Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; St. Matthew Blue King Crab Rebuilding Plan in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, 71272-71273 [2020-23546]
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71272
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 217 / Monday, November 9, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
553(b)(B), there is good cause to waive
prior notice of, and an opportunity for
public comment on, this action for the
following reasons: The regulations
implementing the 2006 Consolidated
HMS FMP and amendments provide for
inseason retention limit adjustments to
respond to the unpredictable nature of
BFT availability on the fishing grounds,
the migratory nature of this species, and
the regional variations in the BFT
fishery. Affording prior notice and
opportunity for public comment to
reopen the fishery is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest. The
General category recently closed, but
based on available BFT quotas, fishery
performance in recent weeks, and the
availability of BFT on the fishing
grounds, responsive reopening of the
fishery is warranted to allow fishermen
to take advantage of availability of fish
and of quota. NMFS could not have
proposed this action earlier, as it needed
to consider and respond to updated data
and information about fishery
conditions and this year’s landings. If
NMFS was to offer a public comment
period now, after having appropriately
considered that data, it would preclude
fishermen from harvesting BFT that are
legally available. This action does not
raise conservation and management
concerns. For all of the above reasons,
there is good cause under 5 U.S.C.
553(d) to waive the 30-day delay in
effectiveness.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq. and 1801
et seq.
Dated: November 4, 2020.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2020–24848 Filed 11–4–20; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[RTID 0648–XY104]
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; St. Matthew Blue
King Crab Rebuilding Plan in the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of agency decision.
AGENCY:
The National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS) announces the
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:57 Nov 06, 2020
Jkt 253001
approval of Amendment 50 to the
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for
Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands (BSAI) King
and Tanner Crabs (Crab FMP)
(Amendment 50). Amendment 50 adds
a new rebuilding plan for St. Matthew
blue king crab (SMBKC) to the Crab
FMP. The objective of this amendment
is to rebuild the SMBKC stock. In order
to comply with provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), this action is
necessary to implement a rebuilding
plan prior to the start of the 2020/2021
fishing season. Amendment 50 is
intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
the Crab FMP, and other applicable
laws.
DATES: The amendment was approved
on October 13, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 50 and the Environmental
Assessment (referred to as the
‘‘Analysis’’) prepared for this action
may be obtained from
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Megan Mackey, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that
each regional fishery management
council submit any FMP amendment it
prepares to NMFS for review and
approval, disapproval, or partial
approval by the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary). The Magnuson-Stevens Act
also requires that NMFS, upon receiving
an FMP amendment, immediately
publish a notice in the Federal Register
announcing that the amendment is
available for public review and
comment.
The Notice of Availability (NOA) for
Amendment 50 was published in the
Federal Register on July 15, 2020 (85 FR
42817) with a 60-day comment period
that ended on September 14, 2020.
NMFS received two comments during
the public comment on the NOA. NMFS
is not disapproving any part of
Amendment 50 in response to these
comments. NMFS summarized and
responded to these comments under
Comments and Responses, below.
NMFS determined that Amendment
50 is consistent with the MagnusonStevens Act and other applicable laws,
and the Secretary of Commerce
approved Amendment 50 on October
13, 2020. The July 15, 2020 NOA
contains additional information on this
action. No changes to Federal
regulations are necessary to implement
the Amendment.
NMFS manages the crab fisheries in
the exclusive economic zone under the
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Crab FMP. The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
prepared the Crab FMP under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq. Regulations
governing U.S. fisheries and
implementing the FMP appear at 50
CFR parts 600 and 680.
Through the Crab FMP, the State of
Alaska (the State) is delegated
management authority over certain
aspects of the SMBKC fishery consistent
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the
FMP. Specific to this Crab FMP
amendment, the State has established a
harvest strategy to set total allowable
catch (TAC) levels and guideline harvest
levels (GHLs), and season or area
closures when the TAC or GHL is
reached. The State’s SMBKC harvest
strategy (5 AAC 34.917) is more
conservative than the Crab FMP’s
control rule parameters. Under the
State’s harvest strategy, directed fishing
is prohibited at or below a larger
biomass level than the Crab FMP’s
overfishing level (FOFL) control rule.
During rebuilding, the State’s harvest
strategy will apply.
NMFS declared the SMBKC stock
overfished on October 22, 2018, because
the estimated spawning biomass was
below the minimum stock size
threshold specified in the Crab FMP. In
order to comply with provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, a rebuilding
plan must be implemented prior to the
start of the 2020/2021 fishing season.
