96-3013. Gulf of Maine Take Reduction Team Meeting  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 29 (Monday, February 12, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 5384-5385]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-3013]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admiistration
    [I.D. 020696D]
    
    
    Gulf of Maine Take Reduction Team Meeting
    
    AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Take Reduction Team (TRT) for the Gulf of Maine (GME) 
    harbor porpoise/sink-gillnet fishery will hold a meeting to develop a 
    Take Reduction Plan (TRP) as described in the Marine Mammal Protection 
    Act (MMPA) focusing on reducing bycatch in the sink-gillnet fisheries 
    of the GME and the Bay of Fundy, Canada.
    
    DATES: The meeting will be held on February 14 and 15, 1996, 8:30 a.m. 
    until 4:30 p.m.
    
    ADDRESSES: The TRT meeting will be held at the King's Grant Inn/Quality 
    Inn, on Route 128, Danvers, MA 01923, (508) 774-6800.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kevin Chu, (508) 281-9254, or Michael 
    Payne, (301) 713-2322
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On April 30, 1994, the 1994 Amendments to 
    the MMPA were signed into law. Section 117 of the MMPA requires that 
    NMFS complete stock assessment reports for all marine mammal stocks 
    within U.S. waters. Each stock assessment report is required to 
    categorize the status of the stock as one that either has a level of 
    human-caused mortality and serious injury that is not likely to cause 
    the stock to be reduced below its optimum sustainable population; or is 
    a strategic stock, with a description of the reasons therefore; and 
    estimate the potential biological removal (PBR) level for the stock, 
    describing the information used to calculate it, including the recovery 
    factor. The Stock Assessment Report and the calculated PBR was 
    published by NMFS in July 1995.
        The MMPA defines a ``strategic stock'' as a marine mammal stock for 
    which the level of direct human-caused mortality exceeds the PBR level; 
    which, based on the best available scientific information, is declining 
    and is likely to be listed as a threatened species under the Endangered 
    Species Act of 1973 (ESA) within the foreseeable future; or which is 
    listed as a threatened species or endangered species under the ESA, or 
    is designated as depleted under the MMPA. The MMPA further defines the 
    term ``potential biological removal,'' or PBR, as ``the maximum number 
    of animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from 
    a marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain 
    its optimum sustainable population.'' The GME harbor porpoise 
    population was proposed as threatened under the ESA on January 7, 1993, 
    and the bycatch of the GME population of harbor porpoise (approximately 
    1,300 per year in 1992 and 1993) is significantly greater (an order of 
    magnitude greater) than the calculated PBR (approximately 400). The GME 
    population of harbor porpoise, therefore, is considered ``strategic'' 
    under the MMPA.
        For a strategic stock, section 118(f) of the MMPA requires NMFS to 
    appoint a TRT, and this TRT must develop a TRP designed to assist in 
    the recovery or 
    
