Gulf
Council convenes March 20-23 in Alabama
CCA insists Council take on Gulf shrimp trawl
bycatch
HOUSTON, TX
– Coastal Conservation Association is insisting that the Gulf of
Mexico Fishery Management Council take action at its meeting next week
to rein in shrimp trawl bycatch to avoid needlessly penalizing
recreational anglers with lower red snapper catch limits.
“Shrimp trawl bycatch
is far and away the single largest source of mortality for juvenile
red snapper in the Gulf of Mexico, and until that is properly
addressed this species will continue to be at risk,” said David
Cummins, CCA president. “That end of the equation must be answered
first.”
Convinced that
meaningful measures to recover red snapper are dependent on
significant reduction in shrimp trawl bycatch, CCA filed a lawsuit
last summer over Amendment 22 to the Reef Fish Management Plan, also
known as the Red Snapper Rebuilding Plan. CCA is seeking to achieve
significant shrimp trawl bycatch reduction on the order of 60-80
percent through measures such as bycatch quotas, areas closed to
shrimping, seasonal shrimping closures and meaningful reduction in
shrimping effort.
“The future of red
snapper is tied directly to reducing shrimp trawl bycatch. More than
80 percent of juvenile red snapper mortality is due to bycatch,” said
Pat Murray, CCA Director of Conservation. “The directed fishery has
stayed within its quotas and done everything the Council has asked us
to do in the past, while the shrimp industry continues to decimate red
snapper stocks. Penalizing recreational anglers again by lowering our
catch limits is pointless. It is not logical for the Council to set
total allowable catch (TAC) limits before factoring in meaningful
bycatch reduction for the shrimp fleet.”
“The red snapper of
the Gulf are an incredible resource,” said Dr. Russell Nelson, CCA
Gulf Fisheries consultant. “Potentially, if a full recovery could be
achieved, we might someday see TACs of 25 million pounds a year. But
we must use every asset at our disposal to assure that NMFS and the
Council are required to address shrimp bycatch effectively before
further limiting our fishing for red snapper.”
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