> > > >NOTE: CRS will be taking a break from daily summaries during the recess. > This will be the last summary for a week; I will resume providing daily >summaries on Monday, April 13. > > >Fisheries and Marine Mammals: Most Recent Developments -- 4/2/98 >(updated daily) > > >New info and changes since 3/27/98 are bracketed {...} >New info and changes since 4/1/98 double bracketed {{...}} > >Marine Fisheries > . > Coral Protection Workshop. On June 9-11, 1998, a federal-state >workshop is tentatively scheduled at the Univ. of Hawaii, Honolulu, on >management and protection of HI coral reefs. [Assoc Press] > . > Ocean Summit. A {National Ocean Conference} on ocean and coastal >issues has been scheduled for {June 11-12, 1998,} at the Naval Postgraduate >School in Monterey, CA. The event is being jointly organized by the Dept. of >Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. >Navy. [Assoc Press, NOAA press release] > . > {West Coast Groundfish. The House Resources Subcommittee on >Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has tentatively scheduled a >hearing on west coast groundfish issues for Apr. 30, 1998.} [personal >communication] > . > {Forum on Ecological Surveys of ANS. A Forum on Ecological >Surveys of Aquatic Nuisance Species (ANS) is scheduled to be held on Apr. >21, 1998, in Edgewater, MD. This workshop will discuss surveys required by >1996 amendments to the Nonindigenous Aquatic Nuisance Prevention and >Control Act in nationally significant estuaries to determine what >nonindigenous >species are present and to estimate the effectiveness of ballast water >guidelines and regulations.} [Fed. Register] > . > {U.S. International Trade Commission Meeting. The U.S. >International Trade Commission has scheduled a public hearing for Apr. 21, >1998, in Washington, DC, on international trade in fish and fish products. >The >hearing will focus on trade and investment liberalization between the United >States and other members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) >forum, particularly on the competitiveness of U.S. firms compared to firms in >other APEC member economies, tariffs and non-tariff barriers currently >affecting trade, and market opportunities resulting from APEC trade >liberalization.} [personal communication] > . > ICCAT Advisory Committee Meeting. The Advisory Committee to the >U.S. Section to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic >Tunas (ICCAT) is scheduled to meet Apr. 6-8, 1998, in Silver Spring, MD, to >discuss implementation of ICCAT recommendations, research and monitoring >activities, and other matters related to ICCAT species. [Fed. Register] > . > {{1998 Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Quotas. On Apr. 1, 1998, NMFS >announced the total 1998 U.S. harvest quota of Atlantic bluefin tuna will be >1,403 metric tons (MT), an increase from the 1997 quota of 1,344 MT due to >carryover of unharvested 1997 quota. 1998 subquotas are 657 MT (general), >53 MT (harpoon), 114 MT (incidental), 250 MT (purse seine), 277 MT (angling), >and 52 MT (reserve).}} [NOAA press release] > . > {Investigation of NMFS. On Mar. 31, 1998, the AK Marine >Conservation Council wrote a letter asking the U.S. Dept. of Commerce's >Inspector General to investigate NMFS for alleged mismanagement of >fisheries. The Council accuses NMFS of emphasizing short-term harvest >goals in the North Pacific ahead of long-term conservation goals. The >Council >is particularly concerned with possible interactions between fishery harvest >and Steller sea lions.} [Assoc Press] > . > {Coral Reef Damage Payment. On Mar. 30, 1998, Mexican officials >announced that Norwegian Cruise Line has agreed to pay compensation for >damage to part of the Maya coral barrier reef near Cancun, by a Dec. 16, >1998, grounding by the cruise ship Leeward. A committee of four Mexican >scientists, two appointed by the cruise line, will study the damage and >determine appropriate compensation.} [Assoc Press] > . > {Scallop Closures. On Mar. 30, 1998, NMFS announced the >emergency closure of two areas off the mid-Atlantic coast to scallop harvest >beginning Apr. 3, 1998, due to low sea scallop populations. These closures, >one area offshore of VA while the second is offshore of NJ, were requested by >the New England and Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Councils.} [NOAA >press release] > . > {Horseshoe Crab Fishery. On Mar. 30, 1998, MD Governor Parris >Glendening proposed emergency regulations to limit the harvest of horseshoe >crabs. A proposed annual quota of 750,000 pounds would restrict the harvest >to about 28% of the 1996 catch of 2.6 million pounds.