(from Jersey Coast Anglers
Association March 2005 Newsletter)
I have been dealing with changing
striped bass regulations since 1986. The regulations have always been very
controversial because of the varied opinions about the appropriate size limits.
However, I have never seen more controversy than right now. A bill was
introduced that would change the current regulations to 2 fish at 28 inches.
This is the position that is supported overwhelmingly by JCAA’s membership. In
speaking with anglers at shows and meetings, I believe 2 fish at 28 inches is
also the preferred option of other anglers as well. The confusion the current
regulation causes on the water is unbelievable. New York, Pennsylvania and
Delaware all have a 28-inch size limit. Delaware and Pennsylvania have 2 fish
at 28 inches and New York has 2 fish at 28 inches for party and charter boats
and 1 fish at 28 inches on private boats. There are no clear lines in Delaware
and Raritan Bays and anglers are left to figure out what regulations apply
where. In order to be legal everywhere, including New Jersey, the only legal
fish is a 34 inch fish unless you have a bonus tag. Again, this forces anglers
who want to follow the rules to harvest larger fish than they might normally
take.
In an attempt to make sure
decisions are made with the best information, I would like to clear up a few
misunderstandings.
First, I keep hearing that the
current regulations which allow 1 fish at 24 – 28 inches and 1 fish over 34
inches are more conservative than the 2 fish at 28 inches option. This is not
true. According to the tables developed by ASMFC, the conservation
equivalencies for these two options are in the same statistical range. Some
tables show a greater conservation by a slight percentage. But anyone who knows
statistics and understands degree of error knows there is really no difference
statistically between these two options. The current regulations allow the
harvest of more fish than the proposed change to 2 fish at 28 inches. But both
regulations are designed to have the same impact on the spawning stock biomass.
In addition, I also hear that
ASMFC is doing a special stock assessment in 2005. There is nothing “special”
planned. The stock assessment team always meets in August to determine what
happened the previous year and then issues a report that is distributed at the
winter meeting. There was controversy last year because the VPA and the tagging
studies didn’t match. The VPA showed the harvest of striped bass was above the
agreed-to limits. The tagging studies did not produce the same results. The
scientists are still trying to correlate and examine the different figures and
cannot give a clear response as to when the data will be available. ASMFC
produces new data every year and the data can be as controversial as the
regulations. However, we need to decide on regulations now for New Jersey and
since most of the coast is at 2 fish at 28 inches, it makes sense to make this
change. If the data requires other changes later, we will, as always, make the
changes required.
It will be difficult to make the
change to 2 fish at 28 inches this year despite overwhelming public support for
the change. On February 3rd, the RFA issued a press release
announcing they did not support any change in the current regulations. On
February 11th, Assemblyman Smith, chairman of the Assembly Natural
Resources and Agriculture Committee, issued a press release that reflects the
RFA position. Since he is the chairman of the committee that would move this
bill to the full Assembly, it will be difficult to move this bill during this
session. Moving this bill would require an extraordinary effort by the anglers
of New Jersey to convince the Assembly that is controlled by the Democrats. If
you feel strongly, write you state legislators in the Assembly and Senate and
let them know how you feel. Make sure to include the bill number (A3790 ) in
your letters and mention it in your phone calls or emails.
We would like to thank
Assemblyman Sean Kean for introducing A3790 to change the striped bass
regulations to 2 fish at 28 inches. JCAA will continue pushing for 2 fish at 28
inches because that is what our membership wants and we believe it is the best
solution available at this time.
ASMFC Meeting Week Report
There was a lot of discussion on
various topics. We have reprinted the partial summary sent out by ASMFC. A
full summary will be on our web page. One of the highlights was the decision to
allow us to go to a 9-inch scup size limit. This will be on a trial basis for
one year and as long as we don’t exceed 3 percent of the recreational coastal
catch, we should be able to stay at 9 inches.