    [[Page 5385]]
    prevent the depletion of each strategic stock of marine mammal and 
    which interacts with a commercial fishery. Section 118(f)(6)(C) states 
    that members of the TRTs shall have expertise regarding the 
    conservation or biology of the marine mammal species that the take 
    reduction plan will address, or the fishing practices that result in 
    the incidental mortality and serious injury of such species.
        The MMPA further specifies that members of the TRT shall include 
    representatives of Federal agencies, each coastal state with fisheries 
    that interact with the species or stock, appropriate Regional Fishery 
    Management Councils, interstate fisheries commissions, academic and 
    scientific organizations, environmental groups, all commercial and 
    recreational fisheries groups and gear types that incidentally take the 
    species or stock, Alaska Native organizations, or Indian tribal 
    organizations, and others as the Secretary of Commerce deems 
    appropriate.
        As a result of draft stock assessment reviews developed under 
    section 117 of the MMPA, and as a result of an extended interview 
    process conducted by a NMFS-contracted facilitator, NMFS, through a 
    letter dated November 1995, has asked the following individuals to be a 
    member of a TRT focusing on reducing bycatch of harbor porpoise in the 
    GME sink-gillnet fishery:
        Erik Anderson, New Hampshire Commercial Fishermens Association; 
    Janice Anderson-Comeau, Massachusetts Netter's Association; Jennifer 
    Atkinson, Conservation Law Foundation; Tina Berger, Atlantic States 
    Marine Fisheries Commission; Jeannette Bubar, Maine Gillnetter's 
    Association; Kevin Chu, NMFS Regional Office; Paul Cohan, Cape Ann 
    Gillnetter's Association; Jeremy Conway, Department of Fisheries and 
    Oceans-Canada; Russell DeConti, Center for Coastal Studies; Chris 
    Finlayson, Maine Department of Natural Resources; Patricia Fiorelli, 
    New England Fishery Management Council; James Gilbert, University of 
    Maine; Cathy Homstead, Maine Gillnetter's Association; Scott Kraus, New 
    England Aquarium; David Laist, Marine Mammal Commission; Robert 
    MacKinnon, Massachusetts Netter's Association; Michael Payne, NMFS 
    Office of Protected Resources; David Pierce, Massachusetts Division of 
    Marine Fisheries; Andrew Read, Duke University; Bruce Smith, New 
    Hampshire Fish and Game; Ron Smolowitz, East Falmouth, MA; Terry 
    Stockwell, Maine Gillnetter's Association; April Valliere, Rhode Island 
    Division of Fish and Wildllife; David Wiley, International Wildlife 
    Coalition; John Williamson, New Hampshire Commercial Fishermen's 
    Association; Nina Young, Center for Marine Conservation; Sharon Young, 
    The Humane Society of the United States. The TRT will be facilitated by 
    Abby Arnold, RESOLVE-Center for Environmental Dispute Resolution, 
    Washington, D.C.
        NMFS fully intends to convene a TRT process in a way that provides 
    for national consistency yet accommodates the unique regional needs and 
    characteristics of any one team. TRTs are not subject to the Federal 
    Advisory Committee Act (5 App. U.S.C.). Meetings are open to the 
    public.
        Section 118 (6)(A)(ii) also requires NMFS to publish the range of 
    the strategic marine mammal stock, and all commercial fisheries that 
    cause incidental mortality and serious injury from such stock. The GME 
    population (stock) of harbor porpoise ranges from the Bay of Fundy, 
    Canada (summer distribution), south to at least North Carolina in the 
    winter until late spring. The GME sink- gillnet fishery interacts with 
    this stock throughout the year, but the estimated bycatch from this 
    fishery is greatest during fall and spring. The interactions (estimated 
    bycatch) by this fishery with harbor porpoise are greater than those of 
    all other fisheries combined.
        Harbor porpoise are also known to interact with a series of coastal 
    gillnet fisheries that operate, primarily, in state waters from New 
    Jersey south to North Carolina. The extent (number of takes) of these 
    interactions is not known; however, the greatest number of interactions 
    (based on strandings data) in these fisheries occurs from mid-March 
    through May in North Carolina and Virginia. These interactions will not 
    be considered by this TRT, because they occur in markedly different 
    fisheries from the GME sink-gillnet fishery and primarily in state 
    waters, which are under a different jurisdiction from the GME sink- 
    gillnet fishery. Another TRT, or a different management process 
    focusing on management of state fisheries, will address the bycatch of 
    harbor porpoise in the mid-Atlantic coastal gillnet fisheries.
    
        Dated: February 6, 1996.
    Patricia A. Montanio,
    Acting Deputy Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine 
    Fisheries Service.
    [FR Doc. 96-3013 Filed 2-9-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-22-F
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/12/1996
Department:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of public meeting.
Document Number:
96-3013
Dates:
The meeting will be held on February 14 and 15, 1996, 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.
Pages:
5384-5385 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
I.D. 020696D
PDF File:
96-3013.pdf