Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Red Snapper Data Calibrations and Gray Snapper Harvest Levels, 41896-41899 [2024-10468]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 14, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
was published in the Federal Register
on April 22, 2024. This correction
makes an update to an OMB number
that was recently revised.
DATES: Effective May 22, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Lois Mandell, Regulatory Secretariat
Division (MVCB), at 202–501–4755 or
GSARegSec@gsa.gov. Please cite FAC
2024–05, Technical Amendments;
Correction.
DoD, GSA,
and NASA are correcting an OMB
control number under part 1, for section
1.106, published at 89 FR 30252, on
April 22, 2024.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Correction
In FR Doc. 2024–07932, published in
the Federal Register at 89 FR 30252, on
April 22, 2024, make the following
correction:
1.106
[Corrected]
1. On page 30252, in the second
column, in section 1.106, in the FAR
segment entry of ‘‘52.204–10(d)(2) and
(3)’’, the OMB control No. of ‘‘3090–
0292’’ is corrected to read ‘‘9000–0177’’.
■
William F. Clark,
Director, Office of Government-wide
Acquisition Policy, Office of Acquisition
Policy, Office of Government-wide Policy.
specific red snapper private angling
component annual catch limits (ACLs)
for Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi
and modifies each of these state’s
private angling component ACLs based
on the new ratios. In addition, this final
rule modifies the stock ACL for gray
snapper in the Gulf exclusive economic
zone (EEZ). The purposes of this final
rule are to update the state specific
private angling component calibration
ratios and ACLs to provide a more
accurate estimate of state landings for
red snapper management and to revise
gray snapper catch limits with updated
scientific information to continue to
achieve optimum yield (OY) for the
stock.
This final rule is effective June
13, 2024.
DATES:
Electronic copies of the
framework action, which include an
environmental assessment, regulatory
impact review, and a Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) analysis, may be
obtained from the Southeast Regional
Office website at https://www.fisheries.
noaa.gov/action/red-snapper-datacalibrations-and-catch-limitmodifications.
ADDRESSES:
Dan
Luers, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
daniel.luers@noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[FR Doc. 2024–10499 Filed 5–13–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
The Gulf
reef fish fishery, which includes both
red snapper and gray snapper, is
managed under the FMP. The Council
prepared the FMP, which the Secretary
of Commerce approved, 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).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 240508–0133]
RIN 0648–BM56
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Red
Snapper Data Calibrations and Gray
Snapper Harvest Levels
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations to
implement management measures
described in a framework action under
the Fishery Management Plan for the
Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of
Mexico (FMP), as prepared by the Gulf
of Mexico (Gulf) Fishery Management
Council (Council). This final rule
modifies the ratios used to set the state-
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SUMMARY:
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Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
NMFS and regional fishery management
councils to prevent overfishing and to
achieve, on a continuing basis, the
optimum yield (OY) from federally
managed fish stocks to ensure that
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.
On January 17, 2024, NMFS
published a proposed rule for the
framework action and requested public
comment (89 FR 2913). Unless
otherwise noted, all weights in this final
rule are in round weight.
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Red Snapper
Red snapper in the Gulf EEZ is
harvested by both the commercial and
recreational sectors. Each sector has its
own ACL and associated management
measures. The stock ACL is allocated 51
percent to the commercial sector and 49
percent to the recreational sector. The
recreational ACL (quota) is further
allocated between the Federal charter
vessel/headboat (for-hire) component
(42.3 percent) and the private angling
component (57.7 percent).
In February 2020, NMFS
implemented state management of red
snapper for the private angling
component through Amendments 50 A–
F to the FMP (85 FR 6819, February 6,
2020). Through these amendments, each
state was allocated a portion of the red
snapper private angling component ACL
and was delegated the authority to set
the private angling fishing season, bag
limit, and size limit. These amendments
also established an accountability
measure (AM) that required any overage
of a state’s ACL to be deducted in the
following year (i.e., a payback
provision).
In 2023, NMFS implemented a
framework action under the FMP to
calibrate the red snapper ACLs for
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and
Mississippi so they could be directly
compared to the landings estimates
produced by each of those state’s data
collection program (Calibration
Framework) (87 FR 74014, December 2,
2022). As explained in the Calibration
Framework final rule, each of these
states have relatively new programs for
monitoring red snapper landed by the
private-angling component (beginning
in 2014 for Alabama and Louisiana and
2015 for Florida and Mississippi), and
these programs do not produce results
that are comparable to each other or to
Federal estimates generated by the
Marine Recreational Information
Program (MRIP). Prior to the
development of these state programs,
NMFS provided the only estimates of
private angler red snapper landings,
except for those in Texas (Texas anglers
have never participated in the NMFS
recreational data collection survey). The
state-specific red snapper ACLs were
established using the results of a stock
assessment that included recreational
landings estimates produced by MRIP.