The Summer Flounder Board approved New Jersey’s
proposal for the 2005 fishery. The New Jersey Marine Fisheries Council will now
make a decision to fully implement or choose a more conservative option. This
decision will be made at their March meeting.
There was a long discussion on
weakfish. The main question was the actual status of the stock. New Jersey and
Delaware have stated for the past few years that the actual number of weakfish
is decreasing. The catch figures for both recreational and commercial confirm
our belief. The stock assessment has shown a continued increase in the number
of weakfish but the catch figures do not support the stock assessment. The
Technical Committee will be looking at this issue more closely.
SUMMER
FLOUNDER, SCUP AND BLACK SEA BASS MANAGEMENT BOARD (February 7, 2005)
Meeting Summary
The Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Management Board approved all of the 2005 recreational summer
flounder proposal submitted by member states. States will finalize their 2005
management measures by March 11 (except for Delaware and the Commonwealth
Massachusetts due to time constraints with public process). The Board also
approved a management proposal for the 2005 scup recreational fishery. North
Carolina, the Commonwealth of Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware scup recreational
regulations are set at an 8 inches minimum fish size, a 50 fish bag limit and an
annual open season. New Jersey dropped from a 10 to a 9 inch fish and the
season is now open from January 1-February 28 and again from July 1-December
31. The bag limit remains at 50 fish. New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts adapted regional management for the 2005 scup
recreational fishery. The states will have a common bag limit (25 fish for the
private and shore mode and 60 fish for the party and charter boat mode for a two
month period after which the bag limit will drop to 25 fish), a season of at
least 120 days, and a minimum fish size of 10 1/2 inches. States may be more
conservative in the size limit in order to extend the season. New York,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts will finalize
their 2005 management measures by April 1.
The Board considered the
initiation of an addendum to address the management tools used for developing
summer flounder conservation equivalency in the recreational fishery. The Board
discussed how regional management and multi-year averaging of the Marine
Recreational Fisheries Survey data would affect the recreational fishery. The
Board delayed the decision to initiate an addendum until the Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Council reviews technical advise on multi-year averaging of
the Marine Recreational Fisheries Survey data.
The Board delayed establishing a
compliance date for which the transfers of commercial summer flounder quota must
be complete. The Addendum establishes an allocation program
for the quota increase that will accrue to the
commercial summer flounder fishery in 2005 and 2006. The Addendum
requires four states to transfer a specified amount of summer flounder quota to
receipient
states and that each of the recipient states use the bycatch allocation
to address bycatch issues in their respective state.
The Board requested that recipient states send a letter outlining how their
management program will change to reduce bycatch.
For
more information, please contact Toni Kerns, Fisheries Management Plan
Coordinator, at (202)289-6400 or
tkerns@asmfc.org.
ATLANTIC
MENHADEN TECHNICAL COMMITTEE (February 8, 2005)
Meeting Summary
The Atlantic Menhaden Technical
Committee met to address a number of charges from the Management Board meeting
in November 2004. Below are the charges (in bold) as well as the responses from
the Technical Committee (TC).
Advise the Management Board on
likely causes for low recruitment in Chesapeake Bay and a comparison of
recruitment trends in other estuaries along the coast.
Some likely causes for low
recruitment in no specific order are:
Low spawning stock biomass,
however, this is unlikely given data from tagging studies (i.e. no apparent
relationship between resident fish in Chesapeake Bay and the following years
recruitment)
Larvae not being brought into
Chesapeake Bay (transport)
Poor survival to at least several
months old (unfavorable conditions of salinity, or temperature, mismatch of
food, disease)
Predation
There is emerging evidence that
climate forcing may play an important role.
Given reduced recruitment of
menhaden in the Chesapeake Bay due to changing environment, there may be an
impact on the future spawning stock biomass if not compensated for by other
areas. There is some suggestion of an increase in recruitment in the northern
areas, no trend in North Carolina and no indices in the Mid-Atlantic. The trend
in other forage species in Chesapeake Bay showed a similar decline.
