Fisheries Off West Coast States; West Coast Salmon Fisheries; 2023 Specifications and Management Measures, 30235-30250 [2023-10090]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 91 / Thursday, May 11, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/resource/
outreach-and-education/careful-catchand-release-brochure/.
HMS Angling and HMS Charter/
Headboat permitted vessel owners are
required to report the catch of all BFT
retained or discarded dead, within 24
hours of the landing(s) or end of each
trip, by accessing https://
hmspermits.noaa.gov, using the HMS
Catch Reporting app, or calling 888–
872–8862 (Monday through Friday from
8 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.).
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Classification
NMFS issues this action pursuant to
section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act and regulations at 50 CFR part 635
and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
The Assistant Administrator for
NMFS (AA) finds that pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B), it is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest to provide
prior notice of, and an opportunity for
public comment on, this action for the
following reasons. Specifically, the
regulations implementing the 2006
Consolidated HMS FMP and its
amendments provide for inseason
adjustments and fishery closures 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. Providing for prior notice and
opportunity to comment is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest as this fishery is currently
underway and delaying this action
could result in further excessive trophy
BFT landings that may result in future
potential quota reductions for the
Angling category, depending on the
magnitude of a potential Angling
category overharvest. NMFS must close
the Gulf of Mexico incidental trophy
BFT fishery before additional landings
of these sizes of BFT occur. Taking this
action does not raise conservation and
management concerns. NMFS notes that
the public had an opportunity to
comment on the underlying
rulemakings that established the U.S.
BFT quota and the inseason adjustment
criteria.
For all of the above reasons, the AA
also finds that pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(d), there is good cause to waive the
30-day delay in effectiveness.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq. and 1801
et seq.
Dated: May 5, 2023.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–10023 Filed 5–8–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 230508–0124]
RIN 0648–BL66
Fisheries Off West Coast States; West
Coast Salmon Fisheries; 2023
Specifications and Management
Measures
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Through this final rule, NMFS
establishes fishery management
measures for the 2023 ocean salmon
fisheries off Washington, Oregon, and
California, and the 2024 salmon seasons
opening earlier than May 16, 2024,
under the authority of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (MSA). The fishery
management measures vary by fishery
and by area, and establish fishing areas,
seasons, quotas, legal gear, recreational
fishing days and catch limits,
possession and landing restrictions, and
minimum lengths for salmon taken in
the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
(3–200 nautical miles (nm); 5.6–370.4
kilometers (km)) off Washington,
Oregon, and California. The
management measures are intended to
prevent overfishing and to apportion the
ocean harvest equitably among treaty
Indian, non-Indian commercial, and
recreational fisheries. The measures are
also intended to allow a portion of the
salmon runs to escape the ocean
fisheries in order to provide for
spawning escapement, comply with
applicable law, and to provide fishing
opportunity for inside fisheries
(fisheries occurring in state waters).
DATES: This final rule is effective from
0001 hours Pacific daylight time, May
16, 2023, until the effective date of the
2024 management measures, as
published in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: The documents cited in this
document are available on the Pacific
Fishery Management Council’s
(Council’s) website (www.pcouncil.org).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shannon Penna at 562–980–4239,
Email: Shannon.Penna@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
The ocean salmon fisheries in the EEZ
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
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30235
and California are managed under a
framework fishery management plan
(FMP). Regulations at 50 CFR part 660,
subpart H, provide the mechanism for
making preseason and inseason
adjustments to the management
measures within limits set by the FMP
by notification in the Federal Register.
Regulations at 50 CFR 660.408 govern
the establishment of annual
management measures.
Through this rule, NMFS is
implementing the management
measures for the 2023 and early 2024
ocean salmon fisheries that were
recommended by the Council at its
April 1 to 7, 2023, meeting and
transmitted to NMFS on April 18, 2023.
Process Used To Establish 2023
Management Measures
The Council announced its annual
preseason management process for the
2023 ocean salmon fisheries on the
Council’s website at www.pcouncil.org
(December 9, 2022), and in the Federal
Register on December 12, 2021 (87 FR
76027). NMFS published an additional
notice of opportunity to submit public
comments on the 2023 ocean salmon
fisheries in the Federal Register on
January 12, 2023 (88 FR 2061). These
notices announced the availability of
Council documents, the dates and
locations of Council meetings and
public hearings comprising the
Council’s complete schedule of events
for determining the annual proposed
and final modifications to ocean salmon
fishery management measures, and
instructions on how to comment on the
development of the 2023 ocean salmon
fisheries. The agendas for the March and
April Council meetings were published
in the Federal Register (88 FR 10095,
February 16, 2023, and 88 FR 16239,
March 16, 2023), and posted on the
Council’s website prior to the meetings.
In accordance with the FMP, the
Council’s Salmon Technical Team (STT)
and economist prepared four reports for
the Council, its advisors, and the public.
All four reports were made available on
the Council’s website upon their
completion. The first of the reports,
‘‘Review of 2022 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries,’’ was prepared in February
when the first increment of scientific
information necessary for crafting
management measures for the 2023 and
early 2024 ocean salmon fisheries
became available. The first report
summarizes biological and socioeconomic data from the 2022 ocean
salmon fisheries and assesses the
performance of the fisheries with
respect to the 2022 management
objectives for salmon stocks and stock
complexes as well as provides historical
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information for comparison. The second
report, ‘‘Preseason Report I Stock
Abundance Analysis and Environmental
Assessment Part 1 for 2023 Ocean
Salmon Fishery Regulations’’ (PRE I),
provides the 2023 salmon stock
abundance projections and analyzes
how the stocks and Council
management goals would be affected if
the 2022 management measures (the NoAction Alternative under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)) were
continued for the 2023/2024 fishing
season. The completion of PRE I is the
initial step in developing and evaluating
the full suite of preseason alternatives.
Following completion of the first two
reports, the Council met from March 4
to 10, 2023, to develop 2023
management alternatives for proposal to
the public and consideration under
NEPA. The Council proposed three
alternatives for commercial and
recreational fisheries management, and
three alternatives for treaty Indian
fisheries management for analysis and
public comment. These alternatives
consisted of various combinations of
management measures designed to
ensure that stocks of coho and Chinook
salmon meet conservation goals, to
provide for ocean harvests of more
abundant stocks, to provide equitable
sharing of harvest among ports and gear
sectors, and to provide for the exercise
of Indian tribal treaty fishing rights.
After the March Council meeting, the
Council’s STT and economist prepared
a third report, ‘‘Preseason Report II
Proposed Alternatives and
Environmental Assessment Part 2 for
2023 Ocean Salmon Fishery
Regulations’’ (PRE II), which analyzes
the effects of the proposed 2023
management alternatives. As requested
in public comment, the no-action
alternative was included in a
comparison of the impacts to Klamath
River Fall Chinook salmon (KRFC) and
Sacramento River Fall Chinook salmon
(SRFC) by management area, month,
and salmon gear sector across the
alternatives in Appendix tables A–2 and
A–3.
The Council sponsored public
hearings in person to receive testimony
on the proposed alternatives on March
20, 2023, for Washington and Oregon,
and on March 21, 2023, for California.
In addition, the states of Washington,
Oregon, and California sponsored
meetings in various forums that also
collected public testimony. The Council
also received public testimony at both
the March and April meetings, and
received written comments at the
Council office and electronic
submissions via the Council’s electronic
portal and via www.regulations.gov.
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The Council met from April 1 to 7,
2023, to adopt its final 2023 ocean
salmon management recommendations;
which it did on April 6, 2023. Following
the April Council meeting, the Council’s
STT and economist prepared a fourth
report, ‘‘Preseason Report III Analysis of
Council-Adopted Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries’’ (PRE III), which analyzes the
environmental and socioeconomic
effects of the Council’s final
recommendations (the Council’s
Proposed Action under NEPA). The
Council transmitted the recommended
management measures to NMFS on
April 18, 2023, and published them on
its website (www.pcouncil.org).
At its March and April meetings, the
Council heard testimony from members
of several federally recognized tribes
including tribes with treaty rights for
salmon harvest; additional tribal
comments were submitted in writing.
Tribes expressed concerns over the
uncertainty of forecasts for some stocks
in 2023 and urged the Council to be
conservative in setting the salmon
seasons. Some Tribes suggested
additional measures to improve
estimation of stock composition and
impact rates in lower Columbia River
fisheries. Tribes also expressed concerns
over the underutilization of hatcheries
as a salmon recovery tool while
ensuring the operation of the hatcheries
minimizing any potential risks to
natural-origin fish.
Under the FMP, the ocean salmon
management cycle begins May 16 and
continues through May 15 of the
following year. This final rule is
effective on May 16, 2023, consistent
with the FMP. Fisheries that begin prior
to May 16, 2023, are governed by the
final rule implementing the salmon
fishery management measures for the
2022 ocean salmon season (87 FR
29690, May 16, 2022). The majority of
fisheries recommended by the Council
for 2023 begin May 16, 2023, and are
authorized under this rule. Salmon
fisheries scheduled to begin before May
16, 2023 under the 2022 rule, are:
• Commercial ocean salmon fisheries
from the U.S./Canada border to the U.S./
Mexico border,
• Recreational ocean salmon fisheries
from Cape Falcon, OR, to Humbug
Mountain, OR,
• Recreational ocean salmon fisheries
from the Oregon/California border to the
U.S./Mexico border, and
• Treaty Indian troll ocean salmon
fisheries north of Cape Falcon.
Several fisheries scheduled to open
between March 15, 2023, and May 15,
2023, have been modified through
inseason action to close the fisheries in
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response to updated salmon stock
forecast information for 2023. For
purposes of analyzing the impacts of
these fisheries on individual stocks
relative to the applicable objectives in
the FMP, Council analysts assumed
fisheries between March 15 to May 15,
2023, would be conducted under the
2022 management measures as modified
by the subsequent inseason actions
under 50 CFR 660.409.
National Environmental Policy Act
The environmental assessment (EA)
for this action comprises the Council’s
documents described above (PRE I, PRE
II, and PRE III), providing an analysis of
environmental and socioeconomic
effects under NEPA. The EA and its
related Finding of No Significant Impact
are posted on the NMFS West Coast
Region website (www.fisheries.noaa
.gov/region/west-coast).
Resource Status
Stocks of Concern
The FMP requires that the fisheries be
managed to meet escapement-based
annual catch limits (ACLs), Endangered
Species Act (ESA) consultation
requirements, obligations of the Pacific
Salmon Treaty (PST) between the U.S.
and Canada, and other conservation
objectives detailed in the FMP. In
addition, under the MSA, all regulations
must be consistent with other applicable
laws. Because the ocean salmon
fisheries are mixed-stock fisheries,
‘‘weak stock’’ management is required to
avoid exceeding limits for the stocks
with the most constraining limits.
Abundance forecasts for individual
salmon stocks can vary significantly
from one year to the next; therefore, the
stocks that constrain the fishery in one
year may differ from those that
constrain the fishery in the next. For
2023, several stocks will constrain
fisheries; these are described below.
Fisheries south of Cape Falcon are
limited in 2023 primarily by
conservation concerns for KRFC, SRFC,
and the ESA-listed Oregon Coast natural
(OCN) coho salmon Evolutionarily
Significant Unit (ESU), and the ESAlisted California Coastal (CC) Chinook
salmon ESU. In 2018, NMFS determined
that the KRFC stock was overfished, as
defined under the MSA and the FMP.
KRFC has not been rebuilt, thus
continues to be managed under a
rebuilding plan (85 FR 75920,
November 27, 2020). In addition to
KRFC, three coho salmon stocks (Queets
River natural coho salmon, Strait of Juan
de Fuca natural coho salmon, and
Snohomish River natural coho salmon)
were determined in 2018 to be
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overfished and continue to be managed
under rebuilding plans (86 FR 9301,
February 12, 2021). Meeting
conservation objectives for these three
coho salmon stocks will not constrain
fisheries in 2023.
Fisheries north of Cape Falcon are
limited by conservation requirements
for ESA-listed lower Columbia River
(LCR) natural tule Chinook salmon. The
limitations imposed in order to protect
this stock are described below. The
alternatives and the Council’s adopted
management measures for 2023 were
designed to avoid exceeding these
limitations.
KRFC (non-ESA-listed): Abundance
for this non-ESA-listed stock in the last
decade has been historically low, and
the stock continues to meet the criteria
for overfished based on spawning
escapement in 2019, 2020, and 2021.
The FMP defines ‘‘overfished’’ status in
terms of a 3-year geometric mean
escapement level and whether it is
below the minimum stock size
threshold (MSST). The KRFC salmon
stock has been below its conservation
objective in 7 of the last 8 years, and has
been managed under de minimus
exploitation rates that apply when
forecast escapement is below the level
associated with maximum sustainable
yield (SMSY) since 2020. Based on the
current harvest control rule, given the
2023 abundance forecast, the lowest
level of de minimis fishing this year
applies, i.e., a total allowable
exploitation rate of 10 percent
(including all ocean and river fisheries,
including tribal fisheries). This will
constrain fisheries south of Cape Falcon.
The Council’s recommended
management measures are forecast to
result in a spawning escapement of
23,615 KRFC natural spawners, which is
below the stock’s minimum stock size
threshold (MSST) (30,525). A naturalarea escapement of 23,615 adults would
represent the 12th lowest value over the
past 45 years of data. Fisheries managed
under the Council’s recommended
management measures for 2023 for the
ocean areas south of Cape Falcon are
projected to impact 0 KRFC salmon.
SRFC (non-ESA-listed): SRFC
abundance in recent years has been low
compared with its conservation
objective. In 2021, NMFS declared the
SRFC salmon stock rebuilt (87 FR
25429) due to several years of higher
escapements. However, low flows and
high temperatures in the Sacramento
River associated with drought in recent
years have adversely affected the stock,
escapements in recent years have once
again been low. Spawner abundance has
been below the SMSY value of 122,000 in
6 of the last 8 years. The 2022 SRFC
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escapement was 61,850 Chinook
salmon, which is one-half of the SMSY of
122,000 and the third lowest
escapement since 1970. The 3-year
geometric mean of spawners is now
102,155 (2020, 2021, and 2022) as
compared with the MSST of 91,500 at
which the stock would meet the criteria
of overfished. The 2023 forecast is one
of the lowest on record. Of additional
concern with respect to the forecast,
forecasts have been higher than the
post-season estimates in 6 of the last 8
years by an average of 41 percent. The
low forecast for 2023 combined with the
recent significant overforecasts increase
the risk that SRFC could become
overfished again. Taking these factors
into consideration, the Council has
recommended management measures
that are forecast to result in a spawning
escapement of 165,000 SRFC natural
spawners (although it does not account
for the potential forecast error), which is
above the escapement goal floor of
122,000. Additionally, according to the
STT’s projections, only 93 SRFC salmon
would be impacted by the fisheries
conducted under the Council’s
recommended 2023 management
measures for the ocean management
areas south of Cape Falcon.
CC Chinook salmon—ESA-listed
Threatened: The CC Chinook salmon
ESU has been listed as threatened under
the ESA since 1999. As considered in
the most recent biological opinion
addressing the effects of the fishery on
CC Chinook salmon, fisheries are
managed to avoid exceeding a 16
percent age-4 ocean harvest rate on
KRFC salmon. This measure is used as
a surrogate for impacts to CC Chinook
salmon, for which information on
fishery impacts is extremely limited.
The post-season assessment of the 2022
ocean fisheries indicated that the take
limit for CC Chinook salmon described
in the current biological opinion and
Incidental Take Statement had been
exceeded. Therefore, in the guidance
letter it provided to the Council at its
March meeting, NMFS stated that the
Council should implement additional
measures to avoid exceedance in 2023.
Specifically, the guidance letter stated
that the Council should (1) manage the
2023 ocean salmon fisheries for a
buffered preseason age-4 KRFC rate of
10 percent, and (2) provide for inseason
management measures to ensure
impacts remain within preseason
projections.
The recommended 2023 management
measures close Chinook salmon
directed commercial and recreational
fisheries off the California coast, close
commercial salmon fishing in coastal
waters south of mid-Oregon, and allow
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only for recreational fisheries targeting
coho salmon off the coast of Oregon.
The resulting projected KRFC age-4
ocean harvest rate from these fisheries is
0.3 percent, well below a KRFC age-4
ocean harvest rate of 10 percent.
Fisheries south of Cape Falcon
scheduled to open prior to May 16,
2024, could be modified through
inseason action following Council
consideration of these early season
fisheries in the context of the 2024
preliminary management measures and
stock abundance forecasts for 2024.
NMFS has reinitiated consultation on
the effects of the fisheries on CC
Chinook salmon, and anticipates
completing this consultation before
commencement of 2024 fisheries. NMFS
has determined that, consistent with
sections 7(a)(2) and 7(d) of the ESA, the
fisheries conducted under the 2023
management measures will not
jeopardize the CC Chinook salmon ESU,
would not adversely modify designated
critical habitat, and will not result in
any irreversible or irretrievable
commitment of resources that would
have the effect of foreclosing the
formulation or implementation of any
reasonable and prudent alternative
measures.
OCN coho salmon (ESA-listed
threatened): OCN coho salmon is an
aggregate coho salmon stock that largely
corresponds to the Oregon coast coho
salmon ESU and is a component of the
Oregon Production Index (OPI) area
coho salmon. Allowable fishery impacts
on OCN coho salmon are determined
annually using a matrix that considers
parental escapement and OPI smolt-tojack survival. The maximum allowable
exploitation rate for 2023 salmon
fisheries is a combined marine/
freshwater exploitation rate not to
exceed 20 percent. In 2023, OCN coho
salmon is the limiting coho salmon
stock for south of Cape Falcon. The
adopted management measures result in
a projected exploitation rate of 19.8
percent compared with the maximum
allowed 20 percent total exploitation
rate (i.e., marine exploitation rate of 14.1
percent and a freshwater exploitation
rate of 5.8 percent as rounded to the
nearest tenth of a percent).
LCR Chinook salmon (ESA-listed
threatened): The LCR Chinook salmon
ESU comprises a spring component, a
‘‘far-north’’ migrating bright component,
and a tule component. The bright and
tule components both have fall run
timing. There are twenty-one separate
populations within the tule component
of this ESU. Unlike the spring or bright
populations of the ESU, LCR tule
populations are caught in large numbers
in Council fisheries, as well as fisheries
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to the north and in the Columbia River.
Therefore, this component of the ESU is
the one most likely to constrain Council
fisheries in the area north of Cape
Falcon. Council fisheries are managed
subject to an abundance-based
management (ABM) framework that
NMFS analyzed in a 2012 biological
opinion, after accounting for anticipated
impacts in northern fisheries and
freshwater fisheries that are outside the
action area. Applying the ABM
framework to the 2023 preseason
abundance forecast, the total LCR tule
exploitation rate for all salmon fisheries
is limited to a maximum of 38 percent.
Fisheries will be constrained north of
Cape Falcon in 2023 such that, when
combined with all other salmon
fisheries in the ocean and in the
Columbia River below Bonneville Dam,
the ESA requirement is met.
Other Resource Issues
Southern Resident Killer Whale
(SRKW) (ESA-listed endangered): The
SRKW distinct population segment
(DPS) was listed under the ESA as
endangered in 2005 (70 FR 69903,
November 18, 2005). After convening
and receiving recommendations from a
SRKW ad-hoc workgroup, the Council
adopted and transmitted to NMFS
Amendment 21 to the FMP that
includes management measures to
address the effects of the fisheries on
SRKW. In April 2021, after concluding
in a biological opinion that fisheries
managed under the FMP including
Amendment 21 was not likely to
jeopardize SRKW or adversely affect
SRKW critical habitat, NMFS approved
the Amendment (86 FR 51017,
September 14, 2021). The FMP as
amended establishes a Chinook salmon
annual abundance management
threshold below which the Council and
NMFS would implement specific
measures to limit the effects of the
ocean salmon fishery on Chinook
salmon prey availability for SRKWs.
These measures include time and area
closures, a quota limitation for the north
of Cape Falcon management area, and
temporal shifts in fishing. Amendment
21 provides that the Chinook salmon
abundance threshold may need to be
updated from the value calculated at the
time of the amendment to reflect new
scientific information as it becomes
available. At its November 2022
meeting, the Council adopted a change
to the Chinook salmon abundance
threshold for north of Cape Falcon
management area that is used as a
management measure to address the
effect of Council-area ocean salmon
fisheries on the Chinook salmon prey
base of SRKW that was implemented
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under Amendment 21 (Decision
Summary Document, November 15,
2023 PFMC). The change incorporated
recent updates to two models used to
calculate the threshold (FRAM 2022,1
Shelton et al. 2021). The STT provided
a report reviewing the updates to the
models to aid the Council in
determining the appropriate numerical
value of the threshold (November 2022,
Agenda Item D.2.a, Supplemental STT
Report 2). The updated Chinook salmon
abundance threshold is 623,000
Chinook salmon. This new value was
reported to the Council in the abovereference preseason reports as required
by the FMP.
The Council considered the Chinook
salmon abundance relative to the
provisions of Amendment 21 when
developing the recommended 2023
annual management measures. Because
the pre-season estimate of the
abundance of Chinook salmon in 2023
(889,900) exceeds the threshold in the
FMP (623,000), the Council did not
recommend implementation of the
additional management measures
included in the FMP under Amendment
21 (Preseason Report III; PFMC 2023).
The 2023 management measures are
consistent with the FMP including
Amendment 21.
ACLs and Status Determination Criteria
ACLs are required for all stocks or
stock complexes in the fishery that are
not managed under an international
agreement, listed under the ESA, or
designated as hatchery stocks. For
salmon, these reference points are
defined in terms of spawner
escapement. ACLs are set for two
Chinook salmon stocks, SRFC and
KRFC, and one coho salmon stock,
Willapa Bay natural coho salmon. The
Chinook salmon stocks are indicator
stocks for the Central Valley Fall
Chinook salmon complex, and the
Southern Oregon/Northern California
Chinook salmon complex, respectively.
The Far North Migrating Coastal
Chinook salmon complex (FNMC)
includes a group of Chinook salmon
stocks that are caught primarily in
fisheries north of Cape Falcon and other
fisheries that occur north of the U.S./
Canada border. No ACL is set for FNMC
stocks because they are managed subject
to provisions of the PST between the
U.S. and Canada (the MSA provides an
international exception from ACL
requirements that applies to stocks or
stock complexes subject to management
1 Salmon modeling and analysis workgroup.
2022. FRAM Documentation. https://
framverse.github.io/fram_doc/ built October 14,
2022.
