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MASSACHUSETTS: Museum To Host Conversation On Woods Hole Fisheriesโ€™ 150th Anniversary

June 4, 2021 โ€” โ€œCelebrating 150 Years of Science at the Woods Hole Fisheries Labโ€ will be the topic of Woods Hole Historical Museumโ€™s online Conversation on Wednesday, June 9, at 7 PM with Jon Hare, science and research director of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries, founded as the U. Commission of Fish and Fisheries in 1871, is celebrating its 150th anniversary this year. The Woods Hole Laboratory is the nationโ€™s first marine research station, and is the founding laboratory of NOAA Fisheries, formally called the National Marine Fisheries Service.

Jon Hare has been the science and research director of the Woods Hole Fisheries since October 2016. He oversees science activities related to the Fisheries mission in the northeast region, including fisheries, aquaculture, protected species, habitat, and ecosystem science. He received a PhD in coastal oceanography from State University of New York Stony Brook. He was awarded a National Research Council Research Associateship in 1994 to work at NOAAโ€™s Beaufort Laboratory and was hired by the agency in 1997.

Read the full story at The Enterprise

Mid-Atlantic council calls for extending observer waiver through 2020

August 17, 2020 โ€” On the eve of NMFS resuming at-sea observer coverage, the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council asked the agency to again extend its covid-19 waiver on deploying observers in the Greater Atlantic region.

โ€œGiven the continued transmission of the covid-19 virus, we do not believe the observer program can be safely operated at this time,โ€ wrote council chairman Michael Luisi in an Aug. 13 letter to NMFS regional director Michael Pentony and Jon Hare, science and research director at the Northeast Fisheries Science Center.

โ€œAccording to the Centers for Disease Control, when we last communicated on this issue (June 23, 2020), the 7-day new case average was under 30,000 new cases per day. On August 11, 2020, the national 7-day average of new cases was over 52,000 new cases per day,โ€ the letter states.

โ€œGiven the ongoing community transmission of the virus and the particularly high risk of transmission in the close quarters onboard a vessel, we believe that deploying observers on fishing vessels at this time poses an unwarranted risk to fishermen, observers, and associated communities.โ€

Council members talked about that concern during their online August meeting this week and approved a recommendation to extend the observer and monitor waiver on permitted commercial fishing vessels through Dec. 31.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Northeast observer coverage resumes July 1; councils express worry

June 24, 2020 โ€” NMFS will resume its usual at-sea observe coverage in the Northeast July 1, after a three-month hiatus when the agency waived requirements because of the covid-19 pandemic.

Dr. Jon Hare, science and research director for the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, confirmed Monday that the agency and its observer providers will move ahead with the resumption, in the planning stages since May 29.

โ€œThe Northeast Fisheries Science Centerโ€™s Fisheries Sampling Branch has been working through internal protocols and processes to ensure shoreside components of the program can operate,โ€ Hare wrote in a letter to fishermen and other stakeholders. โ€œThey are also coordinating with observer providers to develop deployment plans that support the health and safety of observers, fishermen, and others in the fishing industry, in light of the covid-19 virus.โ€

But the Mid-Atlantic and New England fishery management councils reacted with dismay, reflecting worries in the industry that the observer program is being set back in motion before it is safe to do so.

โ€œThe council believes that deploying observers on fishing vessels at this time poses an unnecessary risk to the health and safety of fishermen and observers,โ€ Mid-Atlantic council chairman Michael Luisi wrote in a June 23 letter to Hare and NMFS Northeast regional director Michael Pentony.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Troubling questions, concerns raised about off-shore wind farms

August 22, 2019 โ€” Oceanographer Jon Hare listed the effects of offshore wind development on the marine environment.

Thereโ€™s disturbance to the sea floor during installation of turbine platforms. Noise from pile-driving and other activities. Increases in boat traffic. Lighting of the project site. Dredging for electric cables.

The impacts can be far-reaching.

