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Welcome to the New Era of Shark Ageing

December 18, 2023 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

It’s the “age-old” story—count the rings in shark vertebrae to estimate the age of a shark, like counting the annual growth rings on a tree stump. Or so shark researchers thought, until 2018. That’s when NOAA shark researcher Lisa Natanson and her colleagues reported that the rings on shark vertebrae are not always deposited annually. Instead, they are driven by changes in length and girth over a shark’s lifetime, the rate of which can change over the years. This meant that the ageing keys for many shark species needed to be revised by developing and validating new methods to determine shark ages.

Enter Michelle Passerotti, a shark biologist in the Apex Predators Program at the Northeast Fisheries Science Center’s Narragansett Laboratory. She is developing techniques to revamp shark ageing and correct age estimates where needed in a new era of ageing.

The first crucial step is making sure new methods will accurately predict shark ages by validating traditionally aged samples.

High-value US West Coast stocks may migrate out of reach due to climate change

December 17, 2023 — Recent NOAA research forecasts that three high-value groundfish species will migrate toward deeper offshore waters along the United States West Coast due to climate change in the near future, which will likely require fishery managers to adapt their strategies in response.

NOAA’s study, “Species redistribution creates unequal outcomes for multispecies fisheries under projected climate change” was published in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances in August 2023. It shows that sablefish, dover sole, and shortspine thornyhead are projected to migrate to deeper offshore waters, posing challenges for fishers that may need to travel longer distances and fish at greater depths or shift their operations completely to target more accessible species.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

NOAA Fisheries Releases Report on Killer Whale Entanglements in Alaska from 1991–2022

December 17th, 2023 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

NOAA Fisheries has released a new technical memo, Killer Whale Entanglements in Alaska: Summary Report 1991–2022. It provides comprehensive detail of 37 reported killer whale entanglement cases in Alaska over the past three decades.

This technical memo has been in development since spring of 2023, prior to reports of summer 2023 killer whale takes.

The entanglement of killer whales in fishing gear or marine debris is a serious animal welfare issue and conservation concern. It affects both the marine mammals and the Alaska fishing industry. Killer whales feed on the bait or the catch of fishers, which makes them more susceptible to entanglements. They can become entangled in fishing gear, marine debris, or other materials, which can lead to injury or death. Marine mammal entanglements are also detrimental to the fishers who incur financial and material loss when their gear becomes lost or damaged by the interaction.

 

NOAA Fisheries issues disaster declaration for two California salmon fisheries

December 11, 2023 — NOAA Fisheries has determined a fishery took place in two California salmon fisheries, clearing the path for the fishing industry in those areas to receive financial relief. The U.S. Small Business Administration is also offering low-interest federal disaster loans to businesses affected by the closure.

In April 2023, California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis requested fishery disaster determinations for the Sacramento River Fall chinook fishery and the Klamath River fall chinook, ocean, and inland salmon fisheries.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

Secretary of Commerce Allocates $8.2 Million for Pacific Salmon Fishery Disasters

December 11, 2023 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

Today, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo announced the allocation of $8.2 million appropriated by Congress for the 2021 and 2022 Yurok Tribe Chinook Salmon fishery disasters.

NOAA Fisheries used commercial fishery revenue loss as the basis to allocate the funding across the eligible fishery disasters. We also considered factors that cannot be accounted for in revenue loss data alone, such as subsistence uses. We increased the allocation to the Yurok Tribe to account for these important uses.

“We understand the importance of these funds to the affected communities,” said Kelly Denit, Director of NOAA’s Office of Sustainable Fisheries. “These funds will help them recover from the disaster and prevent similar fishery resource disasters in the future.”

NOAA Fisheries provides guidance on developing spend plans which can cover a range of activities to support disaster-affected communities. The allocated funds can be used to help:

  • Commercial fishermen
  • Recreational fishermen
  • Charter businesses
  • Shore-side infrastructure
  • Subsistence users

It can also help improve the fishing ecosystem and environment.

These funds can help address the factors contributing to the fishery resource disaster and minimizing future uninsured losses.

We will work with the Yurok Tribe on administering these disaster relief funds. Affected fishing communities and individuals should contact the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission to learn more about the spend plan process.

Some of the affected fishing communities may also be eligible for assistance from the Small Business Administration or other federal agencies.