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under an international agreement,
which is defined as ‘‘any bilateral or
multilateral treaty, convention, or
agreement which relates to fishing and
to which the U.S. is a party’’ (50 CFR
600.310(h)(1)(ii)). The Columbia Upper
River Bright Fall and Summer Chinook
salmon stocks are also managed under
the provisions of the PST. Other
Chinook salmon stocks caught in
fisheries north of Cape Falcon are ESAlisted or hatchery produced, and are
managed consistent with ESA
consultations or hatchery goals. Willapa
Bay natural coho salmon is the only
coho salmon stock for which an ACL is
set, as the other coho salmon stocks in
the FMP are either ESA-listed, hatchery
produced, or managed under the PST.
ACLs for salmon stocks are
escapement-based, which means they
establish a number of adults that must
escape the fisheries to return to the
spawning grounds. ACLs are set based
on the annual potential spawner
abundance forecast and a fishing rate
reduced to account for scientific
uncertainty. In addition to ACLs, SRFC
and KRFC have conservation objectives
expressed in terms of escapement goals
that were developed prior to the
requirement for ACLs. Where the
conservation objectives exceed the
ACLs, the Council designs fisheries to
achieve the conservation objectives. In
developing the 2023 management
measures, the Council considered the
factors for SRFC and KRFC discussed in
sections above.
For SRFC in 2023, the overfishing
limit (OFL) is SOFL = 169,767 (potential
spawner abundance forecast) multiplied
by 1¥FMSY (1¥0.78) or 37,349
returning spawners (FMSY is the fishing
mortality rate that would result in
maximum sustainable yield—MSY).
SABC (the spawner escapement that is
associated with the acceptable
biological catch) is 169,767 multiplied
by 1¥FABC (1¥0.70) (FMSY reduced for
scientific uncertainty = 0.70) or 50,930.
The SACL is set equal to SABC, i.e.,
50,930 spawners. The adopted
management measures provide for a
projected SRFC spawning escapement of
164,964.
For KRFC in 2023, SOFL is 26,238
(potential spawner abundance forecast)
multiplied by 1¥FMSY (1¥0.71), or
7,609 returning spawners. SABC is
26,238 multiplied by 1¥FABC (1¥0.68)
(FMSY reduced for scientific uncertainty
= 0.68) or 8,396 returning spawners.
SACL is set equal to SABC, i.e., 8,396
spawners. The adopted management
measures provide for a projected KRFC
spawning escapement of 23,615.
For Willapa Bay natural coho salmon
in 2023, SOFL = 59,417 (potential
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spawner abundance forecast) multiplied
by 1¥FMSY (1¥0.74) or 15,448
returning spawners. SABC is 59,417
multiplied by 1¥FABC (1¥0.70) (FMSY
reduced for scientific uncertainty =
0.70) or 17,825. SACL is set equal to
SABC, i.e., 17,825 spawners. The
adopted management measures provide
for a projected Willapa Bay natural coho
salmon spawning escapement of 22,066.
In summary, fisheries managed under
the Council’s recommended 2023
management measures are expected to
result in escapements greater than
required to meet the ACLs for all three
stocks with defined ACLs.
Public Comments
The Council invited written
comments on developing 2023 salmon
management measures in their notice
announcing public meetings and
hearings (87 FR 76027, December 12,
2022). At its March meeting, the Council
developed three alternatives for 2023
commercial and recreational salmon
management measures having a range of
quotas, season structure, and impacts,
from the least restrictive in Alternative
I to the most restrictive in Alternative
III, as well as three alternatives for 2023
North of Cape Falcon treaty Indian troll
salmon management measures. These
alternatives are described in detail in
PRE II. Subsequently, comments were
taken at three public hearings held in
March, staffed by representatives of the
Council and NMFS. The Council
received 59 written comments via their
electronic portal and 19 oral comments
on 2023 ocean salmon fisheries
including members of the public that
commented several times. The three
public hearings were attended by a total
of 93 people; 28 people provided oral
comments. Comments came from
individual fishers, fishing associations,
fish buyers, processors, the general
public, and conservation organizations.
Written and oral comments addressed
the 2023 management alternatives
described in PRE II and generally
expressed preferences for a specific
alternative or for particular season
structures. All written comments were
made available via the Council’s online
briefing books for the March and April
2023 Council meetings. In addition to
comments collected at the public
hearings and those submitted directly to
the Council, several people provided
oral comments at the March and April
2023 Council meetings. Written and oral
comments received were considered by
the Council, which includes a
representative from NMFS, in
developing the recommended
management measures transmitted to
NMFS on April 18, 2022. NMFS also
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invited comments to be submitted
directly to the Council or to NMFS, via
the Federal Rulemaking Portal
(www.regulations.gov) in a notice (88 FR
2061, January 12, 2023); NMFS received
no comments via the Federal
Rulemaking Portal.
Comments on alternatives for
commercial salmon fisheries. Many
written comments were from
commercial salmon fishermen located
on the coast of California. Of those
written comments, the majority
supported Alternative I. Those testifying
on north of Cape Falcon commercial
salmon fisheries at the Washington
hearing supported the 85,000 total
allowable catch for Chinook salmon in
Alternative I and an allocation schedule
more consistent with long term catch
percentage averages for tule Chinook
salmon. They expressed concern about
the negative economic impact of recent
decreases in quota but were encouraged
by this year’s forecasts and the potential
boost to ocean fisheries. Those testifying
on south of Cape Falcon commercial
salmon fisheries at the Oregon hearing
supported Alternative I. Those testifying
on south of Cape Falcon commercial
salmon fisheries at the California
hearing largely supported a full closure
given the low forecasts for California
salmon stocks. The Council adopted
commercial fishing measures north and
south of Cape Falcon that are within the
range of the alternatives considered.
Comments on alternatives for
recreational fisheries. Many written
comments did not identify the fishery
being commented on, either by
geography or sector. Those that did
submit written comments specifically
on recreational fisheries supported
Alternative I almost unanimously.
Those testifying on north of Cape Falcon
favored Alternative I and opening the
ocean recreational fishing as early as
possible with a season structure that
will allow for a stable season lasting
into September. In addition, several
written and oral comments supported
the opportunity for a ‘‘bubble’’ fishery
for Tillamook Bay, OR. Those
commenting on fisheries south of Cape
Falcon were in favor of both Alternative
I and II, with those in California
supporting a closure of all areas. Several
comments addressed the structure of the
rollover of any surplus mark-selective
coho salmon quota in the Cape Falcon
to the Oregon/California border area.
Commenters felt that it would be a
better option to allow the transfer of
quota between recreational and
commercial fisheries on an impact
neutral basis, prioritizing the needs of
the recreational fishery. The Council
adopted recreational fishing measures
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north and south of Cape Falcon that are
within the range of alternatives
considered.
Additional comments were made
regarding the closure of fisheries in
southern Oregon from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mountain. Key comments were
summarized for response.
Comment 1: The three alternatives did
not allow the EA to evaluate, nor
provide public review, of anything other
than a complete closure. The Council
should have considered at least one
alternative with an open season.
Response: NMFS reviewed the
alternatives proposed in public
comments for the 2023 season and
concluded that the proposals are very
similar to the fisheries that were in
place for the south of Cape Falcon area
in 2022, and are thus part of the NoAction Alternative. Therefore, the
suggested alternative was effectively
evaluated as the No-Action Alternative,
which is comprised of the prior year’s
management measures, in this case the
2022 measures. In PRE I, the effects of
the No-Action Alternative with the
current year’s (2023) salmon forecasts
are evaluated so that the Council can
consider the effects of those fishing
regimes on the achievement of
conservation objectives and other FMP
provisions under 2023 forecasts. Those
forecasts reflect the effect of
environmental conditions and other
factors influencing the survival of
salmon stocks returning in 2023 that
may have been different than those
affecting salmon stocks returning in
2022. As requested by one commenter,
impacts of the No-Action Alternative,
inclusive of the fishery suggested by the
commenter, was included in a
comparison of the impacts to KRFC and
SRFC by management area, month, and
salmon gear sector across the
alternatives in Appendix tables A–2 and
A–3 of PRE–II.
Comment 2: Open a bubble fishery for
Tillamook Bay.
Response: The commenter proposed a
bubble fishery that would extend the
area around Tillamook Bay in particular
to provide opportunity to catch hatchery
spring Chinook salmon. In the past,
bubble fisheries have been used to allow
limited fishing with very low impacts
on constraining stocks where Chinook
salmon retention inside the bubble was
limited to marked fish. Although a
bubble fishery would provide
opportunities to access hatchery springrun Chinook salmon destined for
Tillamook Bay, there is no way to model
the impacts solely within the bubble. It
is only possible to model the impacts as
if the entire south of Cape Falcon area
to the southern end of the Heceta Bank
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area was open. When the requested
bubble area was open in the past, all of
the data for catch in that area was mixed
with ocean fisheries data. As a result, it
is impossible to model and evaluate
potential impacts of the bubble fishery
alone. Fishing opportunities are
available inside Tillamook Bay and the
river to harvest fish returning to that
area including Tillamook River spring
Chinook salmon without accruing
impacts to SRFC and KRFC stocks.
Additionally, the proposed bubble
fishery is entirely in Oregon state
waters. The Council weighed the
proposal together with the collective
public comments and advice from the
Council advisory bodies, and concluded
that the expected harvest and
opportunity from the proposed bubble
fishery did not provide the level of
benefit that the alternatives with greater
spatial and temporal access to coho
salmon did for the limited level of KRFC
and SRFC impacts accrued.
The control rules for KRFC and SRFC
describe maximum allowable
exploitation rates at any given level of
abundance. The FMP provides that the
Council may recommend lower
exploitation rates as needed to address
uncertainties or other year specific
circumstances (PFMC 2022). The
Council recommended more
conservative management measures that
result in lower exploitation rates after
considering the uncertainties, low 2023
abundance forecasts and other
information described previously in this
Rule.
Comments on SRKW. NMFS and the
Council received comments from
several non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) regarding SRKW, with one NGO
providing 43,745 supporting signatures.
Some comments directed at the 2023
annual management measures requested
restrictions beyond those included in
the Council’s alternatives for 2023 ocean
salmon management measures,
requesting further restriction of catch
limits, limiting size of quotas, limiting
season lengths, reducing salmon
bycatch, and closing additional areas to
fishing. The majority of these comments
reiterated comments NMFS previously
addressed in the final EA for FMP
Amendment 21 (https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov//action/
amendment-21-pacific-coast-salmonfishery-management-plan) and in the
notice of agency decision (86 FR 51017,
September 14, 2021); these comments
are critical of Amendment 21 rather
than the specifics of the 2023
management measures. In other
comments, the NGOs expressed concern
that the preseason forecast is biased
high and would prefer management
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16:20 May 10, 2023
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measures that would make more
Chinook salmon available as prey for
SRKW. The Council developed the
management measures consistent with
the FMP including Amendment 21,
which NMFS evaluated consistent with
NEPA, and in an ESA biological opinion
concluding fisheries managed according
to the provisions are not likely to
jeopardize SRKW.
The Council, including the NMFS
representative, took all of these
comments into consideration. The
Council’s final recommendation
generally includes aspects of all three
alternatives, while taking into account
the best available scientific information,
best use of limited opportunity given
impacts to stocks of concern, and
ensuring that fisheries are consistent
with impact limits and accountability
measures for ESA-listed species, ACLs,
PST obligations, MSA requirements,
and tribal fishing rights. The Council
and NMFS also considered comments
on the NEPA analysis in preparing the
final EA.
2023 Specifications and Management
Measures
The Council’s recommended ocean
harvest levels and management
measures for the 2023 fisheries are
designed to apportion the burden of
protecting the weak stocks identified
and discussed in PRE I equitably among
ocean fisheries and to allow maximum
harvest of natural and hatchery runs
surplus to inside fishery and spawning
needs. NMFS finds the Council’s
recommendations to be responsive to
the goals of the FMP, the requirements
of the resource, and the socioeconomic
factors affecting resource users. The
recommendations are consistent with
the requirements of the MSA, U.S.
obligations to Indian tribes with
federally recognized fishing rights, and
U.S. international obligations regarding
Pacific salmon. The Council’s
recommended management measures
are consistent with the proposed actions
analyzed in NMFS’ ESA consultations
for those ESA-listed species that may be
affected by Council fisheries, and are
otherwise consistent with ESA
obligations. Accordingly, NMFS,
through this final rule, approves and
implements the Council’s
recommendations.
North of Cape Falcon, 2023
management measures for non-Indian
commercial troll and recreational
fisheries have slightly increased quotas
for Chinook salmon compared to 2022
due to the increased forecasts of
Columbia River hatchery tule Chinook
salmon. This includes a combined
production of returning lower Columbia
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River hatchery Chinook salmon and
Spring Creek Hatchery Chinook salmon.
The 2023 coho salmon quotas are
slightly decreased but similar to the
2022 quota due to similar abundance
forecasts for Columbia River and coastal
Washington coho salmon stocks and
constrained by low forecasts for
Thompson River natural coho salmon.
Overall, north of Cape Falcon nonIndian commercial and recreational
total allowable catch (TAC) in 2023 is
78,000 Chinook salmon and 190,000
coho salmon marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. The commercial troll
fishery, north of Cape Falcon, will have
a May-June Chinook salmon only
fishery with a quota of 26,000 Chinook
salmon, and a July-September fishery
with a quota of 13,000 Chinook salmon
or 30,400 marked coho salmon. The
recreational fishery, north of Cape
Falcon, will have a June-September
fishery with a TAC of 39,000 Chinook
salmon and 159,600 marked coho
salmon, with subarea quotas.
Quotas for the 2023 treaty-Indian
commercial troll fishery north of Cape
Falcon are 45,000 Chinook salmon and
57,000 coho salmon in ocean
management areas and Washington
State Statistical Area 4B combined.
These quotas provide a slightly higher
amount of Chinook salmon and
substantially more coho salmon than in
2022. The treaty-Indian commercial
fisheries include a May-June fishery
with a quota of 22,500 Chinook salmon,
and a July-September fishery, with
quotas of 22,500 Chinook salmon and
57,000 coho salmon.
South of Cape Falcon, 2023
commercial troll and recreational
fishery management measures are
designed to meet conservation and
management goals for KRFC and SRFC
spawning escapement and to not exceed
the ESA-take limits for CC Chinook
salmon and OCN Chinook salmon.
Overall, south of Cape Falcon nonIndian commercial TAC for coho
salmon is 10,000. For the recreational
fishery, overall coho salmon TAC is
110,000 coho salmon marked with a
healed adipose fin clip (marked), and
25,000 coho salmon in the non-markselective coho salmon fishery.
The timing of the March and April
Council meetings makes it impracticable
for the Council to recommend fishing
seasons that begin before mid-May of
the same year. Therefore, this action
also establishes the 2024 fishing season
that opens earlier than May 16. The
Council recommended, and NMFS
concurs, that the commercial and
recreational seasons will open in 2024
as indicated under the ‘‘Season
Description’’ headings (in ‘‘Section 1.
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Commercial Management Measures for
2023 Ocean Salmon Fisheries’’ and
‘‘Section 2. Recreational Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries’’) of this final rule. At the
March and/or April 2024 meeting,
NMFS may take inseason action, if
recommended by the Council, to adjust
the commercial and recreational seasons
prior to the effective date of the 2024
management measures, which are
expected to be effective in mid-May
2024. The Council recommended, and
NMFS concurs, that the Treaty Indian
ocean troll seasons will open in 2024 as
indicated under the ‘‘Season
Description’’ headings (in ‘‘Section 3.
Treaty Indian Management Measures for
2023 Ocean Salmon Fisheries’’). In
2024, the Treaty Indian ocean troll
season will open May 1, consistent with
all preseason regulations in place for
Treaty Indian Troll fisheries during May
16–June 30, 2023. This opening could
be modified following Council review at
its March and/or April 2024 meetings.
Sections 1, 2, and 3 below set out the
final specifications and management
measures for the ocean salmon fishery
for 2023 and, as specified, for 2024.
Section 1 governs commercial fisheries;
Section 2 governs recreational fisheries;
and Section 3 governs Treaty Indian
Fisheries. Also, Section 4 below
provides requirements for halibut
retention; Section 5 provides
geographical landmarks; and Section 6
specifies notice procedures for inseason
modifications. These measures were
recommended by the Council and
approved by NMFS. Those elements of
the measures set forth below that refer
to fisheries implemented prior to May
16, 2023, were promulgated in our 2022
rule (87 FR 29690, May 16, 2022) and
modified by inseason action at the
March and April 2022 Council meetings
(88 FR 21112, April 10, 2023), and are
included for information only and to
provide continuity for the public and for
states adopting conforming regulations
each May that refer to the Federal rule
for the same year.
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Section 1. Commercial Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section
contain restrictions that must be
followed for lawful participation in the
fishery. Part A identifies each fishing
area and provides the geographic
boundaries from north to south, the
open seasons for the area, the salmon
species allowed to be caught during the
seasons, and any other special
restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C
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specifies requirements, definitions,
restrictions, and exceptions.
Fisheries may need to be adjusted
through inseason action to meet NMFS
ESA consultation standards, FMP
requirements, other management
objectives, or upon receipt of new
allocation recommendations from the
California Fish and Game Commission.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR
—U.S./Canada border to Cape Falcon
May 1–15, 2023.
May 16 through the earlier of June 29,
or 26,000 Chinook salmon. No more
than 6,890 of which may be caught in
the area between the U.S./Canada
border and the Queets River, and no
more than 6,040 of which may be caught
in the area between Leadbetter Point
and Cape Falcon (see C.8).
May 16–June 21; open 7 days per
week (see C.1); then
June 22–June 29.
In the area between the U.S./Canada
border and the Queets River the landing
and possession limit is 70 Chinook
salmon per vessel per landing week
(Thursday–Wednesday) and June 22–29.
Landing limits will be evaluated weekly
inseason (see C.1, C.6).
In the area between the Queets River
and Leadbetter Point the landing and
possession limit is 150 Chinook salmon
per vessel per landing week (Thursday–
Wednesday) and June 22–29. Landing
limits will be evaluated weekly inseason
(see C.1, C.6).
In the area between Leadbetter Point
and Cape Falcon the landing and
possession limit is 60 Chinook salmon
per vessel per landing week (Thursday–
Wednesday) and June 22–29. Landing
limits will be evaluated weekly inseason
(see C.1, C.6).
All salmon, except coho salmon (see
C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum
size limit of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total
length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3).
When it is estimated that
approximately 50 percent of the overall
Chinook salmon quota or any Chinook
salmon subarea guideline has been
landed, inseason action may be
considered to ensure the quota and
subarea guidelines are not exceeded. If
the Chinook salmon quota is exceeded,
the excess will be deducted from the allsalmon season (see C.5).
In 2024, the season will open May 1
consistent with all preseason
regulations in place in this area and
subareas during May 16–June 30, 2023,
including subarea salmon guidelines
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and quotas and weekly vessel limits
except as described below for vessels
fishing or in possession of salmon north
of Leadbetter Point. This opening could
be modified following Council review at
its March and/or April 2024 meetings.
July 1 through the earlier of
September 30, or 13,000 Chinook
salmon or 30,400 marked coho salmon
(see C.8).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon.
Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
27 inches (68.5 cm) total length. Coho
salmon minimum size limit of 16 inches
(40.6 cm) total length (see B, C.1). All
coho salmon must be marked with a
healed adipose fin clip (see C.8.d). No
chum salmon retention north of Cape
Alava, WA, in August and September
(see C.4, C.7). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3).
Landing and possession limit of 150
marked coho salmon per vessel per
landing week (Thursday–Wednesday).
Landing limits will be evaluated weekly
inseason (C.1).
When it is estimated that
approximately 50 percent of the overall
Chinook salmon quota has been landed,
inseason action may be considered to
ensure the quota is not exceeded.
A non-selective coho salmon fishery
that is impact neutral relative to the
preseason assessment may be
considered through inseason
management action later in the season.
For all commercial troll fisheries
north of Cape Falcon: Mandatory closed
areas include Salmon Troll Yelloweye
Rockfish Conservation Area (YRCA),
Cape Flattery, and Columbia Control
Zones. Vessels must land and deliver
their salmon within 24 hours of any
closure of this fishery. Vessels may not
land fish east of the Sekiu River or east
of Tongue Point, OR. Vessels fishing or
in possession of salmon north of
Leadbetter Point must land and deliver
all species of fish in a Washington port
and must possess a Washington troll
and/or salmon delivery license. For
delivery to Washington ports south of
Leadbetter Point, vessels must notify
Washington Department of Fish and
Wildlife (WDFW) at 360–249–1215 prior
to crossing the Leadbetter Point line
with area fished, total Chinook salmon,
coho salmon, and halibut catch aboard,
and destination with approximate time
of delivery. During any single trip, only
one side of the Leadbetter Point line
may be fished (see C.11).
Vessels fishing or in possession of
salmon while fishing south of
Leadbetter Point must land and deliver
all species of fish within the area and
south of Leadbetter Point, except that
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Oregon permitted vessels may also land
all species of fish in Garibaldi, OR. All
Chinook salmon caught north of Cape
Falcon and being delivered by boat to
Garibaldi, OR must meet the minimum
legal total length of 28 inches (71.1 cm)
for Chinook salmon for south of Cape
Falcon seasons unless the season in
waters off Garibaldi, OR have been
closed for Chinook salmon retention for
more than 48 hours (see C.1).
Under state law, vessels must report
their catch on a state fish receiving
ticket. Oregon State regulations require
all fishers landing salmon into Oregon
from any fishery between Leadbetter
Point and Cape Falcon to notify the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
(ODFW) within one hour of delivery or
prior to transport away from the port of
landing by either calling 541–857–2546
or sending notification via email to
nfalcon.trollreport@odfw.oregon.gov.
Notification shall include vessel name
and number, number of salmon by
species, port of landing and location of
delivery, and estimated time of delivery.
Inseason actions may modify harvest
guidelines in later fisheries to achieve or
prevent exceeding the overall allowable
troll harvest impacts (see C.8).
Vessels in possession of salmon north
of the Queets River may not cross the
Queets River line without first notifying
WDFW at 360–249–1215 with area
fished, total Chinook salmon, coho
salmon, and halibut catch abroad, and
destination. Vessels in possession of
salmon south of the Queets River may
not cross the Queets River line without
first notifying WDFW at 360–249–1215
with area fished, total Chinook salmon,
coho salmon, and halibut catch aboard,
and destination (see C.11). Inseason
actions may modify harvest guidelines
in later fisheries to achieve or prevent
exceeding the overall allowable troll
harvest impacts (see C.8).
South of Cape Falcon, OR
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—Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1–October 31 (see C.9.a).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon,
through the earlier of September 30 or
reaching the 10,000 non mark-selective
coho salmon quota; all salmon except
coho salmon thereafter (see C.4, C.7).
