There was a reason the season was closed and if they were so worried about a depletion of the fishery, then even a Federal study wouldn't be exempt. This just proves to me that the Fluke Fishery is doing well and the Feds and Regs are completely messed up!
As was said, if the fluke industry was in such dire straits that the had to put the hammer down on the catch, why is it ok for those who pay for a 'research study' to catch fish?
BTW,Why does pig crap stink?
I also understand that the fluke fishery is not in bad condition, but that this is the last leg of rebuilding the fishery and keeping it built up! However, if the fishery was so good, there wouldn't be a need for the SSFFF and all of the hard work you are doing.
Another question...Will the Federal Saltwater Fishery Registry have any effect on the research? If I am not mistaken, that is the 'reason' for the registry, to gather information from the people who actually fish the saltwater.If so, will the RSA program still be a necessity and to what extent?
For the last 28 years, NOAA’s Fisheries Service has conducted recreational fishingsurveys through random telephone interviews with residents living in coastal counties. NOAAand its regional and state partners conduct an extensive program of dockside interviews ofanglers to obtain data on their catch.The national saltwater registry will enable surveyors to interview only those people whofish, and will reach all anglers, not only those who live near the coast.
My biggest question is, Will any of this REALLY help the fishery or will it just add another bureaucratic level to the regs? That is yet to be seen...Hopefully, it will all work out for the benefit of the angler and the fishery.
So Capt Tb.. If the fishery is that could why did we have to loose a week and give up 2 fish??
I understand some of this.. but its pretty fustrating for to tell clients to release short fish while a dragger kills more in bycatch and has a shorter size limit??Something just don't make sense.
Quote from: Capt. Joe G on June 19, 2009, 10:36:33 AMShort answer I already gave: If you caught more fish in 2008 than your are allocated in 2009, keeping the same regs will not restrict you to the 2009 landings any better than they did the year before. Regardless of the health of the fishery, be it rebuilt or failing or anything in between, the regs have NOTHING to do with the health of the stock other than this: The QUOTA is what is supposed to help the stock, by restricting catch to a sustainable level. The regs are designed to keep you within that quota, so that is the only thing they have to do with the stock health. They are a means to keep your landings at a certain level, period.If you catch 1000 fish in 2008, and you were only allocated 800, you caught too many. If in 2009 the quota allows you to catch 100 fish, things can stay the same. If the quota for 2009 only allows 900 fish and you caught 1000 in 2008, you will still have to restrict your landings further. Yes, the stock grew and so did the quota, but not enough to match your landings from the previous year.That is exactly what happened this past year. The quota for 2009 went up 3 million pounds from the year before. However, certain states (NY and NJ two of them) supposedly caught more fish in 2008 than allocated for 2009, hence the further tightening of our regs.This is where I have a big problem with the Quota and Regs. How do they determine and sample the amount of fish caught? Right now, it is basically a guestimate, of which they don't ever seem to get right. I certainly understand there is no good way and it is virtually impossible to get real time numbers of catches. It has to be a statistical or educated guess. However, whom ever is their actuary or statistician, obviously does not know how to do their job too well. It seems as though, they can't even add 1+1=2.I am still perplexed at how NJ went over the Recreational Quota in 2008. It was my first year back in almost 10 years saltwater fishing and I have never seen such poor fluke catching and keeping from the beach/shore as I had last year. It was extremely surprising for me. 10 years ago, every trip, I managed a keeper for a nice dinner...last year, I didn't take 1 fish! Not 1 keeper fluke for me all year. So, I certainly did not add to that quota!
Short answer I already gave: If you caught more fish in 2008 than your are allocated in 2009, keeping the same regs will not restrict you to the 2009 landings any better than they did the year before. Regardless of the health of the fishery, be it rebuilt or failing or anything in between, the regs have NOTHING to do with the health of the stock other than this: The QUOTA is what is supposed to help the stock, by restricting catch to a sustainable level. The regs are designed to keep you within that quota, so that is the only thing they have to do with the stock health. They are a means to keep your landings at a certain level, period.If you catch 1000 fish in 2008, and you were only allocated 800, you caught too many. If in 2009 the quota allows you to catch 100 fish, things can stay the same. If the quota for 2009 only allows 900 fish and you caught 1000 in 2008, you will still have to restrict your landings further. Yes, the stock grew and so did the quota, but not enough to match your landings from the previous year.That is exactly what happened this past year. The quota for 2009 went up 3 million pounds from the year before. However, certain states (NY and NJ two of them) supposedly caught more fish in 2008 than allocated for 2009, hence the further tightening of our regs.
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