2023 Annual Determination To Implement the Sea Turtle Observer Requirement, 4792-4795 [2023-01427]
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4792
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Government-to-Government
Relationship With Tribes
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994
(Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments; 59 FR 22951), Executive
Order 13175 (Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments), and the Department of
the Interior’s manual at 512 DM 2, we
readily acknowledge our responsibility
to communicate meaningfully with
recognized Federal Tribes on a
government-to-government basis. In
accordance with Secretarial Order 3206
of June 5, 1997 (American Indian Tribal
Rights, Federal-Tribal Trust
Responsibilities, and the Endangered
Species Act), we readily acknowledge
our responsibilities to work directly
with Tribes in developing programs for
healthy ecosystems, to acknowledge that
Tribal lands are not subject to the same
controls as Federal public lands, to
remain sensitive to Indian culture, and
to make information available to Tribes.
There are no Tribal lands associated
with this final rule.
References Cited
A complete list of references cited in
this rulemaking is available on the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov
and upon request from the Carlsbad
Fish and Wildlife Office (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Authors
The primary authors of this final rule
are the staff members of the Fish and
Wildlife Service’s Species Assessment
Team and the Carlsbad Fish and
Wildlife Office.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and threatened species,
Exports, Imports, Plants, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements,
Transportation, Wildlife.
Regulation Promulgation
Accordingly, we hereby amend part
17, subchapter B of chapter I, title 50 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, as set
forth below:
PART 17—ENDANGERED AND
THREATENED WILDLIFE AND PLANTS
1. The authority citation for part 17
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1361–1407; 1531–
1544; and 4201–4245, unless otherwise
noted.
§ 17.11
[Amended]
2. Amend § 17.11 in paragraph (h) by
removing the entry for ‘‘Sparrow, San
■
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16:12 Jan 24, 2023
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Clemente sage’’ under BIRDS from the
List of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife.
§ 17.12
[Amended]
3. Amend § 17.12 in paragraph (h) by
removing the entries for ‘‘Acmispon
dendroideus var. traskiae’’, ‘‘Castilleja
grisea’’, ‘‘Delphinium variegatum ssp.
kinkiense’’, and ‘‘Malacothamnus
clementinus’’ under FLOWERING
PLANTS from the List of Endangered
and Threatened Plants.
■
Martha Williams,
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–01400 Filed 1–24–23; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 222
[Docket No. 230119–0018]
RIN 0648–BL37
2023 Annual Determination To
Implement the Sea Turtle Observer
Requirement
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final determination.
AGENCY:
The National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS) hereby
publishes the final Annual
Determination (AD) for 2023, pursuant
to its authority under the Endangered
Species Act (ESA). Through the AD,
NMFS identifies U.S. fisheries operating
in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico,
and Pacific Ocean in which participants
will be required to take fisheries
observers upon NMFS’ request. The
purpose of observing identified fisheries
is to learn more about sea turtle bycatch
in a given fishery, evaluate measures to
prevent or reduce sea turtle takes, and
implement the prohibition against sea
turtle takes. Fisheries identified on the
2023 AD (see Table 1) will be required
to carry observers upon NMFS’ request,
and will remain on the AD for a 5-year
period until December 31, 2027.
DATES: This final determination is
effective February 24, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Chief, Marine Mammal and
Sea Turtle Conservation Division, Attn:
Sea Turtle Annual Determination, Office
of Protected Resources, NMFS, 1315
East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD
20910.
SUMMARY:
Frm 00072
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Jaclyn Taylor, Office of Protected
Resources, 301–427–8402; Ellen Keane,
Greater Atlantic Region, 978–282–8476;
Dennis Klemm, Southeast Region, 727–
824–5312; Dan Lawson, West Coast
Region, 206–526–4740; Irene Kelly,
Pacific Islands Region, 808–725–5141.
Individuals who use a
telecommunications device for the
hearing impaired may call the Federal
Information Relay Service at 1–800–
877–8339 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Eastern time, Monday through Friday,
excluding Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of the Sea Turtle Observer
Requirement
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Under the ESA, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.,
NMFS has the responsibility to
implement programs to conserve marine
life listed as endangered or threatened.
All sea turtles found in U.S. waters are
listed as either endangered or
threatened under the ESA. Kemp’s
ridley (Lepidochelys kempii),
loggerhead (Caretta caretta; North
Pacific distinct population segment
(DPS)), leatherback (Dermochelys
coriacea), green (Chelonia mydas;
Central West Pacific and Central South
Pacific DPSs) and hawksbill
(Eretmochelys imbricata) sea turtles are
listed as endangered. Loggerhead
(Northwest Atlantic distinct population
segment), green (North Atlantic, South
Atlantic, Central North Pacific, and East
Pacific DPSs), and olive ridley
(Lepidochelys olivacea) sea turtles are
listed as threatened, except for breeding
colony populations of olive ridleys on
the Pacific coast of Mexico, which are
listed as endangered. Due to the
inability to distinguish between
populations of olive ridley turtles away
from the nesting beach, NMFS considers
these turtles endangered wherever they
occur in U.S. Pacific waters. While some
sea turtle populations have shown signs
of recovery, many populations continue
to decline.