The Calibration Framework final rule
applied state-specific ratios to these
MRIP-based ACLs (Federal equivalent
ACLs) to adjust each state’s privateangling ACL to account for the
monitoring programs used by each Gulf
state and allow a direct comparison
between the ACL and state landings
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 14, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
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estimate. The ratios implemented by the
Calibration Framework final rule were:
Alabama (0.4875), Florida (1.0602),
Louisiana (1.06), Mississippi (0.3840),
and Texas (1.00). The ratios for
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and
Mississippi were developed using
available state landings data. More
information on the data used to
calculate the current ratios can be found
in the Calibration Framework.
In June 2022, the Council asked its
Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) to review more recent state data
and provide recommendations on any
appropriate changes to the calibration
ratios. Alabama, Florida, and
Mississippi submitted updated data for
review, and in January 2023, the SSC
concluded that it was appropriate to
modify the ratios for Alabama, Florida,
and Mississippi to 0.548, 1.34, and
0.503, respectively.
This final rule modifies the
calibration ratios for Alabama, Florida,
and Mississippi as recommended by the
SSC and applies these ratios to the
MRIP-based ACLs to update the statesurvey-based ACLs. The framework
action and this final rule will not
change the MRIP-based (Federal
equivalent) state ACLs or the total
private-angling ACL. However, because
the understanding of the relationship
between the states’ landings estimates
and the Federal landings estimates have
changed, NMFS expects each of the
three states to increase the number of
days that private anglers are allowed to
harvest red snapper.
Gray Snapper
Gray snapper in the Gulf EEZ is
managed as a single stock with a stock
ACL and a stock annual catch target
(ACT), although the ACT is not codified
in the regulations or used for
management. There is no allocation of
the stock ACL between the commercial
and recreational sectors. AMs for gray
snapper specify that if the combined
commercial and recreational landings
exceed the stock ACL in a fishing year,
then during the following fishing year if
the stock ACL is reached or is projected
to be reached, the commercial and
recreational sectors will be closed for
the remainder of the fishing year.
However, since the implementation of
gray snapper catch limits in 2012, total
landings have not exceeded the ACL.
Prior to 2018, the status of the gray
snapper stock had not been evaluated in
a stock assessment. In 2018, a Southeast
Data, Assessment, and Review (SEDAR)
benchmark stock assessment for gray
snapper was completed (SEDAR 51) and
indicated that the stock was undergoing
overfishing. SEDAR 51 included
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recreational landings estimates
calibrated to the MRIP-Coastal
Household Telephone Survey (CHTS).
In response to this assessment, the
Council developed and NMFS
implemented Amendment 51 to the
FMP, which established biological
reference points, overfished status
determination criteria, and the current
catch limits for the gray snapper stock
(85 FR 73238, November 17, 2020).
These catch limits are an overfishing
limit (OFL) of 2.57 million lb (1.17
million kg), acceptable biological catch
(ABC) of 2.51 million lb (1.14 million
kg), and stock ACL of 2.23 million lb
(1.02 million kg).
In December 2022, the Southeast
Fisheries Science Center finalized a new
stock assessment report for gray snapper
(SEDAR 75). SEDAR 75 also
incorporated updated recreational
landings data calibrated to the MRIPFishing Effort Survey (FES). MRIP–FES
replaced MRIP–CHTS in 2018, and total
recreational fishing effort estimates
generated from MRIP–FES are generally
higher than MRIP–CHTS estimates.
The Council’s SSC reviewed the
results of SEDAR 75 during its January
2023 meeting and determined that the
assessment was consistent with the best
scientific information available. Based
on the results of SEDAR 75, the
Council’s SSC concluded the stock is
not overfished or undergoing
overfishing as of 2020 and also
determined that the stock was not likely
to have been experiencing overfishing in
2015, as was concluded in SEDAR 51.
For this framework action, the
Council recommended a constant catch
OFL and ABC of 7.547 million lb (3.423
million kg) and 6.226 million lb (2.824
million kg), respectively. The Council
also recommended an 8 percent buffer
between the ABC and stock ACL, which
is based on the Council’s ACL/ACT
control rule. This results in a revised
stock ACL of 5.728 million lb (2.598
million kg). Because of the different
recreational landings estimates used to
determine the current and revised catch
limits (MRIP–CHTS versus MRIP–FES),
these catch limits are not directly
comparable. Much of the increase in the
new catch limits is due to the
conversion from MRIP–CHTS to MRIP–
FES. However, using recreational data
collected in MRIP–CHTS for reference,
the revised catch limits do represent an
approximate increase of 15 percent from
the current catch limits.
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41897
Management Measures Contained in
This Final Rule
Red Snapper
This final rule modifies the
calibration ratios used by Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi to convert
MRIP-based red snapper private angling
component ACLs to state-survey-based
red snapper private angling component
ACLs and applies those ratios to update
each state’s ACL.
As described above, the current state
private recreational data calibration
ratios for Alabama, Florida, and
Mississippi are 0.4875, 1.0602, and
0.3840, respectively. The framework
action and final rule revise the state
private recreational calibration ratios for
Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi to be
0.548, 1.34, and 0.503, respectively.
