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Old 02-05-2010, 04:13 PM   #1
MakoMike
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ASMFC Striped bass board winter meeting minutes

ATLANTIC STRIPED BASS MANAGEMENT BOARD (February 2, 2010)
Meeting Summary
The Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board met to elect a Board vice-chair; review a report
from the Technical Committee, including presentations from three guest speakers on
mycobacteriosis; review the status of the 2010 Cooperative Winter Tagging Cruise; and discuss
the coastal commercial quotas for striped bass.
The Technical Committee (TC) Report responded to five tasks from the Management Board
regarding the juvenile abundance index (JAI) trigger, implications of mycobacteriosis on the
stock, implications of overestimating recreational catch on stock assessment results, the
availability and use of poaching estimates in stock assessment, and evidence for an offshore shift
in stock distribution. The TC Report is available on the Commission’s website
(http://www.asmfc.org/strippedBassMM.htm); only partial details are included here.
The TC reported that it did not recommend using an abbreviated time series when evaluating the
JAI trigger, and, as per a proposed work plan, will complete a more thorough review of each JAI
and the definition of recruitment failure for the Management Board in May. Discussion and
action in response to the TC’s recommendation regarding a potential recreational catch
9
overestimation was referred to the ISFMP Policy Board because of multispecies implications.
Based on the reported lack of adequate poaching estimates for inclusion in stock assessments, a
subcommittee of law enforcement and TC representatives was tasked with designing study
methods capable of producing assessment-grade poaching estimates. The Management Board
also recommended that the ISFMP Policy Board consider sending letters to the National Marine
Fisheries Service and the United States Coast Guard requesting greater fines and permit
sanctions for vessels that illegally harvest striped bass in federal waters.
The 2010 Cooperative Winter Tagging Cruise has been delayed due to vessel repairs and funding
complications. The issue of securing long-term funding was referred to the ISFMP Policy Board
because, in addition to tagging striped bass, the cruise collects important biological data on
multiple Commission-managed species.
The discussion of coastal commercial quotas resulted in a motion to initiate an addendum to
increase the coastal commercial quotas for striped bass; the motion passed. A draft addendum
will be prepared for the Board’s meeting in May. Before considering action to approve the draft
addendum for public comment, the Board will first hear the report from the TC on JAIs. For
more information, please contact Nichola Meserve, Fishery Management Plan Coordinator, at
(202) 289-6400 or nmeserve@asmfc.org.
Motions
Move to nominate Tom O’Connell as Vice-Chair of the Striped Bass Management Board.
Motion made by Mr. Goldsborough and seconded by Mr. Augustine. Motion passes by consent.
Move to initiate an addendum to increase the coastwide commercial quota.
Motion made by Mr. Augustine and seconded by Mr. Johnson. Motion carries (Roll Call Vote: In
favor – NY, DE, MD, PRFC, VA, NC, USFWS, NMFS; Opposed – ME, NH, MA, RI, CT, NJ,
PA; Abstention – DC).

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Old 02-05-2010, 06:25 PM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MakoMike View Post
ATLANTIC STRIPED BASS MANAGEMENT BOARD (February 2, 2010)
Meeting Summary
The Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board met to elect a Board vice-chair; review a report from the Technical Committee, including presentations from three guest speakers on mycobacteriosis; review the status of the 2010 Cooperative Winter Tagging Cruise; and discuss the coastal commercial quotas for striped bass.
Translation: Recognizing mycobacteriosis and seeing presentations - Good (start anyway) but discuss the coastal commercial quotas for striped bass - bad.

Quote:
The Technical Committee (TC) Report responded to five tasks from the Management Board regarding the juvenile abundance index (JAI) trigger, implications of mycobacteriosis on the stock, implications of overestimating recreational catch on stock assessment results, the availability and use of poaching estimates in stock assessment, and evidence for an offshore shift in stock distribution. The TC Report is available on the Commission’s website (http://www.asmfc.org/strippedBassMM.htm ) only partial details are included here.
Quote:
The TC reported that it did not recommend using an abbreviated time series when evaluating the JAI trigger, and, as per a proposed work plan, will complete a more thorough review of each JAI and the definition of recruitment failure for the Management Board in May. Discussion and action in response to the TC’s recommendation regarding a potential recreational catch
overestimation was referred to the ISFMP Policy Board because of multispecies implications.