Coho salmon minimum size limit of 16
inches (40.6 cm) total length, and
Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
28 inches (71.1 cm) total length (see B,
C.1). All vessels fishing in the area must
land their salmon in the State of Oregon.
See gear restrictions and definitions (see
C.2, C.3). Beginning October 1, open
shoreward of the 40-fathom (73-meter)
regulatory line (see C.5.f).
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No more than 75 Chinook salmon
allowed per vessel per landing week
(Thursday–Wednesday), (see C.8.f).
Coho salmon quota of 10,000 nonmark selective. No more than 75 coho
salmon allowed per vessel per landing
week (Thursday–Wednesday). Vessel
limits may be modified inseason (see
C.8.f).
Any remainder of the mark-selective
coho salmon quota from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mountain recreational fishery
may be transferred inseason to the Cape
Falcon to Humbug Mountain troll
fishery on an impact neutral basis.
Recreational fishery needs will be
prioritized for this transfer (see C.8.h).
In 2024, the season will be open
March 15 for all salmon except coho
salmon. Chinook salmon minimum size
limit of 28 inches (71.1 cm) total length.
Gear restrictions are the same as in
2023. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March
2024 meeting.
—Humbug Mountain to Oregon/
California border (Oregon Klamath
Management Zone (KMZ))
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open March
15 for all salmon except coho salmon.
Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
28 inches (71.1 cm) total length. Gear
restrictions are the same as in 2023.
This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March
2024 meeting.
—Oregon/California border to Humboldt
South Jetty (California KMZ)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open May 1
through the earlier of May 31, or a 3,000
Chinook salmon quota. Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 27 inches (68.5
cm) total length. Landing and
possession limit of 20 Chinook salmon
per vessel per day (see C.8.f). Open 5
days per week (Friday–Tuesday). All
salmon except coho salmon (see C.4,
C.7). Any remaining portion of Chinook
salmon quotas may be transferred
inseason on an impact neutral basis to
the next open quota period (see C.8.b).
All fish caught in this area must be
landed within the area, within 24 hours
of any closure of the fishery (see C.6),
and prior to fishing outside the area (see
C.10). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and
definitions (see C.2, C.3). Klamath
Control Zone closed (see C.5.e). See
California State regulations for an
additional closure adjacent to the Smith
River. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March or
April 2024 meetings.
—Humboldt South Jetty to Latitude
40°10′ N
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Closed in 2023.
When the fishery is closed between
the Oregon/California border and
Humbug Mountain, vessels with fish on
board caught in the areas open to
salmon fishing off California may seek
temporary mooring in Brookings, OR
prior to landing in California only if
such vessels first notify the Chetco River
Coast Guard Station via VHF channel
22A between the hours of 0500 and
2200 and provide with vessel name,
number of fish on board, and estimated
time of arrival (see C.6).
—Latitude 40°10′ N to Point Arena (Fort
Bragg)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open April 16
for all salmon except coho salmon (see
C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum
size limit of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total
length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). All salmon must be landed in
California and north of Point Arena (see
C.6, C.11). Landing and possession
limits may be considered inseason (see
C.8.g). This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March
2024 meeting.
—Point Arena to Pigeon Point (San
Francisco)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open on May
1 for all salmon except coho salmon (see
C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum
size limit of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total
length (see B, C.1). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Landing and possession limits may
be considered inseason (see C.8.g). This
opening could be modified following
Council review at its March or April
2024 meeting.
—Point Reyes to Point San Pedro (Fall
Area Target Zone)
Closed in 2023.
—Pigeon Point to the U.S./Mexico
border (Monterey)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open on May
1 for all salmon except coho salmon (see
C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum
size limit of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total
length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Landing and possession limits may
be considered inseason (see C.8.g). This
opening could be modified following
Council review at its March or April
2024 meeting.
California State regulations require all
salmon be made available to a California
Department of Fish and Wildlife
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(CDFW) representative for sampling
immediately at port of landing. Any
person in possession of a salmon with
a missing adipose fin, upon request by
an authorized agent or employee of the
CDFW, shall immediately relinquish the
head of the salmon to the State
(California Fish and Game Code § 8226).
B. Minimum Size (Inches) (See C.1)
TABLE 1—MINIMUM SIZE LIMITS FOR SALMON IN THE 2023 COMMERCIAL OCEAN SALMON FISHERIES
Chinook
Coho
Area (when open)
Total length
(in)
Head-off
(in)
Total length
(in)
Head-off
(in)
North of Cape Falcon, OR ..........................................................
Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain .............................................
Humbug Mountain to OR/CA border ..........................................
OR/CA border to Humboldt South Jetty .....................................
Lat. 40°10′0″ N to Point Arena ...................................................
Point Arena to Pigeon Point .......................................................
Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico border ...........................................
27.0
28.0
28.0
........................
........................
........................
........................
20.5
21.5
21.5
....................
....................
....................
....................
16
16
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
12
12
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
Pink
None.
None.
None.
Metric equivalents: 28.0 in = 71.1 cm, 27.0 in = 68.5 cm, 26 in = 66 cm, 21.5 in = 54.6 cm, 20.5 in = 52.1 cm, 19.5 in = 49.5 cm, 16.0
in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0 in = 30.5 cm.
C. Requirements, Definitions,
Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size or
Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must
meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special
requirements for the area being fished
and the area in which they are landed
if the area is open or has been closed
less than 48 hours for that species of
salmon. Salmon may be landed in an
area that has been closed for a species
of salmon more than 48 hours only if
they meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special
requirements for the area in which they
were caught. Salmon may not be filleted
prior to landing.
Any person who is required to report
a salmon landing by applicable state law
must include on the state landing
receipt for that landing both the number
and weight of salmon landed by species.
States may require fish landing/
receiving tickets be kept on board the
vessel for 90 days or more after landing
to account for all previous salmon
landings.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Salmon may be taken only by hook
and line using single point, single
shank, barbless hooks.
b. Cape Falcon to the Oregon/
California border: no more than 4
spreads are allowed per line.
c. Oregon/California border to U.S./
Mexico border: no more than 6 lines are
allowed per vessel, and barbless circle
hooks are required when fishing with
bait by any means other than trolling.
C.3. Gear Definitions
Trolling: Fishing from a boat or
floating device that is making way by
means of a source of power, other than
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drifting by means of the prevailing
water current or weather conditions.
Troll fishing gear: One or more lines
that drag hooks behind a moving fishing
vessel engaged in trolling. In that
portion of the fishery management area
off Oregon and Washington, the line or
lines must be affixed to the vessel and
must not be intentionally disengaged
from the vessel at any time during the
fishing operation.
Spread: A single leader connected to
an individual lure and/or bait.
Circle hook: A hook with a generally
circular shape and a point which turns
inward, pointing directly to the shank at
a 90° angle.
C.4. Vessel Operation in Closed Areas
With Salmon on Board
a. Except as provided under C.4.b
below, it is unlawful for a vessel to have
troll or recreational gear in the water
while in any area closed to fishing for
a certain species of salmon while
possessing that species of salmon;
however, fishing for species other than
salmon is not prohibited if the area is
open for such species, and no salmon
are in possession.
b. When Genetic Stock Identification
(GSI) samples will be collected in an
area closed to commercial salmon
fishing, the scientific research permit
holder shall notify NOAA Office of Law
Enforcement, U.S. Coast Guard (USCG),
CDFW, WDFW, ODFW, and Oregon
State Police at least 24 hours prior to
sampling and provide the following
information: the vessel name, date,
location and time collection activities
will be done. Any vessel collecting GSI
samples in a closed area shall not
possess any salmon other than those
from which GSI samples are being
collected. Salmon caught for collection
of GSI samples must be immediately
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
released in good condition after
collection of samples.
C.5. Control Zone Definitions
a. Cape Flattery Control Zone—The
area from Cape Flattery (48°23′00″ N
lat.) to the northern boundary of the
U.S. EEZ; and the area from Cape
Flattery south to Cape Alava (48°10′00″
N lat.) and east of 125°05′00″ W long.
b. Salmon Troll YRCA—The area in
Washington Marine Catch Area 3 from
48°00.00′ N lat.; 125°14.00′ W long. to
48°02.00′ N lat.; 125°14.00′ W long. to
48°02.00′ N lat.; 125°16.50′ W long. to
48°00.00′ N lat.; 125°16.50′ W long. and
connecting back to 48°00.00′ N lat.;
125°14.00′ W long.
c. Grays Harbor Control Zone—The
area defined by a line drawn from the
Westport Lighthouse (46°53′18″ N lat.,
124°07′01″ W long.) to Buoy #2
(46°52′42″ N lat., 124°12′42″ W long.) to
Buoy #3 (46°55′00″ N lat., 124°14′48″ W
long.) to the Grays Harbor north jetty
(46°55′36″ N lat., 124°10′51″ W long.).
d. Columbia Control Zone—An area at
the Columbia River mouth, bounded on
the west by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy
#4 (46°13′35″ N lat., 124°06′50″ W long.)
and the green lighted Buoy #7
(46°15′09″ N lat., 124°06′16″ W long.);
on the east, by the Buoy #10 line that
bears north/south at 357° true from the
south jetty at 46°14′00″ N lat.,124°03′07″
W long. to its intersection with the
north jetty; on the north, by a line
running northeast/southwest between
the green lighted Buoy #7 to the tip of
the north jetty (46°15′48″ N lat.,
124°05′20″ W long.), and then along the
north jetty to the point of intersection
with the Buoy #10 line; and, on the
south, by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy
#4 and tip of the south jetty (46°14′03″
N lat., 124°04′05″ W long.), and then
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along the south jetty to the point of
intersection with the Buoy #10 line.
e. Klamath Control Zone—The ocean
area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41°38′48″ N
lat. (approximately 6 nm (11 km) north
of the Klamath River mouth); on the
west by 124°23′00″ W long.
(approximately 12 nm (22 km) off
shore); and on the south by 41°26′48″ N
lat. (approximately 6 nm (11 km) south
of the Klamath River mouth).
f. Waypoints for the 40-fathom (73meter) regulatory line from Cape Falcon
to Humbug Mountain (50 CFR 660.71 (o)
(12)–(62)), when in place.
C.6. Notification When Unsafe
Conditions Prevent Compliance With
Regulations
If prevented by unsafe weather
conditions or mechanical problems from
meeting special management area
landing restrictions, vessels must notify
the USCG and receive acknowledgment
of such notification prior to leaving the
area. This notification shall include the
name of the vessel, port where delivery
will be made, approximate number of
salmon (by species) on board, the
estimated time of arrival, and the
specific reason the vessel is not able to
meet special management area landing
restrictions.
In addition to contacting the USCG,
vessels fishing south of the Oregon/
California border must notify CDFW
within 1 hour of leaving the
management area by calling 800–889–
8346 and providing the same
information as reported to the USCG.
All salmon must be offloaded within 24
hours of reaching port.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
C.7. Incidental Halibut Harvest
Permit applications for incidental
harvest for halibut during commercial
salmon fishing must be obtained from
the NMFS West Coast Region (WCR)
Permits Office.
a. Pacific halibut retained must be no
less than 32 inches (81.3 cm) in total
length (with head on).
b. During the salmon troll season,
incidental harvest is authorized only
during April, May, and June, and after
June 30 if quota remains and if
announced on the NMFS hotline
(phone: 800–662–9825 or 206–526–
6667). WDFW, ODFW, and CDFW will
monitor landings. If the landings are
projected to exceed the preseason
allocation for this fishery or the total
Area 2A non-Indian commercial halibut
allocation, NMFS will take inseason
action to prohibit retention of halibut in
the non-Indian salmon troll fishery. See
the most current Pacific Halibut Catch
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Sharing Plan (88 FR 14066, March 7,
2023) for more details.
c. Incidental Pacific halibut catch
regulations in the commercial salmon
troll fishery adopted for 2023, prior to
any 2023 inseason action, will be in
effect when incidental Pacific halibut
retention opens on April 1, 2023, unless
otherwise modified by inseason action
at the March 2023 Council meeting.
Beginning May 16, 2023, through the
end of the 2023 salmon troll fishery, and
beginning April 1, 2024, until modified
through inseason action or superseded
by the 2024 management measures,
permit holders may land or possess no
more than one Pacific halibut per two
Chinook salmon, except one Pacific
halibut may be possessed or landed
without meeting the ratio requirement,
and no more than 35 halibut may be
possessed or landed per trip.
d. ‘‘C-shaped’’ YRCA is an area to be
voluntarily avoided for salmon trolling.
NMFS and the Council request salmon
trollers voluntarily avoid this area in
order to protect yelloweye rockfish. The
area is defined in the Pacific Council
Halibut Catch Sharing Plan in the North
Coast subarea (Washington marine area
3), with the following coordinates in the
order listed:
48°18′ N lat.; 125°18′ W long.
48°18′ N lat.; 124°59′ W long.
48°11′ N lat.; 124°59′ W long.
48°11′ N lat.; 125°11′ W long.
48°04′ N lat.; 125°11′ W long.
48°04′ N lat.; 124°59′ W long.
48°00′ N lat.; 124°59′ W long.
48°00′ N lat.; 125°18′ W long.
And connecting back to 48°18′ N lat.;
125°18′ W long.
C.8. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason
actions or modifications already noted
under the Season Description heading
above, the following inseason guidance
applies:
a. Chinook salmon remaining from the
May through June non-Indian
commercial troll harvest guideline north
of Cape Falcon may be transferred to the
July through September harvest
guideline if the transfer would not result
in exceeding preseason impact
expectations on any stocks.
b. Chinook salmon remaining from
May, June, and/or July non-Indian
commercial troll quotas in the Oregon or
California KMZ may be transferred to
the Chinook salmon quota for the next
open period if the transfer would not
result in exceeding preseason impact
expectations on any stocks.
c. NMFS may transfer salmon
between the recreational and
commercial fisheries north of Cape
Falcon if there is agreement among the
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Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
areas’ representatives on the Salmon
Advisory Subpanel (SAS), and if the
transfer would not result in exceeding
preseason impact expectations on any
stocks.
d. The Council will consider inseason
recommendations for special regulations
for any experimental fisheries annually
in March; proposals must meet Council
protocol and be received in November
the year prior.
e. If retention of unmarked coho
salmon (adipose fin intact) is permitted
by inseason action, the allowable coho
salmon quota will be adjusted to ensure
preseason projected impacts on all
stocks is not exceeded.
f. Landing limits may be modified
inseason to sustain season length and
keep harvest within overall quotas.
g. Landing limits in California may be
implemented and/or modified inseason
to sustain season length and keep
harvest within preseason expectations.
h. Deviations from the allocation of
allowable ocean harvest of coho salmon
in the area south of Cape Falcon may be
allowed to meet consultation standards
for ESA-listed stocks (FMP 5.3.2).
Therefore, any rollovers that result in a
deviation from the south of Cape Falcon
coho salmon allocation schedule
between sectors would still fall
underneath this exemption.
C.9. State Waters Fisheries
Consistent with Council management
objectives:
a. The state of Oregon may establish
additional late-season fisheries in state
waters.
b. The state of California may
establish limited fisheries in selected
state waters.
c. Check state regulations for details.
C.10. For the purpose of California Fish
and Game Code, Section 8232.5, the
definition of the KMZ for the ocean
salmon season shall be that area from
Humbug Mountain, Oregon, to the
Southern KMZ Boundary.
C.11. Latitudes for geographical
reference of major landmarks along the
West Coast are listed in Section 5 of this
final rule.
Section 2. Recreational Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section
contain restrictions that must be
followed for lawful participation in the
fishery. Part A identifies each fishing
area and provides the geographic
boundaries from north to south, the
open seasons for the area, the salmon
species allowed to be caught during the
seasons, and any other special
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restrictions effective in the area. Part B
specifies minimum size limits. Part C
specifies special requirements,
definitions, restrictions, and exceptions.
Fisheries may need to be adjusted
through inseason action to meet NMFS
ESA consultation standards, FMP
requirements, other management
objectives, or upon receipt of new
allocation recommendations from the
California Fish and Game Commission.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR
—U.S./Canada border to Cape Alava
(Neah Bay Subarea)
June 17 through earlier of September
30, or 16,600 marked coho salmon
subarea quota, with a subarea guideline
of 8,710 Chinook salmon (see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon
except no chum salmon beginning
August 1; two salmon per day, of which
only one may be a Chinook salmon. All
coho salmon must be marked with a
healed adipose fin clip. See minimum
size limits (see B). See gear restrictions
and definitions (see C.1, C.2, C.3).
An impact neutral non-selective coho
salmon fishery may be considered
through inseason management action
later in the season.
Beginning August 1, no Chinook
salmon retention east of the BonillaTatoosh line (see C.4.a) during Council
managed ocean fishery. Inseason
management may be used to sustain
season length and keep harvest within
the overall Chinook salmon and coho
salmon recreational TACs for north of
Cape Falcon (see C.5).
—Cape Alava to Queets River (La Push
Subarea)
June 17 through earlier of September
30, or 4,150 marked coho salmon
subarea quota, with a subarea guideline
of 1,440 Chinook salmon (see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon,
except no chum salmon beginning
August 1; two salmon per day, of which
only one may be a Chinook salmon. All
coho salmon must be marked with a
healed adipose fin clip. See minimum
size limits (see B). See gear restrictions
and definitions (see C.1, C.2, C.3).
Inseason management may be used to
sustain season length and keep harvest
within the overall Chinook salmon and
coho salmon recreational TACs for
north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
An impact neutral non-selective coho
salmon fishery may be considered
through inseason management action
later in the season.
October 3 through earlier of October
7, or 150 Chinook salmon quota (see
C.5) in the area north of 47°50′00″ N lat.
and south of 48°00′00″ N lat.
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Jkt 259001
Chinook salmon only, one Chinook
salmon per day. See minimum size
limits (see B). See gear restrictions and
definitions (see C.1, C.2, C.3).
Fishery may be closed if extreme
freshwater temperature and/or flow
events occur in the Quillayute basin in
September.
—Queets River to Leadbetter Point
(Westport Subarea)
June 24 through earlier of September
30, or 59,050 marked coho salmon
subarea quota, with a subarea guideline
of 17,210 Chinook salmon (see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon,
two salmon per day, of which only one
may be a Chinook salmon. All coho
salmon must be marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions
and definitions (see C.1, C.2, C.3).
Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
22 inches (55.9 cm) total length (see B).
An impact neutral non-selective coho
salmon fishery may be considered
through inseason management action
later in the season.
Inseason management may be used to
sustain season length and keep harvest
within the overall Chinook salmon and
coho salmon recreational TACs for
north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
—Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon
(Columbia River Subarea)
June 24 through earlier of September
30, or 79,800 marked coho salmon
subarea quota, with a subarea guideline
of 11,490 Chinook salmon (see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon,
two salmon per day, of which only one
may be a Chinook salmon. All coho
salmon must be marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions
and definitions (see C.1, C.2, C.3).
Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
22 inches (55.9 cm) total length (see B).
An impact neutral non-selective coho
salmon fishery may be considered
through inseason management action
later in the season.
Columbia Control Zone closed (see
C.4.c). Inseason management may be
used to sustain season length and keep
harvest within the overall Chinook
salmon and coho salmon recreational
TACs for north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
South of Cape Falcon, OR
Mark-selective coho salmon fishery:
—Cape Falcon to Oregon/California
border
June 17 through the earlier of August
31, or 110,000 marked coho salmon
quota (see C.6).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon
except Chinook salmon, two salmon per
day. All retained coho salmon must be
marked with a healed adipose fin clip
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Sfmt 4700
30245
(see C.1). See minimum size limits (see
B). See gear restrictions and definitions
(see C.2, C.3).
Any remainder of the mark-selective
coho salmon quota may be transferred
inseason on an impact neutral basis to
the recreational and/or commercial troll
quotas for the non-selective coho
salmon fishery from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mountain. Recreational needs
will be prioritized for this transfer (see
C.5).
—Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1–October 31 (see C.6).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon
except coho salmon, except as described
in the non-mark-selective coho salmon
fishery (see C.5), one fish per day (see
C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size
limit of 24 inches (61.0 cm) total length
(see B). See gear restrictions and
definitions (see C.2, C.3). Beginning
October 1, open only shoreward of the
40-fathom (73-meter) regulatory line
(see C.5.g).
In 2024, the season will open March
15 for all salmon except coho salmon,
two salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook
salmon minimum size limit of 24 inches
(61 cm) total length (see B); and the
same gear restrictions as in 2023 (see
C.2, C.3). This opening could be
modified following Council review at its
March 2024 meeting.
Non-mark-selective coho salmon
fishery:
—Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1 through the earlier of
September 30, or 25,000 non-markselective coho salmon quota (see C.6).
Open days may be modified inseason.
Open 7 days per week. All salmon,
two salmon per day only one of which
may be a Chinook salmon (see C.1). See
minimum size limits (see B). See gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3).
For recreational fisheries from Cape
Falcon to Humbug Mountain: Fishing in
the Stonewall Bank YRCA is restricted
to trolling only on days the all depth
recreational halibut fishery is open (call
the halibut fishing hotline 1–800–662–
9825 for specific dates) (see C.3.b,
C.4.d).
—Oregon/California Border to latitude
40°10′ N (California KMZ)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens May 1 for all
salmon except coho salmon, two salmon
per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 20 inches (50.8
cm) total length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Bag limits may be modified in
season. This opening could be modified
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following Council review at its March or
April 2024 meeting.
—Latitude 40°10′ N to Point Arena (Fort
Bragg)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all
salmon except coho salmon, two salmon
per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 20 inches (50.8
cm) total length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Bag limits may be modified in
season. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March or
April 2024 meeting.
—Point Arena to Pigeon Point (San
Francisco)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all
salmon except coho salmon, two salmon
per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 24 inches (61.0
cm) total length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Bag limits may be modified in
season. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March or
April 2024 meeting.
—Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico Border
(Monterey)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all
salmon except coho salmon, two salmon
per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 24 inches (61.0
cm) total length (see B). See compliance
requirements (see C.1) and gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2,
C.3). Bag limits may be modified in
season. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March or
April 2024 meeting.
California State regulations require all
salmon be made available to a CDFW
representative for sampling immediately
at port of landing. Any person in
possession of a salmon with a missing
adipose fin, upon request by an
authorized agent or employee of the
CDFW, shall immediately relinquish the
head of the salmon to the state
(California Code of Regulations Title 14
Section 1.73).
B. Minimum Size (Total Length in
Inches) (See C.1)
TABLE 2—MINIMUM SIZE LIMITS FOR SALMON IN THE 2023 RECREATIONAL SALMON FISHERIES
Area (when open)
Chinook
(in)
Coho
(in)
North of Cape Falcon (Westport and Columbia River) ...............................................................
North of Cape Falcon (Neah Bay and La Push) .........................................................................
Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain .............................................................................................
Humbug Mountain to Oregon/California border ..........................................................................
