Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico; Amendment 56, 71812-71816 [2023-22959]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Proposed Rules
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BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
RIN 0648–BM46
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Resources of the Gulf of Mexico;
Amendment 56
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Announcement of availability of
a fishery management plan amendment;
request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council (Council) has
submitted Amendment 56 to the Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) for the Reef
Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico
(Gulf) for review, approval, and
implementation by NMFS. If approved
by the Secretary of Commerce,
Amendment 56 would revise stock
status determination criteria for Gulf
gag, establish a rebuilding plan, and
revise catch limits. Amendment 56
would also revise the sector allocations
of the annual catch limit, revise
recreational accountability measures
(AMs), and revise the recreational
fishing season. The purpose of this
action is to implement a rebuilding plan
for gag and to implement revised
management measures to end
overfishing and rebuild the stock.
DATES: Written comments on
Amendment 56 must be received no
later than December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on Amendment 56 identified by
‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2023–0103’’ by either
of the following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
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SUMMARY:
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https://www.regulations.gov and enter
‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2023–0103’’ in the
Search box. Click the ‘‘Comment’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit all written comments
to Dan Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, 263 13th Avenue South, St.
Petersburg, FL 33701.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on https://www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information, e.g., name, address,
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments—enter
‘‘N/A’’ in the required fields if you wish
to remain anonymous.
An electronic copy of Amendment 56,
which includes an environmental
assessment, a fishery impact statement,
a Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
analysis, and a regulatory impact
review, may be obtained from the
Southeast Regional Office website at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/
amendment-56-modifications-catchlimits-sector-allocation-andrecreational-fishing-seasons.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dan
Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional Office,
telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
daniel.luers@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and
the Council manage the Gulf reef fish
fishery, which includes gag, under the
FMP in Federal waters of the Gulf. The
Council prepared the FMP and NMFS
implements the FMP through
regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
NMFS and regional fishery management
councils to prevent overfishing and
achieve, on a continuing basis, the
optimum yield (OY) from federally
managed fish stocks. These mandates
are intended to ensure fishery resources
are managed for the greatest overall
benefit to the nation, particularly with
respect to providing food production
and recreational opportunities, and
protecting marine ecosystems.
Unless otherwise noted, all weights in
this notice are in gutted weight.
Gag in the Gulf exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) are found primarily in the
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eastern Gulf. Juvenile gag are estuarine
dependent and are often found in
shallow seagrass beds. As gag mature,
they move to deeper offshore waters to
live and spawn. Gag is managed as a
single stock with commercial and
recreational catch limits. The allocation
of the stock annual catch limit (ACL)
between the commercial and
recreational sectors established in
Amendment 30B to the FMP is currently
39 percent commercial and 61 percent
recreational.
Commercial fishing for gag is
managed under the individual fishing
quota (IFQ) program for groupers and
tilefishes (GT–IFQ program), which
began January 1, 2010, upon
implementation of the final rule for
Amendment 29 to the FMP (74 FR
44732, August 31, 2009; 75 FR 9116,
March 1, 2010). Under the GT–IFQ
program, the commercial quota for gag
is set 23 percent below the gag
commercial ACL, and NMFS distributes
allocation (in pounds) of gag on January
1 each year to those who hold shares (in
percent) of the gag total commercial
quota. Both gag and red grouper,
another grouper species managed under
the GT–IFQ program, have a commercial
multi-use provision that allows a
portion of the gag quota to be harvested
under the red grouper allocation, and
vice versa. As explained further in
Amendment 56, the multi-use provision
is based on the difference between the
respective red grouper and gag ACLs
and quotas. However, if gag is under a
rebuilding plan, as would occur under
Amendment 56, the percentage of red
grouper multi-use allocation is equal to
zero. Commercial harvest of gag is also
restricted by area closures and a
minimum size limit.
NMFS and the Council manage the
recreational harvest of gag with an ACL
an annual catch target (ACT) set
approximately 10 percent below the
ACL, in-season and post-season AMs,
seasonal and area closures, a minimum
size limit, and daily bag and possession
limits.
The most recent stock assessment for
gag was completed in 2021 through
Southeast Data, Assessment, and
Review 72 (SEDAR 72), and concluded
that the gag stock is overfished is
undergoing overfishing as of 2019.
Compared to the previous assessment
for gag, SEDAR 72 used several
improved data sources, including
corrections for the potential
misidentification between black grouper
and gag, which are similar looking
species, to better quantify estimates of
commercial discards. SEDAR 72 also
utilized updated recreational catch and
effort data from the Marine Recreational
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Information Program (MRIP) Access
Point Angler Intercept Survey and
Fishing Effort Survey (FES) through
2019. MRIP–FES replaced the MRIP
Coastal Household Telephone Survey
(CHTS) in 2018. Prior to the
implementation of MRIP in 2008,
recreational landings estimates were
generated using the Marine Recreational
Fisheries Statistics Survey (MRFSS).
Because MRIP–FES is designed to more
accurately measure fishing activity, total
recreational fishing effort estimates
generated from MRIP–FES are generally
higher than both the MRFSS and MRIP–
CHTS estimates. Prior to SEDAR 72, the
most recent stock assessment for gag
was SEDAR 33 Update (2016), which
indicated that gag was not subject to
overfishing and was not overfished. The
SEDAR 33 Update included recreational
catch and effort data generated by the
MRIP–CHTS.
SEDAR 72 also accounted for
observations of red tide mortality
directly within the stock assessment
model. Gag is vulnerable to red tide
events and was negatively affected by
these disturbances in 2005, 2014, 2018,
and projected for 2021. Modeling
changes were also made in SEDAR 72 to
improve size estimates of gag retained
by commercial and for-hire (charter
vessels and headboats) fishermen, and
private anglers.
