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JCAA Newsletter

December 2005

NOTICES
Membership by John Toth
This year is rapidly coming to its end and some of our clubs have not paid their annual JCAA dues.  Time goes by quickly and somebody may have forgotten to send in their club’s dues.  So please, if you have not already done so, send in your.....

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Saltwater Sportsman National Seminar Series Comes to
West Long Branch
Mark your calendar for Saturday, January 21. That's when the Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series will come to West Long Branch! The eight-hour seminar, which is presented by West Marine,  .....

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Sportsperson of the Year Dinner/Dance  - by Paul Turi,

On Sunday, November 13th, JCAA held its annual Sportsperson-of-the-Year award dinner/dance at the beautiful Crystal Pt. Yacht Club in Pt. Pleasant.  This year’s honoree was Bruce Freeman.  Bruce was nominated for this award by the Berkeley Striper Club and was elected by JCAA member clubs at our general membership meeting in October.  Bruce has spent almost forty years.......

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Youth Education Report by Greg Kucharewski
I received the following from Wayne Tonnesen, NJ Conservation Officer and NJ State HOFNOD Coordinator. Check out the website – http://www.nanfa.org/corcoran.shtml  -- for the North American Native Fishes Association (NANFA).  It offers small grants of up to $1,000 for ....

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Fisheries Management & Legislative Report by Tom Fote

Here is the bad news on summer flounder. NMFS is going to set the quota at 23.59 million pounds.  This will be an extreme hardship on the both the recreational and commercial fishing industry.  Our only hope is that the states get some backbone but I do not hold out high hope for that.  The joint meeting of ASMFC and the MAFMC will take place.......

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Joint ASMFC MAFMC Meeting Schedule

Wednesday, December 7  8:30         Council convenes jointly with Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Board........

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ASMFC Meeting Report

The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission held their annual meeting in New Jersey.  As you can see from the reports below, the summer flounder meeting proved to be an exercise in futility.  The striped bass committee determined there was no reason to take any action to change the striped bass regulation since .......

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Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board

Striped Bass Stock Assessment Indicates Healthy Stock Total Abundance, Female Spawning Stock Biomass and Recruitment Remain High  Galloway, NJ – Scientific advice presented to the Commission’s Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board today indicates that striped bass management under Amendment 6 to the Interstate Plan continues to be a success. The resource remain .........

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Weakfish Management Board

ASMFC Weakfish Board Approves Biological Sampling & Reporting Program  Stock Assessment Slated for Peer Review in 2006  Galloway, NJ – The Commission’s Weakfish Management Board has approved the biological sampling and reporting provisions of Addendum I to Amendment 4 to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan for Weakfish to bolster data collection and improve future stock assessments. It also .........

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Highly Migratory Species Report - by John T. Koegler

Important new scientific studies have been completed and published proving HMS fish were being over fished worldwide. Below is an outline of those that will have the biggest future impact. Worldwide HMS study In the magazine Nature in 2003 a new study found that the total world wide population of HMS fish had plummeted. The co-authors Boris Worm and Ransom Myers of Dalhousie University state that .......

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ENVIRONMENT
Fish in 22 States Tested for Mercury  
September 15, 2005 WASHINGTON -- A coalition of environmental groups led by Oceana and the Mercury Policy Project released the results of a major, 22-state mercury testing project today, confirming that store-bought swordfish and tuna contain levels of mercury that the federal government has determined may be hazardous to human health, particularly .......

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CBS 60 Minutes - "Burning Rage"
When they first emerged in the mid-1990s, the environmental extremists calling themselves the “Earth Liberation Front” announced they were “the burning rage of a dying planet.” Ever since, the ELF, along with its sister group, the Animal Liberation Front, has been burning everything from SUV dealerships to research labs to housing .......

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MISCELLANEOUS
Recreational Fishermen Deserve Better - by Joe Kasper

Managing wild striped bass in Massachusetts waters as game fish for recreational or personal fishing - and replacing the commercial striper harvest in markets with fish raised through aquiculture - would boost the state's economy by $334 million and support 2,781 new jobs, according .......

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The Rahall Bill - by Tom Siciliano

The Rahall Bill, HR 1431, “Fisheries Science & Management Enhancement Act of 2005” is the house version that amends the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservations and Management Act.  The bill is intended to improve fisheries management and incorporate the recommendations of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy........