Oregon/California border to Point Arena .....................................................................................
Point Arena to Pigeon Point ........................................................................................................
Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico border ............................................................................................
22.0
24.0
24.0
24.0
........................
........................
........................
16.0
16.0
16.0
16.0
........................
........................
........................
Pink
None.
None.
None.
None.
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 22.0 in = 55.9 cm, 20.0 in = 50.8 cm, and 16.0 in = 40.6 cm.
C. Requirements, Definitions,
Restrictions, or Exceptions
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size
and Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must
meet the minimum size or other special
requirements for the area being fished
and the area in which they are landed
if that area is open. Salmon may be
landed in an area that is closed only if
they meet the minimum size or other
special requirements for the area in
which they were caught. Salmon may
not be filleted or salmon heads removed
prior to landing.
Ocean Boat Limits: Off the coast of
Washington, Oregon, and California,
each fisher aboard a vessel may
continue to use angling gear until the
combined daily limits of Chinook and
coho salmon for all licensed and
juvenile anglers aboard have been
attained (additional state restrictions
may apply).
C.2. Gear Restrictions
Salmon may be taken only by hook
and line using barbless hooks. All
persons fishing for salmon, and all
persons fishing from a boat with salmon
on board must meet the gear restrictions
listed below for specific areas or
seasons.
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a. U.S./Canada border to Point
Conception, CA: No more than one rod
may be used per angler; and no more
than two single point, single shank,
barbless hooks are required for all
fishing gear.
b. Latitude 40°10′ N to Point
Conception, CA: Single point, single
shank, barbless circle hooks (see gear
definitions below) are required when
fishing with bait by any means other
than trolling, and no more than two
such hooks shall be used. When angling
with two hooks, the distance between
the hooks must not exceed 5 inches
(12.7 cm) when measured from the top
of the eye of the top hook to the inner
base of the curve of the lower hook, and
both hooks must be permanently tied in
place (hard tied). Circle hooks are not
required when artificial lures are used
without bait.
C.3. Gear Definitions
a. Recreational fishing gear: Off
Oregon and Washington, angling tackle
consists of a single line that must be
attached to a rod and reel held by hand
or closely attended; the rod and reel
must be held by hand while playing a
hooked fish. No person may use more
than one rod and line while fishing off
Oregon or Washington. Off California,
the line must be attached to a rod and
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reel held by hand or closely attended;
weights directly attached to a line may
not exceed 4 pounds (1.8 kg). While
fishing off California north of Point
Conception, no person fishing for
salmon, and no person fishing from a
boat with salmon on board, may use
more than one rod and line. Fishing
includes any activity which can
reasonably be expected to result in the
catching, taking, or harvesting of fish.
b. Trolling: Angling from a boat or
floating device that is making way by
means of a source of power, other than
drifting by means of the prevailing
water current or weather conditions.
c. Circle hook: A hook with a
generally circular shape and a point
which turns inward, pointing directly to
the shank at a 90° angle.
C.4. Control Zone Definitions
a. The Bonilla-Tatoosh Line: A line
running from the western end of Cape
Flattery to Tatoosh Island Lighthouse
(48°23′30″ N lat., 124°44′12″ W long.) to
the buoy adjacent to Duntze Rock
(48°24′37″ N lat., 124°44′37″ W long.),
then in a straight line to Bonilla Point
(48°35′39″ N lat., 124°42′58″ W long.) on
Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
b. Grays Harbor Control Zone: The
area defined by a line drawn from the
Westport Lighthouse (46°53′18″ N lat.,
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124°07′01″ W long.) to Buoy #2
(46°52′42″ N lat., 124°12′42″ W long.) to
Buoy #3 (46°55′00″ N lat., 124°14′48″ W
long.) to the Grays Harbor north jetty
(46°55′36″ N lat., 124°10′51″ W long.).
c. Columbia Control Zone: An area at
the Columbia River mouth, bounded on
the west by a line running northeast/
southwest between the red lighted Buoy
#4 (46°13′35″ N lat., 124°06′50″ W long.)
and the green lighted Buoy #7
(46°15′09″ N lat., 124°06′16″ W long.);
on the east, by the Buoy #10 line which
bears north/south at 357° true from the
south jetty at 46°14′00″ N lat.,
124°03′07″ W long. to its intersection
with the north jetty; on the north, by a
line running northeast/southwest
between the green lighted Buoy #7 to
the tip of the north jetty (46°15′48″ N
lat., 124°05′20″ W long. and then along
the north jetty to the point of
intersection with the Buoy #10 line; and
on the south, by a line running
northeast/southwest between the red
lighted Buoy #4 and tip of the south
jetty (46°14′03″ N lat., 124°04′05″ W
long.), and then along the south jetty to
the point of intersection with the Buoy
#10 line.
d. Stonewall Bank YRCA: The area
defined by the following coordinates in
the order listed:
44°37.46′ N lat.; 124°24.92′ W long.
44°37.46′ N lat.; 124°23.63′ W long.
44°28.71′ N lat.; 124°21.80′ W long.
44°28.71′ N lat.; 124°24.10′ W long.
44°31.42′ N lat.; 124°25.47′ W long.
And connecting back to 44°37.46′ N
lat.; 124°24.92′ W long.
e. Klamath Control Zone: The ocean
area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41°38′48″ N
lat. (approximately 6 nm (11 km) north
of the Klamath River mouth); on the
west by 124°23′00″ W long.
(approximately 12 nm (22 km) offshore);
and, on the south by 41°26′48″ N lat.
(approximately 6 nm (11 km) south of
the Klamath River mouth).
C.5. Inseason Management
Regulatory modifications may become
necessary inseason to meet preseason
management objectives such as quotas,
harvest guidelines, and season duration.
In addition to standard inseason actions
or modifications already noted under
the Season Description heading above,
the following inseason guidance
applies:
a. Actions could include
modifications to bag limits, or days
open to fishing, and extensions or
reductions in areas open to fishing.
b. Coho salmon may be transferred
inseason among recreational subareas
north of Cape Falcon to help meet the
recreational season duration objectives
(for each subarea) after conferring with
representatives of the affected ports and
the Council’s SAS recreational
representatives north of Cape Falcon,
and if the transfer would not result in
exceeding preseason impact
expectations on any stocks.
c. Chinook salmon and coho salmon
may be transferred between the
recreational and commercial fisheries
north of Cape Falcon if there is
agreement among the representatives of
the SAS, and if the transfer would not
result in exceeding preseason impact
expectations on any stocks.
d. Fishery managers may consider
inseason action modifying regulations
restricting retention of unmarked
(adipose fin intact) coho salmon. To
remain consistent with preseason
expectations, any inseason action shall
consider, if significant, the difference
between observed and preseason
forecasted (adipose-clipped) mark rates.
Such a consideration may also include
a change in bag limit of two salmon, no
more than one of which may be a coho
salmon.
e. Marked coho salmon remaining
from the Cape Falcon to Oregon/
California Border: recreational markselective coho salmon quota may be
transferred inseason to the Cape Falcon
to Humbug Mountain non-markselective recreational fishery or the Cape
Falcon to Humbug Mountain
commercial troll fishery if the transfer
would not result in exceeding preseason
impact expectations on any stocks.
f. Deviations from the allocation of
allowable ocean harvest of coho salmon
in the area south of Cape Falcon may be
allowed in order to meet consultation
standards for ESA-listed stocks (FMP
5.3.2). Therefore, any rollovers that
result in a deviation from the south of
Cape Falcon coho salmon allocation
schedule between sectors would still
fall underneath this exemption.
g. Waypoints for the 40-fathom
regulatory line from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mountain (50 CFR
660.71(0)(12)–(62)), when in place.
C.6. Additional Seasons in State
Territorial Waters
Consistent with Council management
objectives, the states of Washington,
Oregon, and California may establish
limited seasons in state waters. Check
state regulations for details.
Section 3. Treaty Indian Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section
contain requirements that must be
followed for lawful participation in the
fishery.
Overall Chinook salmon and/or coho
salmon TACs may need to be reduced
or fisheries adjusted to meet NMFS ESA
guidance, FMP requirements, upon
conclusion of negotiations in the North
of Falcon forum, or upon receipt of
preseason catch and abundance
expectations for Canadian and Alaskan
fisheries.
In 2024, the season will open May 1,
consistent with all preseason
regulations in place for Treaty Indian
Troll fisheries during May 16–June 30,
2023. All catch in May 2024 applies
against the 2024 Treaty Indian Troll
fisheries quota. This opening could be
modified following Council review at its
March and/or April 2024 meetings.
A. Season Descriptions
May 1 through the earlier of June 30,
or 22,500 Chinook salmon quota.
All salmon may be retained except
coho salmon. If the Chinook salmon
quota is exceeded, the excess will be
deducted from the later all-salmon
season (see C.5). See size limit (see B)
and other restrictions (see C).
July 1 through the earlier of
September 15, or 22,500 Chinook
salmon quota or 57,000 coho salmon
quota.
All salmon. See size limit (see B) and
other restrictions (see C).
B. Minimum Size (Inches)
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TABLE 3—MINIMUM SIZE LIMITS FOR SALMON IN THE 2023 TREATY INDIAN OCEAN SALMON FISHERIES
Chinook
Coho
Area (when open)
Total length
(in)
Head-off
(in)
Total length
(in)
Head-off
(in)
North of Cape Falcon ..................................................................
24.0
18.0
16.0
12.0
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in 61.0 cm, 18.0 in 45.7 cm, 16.0 in 40.6 cm, 12.0 in 30.5 cm.
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C. Requirements, Definitions,
Restrictions, or Exceptions
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C.1. Tribe and Area Boundaries
All boundaries may be changed to
include such other areas as may
hereafter be authorized by a Federal
court for that tribe’s treaty fishery.
S’KLALLAM—Washington State
Statistical Area 4B (defined to include
those waters of Puget Sound easterly of
a line projected from the Bonilla Point
light on Vancouver Island to the
Tatoosh Island light, thence to the most
westerly point on Cape Flattery and
westerly of a line projected true north
from the fishing boundary marker at the
mouth of the Sekiu River [Washington
Administrative Code 220–301–030]).
MAKAH—Washington State
Statistical Area 4B and that portion of
the Fishery Management Area (FMA)
north of 48°02′15″ N lat. (Norwegian
Memorial) and east of 125°44′00″ W
long.
QUILEUTE—A polygon commencing
at Cape Alava, located at lat. 48°10′00″
N, long. 124°43′56.9″ W; then
proceeding west approximately 40 nm
(74 km) at that latitude to a
northwestern point located at lat.
48°10′00″ N, long. 125°44′00″ W; then
proceeding in a southeasterly direction
mirroring the coastline at a distance no
farther than 40 nm (74 km) from the
mainland Pacific coast shoreline at any
line of latitude, to a southwestern point
at lat. 47°31′42″ N, long. 125°20′26″ W;
then proceeding east along that line of
latitude to the Pacific coast shoreline at
lat. 47°31′42″ N, long. 124°21′9.0″ W.
HOH—That portion of the FMA
between 47°54′18″ N. lat. (Quillayute
River) and 47°21′00″ N lat. (Quinault
River) and east of 125°44′00″ W long.
QUINAULT—A polygon commencing
at the Pacific coast shoreline near
Destruction Island, located at lat.
47°40′06″ N, long. 124°23′51.362″ W;
then proceeding west approximately 30
nm (55.6 km) at that latitude to a
northwestern point located at lat.
47°40′06″ N, long. 125°08′30″ W; then
proceeding in a southeasterly direction
mirroring the coastline no farther than
30 nm (55.6 km) from the mainland
Pacific coast shoreline at any line of
latitude, to a southwestern point at lat.
46°53′18″ N, long. 124°53′53″ W; then
proceeding east along that line of
latitude to the Pacific coast shoreline at
lat. 46°53′18″ N, long. 124°7′36.6″ W.
C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Single point, single shank, barbless
hooks are required in all fisheries.
b. No more than eight fixed lines per
boat.
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c. No more than four hand held lines
per person in the Makah area fishery
(Washington State Statistical Area 4B
and that portion of the FMA north of
48°02′15″ N lat. (Norwegian Memorial)
and east of 125°44′00″ W long.).
C.3. Quotas
a. The quotas include troll catches by
the S’Klallam and Makah Tribes in
Washington State Statistical Area 4B
from May 1 through September 15.
b. The Quileute Tribe may continue a
ceremonial and subsistence fishery
during the time frame of October 1
through October 15 in the same manner
as in 2004–2015. Fish taken during this
fishery are to be counted against treaty
troll quotas established for the 2024
season (estimated harvest during the
October ceremonial and subsistence
fishery: 20 Chinook salmon; 40 coho
salmon).
C.4. Area Closures
a. The area within a 6 nm (11 km)
radius of the mouths of the Queets River
(47°31′42″ N lat.) and the Hoh River
(47°45′12″ N lat.) will be closed to
commercial fishing.
b. A closure within 2 nm (3.7 km) of
the mouth of the Quinault River
(47°21′00″ N lat.) may be enacted by the
Quinault Nation and/or the State of
Washington and will not adversely
affect the Secretary of Commerce’s
management regime.
C.5. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason
actions or modifications already noted
under the ‘‘Season Description’’ heading
above, the following inseason guidance
is provided by NMFS:
a. Chinook remaining from the May
through June treaty-Indian ocean troll
harvest guideline north of Cape Falcon
may be transferred to the July through
September harvest guideline on a
fishery impact equivalent basis.
Section 4. Halibut Retention
Under the authority of the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act, NMFS promulgated
regulations governing the Pacific halibut
fishery, which appear at 50 CFR part
300, subpart E. On March 7, 2023,
NMFS published a final rule
announcing the International Pacific
Halibut Commission’s (IPHC)
regulations, including season dates,
management measures, TAC for each
IPHC management area including the
U.S. West Coast (Area 2A), and Catch
Sharing Plan for the U.S. waters off of
Alaska (88 FR 14966, March 7, 2023).
The Area 2A Catch Sharing Plan, in
combination with the IPHC regulations,
provides that vessels participating in the
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salmon troll fishery in Area 2A, which
have obtained the appropriate permit,
may retain halibut caught incidentally
during authorized periods in
conformance with provisions published
with the annual salmon management
measures. A salmon troller may
participate in the halibut incidental
catch fishery during the salmon troll
season or in the directed commercial
fishery targeting halibut, but not both.
The following measures have been
approved by the IPHC and implemented
by NMFS. During authorized periods,
the operator of a vessel that has been
issued an incidental halibut harvest
permit may retain Pacific halibut caught
incidentally in Area 2A while trolling
for salmon. Halibut retained must be no
less than 32 inches (81.3 cm) in total
length, measured from the tip of the
lower jaw with the mouth closed to the
extreme end of the middle of the tail,
and must be landed with the head on.
Permit applications for incidental
harvest must be obtained from the WCR
Permits Office (phone: 562–980–4238 or
wcr-permits@noaa.gov). Applicants
must apply prior to March 1 for 2023
permits. Incidental harvest is authorized
only during April, May, and June of the
2023 salmon troll seasons and after June
30 in 2023 if the quota remains and if
announced on the NMFS hotline
(phone: 800–662–9825 or 206–526–
6667). WDFW, ODFW, and CDFW will
monitor landings. If the landings are
projected to exceed the 45,497 pound
(20,637 kg) preseason allocation or the
total Area 2A non-Indian commercial
halibut allocation, NMFS will take
inseason action to prohibit retention of
halibut in the non-Indian salmon troll
fishery.
Incidental halibut harvest regulations,
including season dates, management
measures, and TAC for each IPHC
management area, are listed under C.7
of Section 1: Commercial Management
Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries.
Section 5. Geographical Landmarks
Wherever the words ‘‘nautical miles
off shore’’ are used in this document,
the distance is measured from the
baseline from which the territorial sea is
measured.
Geographical landmarks referenced in
this document are at the following
locations:
U.S./Canada border .................
Cape Flattery, WA ...................
Cape Alava, WA ......................
Queets River, WA ....................
Leadbetter Point, WA ..............
Cape Falcon, OR ......................
South end Heceta Bank Line,
OR.
Humbug Mountain, OR ...........
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49°00′00″
48°23′00″
48°10′00″
47°31′42″
46°38′10″
45°46′00″
43°58′00″
N
N
N
N
N
N
N
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
42°40′30″ N lat.
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 91 / Thursday, May 11, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Oregon-California border ........
Humboldt South Jetty, CA ......
40°10′ line (near Cape
Mendocino, CA).
Horse Mountain, CA ...............
Point Arena, CA ......................
Point Reyes, CA .......................
Point San Pedro, CA ...............
Pigeon Point, CA .....................
Point Sur, CA ...........................
Point Conception, CA .............
U.S./Mexico border .................
42°00′00″ N lat.
40°45′53″ N lat.
40°10′00″ N lat.
40°05′00″
38°57′30″
37°59′44″
37°35′40″
37°11′00″
36°18′00″
34°27′00″
34°27′00″
N
N
N
N
N
N
N
N
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
lat.
Section 6. Inseason Notice Procedures
Notice of inseason management
actions will be provided by a telephone
hotline administered by the West Coast
Region, NMFS, 800–662–9825 or 206–
526–6667, and by USCG Notice to
Mariners broadcasts. These broadcasts
are announced on Channel 16 VHF–FM
and 2182 KHz at frequent intervals. The
announcements designate the channel
or frequency over which the Notice to
Mariners will be immediately broadcast.
Inseason actions will also be published
in the Federal Register as soon as
practicable. Since provisions of these
management measures may be altered
by inseason actions, fishermen should
monitor either the telephone hotline or
USCG broadcasts for current
information for the area in which they
are fishing.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Classification
NMFS is issuing this rule pursuant to
section 305(d) of the MSA. In a previous
action taken pursuant to section 304(b),
the Council designed the FMP to
authorize NMFS to take this action
pursuant to MSA section 305(d). See 50
CFR 660.408. These regulations are
being promulgated under the authority
of 16 U.S.C. 1855(d) and 16 U.S.C.
773(c).
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries finds good cause under 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B), to waive the
requirement for prior notice and
opportunity for public comment, as
such procedures would be impracticable
and contrary to the public interest.
The annual salmon management cycle
begins May 16 and continues through
May 15 of the following year. May 16
was chosen because it provides the
minimally necessary time required to
complete the necessary environmental
and economic analyses and regulatory
documentation following the April
Council meeting in time for the
Secretary of Commerce to approve and
implement the Council’s annual
recommendation. In addition, these
harvests constitute a relatively small
portion of the annual catch, allowing for
the majority of the season to be
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governed by the new management
measures rule. Analysis by the Council’s
Salmon Technical Team determined
that the pre-May 16 salmon harvests
would constitute a relatively small
portion of the annual catch. The time
frame of the preseason process for
determining the annual modifications to
ocean salmon fishery management
measures depends on when the
pertinent biological data are available.
Salmon stocks are managed to meet
annual spawning escapement goals or
specific exploitation rates. Achieving
either of these objectives requires
designing management measures that
are appropriate for the ocean abundance
predicted for that year. These pre-season
abundance forecasts, which are derived
from previous years’ observed spawning
escapement, vary substantially from
year to year and are not available until
February because spawning escapement
continues through the fall.
The preseason planning and public
review process associated with
developing Council recommendations is
initiated in February as soon as the
forecast information becomes available.
The public planning process requires
coordination of management actions of
four states, numerous Indian tribes, and
the Federal Government, all of which
have management authority over the
stocks. This complex process includes
the affected user groups, as well as the
general public. The process is
compressed into a 2-month period
culminating with the April Council
meeting at which the Council adopts a
recommendation that is forwarded to
NMFS for review, approval, and
implementation of fishing regulations
effective on May 16. Providing the
opportunity for prior notice and public
comments on the Council’s
recommended measures through a
proposed and final rulemaking process
would require 30 to 60 days in addition
to the 2-month period required for the
development of the regulations.
Delaying implementation of annual
fishing regulations, which are based on
the current stock abundance projections,
for an additional 60 days would require
that fishing regulations for May and
June be set in the previous year, without
the benefit of information regarding
current stock abundance. For the 2023
fishing regulations, the current stock
abundance was not available to the
Council until February. In addition,
information related to northern fisheries
and stock status in Alaska and Canada
which is important to assess the amount
of available salmon available to
southern U.S. ocean fisheries is not
available until mid-to late March.
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Because a substantial amount of fishing
normally occurs during late May and
June, managing the fishery with
measures developed using the prior
year’s data could have significant
adverse effects on the managed stocks,
including ESA-listed stocks. Although
salmon fisheries that open prior to May
16 are managed under measures
developed the previous year, as
modified by the Council at its March
and April meetings, relatively little
harvest occurs during that period (e.g.,
on average, 10 percent of commercial
and recreational harvest occurred prior
to May 1 during the years 2011 through
2018). Allowing the much more
substantial harvest levels normally
associated with the late-May and June
salmon seasons to be promulgated
under the prior year’s regulations would
impair NMFS’ ability to protect weak
and ESA-listed salmon stocks, and to
provide harvest opportunities where
appropriate. The choice of May 16 as
the beginning of the regulatory season
balances the need to gather and analyze
the data needed to meet the
management objectives of the salmon
FMP and the need to manage the fishery
using the best available scientific
information.
If the 2023 measures are not in place
on May 16, salmon fisheries will not
open as scheduled. This would result in
lost fishing opportunities, negative
economic impacts, and confusion for
the public as the state fisheries adopt
concurrent regulations that conform to
the Federal management measures.
In addition, these measures were
developed with significant public input.
Public comment was received and
considered by the Council and NMFS
throughout the process of developing
these management measures. As
described above, the Council took
comments at its March and April
meetings and heard summaries of
comments received at public meetings
held between the March and April
meetings for each of the coastal states.
NMFS also invited comments in a
notice published prior to the March
Council meeting, and considered
comments received by the Council
through its representative on the
Council.
Based upon the above-described need
to have these measures effective on May
16, and the fact that there is limited
time available to implement these new
measures after the final Council meeting
in April, and before the commencement
of the 2023 ocean salmon fishing year
on May 16, NMFS has concluded it
would be impracticable and contrary to
the public interest to provide an
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
opportunity for prior notice and public
comment under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries also finds that good cause
exists under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), to waive
the 30-day delay in the date of
effectiveness of this final rule. As
previously discussed, data were not
available until February, and
management measures were not
finalized until mid-April. These
measures are essential to conserve
threatened and endangered ocean
salmon stocks as well as potentially
overfished stocks, and to provide for the
harvest of more abundant stocks.
Delaying the date of effectiveness of
these measures by 30 days could
compromise the ability of some stocks
to attain their conservation objectives,
preclude harvest opportunity, and
negatively impact anticipated
international, state, and tribal salmon
fisheries, thereby undermining the
purposes of this agency action and the
requirements of the MSA.