โ€œPutting a pile into the sediment in essence is habitat alteration,โ€ said Hare, a science and research director with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s Northeast Fisheries Science Center. โ€œYouโ€™re taking relatively smooth, unconsolidated sediments and converting it to hard structure, converting that habitat into something else.โ€

Although Hare didnโ€™t name Vineyard Wind during a seminar on Wednesday, or talk about the companyโ€™s 84-turbine wind farm proposed in waters south of Marthaโ€™s Vineyard, in Massachusetts, the potential impacts he detailed speak to some of the reasons why NOAA has raised concerns about the project, which has led to further scrutiny of the application by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

Read the full story at the Providence Journal

Sea Scallop Camera-Based Survey Expanded on Georges Bank

July 18, 2019 โ€” The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, School for Marine Science and Technology will add the Northern Flank and Closed Area II North to this yearโ€™s planned survey work around Georges Bank to track sea scallop aggregations.

The survey, which uses a drop-camera array, is also covering the Great South Channel, Nantucket Lightship, and the Closed Area I Access Area.

โ€œTaking on this additional work while in the middle of a busy survey season exemplifies the School for Marine Science and Technologyโ€™s dedication to supporting the scallop fishery,โ€ said Jon Hare, director of NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ Northeast Fisheries Science Center. โ€œItโ€™s also a great example of the importance of our strong partnerships in the region that provide science to support management of this valuable resource.โ€

The Universityโ€™s survey is funded by the sale of sea scallops that are set aside from the annual catch limit through the Sea Scallop Research Set-Aside Program. The New England Fishery Management Council established this unique program to address research questions that support management of the sea scallop resource.

Awards are made in pounds, not dollars, and no federal funding is provided. Instead, proceeds generated from the sale of set-aside scallops are used to fund research activities and compensate participating vessels.

Read the full release here

NOAA scientists admit a gaffe on risk to whales of lobster trap lines

October 29, 2018 โ€” ELLSWORTH, Maine โ€” Late last month, the NOAA Fisheries Northeast Fisheries Science Center released a โ€œtechnical memorandumโ€ suggesting that expensive efforts by Maine lobstermen aimed at reducing the risk that endangered North Atlantic right whales and other large whales would become entangled in vertical buoy lines had backfired.

According to the memorandum, issued just before a weeklong meeting of NOAAโ€™s Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team in Providence, R.I., to consider possible changes to the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan, when the industry increased the number of traps trawled together and marked by a single buoy line, lobstermen began using stronger rope. That worsened the entanglement problem.

The memorandum seemed to offer support for calls by some conservation groups for the use of even fewer vertical buoy lines, weaker ropes and the development of a โ€œropeless fisheryโ€ with traps that used a remote device to release a submerged buoy when it was time to raise the gear.

In a letter addressed to NOAA Fisheries Northeast Fisheries Science Center Director Jon Hare, Maine Department of Marine Resources Commissioner Patrick Keliher blasted the memorandum, expressing โ€œsignificant concerns about the scientific meritโ€ of the data and research on which it was based.

Read the full story at the Ellsworth American

 

NOAA Fisheries to Reimburse Vessels for 2018 At-Sea Monitoring Costs

September 28, 2018 โ€” NOAA Fisheries has announced a plan to cover the 2018 costs of at-sea monitoring for ground fish sector vessels in the Northeast.

The agency also plans to contribute more reimbursements to vessels for the 2017 at-sea costs, bringing the total reimbursement for that year up to 85-percent.

The at-sea monitors participate in a series of sector trips to estimate the total catch of quota of the species kept and discarded by the vessel. NOAA says at-sea monitoring also helps groundfish vessels keep track of the pace to which they fill their quotas for each species.

โ€œEffective at-sea monitoring is essential to the success and sustainability of this fishery. This $10.3 million increase from Congress for groundfish at-sea monitoring provides additional economic stability for the sector vessels,โ€ said Northeast Fisheries Science Center Director Jon Hare.

