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Fisheries and Marine Mammals: Most Recent Developments -- 1/14/2000 (updated daily)
New info and changes since 1/7/2000 are bracketed {...} New info and changes since 1/13/2000 are double-bracketed {{...}}
MARINE FISHERIES
{Shark Conference. On Feb. 21-24, 2000, a coalition of five foundations is sponsoring an international shark conservation conference in Honolulu, HI [ http://209.133.10.132/sharkcon/ ].} [personal communication]
{{Fisheries Budget Hearings. On Feb. 17, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the Administration's FY2001 budget request for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NMFS.}} [personal communication]
{{Pelagic Longline Hearings. On Feb. 8, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled a hearing on H.R. 3331, H.R. 3390, and H.R. 3516, measures to ban all pelagic longline fishing or to prohibit pelagic longline fishing in certain areas and buyout pelagic longline fishing vessel permits. On Feb. 23, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled a field hearing in Fort Lauderdale, FL on these same 3 bills.}} [personal communication]
{{Red Drum Stock Assessment. On Feb. 7-9, 2000, the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council's Red Drum Stock Assessment Panel will meet in Miami, FL, to re-evaluate NMFS data and analysis of stock assessment and status of red drum stocks in the Gulf.}} [GMFMC press release]
{Shrimp Bycatch Reduction. On Feb. 2-10, 2000, the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (GMFMC) has scheduled a series of public workshops to receive comments on the need for additional bycatch reduction requirements for the shrimp fishery south and east of Cape San Blas, FL.} [GMFMC press release]
{Fishing Vessel Safety. During the month of February 2000, the U.S. Coast Guard will be scheduling a series of public hearings in fishing ports across the nation, to determine fishermen's views on proposed amendments to the Commercial Fishing Vessel Safety Act.} [Asbury Park Press]
{Horseshoe Crab Harvest. Jan. 21, 2000, is the deadline for public comment on the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's (ASMFC's) Public Information Document concerning the Commission's Draft Addendum I to the Horseshoe Crab Fishery Management Plan (FMP). This document outlines 13 options for implementing a coastwide landings cap for the commercial horseshoe crab bait fishery prior to the beginning of the 2000 fishing season. Public hearings are being held in various states along the Atlantic coast. The ASMFC is scheduled to consider which option to adopt at its Feb. 9, 2000, meeting in Alexandria, VA.} [Assoc Press, ASMFC press release]
{Magnuson-Stevens Act Hearings. On Jan. 18, 2000 (Anchorage, AK) and Jan. 19, 2000 (Seattle, WA), the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Oceans and Fisheries has scheduled field hearings on reauthorization of the Magnuson- Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.} [personal communication]
{Pacific Groundfish Overcapacity. On Jan. 13-14, 2000, the Pacific Fishery Management Council has scheduled a work session in Portland, OR, on overcapacity in Pacific coast groundfish fisheries and potential ways the Council may choose to consider to reduce capacity in these fisheries.} [personal communication]]
Squid Fishery and Seabirds. On Jan. 13, 2000, the CA Dept. of Fish and Game's Squid Advisory Committee has scheduled a special meeting in Long Beach to discuss potential squid fishery harm to seabirds in the Channel Islands. [personal communication]
{Spiny Dogfish. On Jan. 11, 2000, NMFS published final regulations to implement the Spiny Dogfish Fishery Management Plan along the Mid- Atlantic and New England coasts. Under these regulations, stringent restrictions on commercial fishing aim to stop overfishing and rebuild the dogfish population.} [Center for Marine Conservation press release, Fed. Register]
{Smoked Fish Recall. On Jan. 10, 2000, Food and Drug Administration officials announced that a NY company, Royal Baltic Ltd., was expanding a recall of selected smoked fish (sea bass, trout, turbot, and salmon) products from 4 states to nationwide. The products are possibly contaminated with the bacteria Listeria.} [Reuters]
{Tuna Rebate Modification. On Jan. 10, 2000, Federal Trade Commission officials announced that Bumble Bee Seafoods Inc. had agreed to modify a misleading label and coupon offer, wherein a special label on tuna cans had promised a 75-cent coupon toward the consumer's next purchase while details inside the label required the consumer to buy 5 cans of tuna. Bumble Bee has agreed to start a new coupon program.} [Assoc Press]
Boat-Burning Protest. On Jan. 8, 2000, inshore fishermen in southern Thailand plan to burn their own boats in protest over a government decision not to curb what they consider to be improper and possibly illegal night-time anchovy trawling. [Bangkok Post]
Shrimp Closure and Bycatch Meeting. On Jan. 6, 2000, the Shrimp Advisory Panel of the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (GMFMC) is scheduled to meet to review scientific information on the effects of the cooperative shrimp seasonal closure with the state of Texas, to hear a presentation on that status of shrimp stocks and an overfishing report, and to review a draft of options for additional measures to reduce bycatch in the shrimp fishery. [GMFMC press release]
