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JCAA Newsletter
October 2007
NOTICES
Sportsperson of the Year Dinner/Dance
Mark you calendar for November 18th, the night of Jersey Coast Anglers Association annual Sportsperson-of-the-Year Awards Dinner/Dance. Now is the time to buy your tickets. It is one of the major JCAA fundraisers. It takes place on Sunday, November 18, 2007 from 4:00-9:00 p.m. at.....
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16th Annual Governor's Surf Fishing Tournament
Sunday, October 7, 2007
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF EARLY ENTRY INCENTIVE
If your entry form is postmarked by September 14, 2007 you will:
* SAVE $5.00 on adult registration fee!
* BE ELIGIBLE for special prizes only to pre-registrants.....
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Governor Jon Corzine’s Letter on Summer Flounder and MAFMC Reply
Dear Chairman Jensen and Dr. Hogarth:
    I am writing to you regarding the management of summer flounder, with particular attention to the quota for the 2008 fishing year. As you know, just seven months ago, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission.....
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Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series Returns to West Long Branch!
Circle Saturday, January 12, on your calendar! That’s when the Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series returns to the Jersey Shore with an entertaining and information-packed day on how to catch more and bigger saltwater fish off New Jersey - inshore and offshore. Now into its 21st year.....
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President's Report by John Toth
The JCAA does not have regular meetings during the summer since delegates are either busy fishing (which they should be) or on vacation. However, while we have not met since June, there are many issues that are facing anglers who fish in NJ and these issues need your.....
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Fisheries Management & Legislative Report by Tom Fote
Commissioner Jackson Moves to Secure 600 Subway Cars for New Jersey’s Artificial Reef Program
JCAA received this memo from Commissioner Lisa Jackson to the Division of Fish and Wildlife directing their staff to amend the artificial reef permit to allow New Jersey to accept 600 subway cars from New York. Her memo is below. Commissioner Jackson chaired a meeting at the JCAA.....
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Summer Flounder
I got an interesting email questioning what JCAA is doing about summer flounder. I can understand the frustration of anglers from Massachusetts to North Carolina. JCAA has been working on this issue since 1994. As a commissioner to ASMFC, I worked on the same issue throughout my.....
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S138/A636 Hooked on Fishing - Not on Drugs Bill
JCAA, NJSFSC and I have been working hard to get S138/A636 Hooked on Fishing-Not on Drugs Bill passed. It was heard by the Senate Environmental Committee on Monday, September 17 and was moved out of committee. JCAA would like to thank Senator Robert Smith.....
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Pots Off Reefs
Breaking news! Senator Robert Smith, Chairman of the Senate Environmental Committee, announced that he will hold a hearing on this bill on October 4th if there is quorum available. Senator John Adler agreed to be available for this hearing on October 4th. I will keep you posted by.....
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State Studies How to Clean Water Supply
by Trish G. Graber, the Express-Times 8/18/2007
TRENTON - The state is studying methods of removing contaminants that make their way into New Jersey's drinking water, either flushed down the toilet or through human excretion. Department of Environmental Protection officials said they have found low-level contaminants in.....
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Reef Rescue Update
Capt. Adam Nowalsky, Member of Reef Rescue
At the beginning of this year, a multi-front effort was launched at reclaiming NJ’s Artificial Reefs. The problem is simple: a number of NJ’s Artificial Reefs have become dominated by fixed fishing gear (i.e. – fish and lobster pots) consisting of traps, trawl lines, buoys and high.....
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Doherty Seeks Study of NJ Water Supply - Legislator Prompted by Discovery in Texas of Prozac in Fish
by Trish G. Graber, the Express-Times 8/17/2007
TRENTON - A Texas study that found the active ingredient of Prozac in fish has prompted questions from a legislator about what could be floating in New Jersey's water supply. Conducted by Waco, Texas-based Baylor University, the 2003 study found traces of the anti-depressant Prozac in.....
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Recreational Fishermen Hurt by NMFS' Decisions
by Karen E. Wall, Asbury Park Press 9/7/2007
Alexandria, VA – The Commission’s Tautog Management Board approved Addendum V to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan for Tautog. The Addendum modifies the management program contained in Addendum IV by allowing states flexibility to achieve the necessary.....
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Highly Migratory Species Report by John T. Koegler
NMFS-HMS Illegal Shark Plan
Anglers have often disagreed with NMFS-HMS division management plans. All their plans have been designed to limit recreational landings and yet continue the commercial fishery without limits or controls. Of all their plans none is more commercially biased than their new proposed......
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Youth Education Report by Greg Kucharewski
Youth Education Support
Many thanks to the Hi-Mar Striper Club for supplying rods and reels for seven of the lucky participants that won prizes at the Fort Monmouth 2007 Summer Camp Youth Fishing Derby. The Hi-Mar is also involved with the group Father Time run by Jeff Johnson in Keansburg. When Jeff.....
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NJ Marine Fisheries Council Report by Tom Siciliano
The NJ Marine Fisheries Council held its bi-monthly meeting on Thursday, September 6. At the July meeting Dave Chandra had put forth a proposal to ban all pots on New Jersey’s artificial reefs for parts of the season. The Reef Committee had met with advisors and could not reach.....
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Calendar of Events

September 25th - JCAA General Meeting
September 25th - MFCN Board meeting DC
October 7th - Governor’s Surf Fishing Tournament
October 10th - 12th - ASA Summit
October 28th - November 1st - ASMFC Annual meeting
October 30th - JCAA General Meeting
November 18th - JCAA Dinner

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