Based on the reported lack of adequate poaching estimates for inclusion in stock assessments, a subcommittee of law enforcement and TC representatives was tasked with designing study methods capable of producing assessment-grade poaching estimates. The Management Board also recommended that the ISFMP Policy Board consider sending letters to the National Marine
Fisheries Service and the United States Coast Guard requesting greater fines and permit sanctions for vessels that illegally harvest striped bass in federal waters.
Still reading the novel HERE: http://striped-bass.com/striper-fish...SBtcReport.pdf

Quote:
The 2010 Cooperative Winter Tagging Cruise has been delayed due to vessel repairs and funding complications. The issue of securing long-term funding was referred to the ISFMP Policy Board because, in addition to tagging striped bass, the cruise collects important biological data on multiple Commission-managed species.

The discussion of coastal commercial quotas resulted in a motion to initiate an addendum to increase the coastal commercial quotas for striped bass; the motion passed. A draft addendum will be prepared for the Board’s meeting in May. Before considering action to approve the draft addendum for public comment, the Board will first hear the report from the TC on JAIs. For more information, please contact Nichola Meserve, Fishery Management Plan Coordinator, at (202) 289-6400 or nmeserve@asmfc.org.
Quote:
Motions
Move to nominate Tom O’Connell as Vice-Chair of the Striped Bass Management Board.

Motion made by Mr. Goldsborough and seconded by Mr. Augustine. Motion passes by consent.
Quote:
Move to initiate an addendum to increase the coastwide commercial quota.

Motion made by Mr. Augustine and seconded by Mr. Johnson. Motion carries (Roll Call Vote: In favor – NY, DE, MD, PRFC, VA, NC, USFWS, NMFS; Opposed – ME, NH, MA, RI, CT, NJ, PA; Abstention – DC).

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Old 02-05-2010, 06:32 PM   #3
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Thanks for posting this. Been watching the web site for the results of the meetinf. Last year predicted that as soon as Maryland got over their poaching guilt this would pass.

what a difference a year makes 2009 vote
Move to initiate an addendum including options to increase the coastal commercial quotas by 10, 15, 20 and
25% and adopt a 50% underage rollover.
Motion made by Mr. Johnson, second by Mr. Calomo. Motion fails by roll call vote (In favor: MA, NY, DE, DC,
PRFC, VA, and NC; Opposed: ME, NH, RI, CT, NJ, PA, and MD; Abstention: NMFS; absent: USFWS).
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Old 02-06-2010, 12:11 AM   #4
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A bunch of crap, if you ask me. I'm glad that I am young because there's another moratorium on the way. ASMFC is completely inept and the associations (some of which are present here) that state we should support them are only expediting the destruction.

Hope everyone enjoys catching bluefish. What a joke.
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Old 02-06-2010, 08:42 AM   #5
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Sell your high end equipment. Soon, you won't be needing it.
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Old 02-06-2010, 10:31 AM   #6
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Here is your hard science

Check out pages 4 and 5 of attachment 2
Notice a trend ?

Think I better clean up the Big Berthas.

We may have some down time in the near future.

May fortune favor the foolish....
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Old 02-06-2010, 10:34 AM   #7
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Told you so
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Old 02-06-2010, 10:39 AM   #8
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Interesting plot on next to last page of report. SB tagged on Stellwagen show up along the coast (anyone surprised).
Attached Files
File Type: pdf tag.pdf (104.7 KB, 23 views)

Given the diversity of the human species, there is no “normal” human genome sequence. We are all mutants.
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Old 02-06-2010, 10:56 AM   #9
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Quote:
Check out pages 4 and 5 of attachment 2
Notice a trend ?
apropos for above quote-
http://www.asmfc.org/speciesDocument...ndings2010.pdf

also an argument from same document (Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board)
http://striped-bass.com/striper-fish...SBtcReport.pdf

Attachment 3, Figures 3, 4
(female spawning stock biomass)

...above is to keep everything in perspective....
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Old 02-06-2010, 11:07 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PRBuzz View Post
Interesting plot on next to last page of report. SB tagged on Stellwagen show up along the coast (anyone surprised).

Saw that, very interesting. Notice in the prior survey, tagging location was different. It would take many tagging / receiving / surveys to get a better picture but that data would be insightful.

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Old 02-06-2010, 11:21 AM   #11
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Buyin a sailboat nothin else to do on the water soon
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Old 02-06-2010, 11:31 AM   #12
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Buyin a sailboat nothin else to do on the water soon
C'mon..... You really think that the fishing is that bad??????
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Old 02-06-2010, 11:33 AM   #13
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remember 81'?