Review the stock assessment
model; evaluate the issues of inverse catchability, weighing factors for
recruitment indices, and total morality and advise the Management Board on the
inclusion of ecological reference points in the model.
The model does not explicitly
include inverse catchability, however, it is included implicitly through catch
at age composition.
Weighting of Indices
The model is heavily driven by
the age composition of the reduction fishery, and the weighting schemes of
indices will have less of an effect on model output on reference points.
Total Mortality (Z)
In the current configuration
of the stock assessment model, natural mortality is constant across years and
cannot be used to determine changes in total mortality in response to predation.
A level of predator abundance cannot be estimated in the current single species
model and therefore calculations of ecological reference points are not feasible
at this stage. Ecological reference points may be addressed by the Multispecies
Virtual Population Analysis (MSVPA) after it is peer reviewed.
Evaluate Ecological Reference
points and recruitment indices for Chesapeake Bay and advise the Management
Board on the incorporation of Chesapeake Bay values in the stock assessment
model or whether a separate stock assessment model can be developed for
Chesapeake Bay.
Given the lack of information on
stock structure (i.e. stock exchange rate, assumption of closed population), the
TC believes a separate stock assessment model cannot be developed for the
Chesapeake Bay at the present time. Modeling can be done in theory, but the
current data does not support it. In the current assessment model, catch and
size composition is strongly represented by Chesapeake Bay data, and juvenile
and adult indices used to tune the model are primarily weighted in the
Chesapeake Bay. Ecological reference points can be developed coastwide using
total mortality after successful peer review of the MSVPA scheduled for Fall
2005. It should be recognized that Menhaden reference points will be
contingent on management decisions for the predators involved. Management can
set ecological reference points without MSVPA analysis as an allocation issue.
Other important forage species are managed using this approach both in the U.S.
and other countries.
Advise the Management Board
if localized depletion of menhaden stocks in Chesapeake Bay is occurring or
likely to occur under current management of the coastwide stock of menhaden
There is a concern about
localized depletion of age 0 menhaden in the Chesapeake Bay (juvenile abundance
indices). This depletion is on a long-term scale from year to year and is driven
by reduced recruitment and possible increased predation. Catch at age data shows
that fishery removals on this age class in the Chesapeake Bay is not a potential
cause for depletion. There is a lack of reliable data to determine if localized
depletion within season for all ages and annually for ages 1s and 2s is
occurring. There is currently no apparent link between the number of age
2 and 3 resident menhaden and the following years recruitment to the Bay.
Evaluate whether the effects
of time and space openings/closures of fishing harvest caps in Chesapeake Bay
and coast wide can be modeled, measured or monitored well enough to be
considered for management tools.
The MSVPA model can be used to
develop a coastwide multispecies maximum sustainable yield (MSY) level. Optimum
yield (OY) can be decided by the Management Board and area specific TACs can be
derived from historic catch. This MSY cannot be specified using the single
species approach. Setting an OY coastwide that can be taken from a smaller
geographic area is extremely risk prone. Likewise, setting a specific catch cap
for a particular area and not for other areas is also risk prone.
In other business, Alexi Sharov,
Maryland Department of Natural Resources, was elected TC Vice-Chair. For more
information, please contact Nancy Wallace, Fisheries Management Plan
Coordinator, at (202)289-6400 or nwallace@asmfc.org .
ATLANTIC STRIPED BASS MANAGEMENT
BOARD (February 8, 2005)tc "NEAMAP Board – August 21, 2000"
Meeting Summary
The Atlantic Striped Bass
Management Board met to hear a report from the Technical Committee (TC) on a
series of outstanding tasks. The first issue presented to the Board was a
review of the striped bass discards in the New England groundfish fishery. The
TC reviewed an analysis developed by the National Marine Fisheries Service. The
TC determined that the analysis was sound and the discards of striped bass from
the groundfish fishery would not have a significant impact on the stock of
striped bass.