To enhance the fishing industry’s
notification of these new measures, and
to minimize the burden on the regulated
community required to comply with the
new regulations, NMFS is announcing
the new measures over the telephone
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16:20 May 10, 2023
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hotline (800–662–9825 or 206–526–
6667) used for inseason management
actions and is posting the regulations on
its West Coast Region website
(www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/westcoast). NMFS is also advising the states
of Washington, Oregon, and California
of the new management measures.
These states announce the seasons for
applicable state and federal fisheries
through their own public notification
systems.
Because prior notice and an
opportunity for public comment are not
required to be provided for this rule by
5 U.S.C. 553, or any other law, the
analytical requirements of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
et seq., are not applicable. Accordingly,
no Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is
required for this rule and none has been
prepared.
This action contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), and
which have been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
under control number 0648–0433. The
current information collection approval
expires on February 29, 2024. The
public reporting burden for providing
notifications if landing area restrictions
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
cannot be met is estimated to average 15
minutes per response. This estimate
includes the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
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 PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
This final rule was developed after
meaningful consultation with the tribal
representative on the Council who has
agreed with the provisions that apply to
tribal vessels.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773–773k; 1801 et
seq.
Dated: May 8, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–10090 Filed 5–10–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\11MYR1.SGM
11MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 91 (Thursday, May 11, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 30235-30250]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10090]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 230508-0124]
RIN 0648-BL66
Fisheries Off West Coast States; West Coast Salmon Fisheries;
2023 Specifications and Management Measures
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this final rule, NMFS establishes fishery management
measures for the 2023 ocean salmon fisheries off Washington, Oregon,
and California, and the 2024 salmon seasons opening earlier than May
16, 2024, under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (MSA). The fishery management measures
vary by fishery and by area, and establish fishing areas, seasons,
quotas, legal gear, recreational fishing days and catch limits,
possession and landing restrictions, and minimum lengths for salmon
taken in the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) (3-200 nautical miles
(nm); 5.6-370.4 kilometers (km)) off Washington, Oregon, and
California. The management measures are intended to prevent overfishing
and to apportion the ocean harvest equitably among treaty Indian, non-
Indian commercial, and recreational fisheries. The measures are also
intended to allow a portion of the salmon runs to escape the ocean
fisheries in order to provide for spawning escapement, comply with
applicable law, and to provide fishing opportunity for inside fisheries
(fisheries occurring in state waters).
DATES: This final rule is effective from 0001 hours Pacific daylight
time, May 16, 2023, until the effective date of the 2024 management
measures, as published in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: The documents cited in this document are available on the
Pacific Fishery Management Council's (Council's) website
(www.pcouncil.org).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shannon Penna at 562-980-4239, Email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The ocean salmon fisheries in the EEZ off the coasts of Washington,
Oregon, and California are managed under a framework fishery management
plan (FMP). Regulations at 50 CFR part 660, subpart H, provide the
mechanism for making preseason and inseason adjustments to the
management measures within limits set by the FMP by notification in the
Federal Register. Regulations at 50 CFR 660.408 govern the
establishment of annual management measures.
Through this rule, NMFS is implementing the management measures for
the 2023 and early 2024 ocean salmon fisheries that were recommended by
the Council at its April 1 to 7, 2023, meeting and transmitted to NMFS
on April 18, 2023.
Process Used To Establish 2023 Management Measures
The Council announced its annual preseason management process for
the 2023 ocean salmon fisheries on the Council's website at
www.pcouncil.org (December 9, 2022), and in the Federal Register on
December 12, 2021 (87 FR 76027). NMFS published an additional notice of
opportunity to submit public comments on the 2023 ocean salmon
fisheries in the Federal Register on January 12, 2023 (88 FR 2061).
These notices announced the availability of Council documents, the
dates and locations of Council meetings and public hearings comprising
the Council's complete schedule of events for determining the annual
proposed and final modifications to ocean salmon fishery management
measures, and instructions on how to comment on the development of the
2023 ocean salmon fisheries. The agendas for the March and April
Council meetings were published in the Federal Register (88 FR 10095,
February 16, 2023, and 88 FR 16239, March 16, 2023), and posted on the
Council's website prior to the meetings.
In accordance with the FMP, the Council's Salmon Technical Team
(STT) and economist prepared four reports for the Council, its
advisors, and the public. All four reports were made available on the
Council's website upon their completion. The first of the reports,
``Review of 2022 Ocean Salmon Fisheries,'' was prepared in February
when the first increment of scientific information necessary for
crafting management measures for the 2023 and early 2024 ocean salmon
fisheries became available. The first report summarizes biological and
socio-economic data from the 2022 ocean salmon fisheries and assesses
the performance of the fisheries with respect to the 2022 management
objectives for salmon stocks and stock complexes as well as provides
historical
[[Page 30236]]
information for comparison. The second report, ``Preseason Report I
Stock Abundance Analysis and Environmental Assessment Part 1 for 2023
Ocean Salmon Fishery Regulations'' (PRE I), provides the 2023 salmon
stock abundance projections and analyzes how the stocks and Council
management goals would be affected if the 2022 management measures (the
No-Action Alternative under the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)) were continued for the 2023/2024 fishing season. The completion
of PRE I is the initial step in developing and evaluating the full
suite of preseason alternatives.
Following completion of the first two reports, the Council met from
March 4 to 10, 2023, to develop 2023 management alternatives for
proposal to the public and consideration under NEPA. The Council
proposed three alternatives for commercial and recreational fisheries
management, and three alternatives for treaty Indian fisheries
management for analysis and public comment. These alternatives
consisted of various combinations of management measures designed to
ensure that stocks of coho and Chinook salmon meet conservation goals,
to provide for ocean harvests of more abundant stocks, to provide
equitable sharing of harvest among ports and gear sectors, and to
provide for the exercise of Indian tribal treaty fishing rights. After
the March Council meeting, the Council's STT and economist prepared a
third report, ``Preseason Report II Proposed Alternatives and
Environmental Assessment Part 2 for 2023 Ocean Salmon Fishery
Regulations'' (PRE II), which analyzes the effects of the proposed 2023
management alternatives. As requested in public comment, the no-action
alternative was included in a comparison of the impacts to Klamath
River Fall Chinook salmon (KRFC) and Sacramento River Fall Chinook
salmon (SRFC) by management area, month, and salmon gear sector across
the alternatives in Appendix tables A-2 and A-3.
The Council sponsored public hearings in person to receive
testimony on the proposed alternatives on March 20, 2023, for
Washington and Oregon, and on March 21, 2023, for California. In
addition, the states of Washington, Oregon, and California sponsored
meetings in various forums that also collected public testimony. The
Council also received public testimony at both the March and April
meetings, and received written comments at the Council office and
electronic submissions via the Council's electronic portal and via
www.regulations.gov.
The Council met from April 1 to 7, 2023, to adopt its final 2023
ocean salmon management recommendations; which it did on April 6, 2023.
Following the April Council meeting, the Council's STT and economist
prepared a fourth report, ``Preseason Report III Analysis of Council-
Adopted Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon Fisheries'' (PRE
III), which analyzes the environmental and socioeconomic effects of the
Council's final recommendations (the Council's Proposed Action under
NEPA). The Council transmitted the recommended management measures to
NMFS on April 18, 2023, and published them on its website
(www.pcouncil.org).
At its March and April meetings, the Council heard testimony from
members of several federally recognized tribes including tribes with
treaty rights for salmon harvest; additional tribal comments were
submitted in writing. Tribes expressed concerns over the uncertainty of
forecasts for some stocks in 2023 and urged the Council to be
conservative in setting the salmon seasons. Some Tribes suggested
additional measures to improve estimation of stock composition and
impact rates in lower Columbia River fisheries. Tribes also expressed
concerns over the underutilization of hatcheries as a salmon recovery
tool while ensuring the operation of the hatcheries minimizing any
potential risks to natural-origin fish.
Under the FMP, the ocean salmon management cycle begins May 16 and
continues through May 15 of the following year. This final rule is
effective on May 16, 2023, consistent with the FMP. Fisheries that
begin prior to May 16, 2023, are governed by the final rule
implementing the salmon fishery management measures for the 2022 ocean
salmon season (87 FR 29690, May 16, 2022). The majority of fisheries
recommended by the Council for 2023 begin May 16, 2023, and are
authorized under this rule. Salmon fisheries scheduled to begin before
May 16, 2023 under the 2022 rule, are:
Commercial ocean salmon fisheries from the U.S./Canada
border to the U.S./Mexico border,
Recreational ocean salmon fisheries from Cape Falcon, OR,
to Humbug Mountain, OR,
Recreational ocean salmon fisheries from the Oregon/
California border to the U.S./Mexico border, and
Treaty Indian troll ocean salmon fisheries north of Cape
Falcon.
Several fisheries scheduled to open between March 15, 2023, and May
15, 2023, have been modified through inseason action to close the
fisheries in response to updated salmon stock forecast information for
2023. For purposes of analyzing the impacts of these fisheries on
individual stocks relative to the applicable objectives in the FMP,
Council analysts assumed fisheries between March 15 to May 15, 2023,
would be conducted under the 2022 management measures as modified by
the subsequent inseason actions under 50 CFR 660.409.
National Environmental Policy Act
The environmental assessment (EA) for this action comprises the
Council's documents described above (PRE I, PRE II, and PRE III),
providing an analysis of environmental and socioeconomic effects under
NEPA. The EA and its related Finding of No Significant Impact are
posted on the NMFS West Coast Region website (www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/west-coast).
Resource Status
Stocks of Concern
The FMP requires that the fisheries be managed to meet escapement-
based annual catch limits (ACLs), Endangered Species Act (ESA)
consultation requirements, obligations of the Pacific Salmon Treaty
(PST) between the U.S. and Canada, and other conservation objectives
detailed in the FMP. In addition, under the MSA, all regulations must
be consistent with other applicable laws. Because the ocean salmon
fisheries are mixed-stock fisheries, ``weak stock'' management is
required to avoid exceeding limits for the stocks with the most
constraining limits. Abundance forecasts for individual salmon stocks
can vary significantly from one year to the next; therefore, the stocks
that constrain the fishery in one year may differ from those that
constrain the fishery in the next. For 2023, several stocks will
constrain fisheries; these are described below.
Fisheries south of Cape Falcon are limited in 2023 primarily by
conservation concerns for KRFC, SRFC, and the ESA-listed Oregon Coast
natural (OCN) coho salmon Evolutionarily Significant Unit (ESU), and
the ESA-listed California Coastal (CC) Chinook salmon ESU. In 2018,
NMFS determined that the KRFC stock was overfished, as defined under
the MSA and the FMP. KRFC has not been rebuilt, thus continues to be
managed under a rebuilding plan (85 FR 75920, November 27, 2020). In
addition to KRFC, three coho salmon stocks (Queets River natural coho
salmon, Strait of Juan de Fuca natural coho salmon, and Snohomish River
natural coho salmon) were determined in 2018 to be
[[Page 30237]]
overfished and continue to be managed under rebuilding plans (86 FR
9301, February 12, 2021). Meeting conservation objectives for these
three coho salmon stocks will not constrain fisheries in 2023.
Fisheries north of Cape Falcon are limited by conservation
requirements for ESA-listed lower Columbia River (LCR) natural tule
Chinook salmon. The limitations imposed in order to protect this stock
are described below. The alternatives and the Council's adopted
management measures for 2023 were designed to avoid exceeding these
limitations.
KRFC (non-ESA-listed): Abundance for this non-ESA-listed stock in
the last decade has been historically low, and the stock continues to
meet the criteria for overfished based on spawning escapement in 2019,
2020, and 2021. The FMP defines ``overfished'' status in terms of a 3-
year geometric mean escapement level and whether it is below the
minimum stock size threshold (MSST). The KRFC salmon stock has been
below its conservation objective in 7 of the last 8 years, and has been
managed under de minimus exploitation rates that apply when forecast
escapement is below the level associated with maximum sustainable yield
(SMSY) since 2020. Based on the current harvest control
rule, given the 2023 abundance forecast, the lowest level of de minimis
fishing this year applies, i.e., a total allowable exploitation rate of
10 percent (including all ocean and river fisheries, including tribal
fisheries). This will constrain fisheries south of Cape Falcon. The
Council's recommended management measures are forecast to result in a
spawning escapement of 23,615 KRFC natural spawners, which is below the
stock's minimum stock size threshold (MSST) (30,525). A natural-area
escapement of 23,615 adults would represent the 12th lowest value over
the past 45 years of data. Fisheries managed under the Council's
recommended management measures for 2023 for the ocean areas south of
Cape Falcon are projected to impact 0 KRFC salmon.
SRFC (non-ESA-listed): SRFC abundance in recent years has been low
compared with its conservation objective. In 2021, NMFS declared the
SRFC salmon stock rebuilt (87 FR 25429) due to several years of higher
escapements. However, low flows and high temperatures in the Sacramento
River associated with drought in recent years have adversely affected
the stock, escapements in recent years have once again been low.
Spawner abundance has been below the SMSY value of 122,000
in 6 of the last 8 years. The 2022 SRFC escapement was 61,850 Chinook
salmon, which is one-half of the SMSY of 122,000 and the
third lowest escapement since 1970. The 3-year geometric mean of
spawners is now 102,155 (2020, 2021, and 2022) as compared with the
MSST of 91,500 at which the stock would meet the criteria of
overfished. The 2023 forecast is one of the lowest on record. Of
additional concern with respect to the forecast, forecasts have been
higher than the post-season estimates in 6 of the last 8 years by an
average of 41 percent. The low forecast for 2023 combined with the
recent significant overforecasts increase the risk that SRFC could
become overfished again. Taking these factors into consideration, the
Council has recommended management measures that are forecast to result
in a spawning escapement of 165,000 SRFC natural spawners (although it
does not account for the potential forecast error), which is above the
escapement goal floor of 122,000. Additionally, according to the STT's
projections, only 93 SRFC salmon would be impacted by the fisheries
conducted under the Council's recommended 2023 management measures for
the ocean management areas south of Cape Falcon.
CC Chinook salmon--ESA-listed Threatened: The CC Chinook salmon ESU
has been listed as threatened under the ESA since 1999. As considered
in the most recent biological opinion addressing the effects of the
fishery on CC Chinook salmon, fisheries are managed to avoid exceeding
a 16 percent age-4 ocean harvest rate on KRFC salmon. This measure is
used as a surrogate for impacts to CC Chinook salmon, for which
information on fishery impacts is extremely limited. The post-season
assessment of the 2022 ocean fisheries indicated that the take limit
for CC Chinook salmon described in the current biological opinion and
Incidental Take Statement had been exceeded. Therefore, in the guidance
letter it provided to the Council at its March meeting, NMFS stated
that the Council should implement additional measures to avoid
exceedance in 2023. Specifically, the guidance letter stated that the
Council should (1) manage the 2023 ocean salmon fisheries for a
buffered preseason age-4 KRFC rate of 10 percent, and (2) provide for
inseason management measures to ensure impacts remain within preseason
projections.
The recommended 2023 management measures close Chinook salmon
directed commercial and recreational fisheries off the California
coast, close commercial salmon fishing in coastal waters south of mid-
Oregon, and allow only for recreational fisheries targeting coho salmon
off the coast of Oregon. The resulting projected KRFC age-4 ocean
harvest rate from these fisheries is 0.3 percent, well below a KRFC
age-4 ocean harvest rate of 10 percent. Fisheries south of Cape Falcon
scheduled to open prior to May 16, 2024, could be modified through
inseason action following Council consideration of these early season
fisheries in the context of the 2024 preliminary management measures
and stock abundance forecasts for 2024.
NMFS has reinitiated consultation on the effects of the fisheries
on CC Chinook salmon, and anticipates completing this consultation
before commencement of 2024 fisheries. NMFS has determined that,
consistent with sections 7(a)(2) and 7(d) of the ESA, the fisheries
conducted under the 2023 management measures will not jeopardize the CC
Chinook salmon ESU, would not adversely modify designated critical
habitat, and will not result in any irreversible or irretrievable
commitment of resources that would have the effect of foreclosing the
formulation or implementation of any reasonable and prudent alternative
measures.
OCN coho salmon (ESA-listed threatened): OCN coho salmon is an
aggregate coho salmon stock that largely corresponds to the Oregon
coast coho salmon ESU and is a component of the Oregon Production Index
(OPI) area coho salmon. Allowable fishery impacts on OCN coho salmon
are determined annually using a matrix that considers parental
escapement and OPI smolt-to-jack survival. The maximum allowable
exploitation rate for 2023 salmon fisheries is a combined marine/
freshwater exploitation rate not to exceed 20 percent. In 2023, OCN
coho salmon is the limiting coho salmon stock for south of Cape Falcon.
The adopted management measures result in a projected exploitation rate
of 19.8 percent compared with the maximum allowed 20 percent total
exploitation rate (i.e., marine exploitation rate of 14.1 percent and a
freshwater exploitation rate of 5.8 percent as rounded to the nearest
tenth of a percent).
LCR Chinook salmon (ESA-listed threatened): The LCR Chinook salmon
ESU comprises a spring component, a ``far-north'' migrating bright
component, and a tule component. The bright and tule components both
have fall run timing. There are twenty-one separate populations within
the tule component of this ESU. Unlike the spring or bright populations
of the ESU, LCR tule populations are caught in large numbers in Council
fisheries, as well as fisheries
[[Page 30238]]
to the north and in the Columbia River. Therefore, this component of
the ESU is the one most likely to constrain Council fisheries in the
area north of Cape Falcon. Council fisheries are managed subject to an
abundance-based management (ABM) framework that NMFS analyzed in a 2012
biological opinion, after accounting for anticipated impacts in
northern fisheries and freshwater fisheries that are outside the action
area. Applying the ABM framework to the 2023 preseason abundance
forecast, the total LCR tule exploitation rate for all salmon fisheries
is limited to a maximum of 38 percent. Fisheries will be constrained
north of Cape Falcon in 2023 such that, when combined with all other
salmon fisheries in the ocean and in the Columbia River below
Bonneville Dam, the ESA requirement is met.
Other Resource Issues
Southern Resident Killer Whale (SRKW) (ESA-listed endangered): The
SRKW distinct population segment (DPS) was listed under the ESA as
endangered in 2005 (70 FR 69903, November 18, 2005). After convening
and receiving recommendations from a SRKW ad-hoc workgroup, the Council
adopted and transmitted to NMFS Amendment 21 to the FMP that includes
management measures to address the effects of the fisheries on SRKW. In
April 2021, after concluding in a biological opinion that fisheries
managed under the FMP including Amendment 21 was not likely to
jeopardize SRKW or adversely affect SRKW critical habitat, NMFS
approved the Amendment (86 FR 51017, September 14, 2021). The FMP as
amended establishes a Chinook salmon annual abundance management
threshold below which the Council and NMFS would implement specific
measures to limit the effects of the ocean salmon fishery on Chinook
salmon prey availability for SRKWs. These measures include time and
area closures, a quota limitation for the north of Cape Falcon
management area, and temporal shifts in fishing. Amendment 21 provides
that the Chinook salmon abundance threshold may need to be updated from
the value calculated at the time of the amendment to reflect new
scientific information as it becomes available. At its November 2022
meeting, the Council adopted a change to the Chinook salmon abundance
threshold for north of Cape Falcon management area that is used as a
management measure to address the effect of Council-area ocean salmon
fisheries on the Chinook salmon prey base of SRKW that was implemented
under Amendment 21 (Decision Summary Document, November 15, 2023 PFMC).
The change incorporated recent updates to two models used to calculate
the threshold (FRAM 2022,\1\ Shelton et al. 2021). The STT provided a
report reviewing the updates to the models to aid the Council in
determining the appropriate numerical value of the threshold (November
2022, Agenda Item D.2.a, Supplemental STT Report 2). The updated
Chinook salmon abundance threshold is 623,000 Chinook salmon. This new
value was reported to the Council in the above-reference preseason
reports as required by the FMP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Salmon modeling and analysis workgroup. 2022. FRAM
Documentation. https://framverse.github.io/fram_doc/ built October
14, 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Council considered the Chinook salmon abundance relative to the
provisions of Amendment 21 when developing the recommended 2023 annual
management measures. Because the pre-season estimate of the abundance
of Chinook salmon in 2023 (889,900) exceeds the threshold in the FMP
(623,000), the Council did not recommend implementation of the
additional management measures included in the FMP under Amendment 21
(Preseason Report III; PFMC 2023). The 2023 management measures are
consistent with the FMP including Amendment 21.
ACLs and Status Determination Criteria
ACLs are required for all stocks or stock complexes in the fishery
that are not managed under an international agreement, listed under the
ESA, or designated as hatchery stocks. For salmon, these reference
points are defined in terms of spawner escapement. ACLs are set for two
Chinook salmon stocks, SRFC and KRFC, and one coho salmon stock,
Willapa Bay natural coho salmon. The Chinook salmon stocks are
indicator stocks for the Central Valley Fall Chinook salmon complex,
and the Southern Oregon/Northern California Chinook salmon complex,
respectively. The Far North Migrating Coastal Chinook salmon complex
(FNMC) includes a group of Chinook salmon stocks that are caught
primarily in fisheries north of Cape Falcon and other fisheries that
occur north of the U.S./Canada border. No ACL is set for FNMC stocks
because they are managed subject to provisions of the PST between the
U.S. and Canada (the MSA provides an international exception from ACL
requirements that applies to stocks or stock complexes subject to
management under an international agreement, which is defined as ``any
bilateral or multilateral treaty, convention, or agreement which
relates to fishing and to which the U.S. is a party'' (50 CFR
600.310(h)(1)(ii)). The Columbia Upper River Bright Fall and Summer
Chinook salmon stocks are also managed under the provisions of the PST.
Other Chinook salmon stocks caught in fisheries north of Cape Falcon
are ESA-listed or hatchery produced, and are managed consistent with
ESA consultations or hatchery goals. Willapa Bay natural coho salmon is
the only coho salmon stock for which an ACL is set, as the other coho
salmon stocks in the FMP are either ESA-listed, hatchery produced, or
managed under the PST.
ACLs for salmon stocks are escapement-based, which means they
establish a number of adults that must escape the fisheries to return
to the spawning grounds. ACLs are set based on the annual potential
spawner abundance forecast and a fishing rate reduced to account for
scientific uncertainty. In addition to ACLs, SRFC and KRFC have
conservation objectives expressed in terms of escapement goals that
were developed prior to the requirement for ACLs. Where the
conservation objectives exceed the ACLs, the Council designs fisheries
to achieve the conservation objectives. In developing the 2023
management measures, the Council considered the factors for SRFC and
KRFC discussed in sections above.