NMFS notes that the calibration ratios
are not codified in the regulations.
Applying the new ratios to the MRIPbased, Federal equivalent ACLs (which
remain the same) results in revised
state-survey-based private angling
component ACLs as follows: the
Alabama private angling component
ACL will be 664,552 lb (301,436 kg)
with a Federal equivalent of 1,212,687
lb (550,066 kg); the Florida private
angling component ACL will be
2,769,631 lb (1,256,283 kg) with a
Federal equivalent of 2,066,889 lb
(937,525 kg); and the Mississippi private
angling component ACL will be 82,342
lb (37,350 kg) with a Federal equivalent
of 163,702 lb (74,254 kg).
Gray Snapper
As a result of SEDAR 75 and using
data through 2020, this final rule revises
the gray snapper stock ACL from 2.23
million lb (1.01 million kg) to 5.728
million lb (2.598 million kg). As
explained previously, the current and
revised ACLs are not directly
comparable. However, total harvest has
never exceeded the current ACL, and
the revised stock ACL represents an
increase in the allowable harvest.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received seven comment
submissions in response to the proposed
rule which were largely in support of
the framework action and proposed
rule. Several comments were outside the
scope of the proposed rule, including
that the gray snapper size limit is too
low, Mississippi’s red snapper
allocation percentage is too low,
recreational landings should be
calculated in number of fish rather than
in weight, NMFS and the Council must
create a new recreational census-based
reporting system that captures landings
and discards, and NMFS and the
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 14, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Council must implement a mandatory
recreational fishing permit for all Gulf
anglers. While these comments discuss
red and gray snapper management, this
action is limited to modifying the gray
snapper catch limits and modifying the
red snapper calibration ratios for
Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi and
applying these ratios to the MRIP-based
ACLs to update the state-survey-based
ACLs. Broader issues such as size limits,
state allocations, and monitoring
methods are outside the scope of this
action.
Specific comments related to the
proposed rule and the framework action
are summarized below and followed by
NMFS’ respective responses.
Comment 1: NMFS should take a
precautionary approach when drastic
ACL changes are recommended based
on MRIP–FES. For gray snapper, the
drastic increase in the stock ACL
(approximately 200 percent) is not
precautionary, especially given the
uncertainty of the MRIP–FES data and
only 54 percent of last year’s stock ACL
was landed.
Response: Initially, NMFS notes that
this final rule does not increase the gray
snapper stock ACL by 200 percent. As
explained previously, most of the
increase in the new catch limits is due
to the conversion from MRIP–CHTS to
MRIP–FES. This conversion does not
reflect greater harvest than previously
allowed. It changes the scale of the
catch limits to be consistent with the
scale of survey used to monitor those
catch limits. After accounting for the
change to MRIP–FES, the increase in the
gray snapper stock ACL is
approximately 15 percent.
NMFS does not agree that a
precautionary approach is necessary
with respect to the gray snapper catch
limits given the current stock status of
gray snapper. As required by the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the new catch
limits are designed to prevent
overfishing and achieve OY and are
based on the best scientific information
available, including recreational
landings estimates calibrated to MRIP–
FES, which indicates that gray snapper
is not overfished or undergoing
overfishing. Further, the new ACL takes
into account both scientific and
management uncertainty. The Council’s
SSC recommended an ABC that is
approximately 13 percent lower than
the recommended OFL, and this buffer
between the OFL and the ABC accounts
for scientific uncertainty and reduces
the likelihood of overfishing. The
Council accounted for management
uncertainty and further reduced the
likelihood of overfishing by
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recommending a stock ACL eight
percent below the ABC.
Comment 2: States that exceed their
red snapper private angling component
ACLs should not be rewarded with
calibration ratios that increase their
allowable harvest. Alabama,
Mississippi, and Texas benefitted from
a de facto reallocation of the
recreational ACL by exceeding their red
snapper private angling component
ACLs between 2018 and 2021 without
repercussion. These states should not be
rewarded with increased allocation
percentages based their ACL overages.
Response: It is unclear how the
commenter determined that Alabama,
Mississippi, and Texas exceeded their
respective ACLs or benefitted from any
de facto reallocation. In 2018 and 2019,
all of the Gulf states were operating
under exempted fishing permits that
allowed each state to set the red snapper
fishing season for private anglers
landing red snapper in that state. The
state-specific catch levels in each EFP
were based on the amounts requested by
each state, which equaled 96.22 percent
of the total private angling component
ACL. The EFPs required each state to
pay back any overage of its ACL. Florida
and Alabama exceeded their ACLs in
2018 and Louisiana exceeded its ACL in
2019; those overages were paid back in
the following years. More information
about the EFPs and the state landings in
2018 and 2019 can be found at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/southeast/staterecreational-red-snapper-managementexempted-fishing-permits#permits.
Since 2020, each state has been
operating under the authority delegated
in the final rule implementing
Amendments 50A–F, which specified
the state-specific allocations and ACLs.
