Quantcast
Main Menu
Forum
Guidelines/Rules
Photo Contest
TFF Store
Guides/Destinations
Contact/Advertising
Hunting Forum
Other Forums
Advertisement
Affiliates
J.P. Greeson's Weekly Fishing Report
Larry Bozka's Coastal Anglers
Big Billy Kinder Outdoors
Texas Fishing & Outdoors Show
Honey Hole All Outdoors Television
Barry Stokes’ Southwest Outdoors Report
Advertisement
Newest Members
k2bizdevSAHA, Robcaster, Horns Up, MESU Bait Company, Connercox25
71433 Registered Users
Top Posters
TexDawg 51141
JDavis7873® 50249
David Lee 50063
Pilothawk 47984
FattyMcButterpants 47220
John175 ® 45740
OldFrog 45060
Tritonman 44360
Big Red 12 38200
TreeBass 36322
Forum Stats
71433 Members
54 Forums
574471 Topics
7188486 Posts

Max Online: 21159 @ 10/25/10 03:12 PM
AnglerSurvey.com
Topic Options
#6796595 - 11/01/11 10:06 AM Gulf Fishery Update
GandyGirl Offline
Outdoorsman

Registered: 12/08/10
Posts: 23
Ahoy,
The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council met in New Orleans last week to talk fish. The following is an overview of what was discussed at the meeting. I will follow up and post documents and dates for the public hearings that will be conducted on amberjack, red snapper, spiny lobster, and more. If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact me directly at Emily.Muehlstein@gulfcouncil.org.
Your Chum,
Emily Muehlstein
Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council

Grouper Allocation-
The Council has asked for analysis of existing allocations and alternatives for reallocation for gag, red grouper, and black grouper. Allocation is the division of Total Allowable Catch for each fish stock between the commercial and recreational fishing sectors. Council will be presented with results of the analysis (by the Southeast Fisheries Science Center) in April 2012 and decide whether or not to move forward with development of new allocation options at that time.

Amberjack-
The last greater amberjack stock assessment determined that the stock continues to be overfished and undergoing overfishing. In response, the Council’s Scientific and Statistical Committee adjusted the Acceptable Biological Catch level for 2012 -2014. In Reef Fish Amendment 35 Council considers options that will adjust the current annual catch limit so that it is no higher that the new Acceptable Biological Catch level.

The Council has selected preferred alternatives for the actions in this amendment, and public hearings will be scheduled for sometime in January 2012.

Stay tuned for more info on the upcoming amberjack public hearings. Documents will be posted along with meeting dates and times as soon as arrangements are made.

Red Snapper-
Fall Season Options and 2012 Total Allowable Catch
The Council is developing an amendment that may change the structure of the red snapper season and possibly increase the 2012 total allowable catch. Preferred alternatives have been selected for some of the actions in this proposed amendment, and the Council is expected to take final action in February. Documents will be posted as soon as possible.

Restrict Individual Fishing Quota Transfer
When the red snapper Individual Fishing Quota Program was established it included a provision that would allow any U.S. Citizen or permanent resident alien to buy and sell shares beginning in 2012. The Council is developing an amendment that may limit the transfer of red snapper IFQ shares and allocation to commercial reef fish permit holders. Public hearings will be held to gather public opinion on this amendment sometime next year.


Spiny Lobster
To minimize impacts the spiny lobster fishery has on endangered sea turtles, smalltooth sawfish, and elkhorn and staghorn corals, the Council is drafting an amendment that considers:
1. Creating closed areas to reduce the destruction of corals. – the Council’s preferred alternative would prohibit spiny lobster trapping in areas near endangered coral colonies.
2. Using trap line marking requirements to reduce species interactions with gear – the Council’s preferred alternative takes no action on this item.

Dates, locations, and documents for Public hearings will be made available as soon as arrangements are made.

Goliath Grouper
The harvest of Goliath Grouper has been prohibited since 1990. The Gulf Council has decided to convene a panel with the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council to explore methods to move the goliath grouper fishery beyond moratorium and find ways to collect information that will help analyze stock status.

