80_FR_73354 80 FR 73128 - Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Smoothhound Shark and Atlantic Shark Management Measures

80 FR 73128 - Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Smoothhound Shark and Atlantic Shark Management Measures

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 226 (November 24, 2015)

Page Range73128-73146
FR Document2015-29516

This final rule implements Amendment 9 to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory Species (HMS) Fishery Management Plan (FMP) (Amendment 9) to bring smoothhound sharks under Federal management and establishes an effective date for previously-adopted shark management measures finalized in Amendment 3 to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP (Amendment 3) and the 2011 Final Rule to Modify the Retention of Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory Species in Atlantic Trawl Fisheries (August 10, 2011) (2011 HMS Trawl Rule). Specifically, this final rule establishes Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regional smoothhound shark annual commercial quotas based on recent stock assessments; implements the shark gillnet requirements of the 2012 Shark and Smoothhound Biological Opinion (BiOp); and modifies current regulations related to the use of vessel monitoring systems (VMS) by Atlantic shark fishermen using gillnet gear. The term ``smoothhound sharks'' collectively refers to smooth dogfish (Mustelus canis), Florida smoothhound (M. norrisi), Gulf smoothhound (M. sinusmexicanus), small eye smoothhound (M. higmani), and any other Mustelus spp. that might be found in U.S. waters of the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean, collectively. This rule also implements the smooth dogfish specific provisions in the Shark Conservation Act of 2010 (SCA). The SCA requires that all sharks landed from Federal waters in the United States be landed with their fins naturally attached to the carcass, but includes a limited exception for smooth dogfish. For the Federal Atlantic shark fisheries, current HMS regulations require federally-permitted shark fishermen to land all sharks with fins naturally attached to the carcass. The SCA's fins-attached requirement is being addressed nationwide through a separate ongoing rulemaking. This final rule only addresses the provision contained in the SCA that allows at-sea fin removal of Atlantic smooth dogfish. Additionally, NMFS will hold an operator-assisted, public conference call and webinar on December 15, 2015, to discuss the methodology used to calculate the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico smoothhound shark quotas (see ADDRESSES).

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 226 (Tuesday, November 24, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 226 (Tuesday, November 24, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 73128-73146]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-29516]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 635

[Docket No. 110819516-5913-02]
RIN 0648-BB02


Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Smoothhound Shark and Atlantic 
Shark Management Measures

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Final rule; fishery notification.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: This final rule implements Amendment 9 to the 2006 
Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory Species (HMS) Fishery Management 
Plan (FMP) (Amendment 9) to bring smoothhound sharks under Federal 
management and establishes an effective date for previously-adopted 
shark management measures finalized in Amendment 3 to the 2006 
Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP (Amendment 3) and the 2011 Final Rule to 
Modify the Retention of Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory Species in 
Atlantic Trawl Fisheries (August 10, 2011) (2011 HMS Trawl Rule). 
Specifically, this final rule establishes Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico 
regional smoothhound shark annual commercial quotas based on recent 
stock assessments; implements the shark gillnet requirements of the 
2012 Shark and Smoothhound Biological Opinion (BiOp); and modifies 
current regulations related to the use of vessel monitoring systems 
(VMS) by Atlantic shark fishermen using gillnet gear. The term 
``smoothhound sharks'' collectively refers to smooth dogfish (Mustelus 
canis), Florida smoothhound (M. norrisi), Gulf smoothhound (M. 
sinusmexicanus), small eye smoothhound (M. higmani), and any other 
Mustelus spp. that might be found in U.S. waters of the Atlantic, Gulf 
of Mexico, and Caribbean, collectively. This rule also implements the 
smooth dogfish specific provisions in the Shark Conservation Act of 
2010 (SCA). The SCA requires that all sharks landed from Federal waters 
in the United States be landed with their fins naturally attached to 
the carcass, but includes a limited exception for smooth dogfish. For 
the Federal Atlantic shark fisheries, current HMS regulations require 
federally-permitted shark fishermen to land all sharks with fins 
naturally attached to the carcass. The SCA's fins-attached requirement 
is being addressed nationwide through a separate ongoing rulemaking. 
This final rule only addresses the provision contained in the SCA that 
allows at-sea fin removal of Atlantic smooth dogfish.
    Additionally, NMFS will hold an operator-assisted, public 
conference call and webinar on December 15, 2015, to discuss the 
methodology used to calculate the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico 
smoothhound shark quotas (see ADDRESSES).

DATES: Effective March 15, 2016. An operator-assisted, public 
conference call and webinar will be held on December 15, 2015, from 
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., EST.

ADDRESSES: The conference call-in phone number is 1-800-857-9816; 
participant pass code is 9776014. Participants are strongly encouraged 
to log/dial in 15 minutes prior to the meeting. NMFS will show a brief 
presentation via webinar followed by public questions. To join the 
webinar go to: https://noaa-meets.webex.com/noaa-meets/j.php?MTID=m812c15f48b46787ea7475fc010c7099e, enter your name and email 
address, and click the ``JOIN'' button. If requested, the meeting 
number is 991 661 137 and the meeting password is NOAA. Participants 
who have not used WebEx before will be prompted to download and run a 
plug-

[[Page 73129]]

in program that will enable them to view the webinar.
    Copies of Amendment 9, including the Final Environmental Assessment 
(EA) and other relevant documents, are available from the HMS 
Management Division Web site at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/sfa/hms/. 
Copies of the 2015 smoothhound shark stock assessment results are 
available on the Southeast Data Assessment and Review (SEDAR) Web site 
at http://sedarweb.org/sedar-39.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steve Durkee by phone: 202-670-6637 or 
Karyl Brewster-Geisz by phone: 301-427-8503 or by fax: 301-713-1917.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Atlantic sharks are managed under the 
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management 
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), and the authority to promulgate regulations 
under the Magnuson-Stevens Act has been delegated from the Secretary to 
the Assistant Administrator (AA) for Fisheries, NOAA. On October 2, 
2006, NMFS published in the Federal Register (71 FR 58058) final 
regulations, effective November 1, 2006, which detailed management 
measures for Atlantic HMS fisheries, including for the smoothhound 
shark and Atlantic shark fisheries. The implementing regulations for 
the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP and its amendments are at 50 CFR part 
635. This final rule implements the conservation and management 
measures from Amendment 9 in the Atlantic shark and smoothhound shark 
fisheries and the measures in Amendment 3 and 2011 HMS Trawl Rule in 
the Atlantic smoothhound shark fishery.