The Council’s Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC) reviewed
the results of SEDAR 72 in November
2021 and concluded that the assessment
was consistent with the best scientific
information available and suitable for
informing fisheries management. On
January 26, 2022, NMFS notified the
Council that gag was overfished and
undergoing overfishing. The MagnusonStevens Act requires that a rebuilding
plan be developed and implemented
within 2 years from when NMFS
notifies the appropriate fishery
management council that a stock is
overfished. The Council developed
Amendment 56 to comply with this
mandate.
At its January 2022 meeting, the
Council requested that the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center
update the SEDAR 72 base model by
replacing MRIP–FES calibrated landing
estimates with private mode
recreational landings estimates
calibrated to the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Commission’s State Reef Fish
Survey (SRFS). Historically, SRFS
estimates a slightly larger harvest of gag
by private anglers and state charter
vessels (in Florida) than MRIP–CHTS,
but estimates a substantially smaller
harvest of gag by private anglers and
state charter vessels than MRIP–FES.
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This alternative model run of SEDAR 72
(‘‘SRFS Run’’) also used MRIP–FES data
for the federal permitted charter vessel
and shore modes, and Southeast Region
Headboat Survey (SRHS) data for
federally permitted headboats.
The results of the SRFS Run were
presented to the Council’s SSC at its
July 2022 meeting. The SSC found the
SEDAR 72 SRFS Run to be consistent
with the best scientific information
available. The SSC determined that
SRFS is a comprehensive survey for the
gag private angling component of the
recreational sector given that greater
than 95 percent of private angling
landings of gag are captured by the
SRFS sampling frame and that the SRFS
program’s collection protocol had been
certified by NMFS as scientifically
rigorous. NMFS worked in conjunction
with the State of Florida to develop a
calibration model to adjust historic
effort estimates so that they could be
compared to new estimates from SRFS.
The calibration of SRFS to historical gag
landings was reviewed and approved by
peer-review through the NOAA Office of
Science and Technology in May 2022.
Information about the calibration and
the SSC’s review of the SEDAR 72 SRFS
Run can be found here: https://
gulfcouncil.org/meetings/scientific-andstatistical-meetings/july-2022/. The
results of the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run were
consistent with the results of the SEDAR
72 base model in that both concluded
that the gag stock is overfished and is
undergoing overfishing.
Because Amendment 56 would not
likely be implemented until 2024, and
the Council recognized that maintaining
the 2023 catch limits for gag would
continue to allow overfishing, the
Council sent a letter to NMFS, dated
July 18, 2022 (Appendix A in
Amendment 56), requesting interim
measures that would reduce the gag
stock ACL from 3.12 million lb (1.415
million kg) to 661,901 lb (300,233 kg).
The Council determined, and NMFS
agreed, that for this short-term reduction
in harvest it was appropriate to
maintain the current sector allocations
of 39 percent commercial and 61
percent recreational, and the availability
of red grouper multi-use and gag multiuse under the IFQ program. In addition
to the reduction in the catch limits, the
Council requested that the recreational
fishing season for 2023 begin on
September 1 and close on November 10,
rather than the existing open season of
June 1 through December 31. NMFS
implemented these interim measures
through a temporary rule effective on
May 3, 2023 (88 FR 27701, May 3,
2023). The measures in the temporary
rule are effective for 180 days (through
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October 30, 2023), and NMFS expects to
extend them for up to 186 additional
days while NMFS reviews public
comments on this proposed rule and
Amendment 56, and prepares any final
regulations. Because the SSC’s review of
the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run occurred after
the Council’s request for interim
measures for gag, the recreational catch
limits in the temporary rule are
consistent with MRIP–FES calibrated
landings and are not directly
comparable to the catch limits in
Amendment 56. Based on the results of
the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run and the SSC
recommendations, the Council is
recommending management changes for
gag through Amendment 56.
Actions Contained in Amendment 56
If approved by the Secretary of
Commerce, Amendment 56 would make
several changes to the management of
gag in the Gulf:
• Revise the maximum sustainable
yield (MSY) proxy, OY, and stock status
determination criteria (SDC);
• Establish a rebuilding plan for the
stock, and revise the overfishing limit
(OFL), acceptable biological catch
(ABC), and stock ACL consistent with
the rebuilding plan;
• Revise the commercial and
recreational allocation of the stock ACL
and set new commercial and
recreational sector ACLs, sector ACTs
and commercial quota;
• Modify the recreational AMs; and
• Modify the recreational fishing
season.
Status Determination Criteria
Based on the results of SEDAR 72,
Amendment 56 would revise the SDC,
which can be used to determine
whether overfishing is occurring or the
stock is overfished. The proxy for
maximum sustainable yield (MSY)
would be defined as the yield when
fishing at the fishing mortality rate (F)
associated with a 40 percent spawning
potential ratio (SPR), where SPR is the
ratio of the spawning stock biomass to
its unfished state. The maximum fishing
mortality threshold (MFMT) would be
equal to F40%SPR. The minimum stock
size threshold (MSST) would be defined
as 50 percent of the biomass at the new
MSY proxy. The OY would be
conditional on the rebuilding plan, such
that if the stock is under a rebuilding
plan, OY would be equal to the stock
ACL; and if the stock is not under a
rebuilding plan, OY would be equal to
90 percent of MSY or its proxy.
Currently, MSY is defined in the FMP
as F assuming the maximum yield per
recruit (FMAX), and the MFMT is FMAX.
The MSST is defined as 50 percent of
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the biomass at FMAX. The OY is defined
as 75 percent of the yield at FMAX. The
proposed change in SDC represents a
more conservative approach to
management that would rebuild the gag
stock to a more robust size, which
should be more resilient to episodic
mortality from red tide, harmful algal
blooms, and sustainable levels of fishing
mortality.
Stock Rebuilding Plan Timeline, Sector
Allocations, and Catch Limits
Amendment 56 would set the
rebuilding timeline for gag at 18 years
based on the amount of time the stock
is expected to take to rebuild if fished
at 75 percent of the MSY proxy (yield
at F40%SPR). The OFLs and ABCs for
2024 through 2028 are based on the
yield when fishing at F40%SPR and the
yield when fishing at 75 percent of
F40%SPR, respectively.
Amendment 56 evaluated two other
rebuilding times: 11 years, which is the
minimum time to rebuild in the absence
of fishing mortality; and 22 years, which
is twice the minimum time. In addition,
the Council initially considered an
alternative rebuilding time of 19 years,
which is based on the minimum
rebuilding time plus one generation
time (8 years for gag). Because this
option resulted in a rebuilding time
similar to fishing at 75 percent of the
MSY proxy, the Council moved this
alternative Considered but Rejected
(Appendix C in Amendment 56). The
Council also discussed whether to
consider in more detail a rebuilding
time between 11 years and 18 years. The
Council decided not to add an
additional alternative because a slightly
shorter rebuilding time would provide
minimal benefits to the stock but
increase the negative impacts to fishing
communities.
In addition, Amendment 56 would
revise sector allocations of the stock
ACL from 39 percent commercial and 61
percent recreational to 35 percent
commercial and 65 percent recreational,
using recreational data from the SEDAR
72 SRFS Run. The Council considered
two alternatives to allocate the stock
ACL to the commercial and recreational
sectors: (1) maintain the current
allocation of 39 percent commercial and
61 percent recreational, which was
based on MRFSS data from 1986
through 2005, and (2) update historical
recreational landings using the SEDAR
72 SRFS Run calibrated data from the
same 1986 through 2005 period, which
would result in an allocation of the
stock ACL of 35 percent to the
commercial sector and 65 percent to the
recreational sector. During the
development of these two allocation
alternatives, the Council also reviewed
allocation options based on five
additional historical reference periods
from 1986 to 2019. These options
differed by less than 1 percent up to less
than 4 percent. Because the options
were so similar, the Council decided to
move forward with detailed analysis of
only the two alternatives described
above. The Council determined that the
second option would best represent the
historic landings for each sector while
accounting for the change from MRFSS
to SRFS Run data in the recreational
sector.
The commercial-recreational sector
allocation impacts the catch level
projections produced by SEDAR 72. As
more of the stock ACL is allocated to the
recreational sector, the proportion of
recreational discards and associated
mortality increases. Recreational discard
mortality rates are assumed to be less
than commercial discard mortality rates
but the total amount of recreational
discards is considerably greater than
commercial discards. Generally, a gag
caught and released by a recreational
fisherman has a greater likelihood of
survival than by a commercial
fisherman because of how and where
they fish. However, because of the much
higher numbers of gag that are released
by the recreational sector compared to
the commercial sector, the total number
of discarded fish that die from
recreational fishing exceeds dead
discards from commercial fishing. This
results in additional mortality for the
stock and a lower projected annual
yield, which means a lower OFL, ABC,
and stock ACL. However, the higher
number of dead discards is not due to
any change in how the recreational
sector prosecutes the fishery but occurs
because the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run data
estimates greater fishing effort, and
consequently a greater number of fish
being caught, which includes discards
and the associated mortality of
discarded fish.
Consistent with the Councils’
recommended rebuilding time and
commercial-recreational allocation,
Amendment 56 would revise the OFL
and ABC. The Council also
recommended the stock ACL be set
equal to the ABC. The current OFL and
ABC, and the OFLs and ABCs for 2024
through 2028, which increase over the
time series as projected for the
rebuilding plan, are shown in Table 1.
However, the current OLF and ABC are
not directly comparable to the proposed
OFLs and ABCs because they are based,
in part, on recreational landings
estimates produced by the different
surveys discussed above. Note that in
Amendment 56, all of the catch levels
were rounded down to the nearest
thousand pounds. Values in 2028 would
continue for subsequent fishing years
unless modified through another action.
TABLE 1—CURRENT AND PROPOSED OFLS AND ABCS FOR GAG
OFL in pounds
(kg)
Year
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2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................
4,180,000 (1,896,016)
591,000 (268,073)
805,000 (365,142)
991,000 (449,510)
1,200,000 (544,311)
1,454,000 (659,523)
ABC in pounds
(kg)
3,120,000 (1,415,208)
444,000 (201,395)
615,000 (278,959)
769,000 (348,813)
943,000 (427,738)
1,156,000 (524,353)
Note: Values are displayed in gutted weight. Kg is kilograms.
Prior to the implementation of the
2023 temporary rule, the stock ACL was
3.120 million lb (1.415 million kg) and
was allocated 39 percent to the
commercial sector and 61 percent to the
recreational sector. The resulting
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commercial ACL and quota were 1.217
million lb (0.552 million kg) and 0.939
million lb (0.426 million kg)
respectively, and the recreational ACL
and ACT were 1.903 million lb (0.863
million kg) and 1.708 million lb (0.775
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million kg) respectively. The
commercial ACT is not codified. These
catch limits are based on the results of
the 2016 SEDAR 33 Update (2016),
which included recreational landings
estimates generated from MRIP–CHTS.
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The 2023 temporary rule reduced these
catch limits consistent with the
Council’s request. Therefore, the current
commercial ACL and commercial quota
as implemented by the 2023 temporary
rule are 258,000 lb (117,027 kg) and
199,000 lb (90,265 kg), respectively, and
the recreational ACL and ACT are
403,759 lb (183,142 kg) and 362,374 lb
(164,370 kg), respectively. These catch
limits are based on the results of the
initial SEDAR 72 base model run, which
included recreational landings estimates
generated using MRIP–FES.
Amendment 56 would set the stock
ACL for gag at 444,000 lb (201,395 kg)
in 2024, and would allocate
approximately 35 percent to the
commercial sector and approximately
65 percent to the recreational sector.
This results in a 155,000-lb (70,307-kg)
commercial ACL, and a 288,000-lb
(130,635-kg) recreational ACL. These
catch limits are based on the results of
the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run, which
included recreational landings estimates
generated using SRFS. Amendment 56
would set catch levels from 2024
through 2028. However, the 2028 catch
levels would continue after 2028 until
modified by subsequent action. As
noted above, all of the catch levels from
were rounded down to the nearest
thousand pounds. Therefore, the sum of
the sector ACLs does not equal the stock
ACL. In addition, because of the
different recreational landings estimates
used to determine the catch limits
described above, those catch limits are
not directly comparable. However, the
proposed catch limits are a significant
reduction compared to the catch limits
that would go back into effect after the
2023 temporary rule expires.
Based on the Council’s
recommendation, Amendment 56 would
modify the commercial quota such that
it would be set equal to the ACT, and
would be approximately 5 percent
below the commercial ACL. The current
buffer between the commercial ACL and
commercial quota is 23 percent. The
Council recommended reducing this
buffer between the commercial ACL and
ACT in Amendment 56 because there
have been considerable improvements
in the estimation of commercial
landings and discards of gag since the
buffer was put in place through
Amendment 32 to the FMP. Further, the
fraction of gag discarded compared to
the total number of gag caught has
remained low. NMFS does not expect
the actions in Amendment 56 to
significantly increase commercial
discards of gag. Therefore, the
commercial quota would be
approximately 95 percent of the
commercial ACL.
For the recreational sector, the current
buffer between the ACL and ACT is
approximately 10 percent. The Council
elected to choose a more conservative
ACT than if they had applied the ACL
and ACT control rule, which would
have resulted in the same 10 percent
buffer between the recreational ACL and
ACT. Instead, the Council decided to
double that buffer to increase the
probability of rebuilding gag by
accounting for uncertainty in managing
recreational harvest and further
reducing fishing mortality and discards
that result from directed harvest. Thus,
Amendment 56 would establish a
recreational ACT that is approximately
20 percent below the recreational ACL.
Table 2 shows the proposed catch levels
recommended for gag in Amendment
56.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED STOCK ACL AND SECTOR CATCH LEVELS
Stock ACL lb
(kg)
Year
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
...............................
...............................
...............................
...............................
...............................
444,000
615,000
769,000
943,000
1,156,000
Com ACL lb
(kg)
(201,395)
(278,959)
(348,813)
(427,738)
(524,353)
Com ACT &
Quota lb
(kg)
Rec ACL lb
(kg)
155,000 (70,307)
215,000 (97,522)
269,000 (122,016)
330,000 (149,685)
404,000 (183,251)
288,000
399,000
499,000
613,000
751,000
(130,635)
(180,983)
(226,343)
(278,052)
(340,648)
147,000 (66,678)
204,000 (92,533)
255,000 (115,666)
313,000 (141,974)
383,000 (173,726)
Rec ACT lb
(kg)
230,000
319,000
399,000
490,000
600,000
(104,326)
(144,696)
(180,983)
(222,260)
(272,155)
Note: Values are displayed in gutted weight.
Abbreviations used in this table: Com means commercial and Rec means recreational. Lb is pounds and kg is kilograms.
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Recreational Accountability Measures
For the recreational sector, the current
AMs require NMFS to prohibit harvest
of gag for the rest of the fishing year
when the recreational ACL is projected
to be met. The AMs also state that if the
recreational ACL for gag is exceeded in
a fishing year, then in the following
fishing year, NMFS will maintain the
prior year’s ACT at the same level,
unless the best scientific information
available determines that is
unnecessary, and the fishing season
duration will be set based on the
recreational ACT. In addition to the
previous measures, if gag is overfished
and the recreational ACL is exceeded in
a fishing year, NMFS will reduce the
ACL and ACT in the following fishing
year by the amount of the ACL overage,
unless the best scientific information
available determines that is
unnecessary. Amendment 56 would
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change the AMs to require that NMFS
prohibit harvest when the recreational
ACT is projected to be met regardless of
whether there was an overage of the
ACL in the prior year. NMFS and the
Council expect this change, in
combination with the increased buffer
between the recreational ACL and ACT,
to decrease the likelihood of
recreational harvest exceeding the
recreational ACL. The larger buffer
between the recreational ACL and ACT
would also reduce the level of discards
associated with directed harvest,
increasing the probability of meeting the
18 years rebuilding time.
Amendment 56 would also remove
the provision that requires the previous
year’s ACT to be maintained in the year
following an overage of the ACL.
Because the stock is overfished and
NMFS is required to reduce the ACL
and ACT by any overage, an additional
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adjustment that retains the lower ACT is
unnecessary.
Recreational Fishing Season
Before NMFS implemented the
temporary recreational fishing season
for gag in 2023, the season for Gulf gag
began on June 1 and continued through
December 31. During the effective
period of the temporary rule, the
recreational fishing season opened on
September 1 and was to close on
November 10, 2023, unless NMFS
projected the recreational ACL would be
harvested prior to that date. On October
4, 2023, NMFS published a temporary
rule closing recreational harvest
effective on October 19, 2023 (88 FR
68495).
Amendment 56 would modify the
recreational fishing season for gag so the
season would begin each year on
September 1. Unlike the season duration
implemented by the temporary rule,
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Proposed Rules
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Amendment 56 would not establish a
predetermined season closure date.
Consistent with the revised AMs,
Amendment 56 would require NMFS to
close the gag recreational season when
landings are projected to reach the
recreational ACT. NMFS would use the
best data available to project the
duration of the proposed recreational
season in 2024 and in following years.
NMFS expects to have better estimates
of recreational fishing effort and catch of
gag for a season beginning September 1
after data from 2023 are finalized. This
should reduce the uncertainty in
projecting an appropriate closure date
for the 2024 recreational fishing season.
Once the ACT for gag is projected to be
met and is closed, recreational fishing
for gag would not resume before the end
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:59 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
of the year because data would not yet
be available to determine whether
landings did reach the ACT.
Proposed Rule for Amendment 56
NMFS has drafted a proposed rule to
implement Amendment 56. In
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, NMFS is evaluating the proposed
rule to determine whether it is
consistent with the FMP, the MagnusonStevens Act, and other applicable laws.
If that determination is affirmative,
NMFS will publish the proposed rule in
the Federal Register for public review
and comment.
Consideration of Public Comments
The Council has submitted
Amendment 56 for Secretarial review.