Bycatch in fishing gear is the primary
anthropogenic source of sea turtle injury
and mortality in U.S. waters. Section 9
of the ESA prohibits the take (defined to
include harassing, harming, pursuing,
hunting, shooting, wounding, killing,
trapping, capturing, or collecting or
attempting to engage in any such
conduct), including incidental take, of
endangered sea turtles. Pursuant to
section 4(d) of the ESA, NMFS has
issued regulations extending the
prohibition of take, with exceptions, to
threatened sea turtles (50 CFR 223.205
and 223.206). Section 11 of the ESA
provides for civil penalties and criminal
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
penalties for anyone who knowingly
violates the Act or a regulation issued to
implement the ESA. NMFS may grant
exceptions to the take prohibitions with
an incidental take statement or an
incidental take permit issued pursuant
to ESA section 7 or 10, respectively. To
do so, NMFS must determine the
activity that will result in incidental
take is not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of the affected
listed species. For some Federal
fisheries and most state fisheries, NMFS
has not granted an exception for
incidental takes of sea turtles primarily
because we lack information about
fishery-sea turtle interactions.
For most fisheries, the most effective
way for NMFS to learn more about
bycatch in order to implement the take
prohibitions and prevent or minimize
take is to place observers aboard fishing
vessels. In 2007, NMFS issued a
regulation (50 CFR 222.402) establishing
procedures to annually identify,
pursuant to specified criteria and after
notice and opportunity for comment,
those fisheries in which the agency
intends to place observers (72 FR 43176;
August 3, 2007). These regulations
specify that NMFS may observe
fisheries, commercial or recreational,
operating in U.S. territorial waters, the
U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ), or
on the high seas or on vessels that are
otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States. Failure to comply
with the requirements under these
regulations may result in civil or
criminal penalties under the ESA.
NMFS will pay the direct costs for
vessels to carry the required observers.
These include observer salary and
insurance costs. NMFS may also
evaluate other potential direct costs,
should they arise. Once selected, a
fishery will be required to carry
observers, if requested, for a period of
five years without further action by
NMFS. This will enable NMFS to
develop appropriate observer coverage
and sampling protocols to investigate
sea turtle bycatch, and to evaluate
whether existing measures are
minimizing or preventing bycatch.
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Sea Turtle Distribution
NMFS uses information on sea turtle
distribution and habitat use to inform
the development of the final AD. A
summary of this information was
included in the proposed AD (87 FR
54948; September 8, 2022) and was
considered in developing the final 2023
AD.
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Process for Developing the Annual
Determination (AD)
Pursuant to 50 CFR 222.402, NOAA’s
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries
(AA), in consultation with Regional
Administrators and Fisheries Science
Center Directors, develops a proposed
AD identifying which fisheries are
required to carry observers, if requested,
to monitor potential interactions with
sea turtles. NMFS provided an
opportunity for public comment on the
proposed determination (87 FR 54948;
September 8, 2022). The determination
is informed by the best available
scientific, commercial, or other
information regarding sea turtle-fishery
interactions; sea turtle distribution; sea
turtle strandings; fishing techniques,
gears used, target species, seasons and
areas fished; and/or qualitative data
from logbooks or fisher reports.
Specifically, fisheries are identified on
the AD based on the extent to which:
(1) The fishery operates in the same
waters and at the same time as when sea
turtles are present;
(2) The fishery operates at the same
time or prior to elevated sea turtle
strandings; or
(3) The fishery uses a gear or
technique that is known or likely to
result in incidental take of sea turtles
based on documented or reported takes
in the same or similar fisheries; and
(4) NMFS intends to monitor the
fishery and anticipates that it will have
the funds to do so.
The AA used the most recent version
of the annually published Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) List of
Fisheries (LOF) as the comprehensive
list of commercial fisheries for
consideration. The LOF includes all
known state and Federal commercial
fisheries that occur in U.S. waters and
on the high seas. However, in preparing
the AD, we do not rely on the three-part
MMPA LOF classification scheme. In
addition, unlike the LOF, the AD may
include recreational fisheries likely to
interact with sea turtles based on the
best available information.
NMFS consulted with appropriate
state and Federal fisheries officials to
identify which fisheries, both
commercial and recreational, to
consider. NMFS carefully considered all
recommendations and information
available for developing the AD. The AD
is not an exhaustive or comprehensive
list of all fisheries with documented or
suspected sea turtle bycatch. NMFS will
not include a fishery on the AD if that
fishery does not meet the criteria for
inclusion on the AD (50 CFR
222.402(a)).
For many fisheries, NMFS may
already be addressing bycatch through
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another mechanism (e.g., rulemaking to
implement modifications to fishing gear
and/or practices), may be observing the
fishery under a separate statutory
authority, or will consider including
them in future ADs based on the four
previously noted criteria (50 CFR
222.402(a)). The fisheries not included
on the 2023 AD may still be observed
by NMFS fisheries observers under
different authorities (e.g., MMPA,
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(MSA)) than the ESA, if applicable.
