JCAA Newsletter

February 2024
NOTICES
JCAA is Moving!
The Jersey Coast Anglers Association is moving. The JCAA’s new office will be located within the grounds of the former US Army Camp Evans in Wall Township, New Jersey. The physical address of the office is 2203 Marconi Road, Building 9116, Wall Township. (Use 2300 Marconi Rd. to locate using Google Maps, Mapquest, etc.) The mailing address is.....
Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series Returns to Atlantic City
For Immediate Release, Contact 1-800-448-7360
After three years of televised seminars due to COVID, the Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series returns to the road in 2024 - and to Resorts Casino in Atlantic City on Saturday, February 3. Hosting the 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. event will be George Poveromo, Host of George Poveromo's World of Saltwater Fishing on Discovery. Nick Honachefsky, a noted writer, author, TV personality and.....
Empire Wind 1: A Fish Factory in the Making
by Capt. Paul Eidman
Local boat-based fishermen from Northern New Jersey (Think Raritan Bay) and Western New York (Think Jamaica Bay) will soon have 54 new fishing hotspots to explore. Empire Wind 1 and Empire Wind 2 is a “pizza slice” shaped offshore wind lease area, located 13 miles south of Jones Beach, New York, and 19 miles east of Long Branch New Jersey. It is wedged between the shipping channels.....
Please Support Our Sponsors - 2023 List
Grand Prize Sponsors
New Jersey Outboards - www.njoutboards.com
Yamaha - www.yamahaoutboards.com
.....
President's Report by Mark Taylor
Hope everyone had a great start to 2024. With a new year so does the start of a new chapter of everyone’s lives. A new chapter is different for everyone. The new chapter for JCAA starts with moving out of our current office in Toms River and moving to our new office location in Wall. As I am drafting this article we are working on the details and making the arrangements for the move. Please.....
Fisheries Management & Legislative Report by Tom Fote
JCAA Office Moves!
I want to personally thank all the JCAA Board members who worked so hard to make the move a reality. I was not available to help but I know the move was in good hands. A special thanks to Don Marantz for finding this new site.
JCAA Newspaper Archives
If you want to learn history about JCAA from 2000 to the present, visit the JCAA webpage and go to the newspaper archives. There is a wealth of information about the history of striped bass, summer flounder, offshore drilling and many environmental issues. In the future we will work to make this treasure trove easier to search. For now, everything is there. In my own files I have newspapers.....
JCAA Wrongly Accused About Opposing Subway Cars
Last month John Toth wrote an article encouraging former members of the RFA to join JCAA in many upcoming battles. The article stated that we were sorry to see the RFA go out of business and complimented the organization on the areas where we worked together. I thought it was a good article and I found it difficult to understand what Jimmy Donofrio posted on his.....
Striped Bass the Never-Ending Tragedy
Below you will find my testimony to the Striped Bass Board which is different from my testimony on the addendum. That testimony was about reaffirming the need to include Delaware and Hudson Rivers as producing areas. I also included the history of how the Chesapeake Bay was able to use the 25% of the coastal migratory stock as though they produced the entire amount. See the.....
ASMFC Atlantic Striped Bass Board Approves Addendum II
ASMFC Press Release, January 25, 2024
Arlington, VA – The Commission’s Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board approved Addendum II to Amendment 7 to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for Atlantic Striped Bass. The Addendum modifies recreational and commercial measures to reduce fishing mortality in 2024, establishes an expedited response process to upcoming stock assessments, and addresses.....
ASMFC Winter Meeting Summary
ASMFC Release
In addition to approving Addendum II, the Board met to consider a conservation equivalency (CE) proposal submitted by New Jersey under Addendum II, and to approve nominations to the Atlantic Striped Bass Advisory Panel. New Jersey submitted a CE proposal to continue the state’s recreational Striped Bass Bonus Program (SBBP) under Addendum II. New Jersey has reallocated its.....
Commissioner Jackson Moves to Secure 600 Subway Cars for New Jersey’s Artificial Reef Program
(Reprinted from October 2007)
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 office to discuss this issue. In attendance were Deputy Commissioner Jay Watson, Director of Fish.....
JCAA Blasts Reef Opposition
(Reprinted from April 2005)
The Jersey Coast Anglers Association is upset about a Jan. 17 letter from Clean Ocean Action to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The letter asks the engineers to reject the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection application for a permit for artificial reef materials at 14 artificial reef sites and a proposed site along the coast of New Jersey. Tom Fote, JCAA legislative director.....
Striped Bass Letter to the Striped Bass Board from JCAA & NJSFSC
by Tom Fote
The last Striped Bass Board meeting that I attended as a commissioner was the spring of 2023. We were putting together addendum II for public hearings. I requested that the commission recognize the other two producing areas and begin working with their contribution to the coastal migratory stocks. I could not get support to include that in the addendum. I’m here now.....
Membership Report by John Toth
The JCAA is in the process of moving from its Lakewood office to Camp Evans in NJ. Because of this move, we cannot mail the forms for dues payments since our computers have been disconnected. We do not know when they will be up and running to send our dues invoices to you as we usually do. Until then, I would appreciate your sending your club dues, sponsorships, and......
Youth Education Reportby Greg Kucharewski
Youth Education Award
Members of the Newark Bait and Fly-Casting Club will host their annual kid’s fishing night at the Knights of Columbus Hall, located in Union, NJ. The seminar is scheduled for 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, March 5, 2024, at the Kenilworth VFW and it’s always a lot of fun for the youngsters. Children and their families are welcome to come and enjoy a night of fun-fishing activities and.....

Calendar of Events

January 30th JCAA General Meeting & Elections February 3rd George Poveromo’s Saltwater Sportsmen National Seminar Series February 8th JCAA Board Meeting February 27th JCAA General Meeting February 28th-March 3rd Atlantic City Boat Show March 14th JCAA Board Meeting March 15th-17th Saltwater Expo March 26th JCAA General Meeting
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