97-30805. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Proposed 1998 Fishing Quotas for Atlantic Surf Clams and Ocean Quahogs  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 226 (Monday, November 24, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 62543-62545]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-30805]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    
    50 CFR Part 648
    
    [Docket No. 971112268-7268-01; I.D. 102997E]
    
    
    Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Proposed 1998 
    Fishing Quotas for Atlantic Surf Clams and Ocean Quahogs
    
    AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Proposed fishing quotas for the 1998 Atlantic surf clam and 
    ocean quahog fisheries; request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: NMFS proposes quotas for the Atlantic surf clam and ocean 
    quahog fisheries for 1998. These quotas were selected from a range 
    defined as optimum yield (OY) for each fishery and in compliance with 
    overfishing definitions for each species. The intent of this action is 
    to establish allowable harvests of surf clams and ocean quahogs from 
    the exclusive economic zone in 1998.
    
    DATES: Public comments must be received on or before December 24, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Copies of the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council's 
    analysis
    
    [[Page 62544]]
    
    and recommendations, including the Environmental Assessment and the 
    Regulatory Impact Review/Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, are 
    available from David R. Keifer, Executive Director, Mid-Atlantic 
    Fishery Management Council, Room 2115, Federal Building, 300 South New 
    Street, Dover, DE 19901-6790.
        Send comments to: Andrew A. Rosenberg, Regional Administrator, 
    Northeast Region, NMFS, 1 Blackburn Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930-2298. 
    Mark on the outside of the envelope, ``Comments--1998 Surf Clam and 
    Ocean Quahog quotas.''
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Myles Raizin, Fishery Policy Analyst, 
    508-281-9104.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Fishery Management Plan for the Atlantic 
    Surf Clam and Ocean Quahog Fisheries (FMP) directs the Assistant 
    Administrator for Fisheries, in consultation with the Mid-Atlantic 
    Fishery Management Council (Council), to specify quotas for surf clams 
    and ocean quahogs on an annual basis from a range that represents the 
    OY for each fishery. It is the policy of the Council that the level 
    selected allow fishing to continue at that level for at least 10 years 
    for surf clams and 30 years for ocean quahogs. While staying within 
    this constraint, the quotas would be set at a level that would meet the 
    estimated market demand.
        The fishing quotas must be in compliance with overfishing 
    definitions for each species. The overfishing definitions are fishing 
    mortality rates of F20 (20 percent of maximum 
    spawning potential (MSP)) for surf clams and F25 (25 
    percent of MSP) for ocean quahogs.
    
    Surf Clams
    
        The Council recommends a 1998 fishing quota of 2.565 million 
    bushels for surf clams, unchanged from the 1996 and 1997 quotas. The 
    Council staff recommended a surf clam quota of 2.565 million bushels 
    based on management advice from the Stock Assessment Review Committee 
    for the 22nd Northeast Regional Stock Assessment Workshop (SAW 22), 
    which recommended no change from the 1996-97 quotas of 2.565 million 
    bushels until a new stock assessment is available with abundance 
    estimates based on fishery catch rate and research survey data. The 
    results of the 1997 surf clam and ocean quahog survey will not be 
    available for the 1998 fishery.
    
    Ocean Quahogs
    
        The Council recommends an ocean quahog fishing quota of 4 million 
    bushels, a 317,000 bushel reduction from the 1997 quota of 4.317 
    million bushels. This quota level is the lowest possible within the 
    range of 4 and 6 million bushels as specified in the FMP. The Council, 
    in making this recommendation, questioned the validity of assuming that 
    all of the Georges Bank biomass will become available to the fishery 
    over the course of the 30-year harvest period. A notice of closure of 
    the Georges Bank area to fishing for surf clams or ocean quahogs was 
    published on February 1, 1991 (56 FR 3980). The closure was implemented 
    due to the appearance of high levels of the organism responsible for 
    paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP). The area will remain closed until 
    the Secretary of Commerce determines that the adverse environmental 
    conditions caused by the PSP toxin are no longer present. In 1996, when 
    the Council made the assumption of a reopening occurring in the Georges 
    Bank area, it stated that additional quota reductions would be 
    necessary in the future if demonstrable progress is not made toward a 
    reopening of Georges Bank in the near future. The SAW 22 did not offer 
    management advice on the ocean quahog quota. However, it noted that a 
    30-year supply as dictated by Council policy is possible only if the 
    estimated biomass on Georges Bank and in areas off Southern New England 
    and Long Island, generally too deep to be harvested with current 
    technology, is included. Furthermore, it cautioned that this strategy 
    implies that sustainable fishing after 30 years will be limited to 
    recruitment and a very slow annual growth of fully recruited quahogs. 
    Noting the SAW 22 advice, the Science and Statistical (S&S) Committee 
    was concerned with the issue of refugia. It suggested that the Council 
    request the next SAW for surf clams and quahogs to consider the 
    importance of refugia to new recruitment by examining biological and 
    economic aspects for three scenarios: No refugia, Georges Bank only, 
    and Georges Bank and the deep offshore unfished areas. The Council 
    adopted this recommendation and passed a motion to request the next SAW 
    to add this to its ``Terms of Reference.''
        In proposing these quotas, the Council considered the most recent 
    available stock assessments, data reported by harvesters and 
    processors, and other relevant information concerning exploitable 
    biomass and spawning biomass, fishing mortality rates, stock 
    recruitment, projected effort and catches, and areas closed to fishing. 
    This information was presented in a written report prepared by the 
    Council and adopted by the Regional Administrator, Northeast Region, 
    NMFS.
        NMFS, in 1996, approved overfishing definitions for surf clams and 
    ocean quahogs. The overfishing threshold for surf clams is a fishing 
    mortality rate (F) of F20. This translates roughly 
    to F = 0.18 for surf clams (15.3 percent exploitation rate). The F in 
    1997 associated with a quota of 2.565 million bushels was approximately 
    equal to 0.12 for all areas. The specific F associated with the 1998 
    surf clam quota will be able to be calculated when the new assessment 
    is complete, but will be roughly the same as the estimated F in 1997 
    for all areas. The overfishing threshold for ocean quahogs is 
    F25, yielding F = 0.04 (4.3 percent exploitation 
    rate). The 1997 ocean quahog quota yielded an F of approximately 0.032. 
    The specific F associated with the 1998 quota will be calculated when 
    the new assessment is complete and will be slightly less than the F in 
    1997 since the quota is slightly reduced. Therefore, the proposed 
    quotas for both fisheries are below the approved overfishing threshold 
    definitions.
        At its August 1997 meeting, the Council rejected its staff 
    recommendations of 2.565 million bushels for the 1998 surf clam quota 
    and of 4.317 million bushels for the 1998 ocean quahog quota. Instead, 
    the Council submitted to NMFS a surf clam quota recommendation of 2.3 
    million bushels, a 10-percent decrease from the 1997 surf clam quota 
    and of 4 million bushels for ocean quahogs, a 317,000-bushel reduction 
    from the 1997 quota of 4.317 million bushels. The recommendation to 
    reduce the surf clam quota came as a result of testimony given by a 
    segment of the industry in which they argued that a decline in consumer 
    demand for surf clam products had depressed prices and increased 
    inventories for a portion of the industry. In their argument to reduce 
    quota, they invoked the Council's surf clam policy of ``meeting 
    estimated demand.'' In response to the August surf clam and quahog 
    recommendations, several industry representatives, many of whom were 
    not present at the August meeting, protested. This group solicited the 
    Council to reconsider the quota recommendations. In addition, letters 
    to the Council from the New England Fishery Management Council and from 
    a major processor also expressed concern over reducing the surf clam 
    quota to meet the estimated demand.
        The Council voted to reconsider the surf clam quota recommendation 
    at its
    
