COMMENTS ON 2012 INTERIM BUTTERFISH SPECIFICATIONS,
NOAA-NMFS-2011-0245
First let me give you some background information about butterfish. Our company pioneered
the catching of butterfish both along our East Coast and in The Gulf of Mexico. We also
pioneered the marketing of both types of butterfish in The Japanese Market. The economic
foundation of our operation was built with income from butterfish. I am sure we know more
about butterfish harvesting and marketing than any other American organization.
We strongly disagree with your determination that we are risking over fishing of the butterfish
resource because no overfishing level have been determined. May I remind you that none of
the four species in the Mackerel, Squid and Butterfish Plan (MSB) have a specified
overfishing level. To claim that the butterfish quota can’t be increased because of the lack of
overfishing level is pure nonsense with the only objective of making sure we have no viable
fishery.
In 2010 we made comments to the proposed specification for MSB for 2011 in great detail
with the help of a lawyer to make sure we got all the legal terms right. You answered one
comment and told us the rest of the comments were irrelevant. In 2011 we made comments
for the 2012 specifications with the help of a marine biologist to make sure we had all the
biological terms right. Again you attempted to answer one comment and deemed the rest
irrelevant. It seem to be very easy not to reply to any comments that are a bit difficult and
require some work for a response or are such that you can’t come up with a reply. You are
making a mockery of your own system. One of the principles of this country is that no one
person or organization can be the police, prosecutor and judge at the same time. You are
certainly by your actions testing if that principle still stands. You are asking for comments
and then you are determining what comments are relevant. That makes your request for
comments irrelevant. It would be nice if you reply to our comments to this interim
specification and all our comments from
November 2011 to your proposed rule. It is rude and cowardly, not only to us, but the whole
country, not to reply to comments about your governing of our resources. It shows a very
arrogant attitude.
In your latest request for comments dated March 21, 2012 you state that all comments
received are part of the public record and will generally be posted in the Federal Register
without change. This was not done for the comments you received on the MSB
specifications for both 2011 and 2012. Did you not want the public to see what the
comments were?
In your reply to comments on the 2012 MSB specifications you stated as follows:
You received comments from a scientist on behalf of Seafreeze Ltd.
You received comments from The Herring Alliance, an environmental group that represent 42
North East Organizations.
You received comments from the Garden State Seafood Association.
You received comments from Lund’s Fisheries Incorporated.
The choice of wording tell me right away what comments you like and what comments you
don’t like.
You failed to mention that the Herring Alliance consist mostly of groups that nobody have
ever heard of. Some of the organizations have their address as the local library.
You also failed to mention that Garden State Seafood Association and Lund’s Fisheries
Incorporated is one and the same organization.
The assessment of fish stocks is not a very precise science and it will remain so until we
find a way to count every fish in the ocean. There are a lot of unknown factors and a lot of
uncertainty with the assessment of every fish stock, and it will remain so as long as we use
a handful of fish to estimate how many thousands of tons are swimming around under that
shiny ocean surface.
The stock of butterfish has been assessed using the same ways as you are doing for cod
fish. According to your own literature cod live to be over 10 years old and butterfish to be
about 1.5 years old. The survey results you are using in your stock assessments are
normally 5-7 years old by the time they are used for quota setting. This means that for
butterfish we are using information that is 3-4 generations old and for cod about 0.5
generations. If we used the same number of generations for cod as for butterfish we would be
looking at cod data from 30-40 years ago to set next year’s quota. I have not heard anybody
propose a system like that because they would be the laughing stock of the community.
Still we go on and do this for butterfish with straight serious faces every time. We would be
more accurate throwing darts at a board with numbers. When is some body going to wake
up? Or is it calculated that the non government organizations are more likely to take NMFS
to court than the fishing industry is?
A few years ago the principal survey vessel used was changed from the “Albatross”
to “Henry Bigelow”. Before that change took place an attempt was made to calibrate the
catch of fish between the two vessels. The two vessels towed their trawl nets in the
proximity to each other and were sometimes as much 1.5 miles apart. From those 300 +
test tows an attempt was made to mathematically calculate the difference in catch for each
specie of fish and the different size categories of each specie. I think this is about as easy
to do that calculation as to calculate what the weather will be on this day 10 years from now.
When the numbers of assumptions and unknowns going into a calculation are larger than
the number of known facts it is hard to have any kind of confidence in the results.
After the “Henry Bigelow” started working by itself it was found that is caught more fish than
the scientific crew could handle. The solution for that was to reduce the tow time on bottom
from 30 minutes used on “Albatross” to 20 minutes on “Henry Bigelow” and also the tow
speed was changed from 3.8 knot to 3knots with a final result of making the tows a little
more than half the length of what “Albatross” did. I have not seen the calculation for this, but
again it is an absolute impossible task to calculate the difference. Please send out a
questionaire to every trawl captain in the world and ask what happen when you change time
and speed and you will get one answer and that is that it is impossible to know.