Background

    A brief summary of the background of this final action is provided 
below. A more detailed history of the development of these regulations 
and the alternatives considered are described in the Final 
Environmental Assessment (EA) for Amendment 9, which can be found 
online on the HMS Web site (see ADDRESSES).
    NMFS published a proposed rule on August 7, 2014 (79 FR 46217), 
outlining the alternatives analyzed in the Draft EA, identifying 
preferred alternatives, and soliciting public comments on the measures, 
which would impact the smoothhound shark and Atlantic shark fisheries. 
Specifically, the proposed rule included the following measures: For 
smooth dogfish only, modifying prohibitions on at-sea fin removal to be 
consistent with the SCA; implementing Term and Condition 4 of the 2012 
Shark BiOp; based on updated catch data, adjusting the smoothhound 
shark quota finalized in Amendment 3; and modifying the VMS 
requirements for shark gillnet vessels. The full description of the 
management and conservation measures considered is included in both the 
Final EA for Amendment 9 and the proposed rule and is not repeated 
here.
    The comment period for the Draft EA and proposed rule for Amendment 
9 ended on November 14, 2014. The comments received, and responses to 
those comments, are summarized below under the heading labeled Response 
to Comments.
    Management measures in Amendment 9 will impact both the smoothhound 
shark and Atlantic shark fisheries. This rule finalizes most of the 
management measures, but modifies others, that were contained in the 
Draft EA and proposed rule for Amendment 9. This section provides a 
summary of the final management measures being implemented by Amendment 
9 and notes changes from the proposed rule to this final rule. Measures 
that are different from the proposed rule, or measures that were 
proposed but not implemented, are described in detail under the heading 
titled Changes from the Proposed Rule.
    This final rule implements the smooth dogfish-specific measures in 
the SCA to establish an allowance for the removal of smooth dogfish 
fins while at sea. To implement the measures, the proposed rule 
considered three categories of requirements--catch composition, state 
permitting, and geographic applicability of the exceptions--and a range 
of alternatives within each category (``sub-alternatives''). Only 
fishermen that meet the requirements under all three of these 
categories and that are, as specified in the Act, fishing within 50 
nautical miles of shore and possess fins in an amount that does not 
exceed 12 percent of the carcass weight, would be authorized to remove 
smooth dogfish fins at sea.
    For catch composition, NMFS preferred in the proposed rule a sub-
alternative that would have required that smooth dogfish make up at 
least 75 percent of the retained catch on board and that no other 
sharks could be retained. For state permitting, the proposed rule 
included a sub-alternative that would have required an individual to 
hold a state commercial fishing permit that allows smooth dogfish 
retention, in addition to a Federal smoothhound permit. With regard to 
geographic applicability, the proposed rule included a sub-alternative 
that would have applied the SCA exception for smooth dogfish along the 
entire Atlantic coast but not to Florida's coast in the Gulf of Mexico. 
During the public comment period, NMFS received support for the two 
proposed sub-alternatives related to state fishing permits and 
geographic applicability of the SCA provisions. However, NMFS received 
many comments opposing the catch composition requirement of 75 percent 
and the ``no other sharks on board'' provision. Commenters expressed 
concern that these requirements do not meet the intent of the statutory 
exception because they do not reflect the mixed nature of catch in the 
smooth dogfish fishery and would render the exception largely 
meaningless. They also stated that the catch composition requirement 
would lead to excessive dead discards and would be burdensome.
    As detailed under the Changes from the Proposed Rule heading, NMFS 
is implementing the two sub-alternatives related to state fishing 
permits and geographic applicability of the exception as originally 
proposed. NMFS is changing the catch composition requirement and will 
require smooth dogfish to make up at least 25 percent of the total 
retained catch in order to remove the fins of smooth dogfish while at 
sea. Additionally, fishermen may retain other sharks on board provided 
that the fins of other shark species remain naturally attached to the 
carcass through offloading. Only fishermen adhering to the measures in 
the three sub-alternatives, as well as fishing within 50 nautical miles 
of shore and possessing fins in an amount that does not exceed 12 
percent of the carcass weight, will be authorized to remove smooth 
dogfish fins at sea.
    This final rule also establishes separate Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico regional smoothhound shark total allowable catches (TACs) and 
commercial quotas based on the results of the 2015 Southeast Data 
Assessment and Review (SEDAR) 39 stock assessments for smoothhound 
sharks. The assessments were finalized and peer reviewed in March 2015. 
On June 29, 2015, NMFS issued a stock status determination notice (80 
FR 36974) that stated that ``[d]ata from tagging and genetic research 
in SEDAR 39 support the existence of two distinct Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico stocks of smooth dogfish separated by peninsular Florida. 
Therefore, smooth dogfish was treated as two separate stocks, one in 
the Atlantic region and one in the Gulf of Mexico region.'' 80 FR 36974 
(June 29, 2015). Each stock had a status of not overfished with no 
overfishing occurring. Based on public comments requesting that 
commercial quotas be based on stock assessments and not

[[Page 73130]]

landings, NMFS is implementing regional smoothhound shark TACs and 
commercial quotas based on SEDAR 39, instead of the proposed, single 
overall quota based on landings data. Specifically, while we proposed 
an overall commercial quota of 1,739.9 mt dw covering both the Atlantic 
and Gulf of Mexico regions (using commercial landings data in the 
absence of a stock assessment), this final rule establishes separate 
regional TACs and commercial quotas within those TACs as follows: An 
Atlantic regional smoothhound shark TAC of 1,430.6 mt dw with a 
commercial quota of 1,201.7 mt dw, and a Gulf of Mexico regional 
smoothhound shark TAC of 509.6 mt dw with a commercial quota of 336.4 
mt dw. Implementing these science-based TACs and commercial quotas will 
ensure continued sustainable harvest of smoothhound sharks in the 
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions and increase the likelihood of 
maintaining healthy smoothhound shark stocks in both regions. 
Additional details are provided below under the heading Changes from 
the Proposed Rule.
    Term and Condition (TC) 4 of the 2012 Shark BiOp addressed soak 
time and net check requirements for gillnet gear. In order to comply 
with TC 4, this final rule modifies the soak time and net check 
requirements based on the type of gillnet gear used in the Atlantic 
shark and smoothhound shark fisheries. NMFS has determined that current 
regulations meet the specifications for other TCs in the 2012 BiOp. 
This final rule will establish a soak time limit of 24 hours for sink 
gillnet gear and a 0.5 to 2 hour net check requirement for drift 
gillnet gear in the Atlantic shark and smoothhound shark fisheries. 
This requirement would not significantly change smoothhound shark 
fishing practices, since most smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen 
primarily use sink gillnet gear and those fishermen already use a soak 
time of 24 hours or less.
    This final rule also modifies current regulations related to the 
use of VMS by federal directed shark permit holders using gillnet gear. 
Before this rule, federal directed shark permit holders with gillnet 
gear on board were required to use VMS regardless of vessel location in 
order to simplify compliance and outreach for fishermen operating 
across multiple regions. This requirement was implemented as part of 
the 2003 Amendment 1 to the 1999 FMP for Atlantic Tunas, Swordfish, and 
Sharks to ensure shark gillnet vessels were complying with the Atlantic 
Large Whale Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP) time/area closures and 
observer requirements (50 CFR 229.32). However, since implementation, 
it has become apparent that while some fishermen do fish in multiple 
regions, many do not fish in or even near the Southeast U.S. Monitoring 
Area. As such, this final rule will require federal directed shark 
permit holders with gillnet gear on board to use VMS only in the 
vicinity of the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area, pursuant to ALWTRP 
requirements. Requirements to minimize large whale interactions would 
not change; rather, only the geographic area of the VMS requirement 
would change, consistent with the ALWTRP.
    This final rule also establishes an effective date for previously-
adopted smoothhound shark management measures in Amendment 3 and the 
2011 HMS Trawl Rule. The final rule implementing conservation and 
management measures in Amendment 3 published on June 1, 2010 (75 FR 
30484) but delayed the effective date of the smoothhound shark 
management measures until approximately 2012 pending approval for the 
data collection measures under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) by the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), to provide time for 
implementation of a permit requirement, to provide time for NMFS to 
complete a Biological Opinion under Section 7 of the Endangered Species 
Act (ESA), and to provide time for affected fishermen to change 
business practices, particularly as it related to keeping shark fins 
attached to the carcass through offloading. OMB approved the PRA data 
collection in May of 2011 and NMFS met informally with smoothhound 
shark fishermen along the east coast in the fall of 2010. In November 
2011, NMFS published a rule (76 FR 70064, November 10, 2011) that 
indefinitely delayed the effective date for all smoothhound shark 
management measures in both Amendment 3 and in another rule, the 2011 
Final Rule to Modify the Retention of Incidentally-Caught Highly 
Migratory Species in Atlantic Trawl Fisheries (76 FR 49368, August 10, 
2011 (2011 HMS Trawl Rule)), to provide time for NMFS to consider the 
smooth dogfish-specific provisions in the SCA and for NMFS to finalize 
a Biological Opinion on the federal actions in Amendment 3, among other 
things. Previously-adopted management measures from Amendment 3 that 
will become effective on January 1, 2016, include: A research set-aside 
quota; an accountability measure (AM), which closes the fishery when 
smoothhound shark landings reach, or are expected to reach, 80 percent 
of the quota; a requirement for a dealer permit to purchase smoothhound 
sharks; a requirement for dealers to report smoothhound shark 
purchases; a smoothhound permit requirement for commercial and 
recreational fishing and retention; a requirement for vessels fishing 
for smoothhound sharks to carry an observer, if selected; a requirement 
for vessels fishing for smoothhound sharks to comply with applicable 
Take Reduction Plans pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act 
(MMPA); and a requirement for commercial vessels to sell catch only to 
Federally-permitted shark dealers. Management measures affecting 
smoothhound sharks in the HMS Trawl Rule will allow retention of 
smoothhound sharks caught incidentally with trawl gear, provided that 
the total smoothhound shark catch on board or offloaded does not exceed 
25 percent of the total catch by weight.
    Finally, this rule makes administrative changes to the observer 
regulations. Currently, the Atlantic shark fishery observer program is 
administered by the Southeast Fisheries Science Center (SEFSC). 
However, a portion of the commercial smoothhound shark fishery occurs 
in the Northeast region in an area typically covered by observer 
programs administered out of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center 
(NEFSC). Since the fishery spans the geographic area of both the NEFSC 
and SEFSC, smoothhound shark observer regulations need to accommodate 
the administrative processes of both programs. The two regional science 
center observer program processes are slightly different. The SEFSC 
process is currently outlined in the 50 CFR part 635 regulations but 
the NEFSC process is not. Thus, this final rule implements changes to 
the observer regulations in 50 CFR part 635 to incorporate the relevant 
portions of the NEFSC observer regulations found at 50 CFR part 648.