However, at the time Amendments
50A–F were implemented the statespecific ACLs had not been calibrated to
each state’s survey. In the final rule
implementing the state calibration
ratios, NMFS acknowledged that the
lack of the calibrated state ACLs had
allowed the combined landings from the
Gulf States to exceed the total private
angling component ACL. NMFS also
explained that when state reported
landings exceeded the codified state
ACLs, NMFS implemented paybacks to
address the state ACL overages, but no
paybacks for Mississippi or Alabama
had been implemented because landings
estimates provided by these states did
not exceed their ACLs as codified in
2020, 2021, and 2022 (see 87 FR at
74014). The calibrated state ACLs now
allow NMFS to directly compare each
state’s landings estimate to its ACL and
implement any necessary payback.
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The Council did not consider and
NMFS is not making changes to the state
allocations. This final rule is adjusting
how Alabama, Florida, and
Mississippi’s red snapper private
angling program landings estimates
compare to the MRIP-based landings
estimates. Thus while this final rule
increases the state-survey based red
snapper ACLs, the MRIP-based survey
(Federal equivalent) ACLs remain the
same. The allocation percentages
adopted in Amendment 50A are based
on the MRIP-based ACL, and this final
rule is not changing each Gulf state’s
percentage of that MRIP-based ACL.
Comment 3: NMFS must require all
five Gulf states to publicly report
landings in a standardized and timely
manner, and NMFS must provide a
central location that publicizes
recreational red snapper landings and
discard information from the states both
in ‘‘state currency’’ landings and the
appropriate ‘‘common currency’’
landings once those data are finalized.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is
appropriate to require the states to
report in a standardized manner because
Amendments 50A–F were designed to
allow each state to manage red snapper
harvest by the private-angling
component using their own systems,
which are not uniform. NMFS publishes
red snapper recreational landings from
each Gulf state, as estimated by each
state survey (state currency) and as
estimated by MRIP (common currency)
when NMFS receives the data from all
of the Gulf states for a fishing year.
NMFS does not have control over when
the data from each Gulf state are
submitted, so landings data may not be
publicly available for a number of
months after the end of a fishing year.
In addition, the Gulf states’ estimates
may be updated by a state after they are
submitted to NMFS, and those changes
may occur months or years after the data
have been initially submitted. For this
reason, NMFS publishes the red snapper
recreational landings data as most
recently reported by the states without
change. NMFS does not require that the
states provide estimates of red snapper
recreational discards because the state
ACLs are expressed in terms of landed
fish only. Therefore, NMFS does not
publish state discard data. The most
recent private recreational landings
data, estimated by MRIP and as
submitted by the Gulf states, can be
found at: https://www.fisheries.
noaa.gov/southeast/recreational-fishingdata/gulf-mexico-historicalrecreational-landings-and-annual-catch.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 14, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(3) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this final rule is consistent with the
framework action, the FMP, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, the U.S. Constitution, and other
applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides
the legal basis for this final rule. No
duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting
Federal rules have been identified.
A description of this final rule, why
it is being considered, and the purpose
of this final rule are contained in the
SUMMARY and SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION sections of this final rule.
The objective of this final rule is to
improve the management of red snapper
and gray snapper based on the best
scientific information available.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA)
during the proposed rule stage that this
action would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The factual
basis for the certification was published
in the proposed rule and is not repeated
here. NMFS did not receive any
comments from SBA’s Office of
Advocacy or the public regarding the
certification in the proposed rule. As a
result, a final regulatory flexibility
analysis was not required and none was
prepared.
This final rule contains no
information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995.
§ 622.23 State management of the red
snapper recreational sector private angling
component in the Gulf EEZ.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Alabama regional management
area—664,552 lb (301,436 kg); Federal
equivalent—1,212,687 lb (550,066 kg).
(B) Florida regional management
area—2,769,631 lb (1,256,283 kg);
Federal equivalent—2,066,889 lb
(937,525 kg).
*
*
*
*
*
(D) Mississippi regional management
area—82,342 lb (37,350 kg); Federal
equivalent—163,702 lb (74,254 kg).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 622.41, revise paragraph (l) to
read as follows:
§ 622.41 Annual catch limits (ACLs),
annual catch targets (ACTs), and
accountability measures (AMs).
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Gray snapper. If the sum of the
commercial and recreational landings,
as estimated by the SRD, exceeds the
stock ACL, then during the following
fishing year, if the sum of commercial
and recreational landings reaches or is
projected to reach the stock ACL, the
AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register to close
the commercial and recreational sectors
for the remainder of that fishing year.
The stock ACL for gray snapper is 5.728
million lb (2.598 million kg), round
weight.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2024–10468 Filed 5–13–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Annual catch limits, Fisheries,
Fishing, Gulf, Recreational, Red
snapper, Reef fish.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Dated: May 8, 2024.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 231215–0305; RTID 0648–
XD957]
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Summer Flounder Fishery;
Quota Transfer From North Carolina to
Virginia
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, NMFS amends 50 CFR part
622 as follows:
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2. In § 622.23, revise paragraphs
(a)(1)(ii)(A), (B), and (D) to read as
follows:
■
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND
SOUTH ATLANTIC
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
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15:51 May 13, 2024
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National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; quota transfer.
