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Fisheries and Marine Mammals: Most Recent Developments -- 3/10/2000 (updated daily)
New info and changes since 3/3/2000 are bracketed {...} New info and changes since 3/9/2000 are double-bracketed {{...}}
MARINE FISHERIES
{{CITES Hearing. On Mar. 28, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on April 2000 meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).}} [personal communication]
Fisheries Budget Hearings. On Mar. 23, 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. On Mar. 23, 2000, the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, State, and the Judiciary has scheduled a hearing on NOAA's FY2001 budget request. {{On Mar. 28, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the Administration's FY2001 budget request for NMFS.}} [personal communication]
{HI Longline Lawsuit. Mar. 22, 2000 is the end of the 90-day period after which parties to the Leatherback Sea Turtle v. NMFS lawsuit will make recommendations to change U.S. District Judge David Alan Ezra's order. An NMFS analysis of the spatial and temporal distribution of sea turtle and HI longline vessel interactions is also due to Judge Ezra on Mar. 22, 2000.} [Endangered Species & Wetlands Report]
Pacific Groundfish. On Mar. 20-24, 2000, the Pacific Fishery Management Council' Scientific and Statistical Committee has scheduled a workshop in Seattle, WA, to study the productivity of west coast groundfish and to evaluate the Council's harvest rate policy. The workshop will review past research and recommend changes to existing policies, if needed. Contributed presentations are being solicited by the Council, with manuscripts due by Mar. 20, 2000. [Assoc Press, The World (Coos Bay, OR), personal communication]
{{Draft Scup Emergency Rule. On Mar. 13, 2000, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) anticipates making a Draft Emergency Rule available for public review and comment to address problems in the summer period fishery for summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass. This Emergency Rule proposes to resolve difficulties between the ASMFC's management system and that of the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council so that harvest quotas are not exceeded. A total of 5 public hearings is scheduled for Mar. 21-30, 2000. The ASMFC's Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Management Board is scheduled to take final action on the Emergency Rule during the ASMFC's Apr. 3-6 meeting.}} [ASMFC press release].
Magnuson-Stevens Act Hearings. On Mar. 9, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act. [personal communication]
Fishery Disaster Costs. Prior to a congressional hearing on the Magnuson- Stevens Act on Mar. 9, 2000, the Marine Fish Conservation Network (MFCN) released a region-by-region accounting of federal funds spent to offset economic hardship resulting from fishery disasters. {{A total of $160 million was reported to have been spent by the federal government since 1994 on fishery disaster relief, with Congress reportedly considering an additional $421 million in such programs. MFCN's point was that poor fishery management by regional fishery management councils and lax oversight by NMFS has led to these disasters and their costs.}} [Marine Fish Conservation Network press release, Assoc Press]
{Seafood Mishandling. On Mar. 8, 2000, more than 51,000 pounds of rotting and contaminated seafood (shrimp, flounder, whiting, lobster tails) was hauled away from a FL wholesaler's freezers after the FL Dept. of Agriculture condemned the food and business. The owner of the wholesale business was charged with 2 misdemeanors about illegal storage and sale of seafood unfit for human consumption, most of it packaged for retail sale.} [Orlando Sentinel]
{Wetland Preservation. On Mar. 8, 2000, the National Fisheries Institute and NOAA signed an agreement to help local communities restore polluted wetlands nationwide. A total of $2 million in federal funds will support 83 wetlands projects. In addition, the fishing industry will identify threatened wetlands and match federal funds, the federal government will provide technical expertise, and local communities will provide manual labor.} [Assoc Press]
{Canadian Groundfish. On Mar. 8, 2000, the Canadian Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans closed the cod fishery in Newfoundland's Placentia Bay, on the recommendation of fishermen concerned that stocks were too small to support the fishery.} [Canadian Press]