In June 2020, the Council chose a
rebuilding plan for SMBKC that allows
directed harvest during rebuilding only
if estimates of stock biomass are
sufficient to open the fishery under the
State’s crab harvest strategy. The
rebuilding plan is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act (16 U.S.C.
1854(e)); with the National Standards
(see Analysis Section 4.1); and with
National Standard Guidelines (50 CFR
600.310) on time for rebuilding,
specifically rebuilding within a time
(Ttarget) that is as short as possible, taking
into account the status and biology of
any overfished stocks of fish, the needs
of fishing communities,
recommendations by international
organizations in which the United
States participates, and the interaction
of the overfished stock of fish with the
marine ecosystem. This rebuilding plan
will allow directed fishing pursuant to
the State’s harvest strategy because such
fishing, though limited, may provide
important economic opportunities for
harvesters, processors, and Alaska
communities. Maintaining these
economic opportunities for a limited
directed commercial fishery under the
State harvest strategy is important for
E:\FR\FM\09NOR1.SGM
09NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 217 / Monday, November 9, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
harvesters, processors, and
communities, particularly because the
majority of commercial crab stocks are
currently in a state of decline and future
openings are likely to be limited or
closed. Fishermen and communities
must be able to diversify their portfolios
and be flexible enough to take advantage
of any available fishing opportunities
each season to remain viable.
Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
time period specified for rebuilding a
fishery generally should not exceed 10
years unless the biology of the stock or
environmental conditions dictate
otherwise, as is the case for SMBKC.
Because ecological conditions represent
the primary constraint on rebuilding the
SMBKC fishery, the projected time for
rebuilding, taking into account the
biology of the species and current
environmental conditions, is 25.5 years.
The directed fishery has been closed
since 2016 under the State harvest
strategy, and has only been open 6 out
of the past 20 years. In addition to the
State’s conservative SMBKC harvest
policy, multiple measures for habitat
protection and bycatch reduction are in
place for the stock. The St. Matthew
Island Habitat Conservation Area
(SMIHCA) was created in 2008 and
expanded through Amendment 94 to the
FMP for Groundfish of the BSAI
Management Area to protect blue king
crab habitat. Vessels fishing with nonpelagic trawl gear are prohibited from
fishing in the SMIHCA. Other fishery
closure areas include a 20 nautical mile
(nmi) closure around the southern tip of
Hall Island to trawling, hook-and-line,
and pot fisheries for pollock, Pacific
cod, and Atka mackerel to protect
Steller sea lions, which also serves to
limit fishing effort in areas occupied by
SMBKC. In addition, State jurisdictional
waters (0 to 3 nmi from shore)
surrounding St. Matthew, Hall, and
Pinnacle Islands are closed to the taking
of king and Tanner crab and to
commercial groundfish fishing.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:57 Nov 06, 2020
Jkt 253001
Fishing mortality is not considered to
be the primary constraining factor for
rebuilding SMBKC. The groundfish
fisheries incur low levels of bycatch of
SMBKC, but in analytical projections
average bycatch rates had no
constraining effect on rebuilding (see
Analysis Section 2.3). Instead,
rebuilding will depend on successful
recruitment of crab under ecosystem
conditions that have recently been very
unfavorable. Warm bottom
temperatures, low pre-recruit biomass,
and northward movement of predator
species, primarily Pacific cod, have
constrained stock growth (see Analysis
Section 3.3.6). For this reason, the
rebuilding plan aims to maintain
existing low levels of fishing mortality
with the anticipation that future
ecosystem conditions will support
SMBKC stock growth.
Amendment 50 adds Section 6.2.5 to
the Crab FMP to include the approved
rebuilding plan for SMBKC. Under the
approved rebuilding plan, ecosystem
indicators developed for the stock will
be monitored for the foreseeable future.
The NMFS eastern Bering Sea bottomtrawl survey provides data for the
annual assessment of the status of crab
stocks in the BSAI, including SMBKC,
and this survey and assessment will
continue throughout rebuilding. The
Council’s BSAI Crab Plan Team will
report stock status and progress towards
the rebuilt level in the Stock
Assessment and Fishery Evaluation
(SAFE) Report for the king and Tanner
crab fisheries of the BSAI. Additionally,
the State and NMFS monitor directed
fishery catch and bycatch of blue king
crabs in other fisheries. When the
fishery is open, the State requires full
observer coverage (100 percent) for both
catcher vessels and catcher/processors
participating in the crab fishery.
Observers monitor harvest at sea and
landings by catcher vessels to shoreside
processors. The State reports the total
harvest from the commercial crab
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
71273
fishery and that report will be included
annually in the SAFE. The contribution
of the rebuilding plan to stock recovery
is additive to measures already in place
that limit the effects of fishing activity
on SMBKC.
