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Subject: CRS Summary - Part 3
From: Aldo-Pier Solari <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:Academic forum on fisheries ecology and related topics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Tue, 1 Apr 1997 03:57:25 GMT
Content-Type:text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
Parts/Attachments

text/plain (187 lines)


Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 08:11:24 -0500
From: Kate Wing <[log in to unmask]>

Freshwater Fisheries

{BARTON SPRINGS SALAMANDER PROTECTION.   ON  MAR.  26, 1997, U.S.
DISTRICT  JUDGE  LUCIUS  BUNTON  RULED  THAT  INTERIOR  SECRETARY
BABBITT VIOLATED THE ENDANGERED  SPECIES  ACT  IN  1996  WHEN  HE
WITHDREW THE PROPOSED LISTING OF TEXAS' BARTON SPRINGS SALAMANDER
AFTER  STATE  AGENCIES  AGREED  WITH  THE U.S.  FISH AND WILDLIFE
SERVICE ON  A  COOPERATIVE  CONSERVATION  PLAN  FOR THE SPECIES.}
[ASSOC PRESS]

Eurasian Ruffe Symposium.  On Mar.  21, 1997,  the  National  Sea
Grant College Program is sponsoring an international symposium in
Ann  Arbor,  MI, on eurasian ruffe, an unintentionally introduced
species in the Great Lakes.  [Sea Grant press release]

Uncollected Fishing  License  Fees.   On  Mar.   18,  1997, state
examiners released an audit of the WA Dept.  of Fish and Wildlife
indicating as much as $730,000 is owed  the  Dept.,  mostly  from
1994  hunting  and  fishing  license sales at retail outlets.  At
least 155  outlets  failed  to  submit  license revenues.  [Assoc
Press]

Bull Trout.  On Mar.  13,  1997,  the  U.S.   Fish  and  Wildlife
Service  (FWS) announced that 2 populations of bull trout (in the
Klamath and Columbia River basins)  qualify for listing under the
Endangered Species Act  based  on  1994  data,  but  requested  a
5-month  delay  (until  Aug.   15, 1997) to study 1997 data.  FWS
reported  that  listing  was  not   warranted  for  3  stable  or
increasing populations  in  the  coastal/Puget  Sound  area,  WA;
Jarbridge River, NV; and the Saskatchewan River, Alberta, Canada.
{On Mar.  25, 1997, 2 MT conservation groups asked U.S.  District
Judge  Robert  Jones  to  order  the Fish and Wildlife Service to
immediately  list  bull  trout  as  a  threatened  or  endangered
species.} [Assoc Press, NW Fishletter No.  30]

Chippewa Treaty Fishing.  On Mar.   7, 1997, U.S.  District Court
Judge Michael Davis rejected MN's request for a 4-month delay  in
the  exercise  of  newly granted fishing rights by the Mille Lacs
band of Chippewa and 7  other  bands, holding that the bands have
been deprived of their treaty right to fish for too  many  years.
MN  officials  reported  plans  to file an appeal.  {ON MAR.  27,
1997, MN GOVERNOR ARNE  CARLSON  REQUESTED TIME DURING TELEVISION
EVENING NEWS BROADCASTS ON APR.  7, 1997, FOR A PUBLIC ADDRESS TO
STRESS THE IMPORTANCE OF AVOIDING TENSION AND PREVENTING VIOLENCE
IN IMPLEMENTING TREATY FISHING RIGHTS.} [Assoc Press]

Kokanee Salmon in Dworshak  Reservoir.   On  Mar.   7,  1997,  ID
biologists  reported to the ID Fish and Game Commission that they
plan to use strobe lights and  noise to scare kokanee salmon away
from Dworshak  Dam  to  preclude  repeating  the  extensive  loss
experienced in 1996 when more than 1 million kokanee were lost in
spills to discharge high runoff.  [Assoc Press]

Whirling  Disease.   On  Mar.  6-8, 1997, a national symposium on
whirling disease was scheduled  to  convene in Logan, UT.  [Assoc
Press]