For SRFC in 2023, the overfishing limit (OFL) is SOFL =
169,767 (potential spawner abundance forecast) multiplied by 1-
FMSY (1-0.78) or 37,349 returning spawners (FMSY
is the fishing mortality rate that would result in maximum sustainable
yield--MSY). SABC (the spawner escapement that is associated
with the acceptable biological catch) is 169,767 multiplied by 1-
FABC (1-0.70) (FMSY reduced for scientific
uncertainty = 0.70) or 50,930. The SACL is set equal to
SABC, i.e., 50,930 spawners. The adopted management measures
provide for a projected SRFC spawning escapement of 164,964.
For KRFC in 2023, SOFL is 26,238 (potential spawner
abundance forecast) multiplied by 1-FMSY (1-0.71), or 7,609
returning spawners. SABC is 26,238 multiplied by 1-
FABC (1-0.68) (FMSY reduced for scientific
uncertainty = 0.68) or 8,396 returning spawners. SACL is set
equal to SABC, i.e., 8,396 spawners. The adopted management
measures provide for a projected KRFC spawning escapement of 23,615.
For Willapa Bay natural coho salmon in 2023, SOFL =
59,417 (potential
[[Page 30239]]
spawner abundance forecast) multiplied by 1-FMSY (1-0.74) or
15,448 returning spawners. SABC is 59,417 multiplied by 1-
FABC (1-0.70) (FMSY reduced for scientific
uncertainty = 0.70) or 17,825. SACL is set equal to
SABC, i.e., 17,825 spawners. The adopted management measures
provide for a projected Willapa Bay natural coho salmon spawning
escapement of 22,066.
In summary, fisheries managed under the Council's recommended 2023
management measures are expected to result in escapements greater than
required to meet the ACLs for all three stocks with defined ACLs.
Public Comments
The Council invited written comments on developing 2023 salmon
management measures in their notice announcing public meetings and
hearings (87 FR 76027, December 12, 2022). At its March meeting, the
Council developed three alternatives for 2023 commercial and
recreational salmon management measures having a range of quotas,
season structure, and impacts, from the least restrictive in
Alternative I to the most restrictive in Alternative III, as well as
three alternatives for 2023 North of Cape Falcon treaty Indian troll
salmon management measures. These alternatives are described in detail
in PRE II. Subsequently, comments were taken at three public hearings
held in March, staffed by representatives of the Council and NMFS. The
Council received 59 written comments via their electronic portal and 19
oral comments on 2023 ocean salmon fisheries including members of the
public that commented several times. The three public hearings were
attended by a total of 93 people; 28 people provided oral comments.
Comments came from individual fishers, fishing associations, fish
buyers, processors, the general public, and conservation organizations.
Written and oral comments addressed the 2023 management alternatives
described in PRE II and generally expressed preferences for a specific
alternative or for particular season structures. All written comments
were made available via the Council's online briefing books for the
March and April 2023 Council meetings. In addition to comments
collected at the public hearings and those submitted directly to the
Council, several people provided oral comments at the March and April
2023 Council meetings. Written and oral comments received were
considered by the Council, which includes a representative from NMFS,
in developing the recommended management measures transmitted to NMFS
on April 18, 2022. NMFS also invited comments to be submitted directly
to the Council or to NMFS, via the Federal Rulemaking Portal
(www.regulations.gov) in a notice (88 FR 2061, January 12, 2023); NMFS
received no comments via the Federal Rulemaking Portal.
Comments on alternatives for commercial salmon fisheries. Many
written comments were from commercial salmon fishermen located on the
coast of California. Of those written comments, the majority supported
Alternative I. Those testifying on north of Cape Falcon commercial
salmon fisheries at the Washington hearing supported the 85,000 total
allowable catch for Chinook salmon in Alternative I and an allocation
schedule more consistent with long term catch percentage averages for
tule Chinook salmon. They expressed concern about the negative economic
impact of recent decreases in quota but were encouraged by this year's
forecasts and the potential boost to ocean fisheries. Those testifying
on south of Cape Falcon commercial salmon fisheries at the Oregon
hearing supported Alternative I. Those testifying on south of Cape
Falcon commercial salmon fisheries at the California hearing largely
supported a full closure given the low forecasts for California salmon
stocks. The Council adopted commercial fishing measures north and south
of Cape Falcon that are within the range of the alternatives
considered.
Comments on alternatives for recreational fisheries. Many written
comments did not identify the fishery being commented on, either by
geography or sector. Those that did submit written comments
specifically on recreational fisheries supported Alternative I almost
unanimously. Those testifying on north of Cape Falcon favored
Alternative I and opening the ocean recreational fishing as early as
possible with a season structure that will allow for a stable season
lasting into September. In addition, several written and oral comments
supported the opportunity for a ``bubble'' fishery for Tillamook Bay,
OR. Those commenting on fisheries south of Cape Falcon were in favor of
both Alternative I and II, with those in California supporting a
closure of all areas. Several comments addressed the structure of the
rollover of any surplus mark-selective coho salmon quota in the Cape
Falcon to the Oregon/California border area. Commenters felt that it
would be a better option to allow the transfer of quota between
recreational and commercial fisheries on an impact neutral basis,
prioritizing the needs of the recreational fishery. The Council adopted
recreational fishing measures north and south of Cape Falcon that are
within the range of alternatives considered.
Additional comments were made regarding the closure of fisheries in
southern Oregon from Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain. Key comments were
summarized for response.
Comment 1: The three alternatives did not allow the EA to evaluate,
nor provide public review, of anything other than a complete closure.
The Council should have considered at least one alternative with an
open season.
Response: NMFS reviewed the alternatives proposed in public
comments for the 2023 season and concluded that the proposals are very
similar to the fisheries that were in place for the south of Cape
Falcon area in 2022, and are thus part of the No-Action Alternative.
Therefore, the suggested alternative was effectively evaluated as the
No-Action Alternative, which is comprised of the prior year's
management measures, in this case the 2022 measures. In PRE I, the
effects of the No-Action Alternative with the current year's (2023)
salmon forecasts are evaluated so that the Council can consider the
effects of those fishing regimes on the achievement of conservation
objectives and other FMP provisions under 2023 forecasts. Those
forecasts reflect the effect of environmental conditions and other
factors influencing the survival of salmon stocks returning in 2023
that may have been different than those affecting salmon stocks
returning in 2022. As requested by one commenter, impacts of the No-
Action Alternative, inclusive of the fishery suggested by the
commenter, was included in a comparison of the impacts to KRFC and SRFC
by management area, month, and salmon gear sector across the
alternatives in Appendix tables A-2 and A-3 of PRE-II.
Comment 2: Open a bubble fishery for Tillamook Bay.
Response: The commenter proposed a bubble fishery that would extend
the area around Tillamook Bay in particular to provide opportunity to
catch hatchery spring Chinook salmon. In the past, bubble fisheries
have been used to allow limited fishing with very low impacts on
constraining stocks where Chinook salmon retention inside the bubble
was limited to marked fish. Although a bubble fishery would provide
opportunities to access hatchery spring-run Chinook salmon destined for
Tillamook Bay, there is no way to model the impacts solely within the
bubble. It is only possible to model the impacts as if the entire south
of Cape Falcon area to the southern end of the Heceta Bank
[[Page 30240]]
area was open. When the requested bubble area was open in the past, all
of the data for catch in that area was mixed with ocean fisheries data.
As a result, it is impossible to model and evaluate potential impacts
of the bubble fishery alone. Fishing opportunities are available inside
Tillamook Bay and the river to harvest fish returning to that area
including Tillamook River spring Chinook salmon without accruing
impacts to SRFC and KRFC stocks. Additionally, the proposed bubble
fishery is entirely in Oregon state waters. The Council weighed the
proposal together with the collective public comments and advice from
the Council advisory bodies, and concluded that the expected harvest
and opportunity from the proposed bubble fishery did not provide the
level of benefit that the alternatives with greater spatial and
temporal access to coho salmon did for the limited level of KRFC and
SRFC impacts accrued.
The control rules for KRFC and SRFC describe maximum allowable
exploitation rates at any given level of abundance. The FMP provides
that the Council may recommend lower exploitation rates as needed to
address uncertainties or other year specific circumstances (PFMC 2022).
The Council recommended more conservative management measures that
result in lower exploitation rates after considering the uncertainties,
low 2023 abundance forecasts and other information described previously
in this Rule.
Comments on SRKW. NMFS and the Council received comments from
several non-governmental organizations (NGOs) regarding SRKW, with one
NGO providing 43,745 supporting signatures. Some comments directed at
the 2023 annual management measures requested restrictions beyond those
included in the Council's alternatives for 2023 ocean salmon management
measures, requesting further restriction of catch limits, limiting size
of quotas, limiting season lengths, reducing salmon bycatch, and
closing additional areas to fishing. The majority of these comments
reiterated comments NMFS previously addressed in the final EA for FMP
Amendment 21 (https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov//action/amendment-21-pacific-coast-salmon-fishery-management-plan) and in the notice of
agency decision (86 FR 51017, September 14, 2021); these comments are
critical of Amendment 21 rather than the specifics of the 2023
management measures. In other comments, the NGOs expressed concern that
the preseason forecast is biased high and would prefer management
measures that would make more Chinook salmon available as prey for
SRKW. The Council developed the management measures consistent with the
FMP including Amendment 21, which NMFS evaluated consistent with NEPA,
and in an ESA biological opinion concluding fisheries managed according
to the provisions are not likely to jeopardize SRKW.
The Council, including the NMFS representative, took all of these
comments into consideration. The Council's final recommendation
generally includes aspects of all three alternatives, while taking into
account the best available scientific information, best use of limited
opportunity given impacts to stocks of concern, and ensuring that
fisheries are consistent with impact limits and accountability measures
for ESA-listed species, ACLs, PST obligations, MSA requirements, and
tribal fishing rights. The Council and NMFS also considered comments on
the NEPA analysis in preparing the final EA.
2023 Specifications and Management Measures
The Council's recommended ocean harvest levels and management
measures for the 2023 fisheries are designed to apportion the burden of
protecting the weak stocks identified and discussed in PRE I equitably
among ocean fisheries and to allow maximum harvest of natural and
hatchery runs surplus to inside fishery and spawning needs. NMFS finds
the Council's recommendations to be responsive to the goals of the FMP,
the requirements of the resource, and the socioeconomic factors
affecting resource users. The recommendations are consistent with the
requirements of the MSA, U.S. obligations to Indian tribes with
federally recognized fishing rights, and U.S. international obligations
regarding Pacific salmon. The Council's recommended management measures
are consistent with the proposed actions analyzed in NMFS' ESA
consultations for those ESA-listed species that may be affected by
Council fisheries, and are otherwise consistent with ESA obligations.
Accordingly, NMFS, through this final rule, approves and implements the
Council's recommendations.
North of Cape Falcon, 2023 management measures for non-Indian
commercial troll and recreational fisheries have slightly increased
quotas for Chinook salmon compared to 2022 due to the increased
forecasts of Columbia River hatchery tule Chinook salmon. This includes
a combined production of returning lower Columbia River hatchery
Chinook salmon and Spring Creek Hatchery Chinook salmon. The 2023 coho
salmon quotas are slightly decreased but similar to the 2022 quota due
to similar abundance forecasts for Columbia River and coastal
Washington coho salmon stocks and constrained by low forecasts for
Thompson River natural coho salmon. Overall, north of Cape Falcon non-
Indian commercial and recreational total allowable catch (TAC) in 2023
is 78,000 Chinook salmon and 190,000 coho salmon marked with a healed
adipose fin clip. The commercial troll fishery, north of Cape Falcon,
will have a May-June Chinook salmon only fishery with a quota of 26,000
Chinook salmon, and a July-September fishery with a quota of 13,000
Chinook salmon or 30,400 marked coho salmon. The recreational fishery,
north of Cape Falcon, will have a June-September fishery with a TAC of
39,000 Chinook salmon and 159,600 marked coho salmon, with subarea
quotas.
Quotas for the 2023 treaty-Indian commercial troll fishery north of
Cape Falcon are 45,000 Chinook salmon and 57,000 coho salmon in ocean
management areas and Washington State Statistical Area 4B combined.
These quotas provide a slightly higher amount of Chinook salmon and
substantially more coho salmon than in 2022. The treaty-Indian
commercial fisheries include a May-June fishery with a quota of 22,500
Chinook salmon, and a July-September fishery, with quotas of 22,500
Chinook salmon and 57,000 coho salmon.
South of Cape Falcon, 2023 commercial troll and recreational
fishery management measures are designed to meet conservation and
management goals for KRFC and SRFC spawning escapement and to not
exceed the ESA-take limits for CC Chinook salmon and OCN Chinook
salmon. Overall, south of Cape Falcon non-Indian commercial TAC for
coho salmon is 10,000. For the recreational fishery, overall coho
salmon TAC is 110,000 coho salmon marked with a healed adipose fin clip
(marked), and 25,000 coho salmon in the non-mark-selective coho salmon
fishery.
The timing of the March and April Council meetings makes it
impracticable for the Council to recommend fishing seasons that begin
before mid-May of the same year. Therefore, this action also
establishes the 2024 fishing season that opens earlier than May 16. The
Council recommended, and NMFS concurs, that the commercial and
recreational seasons will open in 2024 as indicated under the ``Season
Description'' headings (in ``Section 1.
[[Page 30241]]
Commercial Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon Fisheries'' and
``Section 2. Recreational Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries'') of this final rule. At the March and/or April 2024
meeting, NMFS may take inseason action, if recommended by the Council,
to adjust the commercial and recreational seasons prior to the
effective date of the 2024 management measures, which are expected to
be effective in mid-May 2024. The Council recommended, and NMFS
concurs, that the Treaty Indian ocean troll seasons will open in 2024
as indicated under the ``Season Description'' headings (in ``Section 3.
Treaty Indian Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon Fisheries'').
In 2024, the Treaty Indian ocean troll season will open May 1,
consistent with all preseason regulations in place for Treaty Indian
Troll fisheries during May 16-June 30, 2023. This opening could be
modified following Council review at its March and/or April 2024
meetings.
Sections 1, 2, and 3 below set out the final specifications and
management measures for the ocean salmon fishery for 2023 and, as
specified, for 2024. Section 1 governs commercial fisheries; Section 2
governs recreational fisheries; and Section 3 governs Treaty Indian
Fisheries. Also, Section 4 below provides requirements for halibut
retention; Section 5 provides geographical landmarks; and Section 6
specifies notice procedures for inseason modifications. These measures
were recommended by the Council and approved by NMFS. Those elements of
the measures set forth below that refer to fisheries implemented prior
to May 16, 2023, were promulgated in our 2022 rule (87 FR 29690, May
16, 2022) and modified by inseason action at the March and April 2022
Council meetings (88 FR 21112, April 10, 2023), and are included for
information only and to provide continuity for the public and for
states adopting conforming regulations each May that refer to the
Federal rule for the same year.
Section 1. Commercial Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section contain restrictions that must be
followed for lawful participation in the fishery. Part A identifies
each fishing area and provides the geographic boundaries from north to
south, the open seasons for the area, the salmon species allowed to be
caught during the seasons, and any other special restrictions effective
in the area. Part B specifies minimum size limits. Part C specifies
requirements, definitions, restrictions, and exceptions.
Fisheries may need to be adjusted through inseason action to meet
NMFS ESA consultation standards, FMP requirements, other management
objectives, or upon receipt of new allocation recommendations from the
California Fish and Game Commission.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR
--U.S./Canada border to Cape Falcon
May 1-15, 2023.
May 16 through the earlier of June 29, or 26,000 Chinook salmon. No
more than 6,890 of which may be caught in the area between the U.S./
Canada border and the Queets River, and no more than 6,040 of which may
be caught in the area between Leadbetter Point and Cape Falcon (see
C.8).
May 16-June 21; open 7 days per week (see C.1); then
June 22-June 29.
In the area between the U.S./Canada border and the Queets River the
landing and possession limit is 70 Chinook salmon per vessel per
landing week (Thursday-Wednesday) and June 22-29. Landing limits will
be evaluated weekly inseason (see C.1, C.6).
In the area between the Queets River and Leadbetter Point the
landing and possession limit is 150 Chinook salmon per vessel per
landing week (Thursday-Wednesday) and June 22-29. Landing limits will
be evaluated weekly inseason (see C.1, C.6).
In the area between Leadbetter Point and Cape Falcon the landing
and possession limit is 60 Chinook salmon per vessel per landing week
(Thursday-Wednesday) and June 22-29. Landing limits will be evaluated
weekly inseason (see C.1, C.6).
All salmon, except coho salmon (see C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon
minimum size limit of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total length (see B). See
compliance requirements (see C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions
(see C.2, C.3).
When it is estimated that approximately 50 percent of the overall
Chinook salmon quota or any Chinook salmon subarea guideline has been
landed, inseason action may be considered to ensure the quota and
subarea guidelines are not exceeded. If the Chinook salmon quota is
exceeded, the excess will be deducted from the all-salmon season (see
C.5).
In 2024, the season will open May 1 consistent with all preseason
regulations in place in this area and subareas during May 16-June 30,
2023, including subarea salmon guidelines and quotas and weekly vessel
limits except as described below for vessels fishing or in possession
of salmon north of Leadbetter Point. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March and/or April 2024 meetings.
July 1 through the earlier of September 30, or 13,000 Chinook
salmon or 30,400 marked coho salmon (see C.8).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon. Chinook salmon minimum size limit
of 27 inches (68.5 cm) total length. Coho salmon minimum size limit of
16 inches (40.6 cm) total length (see B, C.1). All coho salmon must be
marked with a healed adipose fin clip (see C.8.d). No chum salmon
retention north of Cape Alava, WA, in August and September (see C.4,
C.7). See compliance requirements (see C.1) and gear restrictions and
definitions (see C.2, C.3).
Landing and possession limit of 150 marked coho salmon per vessel
per landing week (Thursday-Wednesday). Landing limits will be evaluated
weekly inseason (C.1).
When it is estimated that approximately 50 percent of the overall
Chinook salmon quota has been landed, inseason action may be considered
to ensure the quota is not exceeded.
A non-selective coho salmon fishery that is impact neutral relative
to the preseason assessment may be considered through inseason
management action later in the season.
For all commercial troll fisheries north of Cape Falcon: Mandatory
closed areas include Salmon Troll Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area
(YRCA), Cape Flattery, and Columbia Control Zones. Vessels must land
and deliver their salmon within 24 hours of any closure of this
fishery. Vessels may not land fish east of the Sekiu River or east of
Tongue Point, OR. Vessels fishing or in possession of salmon north of
Leadbetter Point must land and deliver all species of fish in a
Washington port and must possess a Washington troll and/or salmon
delivery license. For delivery to Washington ports south of Leadbetter
Point, vessels must notify Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW) at 360-249-1215 prior to crossing the Leadbetter Point line with
area fished, total Chinook salmon, coho salmon, and halibut catch
aboard, and destination with approximate time of delivery. During any
single trip, only one side of the Leadbetter Point line may be fished
(see C.11).
Vessels fishing or in possession of salmon while fishing south of
Leadbetter Point must land and deliver all species of fish within the
area and south of Leadbetter Point, except that
[[Page 30242]]
Oregon permitted vessels may also land all species of fish in
Garibaldi, OR. All Chinook salmon caught north of Cape Falcon and being
delivered by boat to Garibaldi, OR must meet the minimum legal total
length of 28 inches (71.1 cm) for Chinook salmon for south of Cape
Falcon seasons unless the season in waters off Garibaldi, OR have been
closed for Chinook salmon retention for more than 48 hours (see C.1).
Under state law, vessels must report their catch on a state fish
receiving ticket. Oregon State regulations require all fishers landing
salmon into Oregon from any fishery between Leadbetter Point and Cape
Falcon to notify the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW)
within one hour of delivery or prior to transport away from the port of
landing by either calling 541-857-2546 or sending notification via
email to [email protected]. Notification shall
include vessel name and number, number of salmon by species, port of
landing and location of delivery, and estimated time of delivery.
Inseason actions may modify harvest guidelines in later fisheries to
achieve or prevent exceeding the overall allowable troll harvest
impacts (see C.8).
Vessels in possession of salmon north of the Queets River may not
cross the Queets River line without first notifying WDFW at 360-249-
1215 with area fished, total Chinook salmon, coho salmon, and halibut
catch abroad, and destination. Vessels in possession of salmon south of
the Queets River may not cross the Queets River line without first
notifying WDFW at 360-249-1215 with area fished, total Chinook salmon,
coho salmon, and halibut catch aboard, and destination (see C.11).
Inseason actions may modify harvest guidelines in later fisheries to
achieve or prevent exceeding the overall allowable troll harvest
impacts (see C.8).
South of Cape Falcon, OR
--Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1-October 31 (see C.9.a).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon, through the earlier of September
30 or reaching the 10,000 non mark-selective coho salmon quota; all
salmon except coho salmon thereafter (see C.4, C.7). Coho salmon
minimum size limit of 16 inches (40.6 cm) total length, and Chinook
salmon minimum size limit of 28 inches (71.1 cm) total length (see B,
C.1). All vessels fishing in the area must land their salmon in the
State of Oregon. See gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3).
Beginning October 1, open shoreward of the 40-fathom (73-meter)
regulatory line (see C.5.f).
No more than 75 Chinook salmon allowed per vessel per landing week
(Thursday-Wednesday), (see C.8.f).
Coho salmon quota of 10,000 non-mark selective. No more than 75
coho salmon allowed per vessel per landing week (Thursday-Wednesday).
Vessel limits may be modified inseason (see C.8.f).
Any remainder of the mark-selective coho salmon quota from Cape
Falcon to Humbug Mountain recreational fishery may be transferred
inseason to the Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain troll fishery on an
impact neutral basis. Recreational fishery needs will be prioritized
for this transfer (see C.8.h).
In 2024, the season will be open March 15 for all salmon except
coho salmon. Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 28 inches (71.1 cm)
total length. Gear restrictions are the same as in 2023. This opening
could be modified following Council review at its March 2024 meeting.
--Humbug Mountain to Oregon/California border (Oregon Klamath
Management Zone (KMZ))
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open March 15 for all salmon except coho
salmon. Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 28 inches (71.1 cm) total
length. Gear restrictions are the same as in 2023. This opening could
be modified following Council review at its March 2024 meeting.
--Oregon/California border to Humboldt South Jetty (California KMZ)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open May 1 through the earlier of May 31,
or a 3,000 Chinook salmon quota. Chinook salmon minimum size limit of
27 inches (68.5 cm) total length. Landing and possession limit of 20
Chinook salmon per vessel per day (see C.8.f). Open 5 days per week
(Friday-Tuesday). All salmon except coho salmon (see C.4, C.7). Any
remaining portion of Chinook salmon quotas may be transferred inseason
on an impact neutral basis to the next open quota period (see C.8.b).
