Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; 2022 Red Snapper Private Angling Component Closure in Federal Waters off Texas, 53415-53416 [2022-18951]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 168 / Wednesday, August 31, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
determination. The Tribe will evaluate
hunter participation, species-specific
swan harvest, and hunter compliance in
providing species-determinant parts (at
least the intact head) of harvested swans
for species identification. The Tribe will
use appropriate measures to maximize
hunter compliance with the Tribe’s
program for swan harvest reporting. The
Tribe will provide to the Service by June
30 following the swan season a report
detailing hunter participation, speciesspecific swan harvest, and hunter
compliance in reporting harvest.
General Conditions: No rifles,
revolvers, pistols, or shotgun pellets
larger than #2 birdshot may be used in
pursuit of migratory game birds. Only
Service-approved nontoxic shot may be
used to take migratory game birds. No
baiting is allowed, including no take of
sandhill cranes on or over lands where
standing crops have been manipulated
to distribute or scatter grain or other
feed on the land where it was grown.
The Tribe hunts other migratory game
birds but follows the State of Utah
(Uintah and Duchesne Counties) for
seasons and bag limits except for in
some cases where the Tribe may be
more restrictive. For additional
information, see the Ute Indian Tribes
General Hunting Regulations.
(bb) White Earth Band of Ojibwe,
White Earth, Minnesota (Tribal
Members Only).
Ducks
Season Dates: September 10–
December 11, 2022.
Daily Bag Limits: 10 ducks, including
no more than 2 female mallards, 2
pintail, and 2 canvasbacks.
Mergansers
Season Dates: September 10–
December 11, 2022.
Daily Bag Limits: 5 mergansers, no
more than 2 of which may be hooded
mergansers.
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Snipe, Woodcock, Rails, and Mourning
Doves
Season Dates: September 1–November
30, 2022.
Daily Bag Limits: 10 snipe, 10
woodcock, 25 rails, and 25 mourning
doves.
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Canada/Cackling Geese
Season Dates: October 15, 2022–
January 22, 2023.
Daily Bag Limits: 3 Canada/cackling
geese.
General Conditions: Possession limits
are two times the daily bag limits.
Shooting hours are from one-half hour
before sunrise to sunset. There is no
open season for mourning doves, bandtailed pigeons, sandhill cranes, rails,
and snipe. Tribal members and
nontribal hunters must comply with all
basic Federal migratory bird hunting
regulations in 50 CFR part 20. Special
regulations that apply to Tribal
members and nontribal hunters may be
obtained from the White Mountain
Apache Tribe Game and Fish
Department.
[FR Doc. 2022–18747 Filed 8–30–22; 8:45 am]
Coots
Season Dates: September 1–November
30, 2022.
Daily Bag Limits: 20 coots.
15:59 Aug 30, 2022
Ducks (Except Scaup), Coots,
Mergansers, Gallinules
Season Dates: October 15, 2022–
January 22, 2023 (scaup November 5,
2022–January 22, 2023).
Daily Bag Limits: 7 ducks (including
mergansers), which may include no
more than 2 redheads, 1 pintail, 2 scaup
(when open), 2 female mallards, and 2
canvasbacks. The daily bag limit for
coots and gallinules is 25 in the
aggregate.
Maureen D. Foster,
Chief of Staff, Office of the Assistant Secretary
for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
Geese
Season Dates: Early season is
September 1–23, 2022, and late season
is September 24–December 18, 2022.
Daily Bag Limits: 10 geese in the early
season and 7 geese in the late season.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
General Conditions: Shooting hours
are one-half hour before sunrise to onehalf hour after sunset. Nontoxic shot is
required. The White Earth Reservation
Tribal Council employs four full-time
conservation officers to enforce
migratory bird regulations.
(cc) White Mountain Apache Tribe,
Fort Apache Indian Reservation,
Whiteriver, Arizona (Tribal Members
and Nontribal Hunters).