} [Assoc Press] > . > {Shark Cartilage and Lung Cancer. On Mar. 30, 1998, at the 89th >Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in New >Orleans, LA, the Canadian biotechnology company AEterna Laboratories >announced encouraging results from a three-month clinical trial using liquid >shark cartilage extract to treat lung cancer tumors in humans. The shark >cartilage product, AE-941, was reported to show a trend of efficacy without >serious side effects related to its oral administration in treating patients >with >refractory metastatic lung cancer.} [AEterna Laboratories press release] > . > {Cuban Oil Spill. On Mar. 26, 1998, two foreign-registered oil tankers >collided in Matanzas Bay, 60 miles east of Havana, on Cuba's north coast. A >spill of heavy crude oil of undetermined severity reportedly has affected >coastal >resources.} [Reuters] > . > American Fisheries Act Hearing. On Mar. 26, 1998, the Senate >Commerce Subcommittee on Oceans and Fisheries held a hearing on S. >1221, the American Fisheries Act, proposing to alter the foreign ownership >requirements for U.S.-flag fishing vessels. [personal communication] > . > Underwater Obstruction Removal. On Mar. 26, 1998, LA Dept. of >Natural Resources personnel were scheduled to meet with commercial and >sport fishermen in Grand Isle, LA, to initiate a program to identify and >remove >underwater obstructions. While some compensation for damage from >underwater obstructions has been paid regularly, this is the first LA program >to >remove obstructions, with one-year funding of $1.6 million from federal >Hurricane Andrew disaster relief. If an owner can be identified, the owner >will >be required to remove the obstruction. Obstructions too large to remove will >be marked. [Assoc Press] > . > El Nino and Fishmeal Production. On Mar. 26, 1998, Peruvian >officials announced that, due to El Nino conditions, fishmeal production for >the >first two months of 1998 was almost 81% lower than for the same period in >1997 (72,400 metric tons vs. 376,200 metric tons), while fish oil production >had fallen more than 87% for the same period of comparison (6,200 metric >tons vs. 48,700 metric tons). [Dow Jones News] > . > Protection of Whale Sharks and Manta Rays. On Mar. 25, 1998, >Philippine government officials signed a directive ordering a prohibition on >the >killing and sale of whale sharks and manta rays, with moderate fines and up >to >four years imprisonment for violators. This action was taken to prevent >further >decline in stocks. Both species are considered delicacies, with demand >especially strong for export to Taiwan. [Assoc Press] > . > Geoduck Clam Indictment. On Mar. 25, 1998, a federal grand jury >indicted 6 individuals for conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act by purchasing >and selling geoduck clams harvested in violation of WA state law. The trial >of >this case in U.S. District Court is scheduled for June 1, 1998. Illegally >harvested clams are alleged to have been shipped to markets throughout the >United States. [Assoc Press] > . > Fisheries Disaster Request. In late March 1998, the Pacific Coast >Federation of Fishermen's Associations wrote CA Governor Pete Wilson and >OR Governor John Kitzhaber requesting that they declare a state of disaster >in >west coast fisheries as a basis for requesting federal disaster relief. The >requests cite the effects of El Nino reducing the availability of many >species, >more stringent limits on groundfish harvest, and increased protection of >salmon under the Endangered Species Act as combining to leave no >alternatives for fishermen. [Assoc Press] > . > {Atlantic Billfish Minimum Sizes. On Mar. 24, 1998, NMFS published >an interim rule in the Federal Register increasing the minimum size for >Atlantic blue marlin and Atlantic white marlin, effective Mar. 27, 1998. >This >action fulfills the U.S. commitment to ICCAT to reduce marlin landings by at >least 25%. Minimum size (length) for blue marlin was set at 96 inches, while >the minimum size (length) for white marlin was set at 66 inches. Both >species were identified in September 1997 by NMFS as overfished.