All fish caught in this area must be landed within the area, within 24
hours of any closure of the fishery (see C.6), and prior to fishing
outside the area (see C.10). See compliance requirements (see C.1) and
gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Klamath Control Zone
closed (see C.5.e). See California State regulations for an additional
closure adjacent to the Smith River. This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March or April 2024 meetings.
--Humboldt South Jetty to Latitude 40[deg]10' N
Closed in 2023.
When the fishery is closed between the Oregon/California border and
Humbug Mountain, vessels with fish on board caught in the areas open to
salmon fishing off California may seek temporary mooring in Brookings,
OR prior to landing in California only if such vessels first notify the
Chetco River Coast Guard Station via VHF channel 22A between the hours
of 0500 and 2200 and provide with vessel name, number of fish on board,
and estimated time of arrival (see C.6).
--Latitude 40[deg]10' N to Point Arena (Fort Bragg)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open April 16 for all salmon except coho
salmon (see C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 27 inches
(68.5 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see C.1)
and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). All salmon must
be landed in California and north of Point Arena (see C.6, C.11).
Landing and possession limits may be considered inseason (see C.8.g).
This opening could be modified following Council review at its March
2024 meeting.
--Point Arena to Pigeon Point (San Francisco)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open on May 1 for all salmon except coho
salmon (see C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 27 inches
(68.5 cm) total length (see B, C.1). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Landing and
possession limits may be considered inseason (see C.8.g). This opening
could be modified following Council review at its March or April 2024
meeting.
--Point Reyes to Point San Pedro (Fall Area Target Zone)
Closed in 2023.
--Pigeon Point to the U.S./Mexico border (Monterey)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, the season will open on May 1 for all salmon except coho
salmon (see C.4, C.7). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 27 inches
(68.5 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see C.1)
and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Landing and
possession limits may be considered inseason (see C.8.g). This opening
could be modified following Council review at its March or April 2024
meeting.
California State regulations require all salmon be made available
to a California Department of Fish and Wildlife
[[Page 30243]]
(CDFW) representative for sampling immediately at port of landing. Any
person in possession of a salmon with a missing adipose fin, upon
request by an authorized agent or employee of the CDFW, shall
immediately relinquish the head of the salmon to the State (California
Fish and Game Code Sec. 8226).
B. Minimum Size (Inches) (See C.1)
Table 1--Minimum Size Limits for Salmon in the 2023 Commercial Ocean Salmon Fisheries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chinook Coho
-----------------------------------------------------------
Area (when open) Total length Head-off Total length Head-off Pink
(in) (in) (in) (in)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon, OR....... 27.0 20.5 16 12 None.
Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain. 28.0 21.5 16 12 None.
Humbug Mountain to OR/CA border 28.0 21.5 .............. ........... None.
OR/CA border to Humboldt South .............. ............ .............. ........... ....................
Jetty.
Lat. 40[deg]10'0'' N to Point .............. ............ .............. ........... ....................
Arena.
Point Arena to Pigeon Point.... .............. ............ .............. ........... ....................
Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico .............. ............ .............. ........... ....................
border.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 28.0 in = 71.1 cm, 27.0 in = 68.5 cm, 26 in = 66 cm, 21.5 in = 54.6 cm, 20.5 in = 52.1 cm,
19.5 in = 49.5 cm, 16.0 in = 40.6 cm, and 12.0 in = 30.5 cm.
C. Requirements, Definitions, Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size or Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must meet the minimum size, landing/
possession limit, or other special requirements for the area being
fished and the area in which they are landed if the area is open or has
been closed less than 48 hours for that species of salmon. Salmon may
be landed in an area that has been closed for a species of salmon more
than 48 hours only if they meet the minimum size, landing/possession
limit, or other special requirements for the area in which they were
caught. Salmon may not be filleted prior to landing.
Any person who is required to report a salmon landing by applicable
state law must include on the state landing receipt for that landing
both the number and weight of salmon landed by species. States may
require fish landing/receiving tickets be kept on board the vessel for
90 days or more after landing to account for all previous salmon
landings.
C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Salmon may be taken only by hook and line using single point,
single shank, barbless hooks.
b. Cape Falcon to the Oregon/California border: no more than 4
spreads are allowed per line.
c. Oregon/California border to U.S./Mexico border: no more than 6
lines are allowed per vessel, and barbless circle hooks are required
when fishing with bait by any means other than trolling.
C.3. Gear Definitions
Trolling: Fishing from a boat or floating device that is making way
by means of a source of power, other than drifting by means of the
prevailing water current or weather conditions.
Troll fishing gear: One or more lines that drag hooks behind a
moving fishing vessel engaged in trolling. In that portion of the
fishery management area off Oregon and Washington, the line or lines
must be affixed to the vessel and must not be intentionally disengaged
from the vessel at any time during the fishing operation.
Spread: A single leader connected to an individual lure and/or
bait.
Circle hook: A hook with a generally circular shape and a point
which turns inward, pointing directly to the shank at a 90[deg] angle.
C.4. Vessel Operation in Closed Areas With Salmon on Board
a. Except as provided under C.4.b below, it is unlawful for a
vessel to have troll or recreational gear in the water while in any
area closed to fishing for a certain species of salmon while possessing
that species of salmon; however, fishing for species other than salmon
is not prohibited if the area is open for such species, and no salmon
are in possession.
b. When Genetic Stock Identification (GSI) samples will be
collected in an area closed to commercial salmon fishing, the
scientific research permit holder shall notify NOAA Office of Law
Enforcement, U.S. Coast Guard (USCG), CDFW, WDFW, ODFW, and Oregon
State Police at least 24 hours prior to sampling and provide the
following information: the vessel name, date, location and time
collection activities will be done. Any vessel collecting GSI samples
in a closed area shall not possess any salmon other than those from
which GSI samples are being collected. Salmon caught for collection of
GSI samples must be immediately released in good condition after
collection of samples.
C.5. Control Zone Definitions
a. Cape Flattery Control Zone--The area from Cape Flattery
(48[deg]23'00'' N lat.) to the northern boundary of the U.S. EEZ; and
the area from Cape Flattery south to Cape Alava (48[deg]10'00'' N lat.)
and east of 125[deg]05'00'' W long.
b. Salmon Troll YRCA--The area in Washington Marine Catch Area 3
from 48[deg]00.00' N lat.; 125[deg]14.00' W long. to 48[deg]02.00' N
lat.; 125[deg]14.00' W long. to 48[deg]02.00' N lat.; 125[deg]16.50' W
long. to 48[deg]00.00' N lat.; 125[deg]16.50' W long. and connecting
back to 48[deg]00.00' N lat.; 125[deg]14.00' W long.
c. Grays Harbor Control Zone--The area defined by a line drawn from
the Westport Lighthouse (46[deg]53'18'' N lat., 124[deg]07'01'' W
long.) to Buoy #2 (46[deg]52'42'' N lat., 124[deg]12'42'' W long.) to
Buoy #3 (46[deg]55'00'' N lat., 124[deg]14'48'' W long.) to the Grays
Harbor north jetty (46[deg]55'36'' N lat., 124[deg]10'51'' W long.).
d. Columbia Control Zone--An area at the Columbia River mouth,
bounded on the west by a line running northeast/southwest between the
red lighted Buoy #4 (46[deg]13'35'' N lat., 124[deg]06'50'' W long.)
and the green lighted Buoy #7 (46[deg]15'09'' N lat., 124[deg]06'16'' W
long.); on the east, by the Buoy #10 line that bears north/south at
357[deg] true from the south jetty at 46[deg]14'00'' N
lat.,124[deg]03'07'' W long. to its intersection with the north jetty;
on the north, by a line running northeast/southwest between the green
lighted Buoy #7 to the tip of the north jetty (46[deg]15'48'' N lat.,
124[deg]05'20'' W long.), and then along the north jetty to the point
of intersection with the Buoy #10 line; and, on the south, by a line
running northeast/southwest between the red lighted Buoy #4 and tip of
the south jetty (46[deg]14'03'' N lat., 124[deg]04'05'' W long.), and
then
[[Page 30244]]
along the south jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy #10
line.
e. Klamath Control Zone--The ocean area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41[deg]38'48'' N lat. (approximately 6 nm (11
km) north of the Klamath River mouth); on the west by 124[deg]23'00'' W
long. (approximately 12 nm (22 km) off shore); and on the south by
41[deg]26'48'' N lat. (approximately 6 nm (11 km) south of the Klamath
River mouth).
f. Waypoints for the 40-fathom (73-meter) regulatory line from Cape
Falcon to Humbug Mountain (50 CFR 660.71 (o) (12)-(62)), when in place.
C.6. Notification When Unsafe Conditions Prevent Compliance With
Regulations
If prevented by unsafe weather conditions or mechanical problems
from meeting special management area landing restrictions, vessels must
notify the USCG and receive acknowledgment of such notification prior
to leaving the area. This notification shall include the name of the
vessel, port where delivery will be made, approximate number of salmon
(by species) on board, the estimated time of arrival, and the specific
reason the vessel is not able to meet special management area landing
restrictions.
In addition to contacting the USCG, vessels fishing south of the
Oregon/California border must notify CDFW within 1 hour of leaving the
management area by calling 800-889-8346 and providing the same
information as reported to the USCG. All salmon must be offloaded
within 24 hours of reaching port.
C.7. Incidental Halibut Harvest
Permit applications for incidental harvest for halibut during
commercial salmon fishing must be obtained from the NMFS West Coast
Region (WCR) Permits Office.
a. Pacific halibut retained must be no less than 32 inches (81.3
cm) in total length (with head on).
b. During the salmon troll season, incidental harvest is authorized
only during April, May, and June, and after June 30 if quota remains
and if announced on the NMFS hotline (phone: 800-662-9825 or 206-526-
6667). WDFW, ODFW, and CDFW will monitor landings. If the landings are
projected to exceed the preseason allocation for this fishery or the
total Area 2A non-Indian commercial halibut allocation, NMFS will take
inseason action to prohibit retention of halibut in the non-Indian
salmon troll fishery. See the most current Pacific Halibut Catch
Sharing Plan (88 FR 14066, March 7, 2023) for more details.
c. Incidental Pacific halibut catch regulations in the commercial
salmon troll fishery adopted for 2023, prior to any 2023 inseason
action, will be in effect when incidental Pacific halibut retention
opens on April 1, 2023, unless otherwise modified by inseason action at
the March 2023 Council meeting.
Beginning May 16, 2023, through the end of the 2023 salmon troll
fishery, and beginning April 1, 2024, until modified through inseason
action or superseded by the 2024 management measures, permit holders
may land or possess no more than one Pacific halibut per two Chinook
salmon, except one Pacific halibut may be possessed or landed without
meeting the ratio requirement, and no more than 35 halibut may be
possessed or landed per trip.
d. ``C-shaped'' YRCA is an area to be voluntarily avoided for
salmon trolling. NMFS and the Council request salmon trollers
voluntarily avoid this area in order to protect yelloweye rockfish. The
area is defined in the Pacific Council Halibut Catch Sharing Plan in
the North Coast subarea (Washington marine area 3), with the following
coordinates in the order listed:
48[deg]18' N lat.; 125[deg]18' W long.
48[deg]18' N lat.; 124[deg]59' W long.
48[deg]11' N lat.; 124[deg]59' W long.
48[deg]11' N lat.; 125[deg]11' W long.
48[deg]04' N lat.; 125[deg]11' W long.
48[deg]04' N lat.; 124[deg]59' W long.
48[deg]00' N lat.; 124[deg]59' W long.
48[deg]00' N lat.; 125[deg]18' W long.
And connecting back to 48[deg]18' N lat.; 125[deg]18' W long.
C.8. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason actions or modifications already
noted under the Season Description heading above, the following
inseason guidance applies:
a. Chinook salmon remaining from the May through June non-Indian
commercial troll harvest guideline north of Cape Falcon may be
transferred to the July through September harvest guideline if the
transfer would not result in exceeding preseason impact expectations on
any stocks.
b. Chinook salmon remaining from May, June, and/or July non-Indian
commercial troll quotas in the Oregon or California KMZ may be
transferred to the Chinook salmon quota for the next open period if the
transfer would not result in exceeding preseason impact expectations on
any stocks.
c. NMFS may transfer salmon between the recreational and commercial
fisheries north of Cape Falcon if there is agreement among the areas'
representatives on the Salmon Advisory Subpanel (SAS), and if the
transfer would not result in exceeding preseason impact expectations on
any stocks.
d. The Council will consider inseason recommendations for special
regulations for any experimental fisheries annually in March; proposals
must meet Council protocol and be received in November the year prior.
e. If retention of unmarked coho salmon (adipose fin intact) is
permitted by inseason action, the allowable coho salmon quota will be
adjusted to ensure preseason projected impacts on all stocks is not
exceeded.
f. Landing limits may be modified inseason to sustain season length
and keep harvest within overall quotas.
g. Landing limits in California may be implemented and/or modified
inseason to sustain season length and keep harvest within preseason
expectations.
h. Deviations from the allocation of allowable ocean harvest of
coho salmon in the area south of Cape Falcon may be allowed to meet
consultation standards for ESA-listed stocks (FMP 5.3.2). Therefore,
any rollovers that result in a deviation from the south of Cape Falcon
coho salmon allocation schedule between sectors would still fall
underneath this exemption.
C.9. State Waters Fisheries
Consistent with Council management objectives:
a. The state of Oregon may establish additional late-season
fisheries in state waters.
b. The state of California may establish limited fisheries in
selected state waters.
c. Check state regulations for details.
C.10. For the purpose of California Fish and Game Code, Section 8232.5,
the definition of the KMZ for the ocean salmon season shall be that
area from Humbug Mountain, Oregon, to the Southern KMZ Boundary.
C.11. Latitudes for geographical reference of major landmarks along the
West Coast are listed in Section 5 of this final rule.
Section 2. Recreational Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section contain restrictions that must be
followed for lawful participation in the fishery. Part A identifies
each fishing area and provides the geographic boundaries from north to
south, the open seasons for the area, the salmon species allowed to be
caught during the seasons, and any other special
[[Page 30245]]
restrictions effective in the area. Part B specifies minimum size
limits. Part C specifies special requirements, definitions,
restrictions, and exceptions.
Fisheries may need to be adjusted through inseason action to meet
NMFS ESA consultation standards, FMP requirements, other management
objectives, or upon receipt of new allocation recommendations from the
California Fish and Game Commission.
A. Season Description
North of Cape Falcon, OR
--U.S./Canada border to Cape Alava (Neah Bay Subarea)
June 17 through earlier of September 30, or 16,600 marked coho
salmon subarea quota, with a subarea guideline of 8,710 Chinook salmon
(see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon except no chum salmon beginning
August 1; two salmon per day, of which only one may be a Chinook
salmon. All coho salmon must be marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See minimum size limits (see B). See gear restrictions and definitions
(see C.1, C.2, C.3).
An impact neutral non-selective coho salmon fishery may be
considered through inseason management action later in the season.
Beginning August 1, no Chinook salmon retention east of the
Bonilla-Tatoosh line (see C.4.a) during Council managed ocean fishery.
Inseason management may be used to sustain season length and keep
harvest within the overall Chinook salmon and coho salmon recreational
TACs for north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
--Cape Alava to Queets River (La Push Subarea)
June 17 through earlier of September 30, or 4,150 marked coho
salmon subarea quota, with a subarea guideline of 1,440 Chinook salmon
(see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon, except no chum salmon beginning
August 1; two salmon per day, of which only one may be a Chinook
salmon. All coho salmon must be marked with a healed adipose fin clip.
See minimum size limits (see B). See gear restrictions and definitions
(see C.1, C.2, C.3).
Inseason management may be used to sustain season length and keep
harvest within the overall Chinook salmon and coho salmon recreational
TACs for north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
An impact neutral non-selective coho salmon fishery may be
considered through inseason management action later in the season.
October 3 through earlier of October 7, or 150 Chinook salmon quota
(see C.5) in the area north of 47[deg]50'00'' N lat. and south of
48[deg]00'00'' N lat.
Chinook salmon only, one Chinook salmon per day. See minimum size
limits (see B). See gear restrictions and definitions (see C.1, C.2,
C.3).
Fishery may be closed if extreme freshwater temperature and/or flow
events occur in the Quillayute basin in September.
--Queets River to Leadbetter Point (Westport Subarea)
June 24 through earlier of September 30, or 59,050 marked coho
salmon subarea quota, with a subarea guideline of 17,210 Chinook salmon
(see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon, two salmon per day, of which only
one may be a Chinook salmon. All coho salmon must be marked with a
healed adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions and definitions (see
C.1, C.2, C.3). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 22 inches (55.9
cm) total length (see B).
An impact neutral non-selective coho salmon fishery may be
considered through inseason management action later in the season.
Inseason management may be used to sustain season length and keep
harvest within the overall Chinook salmon and coho salmon recreational
TACs for north of Cape Falcon (see C.5).
--Leadbetter Point to Cape Falcon (Columbia River Subarea)
June 24 through earlier of September 30, or 79,800 marked coho
salmon subarea quota, with a subarea guideline of 11,490 Chinook salmon
(see C.5).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon, two salmon per day, of which only
one may be a Chinook salmon. All coho salmon must be marked with a
healed adipose fin clip. See gear restrictions and definitions (see
C.1, C.2, C.3). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 22 inches (55.9
cm) total length (see B).
An impact neutral non-selective coho salmon fishery may be
considered through inseason management action later in the season.
Columbia Control Zone closed (see C.4.c). Inseason management may
be used to sustain season length and keep harvest within the overall
Chinook salmon and coho salmon recreational TACs for north of Cape
Falcon (see C.5).
South of Cape Falcon, OR
Mark-selective coho salmon fishery:
--Cape Falcon to Oregon/California border
June 17 through the earlier of August 31, or 110,000 marked coho
salmon quota (see C.6).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon except Chinook salmon, two salmon
per day. All retained coho salmon must be marked with a healed adipose
fin clip (see C.1). See minimum size limits (see B). See gear
restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3).
Any remainder of the mark-selective coho salmon quota may be
transferred inseason on an impact neutral basis to the recreational
and/or commercial troll quotas for the non-selective coho salmon
fishery from Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain. Recreational needs will be
prioritized for this transfer (see C.5).
--Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1-October 31 (see C.6).
Open 7 days per week. All salmon except coho salmon, except as
described in the non-mark-selective coho salmon fishery (see C.5), one
fish per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 24 inches
(61.0 cm) total length (see B). See gear restrictions and definitions
(see C.2, C.3). Beginning October 1, open only shoreward of the 40-
fathom (73-meter) regulatory line (see C.5.g).
In 2024, the season will open March 15 for all salmon except coho
salmon, two salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit
of 24 inches (61 cm) total length (see B); and the same gear
restrictions as in 2023 (see C.2, C.3). This opening could be modified
following Council review at its March 2024 meeting.
Non-mark-selective coho salmon fishery:
--Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
September 1 through the earlier of September 30, or 25,000 non-
mark-selective coho salmon quota (see C.6). Open days may be modified
inseason.
Open 7 days per week. All salmon, two salmon per day only one of
which may be a Chinook salmon (see C.1). See minimum size limits (see
B). See gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3).
For recreational fisheries from Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain:
Fishing in the Stonewall Bank YRCA is restricted to trolling only on
days the all depth recreational halibut fishery is open (call the
halibut fishing hotline 1-800-662-9825 for specific dates) (see C.3.b,
C.4.d).
--Oregon/California Border to latitude 40[deg]10' N (California KMZ)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens May 1 for all salmon except coho salmon, two
salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 20
inches (50.8 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Bag limits
may be modified in season. This opening could be modified
[[Page 30246]]
following Council review at its March or April 2024 meeting.
--Latitude 40[deg]10' N to Point Arena (Fort Bragg)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all salmon except coho salmon,
two salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 20
inches (50.8 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Bag limits
may be modified in season. This opening could be modified following
Council review at its March or April 2024 meeting.
--Point Arena to Pigeon Point (San Francisco)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all salmon except coho salmon,
two salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 24
inches (61.0 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Bag limits
may be modified in season. This opening could be modified following
Council review at its March or April 2024 meeting.
--Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico Border (Monterey)
Closed in 2023.
In 2024, season opens April 6 for all salmon except coho salmon,
two salmon per day (see C.1). Chinook salmon minimum size limit of 24
inches (61.0 cm) total length (see B). See compliance requirements (see
C.1) and gear restrictions and definitions (see C.2, C.3). Bag limits
may be modified in season. This opening could be modified following
Council review at its March or April 2024 meeting.
California State regulations require all salmon be made available
to a CDFW representative for sampling immediately at port of landing.
Any person in possession of a salmon with a missing adipose fin, upon
request by an authorized agent or employee of the CDFW, shall
immediately relinquish the head of the salmon to the state (California
Code of Regulations Title 14 Section 1.73).
B. Minimum Size (Total Length in Inches) (See C.1)
Table 2--Minimum Size Limits for Salmon in the 2023 Recreational Salmon Fisheries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area (when open) Chinook (in) Coho (in) Pink
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon (Westport and Columbia River) 22.0 16.0 None.
North of Cape Falcon (Neah Bay and La Push)....... 24.0 16.0 None.
Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain.................... 24.0 16.0 None.
Humbug Mountain to Oregon/California border....... 24.0 16.0 None.
Oregon/California border to Point Arena........... .............. .............. ............................
Point Arena to Pigeon Point....................... .............. .............. ............................
Pigeon Point to U.S./Mexico border................ .............. .............. ............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in = 61.0 cm, 22.0 in = 55.9 cm, 20.0 in = 50.8 cm, and 16.0 in = 40.6 cm.
C. Requirements, Definitions, Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Compliance With Minimum Size and Other Special Restrictions
All salmon on board a vessel must meet the minimum size or other
special requirements for the area being fished and the area in which
they are landed if that area is open. Salmon may be landed in an area
that is closed only if they meet the minimum size or other special
requirements for the area in which they were caught. Salmon may not be
filleted or salmon heads removed prior to landing.
Ocean Boat Limits: Off the coast of Washington, Oregon, and
California, each fisher aboard a vessel may continue to use angling
gear until the combined daily limits of Chinook and coho salmon for all
licensed and juvenile anglers aboard have been attained (additional
state restrictions may apply).