Marine Mammals

{WEST COAST PINNIPED DRAFT  REPORT.   ON  MAR.   27,  1997,  NMFS
RELEASED  A  17-PAGE  DRAFT  REPORT  TO  CONGRESS  ON  WEST COAST
PINNIPEDS (SEALS AND  SEA  LIONS).   THE REPORT RECOMMENDS, UNDER
CERTAIN SITUATIONS, KILLING SOME PARTICULARLY  VORACIOUS  PACIFIC
HARBOR  SEALS  AND  CALIFORNIA  SEA  LIONS  TO PROTECT ENDANGERED
SALMON.  IN  ADDITION,  THE  REPORT  SUGGESTS  THAT  FISHERMEN BE
ALLOWED TO KILL SEA LIONS AND SEALS AS A LAST RESORT  TO  PROTECT
GEAR  AND  CATCH.   WEST  COAST SEAL AND SEA LION POPULATIONS ARE
REPORTED TO CONSUME  217,000  METRIC  TONS  OF FISH AND SHELLFISH
ANNUALLY.} [ASSOC PRESS]

{NZ  SEA  LION  PROTECTION.   ON  MAR.   25,  1997,  NEW  ZEALAND
OFFICIALS CLOSED A SQUID FISHERY IN THE SOUTHERN  OCEAN  FOR  THE
REMAINDER  OF 1997 TO PROTECT A POPULATION OF HOOKER'S SEA LIONS.
IN  BALANCING  ECONOMIC   INTERESTS  AGAINST  ECOLOGICAL  DAMAGE,
FISHING INDUSTRY REPRESENTATIVES CLAIMED  EARLY  CLOSURE  OF  THE
FISHERY  WOULD RESULT IN A $13.9 MILLION LOSS IN EXPORT INCOME TO
PROTECT THE RARE SEA  LIONS  AFTER  AN ESTIMATED 100 ANIMALS WERE
DROWNED IN SQUID NETS.} [REUTERS]

Japanese Coastal Whaling.  On Mar.  19-21, 1997, an international
workshop convened in Sendai, Japan, to consider  Japan's  request
to  the  International Whaling Commission (IWC) for permission to
conduct  a  limited  coastal  hunt   to  kill  50  minke  whales.
Recommendations from the workshop will be presented at the annual
IWC meeting in October 1997 in Monaco.  [Dow Jones News]

Gully Protection.  On Mar.  19, 1997, World Wildlife Fund  Canada
launched  a  campaign  to obtain federal government commitment to
protect The Gully,  an  underwater  canyon  near Sable Island off
Nova Scotia, said to be deeper and wider than the  Grand  Canyon.
The  Gully  is  habitat  for  a population of northern bottlenose
whales, a species added to  Canada's  List  of Species at Risk in
1996.  Concerns include  petroleum  exploration  and  development
near  The  Gully.   [World Wildlife Fund Canada press release via
Dow Jones News]

Ballard Locks  Sea  Lions.   On  Mar.   17,  1997, NMFS officials
reported a dramatic decline in the amount of time sea lions  have
spent  around  Ballard  Locks, WA, feeding on migration steelhead
trout and salmon -- from 91  hours  in the first 2 months of 1996
to only 16 minutes during the same period in 1997.  NMFS believes
that capturing and retaining 3 sea lions in captivity in May 1996
is responsible for the difference.  [Assoc Press]

Greenland Minke Whale Quota.  On Mar.  14,  1997,  the  Greenland
newspaper   Sermitsiak  reported  that  Greenland  officials  had
announced the 1997 aboriginal  minke  whale quota, with 148 minke
whales for western Greenland communities (99 of which are  to  be
taken  by fishing boats equipped with harpoon guns) and 12 whales
for eastern Greenland communities.  Since  1997 is the final year
of Greenland's 3-year aboriginal  quota  from  the  International
Whaling Commission (IWC), the IWC will consider new quotas at its
October 1997 meeting.  [High North Alliance News]