ICCAT Advisory Committee Meeting. On Mar. 6-7, 2000, the Advisory Committee to the U.S. Section to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) is scheduled to meet in Silver Spring, MD. [personal communication]
{Frozen Seafood Patent. On Mar. 6, 2000, the Univ. of ME announced that it had received a patent for a new process to preserve the flavor and texture of seafood when it is frozen. This process, involving the injection of sugar-based compounds, has been used on lobsters and may be used for other types of seafood.} [Assoc Press]
Italian Driftnets. On Mar. 6, 2000, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals is scheduled to hear oral arguments on the lawsuit by the Humane Society of the United States, challenging President Clinton's decision not to impose driftnet sanctions on Italy. [personal communication]
{Nutritional Survey. In early March 2000, Quaker Oats Co. released the results of a survey of 525 registered dieticians nationwide, conducted for them by a Chicago research firm. Fish was reported to have been named as the number 1 choice of food considered best for improving heart health by 88% of the dieticians.} [Knight Ridder]
{E-Commerce for Seafood. In early March 2000, CMGI, Inc. (Andover, MA) announced a $12 million venture capital investment in GoFish.com online seafood marketplace.} [Boston Globe]
{Bering Sea Crab Fishery. In early March 2000, nearly 100 crab vessel owners, processors, skippers, and other interested parties attended a meeting in Seattle, WA to determine how to deal with overcapitalization of the Bering Sea crab fleet. This group decided to form a committee of 13 industry members to develop a proposal for vessel buybacks to take to Congress. A separate committee of 21 members will consider a proposal for fishing cooperatives.} [Anchorage Daily News]
{Blue Crab Imports. On Mar. 3, 2000, the national Blue Crab Coalition filed a petition with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), seeking relief from imports that are alleged to be hurting fishermen and processors. The volume of U.S. crabmeat imports was reported to have tripled between 1994 and 1999. The ITC will investigate the situation and make a recommendation to the President. A major concern is the importing of crabmeat labeled to give the incorrect impression that it is blue crab meat.} [Carteret News-Times]
{{Illegal Shrimping. On Mar. 3, 2000, personnel from the Coast Guard Cutter Marlin observed a vessel fishing illegally for shrimp in a closed area off St. Petersburg, FL. The vessel was escorted to port, where NMFS agents met it, selling its catch and assuming responsibility for prosecution of the case.}} [personal communication]
{Sustainable Fishery Designation. On Mar. 3, 2000, the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) announced that the Australian western rock lobster fishery had been awarded MSC accreditation as a sustainable fishery, allowing packages of this product to display the MSC's "Fish Forever" logo. Thames herring are also reported to be certified, and AK salmon is being evaluated.} [personal communication, Assoc Press]
Coral Reef Protection. On Mar. 2, 2000, the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force met in Washington, DC, to discuss the proposed comprehensive U.S. Coral Reef Action Plan and its implementation, responding to President Clinton's Executive Order 13089. {{One of their proposals, setting aside 20% of U.S. coral reefs as "marine ecological reserves," has generated significant concern among commercial fishermen in the FL Keys. On Mar. 23, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled markup of H.R. 2903, the Coral Reef Conservation and Restoration Act of 1999.}} [personal communication, White House press release]
Puget Sound Pollution. On Mar. 1, 2000, the Puget Sound Water Quality Action Team (a subagency of the WA Governor's Office) released a 16-report tracking the health of the Puget Sound ecosystem. The Sound was reported as improving in control of invasive species, opening of shellfish beds to harvest, and reducing concentrations of industrial contaminants such as PCBs. Continuing problems include high fecal coliform counts in more than half the Sound's river stations, a doubling of the incidence of liver tumors in English sole in Elliott Bay, and declining populations of a number of fish and wildlife species. A more-detailed version of the report is scheduled for release in late March 2000. [Seattle Post-Intelligencer]