The TC presented a review of the
different tagging and modeling approaches used to estimate a Chesapeake Bay
specific fishing mortality rate. The TC agreed that Maryland and Virginia would
present results from the three modeling approaches to estimate Bay specific
fishing mortality.
The Board was presented with a
description of the fully recruited ages of striped bass. The description
included a comparison between the biological reference points in Amendments 5
and 6.
The TC presented the Board with
an analysis of the implications of exceeding the target and threshold fishing
mortality rate. The analysis indicated that exceeding the target would lead to
a slight decline in the abundance of striped bass. Exceeding the threshold
would lead to a significant decrease in the population.
The final issue presented by the
TC was the framework for an otolith based aging project. The TC estimated that
about 2000 samples would need to be collected each year to accurately estimate
the age of large striped bass.
Staff updated the Management
Board on the progress of the development of an addendum to collect data on
striped bass bycatch. The Addendum will be developed and presented to the Board
at the May meeting. For more information, please contact Robert Beal, ISFMP
Director, at (202)289-6400 or rbeal@asmfc.org .
Motions
No motions made.
ATLANTIC MENHADEN MANAGEMENT
BOARD AND TECHNICAL COMMITTEE (February 9, 2005)
Press Release
ASMFC Atlantic Menhaden Board Initiates
Development of Addendum II
Addendum to Address Management Options and
Research Needs for the Chesapeake Bay
Alexandria, VA – The Commission’s
Atlantic Menhaden Management Board approved development of Addendum II to
Amendment 1 to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic Menhaden. The
Draft Addendum will present options to limit the catch of menhaden, including
restricting the Chesapeake Bay purse seine harvest to no more than 110,400 mt
annually in 2006 and 2007. It also proposes initiating a research program
immediately to determine the status of menhaden populations in the Chesapeake
Bay and assess whether localized depletion is occurring in the Bay.
While the Board specified that
the Draft Addendum include a cap of 110,400 mt (five-year average of Chesapeake
Bay reduction fishery harvest) for 2006 and 2007, it directed staff to identify
a suite of management options for consideration by the public, including various
cap limits and timeframes, and gears to be addressed. The Addendum will also
include a review of current state rules and regulations for Atlantic menhaden
and the roles these measures have played in localizing menhaden harvest to the
Chesapeake Bay, and coastal waters of Virginia and North Carolina.
At today’s meeting, the Atlantic
Menhaden Technical Committee responded to the list of tasks it received at the
Board’s last meeting. These included questions regarding the possibility of
localized depletion of menhaden stocks in Chesapeake Bay, the likely causes of
low recruitment of menhaden in Chesapeake Bay; and Bay-specific ecological
reference points and recruitment indices.
“The Technical Committee has done
an outstanding job in addressing the issues placed before it,” stated Board
Chair Jack Travelstead of Virginia. “It has conducted a thorough analysis of its
charges with the best data available and has identified research needed to
address outstanding questions on the status of Atlantic menhaden populations in
the Chesapeake Bay.”
The Board will meet in May to
review the Draft Addendum. Upon its approval, the Addendum will be released for
public review and comment. It is anticipated that many states will be conducting
public hearings on the Addendum. For more information, please contact Nancy
Wallace, Fisheries Management Plan Coordinator, at (202)289-6400 or
nwallace@asmfc.org
.
WEAKFISH
MANAGEMENT BOARD (February 9, 2005)
Meeting Summary
The Weakfish Management Board
reviewed state compliance and the FMP Review for the 2003 fishing season.
Commercial landings in all jurisdictions dropped from 2002 to 2003 and coastwide
recreational landings reached a time series low in 2003. Several states did not
fulfill the biological sampling requirement in Amendment 4. The Board tasked
the Weakfish Technical Committee to provide a report on what samples are needed
and how states should sample in light of continued reduced landings.