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 200124–0029: RTID 0648–XC320
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; 2022
Red Snapper Private Angling
Component Closure in Federal Waters
off Texas
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
AGENCY:
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53415
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
NMFS announces a closure
for the 2022 fishing season for the red
snapper private angling component in
the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off
Texas in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf)
through this temporary rule. The red
snapper recreational private angling
component in the Gulf EEZ off Texas
closes on September 3, 2022 until 12:01
a.m., local time, on January 1, 2023.
This closure is necessary to prevent the
private angling component from
exceeding the Texas regional
management area annual catch limit
(ACL) and to prevent overfishing of the
Gulf red snapper resource.
DATES: This closure is effective from
12:01 a.m., local time, on September 3,
2022 until 12:01 a.m., local time, on
January 1, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
daniel.luers@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Gulf
reef fish fishery, which includes red
snapper, is managed under the Fishery
Management Plan for the Reef Fish
Resources of the Gulf of Mexico (FMP).
The FMP was prepared by the Gulf of
Mexico Fishery Management Council
and is implemented by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) by
regulations at 50 CFR part 622.
The final rule implementing
Amendment 40 to the FMP established
two components within the recreational
sector fishing for Gulf red snapper: the
private angling component, and the
Federal for-hire component (80 FR
22422, April 22, 2015). Amendment 40
also allocated the red snapper
recreational ACL (recreational quota)
between the components and
established separate seasonal closures
for the two components. On February 6,
2020, NMFS implemented Amendments
50 A–F to the FMP, which delegated
authority to the Gulf states (Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and
Texas) to establish specific management
measures for the harvest of red snapper
in Federal waters of the Gulf by the
private angling component of the
recreational sector (85 FR 6819,
February 6, 2020). These amendments
allocate a portion of the private angling
ACL to each state, and each state is
required to constrain landings to its
allocation.
As described at 50 CFR 622.23(c), a
Gulf state with an active delegation may
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 168 / Wednesday, August 31, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
request that NMFS close all, or an area
of, Federal waters off that state to the
harvest and possession of red snapper
by private anglers. The state is required
to request the closure by letter to NMFS,
providing dates and geographic
coordinates for the closure. If the
request is within the scope of the
analysis in Amendment 50A, NMFS
publishes a notice in the Federal
Register implementing the closure for
the fishing year. Based on the analysis
in Amendment 50A, Texas may request
a closure of all Federal waters off the
state to allow a year-round fishing
season in state waters. As described at
50 CFR 622.2, ‘‘off Texas’’ is defined as
the waters in the Gulf west of a rhumb
line from 29°32.1′ N lat., 93°47.7′ W
long. to 26°11.4′ N lat., 92°53′ W long.,
which line is an extension of the
boundary between Louisiana and Texas.
On December 3, 2021, NMFS received
a request from the Texas Parks and
Wildlife Department (TPWD) to close
the EEZ off Texas to the red snapper
private angling component for the first
part of the 2022 fishing year. Texas
requested that the closure be effective
from January 1, 2022, until June 1, 2022.
NMFS determined that the TPWD
request was within the scope of analysis
contained within Amendment 50A, and
subsequently published a temporary
rule in the Federal Register
implementing that closure request (86
FR 70985, December 14, 2021). In that
temporary rule, NMFS noted that TPWD
would monitor private recreational
landings, and if necessary, request that
NMFS again close the EEZ in 2022 to
ensure the Texas regional management
area ACL is not exceeded.
On August 24, 2022, NMFS received
a new request from the TPWD to close
the EEZ off Texas to the red snapper
private angling component for the
remainder of the 2022 fishing year.
Texas requested that the closure be
effective on September 3, 2022, through
the end of the 2022 fishing year. NMFS
has determined that this request is
within the scope of analysis contained
within Amendment 50A, which
analyzed the potential impacts of a
closure of all Federal waters off Texas
when a portion of the Texas quota has
been landed. As explained in
Amendment 50A, Texas intends to
maintain a year-round fishing season in
state waters, during which the
remaining part of Texas’ ACL could be
caught.
Therefore, the red snapper
recreational private angling component
in the Gulf EEZ off Texas will close
from 12:01 a.m., local time, on
September 3, 2022, until 12:01 a.m.,
local time, on January 1, 2023. This
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:59 Aug 30, 2022
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closure applies to all private-anglers
(those on board vessels that have not
been issued a valid charter vessel/
headboat permit for Gulf reef fish)
regardless of which state they are from
or where they intend to land.