NMFS publishes the final
determination in the Federal Register
and individuals permitted for each
fishery identified on the AD will receive
a written notification. NMFS will also
notify state or territory agencies. Once
included in the final determination, a
fishery will remain eligible for observer
coverage for a period of five years to
enable the design of an appropriate
sampling program and to ensure
collection of sufficient scientific data for
analysis. If NMFS determines a need for
more than five years to obtain sufficient
scientific data, NMFS will include the
fishery in a subsequent proposed AD,
prior to the end of the fifth year.
On the 2018 AD, NMFS identified two
fisheries and required them to carry
observers, if requested, through
December 31, 2022. The 2020 AD
identified four additional fisheries and
required them to carry observers, if
requested, through September 29, 2025.
The fisheries included on the current
AD are available at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
bycatch/sea-turtle-observerrequirement-annual-determination.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 14 comment letters on
the proposed AD (87 FR 54948;
September 8, 2022). All commenters
were members of the public. All
commenters expressed general support
of the regulation or fishery observer
programs. All substantive comments are
addressed below. Comments on issues
outside the scope of the AD were noted
but are not responded to in this final
determination.
General Comments
Comment 1: Twelve commenters
expressed general support for the
regulation.
Response: NMFS agrees and has
included two fisheries on the 2023 AD
to allow for increased data collection on
sea turtle bycatch to accomplish the
purposes of the regulation.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Recommendations for Fisheries To
Include on the 2023 AD
Comment 2: One commenter was
supportive of the regulation but
recommends NMFS include a fishery in
the Pacific Ocean on the 2023 AD. The
commenter noted that adding a Pacific
fishery will allow NMFS to cover
fisheries in the Atlantic, Pacific, and
Gulf of Mexico.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
there are other fisheries, in addition to
those included on the 2023 AD, that
have the potential to incidentally take
sea turtles. The 2023 AD is not meant
to be a comprehensive list of fisheries
that have sea turtle bycatch or fisheries
that require monitoring, but rather a
focused list, based on specific inclusion
criteria, one of which is based on
available funding (see Purpose of the
Sea Turtle Observer Requirement
section). NMFS is not including a
Pacific fishery on the 2023 AD because
none of the fisheries in the Pacific met
all of the inclusion criteria.
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Observer Coverage
Comment 3: A commenter was
supportive of the regulation but raised
concern over what NMFS’ standards
were for distributing and placing
observers among fisheries on the AD.
The proposed rule stated ‘‘That no
individual person or vessel, or group of
persons or vessels, be subject to
inappropriate, excessive observer
coverage.’’ The commenter questioned
what would make observer coverage
inappropriate or excessive.
Response: When using the AD
authority to observe a fishery, NMFS
will work within the current observer
programs and follow the observer
program’s standards and observer
placement design requirements.
Pursuant to 50 CFR 222.404, NMFS will
follow the standards for distributing and
placing observers: (1) The requirement
to obtain the best available scientific
information; (2) The requirement that
observers be assigned fairly and
equitably among fisheries and among
vessels in a fishery; (3) The requirement
that no individual person or vessel, or
group of persons or vessels, be subject
to inappropriate, excessive observer
coverage; and (4) The need to minimize
costs and avoid duplication, where
practicable. For example, Northeast
Fisheries Observer Program (NEFOP)
coverage is determined by an annual
discard analysis and sea day allocation
report required by the Standardized
Bycatch Reporting Methodology (SBRM)
Amendment. Trips are assigned based
on effort. As there is no pre-trip
notification requirement for these fleets,
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guidance is provided to the contract
holder which estimates coverage based
on that year’s sea day schedule and
prior years effort. There are regulations
in the SBRM amendment and the
contract that prevents individual vessels
from being covered in a biased manner.
Recreational Fisheries
Comment 4: A commenter stated that
the AD does not include information on
how an observer program would be
implemented for recreational fisheries
from public piers. They noted that
several fishing piers in the Gulf of
Mexico have a high rate of sea turtle
bycatch. The Loggerhead Marine Life
Center in Florida has a responsible pier
initiative program. The commenter
stated that this data can provide
information on sea turtle bycatch off
piers and NMFS can use that
information to use the AD for
recreational fisheries occurring on piers.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
there are other fisheries (commercial
and recreational), in addition to those
included on the 2023 AD, that have the
potential to take sea turtles. The 2023
AD is not meant to be a comprehensive
list of fisheries that have sea turtle
bycatch or fisheries that require
monitoring, but rather a focused list,
based on specific inclusion criteria, one
of which is based on available funding
(see Purpose of the Sea Turtle Observer
Requirement section). NMFS is not
including shore-based recreational
fisheries on the 2023 AD because none
of the fisheries met all of the inclusion
criteria. NMFS and our partners
(including those in the Sea Turtle
Stranding and Salvage Network) are
trying to learn more about how sea
turtles interact with recreational fishing
gear—see additional information on our
Sea Turtle and Recreational Fishing
website here: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-life-distress/sea-turtles-andrecreational-fishing.