The Board heard a stock
assessment presentation from the Technical Committee. The Committee reported
that weakfish appear to have declined to low levels of abundance. At this point,
fishing does not appear to be the main cause of the decline. Current evidence
suggests an increase in natural mortality is a more likely cause. The Committee
also noted that more synthesis of the data in the assessment may provide more
definitive insight into weakfish’s stock status. The Board tasked the Committee
to determine the cause of the decline and work with the Plan Review Team to
develop alternatives for how to deal with the decline. Bill Mandulak was
approved to the Weakfish Advisory Panel. For more information, please contact
Braddock Spear, Fisheries Management Plan Coordinator, at (202)289-6400 or
bspear@asmfc.org .
ASMFC Approves Winter Flounder
Amendment 1
Plan Seeks to Rebuild Southern New
England/Mid-Atlantic Stock and Sustain Gulf of Maine Stock
Alexandria, VA – The Atlantic
States Marine Fisheries Commission approved Amendment 1 to the Interstate
Fishery Management Plan for Inshore Stocks of Winter Flounder. The Amendment
revises management goals, objectives, biological reference points, and
rebuilding goals for winter flounder populations in the inshore portions of the
Southern New England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA) and Gulf of Maine (GOM) stock areas.
The Amendment also updates commercial and recreational management measures for
both stock components.
Amendment 1 responds to the
latest stock assessment information and is the product of extensive preparation,
deliberation, and public comment. Scientific advice indicates that the SNE/MA
stock of winter flounder is overfished and overfishing is occurring. Further, a
reduction in fishing mortality is needed to rebuild the spawning stock biomass
to sustainable levels. While the GOM stock is not overfished and overfishing is
not occurring, reports of localized depletion in inshore areas north of
Massachusetts remain a concern.
Amendment 1 establishes the following biological reference points to restore
the SNE/MA stock and maintain the status of the GOM stock:
|
Reference Points |
SNE/MA |
GOM |
|
F Target |
Fmsy=0.32 |
Fmsy=0.43 |
|
F Threshold |
Fmsy =0.24 |
Fmsy=0.32 |
|
SSB Target |
Bmsy=30,100 mt |
Bmsy=4,100 mt |
|
SSB Threshold |
˝SSBmsy=15,050
mt |
˝SSBmsy=2,050
mt |
For the SNE/MA stock,
recreational measures include a 12-inch minimum size limit, a 10-fish creel
limit, and a 60-day open season. Twenty days of March and April must be closed
and the 60-day open season cannot be divided into more than two periods. For
the GOM stock, recreational measures include a 12-inch minimum size limit, an
eight-fish creel limit, and no requirements for closed seasons.
Amendment 1 anticipates a large
reduction in fishing mortality for the offshore commercial fishery with
implementation of the New England Fishery Management Council’s Amendment 13 to
Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish. To complement
these actions in state waters, Amendment 1 establishes commercial management
measures of a 12-inch minimum size limit and a minimum 6.5-inch diamond or
square mesh size for the SNE/MA stock. States in the region must also retain
their existing commercial season closures. Additionally, states have the option
to impose more conservative regulations.
For the GOM stock, the Amendment
establishes a 12-inch minimum size limit, a mesh size consistent with that in
the EEZ adjacent to state waters (currently 6.5-inch diamond or square mesh),
and maintenance of existing commercial season closures.
States have until March 15, 2005
to submit their proposals for plan implementation. The Board will meet in May
2005 to review Technical Committee comments on the proposals and discuss their
approval. Implementation of the provisions of Amendment 1 will be required by
July 31, 2005. Annual compliance reports will be due on November 1 of each
year, beginning in 2006. Copies of Amendment 1 are available via the
Commission’s website at
www.asmfc.org
or by contacting the Commission at (202) 289-6400. For more information, please
contact Lydia Munger, FMP Coordinator, at (202) 289-6400 or
lmunger@asmfc.org .
Motions
Move on behalf of the Winter
Flounder Management Board to approve Amendment 1 to the Interstate Fishery
Management Plan for Inshore Stocks of Winter Flounder.
Motion made by Mr. Augustine. Motion carries (11
in favor, 1 abstention).
Published in the Asbury Park Press 1/28/05
By John Geiser
Thousands of striped bass
fishermen in New Jersey have been clamoring for a new striped bass law, and
Assemblyman Sean T. Kean, R-Monmouth, has responded.
The assemblyman said Wednesday
that he will introduce the bill that the majority of fishermen want: a daily
possession limit of two fish of 28 inches or more and a bonus fish of 28 inches
or over. "Two at 28!" is the rallying cry heard in tackle shops and marinas as
grass roots anglers and activists organize to let legislators know their
position.
Kean said the law passed in
September is confusing and unfair to many anglers. Further it has hurt charter
and party boatmen and has resulted in the suspension of the bonus fish program.
The present law provides for the
harvest of one fish between 24 and less than 28 inches, no fish between 28 and
less than 34 inches, one fish from 34 inches up, and there is no bonus program.
"I am a striped bass fisherman
and I can tell you that many of the individuals that I run into that also fish
are confused by these new rules," he said. "Fishermen in Monmouth County are
bewildered as to why the state passed such a complicated scheme." Kean said his
bill, which will be introduced Feb. 7, will be easy to understand and comply
with. It is also acceptable to the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission,
and conforms to the coastal standard.
"Recreational fishing is one of
the most popular activities of both residents and visitors to Monmouth County
and New Jersey," he said. "Going forward with these unnecessarily complex
regulations will hurt the fishing and related industries and will ultimately
impact tourism."
"New Jersey needs a fair and
easily understandable striped bass policy that lets the state's fishermen
concentrate on battling fish instead of battling bureaucratic red tape," he
pointed out.
Kean acknowledged that different
regions of the state have different needs, and he respects efforts to provide
regional autonomy with respect to fish size, but until a system is worked out,
he said the state needs to simplify and clarify the regulations to avoid
confusion, and accommodate the majority.
Two fish at 28 inches or over is
not a demand spawned in New Jersey, it is the coastal standard, the base agreed
upon by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission.
Two fish at 28 inches is the
choice of the state Division of Fish and Wildlife, and it is the only measure
that will allow them to continue the traditional bonus program for all striped
bass fishermen who want to participate. Any other bonus option that might be
created under the present law will exclude some, if not most, bass fishermen
from the bonus program.
The Recreational Fishing Alliance
has compiled the results of its membership questionnaire on bass fishermen's
preferences, and it was found that the majority favor two fish at 28 inches or
above.
A total of 814 respondents or 45
percent chose two fish at 28 inches with a bonus program, and 1,034 or 57.66
percent favored two fish at 28 inches without a bonus program. The survey
revealed that 645 anglers or 35.7 percent favored the present law with a bonus
program of some form and 441 or 24.59 percent favored the present law without a
bonus program.
Another 346 persons or 19.1
percent favored one fish between 26 and 30 inches and a second fish at 33 inches
or over with some form of a bonus program, and 318 or 17.73 percent favored one
fish between 26 and 30 inches and one fish 33 inches or over without a bonus
program.
The Jersey Coast Anglers
Association, representing 75 fishing clubs, met Tuesday night in Brick, and
representatives voted overwhelmingly to change the present law to two fish at 28
inches or over plus a bonus program.
Bruce L. Freeman, research
scientist for the state's Bureau of Marine Fisheries, said Tuesday that the
bonus program can be continued as it has for 13 years without additional
funding, if the law is changed to two fish at 28 inches or over.
Thomas P. Fote, legislative
chairman of the Jersey Coast Anglers Association, said that organization decided
that it will circulate a petition at the upcoming Atlantic City Boat Show to get
further support for changing the present law to two fish at 28 inches.
More than 60,000 persons went
through the show last year, and a larger crowd is expected this year.
"This will be a simple petition
asking people if they support 28 inches and a bonus program the way it has been
for 13 years," he said.