Iceland  Will Not Go Whaling.  On Mar.  11, 1997, Icelandic Prime
Minister David Oddson announced  on  television that Iceland will
not  harvest  minke  whales  in  the  near  future,  since  there
currently appears to be no legal avenue for marketing  whalemeat.
[personal communication]

NAMMCO  Scientific  Committee Meeting.  On Mar.  10-14, 1997, the
Scientific  Committee  of   the   North  Atlantic  Marine  Mammal
Commission (NAMMCO) met in Tromso, Norway.  Discussion focused on
the role of whales  and  seals  in  the  marine  ecosystem.   New
information on the abundance of several whale stocks was reviewed
--  72,000  for the central North Atlantic stock of minke whales;
22,800 for fin whales  in  the  North Atlantic east of Greenland;
and 9,250 for sei whales in the North Atlantic east of Greenland.
New survey data were reported to have confirmed earlier estimates
of northeast Atlantic pilot whale abundance as stable at 778,000.
In  reviewing  ecological  studies,  the   Scientific   Committee
concluded  that  minke  whales,  harp seals, and hooded seals may
have substantial  direct  and/or  indirect  effects on commercial
fish stocks, but recommended that  knowledge  be  improved.   The
annual  meeting  of  NAMMCO's  Council will be held on May 27-30,
1997, in the Faroe Islands.  [High North Alliance News]

Greenpeace on Steller's Sea Lion  ESA Listing.  On Mar.  6, 1997,
simultaneous press conferences were  held  in  Seattle,  WA,  and
Washington, DC, by Greenpeace to protest what they consider to be
continued delay by NMFS in reclassifying Steller's sea lion as an
endangered  species  as  proposed  by  NMFS on Oct.  4, 1995 (the
species  is  presently  listed   as  threatened).   In  addition,
Greenpeace called for a reduction of pollock quotas in the  North
Pacific,  a  ban  on factory trawling, a new environmental impact
statement on the pollock  fishery,  and congressional hearings on
NMFS's alleged failure to protect the marine ecosystem.  On  Mar.
6,  1997, the Center for Marine Conservation (CMC) announced that
it was preparing  a  notice  of  intent  to  sue  NMFS unless the
reclassification decision is announced.  [Assoc  Press,  Reuters,
CMC press release, Greenpeace press release]

Northern Right Whales.  In early March 1997, New England Aquarium
officials announced that a winter survey of northern right whales
found  15  or 16 new calves in breeding areas off southeastern GA
and northern  FL,  a  significant  increase  for  this endangered
population which  numbers  about  300  animals.   Compared  to  5
northern  right whale deaths in the winter of 1995-1996, only one
whale died this year.  [Assoc Press]

North Atlantic Whaling.  On  Mar.  1, 1997, Norwegian, Icelandic,
and Greenland sponsors held a conference on "Whaling in the North
Atlantic - Economic and  Political  Perspectives"  in  Reykjavik,
Iceland.  [High North Alliance News]

Harp  Seal-Fishery  Interaction  Workshop.  On Feb.  24-27, 1997,
the Canadian Center for  Fisheries Innovation along with Memorial
Univ.  of  Newfoundland  sponsored  a  workshop  on  interactions
between  harp seals and fisheries in the northwest Atlantic.  The
workshop identified and prioritized data needed to assess whether
harp seals affect commercial  fish stocks.  [International Marine
Mammal Association web site]

Items in this summary are excerpted from a variety of information
sources.   The  Congressional  Research  Service  (CRS)  is   not
responsible  for  the  accuracy  of  the various news items.  For
additional information on items in this summary or their sources,
call Gene Buck (CRS-ENR) at 7-7262 or send a fax to 7-7289.  This
summary is available daily  or  weekly  (each Friday) via e-mail;
requests to be added to the daily or  weekly  distribution  lists
may be sent to "[log in to unmask]".
....
end of Part 3
end of file

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