AGENCY:
NMFS announces that the
State of North Carolina is transferring a
SUMMARY:
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41899
portion of its 2024 commercial summer
flounder quota to the Commonwealth of
Virginia. This adjustment to the 2024
fishing year quota is necessary to
comply with the Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) quota transfer
provisions. This announcement informs
the public of the revised 2024
commercial quotas for North Carolina
and Virginia.
DATES: Effective May 13, 2024 through
December 31, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura Deighan, Fishery Management
Specialist, (978) 281–9184.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulations governing the summer
flounder fishery are found in 50 CFR
648.100 through 648.111. These
regulations require annual specification
of a commercial quota that is
apportioned among the coastal states
from Maine through North Carolina. The
process to set the annual commercial
quota and the percent allocated to each
state is described in § 648.102, and the
final 2024 allocations were published
on December 21, 2023 (88 FR 88266).
The final rule implementing
amendment 5 to the Summer Flounder
FMP, as published in the Federal
Register on December 17, 1993 (58 FR
65936), provided a mechanism for
transferring summer flounder
commercial quota from one state to
another. Two or more states, under
mutual agreement and with the
concurrence of the NMFS Greater
Atlantic Regional Administrator, can
transfer or combine summer flounder
commercial quota under § 648.102(c)(2).
The Regional Administrator is required
to consider three criteria in the
evaluation of requests for quota transfers
or combinations: (1) the transfers or
combinations would not preclude the
overall annual quota from being fully
harvested; (2) the transfers address an
unforeseen variation or contingency in
the fishery; and (3) the transfers are
consistent with the objectives of the
FMP and the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act). The Regional
Administrator has determined these
three criteria have been met for the
transfer approved in this notification.
North Carolina is transferring 18,043
pounds (lb; 8,184 kilograms (kg)) to
Virginia through a mutual agreement
between the states. This transfer was
requested to repay landings made by an
out-of-state permitted vessel under a
safe harbor agreement. The revised
summer flounder quotas for 2024 are:
North Carolina, 2,391,124 lb (1,084,596
E:\FR\FM\14MYR1.SGM
14MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 94 (Tuesday, May 14, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 41896-41899]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-10468]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 240508-0133]
RIN 0648-BM56
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Red Snapper Data Calibrations
and Gray Snapper Harvest Levels
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: NMFS issues regulations to implement management measures
described in a framework action under the Fishery Management Plan for
the Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of Mexico (FMP), as prepared by the
Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) Fishery Management Council (Council). This final
rule modifies the ratios used to set the state-specific red snapper
private angling component annual catch limits (ACLs) for Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi and modifies each of these state's private
angling component ACLs based on the new ratios. In addition, this final
rule modifies the stock ACL for gray snapper in the Gulf exclusive
economic zone (EEZ). The purposes of this final rule are to update the
state specific private angling component calibration ratios and ACLs to
provide a more accurate estimate of state landings for red snapper
management and to revise gray snapper catch limits with updated
scientific information to continue to achieve optimum yield (OY) for
the stock.
DATES: This final rule is effective June 13, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the framework action, which include an
environmental assessment, regulatory impact review, and a Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) analysis, may be obtained from the Southeast
Regional Office website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/red-snapper-data-calibrations-and-catch-limit-modifications.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dan Luers, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, telephone: 727-824-5305, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Gulf reef fish fishery, which includes
both red snapper and gray snapper, is managed under the FMP. The
Council prepared the FMP, which the Secretary of Commerce approved, 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 to achieve, on a
continuing basis, the optimum yield (OY) from federally managed fish
stocks to ensure that 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.
On January 17, 2024, NMFS published a proposed rule for the
framework action and requested public comment (89 FR 2913). Unless
otherwise noted, all weights in this final rule are in round weight.
Red Snapper
Red snapper in the Gulf EEZ is harvested by both the commercial and
recreational sectors. Each sector has its own ACL and associated
management measures. The stock ACL is allocated 51 percent to the
commercial sector and 49 percent to the recreational sector. The
recreational ACL (quota) is further allocated between the Federal
charter vessel/headboat (for-hire) component (42.3 percent) and the
private angling component (57.7 percent).
In February 2020, NMFS implemented state management of red snapper
for the private angling component through Amendments 50 A-F to the FMP
(85 FR 6819, February 6, 2020). Through these amendments, each state
was allocated a portion of the red snapper private angling component
ACL and was delegated the authority to set the private angling fishing
season, bag limit, and size limit. These amendments also established an
accountability measure (AM) that required any overage of a state's ACL
to be deducted in the following year (i.e., a payback provision).
