Transcript Slide 1

Pacific Fishery
Management
Council
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Jurisdiction
– 3 miles to 200 miles
– 4 states (includes Idaho)
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Members -- appointed
– State governments
– Federal Agencies
• NMFS
• USFWS
– Tribes
– Industry
– Public
• “Quasi-governmental”
– advisory to NMFS
Salmon catch areas
Decision making process
Department of Commerce (DOC)
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)
Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC)
Public
What
fisheries
do they
want?
Scientific
What are
biological
limitations?
Regulatory
What are legal
limitations?
Final approval
Prepare final regulations
Proposed regulations
Annual Process
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Stocks predicted
STT
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Reviews last year’s fisheries
compiles stock predictions and calibrates models
User groups scope out possibilities for the year
PFMC meets in March
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first cut proposed regulations
initial modeling
public input
three options
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Public meetings for input
PFMC meets in April
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public input
STT modeling
pick final option
NMFS Northwest Region -- April
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high, medium, low
Prepare proposed final regulations based on final option from PFMC
Submit to DOC
DOC
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Review proposed final regulations
May – approve fishery regulations
PFMC Advisory Committees
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Salmon Technical Team (STT)
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Members – Scientists from 4 states, Tribes, Federal Government
Reviews methodologies (with SSC)
Compiles data
Runs models based on PFMC input
Produces 4 reports each year
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Review of Fisheries
Preseason Report 1
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Preseason Report 2
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Preseason Report 3
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3 proposed options
final option with analysis
Salmon Advisory Subpanel
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predictions
Members – Public representatives of commercial, sport, processor, environmental, tribal groups from 4
states
Negotiate desired seasons
Comment on Council proposals
Scientific and Statistical Committee
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Members – Scientists from State and federal agencies and academic institutions
Review methodologies used in fishery management
Review science behind fishery management plans
All Council fisheries, not just salmon
Management Principles
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Mixed-stock management
– In the ocean many stocks are mixed together
– Ability to “target” stocks is limited
• Ability to avoid stocks is limited
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Weak Stock Management
– Manage ocean fisheries to meet management targets of ALL stocks.
• ESA
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Sacramento Winter
Northern California Coast
Lower Columbia
Snake River Fall
Puget Sound
• Management targets
– Escapement goals
– harvest rates
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Overfishing
– must meet minimum every year
– if minimum not met for 3 years in a row then stock is overfished
• Ocean catch prohibited
• Triggers a rebuilding process
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Chinook Stocks
Central Valley (CA)
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Northern California Coast Chinook
(threatened)
Klamath River Fall Chinook
Oregon Coast Chinook
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Sacramento fall Chinook
Sacramento winter (endangered)
Sacramento Spring Chinook
San Joaquin River fall Chinook
North migrating
South migrating
Coastal hatchery
Columbia River Basin
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Lower Columbia River (threatened)
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Spring Creek Hatchery
Upriver bright
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MId-Columbia bright
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Snake River Fall (endangered)
Washington Coastal
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Lower River Hatchery
Lower River wild
Willapa Bay
Gray’s Harbor
Quinault River
Queets River
Hoh River
Quillayute River
Puget Sound (threatened)
Different stocks are “constraining”
in different years.
•Sacramento River fall
•Klamath Fall
•indicator for Northern Calif. Coast
•Snake River fall
•Lower Columbia River
Permits
• We can sample in open areas without any
special permits
• If we want to sample in closed times and
areas we need a Scientific Research
Permit
– Each boat will carry a permit letter
– We are working on making this process as
easy as possible – for all of us!
Research Plan
• We need a research plan to get a permit
• Our research plan must be developed with
full participation of the PFMC
– impacts are accounted for during the preseason process
Sampling Design
• Ideal design –
– Sample 240 fish for each week and area,
open or closed, from Cape Flattery to Point
Sur over the full season
– Obviously, we’re not going to be able to do
that in the near future
Less ambitious designs for 2009
All non-retention fishing
Oregon
• Learn how “fishery independent” surveys could work
– 10 boats, 1 month
• 5 in normal commercial fishing
• 5 in statistical test fishing
• Test at-sea data entry and oceanic data loggers
California
• Repeat 2007 experiment to define Klamath distribution
within SF area
– San Francisco Area North and South
– May and June
Least ambitious plan
Oregon
• Test at-sea data entry systems and
oceanic data loggers
• Up to five boats
• No terminal gear in the water
• Zero impacts
Next Steps
• Talk about these alternatives tomorrow at
OCZMA meeting
• Present these plans to the Council (March)
• Support these plans at the March and April
Council meetings
– Salmon Advisory Subpanel
– Public comment
– Individual conversations