FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
July 22, 2003
CONTACT: Ted Venker
1-800-201-3474
Coastal Conservation Association Applauds Council’s
Decision
To Stop Arbitrary No-Fishing Zones
Naples, FL –
Coastal Conservation Association (CCA) applauds a precedent-setting
decision by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (GMFMC) to
deny the creation of two arbitrary no-fishing zones in the Gulf of
Mexico. The resolution allows recreational anglers to continue to troll
for coastal pelagic species on the surface while restricting
bottom fishing for stressed gag grouper
stocks in the Madison-Swanson and Steamboat Lumps areas, off the Florida
coast.
“We are very pleased that the Council based
its decision on the science,” said Fred Miller, chairman of CCA’s
National Government Relations Committee. “This is the conservation
measure we had in mind when CCA first offered its support of closed
areas for gag grouper stocks in 1999. The process was much more
difficult than it needed to be, but the Council did the right thing. The
end result is sound management of the resource based on science, without
an arbitrary closure to trolling.”
In 1999, it was determined that the
Madison-Swanson and Steamboat Lumps areas are home to significant
spawning aggregations of gag grouper. CCA supported the initial proposal
to close the areas to all bottom fishing to recover those stocks.
However, when the proposal expanded to include banning all fishing in
the two areas, CCA filed suit in federal district court, arguing that
preventing fishing for unrelated and healthy fish stocks in the mid- to
upper-levels of the water column was unnecessary to conserve gag grouper
residing on the bottom, 200 to 400 feet below the surface.
In a settlement
agreement between CCA and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)
reached in 2001, NMFS agreed not to ban trolling for coastal pelagics in
the closed areas until research could determine if it was possible for
recreational fishermen trolling on the surface for mackerel, wahoo and
other species to catch gag grouper. The research, conducted by NMFS in
June 2003, clearly demonstrated that it is virtually impossible to do
so, providing the scientific basis for the Council to deny the
implementation of the blanket no-fishing zones.
“We have contended all
along that surface trolling in the reserves would not impact spawning
gag grouper,” said Alex Jernigan, chairman of CCA’s Gulf of Mexico
Fishery Committee. “This decision is a good compromise and it shows that
the Council is adhering to the original intention to create the reserves
for gag grouper while allowing non-harmful recreational trolling."
The Council’s decision
will maintain a total ban on bottom fishing
in the two areas, allow surface trolling from May to November and close
the areas to all fishing during the winter months when gag grouper
gather there to spawn. The Council also adopted CCA’s recommendation to
provide an additional conservation measure by prohibiting the possession
of any reef fish while in the Madison-Swanson and Steamboat Lumps areas.
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CCA opposes regulations
that prohibit recreational fishing access unless it can be
scientifically determined that recreational fishermen are the cause of a
specific conservation problem and traditional conservation measures are
inadequate.