Fisheries Included on the 2023 Annual
Determination
NMFS includes two fisheries in the
Atlantic Ocean/Gulf of Mexico on the
2023 AD. The two fisheries, listed in
Table 1, are the mid-Atlantic gillnet and
Gulf of Mexico menhaden purse seine
fisheries. These two fisheries were
previously listed on the 2018 AD for a
five-year period ending December 31,
2022. NMFS includes these fisheries
pursuant to the criteria identified at 50
CFR 222.402(a)(1) for listing a fishery on
the AD because sea turtles are known to
occur in the same areas where the
fishery operates, takes have been
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documented in this fishery, and NMFS
intends to monitor this fishery.
NMFS used the 2022 MMPA LOF (87
FR 23122; April 19, 2022) as the
comprehensive list of commercial
fisheries to evaluate for fisheries to
include on the AD. The fishery name,
definition, and number of vessels/
persons for fisheries listed in the AD are
taken from the most recent MMPA LOF.
Additionally, the fishery descriptions
below include a particular fishery’s
current classification on the MMPA LOF
(i.e., Category I, II, or III); Category I and
II fisheries are required to carry
observers under the MMPA, if requested
by NMFS. As noted previously, NMFS
also has authority to observe fisheries in
Federal waters under the MSA and
collect sea turtle bycatch information.
The AD authority will work within the
current observer programs, and allow
NMFS the flexibility to further consider
sea turtle data collection needs when
allocating observer resources.
A summary of information about the
mid-Atlantic gillnet and Gulf of Mexico
menhaden purse seine fisheries was
included in the proposed AD (87 FR
54948; September 8, 2022) and was
considered in developing the final 2023
AD.
Implementation of Observer Coverage
in a Fishery Listed on the 2023 AD
As part of the 2023 AD, NMFS has
included, to the extent practicable,
information on the fisheries and gear
types to observe, geographic and
seasonal scope of coverage, and any
other relevant information. NMFS
intends to monitor the fisheries and
anticipates that it will have the funds to
support observer activities. After
publication of the final determination,
there will be a 30-day delay in the date
of effectiveness for implementing
observer coverage, see DATES.
The design of any observer program
for fisheries identified through the AD
process, including how observers will
be allocated to individual vessels, will
vary among fisheries, fishing sectors,
gear types, and geographic regions, and
will ultimately be determined by the
individual NMFS Regional Office,
Science Center, and/or observer
program. Pursuant to 50 CFR 222.404,
during the program design, NMFS will
follow the standards below for
distributing and placing observers
among fisheries identified in the AD
and among vessels in those fisheries:
(1) The requirement to obtain the best
available scientific information;
(2) The requirement that observers be
assigned fairly and equitably among
fisheries and among vessels in a fishery;
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(3) The requirement that no
individual person or vessel, or group of
persons or vessels, be subject to
inappropriate, excessive observer
coverage; and
(4) The need to minimize costs and
avoid duplication, where practicable.
Vessels subject to observer coverage
under the AD must comply with
observer safety requirements specified
in 50 CFR 600.725 and 600.746.
Specifically, 50 CFR 600.746(c) requires
vessels subject to observer coverage to
provide adequate and safe conditions
for carrying an observer and conditions
that allow for operation of normal
observer functions. To provide such
conditions, a vessel must comply with
the applicable regulations regarding
observer accommodations (see 50 CFR
parts 229, 300, 600, 622, 635, 648, 660,
and 679) and possess a current United
States Coast Guard (USCG) Commercial
Fishing Vessel Safety Examination decal
or a USCG certificate of examination. A
vessel that fails to meet these
requirements at the time an observer is
to be deployed may be prohibited from
fishing without observer coverage under
50 CFR 600.746(i). Observer programs
designed or carried out in accordance
with 50 CFR 222.404 are consistent with
existing NOAA observer policies and
applicable federal regulations, such as
those under the Fair Labor and
Standards Act (29 U.S.C. 201 et seq.),
the Service Contract Act (41 U.S.C. 351
et seq.), and the Observer Health and
Safety regulations (50 CFR part 600).
Additional information on observer
programs in commercial fisheries is
available on the NMFS National
Observer Program’s website: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/topic/fisheryobservers.
TABLE 1—STATE AND FEDERAL COMMERCIAL FISHERIES INCLUDED ON
THE 2023 ANNUAL DETERMINATION
Fishery
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Purse Seine Fisheries:
Gulf of Mexico menhaden
purse seine ..........................
Gillnet Fisheries:
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16:12 Jan 24, 2023
Years eligible
to carry
observers
2023–2027
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TABLE 1—STATE AND FEDERAL COMMERCIAL FISHERIES INCLUDED ON
THE 2023 ANNUAL DETERMINATION—Continued
Years eligible
to carry
observers
Fishery
Mid-Atlantic gillnet ...................
2023–2027
Classification
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce has
certified to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) during the
proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. No comments were received on
that certification, and no new
information has been discovered to
change that conclusion. Accordingly, no
regulatory flexibility analysis is
required, and none has been prepared.
This regulation contains existing
collection-of-information (COI)
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act and would not impose
additional or new COI requirements.
The information collection for the AD is
approved under Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number
0648–0593. Notwithstanding any other
provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, nor shall any
person be subject to a penalty for failure
to comply with, a collection of
information subject to the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB Control Number.
