Author Topic: Weakfish Management Information  (Read 4545 times)

Offline The Broken One

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Weakfish Management Information
« on: August 21, 2009, 07:04:13 PM »
The following is a news release from the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission:

Weakfish Biomass at All-Time Low
ASMFC Weakfish Board Initiates Addendum to Address Stock Decline

In its report to the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission's Weakfish Management Board, an independent panel of scientists endorsed the 2009 weakfish stock assessment for management use. The Review Panel confirmed that stocks are at an all time low and current fishery removals are unsustainable under existing stock conditions. It agreed with the stock assessment's conclusions that weakfish abundance has declined markedly, total mortality is high, non-fishing mortality has recently increased, and the stock is currently in a depleted state. Given these findings, the Board initiated the development of Draft Addendum IV which will propose a range of options to reduce fishing mortality, including complete harvest moratoria and limited bycatch only fisheries.

"While the Board has been aware of the decline in weakfish landings over the past ten years, conflicting signals in the stock assessment models employed in the past confounded decision making.  This peer review panel found the methodology acceptable and agreed that the stock is in dire condition," stated Board Chair Roy Miller. "Given the condition of the stock, the Board has decided to accelerate its management process and prepare a draft addendum for public comment in early fall. Upon considering public comment and final action on the addendum, the Board will have the option to implement the addendum's measures through emergency action this November."

The weakfish stock is depleted at an all-time low of 2.9 million pounds (1,333 metric tons), far below the proposed biomass threshold of 22.4 million pounds (10,179 metric tons). At this stock size, recent fishery removals (landings and dead discards combined), estimated at 1.9 and 1.8 million pounds in 2007 and 2008, respectively, represent a significant proportion of the remaining biomass. While the decline in the stock primarily results from a change in the natural mortality of weakfish in recent years, it is further exacerbated by continued removals by the commercial and recreational fisheries.

Natural mortality has risen substantially since 1995, with factors such as predation, competition, and changes in the environment having a stronger influence on recent weakfish stock dynamics than fishing mortality. Given current high natural mortality levels, stock projections indicate that the stock is unlikely to recover rapidly, even under a harvest moratorium. In order to rebuild the stock, total mortality will need to be reduced, although this is unlikely to occur until natural mortality decreases to
previous levels. On a positive note, juvenile abundance surveys indicate that young-of-the-year weakfish continued to be present in numbers similar to previous years, suggesting that recruitment at this point has not been severely limited in spite of low stock size.

The Board has placed the Draft Addendum on a faster timeline than standard addenda. Staff and the Plan Development Team will prepare a draft for Board review and consideration in mid-September. If approved, the draft will then be made available for public review and comment. It is anticipated that the majority of states will be conducting public hearings of Draft Addendum IV in October; a press release will be issued on those hearings once the information is available. The Board will meet again in November to consider public comment and take final action on the Draft
Addendum. Under Commission procedures, the Board may opt to implement the Addendum under emergency action, with approved measures taking effect  immediately upon Board action.

For more information, please contact Nichola Meserve, Fishery Management Plan Coordinator, at (202)289-6400 or <nmeserve@asmfc.org>.
 slt
"When the game is over, the kings and the pawns go back in the same box"


Offline PeggyLee

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #1 on: August 21, 2009, 07:14:25 PM »
Tom, Is this information and statistics accurate or do we get rammed again. What do you think?
Stay well.AJ.


Offline Pfishingruven

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #2 on: August 21, 2009, 09:18:06 PM »
I think this is very accurate!  I think the natural mortality is the main cause, over being over fished or fishing mortality.  Of course, the gill netters haven't helped at all either.  I used to be able to catch 20+ weakfish a day/night as a teen in late August in the Toms River.  Then hit get them big out of the surf.  Haven't had more than 3 weakfish in the last 2 years and none out of the surf.  What is worse, I haven't heard of that many catches of them from others, either.  I guess if they had a moratorium on them, it wouldn't affect people too much since we are just not catching them anyway.  Plus, it would close the commercial season as well and maybe rebuild the stocks for all interested.

 TT^

Offline captainbailey

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #3 on: August 22, 2009, 07:32:39 AM »
An old salt once told me that weakfish show up in a 7 year cycle. Didn't make much sense at the time, but 12 years later I've come to realize he might not of been that drunk chrz
Z


Offline Pfishingruven

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #4 on: August 23, 2009, 01:30:39 PM »
That might be true,and I hope so, but I used to catch them daily from 1993-2000 every night off a dock in the middle to late August.  We would catch 20+ fish a night per person.  Mostly spikes, but catching at that.  Then in September and October we would hit the bigger ones in the Inlet and in the surf.

Tried last year, several times, same area, not one bite.  Not one weakfish for me in the surf.  I haven't gone this year yet to target them and I am not sure it is worth it.

If they are saying the biggest problem in natural mortality, they need to figure out why before the fish can rebuild.
 
 TT^

Offline Bucktail

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #5 on: August 23, 2009, 01:32:39 PM »
Ummm...  Too many stripers eating them? 5hrug

Offline CapBob

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #6 on: August 23, 2009, 04:43:32 PM »
As brought up by Captain Bailey, yes fish do have cycles........I have my 2 Great Uncles and my Dads log books from the 30's to the 1970's and you can clearly see the cucle of each species.

Additionally you have 2 Preditors that are on the top of their cycle Stripers and Blues, so naturally another species will be going down as these fish forage.



Offline Pfishingruven

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Re: Weakfish Management Information
« Reply #7 on: August 23, 2009, 07:14:49 PM »
That would be something.  An abundance of stripers eating the weakfish.  I guess we can't have our cake and eat it too.

 5hrug

 

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