Marine Fish Protection Areas. On Mar. 1, 2000, officials of Hong Kong's Agriculture and Fisheries Department announced a government plan to, within 2 years, place 10% of Hong Kong waters into fish protection areas, where fishing will be prohibited. The program also involves placing artificial reefs in protected waters to increase fish habitat. [South China Morning Post]
Habitat Restoration Grants. Mar. 1, 2000 is the deadline for applications for the Five Star Challenge Grants Program, while Mar. 6., 2000 is the deadline for application to the American Sportfishing Association's FishAmerica Foundation grants. Under a partnership with NMFS, these grants fund community-based projects [ under "community-based restoration" at http://www.nmfs.gov/habitat/restoration ] to evaluate and restore marine, estuarine, and coastal habitat. [personal communication]
Shrimp Bycatch Reduction. On Feb. 28-Mar. 1, 2000, the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (GMFMC) held additional 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]
Offshore Sand and Gravel Mining. On Feb. 28 and 29, 2000, the Minerals Management Service (MMS, Dept. of the Interior) held information meetings on a request by a private excavating company that MMS hold a lease sale for 100 square miles of seafloor tracts on which the company would mine sand and gravel off Monmouth County, NJ. If granted, these leases would be the first commercial sand and gravel mining operations in U.S. federal waters. Public comment will be accepted by MMS through Apr. 10, 2000. [Asbury Park Press, Fed. Register]
Charterboat Moratorium. The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council's (GMFMC's) Ad Hoc Charter Vessel/Headboat Advisory Panel met Feb. 28-29, 2000, in Tampa, FL, to develop recommendations on a proposed 3-year moratorium on new charterboat fishing permits. On Mar. 20, 2000, in San Antonio, TX, the Reef Fish and Mackerel Management Committees of the GMFMC will meet jointly to review the proposel from the Ad Hoc Charter Vessel/Headboat Advisory Panel, with the full GMFMC discussing the proposal on Mar. 22, 2000. [Assoc Press, GMFMC press release]
Japan-China Fishery Agreement. On Feb. 27, 2000, Japanese and Chinese officials signed an agreement making their November 1997 bilateral fishery agreement for the East China Sea effective in June 2000. Under the agreement, a free fisheries zone allow boats of both countries to fish without prior approval, Japan will allow 600 Chinese fishing vessels annually to fish in the Japanese EEZ, and China will allow 317 Japanese fishing vessels annually to fish in the Chinese EEZ. Implementation of the agreement was delayed over differences in drawing the zoning line and over conditions of operations in areas under joint control. [Yomiuri Shimbun]
Lobster Games? In late February 2000, protests by the Japan Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals forced several game arcades to remove "Submarine Catcher" arcade games, wherein a "maneuver-the-crane-and- catch" mechanism allows players to capture live lobsters and other sea creatures. This game was introduced into the Japanese arcade market earlier in February 2000, with 100 game machines sold immediately and orders placed for an additional 200 machines. [Yomiuri Shimbun]
Shrimp and TEDs. In late February 2000, marine extension agents with the TX Marine Advisory Service announced that they have developed a solution to a design flaw in turtle excluder devices (TEDs) used in shrimp trawls. By replacing traditional nylon netting with stronger high-density polyethylene netting, stretching is minimized, keeping the shrimp trawl grill in proper alignment and reducing shrimp loss. [TX Sea Grant press release]
Long Island Sound Lobsters. In late February 2000, the CT congressional delegation was reported to have asked the Administration for $40 million to $50 million to provide assistance to lobstermen and fund research. On Feb. 28, 2000, the Administration was reported to be asking Congress for $10 million in assistance for this fishery - $6.6 million for research into causes of the recent die-off and $3.4 million for economic development initiatives for the lobster industry. [Assoc Press, Dept. of Commerce press release]
Saltonstall-Kennedy Grants. On Feb. 25, 2000, NMFS published a notice of the FY2001 proposed scope and funding priorities for the Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program. Public comment is accepted through Mar. 13, 2000. [Fed. Register]