Response to Comments

    During the proposed rule stage, NMFS received approximately 500 
written comments from fishermen, States, environmental groups, academia 
and scientists, and other interested parties. NMFS also received 
feedback from the HMS Advisory Panel; constituents who attended the two 
public hearings in October 2014 in Toms River, New Jersey, and Manteo, 
North Carolina; and constituents who attended the conference calls/
webinars held on September 24 and November 4, 2014. Additionally, NMFS 
consulted with the New England, Mid-Atlantic, South Atlantic, Gulf of 
Mexico, and Caribbean Regional Fishery Management Councils, along with 
the Atlantic States and Gulf

[[Page 73131]]

States Marine Fisheries Commissions. A summary of the comments received 
on the proposed rule during the public comment period is provided below 
with NMFS's responses. All written comments submitted during the 
comment period can be found at http://www.regulations.gov by searching 
for NOAA-NMFS-2014-0100.

Implementation of the Smooth-Dogfish Specific Provisions of the Shark 
Conservation Act

    Comment 1: NMFS received comments in support of Alternative A1, 
which would not implement the smooth dogfish-specific measures in the 
Shark Conservation Act of 2010 and would require fins and tails of all 
smooth dogfish to remain naturally attached through offloading. 
Commenters felt that these exceptions to the U.S. ban on at-sea shark 
fin removal would jeopardize our nation's reputation as a shark 
conservation champion, and hurt U.S. arguments in support of Regional 
Fishery Management Organizations' adoption of fins attached 
requirements. Commenters also felt that the fins naturally attached 
method was widely recognized as the best practice for accurate data 
collection and enforcement of finning bans. Commenters felt that 
adopting a fins attached exception for smooth dogfish would undermine 
state bans on finning and would widen loopholes in certain state bans 
on the trade in shark fin products.
    Response: The Shark Conservation Act of 2010, which includes the 
smooth dogfish-specific exception, became Federal law upon Presidential 
signature on January 4, 2011. Thus, NMFS must implement the law in a 
manner that reflects Congressional intent. The Congressional provision 
clearly creates an exception that allows removal of smooth dogfish 
shark fins at sea under certain circumstances and did not leave the 
Agency discretion to forego implementation of the exception.
    Comment 2: NMFS received a comment stating that the 12 percent fin-
to-carcass ratio included in the smooth dogfish-specific provision of 
the SCA was too high and should be lower.
    Response: The 12 percent fin-to-carcass ratio is explicitly 
included in the smooth dogfish-specific provision of the SCA. Thus, 
NMFS must implement the provision as mandated. Nevertheless, some data 
support that a 12 percent fin-to-carcass ratio may be a close 
approximation of the true ratio for smooth dogfish. In the Atlantic 
States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) Shark Board briefing 
materials prepared for a May 21, 2013 meeting, the States of New Jersey 
and New Carolina provided analyses of smooth dogfish fin-to-carcass 
ratios using both landings data and direct measurements of processed 
sharks. Those analyses found a range of fin-to-carcass ratios from 7.5 
percent to 13 percent, depending on the level of processing (e.g. 
whether the belly flaps were removed, whether the tail was retained).
    Comment 3: NMFS received a large volume of comments expressing 
concern that the smooth dogfish-specific provision of the Shark 
Conservation Act allows finning of sharks. These commenters asked NMFS 
not to implement this provision and many of the comments provided 
information about the negative ecological impacts of sharks finning.
    Response: The large volume of comments opposing finning of smooth 
dogfish appears to be based on a misunderstanding on this action. 
Finning, which is the removal of shark fins and disposal of the carcass 
at sea, has been prohibited in Atlantic U.S. shark fisheries since 
1993, and will continue to be prohibited in all Atlantic shark 
fisheries. The exception in the Act allows for the removal of the fins 
at sea rather than requiring the sharks to be landed with their fins 
attached as the Act requires for other shark species. The fins and the 
carcasses still must be landed together.

