Like Gulf of Maine cod, questions have been raised by both industry and independent scientists about recent surveys and assessments.
WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) – Apr. 30, 2012 – NOAA Fisheries has announced several steps to address potential economic loss as a result of cuts in the fishing quota for Georges Bank yellowtail flounder.
This quota cut is the result of a similar situation to the Gulf of Maine Cod crisis. A new yellowtail flounder assessment concluded that the previous assessment was too optimistic in its estimates. Like Gulf of Maine cod, questions have been raised by both industry and independent scientists about recent surveys and assessments. A 40-year time series was "split" in 1995. When the survey was split, surveys after 1995 were estimated to be three times more efficient than previous surveys. This has kept the population estimates down even though more fish have been caught in recent surveys.
The steps include:
A management plan revision to allow unused scallop allocation to be transferred to groundfish vessels.
Authorization to allow mid-sized vessels to use new gear that may reduce by-catch.
Administration of research set-aside awards (funds are provided by the scallop industry, not taxpayers) to fund the University of Massachusetts School of Science and Technology, the Coonamessett Farm Foundation, Inc. in collaboration with the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, and the Gulf of Maine Research Institute for projects designed to provide real time information to help fishermen avoid yellowtail.
These steps are in addition to the working group announced on Friday.
NOAA Fisheries also noted that the International Fisheries Agreement Clarification Act sponsored by Congressman Barney Frank and Senator Olympia Snowe in 2010, which was supported by the entire Northeast delegation, and enacted in 2011, allowed NOAA to extend the rebuilding timeframe from 2016 to 2032.
The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:
GLOUCESTER, Mass. — Apr. 30, 2012 — NOAA will take several steps that may help minimize the economic loss for commercial fishermen who face cuts in Georges Bank fishery quotas, which are jointly fished and managed with Canada. One particular stock, Georges Bank yellowtail flounder, is a mid-value fish often caught incidentally while fishermen target high value stocks like cod, haddock, and scallops.
Poor stock conditions have continued because fewer fish are growing to catchable size
than previously expected. As a result, the overall U.S. allocation of the Georges Bank yellowtail flounder stock will be reduced by 61 percent this fishing year.
The U.S. yellowtail flounder allocation is divided between the scallop and groundfish
fisheries. Yellowtail flounder are bycatch in the high value scallop fishery. Under existing
regulations, the yellowtail flounder allocation to the scallop fishery will increase by 53 percent to approximately 679,024 pounds in 2012. The allocation to the groundfish industry, however, will be reduced by 80 percent to roughly 480,608 pounds.
"While this is good for the scallop industry, it's a challenge for the bigger and some of the
smaller groundfish boats that go to Georges Bank," said Samuel Rauch, acting assistant
administrator, NOAA Fisheries Service. "Several actions that we already have in the works may help mitigate some of these impacts."
NOAA actions that may help mitigate economic loss
NOAA has just approved management plan revisions giving NOAA the authority to
reallocate any projected unused portion of the scallop fishery's Georges Bank yellowtail flounder allocation to groundfish fishing vessels.
These new management measures also authorize mid-sized fishing vessels to use a
new type of trawl fishing gear that may enable fishers to reduce their bycatch of yellowtail
flounder while they target other groundfish species.
NOAA and the New England Fishery Management Council, through the scallop research
set-aside program and other NOAA Cooperative Research Program funds, will support several new research projects in 2012 aimed at reducing yellowtail bycatch on Georges Bank and in other areas.
Funding is expected to be awarded to the University of Massachusetts School of
Science and Technology, to the Coonamessett Farm Foundation, Inc. in collaboration with the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, and to the Gulf of Maine Research Institute for three separate projects, all designed to provide real time information to help fishermen avoid yellowtail and maximize their fishing opportunity on abundant target species.
Last week, NOAA and the council also announced the formation of a new working group,
modeled after the successful Gulf of Maine Cod Working Group that plans to work closely with the fishing industry to explore how to advance these current initiatives and to identify other ideas and management alternatives that may ease the impact of the new regulations on the fishing industry.
The situation with yellowtail flounder could be worse, were it not for legislation introduced by Congressman Barney Frank and Senator Olympia Snowe in 2010, supported by the entire Northeast delegation, and enacted in January 2011. The International Fisheries Agreement Clarification Act allowed NOAA in 2011 to extend the rebuilding timeframe for these shared stocks. The Georges Bank yellowtail flounder rebuilding timeframe was extended from 2016 to 2032, enabling larger allocations. Even with the extended rebuilding schedule, NOAA and the industry are faced with this big reduction in 2012.