Joe Pallotto, president of the Asbury Park Fishing
Club, which has over 100 members, said he is heartened by the results of the RFA
membership poll and the stand of the JCAA's clubs, the state's backing of two at
28 and the support of the New Jersey Federation of Sportsmen's Clubs.
"This proves to everyone that two
at 28 is the way to go," he said. "It has already been approved by the ASMFC --
no hang up there -- all we have to do is get a bill introduced, and impress upon
the state Legislature that this is what the majority of bass fishermen wants."
The Asbury Park Fishing Club,
which dates back over 100 years, has been in the forefront of striped bass
regulations in New Jersey since the first measures were passed in the last
century. "We don't have an axe to grind here," Pallotto said. "We're not
interested in party politics, we're interested in doing what is right for the
majority of the fishermen in New Jersey.
Greg Hueth, a spokesman for the
Shark River Surf Anglers, another club with over 100 members, said his
membership is unified in its support for two fish at 28 inches plus the bonus
program as they have known it for 13 years.
"It's pretty clear what is in the
best interests of the fishermen of New Jersey -- what's right for them," he
said. "We need to move forward now; we can't wait on this."
Lack of bonus program hurts more than anglers
PRESENT LAW: Impossible to monitor thoroughly
By JOHN GEISER CORRESPONDENT
ASBURY PARK PRESS JAN 28, 2005
The striped bass fishing season
opens in estuarine waters in 32 days, and, for the first time in 13 years, there
will be no bonus program.
Greg Heuth, a spokesman for the
Shark River Surf Anglers, a club with over 100 members, said it is a shame that,
under the present law, state biologists will be deprived of the valuable data
from the bonus program. “I hope everyone understands that at present there is
no bonus program,” he said. “The division has told us that they need the bonus
program for research and gathering data on striped bass, but they can’t
implement it with the present law – they just don’t have the money or the
manpower.”
“I‘ve talked to the biologists, and
they need the data from a bonus program to support New Jersey’s position with
the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission down the road,” he said. “That
‘s the best way to monitor the stocks.”
Heuth’s club is unanimous in its support for changing the present
striped bass law to two fish at 28 inches or above. With this law in place, the
state Division of Fish and Wildlife has the funds and personnel to continue the
bonus program as it has in the past.
With the present law, it would be
impossible for the division to meet the enormous demand for bonus tags, monitor
the harvest and close the season in a timely fashion to prevent an overrun of
the quota.
The problem is that the bonus fish,
instead of being a third fish over 28 inches as it was in the past, would now
have to be a fish between 28 and less than 34 inches, a size prohibited ,
otherwise, by the present law.
That fish must be released now. Bonus
tags left from 2004 cannot be used in 2005, and there is no other legal way to
keep that fish, which usually weighs from 10 to 16 pounds.
New Jersey has a bonus quota of 327,000 pounds.
If this were divided by 13 pounds per fish, i.e., the average fish between 28
and less than 34 inches, it is equivalent to only 25,153 fish. Biologists
estimate that this number of fish could be caught in seven weeks and the
program shut down.
Some activists had hoped that
they could persuade the state Legislature to come up with $300,000 to administer
some other kind of bonus program under the new law, but the lawmakers have
already approved $100,000 for the state’s artificial reef program as well as the
regular annual appropriation for marine fisheries.
It is unlikely, with the state
facing a projected $4 billion budget deficit and income tax payments off $1
billion from 2000 that they can be persuaded to part with more money for a
striped bass program.
It is sad that the striped bass
law had to be rewritten in 2004 to begin with.
There are probably more striped
bass in the waters of the East Coast than there have been since colonial times,
but marine biologists still claim that they are concerned about the future of
the stocks.
The ASMFC announced Jan 1, 2004
that the estimated population of striped bass was 56 million fish, an increase
of 10 million fish over the estimated over the estimated population of 2003.
The worries of the scientists
were transmitted to the ASMFC, and last year, that body informed New Jersey that
it would have to cut back its harvest or stop fishing.