Yep, it's gonna get there
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Old 02-06-2010, 12:28 PM   #14
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C'mon..... You really think that the fishing is that bad??????
Can we afford not to be proactive and err on the side of caution?

I'm not one of the people that wants to go Gamefish and eliminate all commercial fishing for stripers. Anecdotal observations of the past few years and conversations of this winter has done nothing to increase my support for comm bass fishing. And the way things are going and have the potential to go, you will see fewer people not against shutting down commercial fishing and lot more for shutting it down. This is reaching a tipping point on both quality of the stocks AND public perception on the merits of comm bass fishing.

ASMFC keeps pushing to open more pounds and areas and less conservation then it may all crash.

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Old 02-06-2010, 12:32 PM   #15
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What do you think would happen if there were no rules changes but the rules on the books were enforced (east coast-wide not selective)!

Given the diversity of the human species, there is no “normal” human genome sequence. We are all mutants.
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Old 02-06-2010, 12:54 PM   #16
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I must be stupid,
If some charts show the 8 yr old biomass declining.
And some charts show total biomass climbing.
Does that imply more small fish and less bigger fish ?

May fortune favor the foolish....
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Old 02-06-2010, 12:56 PM   #17
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well we'd all have to pay more fees to pay for the enforcement
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Old 02-06-2010, 12:57 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by striperman36 View Post
well we'd all have to pay more fees to pay for the enforcement
Isn't everyone going to have to pay this/next year for a saltwater fishing license! What an excellent way to use the funds, increased enforcement.

Given the diversity of the human species, there is no “normal” human genome sequence. We are all mutants.
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Old 02-06-2010, 01:22 PM   #19
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Isn't everyone going to have to pay this/next year for a saltwater fishing license! What an excellent way to use the funds, increased enforcement.
No they are using the funds to build the national database. I am waiting for the rfi to come out and I am going to bid on it.
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Old 02-06-2010, 02:09 PM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by striperman36 View Post
well we'd all have to pay more fees to pay for the enforcement
If they enforced properly, I'm willing to bet they'd make more than enough dishing out fines.

Just think about the increased vigilance in dishing out moving violations by police departments as funding has declined.

If as many people are breaking the law as is laymen observations report, then they should have no problem turning a profit through the fines.
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Old 02-06-2010, 02:46 PM   #21
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Did anyone notice that the ASMFC is asking the feds to increase the fines for fishing in the EEZ?

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Old 02-06-2010, 02:49 PM   #22
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Quote:
I must be stupid,
If some charts show the 8 yr old biomass declining.
And some charts show total biomass climbing.
Does that imply more small fish and less bigger fish ?
My interpertation is that the larger fish biomass is steady (in fact it has shown a tendency to increase); that is mostly due to the huge spawning classes (1993-2005 Attachment 1)...those fish have been growing (and caught), but there were such huge spawns those years that they created a very large pool of fish...thats why the F index is still high; remember that the YOY was started in 1950 (started tracking in 57), and has shown up and downs (as most life cycles do). I think the SUPPOSED shortage of small fish (I haven't seen it in my time on the water-which is often) may be caused by the increase in rec targeting, and the increased commercial quota to net fishery in the Chesapeake (DE, MD, PRFC, VA, NC) several years back. I think that because the spawning biomass is so large, the F index is above what ASMFC considers proper to sustain the viability of the species....it is a very hard thesis for a layman (that's me) to follow, a lot of these scientists working for ASMFC have dedicated their professional careers to study the fishery. For me, I have to place my trust in something, and my 40 years on the water has shown that the fishery is a lot better than in the late 70's...(though I still caught then)....so I have faith in their postulations.....
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Old 02-06-2010, 03:38 PM   #23
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Be nice to get some of these scientist around a bonfire with scotch and cigars.
Pick their brains a little and clear up the fog of stats.