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Wildlife Retirees Must Be Replaced  - Al Ristori, Star Ledger Staff

Marty McHugh, director of the Division of Fish and Wildlife, gave the keynote address at Sunday's Jersey Coast Anglers Association (JCAA) Sportsperson of the Year Dinner/Dance honoring the service of this year's recipient, Bruce Freeman, while also pointing out that many of the Division's key scientists and administrators will be retiring around the same time -- leaving the state unable to comply.......

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Calendar of Events


November 29
: JCAA General Meeting
December 6-7
: Mid-Atlantic Marine Fisheries Mgmt & ASMFC Joint Meeting on Summer Flounder and Sea Bass
December 8th:
JCAA Board Meeting
December 27th:
JCAA General Meeting
January 12-15:  Garden State Outdoor Show
January 21:
Saltwater Sportsman Seminar

GoTo: Interactive Calendar of Events


 

 Acronyms, Abbreviations & Technical Terms Used in Fisheries Management Documents

EEZ= Exclusive Economic Zone = Federal water from 3 to 200 nautical miles offshore. Fisheries in the EEZ are generally under federal Control

M
Natural mortality (M) - The instantaneous rate at which fish die from all causes other than harvest. This rate has traditionally included unmeasured bycatch mortality, but as research has documented bycatch, it is increasingly included in "F". Usually "M" is an assumption or estimate from maximum age data or the value used for other species with a similar life history strategy. Natural mortality can rarely be measured directly.

MRFSS
= Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics Survey

MSP
= Maximum spawning potential =  The estimated female spawning stock biomass or egg production in the absence of fishing. A percentage of this value (% MSP) can be used as a measure of the health of a stock.

MSY
= Maximum sustainable yield = The largest catch, on average, which can be taken from a stock over time under existing environmental conditions without affecting the reproductive capacity of the stock.

MT
= Metric Ton = 2,204.6 pounds

Recruit
= An individual fish which has entered a defined group through growth,spawning, or migration, such as those fish above minimum legal size ( fishable stock) or which are sexually mature ( spawning stock).

Recruitment
= A measure of weight or number of fish which enter a defined portion of a stock, such as fishable stock or the spawning stock.

 SPR = Spawning potential ratio = SPR compares the spawning ability of a stock in the fished condition to the stock’s spawning ability in the unfished condition

SSB
= Spawning stock biomass = total weight of fish which are sexually mature; generally pertaining only to females

TAC
= Total allowable catch

Threshold
= that point where the fishery is regarded as  overfished

Target Values
= that value or below which allows the fishery to be self sustaining

Biomass
= The total weight of a stock of fish or of a defined subunit of a stock, such as spawning females (SSB)

Bycatch
= That portion of a catch taken incidentally to the targeted catch because of non-selectivity of fishing gear to either species or size differences. Some by catch may be retained, but most is usually discarded

CPUE
= C/E = The catch taken by a given amount of fishing gear during a given period of time. Over time, CPUE data often provides an indication of trends in abundance in a fish stock

Coastal Pelagic
= Fish that migrate along the coast, generally near shore, and live in the water column rather than in association with the bottom.

Demersal 
= Refers to organisms which live at or near the bottom, but not in (Benthic) the bottom

Estuary
  = A coastal area landward of the ocean beach where freshwater and saltwater mix. Estuaries are among the most biologically productive and environmentally sensitive habitats.

ITQ
= Individual transferable quota + A form of controlled access in which individual persons or vessels receive a property right to a share or specific allocation of the total expected harvest of fish which they can buy, sell, lease, etc.

Mortality rate
  = the rate at which fish die. Mortality can be expressed as annual percentages or instantaneous rates (the fraction of the stock which dies within each small amount of time). Fishery scientists utilize several different types of mortality to evaluate status of fish stocks, and some serve as biological reference points (Instantaneous rates are used in most stock assessments):

 A
= Annual mortality = the percentage of a fish stock which dies from all causes during a year.

Fishing mortality (F) -  A measurement of the rate of removal of fish from a population by fishing. Fishing mortality can be reported as either annual or instantaneous. Annual mortality is the percentage of fish dying in one year. Instantaneous is that percentage of fish dying at ny one time. The acceptable rates of fishing mortality may vary from species to species. There are several kinds of fishing mortality rates; some of the more common include the following:

 F max
- The rate of fishing mortality which maximizes the weight taken from a single cohort* over its entire life.
 ( * a group of fish spawned during a given period, usually in a single year)

 F msy - The rate of fishing mortality, which maximizes the weight of the harvest within a year.

 
F 0,1 - The rate of fishing mortality at which an increase in catch for a given increase in effort is only 10% of what it would be from an unfished stock.

 Z = Total instantaneous mortality = The sum of fishing F and natural mortality M

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