Sub-Alternatives--Issue 1: Catch Composition

    Comment 4: NMFS received several comments, including from the 
SAFMC, MAFMC, and the States of New Jersey, North Carolina and 
Maryland, opposing the proposed sub-alternative A2-1c that smooth 
dogfish must make up at least 75 percent of the retained catch (no 
other sharks can be retained). Commenters felt that the 75 percent 
catch composition would be difficult to enforce and burdensome for 
fishermen. Some felt that the 75 percent would lead to waste and 
discarding in cases where fishermen found that their catch percentages 
did not qualify them for the at-sea processing allowance. Others 
emphasized that the smoothhound fishery is a mixed fishery, and that 
fishermen needed more flexibility if the SCA exception were to have any 
utility. NMFS also received comments that the 75 percent catch 
composition was inconsistent with ASMFC requirements and that the new 
federal requirements might push fishermen into state waters where there 
are no catch composition requirements. Commenters felt that as a 
consequence, fishermen may avoid obtaining a federal smoothhound shark 
permit, leading to less data for federal mangers. NMFS received support 
from the MAFMC and the state of New Jersey for sub-alternative A2-1b 
that would require smooth dogfish make up at least 25 percent of the 
retained catch. NMFS also received some limited support for the 75 
percent catch composition.
    Response: In the Draft EA and proposed rule, NMFS interpreted the 
phrase ``fishing for smooth dogfish'' to mean fishing with the object 
of commercially harvesting smooth dogfish, but also emphasized that the 
SCA had specified that the exception applies when an individual is 
fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish as opposed to fishing ``for'' other 
species and incidentally catching smooth dogfish or simply stating that 
it applies ``when fishing.'' We then preferred a sub-alternative that 
smoothhound sharks must make up 75 percent of the retained catch on 
board a vessel to constitute a trip fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish and 
stated that this would preclude fishermen on trips for other species 
but who incidentally catch smooth dogfish from removing smooth dogfish 
fins at sea. The catch composition threshold of 75 percent is used in 
other fisheries that interact with HMS (e.g., incidental swordfish 
catch in the squid trawl fishery) to distinguish between directed and 
incidental fisheries and NMFS felt this high level of retention was an 
appropriate way to identify those fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish.
    Based on public comments, however, it has become apparent that the 
75 percent level used in other fisheries is not appropriate in the 
smooth dogfish fishery and does not accurately reflect fishing 
practices in that fishery. To verify the feedback from commenters, NMFS 
reviewed data on the mixed nature of the smoothhound shark fishery and 
how well catch composition reflects the fishery and discovered that, as 
asserted by the commenters, the smooth dogfish fishery is far more 
mixed than NMFS assumed in the proposed rule. As a result, implementing 
a 75 percent catch composition requirement would make the exception 
largely meaningless. Thus, while NMFS' objective for the implementation 
of the smooth dogfish-specific provision of the SCA remains the same as 
described in the Draft EA, and NMFS still needs to give meaning to the 
phrase ``fishing for smooth dogfish'' as opposed to simply ``fishing,'' 
NMFS agrees with the majority of the commenters that a catch 
composition requirement of 25 percent is more appropriate. This is 
consistent with the smooth dogfish-specific provision in the SCA that 
limits the exception to those fishermen that are

[[Page 73132]]

fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish while acknowledging the need for 
enhanced flexibility in a mixed fishery. The reasons for the change 
include the four following factors, which were reflected in public 
comment on the proposed rule:
     Sink gillnet gear, the predominant gear used in the 
directed smooth dogfish fishery, often catches other species along with 
the targeted species. If a fisherman retains other legal species in an 
amount greater than 25 percent of the total retained catch, it does not 
necessarily mean that effort was not being directed on smooth dogfish, 
it could simply mean that other species were encountered in a greater 
amount than anticipated.
     Although a 75 percent catch composition is an appropriate 
indicator of target species in other HMS fisheries, such as the squid 
trawl fishery, it is not appropriate at this time in the smooth dogfish 
fishery. In the squid trawl fishery, swordfish caught in squid trawls 
can only be retained if at least 75 percent of the retained catch is 
squid, indicating that squid is the targeted fishery. In that fishery, 
the catch is predominantly squid but swordfish that are feeding on the 
squid are sometimes inadvertently caught. The smooth dogfish fishery is 
a more mixed fishery and the target species is often co-located with 
other species, resulting in less certainty of target species catch 
levels
     When fishermen decide to remove fins from smooth dogfish 
while at sea, the fins are not removed at the end of the trip. Rather, 
the fins are removed shortly after the smooth dogfish is brought on 
board in order to maintain the highest quality product. This processing 
method negates the benefits of a high catch composition requirement. 
For example: If a fishermen is directing effort on smooth dogfish and 
removing the fins as the smooth dogfish are brought on board, that 
fishermen does not know what the final catch composition will be. The 
first part of the trip could be 100 percent smooth dogfish, but if the 
catch transitions to predominantly other species, the fishermen may 
have found that he no longer meets the high catch composition 
requirement. In that case, the fisherman has two options: To either 
discard all the smooth dogfish carcasses and fins that have been 
processed or discard the non-smooth dogfish catch in an amount that 
will meet the catch composition requirement. Either way, a high catch 
composition could lead to unnecessary regulatory discards. Although 
this last example could also pertain to the preferred 25 percent catch 
composition, the lower threshold provides a greater amount of 
flexibility and reduces the instances of regulatory discards, 
consistent with National Standard 9.
     Smooth dogfish, and the fishery that targets them, closely 
follow specific water temperature gradients. Fisherman intending to 
land primarily smooth dogfish may find their gear in sub-optimal water 
temperatures leading to lower smooth dogfish catch despite the 
intention to directly target the species and resulting in a lower catch 
composition than expected.
    Comment 5: NMFS received comments that NMFS was interpreting the 
smooth dogfish-specific provisions in the SCA incorrectly because the 
provision does not specify its application to the directed or 
incidental smooth dogfish fishery and that limiting fishermen to a 
directed fishery would only serve to inflict financial hardships on 
fishermen.
    Response: The SCA does not explicitly state that it applies only to 
directed fisheries; however, the relevant SCA statutory text, (``an 
individual engaged in commercial fishing for smooth dogfish (Mustelus 
canis)'') included descriptive language such as ``engaged in'' and 
``for'' that NMFS understood to be more limiting than if the statute 
had simply said ``while fishing.'' We thus interpreted ``fishing for 
smooth dogfish'' to limit the exception to those fishing primarily for 
smooth dogfish, as reflected by the 75 percent retention requirement. 
Had Congress intended to allow all trips to remove smooth dogfish fins 
at sea, this qualifying language and emphasis on fishing ``for'' smooth 
dogfish would not have been included. As explained in the previous 
response, the final rule's lower percentage requirement for smooth 
dogfish catch composition (25 percent v. 75 percent) should address 
some of the concerns about the practicality of the proposed rule's 
catch composition requirements in light of the very mixed nature of the 
fishery, while still ensuring that the exception is limited to those 
fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish.
    Comment 6: NMFS received comments, including from the SAFMC, MAFMC, 
NCDMR, and the States of New Jersey and Maryland opposing the ``no 
other sharks on board'' provision. The commenters stated that this 
provision would be burdensome for fishermen and would lead to 
unnecessary waste and discards of other valuable shark species since it 
is a mixed, variable fishery. Others noted that NMFS is interpreting 
the smooth dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA incorrectly because 
``no other sharks on board'' is never mentioned in the statute and that 
it is inconsistent with ASMFC requirements. Additionally, NMFS received 
comments stating that a large number of common thresher sharks are 
often caught with smooth dogfish and if these species had to be 
discarded, this would be wasteful and could lead to economic impacts to 
shark fishermen.
    Response: After considering public comment, NMFS has determined 
that it is more appropriate and consistent with the SCA to implement 
Sub-Alternative A2-1e, which allows other sharks to be retained when 
removing smooth dogfish fins at seas, provided those sharks are 
maintained in a condition where the fins and tail remain naturally 
attached to the carcass through landing. This measure is included in 
the new sub-alternative based on public comment and additional 
analyses, and in recognition that a prohibition on having other sharks 
on board would likely increase regulatory discards, contrary to 
National Standard 9. The smooth dogfish fishery is more mixed than 
previously thought, and other sharks, particularly spiny dogfish and 
common thresher sharks, make up a portion of the catch and contribute 
considerable revenue to fishermen participating in the smooth dogfish 
fishery. Under the new preferred sub-alternative, fishermen would not 
have to choose whether to land smooth dogfish with the fins removed or 
another species of shark. This is a change from the proposed rule, 
which would have prohibited retention of other sharks when removing the 
fins from smooth dogfish at sea. As proposed, a fisherman who wanted to 
remove fins of smooth dogfish at sea would have had to discard all non-
smooth dogfish sharks even if they were dead and were otherwise legal 
to retain based on species, size, and permits. Alternatively, as 
proposed, a fisherman could decide to retain non-smooth dogfish sharks 
and discard any smooth dogfish carcasses and fins that had already been 
processed. In either situation, as proposed, dead discards would likely 
increase, given the mixed catches in the smooth dogfish fishery.
    Allowing other sharks onboard is consistent with the objective of 
Amendment 9 to narrowly focus the at-sea fin removal allowance for the 
smooth dogfish fishery and would not undermine the enforcement of the 
limited smooth dogfish exception or impact the conservation of non-
smooth dogfish sharks because smooth dogfish carcasses can be readily 
differentiated from other non-smoothhound shark carcasses by the 
presence of a pre-dorsal ridge. As a practical matter, smooth dogfish 
and other smoothhound species