Iceland ITQ Ruling. On Jan. 5, 2000, Iceland's Regional Court of the Western Fjords found a fishing vessel captain and vessel owner not guilty of fishing without owning or leasing quota in January 1999, concluding that Icelandic laws on individual transferrable quotas (ITQs) violate both the constitutional rule against discrimination and the rule about the right to work. The Minister of Fisheries reportedly indicated the case will likely be appealed to the Supreme Court. [personal communication]
Canadian Groundfish. In early January 2000, the Canadian government announced the conclusion of a 5th round of buyouts of Newfoundland groundfish licenses. A total of 120 licenses were purchased from a total of 600 bids. The total cost of the buyout is about C$13 million. Altogether, the 6-year program has purchased about 1,300 licenses for a cost of around C$114 million. On Jan. 6, 2000, Canadian Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans officials reported that owners of the Portuguese fishing vessel Calvao, boarded in late December 1999, will be charged in Portugal with overfishing American plaice on the Grand Banks and misreporting their catch. The Calvao was supposed to be fishing for redfish. [Canadian Press]
Bering Sea Snow Crab. In early January 2000, AK Dept. of Fish and Game managers speculated that the Bering Sea snow crab fishery, scheduled to open on Jan. 15, 2000, might be postponed until late April or May 2000, if ice extending much farther south than normal makes most of the fishing area unaccessible. Ice conditions are reported to be the most severe since January 1975, with the St. Paul Island and harbor (with processing plants) iced in and inaccessible. Others suggest that postponing the season may be an economically motivated decision, allowing fishermen to catch high-value cod now and snow crab later in the spring. A decision on this fishery is expected to be made by Jan. 7, 2000. [Anchorage Daily News]
Invasive Species. On Jan. 1, 2000, CA became the first state to require ships to exchange their ballast water at sea to minimize the possibility of transporting invasive species to CA ports. This is the result of the CA Legislature enacting AB703. [San Jose Mercury]
Oil Spill Compensation. On Dec. 29, 1999, representatives of the International Fund for Compensation for Oil Pollution Damage announced that Japanese businesses harmed by rumors that crab and shrimp had been polluted by a January 1997 Russian tanker spill would receive more than $2.6 million in compensation. More payments are anticipated. [Yomiuri Shimbun]
Illegal Fishing. On Dec. 27, 1999, Coast Guard personnel intercepted a Mexican lancha fishing illegally for shark in U.S. waters off TX with gillnets. The TX Dept. of Parks and Wildlife assumed responsibility for prosecution. [personal communication]
RI Oil Spill Settlement. On Dec. 21, 1999, U.S. District Court Judge Ernest Torres announced approval of the agreement between Eklof Marine Corp. and RI lobstermen, fishermen, and fishing-related businesses whose livelihoods were damaged by the January 1996 North Cape barge grounding and heating oil spill in Block Island Sound near Point Judith. On Dec. 22, 1999, a tentative agreement was announced for environmental damages, including more than $16 million to be spent on restoring fish stocks and other resources. Between $8 million and $10 million would be spent to purchase 1.24 million female lobsters from wholesalers to be reintroduced into the fishery with markings making them illegal to land. This agreement must be approved by the court. [Boston Globe, MSNBC, Assoc Press, NOAA press release]
French Oil Spill. As of Dec. 19, 1999, the oil spilled when the Maltese- registered oil tanker Erika broke in half about 43 miles off the northwestern coast of France, was in numerous small sections about 40 miles off the French coast and moving southward. The tanker's captain was held in a Paris jail until Dec. 23, under investigation for "endangering the life of others and marine pollution." Oil first hit shore on Dec. 25, 1999. On Dec. 26, 1999, France's Environment Minister Dominique Voynet declared that France's Atlantic coast is facing a significant ecological catastrophe from oil washing up on beaches and rocky coastline. More than 6,000 dead birds have been collected from beaches. A grey seal population may also be threatened. Eight tugboats have vacuumed up about 10% of the spill. By Jan. 3, 2000, an estimated 18,000 seabirds had been killed by the spill. On Jan. 6, 2000, the French food safety agency, Agence Francaise de Securite Sanitaire des Aliments, recommended a ban on the sale of shellfish and seaweed from the coastline most affected by the oil spill as well as a ban on fishing from the shore in the region. Tests were recommended for fish caught at sea to assure they are not contaminated. Oil has come ashore along 250 miles of the coast. [Environment News Service, Assoc Press]
ICCAT Tuna Enforcement. On Dec. 17, 1999, Mitsubishi Corp. distributed a press release announcing that it was ceasing to buy or transport any tuna caught by 315 flag of convenience tuna fishing vessels identified as not complying with International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) regulations and reporting requirements. [personal communication]
EU Fishery Ministerial Meeting. On Dec. 16 and 17, 1999, European Union fishery ministers met in Brussels to set fishery quotas, agreeing to reduce cod harvest in the Irish Sea by about 62%, while whiting and herring catches would be reduced by 40%. In the North Sea, cod and monkfish harvest would be reduced by about 40%, hake by 39%, whiting by more than 30%, and haddock by more than 13%. The projected annual loss for British fishermen is more than $140 million. [The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, BBC News, Environment News Service]
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