Conservation groups call on US to ban foreign seafood over whale and dolphin bycatch

December 8, 2023 — Conservation groups want NOAA Fisheries to ban imports from foreign fisheries that are not adequately working to prevent marine mammal bycatch.

“By continuing to allow imports that do not meet U.S. standards, [NOAA Fisheries] NMFS chooses business as usual over the survival of some of the most amazing species on the planet,” Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) Senior Attorney and Global Biodiversity Conservation Director Zak Smith said. “Because NMFS has failed to safeguard ocean biodiversity, future generations may never have the chance to protect invaluable marine life.”

Read the full story at SeafoodSource

 

A group of commercial fishermen have ended up before the Supreme Court

December 7, 2023 — For years, fishermen like Bill Bright and his colleague Wayne Reichle have been required to take federal observers on their boats when they set out into the North Atlantic in search of herring. Those observers are making sure fishermen are catching what they’re legally allowed, most of it in efforts to prevent overfishing.

But back in 2020, federal regulators moved to require herring fishermen to directly pay observers salaries, a move that could potentially cost herring fishermen up to $700 per day.

By some estimates, that could top 20% of revenue from a fisherman’s catch.

“From the beginning, the most important thing for us was the ability to continue fishing and continue operating the way we’ve operated for a number of years,” Wayne Reichle said.

As a result, Reichle, Bright and a half dozen other fishermen sued the federal government.

A case that has rippled so far beyond the shores of New Jersey that it has now ended up before the Supreme Court. Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc. v. Gina Raimondo is set to be argued before the court in January 2024.

“From the beginning, the most important thing for us was the ability to continue fishing and continue operating the way we’ve operated for a number of years. It’s about us being able to maintain our livelihoods and operations,” Reichle said.

Read the full story at KSBY

Navy to build $146.7 million NOAA marine operations center in Rhode Island

December 6, 2023 — The U.S. Navy awarded a $146.7 million contract to New York-based Skanska USA to design and build a new National Oceanic and Atmospheric base on Naval Station Newport in Rhode Island, with plans for the facility to eventually be homeport for NOAA’s Marine Operations Center – Atlantic. 

Design details are still being finalized, according to a brief prepared statement issued by NOAA late Tuesday. requirements include having a pier that will accommodate four large vessels, a floating dock for smaller vessels, space for vessel repairs and parking and a building to be used for shoreside support and as a warehouse. Construction is anticipated to be completed by 2027. 

Design and construction of the NOAA port will be “funded in part by the Inflation Reduction Act — a historic $3.3 billion investment to help communities, including tribes and vulnerable populations, prepare, adapt and build resilience to weather and climate events in pursuit of a climate-ready nation,” according to the agency. “The act also supports improvements to weather and climate data and services, and strengthens NOAA’s fleet of research airplanes and ships.”

Read the full story at National Fisherman 

Bottom-trawl gear to blame for most of this year’s fishery-related killer whale deaths, NOAA says

December 5, 2023 — A federal investigation into the unusually large number of Bering Sea and Aleutian killer whales found dead this summer determined that most but not all of the deaths were killed by entanglement in fishing gear.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center on Friday released some details about the deaths in the Bering Sea and Aleutians, which had spurred sharp criticism of seafood trawling practices.

Of the nine killer whales that were found ensnared in bottom-trawling gear, six were killed by those entanglements but two others were already dead before they were netted, the investigation found. The other whale was seriously injured by the gear entanglement but escaped alive, the agency said.

In addition to the nine whales found in bottom-trawl gear, there were two other cases of dead killer whales found entangled in other types of fishing gear.

Read the full story at the Alaska Beacon

Biden-Harris Administration makes $106 million available for Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund as part of Investing in America Agenda

December 5, 2023 — The following was released by NOAA:

Today, the Department of Commerce and NOAA are announcing the availability of up to $106 million in funding through the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund (PCSRF) for Pacific salmon and steelhead recovery and conservation projects. This funding — which includes funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) and Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) — will support state and tribal salmon restoration projects and activities to protect, conserve and restore these fish populations and their habitats.

“Restoring Pacific salmon populations and their habitats is vital for communities on the West Coast and in Alaska,” said Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo. “This funding — supported  by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act, a key pillar of Bidenomics — will power transformational, high-impact projects and support efforts by states and tribes to protect and conserve salmon populations.”

Read the full release from NOAA

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