FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE June 4, 2009
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
CCA Calls for
Balanced Approach to Red Snapper Crisis
Unprecedented fisheries disaster in South Atlantic needs calculated
response
In late 2006, Congress passed a significantly
strengthened Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Management and Conservation
Act, the overriding piece of legislation that guides federal
fisheries management. Among other progressive provisions, the new
law required managers to end
overfishing by 2010. Only a year later, a stock assessment for South
Atlantic red snapper, the first modern stock assessment ever done on
the species, was released and proclaimed red snapper undergoing
severe overfishing and so grossly overfished that it was instantly a
full-blown crisis discovered right under managers' noses.
Now those two events
are colliding and recreational anglers from North Carolina to
Florida are caught squarely in the middle.
“This is a perfect
storm for fisheries management, and the system is clearly not
designed to handle this type of unforeseen and unforeseeable
situation,” said Richen Brame, Atlantic States Fisheries Director
for Coastal Conservation Association (CCA). “If the science on red
snapper is correct, then managers need to act. However, we believe
that the measures that would be implemented for a stock that had
been willfully mismanaged for 40 years should not be the same as
those implemented for a stock such as this that has been ignored for
40 years and suddenly appears on the radar in a critically depressed
condition.”
As a result, CCA is
calling on the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council to take a
calculated approach to red snapper to mitigate the impact on
recreational angling to the greatest extent possible, including:
·
Further review of the existing science on red snapper
to confirm the status of the stock;
·
Additional research to fill critical gaps in
researchers’ knowledge of the species for management;
·
While complete closure of any fishery should be the
means of a last resort for any species, if upon further review and
research it appears necessary for red snapper, then the fisheries
for all other bottom species should remain open;
·
Additional federal funding for the development of
better release practices to reduce red snapper release mortality;
·
When the stock is recovered, it should be managed as a
purely recreational fishery;
·
Any proposal to close all bottom fishing will be
opposed by CCA unless all other options have been thoroughly
exhausted and such closures comply with specific criteria outlined
in the Magnuson-Stevens Act, including timelines for reopening,
periodic research and assessment requirements, and minimum size
designations that are no larger than that needed to achieve the
rebuilding objectives for red snapper.
“We need a scalpel,
not a sledge hammer to manage this species. Massive bottom closures
just do not fit the unique circumstances of this extraordinary
case,” said Brame. “Anglers are willing to do their part and accept
extensive regulations to keep marine resources healthy whenever
necessary, but any proposals to close all bottom fishing should be
the management tool of absolute last resort.”
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CCA is the largest marine resource
conservation group of its kind in the nation. With almost 100,000
members in 17 state chapters along all three coasts, CCA has been
active in state, national and international fisheries management
issues since 1977. Visit
www.JoinCCA.org for more information.