    [[Page 62545]]
    
    September meeting. This resulted in a surf clam quota recommendation of 
    2.565 million bushels, as initially recommended by the Council staff 
    and SAW 22. The ocean quahog quota recommendation remained unchanged at 
    4 million bushels. The rationale for the reduction in this quota is 
    biologically based, and the recommendation was not reconsidered at the 
    September Council meeting.
        The proposed quotas for the 1998 Atlantic surf clam and ocean 
    quahog fisheries are as follows:
    
    Proposed 1998 SURF CLAM/Ocean QUAHOG Quotas
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      1998 final  1998 final
                         Fishery                        quotas      quotas  
                                                         (bu)        (hL)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Surf clam.......................................   2,565,000   1,362,000
    Ocean quahog....................................   4,000,000   2,122,000
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Classification
    
        This action is authorized by 50 CFR part 648, complies with the 
    National Environmental Policy Act, and has been determined to be not 
    significant for purposes of E.O. 12866.
        The Council prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (IRFA), as part of the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), that describes 
    the impact the proposed specification, if adopted, would have on small 
    entities. The proposed 1998 fishing quota for surf clams of 2.565 
    million bushels is unchanged from the 1996 and 1997 quotas. This quota 
    is based on management advice from the Stock Assessment Review 
    Committee for the 22nd Northeast Regional Stock Assessment Workshop, 
    which recommended no change in the quotas until a new stock assessment 
    is available with abundance estimates based on fishery catch rate and 
    research survey data.
        The proposed 1998 fishing quota for ocean quahogs of 4.000 million 
    bushels is a 317,000 bushel reduction from the 1997 quota of 4.317 
    million bushels, a decrease of 7.3 percent. This Council quota 
    recommendation reflects the lowest quota specification possible within 
    the range of 4.000 and 6.000 million bushels specified in the fishery 
    management plan. The Council staff recommendation for quahogs was to 
    maintain the 1997 quota of 4.317 million bushels. The Science and 
    Statistics and the Surf Clam and Ocean Quahog Committees of the Council 
    both endorsed the staff recommendation. However, the Council's 
    rationale for the reduction of the ocean quahog quota is biologically 
    based and involves the conservation of the resource and preservation of 
    the fishery.
        All of the 56 vessels participating in the surf clam and ocean 
    quahog fisheries in 1996 are small entities. Twenty fished exclusively 
    for surf clams, 14 fished for surf clams and ocean quahogs, and 22 
    fished exclusively for ocean quahogs. The proposed quota for the ocean 
    quahog fishery for 1998 is 7.3 percent less than the quotas for both 
    1996 and 1997. Because 22 of the 36 vessels participating in the ocean 
    quahog fishery (61 percent) harvest ocean quahog only, it is assumed 
    that most or all of those vessels will have a reduction of 5 percent or 
    more in ex-vessel revenues in 1998 compared to 1996, the most recent 
    year for which data are complete. Meanwhile, the analyses indicate that 
    no vessels will cease operations and compliance costs will not increase 
    total costs of production of more than 5 percent for 20 percent or more 
    of the affected small entities as a result of the proposed 
    specifications. A copy of the RIR/IRFA is available from the Council 
    (see ADDRESSES).
    
        Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
    
        Dated: November 18, 1997.
    David L. Evans,
    Deputy Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries 
    Service.
    [FR Doc. 97-30805 Filed 11-21-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/24/1997
Department:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed fishing quotas for the 1998 Atlantic surf clam and ocean quahog fisheries; request for comments.
Document Number:
97-30805
Dates:
Public comments must be received on or before December 24, 1997.
Pages:
62543-62545 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 971112268-7268-01, I.D. 102997E
PDF File:
97-30805.pdf
CFR: (1)
50 CFR 648