This regulation has been determined
to be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
In accordance with the Companion
Manual for NOAA Administrative Order
(NAO) 216–6A, NMFS determined that
publishing the AD qualifies to be
categorically excluded from further
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) review, consistent with
categories of activities identified in
Categorical Exclusion G7 (‘‘Preparation
of policy directives, rules, regulations,
and guidelines of an administrative,
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Sfmt 9990
4795
financial, legal, technical, or procedural
nature, or for which the environmental
effects are too broad, speculative or
conjectural to lend themselves to
meaningful analysis and will be subject
later to the NEPA process, either
collectively or on a case-by-case basis’’)
of the Companion Manual, and we have
not identified any extraordinary
circumstances listed in Chapter 4 of the
Companion Manual for NAO 216–6A
that would preclude application of this
categorical exclusion. If NMFS takes a
management action for a specific
fishery, for example, requiring fishing
gear modifications, NMFS would first
prepare any environmental document
specific to that action that is required
under NEPA.
This regulation would not affect
species listed as threatened or
endangered under the ESA or their
associated critical habitat. The impacts
of numerous fisheries have been
analyzed in various biological opinions,
and this regulation would not affect the
conclusions of those opinions. The
inclusion of fisheries on the AD is not
considered a management action that
would adversely affect threatened or
endangered species. If NMFS takes a
management action, for example,
requiring modifications to fishing gear
and/or practices, NMFS would review
the action for potential adverse effects to
listed species under the ESA.
This regulation would have no
adverse impacts on sea turtles, and
information collected from observer
programs may have a positive impact on
sea turtles by improving knowledge of
sea turtles and the fisheries interacting
with sea turtles.
This regulation would not affect the
land or water uses or natural resources
of the coastal zone, as specified under
section 307 of the Coastal Zone
Management Act.
Dated: January 19, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–01427 Filed 1–24–23; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 16 (Wednesday, January 25, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4792-4795]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-01427]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 222
[Docket No. 230119-0018]
RIN 0648-BL37
2023 Annual Determination To Implement the Sea Turtle Observer
Requirement
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final determination.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) hereby publishes
the final Annual Determination (AD) for 2023, pursuant to its authority
under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Through the AD, NMFS identifies
U.S. fisheries operating in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and
Pacific Ocean in which participants will be required to take fisheries
observers upon NMFS' request. The purpose of observing identified
fisheries is to learn more about sea turtle bycatch in a given fishery,
evaluate measures to prevent or reduce sea turtle takes, and implement
the prohibition against sea turtle takes. Fisheries identified on the
2023 AD (see Table 1) will be required to carry observers upon NMFS'
request, and will remain on the AD for a 5-year period until December
31, 2027.
DATES: This final determination is effective February 24, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Chief, Marine Mammal and Sea Turtle Conservation Division,
Attn: Sea Turtle Annual Determination, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jaclyn Taylor, Office of Protected
Resources, 301-427-8402; Ellen Keane, Greater Atlantic Region, 978-282-
8476; Dennis Klemm, Southeast Region, 727-824-5312; Dan Lawson, West
Coast Region, 206-526-4740; Irene Kelly, Pacific Islands Region, 808-
725-5141. Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the
hearing impaired may call the Federal Information Relay Service at 1-
800-877-8339 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through
Friday, excluding Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of the Sea Turtle Observer Requirement
Under the ESA, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq., NMFS has the responsibility
to implement programs to conserve marine life listed as endangered or
threatened. All sea turtles found in U.S. waters are listed as either
endangered or threatened under the ESA. Kemp's ridley (Lepidochelys
kempii), loggerhead (Caretta caretta; North Pacific distinct population
segment (DPS)), leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea), green (Chelonia
mydas; Central West Pacific and Central South Pacific DPSs) and
hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata) sea turtles are listed as
endangered. Loggerhead (Northwest Atlantic distinct population
segment), green (North Atlantic, South Atlantic, Central North Pacific,
and East Pacific DPSs), and olive ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea) sea
turtles are listed as threatened, except for breeding colony
populations of olive ridleys on the Pacific coast of Mexico, which are
listed as endangered. Due to the inability to distinguish between
populations of olive ridley turtles away from the nesting beach, NMFS
considers these turtles endangered wherever they occur in U.S. Pacific
waters. While some sea turtle populations have shown signs of recovery,
many populations continue to decline.
Bycatch in fishing gear is the primary anthropogenic source of sea
turtle injury and mortality in U.S. waters. Section 9 of the ESA
prohibits the take (defined to include harassing, harming, pursuing,
hunting, shooting, wounding, killing, trapping, capturing, or
collecting or attempting to engage in any such conduct), including
incidental take, of endangered sea turtles. Pursuant to section 4(d) of
the ESA, NMFS has issued regulations extending the prohibition of take,
with exceptions, to threatened sea turtles (50 CFR 223.205 and
223.206). Section 11 of the ESA provides for civil penalties and
criminal
[[Page 4793]]
penalties for anyone who knowingly violates the Act or a regulation
issued to implement the ESA. NMFS may grant exceptions to the take
prohibitions with an incidental take statement or an incidental take
permit issued pursuant to ESA section 7 or 10, respectively. To do so,
NMFS must determine the activity that will result in incidental take is
not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of the affected listed
species. For some Federal fisheries and most state fisheries, NMFS has
not granted an exception for incidental takes of sea turtles primarily
because we lack information about fishery-sea turtle interactions.
