July 1, 2016 — Crabs were the hot topic Tuesday at the Virginia Marine Resources Commission. Crab stocks have increased, not yet to desired levels, but enough that regulations were relaxed some. Commercial crabbers will have extended potting seasons.
The winter crab dredge fishery was kept closed. Recreational crabbing regulations did not change for the most part. The exception is the five-pot recreational license. Everyone may use up to two crab pots for personal consumption without a license. Recreational crabbers may use up to five pots with a license.
This license technically is for using commercial gear for recreational purposes. When crabbing under this license, you have commercial regulations with which to comply — as in mandatory reporting, time-of-day restrictions, no crabbing Sunday and a shorter season. Again, these regulations only apply to the five-pot license, not to all other recreational crabbing.
With the increase in the commercial potting seasons, arguments were to also increase this recreational five-pot season, but it was kept unchanged. What was changed is that there are now two five-pot license fees. This is due to the Northern diamondback terrapin. Some get drowned in crab pots. Now, if you have turtle-excluder devices on your crab pots, you can buy a five-pot license for $36. If you do not have the devices, you can buy a five-pot license for $46. This does not apply to commercial pots or to normal recreational (two) pots.