Read the full story at CapeCod.com

Scallop RSA Program: NEFMC and NOAA Announce 15 Awards Selected for 2018-2019 funding

May 16, 2018 โ€” The following was released by New England Fishery Management Council:

 

The New England Fishery Management Council and NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) are pleased to announce that 15 projects have been selected for 2018-2019 funding through the Sea Scallop Research Set-Aside (RSA) Program.

โ€œThe Scallop RSA Program truly has become one of the flagships of the scallop fishery,โ€ said New England Council Chairman Dr. John Quinn. โ€œThe collaborative efforts that take place at sea between fishermen and researchers go a long way toward enhancing our understanding of whatโ€™s happening with the resource. The results of this RSA work funnel back to the Council and support stock assessments. Without a doubt, the RSA program helps us better manage our โ€“ Virginia Institute of Marine Science photo extremely valuable scallop fishery.โ€

Projects will address research priorities established by the Council, with a particular focus on resource surveys. The awards are expected to generate more than $12 million: $3 million to fund research; and $9 million to compensate industry partners who harvest set-aside quota

โ€œWe are excited to be able to work with the New England Fishery Management Council, industry, and scientists to fund sea scallop science through the Research Set-Aside Program,โ€ said NEFSC Science and Research Director Dr. Jon Hare. โ€œThe projects funded support surveys, bycatch mitigation, and biological studies, all with the purpose of improving the information used in the management of the sea scallop resource.โ€

The New England Council established the Sea Scallop RSA Program to address research questions that support management of the scallop resource. The Council sets the research priorities and researchers compete for funding through a federal grant competition managed by NOAA Fisheries.

No federal funds are provided to support the research. Instead, projects are awarded pounds of scallops, which have been โ€œset asideโ€ from the annual fishery quota for this purpose. Successful applicants partner with the fishing industry to harvest their set-aside award to generate funds for the research. There are active research set-aside programs for Atlantic sea scallops, Atlantic herring, and monkfish.

2018-2019 Scallop RSA Award Summary

The awards fall into three categories: scallop surveys (dredge, drop camera, and HabCam); bycatch mitigation; and sea scallop biology.

Scallop Surveys

The Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) received new awards to conduct dredge surveys in Closed Area I, Closed Area II, and the Nantucket Lightship. Under an existing award from last year, VIMS also will conduct a dredge survey of the Mid-Atlantic Bight. As part of ongoing efforts to better understand scallop survey dredge performance, VIMS investigators received an award to evaluate the hydrodynamic characteristics of both lined and unlined survey dredges in the largest flume tank in the world, located in St. Johnโ€™s, Newfoundland at Memorial Universityโ€™s Marine Institute.

The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology (SMAST) received three awards to conduct surveys using a drop-camera array. Through these awards, researchers plan to conduct high-resolution surveys of the Nantucket Lightship, Closed Area I, Great South Channel, and select portions of the Northern Gulf of Maine Scallop Management Area.

The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) will conduct Habitat Camera Mapping System (HabCam) optical surveys throughout the Mid-Atlantic Bight and on the northern flank of Georges Bank. In addition to these surveys, researchers will continue to evaluate dredge effects on habitat and habitat recovery in the Closed Area II Habitat Area of Particular Concern. Coonamessett Farm Foundation will conduct a HabCam survey of the Nantucket Lightship and Southern Flank of Georges Bank.

Bycatch Mitigation

Coonamessett Farm Foundation will continue its seasonal survey on Georges Bank, collecting information on bycatch rates for yellowtail flounder and other species relative to scallop meat yield. These data also will be used to evaluate sea scallop health and meat quality, biological questions about several flounder species, and to examine lobsters for shell disease.

Coonamessett Farm Foundation will continue its loggerhead sea turtle tagging program, receiving funds to tag up to 20 loggerheads with water activated tags. Tag data will be used to evaluate spatial and temporal overlap between loggerhead sea turtles and the scallop fishery.

