December 4, 2019 — The following was released by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission:
The Commission’s South Atlantic State/Federal Fisheries Management Board (Board) releases two documents for public comment: Draft Addendum III to Amendment 1 to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for Atlantic Croaker and Draft Addendum III to the Omnibus Amendment to the Interstate FMPs for Spanish Mackerel, Spot, and Spotted Seatrout. The states of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina have scheduled their hearings to gather public input on the Draft Addenda. The details of those hearings, as well as an ASMFC Public Hearing webinar, follow.
Maryland Department of Natural Resources
December 3, 2019 at 6 PM
- Tawes State Office Building
- C1 (Lobby) Conference Room
- 580 Taylor Avenue, Annapolis, Maryland 21401
- Contact: Lynn Fegley at 410.260.8285
December 16, 2019 at 6 PM*
- Wor-Wic Community College
- 32000 Campus Drive, Hazel Center Room 302, Salisbury, MD 21804
- Contacts: Lynn Fegley at 410.260.8285 and John Clark at 302.739.9914
- * Held jointly with the DE Division of Fish & Wildlife
Virginia Marine Resources Commission
- January 7, 2020 at 6:30 PM
- 380 Fenwick Road, Ft. Monroe, VA 23651
- Contact: Adam Kenyon and Somers Smott at 757.247.2200
North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries
- December 5, 2019 at 6 PM
- N.C. Department of Environmental Quality Southern Regional Office
- 127 Cardinal Drive Extension, Wilmington, NC 28405
- Contact: Chris Batsavage at 252.808.8009
REVISED: ASMFC Public Hearing Webinar
- January 8, 2020 at 6 PM
- Webinar link: https://attendee.
gotowebinar.com/register/ 3538748890460954125 - Conference Call #: 1-888-585-9008 (enter Conference Room: 275-479-282 when prompted)
- Contact: Mike Schmidtke at 703.842.0740
The Board initiated the development of the Draft Addenda for Atlantic croaker and spot to incorporate updates on the annual traffic light approach (TLA) and propose changes to the management program. In the absence of an approved stock assessment, which is the case for both species, the TLA is conducted each year to evaluate fishery trends and develop management actions (e.g. bag limits, size restrictions, time and area closures, and gear restrictions) when harvest and abundance thresholds are exceeded. The TLA assigns a color (red, yellow, or green) to categorize relative levels of indicators on the condition of the fish population or fishery. For example, as harvest or abundance increases relative to its long-term average, the proportion of green in a given year will increase and as harvest or abundance decreases, the amount of red in that year will increase. The Board annually evaluates the proportion of red against threshold levels to determine if management action is required. In recent years, fisheries for both Atlantic croaker and spot have experienced declines in harvest, but not declines in abundance as indicated by fishery-independent surveys used in the TLA. Therefore, management action has not been triggered. The lack of triggering management action with these harvest declines has raised concerns, leading to re-evaluation of TLA methods and the proposal of changes to management.
Both Draft Addenda present updates to resolve issues with the TLA analyses in order to better reflect stock characteristics, based on recommendations from the Atlantic Croaker Technical Committee and Spot Plan Review Team. Each Draft Addendum also presents options for four issues that address the TLA management triggering mechanism, triggered management responses for the recreational and commercial fisheries, and evaluation of the population’s response to triggered management actions.
The Draft Addenda are available athttp://www.asmfc.org/files/