In 2023, NMFS implemented a framework action under the FMP to
calibrate the red snapper ACLs for Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and
Mississippi so they could be directly compared to the landings
estimates produced by each of those state's data collection program
(Calibration Framework) (87 FR 74014, December 2, 2022). As explained
in the Calibration Framework final rule, each of these states have
relatively new programs for monitoring red snapper landed by the
private-angling component (beginning in 2014 for Alabama and Louisiana
and 2015 for Florida and Mississippi), and these programs do not
produce results that are comparable to each other or to Federal
estimates generated by the Marine Recreational Information Program
(MRIP). Prior to the development of these state programs, NMFS provided
the only estimates of private angler red snapper landings, except for
those in Texas (Texas anglers have never participated in the NMFS
recreational data collection survey). The state-specific red snapper
ACLs were established using the results of a stock assessment that
included recreational landings estimates produced by MRIP. The
Calibration Framework final rule applied state-specific ratios to these
MRIP-based ACLs (Federal equivalent ACLs) to adjust each state's
private-angling ACL to account for the monitoring programs used by each
Gulf state and allow a direct comparison between the ACL and state
landings
[[Page 41897]]
estimate. The ratios implemented by the Calibration Framework final
rule were: Alabama (0.4875), Florida (1.0602), Louisiana (1.06),
Mississippi (0.3840), and Texas (1.00). The ratios for Alabama,
Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi were developed using available
state landings data. More information on the data used to calculate the
current ratios can be found in the Calibration Framework.
In June 2022, the Council asked its Scientific and Statistical
Committee (SSC) to review more recent state data and provide
recommendations on any appropriate changes to the calibration ratios.
Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi submitted updated data for review,
and in January 2023, the SSC concluded that it was appropriate to
modify the ratios for Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi to 0.548, 1.34,
and 0.503, respectively.
This final rule modifies the calibration ratios for Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi as recommended by the SSC and applies these
ratios to the MRIP-based ACLs to update the state-survey-based ACLs.
The framework action and this final rule will not change the MRIP-based
(Federal equivalent) state ACLs or the total private-angling ACL.
However, because the understanding of the relationship between the
states' landings estimates and the Federal landings estimates have
changed, NMFS expects each of the three states to increase the number
of days that private anglers are allowed to harvest red snapper.
Gray Snapper
Gray snapper in the Gulf EEZ is managed as a single stock with a
stock ACL and a stock annual catch target (ACT), although the ACT is
not codified in the regulations or used for management. There is no
allocation of the stock ACL between the commercial and recreational
sectors. AMs for gray snapper specify that if the combined commercial
and recreational landings exceed the stock ACL in a fishing year, then
during the following fishing year if the stock ACL is reached or is
projected to be reached, the commercial and recreational sectors will
be closed for the remainder of the fishing year. However, since the
implementation of gray snapper catch limits in 2012, total landings
have not exceeded the ACL.
Prior to 2018, the status of the gray snapper stock had not been
evaluated in a stock assessment. In 2018, a Southeast Data, Assessment,
and Review (SEDAR) benchmark stock assessment for gray snapper was
completed (SEDAR 51) and indicated that the stock was undergoing
overfishing. SEDAR 51 included recreational landings estimates
calibrated to the MRIP-Coastal Household Telephone Survey (CHTS). In
response to this assessment, the Council developed and NMFS implemented
Amendment 51 to the FMP, which established biological reference points,
overfished status determination criteria, and the current catch limits
for the gray snapper stock (85 FR 73238, November 17, 2020). These
catch limits are an overfishing limit (OFL) of 2.57 million lb (1.17
million kg), acceptable biological catch (ABC) of 2.51 million lb (1.14
million kg), and stock ACL of 2.23 million lb (1.02 million kg).
In December 2022, the Southeast Fisheries Science Center finalized
a new stock assessment report for gray snapper (SEDAR 75). SEDAR 75
also incorporated updated recreational landings data calibrated to the
MRIP-Fishing Effort Survey (FES). MRIP-FES replaced MRIP-CHTS in 2018,
and total recreational fishing effort estimates generated from MRIP-FES
are generally higher than MRIP-CHTS estimates.
The Council's SSC reviewed the results of SEDAR 75 during its
January 2023 meeting and determined that the assessment was consistent
with the best scientific information available. Based on the results of
SEDAR 75, the Council's SSC concluded the stock is not overfished or
undergoing overfishing as of 2020 and also determined that the stock
was not likely to have been experiencing overfishing in 2015, as was
concluded in SEDAR 51.
For this framework action, the Council recommended a constant catch
OFL and ABC of 7.547 million lb (3.423 million kg) and 6.226 million lb
(2.824 million kg), respectively. The Council also recommended an 8
percent buffer between the ABC and stock ACL, which is based on the
Council's ACL/ACT control rule. This results in a revised stock ACL of
5.728 million lb (2.598 million kg). Because of the different
recreational landings estimates used to determine the current and
revised catch limits (MRIP-CHTS versus MRIP-FES), these catch limits
are not directly comparable. Much of the increase in the new catch
limits is due to the conversion from MRIP-CHTS to MRIP-FES. However,
using recreational data collected in MRIP-CHTS for reference, the
revised catch limits do represent an approximate increase of 15 percent
from the current catch limits.