New England Groundfish. On Feb. 23, 2000, personnel from the Coast Guard Cutter Adak observed 2 trawlers fishing illegally inside Restricted Gear Area 2, south of Long Island. Both vessels were escorted to New Bedford, MA, where NMFS seized and auctioned their catch and initiated prosecution. On Feb. 29, 2000, NMFS officials announced that a New Bedford trawler and crew had been issued sanctions including an agreement to sell the trawler and loss of the right to fish in federal waters for 4 years for fishing with illegally modified gear in August 1998. {On Mar. 7, 2000, MA fishermen met with Secretary of Commerce Daley, seeking changes in proposed January closures to cod fishing in the Gulf of Maine, beginning in 2001. The fishermen's 4- point proposal included 1) allowing 7 days of fishing during January, 2) buying back fishing permits of those who use them sparingly, 3) appropriating $2.5 million for a marketing program, and 4) expediting the release of federal funds already approved to assist fishermen.} [Boston Globe, Assoc Press, Boston Herald, personal communication]
Herring Limited Entry. On Feb. 22-29, 2000, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) and the New England Fishery Management Council have scheduled a series of 4 joint scoping hearings to gather public comment on the issue of controlled access (limited entry) in the Atlantic herring fishery. Concern focuses on the Gulf of Maine, where reported landings 1996 and 1997 exceeded the total allowable catch (TAC) by a substantial amount. [ASMFC press release]
Mud Dump. On Feb. 22, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans held an oversight field hearing in Toms River, NJ, to examine the effects on living marine resources from material deposited in the NY Bight area. [Assoc Press, personal communication]
NC Crab and Licensing Proposals. On Feb. 18, 2000, the NC Marine Fisheries Commission voted to request the NC General Assembly to abolish the crab harvesting license, effectively terminating the moratorium on new entrants into the commercial crab fishery. The Commission also agreed to review a proposal to establish a point system to penalize commercial fishermen who violate NC regulations; any fishermen who receives 36 points within a 3- year period or is convicted of a felony fisheries violation would have his commercial fishing license suspended for a year. [Carteret News-Times]
Sea Turtle Protection. On Feb. 17, 2000, NMFS published a proposed rule that would require HI-based pelagic longline limited access vessels to use sea turtle mitigation devices (clippers and dip nets) to free turtles. Methods are specified for handling, resuscitating, and releasing turtles. [Fed. Register]
Fisheries Protest at Parliament. On Feb. 17, 2000, about 300 members of the Food and Allied Workers Union held a protest at the South African Parliament to call attention to alleged corruption of the fishing quota system and the Dept. of Sea Fisheries. Concerns include inability and incompetence in monitoring illegal fishing and reluctance to allocate quota to previously disadvantaged groups. [South Africa Press Assoc]
Marine Protected Areas. On Feb. 16, 2000, the Marine Conservation Biology Institute and The Cousteau Society released documents from a workshop "Establishing a National System of Marine Protected Areas in the United States" held in Washington, DC, as well as the groups' recommendations ("Safeguarding America's Seas" Establishing a National System of Marin Protected Areas - A Call for Presidential Action) to the Clinton Administration [ http://www.mcbi.org/maritimes/presac~1.htm ]. [personal communication]
Immigration Problems in the Bering Sea. In mid-February 2000, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service agents arrested 20 illegal deckhands and unskilled pollock/cod processors on fishing boats calling at Dutch Harbor, AK. Additional arrests were made in Unalaska and Anchorage. INS agents are scheduled to visit shoreside processing plants. [Anchorage Daily News]
HMS SAFE Report. On Feb. 15, 2000, NMFS released its year 2000 Stock Assessment and Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) report [ http://www.nmfs.gov/sfa/hmspg.html ] for Atlantic Highly Migratory Species (HMS), summarizing the best available scientific information on these fish stocks. [personal communication]
Indian Shellfish Harvest. On Feb. 15, 2000, about 20 Suquamish Tribe clam diggers conducted the first commercial shellfish harvest on private, non-Indian tideland on Dyas Inlet, WA, since the 1994 District Court decision enforcing Treaty rights for 15 western WA tribes. Subsistence clam digging on non- Indian land under this decision was first done in August 1997, by members of the Skokomish Tribe. [Seattle Post-Intelligencer]