For most fisheries, the most effective way for NMFS to learn more
about bycatch in order to implement the take prohibitions and prevent
or minimize take is to place observers aboard fishing vessels. In 2007,
NMFS issued a regulation (50 CFR 222.402) establishing procedures to
annually identify, pursuant to specified criteria and after notice and
opportunity for comment, those fisheries in which the agency intends to
place observers (72 FR 43176; August 3, 2007). These regulations
specify that NMFS may observe fisheries, commercial or recreational,
operating in U.S. territorial waters, the U.S. exclusive economic zone
(EEZ), or on the high seas or on vessels that are otherwise subject to
the jurisdiction of the United States. Failure to comply with the
requirements under these regulations may result in civil or criminal
penalties under the ESA.
NMFS will pay the direct costs for vessels to carry the required
observers. These include observer salary and insurance costs. NMFS may
also evaluate other potential direct costs, should they arise. Once
selected, a fishery will be required to carry observers, if requested,
for a period of five years without further action by NMFS. This will
enable NMFS to develop appropriate observer coverage and sampling
protocols to investigate sea turtle bycatch, and to evaluate whether
existing measures are minimizing or preventing bycatch.
Sea Turtle Distribution
NMFS uses information on sea turtle distribution and habitat use to
inform the development of the final AD. A summary of this information
was included in the proposed AD (87 FR 54948; September 8, 2022) and
was considered in developing the final 2023 AD.
Process for Developing the Annual Determination (AD)
Pursuant to 50 CFR 222.402, NOAA's Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries (AA), in consultation with Regional Administrators and
Fisheries Science Center Directors, develops a proposed AD identifying
which fisheries are required to carry observers, if requested, to
monitor potential interactions with sea turtles. NMFS provided an
opportunity for public comment on the proposed determination (87 FR
54948; September 8, 2022). The determination is informed by the best
available scientific, commercial, or other information regarding sea
turtle-fishery interactions; sea turtle distribution; sea turtle
strandings; fishing techniques, gears used, target species, seasons and
areas fished; and/or qualitative data from logbooks or fisher reports.
Specifically, fisheries are identified on the AD based on the extent to
which:
(1) The fishery operates in the same waters and at the same time as
when sea turtles are present;
(2) The fishery operates at the same time or prior to elevated sea
turtle strandings; or
(3) The fishery uses a gear or technique that is known or likely to
result in incidental take of sea turtles based on documented or
reported takes in the same or similar fisheries; and
(4) NMFS intends to monitor the fishery and anticipates that it
will have the funds to do so.
The AA used the most recent version of the annually published
Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) List of Fisheries (LOF) as the
comprehensive list of commercial fisheries for consideration. The LOF
includes all known state and Federal commercial fisheries that occur in
U.S. waters and on the high seas. However, in preparing the AD, we do
not rely on the three-part MMPA LOF classification scheme. In addition,
unlike the LOF, the AD may include recreational fisheries likely to
interact with sea turtles based on the best available information.
NMFS consulted with appropriate state and Federal fisheries
officials to identify which fisheries, both commercial and
recreational, to consider. NMFS carefully considered all
recommendations and information available for developing the AD. The AD
is not an exhaustive or comprehensive list of all fisheries with
documented or suspected sea turtle bycatch. NMFS will not include a
fishery on the AD if that fishery does not meet the criteria for
inclusion on the AD (50 CFR 222.402(a)).
For many fisheries, NMFS may already be addressing bycatch through
another mechanism (e.g., rulemaking to implement modifications to
fishing gear and/or practices), may be observing the fishery under a
separate statutory authority, or will consider including them in future
ADs based on the four previously noted criteria (50 CFR 222.402(a)).
The fisheries not included on the 2023 AD may still be observed by NMFS
fisheries observers under different authorities (e.g., MMPA, Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA)) than the ESA, if
applicable.
NMFS publishes the final determination in the Federal Register and
individuals permitted for each fishery identified on the AD will
receive a written notification. NMFS will also notify state or
territory agencies. Once included in the final determination, a fishery
will remain eligible for observer coverage for a period of five years
to enable the design of an appropriate sampling program and to ensure
collection of sufficient scientific data for analysis. If NMFS
determines a need for more than five years to obtain sufficient
scientific data, NMFS will include the fishery in a subsequent proposed
AD, prior to the end of the fifth year.
On the 2018 AD, NMFS identified two fisheries and required them to
carry observers, if requested, through December 31, 2022. The 2020 AD
identified four additional fisheries and required them to carry
observers, if requested, through September 29, 2025. The fisheries
included on the current AD are available at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/bycatch/sea-turtle-observer-requirement-annual-determination.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 14 comment letters on the proposed AD (87 FR 54948;
September 8, 2022). All commenters were members of the public. All
commenters expressed general support of the regulation or fishery
observer programs. All substantive comments are addressed below.
Comments on issues outside the scope of the AD were noted but are not
responded to in this final determination.
