Fishermen targeting black sea bass may have a much longer season this year as a recent scientific review shows the stock is rebuilt. The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council has proposed to more than double the current annual catch limit of 847,000 pounds (whole weight) to 1,814,000 pounds. NOAA Fisheries is reviewing this request and expects to publish a proposed rule for public comment this summer. The black sea bass fishery opened for both commercial and recreational fishermen on June 1, 2013, in federal waters from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, southward along the east coast of Florida.
Earlier this month, the Council met during a special session and approved the increase to the overall annual catch limit. The proposed increase is based on the most recent stock assessment update, completed in early 2013 through the Southeast Data, Assessment and Review program. The updated black sea bass stock assessment confirms what fishermen are seeing on the water. The stock is no longer overfished or undergoing overfishing, and is rebuilt.
The increase in the catch limit is proposed through Regulatory Amendment 19 to the Snapper Grouper Fishery Management Plan and must be approved by the Secretary of Commerce for implementation later this year. The Council is proposing the increase go into effect as soon as possible in order to extend the 2013 fishing season. The current bag limit is 5 fish per person per day with a 13″ total length minimum size limit for the recreational fishery. There are no changes proposed to the size and bag limits.
It seems that black sea bass are swimming nearly everywhere these days in the waters along the South Atlantic coast—along rocky outcrops, reefs and ledges, artificial reefs, rock jetties, and even inshore, where fishermen report they’ve never seen black sea bass before. From the Carolinas to northeast Florida, fishermen are reporting abundant numbers of black sea bass and larger size fish. “We’re seeing huge black sea bass,” exclaimed Captain Bill Parker, a charter captain from Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. “There are lots of fish on every artificial reef within 10 to 15 miles offshore. It’s hard to get a bait down to a grouper without a sea bass taking it, even a live pin fish,” said Captain Parker.
“The recovery of the black sea bass stock in the South Atlantic has several facets,” said David Cupka, Chairman of the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council. “The Council took action to end overfishing following a 2006 stock assessment, reducing the recreational bag limit, increasing both commercial and recreational size limits, and setting quotas,” explained Cupka. “Those measures, coupled with annual catch limits required under the reauthorized Magnuson-Stevens Act, led to an early recovery of the stock.”
“Rebuilding this population has far reaching impacts as black sea bass is one of the most popular recreational and commercial species in the South Atlantic and is of great economic importance in the southeast U.S.” said Roy Crabtree, southeast regional administrator for NOAA Fisheries Service. “We thank the fishermen and the Council for their commitment and combined efforts leading to more fish and greater fishing opportunities.”
A benchmark stock assessment conducted in 2011 showed the stock was improving but still not rebuilt. The 2013 update to the assessment includes two additional years of recent data, showing the stock rebuilt three years ahead of the 10-year rebuilding schedule. “Fishermen have made sacrifices when it comes to black sea bass, including reductions in bag limits, increases in size limits, and shorter and shorter seasons while watching the stock recover,” said Cupka. “The latest stock assessment allowing the Council to propose more than doubling the current annual catch limit is a reflection of those sacrifices. It is a good news story that we are all privileged to share.”
Recreational fishermen are allocated 57% and commercial fishermen receive 43% of the total annual catch limit. The fishing year begins June 1st. Recent seasons for the recreational fishery have been limited under the current recreational catch limit as the stock continued to rebuild. The 2011-2012 recreational black sea bass season opened on June 1st and closed October 17, 2011. Last year, the season lasted a little over two months, closing September 4, 2012. The proposed increase to the 2013 recreational catch limit from 409,000 pounds to 1,033,980 pounds may extend the recreational season into December, depending on fishing activity and the level of harvest.
The commercial black sea bass season has lasted less than a full calendar year since 2008. As the stock recovered and the fish became more abundant, a derby fishery developed and the seasons became shorter and shorter. The season that began in June of 2011 lasted less than two months. With the proposed increase in the commercial catch limit from 309,000 pounds to 780,020 pounds the commercial season may extend beyond November 1st.
Additional information about Regulatory Amendment 19 and black sea bass is available from the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council at www.safmc.net/Library/SnapperGrouper/tabid/415/Default.aspx and NOAA Fisheries Southeast Regional Office at http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/sustainable_fisheries/s_atl/sg/bsb/index.html.
The Cape Fear River Partnership, a coalition of state and federal natural resources agencies, academic entities, and private and non-governmental organizations, recently released the final version of the “Cape Fear River Basin Action Plan for Migratory Fish”—a blueprint that provides long-term, habitat-based solutions for the most pressing challenges to migratory fish in the Cape Fear River basin.
The plan was unveiled during a ribbon-cutting ceremony in Bladen County to celebrate the completed construction of a rock arch ramp—or “fish passage way”—at the Cape Fear River Lock and Dam No. 1, which is located 32 miles upriver from Wilmington.
Members of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which constructed the rock arch ramp, cut the ceremonial red ribbon at 10 a.m. to mark the official opening of the rock arch ramp.
The rock arch ramp is expected to improve passage of anadromous fish such as striped bass, American shad, river herring, and sturgeon, during their spring migrations to reach historical spawning grounds. An evaluation will follow the rock arch ramp construction, assessing fishes’ use of the ramp over a two-year period.
At more than 9,000 square miles, the Cape Fear River basin is the largest watershed in North Carolina. Poor habitat quality in rivers and streams threatens fish, such as American shad, striped bass, river herring, American eel, and endangered Atlantic and shortnose sturgeon populations. Dams and other blockages prevent or delay many migratory fish from swimming upstream to spawn.
While completion of the rock arch ramp at Lock and Dam No. 1 is the first step in restoring access to historic migratory fish habitat, passage past two additional lock and dams on the river in Bladen County will have to be provided before these species will have unimpeded access to their historical spawning grounds located at Smiley Falls near Erwin in Harnett County. Providing fish passage beyond these two barriers is critical to re-building migratory fish populations in the Cape Fear River and is a top priority of the action plan.
In addition to providing a blueprint for restoring fish access and improving habitat and water quality, the action plan will assess the community and economic benefits of improved migratory fish populations on tourism, recreation, fishing and other commercial uses.
“A strong migratory fish population could have immense environmental, economic and recreational benefits for local communities,” said Anne Deaton, Habitat Protection Section Chief for the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries. “For example, in 2011, North Carolina anglers spent more than $1.5 billion on fishing related activities. This number emphasizes the economic importance of restoring aquatic habitat connectivity to support sustainable fish populations in North Carolina.”
Read the final version of the “Cape Fear River Basin Action Plan for Migratory Fish” or visit the Cape Fear River Partnership page (www.habitat.noaa.gov/protection/capefear/) for more information.