Tautog Non-Compliance. On Feb. 15, 2000, NMFS published a notice of determination that RI was out of compliance with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's Interstate Fishery Management Plan for tautog. A moratorium on tautog harvest will commence on June 15, 2000, unless RI takes action by June 1, 2000, to come into compliance. [Fed. Register]
Sharks. On Feb. 15, 2000, NMFS published notice of a delay in the effective date of the final rule for the Spiny Dogfish Fishery Management Plan from Feb. 10, 2000, to Mar. 15, 2000, to encourage the Mid-Atlantic and New England Councils to come to an agreement on differing opinions about how to manage this fishery. On Feb. 15, 2000, representatives of 5 conservation groups sent a joint letter to Clinton Administration officials, requesting the administration address shark management concerns, such as the alleged shortsighted delay in implementing dogfish management measures. On Feb. 29, 2000, the HI state House Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee approved H.B. 1947, a bill that would require fishermen to land entire blue shark carcasses if finning was contemplated. On Mar. 1, 2000, the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council voted 7-2 to recommend that NMFS limit the annual blue shark harvest in Exclusive Economic Zone waters around Pacific islands under U.S. jurisdiction to 50,000 animals as well as a limit of 1 fish per trip for other shark species. [ASMFC press release, personal communication, Center for Marine Conservation press release, Fed. Register, Assoc Press]
Shark Conferences. On Feb. 14-17, 2000, the Ocean Wildlife Campaign, two foundations, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium sponsored an International Pelagic Shark Workshop in Pacific Grove, CA [ http://www.wcs.org/pelagicworkshop.html ]. On Feb. 21-24, 2000, a coalition of five foundations sponsored an international shark conservation conference in Honolulu, HI [ http://209.133.10.132/sharkcon/ ]. [personal communication]
Invasive Species. On Feb. 13-17, 2000, the 10th International Aquatic Nuisance Species and Zebra Mussel Conference convenes in Toronto, Ontario. This conference highlights latest findings, technology, management strategies, and public education programs related to aquatic nuisance species prevention and control. On Feb. 18, 2000, a symposium panel on "Alien Species in Coastal Waters: What are the Real Ecological and Social Costs?" is scheduled at the American Association for the Advancement of Science Annual Meeting in Washington, DC. On Mar. 1, 2000, the CA Academy of Sciences announced the beginning of "San Francisco Bay: Y2K" -- a 4-year effort to comprehensively survey Bay fauna and identify non-native species. [personal communication, San Francisco Chronicle]
Native Fishery. On Feb. 13, 2000, Canadian Fisheries Minister Herb Dhaliwal reported that a framework for accommodating aboriginal fishermen in Maritime Canada will be implemented by late April 2000 when some lobster fisheries open, although all communities and bands may not have concluded interim fishing agreements. The framework reportedly will increase aboriginal participation as well as regulate the fishery with clear conservation measures. On Feb. 13, 2000, enforcement officers with the Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans seized 2 Native crab vessels from the Indian Brook reserve fishing off eastern Nova Scotia allegedly in closed waters. The vessels were escorted to Dartmouth, NS, where the crab catch was unloaded. Indian Brook officials claimed to have an exploratory license for snow crab, but federal officials said this license was for a different area. On Feb. 15, 2000, Native leaders stated that aboriginal fishermen will begin fishing for lobster and other species after the ice goes out in April, whether or not they have an agreement with the federal government. On Mar. 1, 2000, Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans officials announced that the Canadian federal government would spend C$160 million over the next 2 years to increase Native participation in commercial fishing industry. Of this amount, about C$29 million would be spent before Mar. 31, 2000, for buying back commercial licenses for transfer to Native fishermen and for aboriginal training. [Canadian Press, National Post, Halifax Herald]
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