General Comments
Comment 1: Twelve commenters expressed general support for the
regulation.
Response: NMFS agrees and has included two fisheries on the 2023 AD
to allow for increased data collection on sea turtle bycatch to
accomplish the purposes of the regulation.
[[Page 4794]]
Recommendations for Fisheries To Include on the 2023 AD
Comment 2: One commenter was supportive of the regulation but
recommends NMFS include a fishery in the Pacific Ocean on the 2023 AD.
The commenter noted that adding a Pacific fishery will allow NMFS to
cover fisheries in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf of Mexico.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that there are other fisheries, in
addition to those included on the 2023 AD, that have the potential to
incidentally take sea turtles. The 2023 AD is not meant to be a
comprehensive list of fisheries that have sea turtle bycatch or
fisheries that require monitoring, but rather a focused list, based on
specific inclusion criteria, one of which is based on available funding
(see Purpose of the Sea Turtle Observer Requirement section). NMFS is
not including a Pacific fishery on the 2023 AD because none of the
fisheries in the Pacific met all of the inclusion criteria.
Observer Coverage
Comment 3: A commenter was supportive of the regulation but raised
concern over what NMFS' standards were for distributing and placing
observers among fisheries on the AD. The proposed rule stated ``That no
individual person or vessel, or group of persons or vessels, be subject
to inappropriate, excessive observer coverage.'' The commenter
questioned what would make observer coverage inappropriate or
excessive.
Response: When using the AD authority to observe a fishery, NMFS
will work within the current observer programs and follow the observer
program's standards and observer placement design requirements.
Pursuant to 50 CFR 222.404, NMFS will follow the standards for
distributing and placing observers: (1) The requirement to obtain the
best available scientific information; (2) The requirement that
observers be assigned fairly and equitably among fisheries and among
vessels in a fishery; (3) The requirement that no individual person or
vessel, or group of persons or vessels, be subject to inappropriate,
excessive observer coverage; and (4) The need to minimize costs and
avoid duplication, where practicable. For example, Northeast Fisheries
Observer Program (NEFOP) coverage is determined by an annual discard
analysis and sea day allocation report required by the Standardized
Bycatch Reporting Methodology (SBRM) Amendment. Trips are assigned
based on effort. As there is no pre-trip notification requirement for
these fleets, guidance is provided to the contract holder which
estimates coverage based on that year's sea day schedule and prior
years effort. There are regulations in the SBRM amendment and the
contract that prevents individual vessels from being covered in a
biased manner.
Recreational Fisheries
Comment 4: A commenter stated that the AD does not include
information on how an observer program would be implemented for
recreational fisheries from public piers. They noted that several
fishing piers in the Gulf of Mexico have a high rate of sea turtle
bycatch. The Loggerhead Marine Life Center in Florida has a responsible
pier initiative program. The commenter stated that this data can
provide information on sea turtle bycatch off piers and NMFS can use
that information to use the AD for recreational fisheries occurring on
piers.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that there are other fisheries
(commercial and recreational), in addition to those included on the
2023 AD, that have the potential to take sea turtles. The 2023 AD is
not meant to be a comprehensive list of fisheries that have sea turtle
bycatch or fisheries that require monitoring, but rather a focused
list, based on specific inclusion criteria, one of which is based on
available funding (see Purpose of the Sea Turtle Observer Requirement
section). NMFS is not including shore-based recreational fisheries on
the 2023 AD because none of the fisheries met all of the inclusion
criteria. NMFS and our partners (including those in the Sea Turtle
Stranding and Salvage Network) are trying to learn more about how sea
turtles interact with recreational fishing gear--see additional
information on our Sea Turtle and Recreational Fishing website here:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-life-distress/sea-turtles-and-recreational-fishing.
Fisheries Included on the 2023 Annual Determination
NMFS includes two fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean/Gulf of Mexico on
the 2023 AD. The two fisheries, listed in Table 1, are the mid-Atlantic
gillnet and Gulf of Mexico menhaden purse seine fisheries. These two
fisheries were previously listed on the 2018 AD for a five-year period
ending December 31, 2022. NMFS includes these fisheries pursuant to the
criteria identified at 50 CFR 222.402(a)(1) for listing a fishery on
the AD because sea turtles are known to occur in the same areas where
the fishery operates, takes have been documented in this fishery, and
NMFS intends to monitor this fishery.
NMFS used the 2022 MMPA LOF (87 FR 23122; April 19, 2022) as the
comprehensive list of commercial fisheries to evaluate for fisheries to
include on the AD. The fishery name, definition, and number of vessels/
persons for fisheries listed in the AD are taken from the most recent
MMPA LOF. Additionally, the fishery descriptions below include a
particular fishery's current classification on the MMPA LOF (i.e.,
Category I, II, or III); Category I and II fisheries are required to
carry observers under the MMPA, if requested by NMFS. As noted
previously, NMFS also has authority to observe fisheries in Federal
waters under the MSA and collect sea turtle bycatch information. The AD
authority will work within the current observer programs, and allow
NMFS the flexibility to further consider sea turtle data collection
needs when allocating observer resources.