} [NOAA >press release, Fed. Register] > . > FL Net Ban. On Mar. 24, 1998, FL Governor Chiles and his Cabinet >approved regulations prohibiting small (less than 500 square feet) seine nets >with mesh larger than 2 inches, in an attempt to settle confusion over what >gear is legal under FL's July 1995 net ban law. [Assoc Press] > . > Sand Disposal Lawsuit. On Mar. 23, 1998, two Pacific northwest >fishermen's groups filed suit in U.S. District Court, seeking an injunction >to >force the Army Corps of Engineers to dump several million cubic yards of sand >dredged from the lower Columbia River further offshore than currently >planned. >The fishermen's groups contend the proposed dumping will damage productive >crab habitat and fisheries. [Assoc Press] > . > ME Lobster Regulation Challenge. On Mar. 23, 1998, the U.S. >Supreme Court declined to review an appeal by a group of ME lobstermen >challenging 1995 state legislation that established new regulations to limit >the >lobster fishery, including trap limits, license limits, and an extension of >state >authority to regulate lobstering in offshore federal waters. [Assoc Press] > . > Shark Fishery Closure. On Mar. 23, 1998, NMFS announced that the >commercial fishery for Atlantic large coastal sharks will close on Mar. 31, >1998, when it is estimated that this year's first semiannual quota of 642 >metric >tons will have been harvested. [NMFS notice] > . > Canada's Atlantic Groundfish. On Mar. 23, 1998, the Canadian >Parliament's Commons Fisheries Committee released a report blaming the >government for the collapse of Atlantic cod fisheries. The Committee >recommended that the federal government remove all senior officials in the >Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) deemed responsible for the >mismanagement of Atlantic groundfish stocks, that foreign fishing in Canadian >waters be eliminated, that the DFO be decentralized, that subsidies be >continued for unemployed fishermen in Maritime Canada, and that an >expanded seal hunt be considered. [Assoc Press] > . > Icelandic Fishery Strike? After Icelandic fishermen resumed an >industry-wide strike on Mar. 15, 1998, votes from major fishing union members >and fishing vessel owners were to be counted on Mar. 19, 1998, on the >question of whether to accept an Arbitration Committee report or resume the >strike. The Arbitration Committee has proposed the creation of a >government-regulated market for the transfer of fish quotas between vessels, >with buyers and sellers remaining anonymous to eliminate concerns that >quota transfer deals are detrimental to fishing industry employees. Initial >reports indicated that the Arbitration Committee's compromise was accepted >by the fishermen's unions but rejected by an overwhelming majority of vessel >owners. [Dow Jones News, personal communication] > . > IPHC Appointment. On Mar. 19, 1998, President Clinton announced >his intent to appoint Steven Pennoyer of Juneau, AK, as U.S. Commissioner >of the International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC). Mr. Pennoyer is >currently Regional Administrator in Alaska for NMFS. [White House press >release] > . > Essential Fish Habitat. Mar. 19, 1998 is the deadline for public >comment on NMFS final regulations concerning essential fish habitat, >published in the Federal Register on Dec. 19, 1998. [Fed. Register] > . > Oceans Legislation Hearing. On Mar. 19, 1998, the House >Committee on Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, >and Oceans held a hearing on S. 1213 (establishing a National Ocean Council >and a Commission on Ocean Policy), H.R. 2547 (developing a comprehensive >long-range national ocean policy), and H.R. 3445 (Oceans Act of 1998). >[personal communication, Center for Marine Conservation press release] > . > IFQ Meetings. On Mar. 18-20, 1998, the National Research Council's >Committee to Review Individual Fishing Quotas took public comment at >meetings in Washington, DC. {On May 6-7, 1998, the National Research >Council's Committee to Review Individual Fishing Quotas is scheduled to >conduct its fifth and final public meeting in Boston, MA.} [National Research >Council press release, personal communication] > . > BC Herring Opening Canceled. On Mar. 18, 1998, the Canadian >Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans canceled a scheduled herring fishery along the >west coast of Vancouver Island after the aboriginal community protested that >herring were scarce and the Native community had not yet taken herring for >personal use. [Assoc Press] > . > TX Sea Turtle Stranding Report. On Mar. 18, 1998, a U.S. >Geological Survey biologist released a report on 1997 sea turtle strandings >on >TX beaches. Of 523 sea turtle strandings on TX beaches in 1997, 180 were >Kemp's ridley turtles -- the second highest recorded number of sea turtle >deaths since 1980 (527 were reported to have died in 1994). The report >concluded there was a connection between shrimping and the number of turtle >deaths, with a 90% decline in strandings recorded when shrimp trawling was >prohibited. [Assoc Press] > . > >
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