On and after the effective dates of the
closure in the EEZ off Texas, the harvest
and possession of red snapper in the
EEZ off Texas by the private angling
component is prohibited and the bag
and possession limits for the red
snapper private angling component in
the closed area is zero.
Classification
NMFS issues this action pursuant to
section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. This action is required by 50 CFR
622.23(c), which was issued pursuant to
section 304(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there
is good cause to waive prior notice and
an opportunity for public comment on
this action, as notice and comment are
unnecessary and contrary to the public
interest.
Such procedures are unnecessary
because the rule implementing the area
closure authority and the state-specific
private angling ACLs has already been
subject to notice and comment, and all
that remains is to notify the public of
the closure. Such procedures are
contrary to the public interest because a
failure to implement the closure
immediately would be inconsistent with
Texas’s state management plan and may
result in less access to red snapper in
state waters.
For the aforementioned reasons, there
is good cause to waive the 30-day delay
in the effectiveness of this action under
5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: August 29, 2022.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2022–18951 Filed 8–29–22; 4:15 pm]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 140501394–5279–02; RTID
0648–XC303]
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; 2022
Commercial Closure for Blueline
Tilefish in the South Atlantic
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
NMFS implements an
accountability measure for blueline
tilefish in the exclusive economic zone
(EEZ) of the South Atlantic. NMFS
projects commercial landings of
blueline tilefish have reached the
commercial annual catch limit (ACL) for
the 2022 fishing year. Therefore, NMFS
is closing the commercial sector for
blueline tilefish in the South Atlantic
EEZ. This closure is necessary to protect
the blueline tilefish resource.
DATES: This temporary rule is effective
from 12:01 a.m., eastern time, on
September 3, 2022, through December
31, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Vara, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
mary.vara@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
snapper-grouper fishery of the South
Atlantic includes blueline tilefish and is
managed under the Fishery
Management Plan for the SnapperGrouper Fishery of the South Atlantic
Region (FMP). The South Atlantic
Fishery Management Council and
NMFS prepared the FMP, and the FMP
is implemented by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) by
regulations at 50 CFR part 622. All
weights in this temporary rule are given
in round weight.
As specified at 50 CFR
622.193(z)(1)(i), the commercial ACL for
blueline tilefish is 117,148 lb (53,137
kg). The commercial accountability
measure for blueline tilefish requires
NMFS to close the commercial sector
when its ACL is reached, or is projected
to be reached, by filing a notification to
that effect with the Office of the Federal
Register. NMFS has projected that for
the 2022 fishing year, the commercial
ACL for South Atlantic blueline tilefish
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 168 (Wednesday, August 31, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 53415-53416]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-18951]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 200124-0029: RTID 0648-XC320
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; 2022 Red Snapper Private
Angling Component Closure in Federal Waters off Texas
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS announces a closure for the 2022 fishing season for the
red snapper private angling component in the exclusive economic zone
(EEZ) off Texas in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) through this temporary
rule. The red snapper recreational private angling component in the
Gulf EEZ off Texas closes on September 3, 2022 until 12:01 a.m., local
time, on January 1, 2023. This closure is necessary to prevent the
private angling component from exceeding the Texas regional management
area annual catch limit (ACL) and to prevent overfishing of the Gulf
red snapper resource.
DATES: This closure is effective from 12:01 a.m., local time, on
September 3, 2022 until 12:01 a.m., local time, on January 1, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727-824-5305, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Gulf reef fish fishery, which includes
red snapper, is managed under the Fishery Management Plan for the Reef
Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico (FMP). The FMP was prepared by the
Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council and is implemented by NMFS
under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) by regulations at 50 CFR part
622.
