Take Reduction Planning
Purpose | Goals | Process | Content | Contact | More Info
Purpose
The Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) section 118 specifies that NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) develop and implement take reduction plans (TRPs) to assist in the recovery or prevent the depletion of strategic marine mammal stocks that interact with Category I and II fisheries.
A strategic stock is one which:
- is listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA),
- is declining and likely to be listed as threatened under the ESA,
- is listed as depleted under the MMPA, or
- has direct human-caused mortality which exceeds the stock's "Potential Biological Removal (PBR) level".
Goals
The immediate goal of take reduction plans is to reduce, within six months of its implementation, the incidental serious injury or mortality of marine mammals from commercial fishing to levels less than PBR.
The long-term goal is to reduce, within five years of its implementation, the incidental serious injury and mortality of marine mammals from commercial fishing operations to insignificant levels approaching a zero serious injury and mortality rate, taking into account the economics of the fishery, the availability of existing technology, and existing state or regional fishery management plans.
Process
NMFS convenes take reduction teams (TRTs) to develop such plans. Take reduction teams consist of a balance of representatives from the fishing industry, fishery management councils, state and Federal resource management agencies, the scientific community, and conservation organizations.
Once NMFS publishes a Federal Register notice to establish and convene a TRT, the team has 6 months to develop a draft TRP. The MMPA states that a TRP must be developed by consensus and then submitted to NMFS. NMFS has 60 days to publish a draft TRP, including any proposed changes to the plan. The public then has an opportunity to review the plan and provide comments on the draft TRP and the proposed regulations for implementing the TRP. If a TRT cannot reach consensus on a draft plan, the TRT can document the range of possibilities considered and both majority and minority views. If a TRT does not submit a draft TRP, NMFS has 8 months from the date the TRT was formed to develop a proposed plan and implementing regulations. NMFS may use the TRT's deliberations as the basis for a proposed plan. After the close of the comment period on a proposed TRP and implementing regulations, NMFS has 60 days to publish a final TRP and regulations to implement that TRP. After each TRP is finalized, the TRT and NMFS meet periodically to monitor implementation of the plan.
Content
Each take reduction plan must include:
- A review of the final stock assessment report for each marine mammal addressed by the TRP and any substantial new information;
- An estimate of the total number and, if possible, age and gender, of animals from the stock that is incidentally killed or seriously injured each year during the course of commercial fishing operations, by fishery;
- Recommended regulatory or voluntary measures for the reduction of incidental mortality and serious injury; and
- Recommended dates for achieving the specific objectives of the plan.
Contact
Kristy Long & Melissa Andersen
NMFS Office of Protected Resources
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-713-2322
More Info
- GAO Report on Take Reduction Planning - Improvements Are Needed in the Federal Process Used to Protect Marine Mammals from Commercial Fishing [pdf] (December 2008)
- Development of a Process for the Long-term Monitoring of MMPA Category I and II Commercial Fisheries [pdf] [7.2 MB]
- Take Reduction Team Negotiation Process Evaluation [pdf] [4.9 MB]
- Serious Injury Technical Workshop (2007)
- Serious Injury Workshop Report (1997): Differentiating Serious and Non-Serious Injury of Marine Mammals Taken Incidental to Commercial Fishing Operations [pdf]