[Federal Register: October 4, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 193)]
[Rules and Regulations]               
[Page 62212-62213]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr04oc02-12]                         

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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 679

[I.D. 092602D]

 
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Overfished 
Fisheries

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Notification of overfished stock.

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SUMMARY: NMFS has identified the Pribilof Islands blue king crab 
(Paralithodes platypus) stock as overfished. This document is intended 
to notify the public that the North Pacific Fishery Management Council 
(Council) has been informed that this stock is overfished and that the 
Council has been directed to initiate action to rebuild the stock. This 
notification is necessary to comply with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), which requires 
identification of overfished stocks and subsequent implementation of 
management measures to rebuild overfished stocks.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nina Mollett, 907-586-7462.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 304(e) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act 
requires that, if the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) determines that 
a fishery is overfished, the Secretary shall immediately notify the 
appropriate fishery management council and request that action be taken 
to end overfishing in the fishery and to implement conservation and 
management measures to rebuild affected stocks. The fishery management 
council has one year from the date of notification to prepare a plan to 
end overfishing in the fishery and to rebuild affected stocks.
    On March 3, 1999, the Secretary approved Amendment 7 to the Fishery 
Management Plan for the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner 
Crabs (FMP) (64 FR 11390, March 9, 1999). Pursuant to section 
303(a)(10) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and the national standard 
guidelines (50 CFR part 600), the amendment revised the definitions of 
overfishing, maximum sustainable yield, and optimum yield for the king 
and Tanner crab stocks of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands.
    A stock is considered overfished when the total spawning biomass is 
below the minimum stock size threshold (MSST) as defined in the FMP. 
The MSST for Pribilof Islands blue king crabs is 6.6 million lb (2,994 
mt) of total mature biomass (TMB).
    The Alaska Fisheries Science Center (AFSC) has determined that the 
stock has declined below its MSST. This determination is based on a 
joint NMFS and Alaska Department of Fish&Game (ADF&G) assessment of 
stock conditions, which incorporates the 2002 NMFS Eastern Bering Sea 
trawl survey data.
    NMFS, as required by section 304(e), notified the Council by letter 
on September 23, 2002, that the Pribilof Islands blue king crab stock 
is overfished and that the Council must develop a rebuilding plan 
within one year. The time period for a rebuilding program must be as 
short as possible, but not exceed 10 years, unless the biology of the 
stock or other environmental conditions dictate otherwise.
    According to the national standard guidelines at 50 CFR 
600.310(d)(4)(ii) and (e)(3), the Council has two alternatives for 
remedial action. First, under the guidelines, if the stock is declining 
due to changes in environmental conditions that affect its long-term 
productivity, the Council must respecify the MSST. Second, if the stock 
or stock complex is overfished or if a threshold is being approached, 
the Council must take remedial action by preparing an FMP amendment 
designed

[[Page 62213]]

to rebuild the stock to the maximum sustainable yield level within an 
appropriate time frame.

Management Background

    The situation with Pribilof Islands blue king crab is somewhat 
unusual in that NMFS is declaring the fishery overfished even though it 
has been closed since 1999, the stock is protected by existing Council, 
State of Alaska, and NMFS management measures, its habitat is protected 
by the Pribilof Islands habitat conservation area, and Pribilof Islands 
blue king crab are not caught as bycatch in any fishery.
    Since 1980, when the harvest from this stock reached 11.0 million 
lb (4,990 mt), the Pribilof Islands blue king crab stock has declined 
substantially in abundance. The fishery was closed from 1988 to 1994 
due to low stock abundance. Although this stock was estimated to be 
above the MSST during the early 1990s, abundance estimates of this 
stock were considered too unreliable to justify reopening the fishery. 
By 1995, the estimates had improved enough to open the fishery. 
However, from 1995 through 1998, harvests fell from 1.3 million lb (590 
mt) to 0.5 million lb (227 mt). In 1999 the fishery was again closed 
due to several factors, including the declining abundance trend, low 
level of prerecruits, low precision of estimates, and poor fishery 
performance in the preceding two seasons.
    Since 1999 the fishery has remained closed. Data from the 2001 NMFS 
Eastern Bering Sea trawl survey indicated that the stock was continuing 
its decline in abundance from mid-1990s levels. The stock's TMB for 
2001 was estimated at 7.0 million lb (3,175 mt). Although that was 
above the MSST of 6.6 million lb (2,994 mt), the fishery remained 
closed because the abundance of mature males fell below the 0.77 
million lb (349 mt) threshold level for mature males that the Alaska 
Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) established under its harvest 
strategy for this stock. Furthermore, the stock level and trend raised 
concerns that the stock could fall below the MSST by 2002.
    These concerns were borne out in 2002, when the stock's TMB was 
estimated to be below the MSST, at 4.5 million lb (2,041 mt). Mature 
male abundance for 2002 was estimated at 0.338 million lb (153 mt); 
this again was below the harvest strategy threshold for a fishery 
opening.
    Although poor precision in abundance estimates makes year-to-year 
comparisons difficult, the trend in estimates since the mid-1990s 
indicates that this stock is depressed, in decline, and below MSST. 
Estimates of abundance for all male size classes are low and provide no 
suggestion of recruitment to the mature or legal component in the near 
future. A total of only 12 male blue king crabs were caught at six 
stations in the Pribilof District during the 2002 survey. Of these, 
only one was sub-legal size, and most of the rest were old-shell post 
recruit crabs.
    ADF&G concurs with the results of the analysis of the 2002 NMFS 
trawl survey. The Council is aware of the results of the trawl survey 
and anticipated this determination. Industry has not been dependent on 
this fishery, which has been closed for several years.

    Dated: September 27, 2002.
Virginia M. Fay,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 02-25331 Filed 10-3-02; 8:45 am]
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