Comments on Amendment 56 must be
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
received by December 18, 2023.
Comments received during the
respective comment periods, whether
specifically directed to Amendment 56
or the proposed rule will be considered
by NMFS in the decision to approve,
disapprove, or partially approve
Amendment 56. All comments received
by NMFS on the amendment or the
proposed rule during their respective
comment periods will be addressed in
any final rule.
(Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.)
Dated: October 13, 2023.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–22959 Filed 10–17–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\18OCP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 200 (Wednesday, October 18, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 71812-71816]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-22959]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
RIN 0648-BM46
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico; Amendment 56
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Announcement of availability of a fishery management plan
amendment; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (Council) has
submitted Amendment 56 to the Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the
Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) for review, approval,
and implementation by NMFS. If approved by the Secretary of Commerce,
Amendment 56 would revise stock status determination criteria for Gulf
gag, establish a rebuilding plan, and revise catch limits. Amendment 56
would also revise the sector allocations of the annual catch limit,
revise recreational accountability measures (AMs), and revise the
recreational fishing season. The purpose of this action is to implement
a rebuilding plan for gag and to implement revised management measures
to end overfishing and rebuild the stock.
DATES: Written comments on Amendment 56 must be received no later than
December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on Amendment 56 identified by
``NOAA-NMFS-2023-0103'' by either of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter ``NOAA-NMFS-2023-0103'' in the Search
box. Click the ``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields, and
enter or attach your comments.
Mail: Submit all written comments to Dan Luers, NMFS
Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL
33701.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
https://www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information, e.g., name, address, confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily by the sender
will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous comments--enter
``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain anonymous.
An electronic copy of Amendment 56, which includes an environmental
assessment, a fishery impact statement, a Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) analysis, and a regulatory impact review, may be obtained from
the Southeast Regional Office website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/amendment-56-modifications-catch-limits-sector-allocation-and-recreational-fishing-seasons.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dan Luers, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, telephone: 727-824-5305, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and the Council manage the Gulf reef
fish fishery, which includes gag, under the FMP in Federal waters of
the Gulf. The Council prepared the FMP and NMFS implements the FMP
through regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act).
Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires NMFS and regional fishery
management councils to prevent overfishing and achieve, on a continuing
basis, the optimum yield (OY) from federally managed fish stocks. These
mandates are intended to ensure fishery resources are managed for the
greatest overall benefit to the nation, particularly with respect to
providing food production and recreational opportunities, and
protecting marine ecosystems.
Unless otherwise noted, all weights in this notice are in gutted
weight.
Gag in the Gulf exclusive economic zone (EEZ) are found primarily
in the eastern Gulf. Juvenile gag are estuarine dependent and are often
found in shallow seagrass beds. As gag mature, they move to deeper
offshore waters to live and spawn. Gag is managed as a single stock
with commercial and recreational catch limits. The allocation of the
stock annual catch limit (ACL) between the commercial and recreational
sectors established in Amendment 30B to the FMP is currently 39 percent
commercial and 61 percent recreational.
Commercial fishing for gag is managed under the individual fishing
quota (IFQ) program for groupers and tilefishes (GT-IFQ program), which
began January 1, 2010, upon implementation of the final rule for
Amendment 29 to the FMP (74 FR 44732, August 31, 2009; 75 FR 9116,
March 1, 2010). Under the GT-IFQ program, the commercial quota for gag
is set 23 percent below the gag commercial ACL, and NMFS distributes
allocation (in pounds) of gag on January 1 each year to those who hold
shares (in percent) of the gag total commercial quota. Both gag and red
grouper, another grouper species managed under the GT-IFQ program, have
a commercial multi-use provision that allows a portion of the gag quota
to be harvested under the red grouper allocation, and vice versa. As
explained further in Amendment 56, the multi-use provision is based on
the difference between the respective red grouper and gag ACLs and
quotas. However, if gag is under a rebuilding plan, as would occur
under Amendment 56, the percentage of red grouper multi-use allocation
is equal to zero. Commercial harvest of gag is also restricted by area
closures and a minimum size limit.
NMFS and the Council manage the recreational harvest of gag with an
ACL an annual catch target (ACT) set approximately 10 percent below the
ACL, in-season and post-season AMs, seasonal and area closures, a
minimum size limit, and daily bag and possession limits.
The most recent stock assessment for gag was completed in 2021
through Southeast Data, Assessment, and Review 72 (SEDAR 72), and
concluded that the gag stock is overfished is undergoing overfishing as
of 2019. Compared to the previous assessment for gag, SEDAR 72 used
several improved data sources, including corrections for the potential
misidentification between black grouper and gag, which are similar
looking species, to better quantify estimates of commercial discards.
SEDAR 72 also utilized updated recreational catch and effort data from
the Marine Recreational
[[Page 71813]]
Information Program (MRIP) Access Point Angler Intercept Survey and
Fishing Effort Survey (FES) through 2019. MRIP-FES replaced the MRIP
Coastal Household Telephone Survey (CHTS) in 2018. Prior to the
implementation of MRIP in 2008, recreational landings estimates were
generated using the Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics Survey
(MRFSS). Because MRIP-FES is designed to more accurately measure
fishing activity, total recreational fishing effort estimates generated
from MRIP-FES are generally higher than both the MRFSS and MRIP-CHTS
estimates. Prior to SEDAR 72, the most recent stock assessment for gag
was SEDAR 33 Update (2016), which indicated that gag was not subject to
overfishing and was not overfished. The SEDAR 33 Update included
recreational catch and effort data generated by the MRIP-CHTS.
SEDAR 72 also accounted for observations of red tide mortality
directly within the stock assessment model. Gag is vulnerable to red
tide events and was negatively affected by these disturbances in 2005,
2014, 2018, and projected for 2021. Modeling changes were also made in
SEDAR 72 to improve size estimates of gag retained by commercial and
for-hire (charter vessels and headboats) fishermen, and private
anglers.
The Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC) reviewed
the results of SEDAR 72 in November 2021 and concluded that the
assessment was consistent with the best scientific information
available and suitable for informing fisheries management. On January
26, 2022, NMFS notified the Council that gag was overfished and
undergoing overfishing. The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that a
rebuilding plan be developed and implemented within 2 years from when
NMFS notifies the appropriate fishery management council that a stock
is overfished. The Council developed Amendment 56 to comply with this
mandate.
At its January 2022 meeting, the Council requested that the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center update the SEDAR 72 base model by
replacing MRIP-FES calibrated landing estimates with private mode
recreational landings estimates calibrated to the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Commission's State Reef Fish Survey (SRFS). Historically, SRFS
estimates a slightly larger harvest of gag by private anglers and state
charter vessels (in Florida) than MRIP-CHTS, but estimates a
substantially smaller harvest of gag by private anglers and state
charter vessels than MRIP-FES. This alternative model run of SEDAR 72
(``SRFS Run'') also used MRIP-FES data for the federal permitted
charter vessel and shore modes, and Southeast Region Headboat Survey
(SRHS) data for federally permitted headboats.
The results of the SRFS Run were presented to the Council's SSC at
its July 2022 meeting. The SSC found the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run to be
consistent with the best scientific information available. The SSC
determined that SRFS is a comprehensive survey for the gag private
angling component of the recreational sector given that greater than 95
percent of private angling landings of gag are captured by the SRFS
sampling frame and that the SRFS program's collection protocol had been
certified by NMFS as scientifically rigorous. NMFS worked in
conjunction with the State of Florida to develop a calibration model to
adjust historic effort estimates so that they could be compared to new
estimates from SRFS. The calibration of SRFS to historical gag landings
was reviewed and approved by peer-review through the NOAA Office of
Science and Technology in May 2022. Information about the calibration
and the SSC's review of the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run can be found here:
https://gulfcouncil.org/meetings/scientific-and-statistical-meetings/july-2022/. The results of the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run were consistent with
the results of the SEDAR 72 base model in that both concluded that the
gag stock is overfished and is undergoing overfishing.
Because Amendment 56 would not likely be implemented until 2024,
and the Council recognized that maintaining the 2023 catch limits for
gag would continue to allow overfishing, the Council sent a letter to
NMFS, dated July 18, 2022 (Appendix A in Amendment 56), requesting
interim measures that would reduce the gag stock ACL from 3.12 million
lb (1.415 million kg) to 661,901 lb (300,233 kg). The Council
determined, and NMFS agreed, that for this short-term reduction in
harvest it was appropriate to maintain the current sector allocations
of 39 percent commercial and 61 percent recreational, and the
availability of red grouper multi-use and gag multi-use under the IFQ
program. In addition to the reduction in the catch limits, the Council
requested that the recreational fishing season for 2023 begin on
September 1 and close on November 10, rather than the existing open
season of June 1 through December 31. NMFS implemented these interim
measures through a temporary rule effective on May 3, 2023 (88 FR
27701, May 3, 2023). The measures in the temporary rule are effective
for 180 days (through October 30, 2023), and NMFS expects to extend
them for up to 186 additional days while NMFS reviews public comments
on this proposed rule and Amendment 56, and prepares any final
regulations. Because the SSC's review of the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run occurred
after the Council's request for interim measures for gag, the
recreational catch limits in the temporary rule are consistent with
MRIP-FES calibrated landings and are not directly comparable to the
catch limits in Amendment 56. Based on the results of the SEDAR 72 SRFS
Run and the SSC recommendations, the Council is recommending management
changes for gag through Amendment 56.
Actions Contained in Amendment 56
If approved by the Secretary of Commerce, Amendment 56 would make
several changes to the management of gag in the Gulf:
Revise the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) proxy, OY, and
stock status determination criteria (SDC);
Establish a rebuilding plan for the stock, and revise the
overfishing limit (OFL), acceptable biological catch (ABC), and stock
ACL consistent with the rebuilding plan;
Revise the commercial and recreational allocation of the
stock ACL and set new commercial and recreational sector ACLs, sector
ACTs and commercial quota;
Modify the recreational AMs; and
Modify the recreational fishing season.
Status Determination Criteria
Based on the results of SEDAR 72, Amendment 56 would revise the
SDC, which can be used to determine whether overfishing is occurring or
the stock is overfished. The proxy for maximum sustainable yield (MSY)
would be defined as the yield when fishing at the fishing mortality
rate (F) associated with a 40 percent spawning potential ratio (SPR),
where SPR is the ratio of the spawning stock biomass to its unfished
state. The maximum fishing mortality threshold (MFMT) would be equal to
F40SPR. The minimum stock size threshold
(MSST) would be defined as 50 percent of the biomass at the new MSY
proxy. The OY would be conditional on the rebuilding plan, such that if
the stock is under a rebuilding plan, OY would be equal to the stock
ACL; and if the stock is not under a rebuilding plan, OY would be equal
to 90 percent of MSY or its proxy. Currently, MSY is defined in the FMP
as F assuming the maximum yield per recruit (FMAX), and the
MFMT is FMAX. The MSST is defined as 50 percent of
[[Page 71814]]
the biomass at FMAX. The OY is defined as 75 percent of the
yield at FMAX. The proposed change in SDC represents a more
conservative approach to management that would rebuild the gag stock to
a more robust size, which should be more resilient to episodic
mortality from red tide, harmful algal blooms, and sustainable levels
of fishing mortality.
Stock Rebuilding Plan Timeline, Sector Allocations, and Catch Limits
Amendment 56 would set the rebuilding timeline for gag at 18 years
based on the amount of time the stock is expected to take to rebuild if
fished at 75 percent of the MSY proxy (yield at
F40SPR). The OFLs and ABCs for 2024
through 2028 are based on the yield when fishing at
F40SPR and the yield when fishing at 75
percent of F40SPR, respectively.
