduced by this final rule.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this rule would not
have a significant adverse economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. The factual basis for this determination was published
in the proposed rule and is not repeated here. No changes to this final
rule were made in response to public comments. As a result, a final
regulatory flexibility analysis was not required and none was prepared.
NMFS did not receive any comments specific to the certification
that there would not be a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. However, NMFS received one public comment
related to the economic impact of the commercial trip limit reduction
to 5 mutton snapper per person per day or per trip, whichever is more
restrictive, during the mutton snapper spawning months of April through
June. That comment, also addressed in Comment 1 of the Comments and
Responses section, stated the commercial trip limit reduction would be
too restrictive and economically burdensome. Prior to this final rule,
there was a commercial trip limit of 10 mutton snapper per person per
day or per trip, whichever was more restrictive, during May and June
each year, and no trip limit in April. From 2010 through 2014, the
average commercial trip that landed mutton snapper harvested less than
5 mutton snapper per person per trip, and that figure does not change
when landings and trips from 2015 through 2016 are included. NMFS
acknowledges that a business with a vessel that has landed more than 5
mutton snapper per person during a trip in April through June could
experience adverse economic impacts from the commercial trip limit in
this final rule, especially if that business has a history of increased
effort during these spawning months. However, that would not change the
determination that this rule will not have a significant adverse
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Fisheries, Fishing, Mutton snapper, South Atlantic.
Dated: January 5, 2018.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Sec. 622.184 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 622.184, remove and reserve paragraph (b).
0
3. In Sec. 622.185, revise paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.185 Size limits.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(4) Mutton snapper--18 inches (45.7 cm), TL.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 622.187, revise paragraph (b)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.187 Bag and possession limits.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) Snappers, combined--10.
(i) Within the 10-fish bag limit, no more than 5 fish may be mutton
snapper.
(ii) Excluded from this 10-fish bag limit are cubera snapper,
measuring 30 inches (76.2 cm), TL, or larger, in the South Atlantic off
Florida, and red snapper and vermilion snapper. (See Sec.
622.181(b)(2) for the prohibitions on harvest or possession of red
snapper, except during a limited recreational fishing season, and Sec.
622.181(c)(1) for limitations on cubera snapper measuring 30 inches
(76.2 cm), TL, or larger, in or from the South Atlantic EEZ off
Florida.)
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 622.191, add paragraph (a)(13) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.191 Commercial trip limits.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(13) Mutton snapper. The following commercial trip limits apply
until the applicable commercial ACL in Sec. 622.193(o)(1)(iii) is
reached. See Sec. 622.193(o)(1) for the limitations regarding mutton
snapper after the commercial ACL is reached.
(i) From January 1 through March 31, and July 1 through December
31--500 lb (227 kg), round weight.
(ii) From April 1 through June 30--5 fish per person per day or 5
fish per person per trip, whichever is more restrictive.
* * * * *
0
7. In Sec. 622.193, revise paragraph (o) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.193 Annual catch limits (ACLs), annual catch targets
(ACTs), and accountability measures (AMs).
* * * * *
(o) Mutton snapper--(1) Commercial sector. (i) If commercial
landings for
[[Page 1310]]
mutton snapper, as estimated by the SRD, reach or are projected to
reach the applicable commercial ACL specified in paragraph (o)(1)(iii)
of this section, the AA will file a notification with the Office of the
Federal Register to close the commercial sector for the remainder of
the fishing year. On and after the effective date of such a
notification, all sale or purchase of mutton snapper is prohibited and
harvest or possession of mutton snapper in or from the South Atlantic
EEZ is limited to the bag and possession limits. These bag and
possession limits apply in the South Atlantic on board a vessel for
which a valid Federal commercial or charter vessel/headboat permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper has been issued, without regard to where
such species were harvested, i.e., in state or Federal waters.
(ii) If commercial landings for mutton snapper, as estimated by the
SRD, exceed the applicable commercial ACL specified in paragraph
(o)(1)(iii) of this section, and the applicable combined commercial and
recreational ACL specified in paragraph (o)(3) of this section is
exceeded during the same fishing year, and the species is overfished
based on the most recent Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to Congress,
the AA will file a notification with the Office of the Federal Register
to reduce the commercial ACL in the following fishing year by the
amount of the commercial ACL overage in the prior fishing year.
(iii) The commercial ACLs for the following fishing years are given
in round weight. For 2017--100,015 lb (45,366 kg); for 2018--104,231 lb
(47,278 kg); for 2019--107,981 lb (48,979 kg); for 2020 and subsequent
fishing years--111,354 lb (50,509 kg).
(2) Recreational sector. (i) If recreational landings for mutton
snapper, as estimated by the SRD, reach or are projected to reach the
applicable recreational ACL specified in paragraph (o)(2)(iii) of this
section, the AA will file a notification with the Office of the Federal
Register to close the recreational sector for the remainder of the
fishing year regardless if the stock is overfished, unless NMFS
determines that no closure is necessary based on the best scientific
information available. On and after the effective date of such a
notification, the bag and possession limits for mutton snapper in or
from the South Atlantic EEZ are zero.
(ii) If recreational landings for mutton snapper, as estimated by
the SRD, exceed the applicable recreational ACL specified in paragraph
(o)(2)(iii) of this section, then during the following fishing year
recreational landings will be monitored for a persistence in increased
landings, and if necessary, the AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register to reduce the length of the recreational
fishing season and the recreational ACL by the amount of the
recreational ACL overage, if the species is overfished based on the
most recent Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to Congress, and if the
applicable combined commercial and recreational ACL specified in
paragraph (o)(3) of this section is exceeded during the same fishing
year. NMFS will use the best scientific information available to
determine if reducing the length of the recreational fishing season and
recreational ACL is necessary. When the recreational sector is closed
as a result of NMFS reducing the length of the recreational fishing
season and ACL, the bag and possession limits for mutton snapper in or
from the South Atlantic EEZ are zero.
(iii) The recreational ACLs for the following fishing years are
given in numbers of fish. For 2017--116,127; for 2018--121,318; for
2019--124,766; for 2020 and subsequent fishing years--127,115.
(3) Combined commercial and recreational ACL. The combined
commercial and recreational ACLs for the following fishing years are
given in round weight. For 2017--587,633 lb (266,546 kg); for 2018--
612,401 lb (277,780 kg); for 2019--634,435 lb (287,775 kg); for 2020
and subsequent fishing years--654,257 lb (296,766 kg).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2018-00313 Filed 1-10-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P