Management Measures Contained in This Final Rule
Red Snapper
This final rule modifies the calibration ratios used by Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi to convert MRIP-based red snapper private
angling component ACLs to state-survey-based red snapper private
angling component ACLs and applies those ratios to update each state's
ACL.
As described above, the current state private recreational data
calibration ratios for Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi are 0.4875,
1.0602, and 0.3840, respectively. The framework action and final rule
revise the state private recreational calibration ratios for Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi to be 0.548, 1.34, and 0.503, respectively.
NMFS notes that the calibration ratios are not codified in the
regulations. Applying the new ratios to the MRIP-based, Federal
equivalent ACLs (which remain the same) results in revised state-
survey-based private angling component ACLs as follows: the Alabama
private angling component ACL will be 664,552 lb (301,436 kg) with a
Federal equivalent of 1,212,687 lb (550,066 kg); the Florida private
angling component ACL will be 2,769,631 lb (1,256,283 kg) with a
Federal equivalent of 2,066,889 lb (937,525 kg); and the Mississippi
private angling component ACL will be 82,342 lb (37,350 kg) with a
Federal equivalent of 163,702 lb (74,254 kg).
Gray Snapper
As a result of SEDAR 75 and using data through 2020, this final
rule revises the gray snapper stock ACL from 2.23 million lb (1.01
million kg) to 5.728 million lb (2.598 million kg). As explained
previously, the current and revised ACLs are not directly comparable.
However, total harvest has never exceeded the current ACL, and the
revised stock ACL represents an increase in the allowable harvest.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received seven comment submissions in response to the proposed
rule which were largely in support of the framework action and proposed
rule. Several comments were outside the scope of the proposed rule,
including that the gray snapper size limit is too low, Mississippi's
red snapper allocation percentage is too low, recreational landings
should be calculated in number of fish rather than in weight, NMFS and
the Council must create a new recreational census-based reporting
system that captures landings and discards, and NMFS and the
[[Page 41898]]
Council must implement a mandatory recreational fishing permit for all
Gulf anglers. While these comments discuss red and gray snapper
management, this action is limited to modifying the gray snapper catch
limits and modifying the red snapper calibration ratios for Alabama,
Florida, and Mississippi and applying these ratios to the MRIP-based
ACLs to update the state-survey-based ACLs. Broader issues such as size
limits, state allocations, and monitoring methods are outside the scope
of this action.
Specific comments related to the proposed rule and the framework
action are summarized below and followed by NMFS' respective responses.
Comment 1: NMFS should take a precautionary approach when drastic
ACL changes are recommended based on MRIP-FES. For gray snapper, the
drastic increase in the stock ACL (approximately 200 percent) is not
precautionary, especially given the uncertainty of the MRIP-FES data
and only 54 percent of last year's stock ACL was landed.
Response: Initially, NMFS notes that this final rule does not
increase the gray snapper stock ACL by 200 percent. As explained
previously, most of the increase in the new catch limits is due to the
conversion from MRIP-CHTS to MRIP-FES. This conversion does not reflect
greater harvest than previously allowed. It changes the scale of the
catch limits to be consistent with the scale of survey used to monitor
those catch limits. After accounting for the change to MRIP-FES, the
increase in the gray snapper stock ACL is approximately 15 percent.
NMFS does not agree that a precautionary approach is necessary with
respect to the gray snapper catch limits given the current stock status
of gray snapper. As required by the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the new catch
limits are designed to prevent overfishing and achieve OY and are based
on the best scientific information available, including recreational
landings estimates calibrated to MRIP-FES, which indicates that gray
snapper is not overfished or undergoing overfishing. Further, the new
ACL takes into account both scientific and management uncertainty. The
Council's SSC recommended an ABC that is approximately 13 percent lower
than the recommended OFL, and this buffer between the OFL and the ABC
accounts for scientific uncertainty and reduces the likelihood of
overfishing. The Council accounted for management uncertainty and
further reduced the likelihood of overfishing by recommending a stock
ACL eight percent below the ABC.
Comment 2: States that exceed their red snapper private angling
component ACLs should not be rewarded with calibration ratios that
increase their allowable harvest. Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas
benefitted from a de facto reallocation of the recreational ACL by
exceeding their red snapper private angling component ACLs between 2018
and 2021 without repercussion. These states should not be rewarded with
increased allocation percentages based their ACL overages.
Response: It is unclear how the commenter determined that Alabama,
Mississippi, and Texas exceeded their respective ACLs or benefitted
from any de facto reallocation. In 2018 and 2019, all of the Gulf
states were operating under exempted fishing permits that allowed each
state to set the red snapper fishing season for private anglers landing
red snapper in that state. The state-specific catch levels in each EFP
were based on the amounts requested by each state, which equaled 96.22
percent of the total private angling component ACL. The EFPs required
each state to pay back any overage of its ACL. Florida and Alabama
exceeded their ACLs in 2018 and Louisiana exceeded its ACL in 2019;
those overages were paid back in the following years. More information
about the EFPs and the state landings in 2018 and 2019 can be found at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/southeast/state-recreational-red-snapper-management-exempted-fishing-permits#permits.