A summary of information about the mid-Atlantic gillnet and Gulf of
Mexico menhaden purse seine fisheries was included in the proposed AD
(87 FR 54948; September 8, 2022) and was considered in developing the
final 2023 AD.
Implementation of Observer Coverage in a Fishery Listed on the 2023 AD
As part of the 2023 AD, NMFS has included, to the extent
practicable, information on the fisheries and gear types to observe,
geographic and seasonal scope of coverage, and any other relevant
information. NMFS intends to monitor the fisheries and anticipates that
it will have the funds to support observer activities. After
publication of the final determination, there will be a 30-day delay in
the date of effectiveness for implementing observer coverage, see
DATES.
The design of any observer program for fisheries identified through
the AD process, including how observers will be allocated to individual
vessels, will vary among fisheries, fishing sectors, gear types, and
geographic regions, and will ultimately be determined by the individual
NMFS Regional Office, Science Center, and/or observer program. Pursuant
to 50 CFR 222.404, during the program design, NMFS will follow the
standards below for distributing and placing observers among fisheries
identified in the AD and among vessels in those fisheries:
(1) The requirement to obtain the best available scientific
information;
(2) The requirement that observers be assigned fairly and equitably
among fisheries and among vessels in a fishery;
[[Page 4795]]
(3) The requirement that no individual person or vessel, or group
of persons or vessels, be subject to inappropriate, excessive observer
coverage; and
(4) The need to minimize costs and avoid duplication, where
practicable.
Vessels subject to observer coverage under the AD must comply with
observer safety requirements specified in 50 CFR 600.725 and 600.746.
Specifically, 50 CFR 600.746(c) requires vessels subject to observer
coverage to provide adequate and safe conditions for carrying an
observer and conditions that allow for operation of normal observer
functions. To provide such conditions, a vessel must comply with the
applicable regulations regarding observer accommodations (see 50 CFR
parts 229, 300, 600, 622, 635, 648, 660, and 679) and possess a current
United States Coast Guard (USCG) Commercial Fishing Vessel Safety
Examination decal or a USCG certificate of examination. A vessel that
fails to meet these requirements at the time an observer is to be
deployed may be prohibited from fishing without observer coverage under
50 CFR 600.746(i). Observer programs designed or carried out in
accordance with 50 CFR 222.404 are consistent with existing NOAA
observer policies and applicable federal regulations, such as those
under the Fair Labor and Standards Act (29 U.S.C. 201 et seq.), the
Service Contract Act (41 U.S.C. 351 et seq.), and the Observer Health
and Safety regulations (50 CFR part 600).
Additional information on observer programs in commercial fisheries
is available on the NMFS National Observer Program's website: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/topic/fishery-observers.
Table 1--State and Federal Commercial Fisheries Included on the 2023
Annual Determination
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Years eligible
Fishery to carry
observers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Purse Seine Fisheries:
Gulf of Mexico menhaden purse seine................. 2023-2027
Gillnet Fisheries:
Mid-Atlantic gillnet................................ 2023-2027
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Classification
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce has
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) during the proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. No comments were received on that certification, and no
new information has been discovered to change that conclusion.
Accordingly, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required, and none
has been prepared.
This regulation contains existing collection-of-information (COI)
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act and would not
impose additional or new COI requirements. The information collection
for the AD is approved under Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
control number 0648-0593. Notwithstanding any other provision of the
law, no person is required to respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply with, a collection of
information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act,
unless that collection of information displays a currently valid OMB
Control Number.
This regulation has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
In accordance with the Companion Manual for NOAA Administrative
Order (NAO) 216-6A, NMFS determined that publishing the AD qualifies to
be categorically excluded from further National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) review, consistent with categories of activities identified
in Categorical Exclusion G7 (``Preparation of policy directives, rules,
regulations, and guidelines of an administrative, financial, legal,
technical, or procedural nature, or for which the environmental effects
are too broad, speculative or conjectural to lend themselves to
meaningful analysis and will be subject later to the NEPA process,
either collectively or on a case-by-case basis'') of the Companion
Manual, and we have not identified any extraordinary circumstances
listed in Chapter 4 of the Companion Manual for NAO 216-6A that would
preclude application of this categorical exclusion. If NMFS takes a
management action for a specific fishery, for example, requiring
fishing gear modifications, NMFS would first prepare any environmental
document specific to that action that is required under NEPA.
This regulation would not affect species listed as threatened or
endangered under the ESA or their associated critical habitat. The
impacts of numerous fisheries have been analyzed in various biological
opinions, and this regulation would not affect the conclusions of those
opinions. The inclusion of fisheries on the AD is not considered a
management action that would adversely affect threatened or endangered
species. If NMFS takes a management action, for example, requiring
modifications to fishing gear and/or practices, NMFS would review the
action for potential adverse effects to listed species under the ESA.
This regulation would have no adverse impacts on sea turtles, and
information collected from observer programs may have a positive impact
on sea turtles by improving knowledge of sea turtles and the fisheries
interacting with sea turtles.
This regulation would not affect the land or water uses or natural
resources of the coastal zone, as specified under section 307 of the
Coastal Zone Management Act.
Dated: January 19, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-01427 Filed 1-24-23; 8:45 am]
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