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NORTH CAROLINA: Nothing fishy about it: Seafood saves lives

May 13, 2021 โ€” Fish literally saves lives: A North Carolina statewide public relations campaign will focus on promoting the health benefits of eating local seafood.

The campaign explores the health benefits of eating local seafood that directly affect the consumer, backed by well-documented scientific data from respected health professional and scientists.

The Science Behind Your Local Seafood uses a website and digital billboards to promote fish as among the healthiest foods on the planet, emphasizing its nourishment for both body and brain. This data will be used to educate con-sumers across generations.

For example:

  • Scientific Review indicates an average 7.7 IQ point gain in children whose mothers ate seafood during pregnancy compared to mothers who did not.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Marine Fisheries Commission amends sector allocations for southern flounder plan amendment

April 7, 2021 โ€” The North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission voted to amend the previously adopted sector allocations for Amendment 3 to the Southern Flounder Fishery Management Plan to gradually equalize allocations between the commercial and recreational fisheries.

The commission voted to change the allocation to 70% commercial and 30% recreational in 2021 and 2022, 60% commercial and 40% recreational in 2023 and 50% commercial and 50% recreational in 2024, states a media release from Division of Marine Fisheries.

In February, the commission had selected sector harvest allocations of 70% commercial and 30% recreational for the duration of Amendment 3. That allocation was similar to the harvest landed by each sector in 2017, the terminal year of the stock assessment on which draft management measures in Amendment 3 are based.

Read the full story at The Coastland Times

NORTH CAROLINA: Commercial, recreational fishermen at odds over proposed limits to southern flounder catch

March 29, 2021 โ€” The North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission is making plans to protect and preserve the southern flounder population off North Carolinaโ€™s coast, but its decision on how it will allocate the supply between recreational and commercial fishermen is causing people to get upset.

โ€œThe stock is in trouble, big trouble,โ€ said the chair of the commission, Rob Bizzell, โ€œAnd weโ€™re looking at an overall 72 percent reduction in the take, which is significant. Some people are scared that the stock is going to collapse, and when the stock collapses, thereโ€™s no hope for recovery. Weโ€™re trying to avoid that.โ€

The commission is working on limiting the amount of the catch in a single season to around 500,000 fish. A recent vote by the commission to give the commercial industry approximately 70 percent of that supply and the recreational fishermen 30 percent of that supply is upsetting some.

โ€œI got almost 900 letters of concern about the 30/70 allocation,โ€ Bizzell said. โ€œAnd, you know, for every one letter you get, good gracious, probably 20 or 30 individuals who feel the same way, but just donโ€™t take the effort to speak up.โ€

Read the full story at WRAL

North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission to meet by web conference March 31

March 25, 2021 โ€” The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission will meet by web conference on March 31 beginning at 1 p.m.

The public may listen to the meeting by phone or listen and view presentations online.

For to the link and phone number to join the meeting go to the Marine Fisheries Commission Meeting webpage.

Members of the public may submit written comments to the commission in two ways:

  1. Online Comments โ€“ Public comments will be accepted until noon on Monday, March 29, through an online form available here.
  2. Mailed Comments โ€“ Written comments may be mailed to March 31, 2021 Marine Fisheries Commission Meeting Comments, P.O Box 769, Morehead City, N.C. 28557. Comments must be received by the division by noon on Monday, March 29.

Public comment will not be accepted during the meeting or through email.

Following the meeting, an audio recording will be posted online.

Read the full story at the Island Free Press

CARES Act support for fishermen, seafood dealers may come this spring

March 5, 2021 โ€” Commercial fishermen, seafood dealers and others who make their living on the water may get federal aid sometime this spring to help make up coronavirus-related loses.

N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries Deputy Director Dee Lupton informed the N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission Feb. 25 during the commissionโ€™s online Webinar meeting that division staff is processing Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act financial aid applications from commercial and for-hire fishermen, seafood dealers and processors.

The application period for the $5.4 million in federal aid for North Carolina watermen closed Nov. 30, and according to an email Feb. 23 to the News-Times from DMF Communications Director Patricia Smith, the division received 290 applications, of which 216 were from commercial fishermen and aquaculture operations, 35 were from seafood dealers and processors and 39 were from for-hire operations.

โ€œAs of this past Monday (Feb. 22), weโ€™ve reviewed all of them,โ€ Ms. Lupton said at the Feb. 25 commission meeting. โ€œOne hundred and ninety-eight have been approved. Weโ€™re in the process of notifying those determined not-eligible, they will have an appeal opportunity.โ€

Read the full story at the Carteret County News-Times

North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission tackles circle hooks through fishery management plans

March 3, 2021 โ€” Recreational and commercial fishermen may see new requirements for circle hooks on a species-by-species basis in the future.

The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission met online Feb. 25 via Webinar, during which the commission unanimously agreed to maintain current circle hook requirements while considering additional rules on a species-by-species basis through the fishery management plan process. Circle hooks are a type of gear recommended by conservationists and marine scientists to reduce dead discards.

