August 20, 2018 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:
Here’s a roundup of upcoming meetings and new developments that are relevant to the New England Fishery Management Council’s stakeholders.
SEPTEMBER 2018 COUNCIL MEETING: The Council has extended its September meeting by a half-day. The meeting now will begin on Monday, September 24 at 2 p.m. and run through Thursday, September 27 at Hotel 1620 Plymouth Harbor in Plymouth, MA. The agenda and meeting materials will be posted in the coming weeks at September 2018 Plymouth.
DOGFISH: The New England and Mid-Atlantic Councils jointly manage spiny dogfish. The Mid-Atlantic Council, which has the administrative lead over the Spiny Dogfish Fishery Management Plan, has scheduled two upcoming meetings to review recent fishery performance and talk about specifications for fishing year 2019 and beyond.
- Spiny Dogfish Advisory Panel – The advisory panel (AP) will meet via webinar on August 27, 2018 to develop a Fishery Performance Report and provide input on upcoming specifications. More information is available at Spiny Dogfish AP and AP webinar.
- Spiny Dogfish Monitoring Committee – The monitoring committee will meet via webinar on September 14, 2018 to review annual specifications and management measures and make appropriate recommendations for upcoming fishing years. Visit meeting details and spiny dogfish.
ATLANTIC SEA SCALLOPS: The Council’s scallop-related bodies will be meeting to discuss: (1) the 2018 scallop benchmark stock assessment; (2) preliminary results from 2018 scallop surveys; (3) fishery specifications and Framework Adjustment 30 management measures; (4) limited access general category individual fishing quota (LAGC IFQ) trip limit analyses; and (5) 2019 scallop work priorities.
- Scallop Plan Development Team – Tuesday, August 28 and Wednesday, August 29, 2018 at Coonamessett Inn in Falmouth, MA. Check here for details.
- Scallop Advisory Panel and Scallop Committee – Thursday, September 13, 2018 and Friday, September 14, 2018 respectively at Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott in New Bedford. Learn more at Scallop AP and Scallop Committee.
- Groundfish Plan Development Team – Wednesday, August 22, 2018 via webinar to discuss Framework Adjustment 58 issues and Monitoring Amendment 23. Details are available at webinar information.
- Fishery Data for Stock Assessment Working Group – Friday, September 7, 2018 at the UMass Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford to continue work on how fishery dependent data can be used to inform stock abundance. The agenda can be found at working group meeting.
- Transboundary Management Guidance Committee (TMGC) – The TMGC will meet Tuesday and Wednesday, September 11-12, 2018, to develop recommendations for 2019 total allowable catches for shared U.S./Canada groundfish stocks on Georges Bank. Details will be posted at TMGC meetingwhen available.
- Atlantic Cod – The New England Council manages Gulf of Maine and Georges Bank cod under the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan. The University of New Hampshire recently hosted a Cod Population Structure Symposium that included several presentations from regional scientists. Copies of those presentations can be downloaded at Cod Population Structure and New England Fisheries.
- Social Impact Analyst Dr. Rachel Feeney and Atlantic Herring Fishery Analyst Deirdre Boelke were authors on a journal article titled “The dream and the reality: meeting decision-making time frames while incorporating ecosystem and economic models into management strategy evaluation,” which recently was published in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.
- Scallop Fishery Analyst Sam Asci was the lead author on a paper titled “Estimating similarity in benthic communities over decades and in areas open and closed to fishing in the central Gulf of Maine, USA,” which was published in Marine Ecology Progress Series.
- Dr. John Wiedenmann and Dr. Olaf Jensen authored a paper titled “Could recent overfishing of New England groundfish have been prevented? A retrospective evaluation of alternative management strategies.” The work was funded by the New England Council, and the resulting article was published in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.
- The title of Michelle’s talk is “A Collaborative Effort: Designing and Evaluating Deep-Sea Coral Protection Strategies for New England Waters.”
- During the same session, Council member and charter boat Captain Rick Bellavance will be speaking on “A Case Study: Electronic Vessel Trips Reports for the For Hire Fleet; Industry and Agency come together to improve recreational data using modern technologies.”