C.2. Gear Restrictions
Salmon may be taken only by hook and line using barbless hooks. All
persons fishing for salmon, and all persons fishing from a boat with
salmon on board must meet the gear restrictions listed below for
specific areas or seasons.
a. U.S./Canada border to Point Conception, CA: No more than one rod
may be used per angler; and no more than two single point, single
shank, barbless hooks are required for all fishing gear.
b. Latitude 40[deg]10' N to Point Conception, CA: Single point,
single shank, barbless circle hooks (see gear definitions below) are
required when fishing with bait by any means other than trolling, and
no more than two such hooks shall be used. When angling with two hooks,
the distance between the hooks must not exceed 5 inches (12.7 cm) when
measured from the top of the eye of the top hook to the inner base of
the curve of the lower hook, and both hooks must be permanently tied in
place (hard tied). Circle hooks are not required when artificial lures
are used without bait.
C.3. Gear Definitions
a. Recreational fishing gear: Off Oregon and Washington, angling
tackle consists of a single line that must be attached to a rod and
reel held by hand or closely attended; the rod and reel must be held by
hand while playing a hooked fish. No person may use more than one rod
and line while fishing off Oregon or Washington. Off California, the
line must be attached to a rod and reel held by hand or closely
attended; weights directly attached to a line may not exceed 4 pounds
(1.8 kg). While fishing off California north of Point Conception, no
person fishing for salmon, and no person fishing from a boat with
salmon on board, may use more than one rod and line. Fishing includes
any activity which can reasonably be expected to result in the
catching, taking, or harvesting of fish.
b. Trolling: Angling from a boat or floating device that is making
way by means of a source of power, other than drifting by means of the
prevailing water current or weather conditions.
c. Circle hook: A hook with a generally circular shape and a point
which turns inward, pointing directly to the shank at a 90[deg] angle.
C.4. Control Zone Definitions
a. The Bonilla-Tatoosh Line: A line running from the western end of
Cape Flattery to Tatoosh Island Lighthouse (48[deg]23'30'' N lat.,
124[deg]44'12'' W long.) to the buoy adjacent to Duntze Rock
(48[deg]24'37'' N lat., 124[deg]44'37'' W long.), then in a straight
line to Bonilla Point (48[deg]35'39'' N lat., 124[deg]42'58'' W long.)
on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
b. Grays Harbor Control Zone: The area defined by a line drawn from
the Westport Lighthouse (46[deg]53'18'' N lat.,
[[Page 30247]]
124[deg]07'01'' W long.) to Buoy #2 (46[deg]52'42'' N lat.,
124[deg]12'42'' W long.) to Buoy #3 (46[deg]55'00'' N lat.,
124[deg]14'48'' W long.) to the Grays Harbor north jetty
(46[deg]55'36'' N lat., 124[deg]10'51'' W long.).
c. Columbia Control Zone: An area at the Columbia River mouth,
bounded on the west by a line running northeast/southwest between the
red lighted Buoy #4 (46[deg]13'35'' N lat., 124[deg]06'50'' W long.)
and the green lighted Buoy #7 (46[deg]15'09'' N lat., 124[deg]06'16'' W
long.); on the east, by the Buoy #10 line which bears north/south at
357[deg] true from the south jetty at 46[deg]14'00'' N lat.,
124[deg]03'07'' W long. to its intersection with the north jetty; on
the north, by a line running northeast/southwest between the green
lighted Buoy #7 to the tip of the north jetty (46[deg]15'48'' N lat.,
124[deg]05'20'' W long. and then along the north jetty to the point of
intersection with the Buoy #10 line; and on the south, by a line
running northeast/southwest between the red lighted Buoy #4 and tip of
the south jetty (46[deg]14'03'' N lat., 124[deg]04'05'' W long.), and
then along the south jetty to the point of intersection with the Buoy
#10 line.
d. Stonewall Bank YRCA: The area defined by the following
coordinates in the order listed:
44[deg]37.46' N lat.; 124[deg]24.92' W long.
44[deg]37.46' N lat.; 124[deg]23.63' W long.
44[deg]28.71' N lat.; 124[deg]21.80' W long.
44[deg]28.71' N lat.; 124[deg]24.10' W long.
44[deg]31.42' N lat.; 124[deg]25.47' W long.
And connecting back to 44[deg]37.46' N lat.; 124[deg]24.92' W long.
e. Klamath Control Zone: The ocean area at the Klamath River mouth
bounded on the north by 41[deg]38'48'' N lat. (approximately 6 nm (11
km) north of the Klamath River mouth); on the west by 124[deg]23'00'' W
long. (approximately 12 nm (22 km) offshore); and, on the south by
41[deg]26'48'' N lat. (approximately 6 nm (11 km) south of the Klamath
River mouth).
C.5. Inseason Management
Regulatory modifications may become necessary inseason to meet
preseason management objectives such as quotas, harvest guidelines, and
season duration. In addition to standard inseason actions or
modifications already noted under the Season Description heading above,
the following inseason guidance applies:
a. Actions could include modifications to bag limits, or days open
to fishing, and extensions or reductions in areas open to fishing.
b. Coho salmon may be transferred inseason among recreational
subareas north of Cape Falcon to help meet the recreational season
duration objectives (for each subarea) after conferring with
representatives of the affected ports and the Council's SAS
recreational representatives north of Cape Falcon, and if the transfer
would not result in exceeding preseason impact expectations on any
stocks.
c. Chinook salmon and coho salmon may be transferred between the
recreational and commercial fisheries north of Cape Falcon if there is
agreement among the representatives of the SAS, and if the transfer
would not result in exceeding preseason impact expectations on any
stocks.
d. Fishery managers may consider inseason action modifying
regulations restricting retention of unmarked (adipose fin intact) coho
salmon. To remain consistent with preseason expectations, any inseason
action shall consider, if significant, the difference between observed
and preseason forecasted (adipose-clipped) mark rates. Such a
consideration may also include a change in bag limit of two salmon, no
more than one of which may be a coho salmon.
e. Marked coho salmon remaining from the Cape Falcon to Oregon/
California Border: recreational mark-selective coho salmon quota may be
transferred inseason to the Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain non-mark-
selective recreational fishery or the Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain
commercial troll fishery if the transfer would not result in exceeding
preseason impact expectations on any stocks.
f. Deviations from the allocation of allowable ocean harvest of
coho salmon in the area south of Cape Falcon may be allowed in order to
meet consultation standards for ESA-listed stocks (FMP 5.3.2).
Therefore, any rollovers that result in a deviation from the south of
Cape Falcon coho salmon allocation schedule between sectors would still
fall underneath this exemption.
g. Waypoints for the 40-fathom regulatory line from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mountain (50 CFR 660.71(0)(12)-(62)), when in place.
C.6. Additional Seasons in State Territorial Waters
Consistent with Council management objectives, the states of
Washington, Oregon, and California may establish limited seasons in
state waters. Check state regulations for details.
Section 3. Treaty Indian Management Measures for 2023 Ocean Salmon
Fisheries
Parts A, B, and C of this section contain requirements that must be
followed for lawful participation in the fishery.
Overall Chinook salmon and/or coho salmon TACs may need to be
reduced or fisheries adjusted to meet NMFS ESA guidance, FMP
requirements, upon conclusion of negotiations in the North of Falcon
forum, or upon receipt of preseason catch and abundance expectations
for Canadian and Alaskan fisheries.
In 2024, the season will open May 1, consistent with all preseason
regulations in place for Treaty Indian Troll fisheries during May 16-
June 30, 2023. All catch in May 2024 applies against the 2024 Treaty
Indian Troll fisheries quota. This opening could be modified following
Council review at its March and/or April 2024 meetings.
A. Season Descriptions
May 1 through the earlier of June 30, or 22,500 Chinook salmon
quota.
All salmon may be retained except coho salmon. If the Chinook
salmon quota is exceeded, the excess will be deducted from the later
all-salmon season (see C.5). See size limit (see B) and other
restrictions (see C).
July 1 through the earlier of September 15, or 22,500 Chinook
salmon quota or 57,000 coho salmon quota.
All salmon. See size limit (see B) and other restrictions (see C).
B. Minimum Size (Inches)
Table 3--Minimum Size Limits for Salmon in the 2023 Treaty Indian Ocean Salmon Fisheries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chinook Coho
--------------------------------------------------------------
Area (when open) Total length Head-off Total length Head-off Pink
(in) (in) (in) (in)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North of Cape Falcon......... 24.0 18.0 16.0 12.0 None.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metric equivalents: 24.0 in 61.0 cm, 18.0 in 45.7 cm, 16.0 in 40.6 cm, 12.0 in 30.5 cm.
[[Page 30248]]
C. Requirements, Definitions, Restrictions, or Exceptions
C.1. Tribe and Area Boundaries
All boundaries may be changed to include such other areas as may
hereafter be authorized by a Federal court for that tribe's treaty
fishery.
S'KLALLAM--Washington State Statistical Area 4B (defined to include
those waters of Puget Sound easterly of a line projected from the
Bonilla Point light on Vancouver Island to the Tatoosh Island light,
thence to the most westerly point on Cape Flattery and westerly of a
line projected true north from the fishing boundary marker at the mouth
of the Sekiu River [Washington Administrative Code 220-301-030]).
MAKAH--Washington State Statistical Area 4B and that portion of the
Fishery Management Area (FMA) north of 48[deg]02'15'' N lat. (Norwegian
Memorial) and east of 125[deg]44'00'' W long.
QUILEUTE--A polygon commencing at Cape Alava, located at lat.
48[deg]10'00'' N, long. 124[deg]43'56.9'' W; then proceeding west
approximately 40 nm (74 km) at that latitude to a northwestern point
located at lat. 48[deg]10'00'' N, long. 125[deg]44'00'' W; then
proceeding in a southeasterly direction mirroring the coastline at a
distance no farther than 40 nm (74 km) from the mainland Pacific coast
shoreline at any line of latitude, to a southwestern point at lat.
47[deg]31'42'' N, long. 125[deg]20'26'' W; then proceeding east along
that line of latitude to the Pacific coast shoreline at lat.
47[deg]31'42'' N, long. 124[deg]21'9.0'' W.
HOH--That portion of the FMA between 47[deg]54'18'' N. lat.
(Quillayute River) and 47[deg]21'00'' N lat. (Quinault River) and east
of 125[deg]44'00'' W long.
QUINAULT--A polygon commencing at the Pacific coast shoreline near
Destruction Island, located at lat. 47[deg]40'06'' N, long.
124[deg]23'51.362'' W; then proceeding west approximately 30 nm (55.6
km) at that latitude to a northwestern point located at lat.
47[deg]40'06'' N, long. 125[deg]08'30'' W; then proceeding in a
southeasterly direction mirroring the coastline no farther than 30 nm
(55.6 km) from the mainland Pacific coast shoreline at any line of
latitude, to a southwestern point at lat. 46[deg]53'18'' N, long.
124[deg]53'53'' W; then proceeding east along that line of latitude to
the Pacific coast shoreline at lat. 46[deg]53'18'' N, long.
124[deg]7'36.6'' W.
C.2. Gear Restrictions
a. Single point, single shank, barbless hooks are required in all
fisheries.
b. No more than eight fixed lines per boat.
c. No more than four hand held lines per person in the Makah area
fishery (Washington State Statistical Area 4B and that portion of the
FMA north of 48[deg]02'15'' N lat. (Norwegian Memorial) and east of
125[deg]44'00'' W long.).
C.3. Quotas
a. The quotas include troll catches by the S'Klallam and Makah
Tribes in Washington State Statistical Area 4B from May 1 through
September 15.
b. The Quileute Tribe may continue a ceremonial and subsistence
fishery during the time frame of October 1 through October 15 in the
same manner as in 2004-2015. Fish taken during this fishery are to be
counted against treaty troll quotas established for the 2024 season
(estimated harvest during the October ceremonial and subsistence
fishery: 20 Chinook salmon; 40 coho salmon).
C.4. Area Closures
a. The area within a 6 nm (11 km) radius of the mouths of the
Queets River (47[deg]31'42'' N lat.) and the Hoh River (47[deg]45'12''
N lat.) will be closed to commercial fishing.
b. A closure within 2 nm (3.7 km) of the mouth of the Quinault
River (47[deg]21'00'' N lat.) may be enacted by the Quinault Nation
and/or the State of Washington and will not adversely affect the
Secretary of Commerce's management regime.
C.5. Inseason Management
In addition to standard inseason actions or modifications already
noted under the ``Season Description'' heading above, the following
inseason guidance is provided by NMFS:
a. Chinook remaining from the May through June treaty-Indian ocean
troll harvest guideline north of Cape Falcon may be transferred to the
July through September harvest guideline on a fishery impact equivalent
basis.
Section 4. Halibut Retention
Under the authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act, NMFS
promulgated regulations governing the Pacific halibut fishery, which
appear at 50 CFR part 300, subpart E. On March 7, 2023, NMFS published
a final rule announcing the International Pacific Halibut Commission's
(IPHC) regulations, including season dates, management measures, TAC
for each IPHC management area including the U.S. West Coast (Area 2A),
and Catch Sharing Plan for the U.S. waters off of Alaska (88 FR 14966,
March 7, 2023). The Area 2A Catch Sharing Plan, in combination with the
IPHC regulations, provides that vessels participating in the salmon
troll fishery in Area 2A, which have obtained the appropriate permit,
may retain halibut caught incidentally during authorized periods in
conformance with provisions published with the annual salmon management
measures. A salmon troller may participate in the halibut incidental
catch fishery during the salmon troll season or in the directed
commercial fishery targeting halibut, but not both.
The following measures have been approved by the IPHC and
implemented by NMFS. During authorized periods, the operator of a
vessel that has been issued an incidental halibut harvest permit may
retain Pacific halibut caught incidentally in Area 2A while trolling
for salmon. Halibut retained must be no less than 32 inches (81.3 cm)
in total length, measured from the tip of the lower jaw with the mouth
closed to the extreme end of the middle of the tail, and must be landed
with the head on.
Permit applications for incidental harvest must be obtained from
the WCR Permits Office (phone: 562-980-4238 or [email protected]).
Applicants must apply prior to March 1 for 2023 permits. Incidental
harvest is authorized only during April, May, and June of the 2023
salmon troll seasons and after June 30 in 2023 if the quota remains and
if announced on the NMFS hotline (phone: 800-662-9825 or 206-526-6667).
WDFW, ODFW, and CDFW will monitor landings. If the landings are
projected to exceed the 45,497 pound (20,637 kg) preseason allocation
or the total Area 2A non-Indian commercial halibut allocation, NMFS
will take inseason action to prohibit retention of halibut in the non-
Indian salmon troll fishery.
Incidental halibut harvest regulations, including season dates,
management measures, and TAC for each IPHC management area, are listed
under C.7 of Section 1: Commercial Management Measures for 2023 Ocean
Salmon Fisheries.
Section 5. Geographical Landmarks
Wherever the words ``nautical miles off shore'' are used in this
document, the distance is measured from the baseline from which the
territorial sea is measured.
Geographical landmarks referenced in this document are at the
following locations:
U.S./Canada border..................... 49[deg]00'00'' N lat.
Cape Flattery, WA...................... 48[deg]23'00'' N lat.
Cape Alava, WA......................... 48[deg]10'00'' N lat.
Queets River, WA....................... 47[deg]31'42'' N lat.
Leadbetter Point, WA................... 46[deg]38'10'' N lat.
Cape Falcon, OR........................ 45[deg]46'00'' N lat.
South end Heceta Bank Line, OR......... 43[deg]58'00'' N lat.
Humbug Mountain, OR.................... 42[deg]40'30'' N lat.
[[Page 30249]]
Oregon-California border............... 42[deg]00'00'' N lat.
Humboldt South Jetty, CA............... 40[deg]45'53'' N lat.
40[deg]10' line (near Cape Mendocino, 40[deg]10'00'' N lat.
CA).
Horse Mountain, CA..................... 40[deg]05'00'' N lat.
Point Arena, CA........................ 38[deg]57'30'' N lat.
Point Reyes, CA........................ 37[deg]59'44'' N lat.
Point San Pedro, CA.................... 37[deg]35'40'' N lat.
Pigeon Point, CA....................... 37[deg]11'00'' N lat.
Point Sur, CA.......................... 36[deg]18'00'' N lat.
Point Conception, CA................... 34[deg]27'00'' N lat.
U.S./Mexico border..................... 34[deg]27'00'' N lat.
Section 6. Inseason Notice Procedures
Notice of inseason management actions will be provided by a
telephone hotline administered by the West Coast Region, NMFS, 800-662-
9825 or 206-526-6667, and by USCG Notice to Mariners broadcasts. These
broadcasts are announced on Channel 16 VHF-FM and 2182 KHz at frequent
intervals. The announcements designate the channel or frequency over
which the Notice to Mariners will be immediately broadcast. Inseason
actions will also be published in the Federal Register as soon as
practicable. Since provisions of these management measures may be
altered by inseason actions, fishermen should monitor either the
telephone hotline or USCG broadcasts for current information for the
area in which they are fishing.
Classification
NMFS is issuing this rule pursuant to section 305(d) of the MSA. In
a previous action taken pursuant to section 304(b), the Council
designed the FMP to authorize NMFS to take this action pursuant to MSA
section 305(d). See 50 CFR 660.408. These regulations are being
promulgated under the authority of 16 U.S.C. 1855(d) and 16 U.S.C.
773(c).
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries finds good cause under 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B), to waive the requirement for prior notice and
opportunity for public comment, as such procedures would be
impracticable and contrary to the public interest.
The annual salmon management cycle begins May 16 and continues
through May 15 of the following year. May 16 was chosen because it
provides the minimally necessary time required to complete the
necessary environmental and economic analyses and regulatory
documentation following the April Council meeting in time for the
Secretary of Commerce to approve and implement the Council's annual
recommendation. In addition, these harvests constitute a relatively
small portion of the annual catch, allowing for the majority of the
season to be governed by the new management measures rule. Analysis by
the Council's Salmon Technical Team determined that the pre-May 16
salmon harvests would constitute a relatively small portion of the
annual catch. The time frame of the preseason process for determining
the annual modifications to ocean salmon fishery management measures
depends on when the pertinent biological data are available. Salmon
stocks are managed to meet annual spawning escapement goals or specific
exploitation rates. Achieving either of these objectives requires
designing management measures that are appropriate for the ocean
abundance predicted for that year. These pre-season abundance
forecasts, which are derived from previous years' observed spawning
escapement, vary substantially from year to year and are not available
until February because spawning escapement continues through the fall.
The preseason planning and public review process associated with
developing Council recommendations is initiated in February as soon as
the forecast information becomes available. The public planning process
requires coordination of management actions of four states, numerous
Indian tribes, and the Federal Government, all of which have management
authority over the stocks. This complex process includes the affected
user groups, as well as the general public. The process is compressed
into a 2-month period culminating with the April Council meeting at
which the Council adopts a recommendation that is forwarded to NMFS for
review, approval, and implementation of fishing regulations effective
on May 16. Providing the opportunity for prior notice and public
comments on the Council's recommended measures through a proposed and
final rulemaking process would require 30 to 60 days in addition to the
2-month period required for the development of the regulations.
Delaying implementation of annual fishing regulations, which are based
on the current stock abundance projections, for an additional 60 days
would require that fishing regulations for May and June be set in the
previous year, without the benefit of information regarding current
stock abundance. For the 2023 fishing regulations, the current stock
abundance was not available to the Council until February. In addition,
information related to northern fisheries and stock status in Alaska
and Canada which is important to assess the amount of available salmon
available to southern U.S. ocean fisheries is not available until mid-
to late March. Because a substantial amount of fishing normally occurs
during late May and June, managing the fishery with measures developed
using the prior year's data could have significant adverse effects on
the managed stocks, including ESA-listed stocks. Although salmon
fisheries that open prior to May 16 are managed under measures
developed the previous year, as modified by the Council at its March
and April meetings, relatively little harvest occurs during that period
(e.g., on average, 10 percent of commercial and recreational harvest
occurred prior to May 1 during the years 2011 through 2018). Allowing
the much more substantial harvest levels normally associated with the
late-May and June salmon seasons to be promulgated under the prior
year's regulations would impair NMFS' ability to protect weak and ESA-
listed salmon stocks, and to provide harvest opportunities where
appropriate. The choice of May 16 as the beginning of the regulatory
season balances the need to gather and analyze the data needed to meet
the management objectives of the salmon FMP and the need to manage the
fishery using the best available scientific information.
If the 2023 measures are not in place on May 16, salmon fisheries
will not open as scheduled. This would result in lost fishing
opportunities, negative economic impacts, and confusion for the public
as the state fisheries adopt concurrent regulations that conform to the
Federal management measures.
In addition, these measures were developed with significant public
input. Public comment was received and considered by the Council and
NMFS throughout the process of developing these management measures. As
described above, the Council took comments at its March and April
meetings and heard summaries of comments received at public meetings
held between the March and April meetings for each of the coastal
states. NMFS also invited comments in a notice published prior to the
March Council meeting, and considered comments received by the Council
through its representative on the Council.
Based upon the above-described need to have these measures
effective on May 16, and the fact that there is limited time available
to implement these new measures after the final Council meeting in
April, and before the commencement of the 2023 ocean salmon fishing
year on May 16, NMFS has concluded it would be impracticable and
contrary to the public interest to provide an
[[Page 30250]]
opportunity for prior notice and public comment under 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B).
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries also finds that good
cause exists under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), to waive the 30-day delay in the
date of effectiveness of this final rule. As previously discussed, data
were not available until February, and management measures were not
finalized until mid-April. These measures are essential to conserve
threatened and endangered ocean salmon stocks as well as potentially
overfished stocks, and to provide for the harvest of more abundant
stocks. Delaying the date of effectiveness of these measures by 30 days
could compromise the ability of some stocks to attain their
conservation objectives, preclude harvest opportunity, and negatively
impact anticipated international, state, and tribal salmon fisheries,
thereby undermining the purposes of this agency action and the
requirements of the MSA.
To enhance the fishing industry's notification of these new
measures, and to minimize the burden on the regulated community
required to comply with the new regulations, NMFS is announcing the new
measures over the telephone hotline (800-662-9825 or 206-526-6667) used
for inseason management actions and is posting the regulations on its
West Coast Region website (www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/west-coast).
NMFS is also advising the states of Washington, Oregon, and California
of the new management measures. These states announce the seasons for
applicable state and federal fisheries through their own public
notification systems.
Because prior notice and an opportunity for public comment are not
required to be provided for this rule by 5 U.S.C. 553, or any other
law, the analytical requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq., are not applicable. Accordingly, no Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis is required for this rule and none has been
prepared.
This action contains collection-of-information requirements subject
to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), and which have been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under control number 0648-
0433. The current information collection approval expires on February
29, 2024. The public reporting burden for providing notifications if
landing area restrictions cannot be met is estimated to average 15
minutes per response. This estimate includes the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection of information.
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 PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
This final rule was developed after meaningful consultation with
the tribal representative on the Council who has agreed with the
provisions that apply to tribal vessels.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773-773k; 1801 et seq.
Dated: May 8, 2023.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-10090 Filed 5-10-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P