Comments and Responses
During the public comment period for
the NOA for Amendment 50, NMFS
received two unique comments from
two members of the public. NMFS is not
disapproving any part of Amendment 50
in response to these comments. NMFS’s
responses to these comments are
presented below.
Comment 1: One commenter
expressed general support for this
action.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 2: One commenter stated
that crab fisheries in Alaska should be
shut down.
Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act
and the Crab FMP require, among other
things, that the Council and NMFS
manage fisheries to prevent overfishing
while achieving, on a continuing basis,
the optimum yield from each fishery
and base management decisions on the
best scientific information available.
The commenter provided no
information to support shutting down
crab fisheries in Alaska. Currently, crab
fisheries in Alaska are being responsibly
managed with conservative harvest
strategies and provide important
economic benefits to Alaskan
communities.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: October 20, 2020.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2020–23546 Filed 11–6–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\09NOR1.SGM
09NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 217 (Monday, November 9, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 71272-71273]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-23546]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[RTID 0648-XY104]
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; St. Matthew
Blue King Crab Rebuilding Plan in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of agency decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) announces the
approval of Amendment 50 to the Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for
Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands (BSAI) King and Tanner Crabs (Crab FMP)
(Amendment 50). Amendment 50 adds a new rebuilding plan for St. Matthew
blue king crab (SMBKC) to the Crab FMP. The objective of this amendment
is to rebuild the SMBKC stock. In order to comply with provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act), this action is necessary to implement a rebuilding plan
prior to the start of the 2020/2021 fishing season. Amendment 50 is
intended to promote the goals and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, the Crab FMP, and other applicable laws.
DATES: The amendment was approved on October 13, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of Amendment 50 and the Environmental
Assessment (referred to as the ``Analysis'') prepared for this action
may be obtained from www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Megan Mackey, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that each
regional fishery management council submit any FMP amendment it
prepares to NMFS for review and approval, disapproval, or partial
approval by the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary). The Magnuson-Stevens
Act also requires that NMFS, upon receiving an FMP amendment,
immediately publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing that
the amendment is available for public review and comment.
The Notice of Availability (NOA) for Amendment 50 was published in
the Federal Register on July 15, 2020 (85 FR 42817) with a 60-day
comment period that ended on September 14, 2020. NMFS received two
comments during the public comment on the NOA. NMFS is not disapproving
any part of Amendment 50 in response to these comments. NMFS summarized
and responded to these comments under Comments and Responses, below.
NMFS determined that Amendment 50 is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act and other applicable laws, and the Secretary of Commerce
approved Amendment 50 on October 13, 2020. The July 15, 2020 NOA
contains additional information on this action. No changes to Federal
regulations are necessary to implement the Amendment.
NMFS manages the crab fisheries in the exclusive economic zone
under the Crab FMP. The North Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) prepared the Crab FMP under the authority of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq. Regulations governing U.S.
fisheries and implementing the FMP appear at 50 CFR parts 600 and 680.
Through the Crab FMP, the State of Alaska (the State) is delegated
management authority over certain aspects of the SMBKC fishery
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the FMP. Specific to this
Crab FMP amendment, the State has established a harvest strategy to set
total allowable catch (TAC) levels and guideline harvest levels (GHLs),
and season or area closures when the TAC or GHL is reached. The State's
SMBKC harvest strategy (5 AAC 34.917) is more conservative than the
Crab FMP's control rule parameters. Under the State's harvest strategy,
directed fishing is prohibited at or below a larger biomass level than
the Crab FMP's overfishing level (FOFL) control rule. During
rebuilding, the State's harvest strategy will apply.
NMFS declared the SMBKC stock overfished on October 22, 2018,
because the estimated spawning biomass was below the minimum stock size
threshold specified in the Crab FMP. In order to comply with provisions
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, a rebuilding plan must be implemented
prior to the start of the 2020/2021 fishing season.
In June 2020, the Council chose a rebuilding plan for SMBKC that
allows directed harvest during rebuilding only if estimates of stock
biomass are sufficient to open the fishery under the State's crab
harvest strategy. The rebuilding plan is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act (16 U.S.C. 1854(e)); with the National Standards (see
Analysis Section 4.1); and with National Standard Guidelines (50 CFR
600.310) on time for rebuilding, specifically rebuilding within a time
(Ttarget) that is as short as possible, taking into account
the status and biology of any overfished stocks of fish, the needs of
fishing communities, recommendations by international organizations in
which the United States participates, and the interaction of the
overfished stock of fish with the marine ecosystem. This rebuilding
plan will allow directed fishing pursuant to the State's harvest
strategy because such fishing, though limited, may provide important
economic opportunities for harvesters, processors, and Alaska
communities. Maintaining these economic opportunities for a limited
directed commercial fishery under the State harvest strategy is
important for
[[Page 71273]]
harvesters, processors, and communities, particularly because the
majority of commercial crab stocks are currently in a state of decline
and future openings are likely to be limited or closed. Fishermen and
communities must be able to diversify their portfolios and be flexible
enough to take advantage of any available fishing opportunities each
season to remain viable.
Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the time period specified for
rebuilding a fishery generally should not exceed 10 years unless the
biology of the stock or environmental conditions dictate otherwise, as
is the case for SMBKC. Because ecological conditions represent the
primary constraint on rebuilding the SMBKC fishery, the projected time
for rebuilding, taking into account the biology of the species and
current environmental conditions, is 25.5 years.
The directed fishery has been closed since 2016 under the State
harvest strategy, and has only been open 6 out of the past 20 years. In
addition to the State's conservative SMBKC harvest policy, multiple
measures for habitat protection and bycatch reduction are in place for
the stock. The St. Matthew Island Habitat Conservation Area (SMIHCA)
was created in 2008 and expanded through Amendment 94 to the FMP for
Groundfish of the BSAI Management Area to protect blue king crab
habitat. Vessels fishing with non-pelagic trawl gear are prohibited
from fishing in the SMIHCA. Other fishery closure areas include a 20
nautical mile (nmi) closure around the southern tip of Hall Island to
trawling, hook-and-line, and pot fisheries for pollock, Pacific cod,
and Atka mackerel to protect Steller sea lions, which also serves to
limit fishing effort in areas occupied by SMBKC. In addition, State
jurisdictional waters (0 to 3 nmi from shore) surrounding St. Matthew,
Hall, and Pinnacle Islands are closed to the taking of king and Tanner
crab and to commercial groundfish fishing.
Fishing mortality is not considered to be the primary constraining
factor for rebuilding SMBKC. The groundfish fisheries incur low levels
of bycatch of SMBKC, but in analytical projections average bycatch
rates had no constraining effect on rebuilding (see Analysis Section
2.3). Instead, rebuilding will depend on successful recruitment of crab
under ecosystem conditions that have recently been very unfavorable.
Warm bottom temperatures, low pre-recruit biomass, and northward
movement of predator species, primarily Pacific cod, have constrained
stock growth (see Analysis Section 3.3.6). For this reason, the
rebuilding plan aims to maintain existing low levels of fishing
mortality with the anticipation that future ecosystem conditions will
support SMBKC stock growth.
Amendment 50 adds Section 6.2.5 to the Crab FMP to include the
approved rebuilding plan for SMBKC. Under the approved rebuilding plan,
ecosystem indicators developed for the stock will be monitored for the
foreseeable future. The NMFS eastern Bering Sea bottom-trawl survey
provides data for the annual assessment of the status of crab stocks in
the BSAI, including SMBKC, and this survey and assessment will continue
throughout rebuilding. The Council's BSAI Crab Plan Team will report
stock status and progress towards the rebuilt level in the Stock
Assessment and Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) Report for the king and Tanner
crab fisheries of the BSAI. Additionally, the State and NMFS monitor
directed fishery catch and bycatch of blue king crabs in other
fisheries. When the fishery is open, the State requires full observer
coverage (100 percent) for both catcher vessels and catcher/processors
participating in the crab fishery. Observers monitor harvest at sea and
landings by catcher vessels to shoreside processors. The State reports
the total harvest from the commercial crab fishery and that report will
be included annually in the SAFE. The contribution of the rebuilding
plan to stock recovery is additive to measures already in place that
limit the effects of fishing activity on SMBKC.
Comments and Responses
During the public comment period for the NOA for Amendment 50, NMFS
received two unique comments from two members of the public. NMFS is
not disapproving any part of Amendment 50 in response to these
comments. NMFS's responses to these comments are presented below.
Comment 1: One commenter expressed general support for this action.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 2: One commenter stated that crab fisheries in Alaska
should be shut down.
Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act and the Crab FMP require, among
other things, that the Council and NMFS manage fisheries to prevent
overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the optimum yield
from each fishery and base management decisions on the best scientific
information available. The commenter provided no information to support
shutting down crab fisheries in Alaska. Currently, crab fisheries in
Alaska are being responsibly managed with conservative harvest
strategies and provide important economic benefits to Alaskan
communities.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: October 20, 2020.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2020-23546 Filed 11-6-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P