May fortune favor the foolish....
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Old 02-06-2010, 05:29 PM   #24
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WOW! Ypu guys have no idea what you are reading! That is sure true in this case...I hope you all quit fishing because then I will have alot more spots to myself...page 4 and 5 says nothing of a stock collapse, it merely discusses the effect that said Myco might have on the fish and if you look its all the same all the way back to 99...meaning it reall hasn't effected anything because we had an explosion of 2001 2002 yoy creating a huge 8 year old year class that is dying soon of old age...the affected fish have always been effected...secondly I love the anti commercial sentiment again...if you read the numbers of fish caught recreationally it is actually up! So where is this 1/3 of what the catch was? and the commercial fishery is the same! LOL wow funny how some of you can actually read something that is not even there!
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Old 02-06-2010, 05:46 PM   #25
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jmac View Post
apropos for above quote-
http://www.asmfc.org/speciesDocument...ndings2010.pdf

also an argument from same document (Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board)
http://striped-bass.com/striper-fish...SBtcReport.pdf

Attachment 3, Figures 3, 4
(female spawning stock biomass)

...above is to keep everything in perspective....

And here is a little perspective for you since you are so fond of throwing that bogus recreational/commercial curve at us again and again.

"......... Since MRFSS recreational landings of striped bass are likely
overestimated by 45% to 70% after 1999, the current (2008) coast-wide commercial
landings composition would have increased from 31% under the original MRFSS landing
to 52% under the scenario 1 bias correction, and further to 59% following bias correction
under scenario 2. "


Am I reading it wrong or does that say the commercial catch is actually more like 52-59% of coastwide striped bass landing (excluding poaching of course since as they are quick to point out..."There is no requirement for estimating poaching
as part of the management program.") ? Add poaching in and what does that do to the numbers? Of course the ASMFC board chooses not to see things that way. The garbage numbers are obviously more suitable to their (and your) agenda.
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Old 02-06-2010, 06:28 PM   #26
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Quote:
The garbage numbers are obviously more suitable to their (and your) agenda.
My agenda???..."throwing at you again and again"....

It's pretty obvious what your's is...ATTACK everybody who tries to offer a different point of view then yours....

...As I said, I am a layman when it comes to the science (referring to what you posted, as in the document cited)...I know what I see on the water (as I stated)...
Also, in reference to your claim about 52-59% commercial catch (thats diffirent then reports I've seen...)....I think I offered up what was an increase in COMMERCIAL NETTING IN CHESAPEAKE .....it happened several years ago....MA and RI quotas have been static....

........people like you are impossible to reason with....thats why we have both sides fighting each other.......bye
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Old 02-06-2010, 07:38 PM   #27
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Mid-Atlantic Winter Fishery = death

Click on the hooks to see pics.
Not many small fish. Lots look to be full of roe.

http://www.virginiafishing.com/FISHI...yindexlist.htm
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Old 02-06-2010, 07:41 PM   #28
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8 year old fish are dying of old age.
Guess I really don't know what I'm reading.
I assumed the base line was actual data, my bad. I 'm just a dumb electrical contractor not a scientist.
According to the Virginia Institute of Marine Science the bass is a long lived fish that can reach 30 yrs of age.
But they are not as smart as most of us.

May fortune favor the foolish....
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Old 02-06-2010, 08:56 PM   #29
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sashamy View Post
WOW! Ypu guys have no idea what you are reading! That is sure true in this case...I hope you all quit fishing because then I will have alot more spots to myself...page 4 and 5 says nothing of a stock collapse, it merely discusses the effect that said Myco might have on the fish and if you look its all the same all the way back to 99...meaning it reall hasn't effected anything because we had an explosion of 2001 2002 yoy creating a huge 8 year old year class that is dying soon of old age...the affected fish have always been effected...secondly I love the anti commercial sentiment again...if you read the numbers of fish caught recreationally it is actually up! So where is this 1/3 of what the catch was? and the commercial fishery is the same! LOL wow funny how some of you can actually read something that is not even there!
8 year old fish dying of old age? Do you have any data that supports that? And I was always told that 8 year old bass are basically teenagers.
From the NOAA website:
Quote:
# Growth rate: Growth rates are variable, depending on a combination of season, location, age, sex, and competition. Growth is more rapid during the second and third years of life, before striped bass reach sexual maturity, than during later years. After age 4, growth may be 2.5 to 3 inches a year until age 8. Starting at age 4, females grow faster than males. Growth occurs between April and October.
# Maximum size: Striped bass generally grow to lengths of up to 59 inches and weights of 55 to 77 pounds. The largest striped bass on record is a 125-pound female caught off North Carolina in 1891.
By your "facts", stripers should only get to a maximum size of about 24".
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Old 02-06-2010, 10:57 PM   #30
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OK so which of you canal guys caught the 2 missing stripers: 9 detected on the E end and only 7 made it to the W end!
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Given the diversity of the human species, there is no “normal” human genome sequence. We are all mutants.
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