[[Page 73133]]

are indistinguishable in the field. But geographically, smooth dogfish 
largely are the only smoothhound species found in the Atlantic, which 
is the only place where smooth dogfish fins can be removed, thus 
largely alleviating that identification concern. Under the new 
preferred sub-alternative, other sharks would be allowed on board while 
removing smooth dogfish fins at sea as long as the fins of non-smooth 
dogfish sharks remain naturally attached through offloading as 
currently required. NMFS will monitor all shark catches and discards 
and dead discards to ensure the conservation of all shark species and 
will take the additional action, as necessary, to address any 
conservation or management issues that may arise.

Sub-Alternatives--Issue 2: State Fishing Permit

    Comment 7: NMFS received several comments, including from the MAFMC 
and the States of New Jersey and Maryland, supporting the preferred 
Sub-Alternative A2-2b to require any state commercial fishing permit 
appropriate for the retention of smoothhound sharks when removing 
smooth dogfish fins at sea. Some of these comments noted the non-
preferred sub-alternative, which would require a smoothhound-specific 
state commercial fishing permit, could require new regulations and may 
necessitate cost recovery of permit administration.
    Response: NMFS agrees that requiring a smoothhound-specific state 
fishing permit could be burdensome to states and fishermen. In the 
Draft EA and proposed rule, NMFS asked for comment on this issue, 
particularly from the states that would need to develop and administer 
a smoothhound-specific permit. The states that commented on this issue 
were unanimously opposed to a smoothhound-specific permit and favored 
the preferred Sub-Alternative A2-2b. For these reasons, NMFS will 
implement Sub-Alternative A2-2b as proposed.

Sub-Alternatives--Issue 3: Geographic Applicability

    Comment 8: NMFS received comments, including from the MAFMC and the 
State of Florida, in support of the preferred Sub-Alternative A2-3b to 
apply the exception for smooth dogfish along the Atlantic Coast and not 
to Florida's coast in the Gulf of Mexico. Conversely, NMFS also 
received a comment stating that the exception should be applicable in 
the Gulf of Mexico so that the historical boundaries between the Gulf 
and South Atlantic Councils are honored and the State of Florida can 
manage the fishery in a balanced way.
    Response: As a practical matter, smooth dogfish and other 
smoothhound species are indistinguishable in the field. The best 
available scientific information indicates that smooth dogfish are the 
predominant smoothhound shark species along the Atlantic coast (only a 
handful of Florida smoothhound have ever been recorded in the Atlantic 
and those have been near southern Florida). In the Gulf of Mexico, 
however, there are at least three different smoothhound species, with 
no practical way to readily distinguish among them. By limiting the 
exception to the Atlantic region, as specified at Sec.  635.27(b)(1), 
this sub-alternative will ensure that the exception only applies where 
the population is almost entirely smooth dogfish, reducing 
identification problems and inadvertent finning violations. 
Furthermore, the State of Florida found the preferred sub-alternative 
limiting the exception to the Atlantic to be consistent with the 
Florida Coastal Management Program.

Commercial Quota Adjustment for the Smoothhound Shark Fishery

    Comment 9: Multiple commenters, including the SAFMC, the States of 
Maryland, New Jersey, Georgia, and the Commonwealth of Virginia, 
suggested that none of the landings-based methodologies should be used 
to establish a smoothhound shark quota. Instead, NMFS should base the 
quota on the SEDAR 39 smoothhound shark stock assessment that was 
underway at that time, and which was proposed as an alternative, 
although the results had not yet been finalized at the time of proposed 
rule publication. NMFS also received comments opposing the preferred 
alternative B3, establishing a smoothhound quota equal to the maximum 
annual landings from 2004-2013 plus two standard deviations because 
some commenters thought this quota was too high and seemed contrary to 
a risk averse approach.
    Response: NMFS agrees that it is preferable to establish 
scientifically-based quotas using results from the SEDAR 39 stock 
assessments. Since publication of the proposed rule, the SEDAR 39 stock 
assessments have been completed. Based on the availability of the stock 
assessment results and public comments, NMFS no longer prefers the 
alternative to establish a landings-based quota and now is basing the 
quotas on the results of the stock assessments. Thus, NMFS is 
establishing a smoothhound shark TAC of 1,430.6 mt dw and a commercial 
quota of 1,201.7 mt dw in the Atlantic region, and a TAC of 509.6 mt dw 
and commercial quota of 336.4 mt dw in the Gulf of Mexico region, based 
on results of SEDAR 39. Section 2 of the Final EA provides a summary of 
the calculations used to determine these quotas.
    Comment 10: NMFS received a comment asking NMFS not to wait until 
the stock assessment was completed and to implement Alternative B1, the 
smoothhound quota of 715.5 mt dw established in Amendment 3 to the 2006 
Consolidated HMS FMP.
    Response: NMFS recognizes the benefits of establishing a quota to 
limit mortality in the commercial fisheries. However, based on the 
timing of both this action and the SEDAR 39 stock assessments, NMFS 
determined that establishing scientifically-based quotas using results 
of the stock assessments outweigh benefits of implementing a landings-
based quota. Since the stock assessments are now available, NMFS is 
establishing quotas based on those stock assessments.

Biological Opinion Implementation

    Comment 11: NMFS received support for the preferred alternative C4 
to establish a 24-hour soak time limit for sink gillnets and a 0.5 to 2 
hour net check requirement for drift gillnet gear. The MAFMC and State 
of New Jersey also expressed support for the preferred alternative but 
asked that the definitions of sink and drift gillnets be clarified so 
that a sink gillnet cannot be mistaken for a net that is drifting in 
the water column. The State of Maryland expressed support for 
alternative C3 (24-hour soak time for smoothhound permit holders) 
stating that net checks are not enforceable. NMFS also received 
comments suggesting that gillnet fishermen should be required to do 
both net checks and limit soak time to 24 hours. Other commenters asked 
NMFS to consider a reduced soak time because they felt that 24 hours 
was too long and would not reduce the risk of large whale interactions.
    Response: NMFS agrees that a 24-hour soak time limit for sink 
gillnets and a 0.5 to 2 hour net check requirement for drift gillnet 
gear are appropriate ways to implement the Term and Condition 4 of the 
2012 Shark BiOp. NMFS also agrees that the definitions of sink and 
drift gillnet need to be clear so as not to confuse fishery 
participants and enforcement officials. As detailed in the Final EA, 
most smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen will be required to limit soak 
times to 24 hours since they primarily use sink gillnet gear. This 
requirement will not significantly change smoothhound shark fishing