In the middle nineties we stopped directly fishing for Atlantic butterfish because catches
were low and as a result the Japanese buyers switched to processing other similar fishes. In
2001 we found huge schools of Atlantic butterfish and we decided to try catching and
marketing the fish again. We had the best catches we have ever seen and 2 boats caught
2,600 metric tons in 6 weeks before we stopped catching. These catches show up in all your
agency’s records. It proved to be a lot harder to get the market back that what we had
imagined, and we struggled for 3 years to sell what caught at low prices. When we finally
started to get some traction in the market the quota was reduced to low level that killed all
the interest in The Japanese Market.
Since that time the stock of butterfish seem to have continued to increase, but it is difficult
to estimate what catches could be since we have a very low quota coupled with very low trip
limits that result in no directed commercial fishing. Whenever I hear butterfish discussed by
scientists and managers I hear that the butterfish stock must be in trouble because landings
are so low. That is from the same people that supply the information and make the decisions
that will perpetually keep the catches low. We are in a vicious circle that it seem impossible
to get out of.
We need to turn butterfish into export revenue and jobs rather than let it die and fall to the
bottom and rot to nobody’s benefit.
All the state surveys done along the East Coast show increased abundance of butterfish. All
the university surveys that have been done show increased abundance of butterfish and the
same shows at all nuclear plants using filtered seawater for cooling. All the recent NEFSC
surveys show high and increased abundance of butterfish. The most telling story was
published in a Bangor, Maine newspaper last year and told a story about how the tern
chicks were dying of starvation because butterfish had replaced the traditional sand eels in
coastal waters. The sand eel is long and slim while the butterfish is short and wide and will
fit down the narrow neck of a tern chick. The article came with a picture of an adult tern
trying to feed it’s chick a butterfish that would not fit. However, the recent high abundance
of butterfish is explained away by using the calibration factor between ‘Albatross” and “Henry
Bigelow”. In all recent surveys butterfish account for one of the highest catches of any fish
that have high quotas. The most glaring example is a 2009 survey where the catch Pollock
108 Lbs. and butterfish is about 9,700 Lbs. At that time the Pollock quota was increased to
about 16,000 metric tons while butterfish remained at about 500 metric tons. Our captains
are the most experienced catching butterfish and are reporting higher abundance of
butterfish than they have ever seen. Other captains are also reporting the same. In the
NEFSC fall survey of 2011 butterfish was the second highest catch after dogfish. Several
tows of butterfish were around 10,000 Lbs. or more and some were so large they could not
brought up on deck. We got this information from several independent sources, but NMFS is
treating this as a national top secret and we have not been able to get an official number for
the catch of butterfish.
Several representatives of different Japanese fishing companies have told me over the years
that when they were allowed to fish here they caught about 60,000 Metric tons (132,000,000
Lbs.) each year, and they only reported a fraction of it. There were no on board observers at
that time. This created a market and demand for the fish in Japan, and these same fishing
companies were the first ones to come here to purchase butterfish after introduction of the
200 mile exclusive zone. In the eighties NMFS made a preliminary management plan for the
Gulf of Mexico butterfish and estimated it could handle a yearly catch of 50,000 metric tons.
When we stopped catching butterfish in the middle nineties the average selling price was
about $2,-/Lb. If we had a quota of 50,000 metric tons (110,000,000Lbs.) and were able to
catch and sell that at the same price level that would be equal to $220,000,000 in export
revenue per year. To measure total economic impact to the local economy I have seen
multipliers use from 4 to 6, and that would result in total impact between $800,000,000 and
$1,200,000,000 per year. That again would result in thousands if not tens of thousands of
jobs. If you think that the reduction of 2,000 metric tons of cod quota is big problem than it is
about time you take a look at this problem. This month the loligo squid fishery also got
closed down because the boats were catching butterfish that it is impossible to avoid.
If we get a high quota for butterfish the catches will not increase rapidly. They will have to be
sold before anybody will put a lot of effort into catching and freezing them. I will take many
years to bring the market back and there will be plenty of time to adjust the management if
the situation warrants it. Please keep in mind that with a short lived specie like butterfish the
natural swings in population can be huge. The recruitment can be very strong and the time
line between a stock high and a stock low can be very short.
We know some of the bags of butterfish were so large that the crew could not bring them
onboard. We got this information confirmed from various sources, but within NMFS it is
being treated as a national top secret and we have not been able to get an official number for
the butterfish catch.
Please do not let us go through another year of millions of dollars of dead fish falling to the
bottom of the ocean without creating any jobs and benefits to our country.
Attachments:
Comment from Geir Monsen 20Apr2012
Title: Comment from Geir Monsen 20Apr2012
View Attachment:
Comment from Geir Munson - Submitted 20Apr2012
Title: Comment from Geir Munson - Submitted 20Apr2012
Geir Monsen
This is comment on Rule
Fisheries of Northeastern United States: Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Specifications and Management Measures
View Comment
Attachments:
Comment from Geir Monsen 20Apr2012
Title:
Comment from Geir Monsen 20Apr2012
Comment from Geir Munson - Submitted 20Apr2012
Title:
Comment from Geir Munson - Submitted 20Apr2012
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