The final rule implementing Amendment 40 to the FMP established two
components within the recreational sector fishing for Gulf red snapper:
the private angling component, and the Federal for-hire component (80
FR 22422, April 22, 2015). Amendment 40 also allocated the red snapper
recreational ACL (recreational quota) between the components and
established separate seasonal closures for the two components. On
February 6, 2020, NMFS implemented Amendments 50 A-F to the FMP, which
delegated authority to the Gulf states (Louisiana, Mississippi,
Alabama, Florida, and Texas) to establish specific management measures
for the harvest of red snapper in Federal waters of the Gulf by the
private angling component of the recreational sector (85 FR 6819,
February 6, 2020). These amendments allocate a portion of the private
angling ACL to each state, and each state is required to constrain
landings to its allocation.
As described at 50 CFR 622.23(c), a Gulf state with an active
delegation may
[[Page 53416]]
request that NMFS close all, or an area of, Federal waters off that
state to the harvest and possession of red snapper by private anglers.
The state is required to request the closure by letter to NMFS,
providing dates and geographic coordinates for the closure. If the
request is within the scope of the analysis in Amendment 50A, NMFS
publishes a notice in the Federal Register implementing the closure for
the fishing year. Based on the analysis in Amendment 50A, Texas may
request a closure of all Federal waters off the state to allow a year-
round fishing season in state waters. As described at 50 CFR 622.2,
``off Texas'' is defined as the waters in the Gulf west of a rhumb line
from 29[deg]32.1' N lat., 93[deg]47.7' W long. to 26[deg]11.4' N lat.,
92[deg]53' W long., which line is an extension of the boundary between
Louisiana and Texas.
On December 3, 2021, NMFS received a request from the Texas Parks
and Wildlife Department (TPWD) to close the EEZ off Texas to the red
snapper private angling component for the first part of the 2022
fishing year. Texas requested that the closure be effective from
January 1, 2022, until June 1, 2022. NMFS determined that the TPWD
request was within the scope of analysis contained within Amendment
50A, and subsequently published a temporary rule in the Federal
Register implementing that closure request (86 FR 70985, December 14,
2021). In that temporary rule, NMFS noted that TPWD would monitor
private recreational landings, and if necessary, request that NMFS
again close the EEZ in 2022 to ensure the Texas regional management
area ACL is not exceeded.
On August 24, 2022, NMFS received a new request from the TPWD to
close the EEZ off Texas to the red snapper private angling component
for the remainder of the 2022 fishing year. Texas requested that the
closure be effective on September 3, 2022, through the end of the 2022
fishing year. NMFS has determined that this request is within the scope
of analysis contained within Amendment 50A, which analyzed the
potential impacts of a closure of all Federal waters off Texas when a
portion of the Texas quota has been landed. As explained in Amendment
50A, Texas intends to maintain a year-round fishing season in state
waters, during which the remaining part of Texas' ACL could be caught.
Therefore, the red snapper recreational private angling component
in the Gulf EEZ off Texas will close from 12:01 a.m., local time, on
September 3, 2022, until 12:01 a.m., local time, on January 1, 2023.
This closure applies to all private-anglers (those on board vessels
that have not been issued a valid charter vessel/headboat permit for
Gulf reef fish) regardless of which state they are from or where they
intend to land.
On and after the effective dates of the closure in the EEZ off
Texas, the harvest and possession of red snapper in the EEZ off Texas
by the private angling component is prohibited and the bag and
possession limits for the red snapper private angling component in the
closed area is zero.
Classification
NMFS issues this action pursuant to section 305(d) of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act. This action is required by 50 CFR 622.23(c), which was
issued pursuant to section 304(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and is
exempt from review under Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there is good cause to waive prior
notice and an opportunity for public comment on this action, as notice
and comment are unnecessary and contrary to the public interest.
Such procedures are unnecessary because the rule implementing the
area closure authority and the state-specific private angling ACLs has
already been subject to notice and comment, and all that remains is to
notify the public of the closure. Such procedures are contrary to the
public interest because a failure to implement the closure immediately
would be inconsistent with Texas's state management plan and may result
in less access to red snapper in state waters.
For the aforementioned reasons, there is good cause to waive the
30-day delay in the effectiveness of this action under 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3).
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: August 29, 2022.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2022-18951 Filed 8-29-22; 4:15 pm]
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