[[Page 73134]]

practices. With regard to other Atlantic shark fishermen, fishermen who 
use sink gillnet gear will be required to limit soak times to 24 hours 
and those that use drift gillnets will be required to perform net 
checks at least every 2 hours. Currently, all Atlantic shark fishermen 
that use gillnet gear to fish for or who are in possession of any large 
coastal, small coastal, or pelagic shark, regardless of gillnet type, 
are required to perform net checks at least every 2 hours (see Sec.  
635.21(e)(3)(v)). During the net checks, fishermen are required to look 
for and remove any sea turtles, marine mammals, or smalltooth sawfish. 
In the 2012 Shark BiOp, the requirement to use either net checks or the 
24-hour set limitation was determined to ensure that any incidentally 
taken ESA-listed species are detected and released in a timely manner, 
reducing the likelihood of mortality. As such, NMFS has determined that 
this alternative will likely have short and long-term minor beneficial 
ecological impacts on protected resources because it will implement one 
of the Terms and Conditions of the 2012 Shark BiOp to minimize impacts 
on protected resources. Because this alternative complies with the 2012 
Shark BiOp, has beneficial ecological impacts to protected species, and 
allows all smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen to continue current 
fishing practices, NMFS will implement soak time limits for sink 
gillnets and net checks for drift gillnets, as proposed, in the final 
rule.
    Comment 12: NMFS received a comment stating that NMFS has not 
received authorization of the incidental take of endangered large 
whales that may result due to the operation of the fishery. The comment 
stated that without incidental take of endangered whales authorized 
under both the MMPA and ESA, federal management violates those laws. 
The commenter stated that NMFS must acquire take authorization under 
the MMPA section 101(a)(5)(E) for the expected whale takes associated 
with the smoothhound fishery and that NMFS must delay Amendment 9 until 
completion of a negligible impact analysis for North Atlantic right 
whale, humpback whale and fin whale. NMFS also received comments 
stating that (1) since the completion of the BiOp, critical habitat has 
been designated for loggerhead sea turtles, which triggers the 
requirement to reinitiate consultation in the shark fishery, and (2) 
the Draft EA fails to discuss effects of the fishery on loggerhead 
critical habitat.
    Response: As required by section 7(a)(2) of the ESA, the HMS 
Management Division of NMFS Office of Sustainable Fisheries consulted 
with the NMFS Protected Resources Division (PRD) over proposed Atlantic 
shark fishery management measures in December 2009. That consultation 
was completed in 2012, and the Shark BiOp was issued in December 2012. 
The Biological Opinion concluded that the actions as proposed--
including the operation of the smoothhound fishery--were not likely to 
jeopardize the continued existence of Atlantic sturgeon, smalltooth 
sawfish or any species of ESA-listed large whales or sea turtles.
    Section 9 and regulations implementing section 4(d) of the ESA 
prohibit the ``take'' or incidental take of listed species without an 
exemption. Under the terms of Section 7(b)(4) and Section 7(o)(2), 
otherwise prohibited take that is incidental to and not intended as 
part of the agency action may be permitted if it complies with 
reasonable and prudent measures (RPMs) and terms and conditions of an 
incidental take statement (ITS). Two RPMs were included in the 2012 
Shark BiOp to minimize the effects of the action on sea turtles, 
smalltooth sawfish, and Atlantic sturgeon by the smoothhound and 
Atlantic shark fisheries and to monitor the level of incidental take: 
(1) Minimize the Potential Effects to Sea Turtles, Smalltooth Sawfish, 
Atlantic Sturgeon and Marine Mammals, and (2) Monitor the Frequency and 
Magnitude of Incidental Take. One remaining term and condition will be 
implemented in this final rule and will require gillnet fishermen to 
conduct net checks and limit gillnet soak times mitigating or reducing 
interactions with protected species.
    Since finalizing the 2012 BiOp, NMFS issued a final determination 
to list four separate DPSs of the scalloped hammerhead shark (Sphyrna 
lewini) under the ESA (79 FR 38214, July 3, 2014). The DPSs are Central 
and Southwest Atlantic, Indo-West Pacific, Eastern Atlantic, and 
Eastern Pacific. The Eastern Atlantic and Eastern Pacific DPSs are 
listed as endangered, and the Central and Southwest Atlantic and the 
Indo-West Pacific DPSs are listed as threatened. NMFS determined that 
each of the DPSs was significant and distinct based on genetic, 
behavioral, and physical factors, and in some cases, differences in the 
control of exploitation of the species across international boundaries. 
On August 27, 2014, NMFS published a final rule to list the following 
20 coral species as threatened: Five in the Caribbean, including 
Florida and the Gulf of Mexico (Dendrogyra cylindrus, Orbicella 
annularis, Orbicella faveolata, Orbicella franksi, and Mycetophyllia 
ferox); and 15 in the Indo-Pacific (Acropora globiceps, Acropora 
jacquelineae, Acropora lokani, Acropora pharaonis, Acropora retusa, 
Acropora rudis, Acropora speciosa, Acropora tenella, Anacropora 
spinosa, Euphyllia paradivisa, Isopora crateriformis, Montipora 
australiensis, Pavona diffluens, Porites napopora, and Seriatopora 
aculeata). Two Caribbean species currently listed as threatened 
(Acropora cervicornis and Acropora palmata) still warranted listing as 
threatened. The Central and Southwest Atlantic DPS of scalloped 
hammerhead shark and the seven Caribbean species of coral occur within 
the boundary of Atlantic HMS commercial and recreational fisheries.
    On October 30, 2014, based on the new listings, NMFS requested re-
initiation of ESA section 7 consultation on the continued operation and 
use of HMS gear types (bandit gear, bottom longline, buoy gear, 
handline, and rod and reel) and associated fisheries management actions 
in the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP and its amendments. NMFS has 
preliminarily determined that the ongoing operation of the fisheries is 
consistent with existing biological opinions and is not likely to 
jeopardize the continued existence of the Central and Southwest DPS of 
scalloped hammerhead sharks or the threatened coral species or result 
in an irreversible or irretrievable commitment of resources which would 
foreclose formulation or implementation of any reasonable and prudent 
alternative measures for these species.
    Regarding marine mammals, the final 2014 MMPA List of Fisheries 
classified the southeastern Atlantic shark gillnet fishery as Category 
II (occasional serious injuries and mortalities). The southeastern Mid-
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico shark BLL shark fishery is classified as 
Category III (remote likelihood or no known serious injuries or 
mortalities). Commercial passenger fishing vessel (charter/headboat) 
fisheries are subject to Section 118 and are listed as a Category III 
fishery. This action would not significantly increase fishing effort 
rates, levels, or locations or fishing mortality. The preferred 
alternatives would not increase effort because the smoothhound quotas 
are based on the most recent smoothhound shark stock assessments (SEDAR 
39). In addition, final management measures are not expected to alter 
interactions with protected species.