Vermillion Snapper
The latest vermillion snapper stock assessment found that the stock is neither overfished nor undergoing overfishing. As a result, the Council is preparing a framework action that would increase the 3.42 million pound whole weight vermillion snapper catch limit that was proposed in the Generic Annual Catch Limits/Accountability Measures Amendment.

Crew Size and Income – Reef Fish Amendment 34
The Council reviewed a public hearing draft and chose preferred alternatives that:
1. Eliminate the income requirement for Gulf Commercial Reef Fish Permits
2. Increase the maximum crew size to four for dual-permitted vessels

The Council plans to take final action on Amendment 34 during its January/February meeting in Mobile, Alabama.

Sector Separation
The Council discussed issues relative to possible management scenarios that would separate the recreational sector into sub-sectors. The Council asked staff to develop a scoping document on sector separation and present it to the Council during the April 2012 Council meeting in Corpus Christi, Texas. The draft document will consider alternatives for allocation decisions and how those decisions translate into Annual Catch Limits and Annual Catch Targets.

Top
#6796777 - 11/01/11 11:06 AM Re: Gulf Fishery Update [Re: GandyGirl]
Oldtrackster Offline
Angler

Registered: 09/12/09
Posts: 337
Loc: Blackwell, TX
GandyGirl

I have asked this once before and did not receive a response.

Where do I send an open records request to obtain the data, statistical analysis, and all other similar information for Amberjack and Red Snapper in the Gulf of Mexico? I would also like to know what statistical program is used to crunch these numbers for example is it IBM's SPSS program for predictive analytics?


Edited by Oldtrackster (11/01/11 11:06 AM)
_________________________
Can someone explain how the Feds count recreational Red Snapper catch?

"Pretty sure it involves a witch doctor, an astrologist, and a tub of KY jelly." - jamisjockey

Top
#6797120 - 11/01/11 12:39 PM Re: Gulf Fishery Update [Re: Oldtrackster]
GandyGirl Offline
Outdoorsman

Registered: 12/08/10
Posts: 23
Originally Posted By: Oldtrackster
GandyGirl

I have asked this once before and did not receive a response.

Where do I send an open records request to obtain the data, statistical analysis, and all other similar information for Amberjack and Red Snapper in the Gulf of Mexico? I would also like to know what statistical program is used to crunch these numbers for example is it IBM's SPSS program for predictive analytics?


Well if you haven't seen the following documents I would start there. If you want more info after looking at these reports then please email me directly at emily.muehlstein@gulfcouncil.org and I'll get you what you're looking for.
The following are the Southeast Data Assessment and Review (SEDAR) documents for each assessment. Both recent amberjack and red snapper assessments were 'updates' and the benchmarks are available at: http://www.sefsc.noaa.gov/sedar/

Amberjack: http://www.sefsc.noaa.gov/sedar/download...pdf?id=DOCUMENT

Red snapper: http://www.sefsc.noaa.gov/sedar/download/Red%20Snapper%20Update%202009%205.0.pdf?id=DOCUMENT

Top
#6797198 - 11/01/11 12:59 PM Re: Gulf Fishery Update [Re: GandyGirl]
Oldtrackster Offline
Angler

Registered: 09/12/09
Posts: 337
Loc: Blackwell, TX
Thank you Mam. This will keep me busy a while. Never looked at the sedar close, and did not realize what all information was contained in it. If I have questions I will shoot you an email.


Edited by Oldtrackster (11/01/11 01:01 PM)
_________________________
Can someone explain how the Feds count recreational Red Snapper catch?

"Pretty sure it involves a witch doctor, an astrologist, and a tub of KY jelly." - jamisjockey

Top
#6829819 - 11/09/11 11:41 PM Re: Gulf Fishery Update [Re: GandyGirl]
georgeth Offline
Outdoorsman

Registered: 09/20/11
Posts: 92
Besides cobia, you’ll also catch sheepshead, pompano, whiting, ground mullet and Spanish mackerel, and if the water warms-up, an occasional king mackerel and redfish off the pier this month, depending on the water clarity. Alabama’s Gulf Coast offers many fishing opportunities in March.
_________________________
wedding app

Top



1998-2012 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide