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CALIFORNIA: Dungeness crab fishing season ends four weeks early

May 25, 2021 โ€” The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is ending the Dungeness crab fishing season early on June 1 because of an increase in humpback whales in the Pacific Ocean.

On May 18, Charlton Bonham, director of the state agency, announced that recent survey data indicated an increase in humpback whales returning from their winter breeding grounds to California fishing grounds.

In a press release, Bonham said that considering the data and recommendations from the Dungeness Crab Fishing Gear Working Group and other stakeholders, he assessed the entanglement risk under the Risk Assessment Mitigation Program (RAMP) and announced the early closure of the commercial Dungeness crab fishery.

All commercial crab traps must be removed from the fishing grounds by noon on June 1.

Read the full story at The New Times

CALIFORNIA: Monterey Bay area affected by shortened crab season

May 21, 2021 โ€” With the higher number of humpback whales descending on Central Coast waters, and out of concern with them becoming entangled in crab lines, state officials said this week that they will close the Dungeness crab season on June 1, four weeks early.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which regulates the stateโ€™s crab fishery, issued the decision Tuesday following agency Director Charlton Bonhamโ€™s assessment of entanglement risk to humpback whales and critically endangered leatherback sea turtles.

The closure will begin statewide at noon on June 1.

โ€œIt has been a very difficult year for many in our fishing communities and I recognize that every day of lost fishing further impacts families and small businesses,โ€ Bonham said in a statement.

Read the full story at the Monterey Herald

Gov. Newsomโ€™s California Comeback Plan Includes Significant Increases for Fish and Wildlife

May 18, 2021 โ€” Proposed budget increases for California will help shark and swordfish gillnet fishermen transition out of the fishery.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday introduced his California Comeback Plan, which includes significant fiscal resources aimed to protect Californiaโ€™s diverse fish, wildlife and plant resources and the habitats on which they depend, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a press release. The proposed budget increases show the Newsom administrationโ€™s investment in Californiaโ€™s biodiversity both for its intrinsic, ecological value as well as for future generations of hunters, hikers, fishermen, birders and outdoor enthusiasts.

Read the full story at Seafood News

California ropeless gear bill dies without a hearing

May 3, 2021 โ€” A California bill that would have required the ropeless pop-up gear in Dungeness crab and other trap fisheries by 2025, died without a hearing last week in the California State Assembly. Dubbed the Whale Entanglement Prevention Act, (AB-534) was introduced in February by Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) and was largely written by the Center for Biological Diversity.

Bonta was sworn in as Californiaโ€™s attorney general on April 23, and no other assembly member chose to pick up the bill after his departure.

โ€œIt was a true David and Goliath moment for the fishing industry. It shows when the facts are on our side and we work together, we can actually win,โ€ said Ben Platt, a Crescent City-based fisherman and president of the California Coast Crab Association. โ€œIt was the consensus if we were mandated to go ropeless, weโ€™d all go out of business.โ€

California fishermen were blindsided by bill when it was introduced, as new Risk Assessment and Mitigation Program (RAMP) regulations were instituted by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife in November. The RAMP rules โ€” among other things โ€” keep fishermen off the water when the presence of whales exceeded a certain threshold in state crab districts, as happened in November and December.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

California Commercial Salmon Season to be Reduced โ€” Maybe by Half

March 16, 2021 โ€” The California commercial salmon season, due to start May 1, will be only about half as long as last yearโ€™s season, after the Pacific Fisheries Management Council settled on three proposals for the dates and months fishing can take place this season.

โ€œTime on the water is cut this year in an effort to have more salmon return to the rivers to spawn to meet our management objectives,โ€ Kandice Morgenstern, environmental scientist at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, said after the councilโ€™s decision Thursday.

Read the full story at Seafood News

CALIFORNIA: Innovative fishing gear is being tested to reduce impact on whales and sea turtles

February 22, 2021 โ€” A new collaborative project between environmental groups, the state, scientists, and Dungeness crab fishers is testing innovative new gear designed to reduce the impact of whales and sea turtles getting caught in fishing gear.

This is in response to Californiaโ€™s recent state regulations to reduce the risk of endangered whales and sea turtles getting caught in commercial Dungeness crab gear. The regulations went into effect last November, and when high numbers of humpback whales were sighted off the coast near San Francisco and Monterey Bay, the opening of the commercial Dungeness crab season was delayed by about a month.

Since 2014, the number of interactions between whales and fishing gear has been historically high. In 2019, for example, 26 whales were entangled off the West Coast, 17 of which were humpback whales.

โ€œThereโ€™s a vertical line attached to the trap that goes to the buoys at the surface,โ€ said Greg Wells of the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation who is managing the collaborative gear-testing research project. โ€œThatโ€™s the part that poses an entanglement risk for whales and other marine life.โ€

Read the full story at The Monterey Herald

CALIFORNIA: Spiny lobster comes back to San Diego

February 11, 2021 โ€” โ€œIt started with rumors, said Pete Halmay, seasoned urchin diver and president of San Diego Fishermenโ€™s Working Group. At seventy-something, heโ€™s still out getting salty almost every day. Two or three months before spiny lobster season was set to open in early October, Halmay said, talk on the docks was that Asia wasnโ€™t buying this year, demand was way down due to covid-19, and the price San Diego fishermen would get for spiny lobster would be 30-50 percent of the norm. In a typical year, 95 percent of spiny lobster caught in San Diego goes to overseas markets, primarily Asia.

Coveted for its resemblance to a dragon, California spiny lobster is a lucky dish for Lunar New Year and is served at weddings and large get-togethers. Covid-19 crashed those parties in late 2019 and throughout 2020. Spiny lobster prices crashed too. President Trumpโ€™s trade war with China and the retaliatory tariffs didnโ€™t help. The rumored price prior to the season opening was $8 per pound, down from the 2019 average of about $20 and 2015โ€™s high near $30. California Department of Fish and Wildlife data showed that spiny lobster was the most profitable local catch at $3.8 million in 2017. In 2018, it brought in $3 million, beating out bigeye tuna. When the pandemic started in China in late 2019, it coincided with the height of legal spiny lobster season in California. Sales in 2019 dropped to $1.8 million. Among San Diegoโ€™s top-grossing seafoods, spiny lobster saw the biggest decline. Said Halmay, โ€œThey [local fishermen] got together and decided, โ€˜We canโ€™t make a living off that. Letโ€™s do something about it.โ€™โ€

Seafood typically changes hands four or five times before reaching the consumer. In San Diego, fishermen sell off the dock to whomever is buying at the highest price, and they have no control over the โ€œchain of custodyโ€ after that. โ€œWe know one up and one down, where it comes from and who buys it. We donโ€™t really know for sure where it goes after that.โ€

Read the full story at the San Diego Reader

North Bay crabbers caught in price battle with wholesalers

December 23, 2020 โ€” Eggnog? Check. Chestnuts roasting on an open fire? Sure, if youโ€™re into that. But donโ€™t bet on landing any Dungeness crab this holiday season.

โ€œUnless a miracle happens, which is highly unlikely, we wonโ€™t see crab for Christmas,โ€ said Tony Anello, a veteran fisher who runs his boat, the Annabelle, out of Bodega Bay and offers up his tender product at Spud Point Crab Co.

After several years of varied setbacks and more than a month of delays to the 2020 Dungeness season, local crabbers now face a new hurdle as they haggle over price with large wholesalers. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife had reset the seasonโ€™s start date to Wednesday, offering a glimmer of hope to those who have made fresh crab part of their annual holiday ritual. But few boats were heading out to set traps on Tuesday.

โ€œWe should be traveling right now,โ€ Dick Ogg, another icon of the local Dungeness harvest, said Monday from behind a shopping cart at Costco. โ€œIโ€™m here grabbing stuff in case something happens this afternoon. We would normally anchor up, set up all the bait cups and be ready. Then (Tuesday), right at 6:01 (a.m.), weโ€™d start setting gear.โ€

But Monday did not bring resolution. At 3 p.m. that day, representatives of the major fishing ports in Northern California spoke by phone with executives of Pacific Seafood, one of the Westโ€™s largest seafood wholesalers. A couple hours later, the company engaged in a separate call with a wider range of fishers stretching up the Oregon coast.

Read the full story at The Press Democrat

California Commercial Dungeness Crab Update

December 15, 2020 โ€” The following was released by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife:

Proving that the Risk Assessment Mitigation Program is successfully striking a balance between the needs of the commercial Dungeness crab fleet and protection of marine life, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) will open the commercial season statewide on Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020, allowing the fleet a chance to get Dungeness crab on California tables before the holiday season ends.

This statewide opener ends delays in place due to meat quality in the northern management area (NMA) and the potential for whale entanglement in the central management area (CMA). It also gives the fleet ample time for planning and gear preparation and promotes an orderly start to the fishery. For the NMA Fishing Zones 1 and 2, the pre-soak period will begin Sunday, Dec. 20 at 8:01 a.m. and for the CMA, Fishing Zones 3, 4, 5 and 6, the pre-soak period will begin Tuesday, Dec. 22 at 6:01 a.m.

Available data indicates some whales remain in the fishing grounds but risk is declining and CDFW supports a balanced approach to managing risk and providing opportunity for the commercial fishery that is grounded in expert science.

Whale entanglement risk still exists, but it is low. Thus, the opening declaration is accompanied by an notice to the fleet to use best fishing practices and avoid areas where whales may be congregating including around the canyon edges of Monterey, and between the Farallon Islands and Point Reyes. Crabbers are encouraged to review the Best Practices Guide and remember to minimize knots and line scope when fishing.

Recent survey data indicate most whales have started their annual migration out of the fishing grounds. Based on these data, CDFW made a preliminary recommendation to open the fishery statewide on Wednesday, Dec. 16. The Whale Entanglement Working Group evaluated all available data and did not provide a consensus recommendation to open or delay. After the Working Group meeting, the majority of ports requested further delay of the opener.

Read the full release here

CALIFORNIA: Crab for Christmas: Dungeness season starts Dec. 23

December 14, 2020 โ€” Christmas will come early for Dungeness crab lovers.

Two days early.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that the commercial Dungeness crab fishing season will open Dec. 23.

The official opening date of Nov. 15 had been delayed for weeks in the central California zone, from the Sonoma/Mendocino county line south, because of the possibility of migrating whales getting tangled in fishing lines. And it had been delayed in the northern zone, which consists of Humboldt, Mendocino and Del Norte counties, because the sample catch failed to reach the poundage required for testing.

โ€œRecent survey data indicate most whales have started their annual migration out of the fishing grounds,โ€ according to a statement by state officials, who conduct aerial surveys of the Pacific Ocean waters off the coast. โ€œWhale entanglement risk still exists, but it is low. Thus, the opening declaration is accompanied by a notice to the fleet to use best fishing practices and avoid areas where whales may be congregating, including around the canyon edges of Monterey and between the Farallon Islands and Point Reyes.โ€

Read the full story at The Daily Democrat

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