Amendment 56 evaluated two other rebuilding times: 11 years, which
is the minimum time to rebuild in the absence of fishing mortality; and
22 years, which is twice the minimum time. In addition, the Council
initially considered an alternative rebuilding time of 19 years, which
is based on the minimum rebuilding time plus one generation time (8
years for gag). Because this option resulted in a rebuilding time
similar to fishing at 75 percent of the MSY proxy, the Council moved
this alternative Considered but Rejected (Appendix C in Amendment 56).
The Council also discussed whether to consider in more detail a
rebuilding time between 11 years and 18 years. The Council decided not
to add an additional alternative because a slightly shorter rebuilding
time would provide minimal benefits to the stock but increase the
negative impacts to fishing communities.
In addition, Amendment 56 would revise sector allocations of the
stock ACL from 39 percent commercial and 61 percent recreational to 35
percent commercial and 65 percent recreational, using recreational data
from the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run. The Council considered two alternatives to
allocate the stock ACL to the commercial and recreational sectors: (1)
maintain the current allocation of 39 percent commercial and 61 percent
recreational, which was based on MRFSS data from 1986 through 2005, and
(2) update historical recreational landings using the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run
calibrated data from the same 1986 through 2005 period, which would
result in an allocation of the stock ACL of 35 percent to the
commercial sector and 65 percent to the recreational sector. During the
development of these two allocation alternatives, the Council also
reviewed allocation options based on five additional historical
reference periods from 1986 to 2019. These options differed by less
than 1 percent up to less than 4 percent. Because the options were so
similar, the Council decided to move forward with detailed analysis of
only the two alternatives described above. The Council determined that
the second option would best represent the historic landings for each
sector while accounting for the change from MRFSS to SRFS Run data in
the recreational sector.
The commercial-recreational sector allocation impacts the catch
level projections produced by SEDAR 72. As more of the stock ACL is
allocated to the recreational sector, the proportion of recreational
discards and associated mortality increases. Recreational discard
mortality rates are assumed to be less than commercial discard
mortality rates but the total amount of recreational discards is
considerably greater than commercial discards. Generally, a gag caught
and released by a recreational fisherman has a greater likelihood of
survival than by a commercial fisherman because of how and where they
fish. However, because of the much higher numbers of gag that are
released by the recreational sector compared to the commercial sector,
the total number of discarded fish that die from recreational fishing
exceeds dead discards from commercial fishing. This results in
additional mortality for the stock and a lower projected annual yield,
which means a lower OFL, ABC, and stock ACL. However, the higher number
of dead discards is not due to any change in how the recreational
sector prosecutes the fishery but occurs because the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run
data estimates greater fishing effort, and consequently a greater
number of fish being caught, which includes discards and the associated
mortality of discarded fish.
Consistent with the Councils' recommended rebuilding time and
commercial-recreational allocation, Amendment 56 would revise the OFL
and ABC. The Council also recommended the stock ACL be set equal to the
ABC. The current OFL and ABC, and the OFLs and ABCs for 2024 through
2028, which increase over the time series as projected for the
rebuilding plan, are shown in Table 1. However, the current OLF and ABC
are not directly comparable to the proposed OFLs and ABCs because they
are based, in part, on recreational landings estimates produced by the
different surveys discussed above. Note that in Amendment 56, all of
the catch levels were rounded down to the nearest thousand pounds.
Values in 2028 would continue for subsequent fishing years unless
modified through another action.
Table 1--Current and Proposed OFLs and ABCs for Gag
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year OFL in pounds (kg) ABC in pounds (kg)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2023........................................................ 4,180,000 (1,896,016) 3,120,000 (1,415,208)
2024........................................................ 591,000 (268,073) 444,000 (201,395)
2025........................................................ 805,000 (365,142) 615,000 (278,959)
2026........................................................ 991,000 (449,510) 769,000 (348,813)
2027........................................................ 1,200,000 (544,311) 943,000 (427,738)
2028........................................................ 1,454,000 (659,523) 1,156,000 (524,353)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Values are displayed in gutted weight. Kg is kilograms.
Prior to the implementation of the 2023 temporary rule, the stock
ACL was 3.120 million lb (1.415 million kg) and was allocated 39
percent to the commercial sector and 61 percent to the recreational
sector. The resulting commercial ACL and quota were 1.217 million lb
(0.552 million kg) and 0.939 million lb (0.426 million kg)
respectively, and the recreational ACL and ACT were 1.903 million lb
(0.863 million kg) and 1.708 million lb (0.775 million kg)
respectively. The commercial ACT is not codified. These catch limits
are based on the results of the 2016 SEDAR 33 Update (2016), which
included recreational landings estimates generated from MRIP-CHTS.
[[Page 71815]]
The 2023 temporary rule reduced these catch limits consistent with the
Council's request. Therefore, the current commercial ACL and commercial
quota as implemented by the 2023 temporary rule are 258,000 lb (117,027
kg) and 199,000 lb (90,265 kg), respectively, and the recreational ACL
and ACT are 403,759 lb (183,142 kg) and 362,374 lb (164,370 kg),
respectively. These catch limits are based on the results of the
initial SEDAR 72 base model run, which included recreational landings
estimates generated using MRIP-FES.
Amendment 56 would set the stock ACL for gag at 444,000 lb (201,395
kg) in 2024, and would allocate approximately 35 percent to the
commercial sector and approximately 65 percent to the recreational
sector. This results in a 155,000-lb (70,307-kg) commercial ACL, and a
288,000-lb (130,635-kg) recreational ACL. These catch limits are based
on the results of the SEDAR 72 SRFS Run, which included recreational
landings estimates generated using SRFS. Amendment 56 would set catch
levels from 2024 through 2028. However, the 2028 catch levels would
continue after 2028 until modified by subsequent action. As noted
above, all of the catch levels from were rounded down to the nearest
thousand pounds. Therefore, the sum of the sector ACLs does not equal
the stock ACL. In addition, because of the different recreational
landings estimates used to determine the catch limits described above,
those catch limits are not directly comparable. However, the proposed
catch limits are a significant reduction compared to the catch limits
that would go back into effect after the 2023 temporary rule expires.