Striped bass abundance has been
increasing steadily since 1982, and reached a level of around 45 million fish in
1996. It remained at this level until 2002 when it jumped to 52 million fish.
New Jersey has ranked as one of
the top four states in the number of striped bass harvested since 1996, and in
2002 ranked second to Maryland in number of striped bass caught, 391,000 to
491,000, and was first in pounds of striped bass landed.
New Jersey ranked third in number
of anglers (961,000) on the East Coast behind Florida (2.2 million) and North
Carolina (1.8 million). Of the total number of anglers in New Jersey, 34
percent or 326,740 fished from beaches, jetties and bridges, and some
authorities believe that most fished for or caught striped bass incidentally
sometime during the year.
Ristori: Striper regs a complicated mess
Thursday, February 03, 2005
By Al Ristori
Star-Ledger Staff
Every striped bass angler in the
state has his or her idea of what regulations should be imposed on that fishery,
and achieving a consensus is a continuing problem that may be coming to a head.
The Atlantic States Marine
Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) has a coastal standard of two bass at a 28-inch
minimum, and required New Jersey to give up its 24-to-less than-28-inch slot
striper (half of the daily limit we enjoyed for years along with a 28-inch or
larger bass) unless a conservationally equivalent plan was enacted.
In the scramble to avoid having
our fishery shut down last fall, the legislature voted for a law that retains
the slot bass but requires the other half of the limit be at least 34 inches.
That 6-inch gap between 28 and 34 inches created lots of confusion as anglers
had to release bass that many considered a prize catch. In most cases, stripers
over 34 inches were hard to come by during the fall, though such sizes are
routine when bunker is utilized in the spring.
An additional complication
involves the Bonus Card Program that allows anglers who sign up to take a third
striper of 28 inches or more. The Division of Fish and Wildlife declared it
doesn't have adequate funding to continue that program under the present rules.
It already was running weeks behind in getting bonus cards out, and there was
fear the new regs would greatly increase that burden as it would be the only way
a 28-to-less than-34-inch bass could be kept. The anticipated increase in demand
would not only outstrip the Division's ability to deliver cards, but could also
result in quick capture of the entire 327,000 pound quota derived from the old
commercial catch before N.J. became a striped bass game fish state. Thus, there
will be no Bonus Card program if the current regulations continue, though it
will be run if two at 28 inches becomes law.
The simple solution to the
problem involves adopting the ASMFC coastal provision of two bass at 28 inches
or more. Most anglers in northern N.J. were in favor of that last year, and the
Jersey Coast Anglers Association (JCAA) supported that position after an almost
unanimous vote of its constituent clubs from all over the state. On the other
hand, the slot was so popular in the southern portion of the state that the
Recreational Fishing Alliance (RFA) came out in favor of the present law that
South Jersey Assemblyman Robert Smith passed through his committee.
The RFA took a survey of its
members here and in Pennsylvania over the winter. In answer to the question,
"Which management plan do you prefer the most with a Bonus Program?," 45 percent
voted for two at 28 inches while 36 percent favored the present regulation --
and 19 percent opted for one bass 26 to less than 30 inches plus one 33 inches
or more. Keep in mind the fact that the Division already has stated there will
be no Bonus Program except with the two bass at 28 inches. When RFA members were
asked "Which management option would you prefer without a Bonus Program?" 58
percent preferred two at 28 inches. The RFA has suggested the state be split,
with different striper regulations north and south -- but the Division has
rejected that due to both law enforcement problems and lack of documentation
with which to get ASMFC approval.
The political reality is
Assemblyman Smith must be willing to put any possible change in the present law
through his committee. He's meeting with both Tom Fote of the JCAA and Jimmy
Donofrio of the RFA today at the Atlantic City Boat Show in order to come up
with a solution that all parties can live with and which meets the ASMFC
standards.
Al Ristori appears regularly in The
Star-Ledger. He can be reached at
cristori@aol.com .