[[Page 73135]]

Atlantic Shark Gillnet Vessel Monitoring System Requirements

    Comment 13: NMFS received support for the preferred alternative of 
requiring directed shark permit holders with gillnet gear on board to 
use VMS only in the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area, including from the 
States of North Carolina, New Jersey, and Maryland, and the MAFMC. NMFS 
also received comments preferring the status quo stating that VMS 
should be required regardless of where the vessel is fishing.
    Response: Currently, under Federal HMS regulations, Atlantic shark 
gillnet fishermen are required to use VMS at certain times of the year 
regardless of where they are fishing. However, per 50 CFR 
229.32(h)(2)(i), the implementing regulations for the Atlantic Large 
Whale Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP), Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen 
are only required to have VMS if they are fishing in the Southeast U.S. 
Monitoring Area. Because NMFS has determined that VMS is not necessary 
for Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen in the other ALWTRP restricted 
areas through the implementation of the ALWTRP regulations, NMFS 
believes it is best to maintain consistency with these regulations. 
Maintaining consistency between the Atlantic HMS and ALWTRP regulations 
will reduce confusion, help fishermen comply with these regulations 
more easily, and will avoid unnecessary economic burdens on shark 
fishery participants.

Previously Adopted Smoothhound Shark Measures in Amendment 3 and the 
HMS Trawl Rule

    Comment 14: NMFS received a comment stating that smoothhound sharks 
should be managed by the Regional Fishery Management Councils in 
cooperation with ASMFC.
    Response: As detailed in Amendment 3 to the 2006 Consolidated 
Atlantic HMS FMP, smoothhound sharks are ``oceanic sharks'' as defined 
by the Magnuson-Stevens Act and are subject to management by the 
Secretary of Commerce under that Act. Please refer to Amendment 3 to 
the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP for a detailed explanation of 
why smoothhound sharks are appropriately subject to Federal management.
    Comment 15: NMFS received a comment stating that the Federal 
smoothhound permit could trigger an increase in directed smooth dogfish 
effort. A comment was also received suggesting that the fishery, once 
permitted, should not be open access and that a control date should be 
set to discourage new entrants.
    Response: Based on the nature of the fishery, which is labor-
intensive and high-volume, additional management burdens such as permit 
requirements are unlikely to result in an increase in effort. In fact, 
a slight reduction is more likely. Since effort increases are not 
expected, NMFS does not believe that introducing a limited access 
permit in this fishery is necessary at this time. Nevertheless, this 
action will implement scientifically-based quotas and landings will be 
closely monitored to ensure that total mortality does not exceed 
scientifically-determined limits. If, in fact, directed smooth dogfish 
effort increases, protections will be in place to ensure that fishing 
pressure does not exceed sustainable levels while NMFS considers if 
additional measures are necessary.
    Comment 16: NMFS received a comment from the State of Maryland 
stating that they are concerned about the measure to close the fishery 
when 80 percent of the smoothhound quota has been caught. They feel 
that this measure may limit access to some states later in the year. 
The State of Maryland recommends working with the other Atlantic states 
to close each state's smoothhound fishery once 80 percent of the 
state's allocation has been harvested.
    Response: In all quota-managed Atlantic shark fisheries, NMFS 
closes the applicable fishery when landings reach, or are expected to 
reach, 80 percent of the quota. This measure mitigates for possible 
late reporting, which could result in quota overharvests. Based on the 
success of this measure in the other shark fisheries, NMFS prefers to 
implement the 80-percent accountability measure (AM) in the smoothhound 
shark fisheries as finalized in Amendment 3 to the 2006 Consolidated 
HMS FMP rather than risk exceeding the quotas in the smoothhound 
fisheries.
    Through Addendum II to the Coastal Sharks Interstate FMP, the ASMFC 
instituted state shares of the Federal smoothhound shark quota. 
Although this system was finalized in May 2013 before the Federal 
smoothhound shark quota was effective, Addendum II proactively divided 
the quota among several of the Atlantic states in an amount that would 
total 100 percent of the Federal quota. This agreement among the 
Atlantic states to limit each state's harvest does not impact nor 
influence the Federal quota. Although NMFS recognizes that closing the 
fishery when landings reach, or are expected to reach, 80 percent of 
the quota could prevent some states from harvesting their full state 
share of the quota per the ASMFC plan, the measure is an important and 
effective way to ensure that the sustainability of the smoothhound 
shark fishery is not jeopardized by overharvests.
    Comment 17: NMFS received a comment stating that NMFS should not 
implement the smoothhound retention allowance from the 2011 HMS Trawl 
Rule because the increased retention will lead to increased fishing 
mortality and this mortality will not be adequately quantified and 
counted against the quota. There are no reporting requirements with 
open access permits and fisheries tend to underreport incidental 
catches.
    Response: Since January 1, 2013, all commercial landings of 
Atlantic HMS, regardless of gear type or permit, are required to be 
reported on a weekly basis. Through these weekly reports, NMFS monitors 
commercial landings of Atlantic HMS, which will include smoothhound 
sharks upon implementation of this action. Trawl gear and open access 
permits do not present unique reporting concerns. Allowing smoothhound 
sharks to be landed by fishermen who use trawl gear or possess an open 
access permit does not raise unique concerns about the sustainability 
of the fishery.

General Comments

    Comment 18: NMFS received comments that Amendment 9 is too narrowly 
focused on smoothhound sharks and should instead consider all species 
managed under the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP. The commenter asserts that 
a multispecies management approach is preferable. Furthermore, the 
commenter noted that NMFS' decision to include all HMS in a single, 
consolidated FMP effectively categorizes all HMS fisheries as a single 
``fishery.'' Thus, all National Standards (NS) under the Magnuson-
Stevens Act must be considered in the context of all HMS, not just 
smoothhound sharks and Atlantic sharks. Specifically, the commenter 
suggested that NS 3 (``To the extent practicable, an individual stock 
of fish shall be managed as a unit throughout its range, and 
interrelated stocks of fish shall be managed as a unit or in close 
coordination'') requires NMFS to optimize access and management of all 
HMS, not just smoothhound sharks and Atlantic sharks. Additionally, the 
commenter felt that NS 1, which mandates achieving optimum yield from 
each fishery, should be applied across all HMS since all HMS should be 
categorized as one single fishery.
    Response: While a multispecies management approach is advantageous 
in some instances, NMFS disagrees that

[[Page 73136]]

Amendment 9 should broadly consider all HMS (including tunas, billfish, 
and swordfish) as a single fishery. In 2006, NMFS merged all Atlantic 
HMS management into a single, consolidated FMP. In the 2006 
Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP, NMFS noted that the interrelated nature 
of HMS fisheries and the need to consider management actions together 
necessitated merging the two existing HMS FMPs into one FMP. In 
addition, NMFS identified some adverse ramifications stemming from 
separation of the plans, including unnecessary administrative 
redundancy and complexity, loss of efficiency, and public confusion 
over the management process. It is important to note that NMFS 
consolidated management of all HMS under one FMP because of the 
interrelated nature of some of the fisheries and to streamline 
administration, not because all HMS constitute a single fishery. As 
appropriate, NMFS analyzes the impacts of management actions for each 
HMS fishery and optimizes management for all affected HMS fisheries. 
The Environmental Assessment appropriately considers any effects on the 
environment, including effects on other fish stocks or fisheries that 
may result from the actions in Amendment 9. The analyses show that the 
actions considered in Amendment 9 are unlikely to affect non-
smoothhound shark fisheries or Atlantic shark fisheries. The management 
objectives are narrowly focused on smoothhound sharks, smooth dogfish, 
and/or Atlantic sharks caught in gillnet gear, the predominant gear 
type used in the directed smoothhound shark fishery. None of the 
fisheries considered in this action are likely to encounter other non-
smoothhound shark or Atlantic shark in large numbers. Billfish, 
swordfish, tunas, and pelagic sharks are unlikely to co-occur with the 
smoothhound sharks nor can swordfish or tunas be retained if caught in 
gillnet gear. The one exception is the measure to establish an 
effective date for the 2011 HMS Trawl Rule. Trawl gear does have the 
potential to interact with a variety of HMS, including smoothhound 
sharks, Atlantic sharks, and swordfish. The 2011 HMS Trawl rule, 
recognizing the potential interaction between trawl gear and some HMS, 
considered an allowance for the limited retention of incidentally 
caught swordfish and smoothhound sharks. As such, that action 
considered impacts and explicitly optimized access to affected HMS. 
With respect to consistency with NS 1 and 3, each HMS management action 
considers all National Standards in the context of the affected HMS. 
For detailed information about Amendment 9's consistency with National 
Standards, please see Section 10 of the Final EA.