Based on the Council's recommendation, Amendment 56 would modify
the commercial quota such that it would be set equal to the ACT, and
would be approximately 5 percent below the commercial ACL. The current
buffer between the commercial ACL and commercial quota is 23 percent.
The Council recommended reducing this buffer between the commercial ACL
and ACT in Amendment 56 because there have been considerable
improvements in the estimation of commercial landings and discards of
gag since the buffer was put in place through Amendment 32 to the FMP.
Further, the fraction of gag discarded compared to the total number of
gag caught has remained low. NMFS does not expect the actions in
Amendment 56 to significantly increase commercial discards of gag.
Therefore, the commercial quota would be approximately 95 percent of
the commercial ACL.
For the recreational sector, the current buffer between the ACL and
ACT is approximately 10 percent. The Council elected to choose a more
conservative ACT than if they had applied the ACL and ACT control rule,
which would have resulted in the same 10 percent buffer between the
recreational ACL and ACT. Instead, the Council decided to double that
buffer to increase the probability of rebuilding gag by accounting for
uncertainty in managing recreational harvest and further reducing
fishing mortality and discards that result from directed harvest. Thus,
Amendment 56 would establish a recreational ACT that is approximately
20 percent below the recreational ACL. Table 2 shows the proposed catch
levels recommended for gag in Amendment 56.
Table 2--Proposed Stock ACL and Sector Catch Levels
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Com ACT & Quota lb
Year Stock ACL lb (kg) Com ACL lb (kg) Rec ACL lb (kg) (kg) Rec ACT lb (kg)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2024......................................... 444,000 (201,395) 155,000 (70,307) 288,000 (130,635) 147,000 (66,678) 230,000 (104,326)
2025......................................... 615,000 (278,959) 215,000 (97,522) 399,000 (180,983) 204,000 (92,533) 319,000 (144,696)
2026......................................... 769,000 (348,813) 269,000 (122,016) 499,000 (226,343) 255,000 (115,666) 399,000 (180,983)
2027......................................... 943,000 (427,738) 330,000 (149,685) 613,000 (278,052) 313,000 (141,974) 490,000 (222,260)
2028......................................... 1,156,000 (524,353) 404,000 (183,251) 751,000 (340,648) 383,000 (173,726) 600,000 (272,155)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Values are displayed in gutted weight.
Abbreviations used in this table: Com means commercial and Rec means recreational. Lb is pounds and kg is kilograms.
Recreational Accountability Measures
For the recreational sector, the current AMs require NMFS to
prohibit harvest of gag for the rest of the fishing year when the
recreational ACL is projected to be met. The AMs also state that if the
recreational ACL for gag is exceeded in a fishing year, then in the
following fishing year, NMFS will maintain the prior year's ACT at the
same level, unless the best scientific information available determines
that is unnecessary, and the fishing season duration will be set based
on the recreational ACT. In addition to the previous measures, if gag
is overfished and the recreational ACL is exceeded in a fishing year,
NMFS will reduce the ACL and ACT in the following fishing year by the
amount of the ACL overage, unless the best scientific information
available determines that is unnecessary. Amendment 56 would change the
AMs to require that NMFS prohibit harvest when the recreational ACT is
projected to be met regardless of whether there was an overage of the
ACL in the prior year. NMFS and the Council expect this change, in
combination with the increased buffer between the recreational ACL and
ACT, to decrease the likelihood of recreational harvest exceeding the
recreational ACL. The larger buffer between the recreational ACL and
ACT would also reduce the level of discards associated with directed
harvest, increasing the probability of meeting the 18 years rebuilding
time.
Amendment 56 would also remove the provision that requires the
previous year's ACT to be maintained in the year following an overage
of the ACL. Because the stock is overfished and NMFS is required to
reduce the ACL and ACT by any overage, an additional adjustment that
retains the lower ACT is unnecessary.
Recreational Fishing Season
Before NMFS implemented the temporary recreational fishing season
for gag in 2023, the season for Gulf gag began on June 1 and continued
through December 31. During the effective period of the temporary rule,
the recreational fishing season opened on September 1 and was to close
on November 10, 2023, unless NMFS projected the recreational ACL would
be harvested prior to that date. On October 4, 2023, NMFS published a
temporary rule closing recreational harvest effective on October 19,
2023 (88 FR 68495).
Amendment 56 would modify the recreational fishing season for gag
so the season would begin each year on September 1. Unlike the season
duration implemented by the temporary rule,
[[Page 71816]]
Amendment 56 would not establish a predetermined season closure date.
Consistent with the revised AMs, Amendment 56 would require NMFS to
close the gag recreational season when landings are projected to reach
the recreational ACT. NMFS would use the best data available to project
the duration of the proposed recreational season in 2024 and in
following years. NMFS expects to have better estimates of recreational
fishing effort and catch of gag for a season beginning September 1
after data from 2023 are finalized. This should reduce the uncertainty
in projecting an appropriate closure date for the 2024 recreational
fishing season. Once the ACT for gag is projected to be met and is
closed, recreational fishing for gag would not resume before the end of
the year because data would not yet be available to determine whether
landings did reach the ACT.
Proposed Rule for Amendment 56
NMFS has drafted a proposed rule to implement Amendment 56. In
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, NMFS is evaluating the
proposed rule to determine whether it is consistent with the FMP, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable laws. If that determination
is affirmative, NMFS will publish the proposed rule in the Federal
Register for public review and comment.
Consideration of Public Comments
The Council has submitted Amendment 56 for Secretarial review.
Comments on Amendment 56 must be received by December 18, 2023.
Comments received during the respective comment periods, whether
specifically directed to Amendment 56 or the proposed rule will be
considered by NMFS in the decision to approve, disapprove, or partially
approve Amendment 56. All comments received by NMFS on the amendment or
the proposed rule during their respective comment periods will be
addressed in any final rule.
(Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.)
Dated: October 13, 2023.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-22959 Filed 10-17-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P