Since 2020, each state has been operating under the authority
delegated in the final rule implementing Amendments 50A-F, which
specified the state-specific allocations and ACLs. However, at the time
Amendments 50A-F were implemented the state-specific ACLs had not been
calibrated to each state's survey. In the final rule implementing the
state calibration ratios, NMFS acknowledged that the lack of the
calibrated state ACLs had allowed the combined landings from the Gulf
States to exceed the total private angling component ACL. NMFS also
explained that when state reported landings exceeded the codified state
ACLs, NMFS implemented paybacks to address the state ACL overages, but
no paybacks for Mississippi or Alabama had been implemented because
landings estimates provided by these states did not exceed their ACLs
as codified in 2020, 2021, and 2022 (see 87 FR at 74014). The
calibrated state ACLs now allow NMFS to directly compare each state's
landings estimate to its ACL and implement any necessary payback.
The Council did not consider and NMFS is not making changes to the
state allocations. This final rule is adjusting how Alabama, Florida,
and Mississippi's red snapper private angling program landings
estimates compare to the MRIP-based landings estimates. Thus while this
final rule increases the state-survey based red snapper ACLs, the MRIP-
based survey (Federal equivalent) ACLs remain the same. The allocation
percentages adopted in Amendment 50A are based on the MRIP-based ACL,
and this final rule is not changing each Gulf state's percentage of
that MRIP-based ACL.
Comment 3: NMFS must require all five Gulf states to publicly
report landings in a standardized and timely manner, and NMFS must
provide a central location that publicizes recreational red snapper
landings and discard information from the states both in ``state
currency'' landings and the appropriate ``common currency'' landings
once those data are finalized.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is appropriate to require the
states to report in a standardized manner because Amendments 50A-F were
designed to allow each state to manage red snapper harvest by the
private-angling component using their own systems, which are not
uniform. NMFS publishes red snapper recreational landings from each
Gulf state, as estimated by each state survey (state currency) and as
estimated by MRIP (common currency) when NMFS receives the data from
all of the Gulf states for a fishing year. NMFS does not have control
over when the data from each Gulf state are submitted, so landings data
may not be publicly available for a number of months after the end of a
fishing year. In addition, the Gulf states' estimates may be updated by
a state after they are submitted to NMFS, and those changes may occur
months or years after the data have been initially submitted. For this
reason, NMFS publishes the red snapper recreational landings data as
most recently reported by the states without change. NMFS does not
require that the states provide estimates of red snapper recreational
discards because the state ACLs are expressed in terms of landed fish
only. Therefore, NMFS does not publish state discard data. The most
recent private recreational landings data, estimated by MRIP and as
submitted by the Gulf states, can be found at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/southeast/recreational-fishing-data/gulf-mexico-historical-recreational-landings-and-annual-catch.
[[Page 41899]]
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(3) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined that this final rule is
consistent with the framework action, the FMP, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the U.S. Constitution, and other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the legal basis for this final
rule. No duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting Federal rules have
been identified.
A description of this final rule, why it is being considered, and
the purpose of this final rule are contained in the SUMMARY and
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION sections of this final rule. The objective of
this final rule is to improve the management of red snapper and gray
snapper based on the best scientific information available.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) during the proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. The factual basis for the certification was published
in the proposed rule and is not repeated here. NMFS did not receive any
comments from SBA's Office of Advocacy or the public regarding the
certification in the proposed rule. As a result, a final regulatory
flexibility analysis was not required and none was prepared.
This final rule contains no information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Annual catch limits, Fisheries, Fishing, Gulf, Recreational, Red
snapper, Reef fish.
Dated: May 8, 2024.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS amends 50 CFR part
622 as follows:
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 622.23, revise paragraphs (a)(1)(ii)(A), (B), and (D) to
read as follows:
Sec. 622.23 State management of the red snapper recreational sector
private angling component in the Gulf EEZ.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Alabama regional management area--664,552 lb (301,436 kg);
Federal equivalent--1,212,687 lb (550,066 kg).
(B) Florida regional management area--2,769,631 lb (1,256,283 kg);
Federal equivalent--2,066,889 lb (937,525 kg).
* * * * *
(D) Mississippi regional management area--82,342 lb (37,350 kg);
Federal equivalent--163,702 lb (74,254 kg).
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 622.41, revise paragraph (l) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.41 Annual catch limits (ACLs), annual catch targets (ACTs),
and accountability measures (AMs).
* * * * *
(l) Gray snapper. If the sum of the commercial and recreational
landings, as estimated by the SRD, exceeds the stock ACL, then during
the following fishing year, if the sum of commercial and recreational
landings reaches or is projected to reach the stock ACL, the AA will
file a notification with the Office of the Federal Register to close
the commercial and recreational sectors for the remainder of that
fishing year. The stock ACL for gray snapper is 5.728 million lb (2.598
million kg), round weight.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2024-10468 Filed 5-13-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P