N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries Executive Assistant for Council Steve Poland delivered a report on a commission-requested study on the effectiveness of barbless circle hooks. According to the report, current scientific opinions support the use of hook modifications to reduce discard mortality.

โ€œThe general consensus is the science supports circle hooks,โ€ Mr. Poland said. โ€œHoweverโ€ฆscience also suggests not all circle hooks are created equal.โ€

Existing state and interstate regulations require circle hooks for some fisheries, but not all. The DMF requires them in areas of Pamlico Sound when fishing for red drum. Meanwhile, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission requires non-offset circle hooks when fishing for sharks in state waters and when using natural bait to fish for striped bass in the Atlantic Ocean. The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council also has some circle hook regulations, requiring the hooks when fishermen are in possession of snapper-grouper species in South Atlantic Ocean waters.

Read the full story at the Carteret County News-Times

NORTH CAROLINA: Blue crab season closure implemented

December 10, 2020 โ€” The following was released by the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality:

The blue crab season closures will go into effect Jan. 1-31, 2021 in North Carolina state waters north and east of the Highway 58 bridge and March 1-15, 2021 south and west of the Highway 58 bridge. The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission approved measures to end overfishing and achieve sustainable harvest with the adoption of the Blue Crab Fishery Management Plan Amendment 3 at its February 2020 meeting.

The blue crab season closure replaces the annual pot closure period and will remain closed for the entirety. Pots of any type must be removed from Internal Coastal Fishing Waters (excludes ocean) during the season closure and possession of blue crabs regardless of harvest gear type is prohibited from all Coastal Fishing Waters (ocean and internal waters).

Season closures are necessary to reduce harvest because a recent North Carolina stock assessment for blue crab determined the stock is overfished and overfishing is occurring. Overfished means the population is too small. Overfishing means the removal rate is too high. North Carolina law mandates that fishery management plans include measures to end overfishing within two years of adoption and rebuild the stock to achieve sustainable harvest within 10 years of adoption.

Division of Marine Fisheries Director Steve Murphey implemented the new measures through Proclamation M-01-2021. Proclamations are available on the divisionโ€™s website at http://portal.ncdenr.org/web/mf/proclamations.

Information on Amendment 3 can be found on the Blue Crab Fishery Management Plan Information webpage. For more information, contact division biologist Daniel Zapf at 252-946-6481.

NORTH CAROLINA: Fisheries Nominating Committee to Meet

October 8, 2020 โ€” The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission Nominating Committee will meet next week by webinar to recommend candidates for at-large seats on two fishery management councils.

The committeeโ€™s recommendations for the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council and the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council will be forwarded to the Marine Fisheries Commission, a nine-member board appointed by the governor to manage, restore, develop, cultivate, protect and regulate the stateโ€™s marine and estuary resources.

Read the full story at Coastal Review Online

Flounder: Summer landings on track; reductions coming for southern allocations

August 18, 2020 โ€” Summer flounder is a popular commercial fishery in the Mid-Atlantic region, with North Carolina allocated the largest share at 27.44 percent. Despite the widespread disruption in markets from covid-19, the stateโ€™s fleet by early summer was on track for landings just slightly lower than 2019.

Preliminary statistics show 69 North Carolina vessels representing 131 trips had landed 744,479 pounds of summer flounder by late June, with a value of $2.67 million distributed to 16 dealers.

โ€œLandings of summer flounder appear to be somewhat down from last year, but the trend seems similar,โ€ said Lee Paramore, biologist supervisor with the North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries. โ€œSince we can modify trip limits to stay within quota, it may be possible to allow for increased harvest if landings remain down relative to last year.

โ€œThere a lot of factors that can impact landings, and we havenโ€™t yet determined if covid will play a part, but currently the fish houses here that typically land summer flounder have been operating at same level.โ€

The stateโ€™s commercial landings for summer flounder have been consistent since 2008 ,with the exception of 2012-13, where excessive shoaling in Oregon Inlet limited the number of trawl boats able to land in North Carolina. Annual commercial landings averaged 2.25 million pounds of summer flounder since 2008.

Read the full story at National Fisherman

NORTH CAROLINA: Calls for reform and a coming resignation as fight rages over coastal fisheries

November 25, 2019 โ€” A wildlife conservation group called this week for an overhaul in the way North Carolina manages its coastal fisheries, and a member of the policy-setting commission in charge is contemplating resignation.

The North Carolina Wildlife Federation voted Saturday to recommend a massive management consolidation over one of the stateโ€™s most contentious issues. Under their plan, the Marine Fisheries Commission, a board appointed by the governor, and the Division of Marine Fisheries, which enforces rules day to day along the North Carolina coast, would be folded into the state Wildlife Resources Commission.

Wildlife Resources is a stand-alone entity whose board is appointed by the governor and leadership in the General Assembly, and it already manages freshwater fishing in North Carolinaโ€™s lakes and rivers. The commission is jousting now with the Division of Marine Fisheries over just where each entityโ€™s boundaries are when freshwater meets saltwater along North Carolinaโ€™s coast.

Read the full story at WRAL

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