Coonamessett Farm Foundation also will be testing a dredge twine-top cover net in an attempt to quantify dredge selectivity characteristics.

Sea Scallop Biology

The Virginia Institute of Marine Science will investigate sea scallop density-dependence factors that may be affecting growth, mortality, and reproduction of scallops in the Nantucket Lightship and Elephant Trunk areas. In addition, VIMS will conduct a pilot study to extend the current stock assessment model to better account for sea scallop ages with a particular focus on the Mid-Atlantic Bight and Nantucket Lightship areas.

WHOI will receive support to determine if a gonadosomatic index (GSI) can be calculated from Light Field 3D images of shucked scallops collected during fishing operations. The GSI is used to assess maturity and spawning events in many species of fish and shellfish, including scallops. If successful, this could improve the ability to collect and quantify scallop maturation and spawning data during the course of routine fishery sampling procedures.

The 2018-2019 award listings can be found on the Northeast Fisheries Science Center website at: https://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/coopresearch/news/scallop-rsa-2018-2019/.

RSA award announcements and answers to โ€œfrequently asked questionsโ€ also are available at https://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/coopresearch/rsa_program.html.

Visit the New England Councilโ€™s scallop webpage: https://www.nefmc.org/management-plans/scallops.

View the release in its entirety here.

 

NOAA touts upgrades to fish trip reporting

February 15, 2018 โ€” NOAA Fisheries has updated the online method for groundfishermen to notify regulators of upcoming fishing trips, saying it should help even the playing field in the selection of vessels for observer coverage.

The system, known as PTNS for pre-trip notification system, specifically was redesigned to address the inflexibility of the current notification system and make it easier for fishermen to adapt to changes in monitoring requirements, according to regulators.

The new system, which has taken a technical team more than a year to develop, is set to go online in late April, in time for the May 1 opening of the 2018 fishing season, NOAA Fisheries said.

โ€œWe are thrilled to launch this update,โ€ Jon Hare, director of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, said in announcing the update. โ€œThis is a big step in the right direction.โ€

Under current management regulations, Northeast groundfishermen must notify NOAA Fisheries in advance of any commercial fishing trip to enable regulators to schedule at-sea monitor coverage across the fleet. The notifications can be made online, by email and by phone.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

 

New NOAA director seems willing to work with fishing industry

November 20, 2017 โ€” Jon Hare has just completed his first twelve months on the job as science and research director for NOAAโ€™s Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole. And itโ€™s a big job. But heโ€™s still smiling.

The NEFSC manages the living marine resources of the Northeast Continental Shelf Ecosystem from the Gulf of Maine to Cape Hatteras. But Hareโ€™s energy and enthusiasm have been equal to the task, while his willingness to listen and engage with all comers have earned him respect within NOAA and in the larger community. โ€œItโ€™s been a challenge but one that Iโ€™ve enjoyed,โ€ he said, sitting down for a wide-ranging discussion at the Fishing Partnership office in New Bedford last week.

There was plenty to talk about but in this city, it begins with fish.

Among its many duties, the Science Center is responsible for conducting the groundfish surveys that determine annual catch limits for each species. Tensions with industry have ensued. Fishermen have frequently been critical of the surveyโ€™s methods and findings, convinced that cuts to their quota are a result of flawed science rather than falling stock levels.

There was not a lot of empathy from NOAA in the past but Hare has displayed his willingness to collaborate with the industry. NOAA supports a number of fishing industry-based projects, using commercial fishing vessels, to gather data that can be used to augment the government surveys.

โ€œWhen any group asks me to meet with them I go. What we do affects them in their day-to-day life and that weighs on me,โ€ he said. โ€œI think now there is more of seeing the pros and cons of a particular piece of science. We need to value different perspectives. We should care what everyone thinks. Itโ€™s about communication.โ€

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

 

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