Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2014/12/01/2014-28224/atlantic-highly-migratory-species-commercial-aggregated-large-coastal-sharks-lcs-and-hammerhead
Timestamp: 2018-04-20 20:40:36
Document Index: 622053615

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635', '§\u2009635']

Federal Register :: Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Commercial Aggregated Large Coastal Sharks (LCS) and Hammerhead Sharks in the Atlantic Region
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Commercial Aggregated Large Coastal Sharks (LCS) and Hammerhead Sharks in the Atlantic Region
A Rule by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on 12/01/2014
The commercial fisheries for Atlantic aggregated LCS and Atlantic hammerhead are closed effective 11:30 p.m. local time November 30, 2014, until the end of the 2014 fishing season on December 31, 2014, or until and if NMFS announces via a notice in the Federal Register that additional quota is available and the season is reopened.
71029-71030 (2 pages)
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2014-28224 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2014-28224
NMFS is closing the fisheries for commercial aggregated LCS and hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region. This action is necessary because the commercial landings of Atlantic aggregated LCS for the 2014 fishing season have reached 80 percent of the available commercial quota as of November 14, 2014, and the fisheries are quota-linked under current regulations.
Alexis Jackson or Karyl Brewster-Geisz 301-427-8503; fax 301-713-1917.
The Atlantic shark fisheries are managed under the 2006 Consolidated Highly Migratory Species (HMS) Fishery Management Plan (FMP), its amendments, and its implementing regulations (50 CFR part 635) issued under authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.).
Under § 635.5(b)(1), dealers must electronically submit reports on sharks that are first received from a vessel on a weekly basis through a NMFS-approved electronic reporting system. Reports must be received by no later than midnight, local time, of the first Tuesday following the end of the reporting week unless the dealer is otherwise notified by NMFS. Under § 635.28(b)(3), the quotas of certain species and/or management groups are linked. The quotas for aggregated LCS and hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic Start Printed Page 71030region are linked (§ 635.28(b)(3)(i)). Under § 635.28(b)(2), when NMFS calculates that the landings for any species and/or management group of a linked group have reached or are projected to reach 80 percent of the available quota, NMFS will file for publication with the Office of the Federal Register a notice of closure for all of the species and/or management groups in a linked group that will be effective no fewer than 5 days from date of filing. From the effective date and time of the closure until and if NMFS announces, via a notice in the Federal Register, that additional quota is available and the season is reopened, the fishery for all linked species and/or management groups is closed, even across fishing years.
On July 3, 2013 (78 FR 40318), NMFS announced the final rule for Amendment 5a to the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP, which, among other things, established new quotas for aggregated LCS and hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region and linked the Atlantic aggregated LCS and Atlantic hammerhead shark management groups. As a result of the quota linkage, when the quota for one management group is reached and is closed, the other management group closes at the same time. On November 26, 2013 (78 FR 70500), NMFS announced that the commercial Atlantic aggregated LCS quota for 2014 was 168.9 metric tons (mt) dressed weight (dw) (372,552 lb dw), and the Atlantic hammerhead shark quota was 27.1 mt dw (59,736 lb dw).
Dealer reports recently received through November 14, 2014, indicate that 135.0 mt dw, or 80 percent, of the available Atlantic aggregated LCS quota has been landed, and that 10.1 mt dw, or 37 percent, of the available Atlantic hammerhead shark quota has been landed. Based on these dealer reports, NMFS estimates that the 80-percent limit specified for a closure notice in the regulations has been reached as of November 14, 2014. Accordingly, NMFS is closing both the commercial aggregated LCS and hammerhead management groups in the Atlantic region as of 11:30 p.m. local time November 30, 3014. All other shark species or management groups that are currently open will remain open, including the blue shark, porbeagle shark, and pelagic sharks other than porbeagle or blue shark management groups.
At § 635.27(b)(1), the boundary between the Gulf of Mexico region and the Atlantic region is defined as a line beginning on the East Coast of Florida at the mainland at 25°20.4′ N. lat, proceeding due east. Any water and land to the south and west of that boundary is considered for the purposes of monitoring and setting quotas, to be within the Gulf of Mexico region.
During the closure, retention of aggregated LCS and hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region is prohibited for persons fishing aboard vessels issued a commercial shark limited access permit (LAP) under § 635.4. However, persons aboard a commercially-permitted vessel that is also properly permitted to operate as a charter vessel or headboat for HMS and is engaged in a for-hire trip could fish under the recreational retention limits for sharks and “no sale” provisions (§ 635.22(a) and (c)). Similarly, persons aboard a commercially-permitted vessel that possesses a valid shark research permit under § 635.32 and has a NMFS-approved observer onboard may continue to harvest and sell aggregated LCS and hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region pursuant to the terms and conditions of the shark research permit.
During this closure, a shark dealer issued a permit pursuant to § 635.4 may not purchase or receive aggregated LCS and/or hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region from a vessel issued an Atlantic Shark LAP, except that a permitted shark dealer or processor may possess aggregated LCS and/or hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region that were harvested, off-loaded, and sold, traded, or bartered prior to the effective date of the closure and were held in storage, consistent with § 635.28(b)(5). Additionally, a permitted shark dealer or processor may possess aggregated LCS and/or hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region that were harvested by a vessel issued a valid shark research fishery permit per § 635.32 that had a NMFS-approved observer onboard during the trip the sharks were taken on, as long as the LCS research fishery quota remains open. Similarly, a shark dealer issued a permit pursuant to § 635.4 may, in accordance with relevant state regulations, purchase or receive aggregated LCS and/or hammerhead sharks in the Atlantic region if the sharks were harvested, off-loaded, and sold, traded, or bartered from a vessel that fishes only in state waters and that has not been issued an Atlantic Shark LAP, HMS Angling permit, or HMS Charter/Headboat permit pursuant to § 635.4.
[FR Doc. 2014-28224 Filed 11-25-14; 4:15 pm]