Changes From the Proposed Rule (79 FR 46217, August 7, 2014)

    NMFS made several changes from the proposed rule, as described 
below.
    1. Catch Composition and ``No Other Sharks'' Requirements for 
Removing Smooth Dogfish Fins at Sea (Sec.  635.30(c)(5)(iii)). The SCA 
has provisions related to the removal of smooth dogfish fins while at 
sea that apply when an individual is fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish. 
Thus, the proposed rule considered sub-alternatives to apply the 
exception only to those fishing with the object of commercially 
harvesting smooth dogfish by focusing on catch composition. This final 
rule is not implementing the preferred catch composition sub-
alternative (75 percent of retained catch must be smooth dogfish), but 
another sub-alternative (25 percent smooth dogfish) that had been 
discussed in the proposed rule and analyzed in the draft EA.
    NMFS received numerous public comments that the 75 percent catch 
composition requirement did not adequately reflect the mixed nature of 
the smooth dogfish fishery and would lead to excessive dead discards. 
Based on this public comment, NMFS reconsidered the 75 percent smooth 
dogfish requirement, and determined that it does not properly reflect 
fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish. According to public comment, fishermen 
that fish for smooth dogfish often encounter and retain other species 
of fish. NMFS verified this by evaluating data from vessel trip reports 
(VTR). On trips that landed smooth dogfish caught in sink gillnet gear 
between 2003 and 2014, smooth dogfish only made up 36 percent of the 
total retained catch while other species such as croaker, bluefish, 
monkfish, and spiny dogfish made up the remainder. See Final EA at 
Section 3.4.1 for further detail. If NMFS retained the 75 percent 
requirement, then this could result in dead discards as well as lost 
revenues from those species. The 25 percent requirement adopted in the 
final rule better reflects fishing ``for'' smooth dogfish, and is 
within the range of alternatives considered and analyzed in the 
proposed rule.
    Related to the catch composition change and concern about discards, 
this final rule also makes a change from the proposed rule by allowing 
retention of other shark species provided that their fins remain 
naturally attached to the carcass through offloading. This measure is 
included based on public comment and additional analyses and 
recognizing that a prohibition on having other sharks on board would 
likely increase regulatory discards. Specifically, additional analyses 
indicate that the smooth dogfish fishery is more mixed than previously 
thought, and that other sharks, particularly spiny dogfish and common 
thresher sharks, make up a portion of the catch and revenue for 
fishermen also fishing for smooth dogfish. Given that fishermen process 
smooth dogfish as they are brought on board, including removing the 
fins where allowable, the proposed rule approach would have forced 
fishermen to choose whether to land smooth dogfish with the fins 
removed (and discard the other species) or land the other species of 
shark with the fins attached and discard the smooth dogfish with their 
fins removed at sea. As proposed, a fisherman who wanted to remove 
smooth dogfish fins at sea would not have been able to retain non-
smooth dogfish sharks even if those sharks were dead and otherwise 
legally retainable based on species, size, and permits. In either 
situation, as proposed, dead discards would likely have increased given 
the mixed catches in the smooth dogfish fishery. Thus, other sharks 
will be allowed on board when smooth dogfish fins have been removed at 
sea as long as the fins of the non-smooth dogfish sharks remain 
naturally attached through offloading, as is currently required.
    Allowing other sharks on board should not raise enforcement 
concerns or impact the conservation of non-smooth dogfish sharks 
because smooth dogfish carcasses can be readily differentiated from 
other shark carcasses by the presence of a pre-dorsal ridge. While 
other ``ridgeback sharks'' have an interdorsal ridge, smooth dogfish 
are the only shark species in the Atlantic that have a pre-dorsal 
ridge. We will work with the Office of Law Enforcement to ensure that 
they are aware of this identifying feature and will update outreach 
information for shark identification including relevant workshops as 
appropriate to make permitted shark fishermen and dealers aware of the 
distinction. NMFS will also continue to monitor all shark catches and 
discards and take additional action, if necessary to address non-
compliance.
    The changes in this final rule are consistent with the conservation 
and management objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and Amendment 9 
and the SCA. These changes will not impact the conservation of smooth 
dogfish or other sharks because landings of these species, regardless 
of catch

[[Page 73137]]

composition percentage, will be capped at or under the commercial quota 
through AMs and/or closures. These changes thus will not have an effect 
on the status of these stocks, nor are other adverse environmental 
impacts anticipated. They will also provide for a flexible, profitable, 
and sustainable smooth dogfish fishery.
    2. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Regional Commercial Smoothhound 
Shark Quotas (Sec.  635.27(b)(1)(xi)). NMFS proposed a smoothhound 
shark quota equal to the maximum annual landings from 2004-2013 plus 
two standard deviations (1,739.9 mt dw) using commercial landings data 
in the absence of a stock assessment and methodology outlined in 
Amendment 3. At that time, NMFS anticipated that the SEDAR 39 stock 
assessment for smoothhound sharks would be completed in 2014. 
Consequently, the proposed rule discussed, and the draft EA analyzed, a 
quota alternative that would ``implement a TAC and smoothhound shark 
quota(s) consistent with the results of the 2014 smoothhound shark 
stock assessment if the results become available before publication of 
the final rule for this action.'' (See Alternative B4 in the Draft EA 
for Amendment 9). The proposed rule also stated that ``[t]he 2014 
smoothhound shark stock assessment could separate one or more of the 
stocks into regional stocks between the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico,'' 
and that for the purposes of the environmental analyses, ``NMFS assumes 
one overarching quota but these alternatives and analyses could apply 
to multiple regions as well.''
    During the public comment period on the proposed rule and draft EA, 
commenters expressed concern about implementing a smoothhound shark 
commercial quota based on historical landings, and requested that NMFS 
wait for SEDAR 39 to be completed. Based on these comments, in this 
final rule, NMFS is implementing region-specific commercial quotas 
based on SEDAR 39. Specifically, this final rule establishes an overall 
TAC of 1,940.2 mt implemented as follows: An Atlantic regional 
smoothhound shark TAC of 1,430.6 mt dw with a commercial quota of 
1,201.7 mt dw, and a Gulf of Mexico regional smoothhound shark TAC of 
509.6 mt dw with a commercial quota of 336.4 mt dw. Although the TAC 
identified in the final rule is inclusive of sources of mortality other 
than a commercial quota (which is thus necessarily less than the TAC), 
the overall TAC in the final rule is only 201 mt more than the 1,739.9 
mt dw commercial quota from the proposed rule. Thus, establishing a TAC 
of this level does not raise concerns about requiring additional 
environmental analyses or additional regulatory action, which may have 
been the case if the stock assessment had identified a significantly 
greater allowable TAC (and resultant commercial quota) than those 
anticipated and analyzed in the proposed rule. The proposed rule 
presented and analyzed an alternative that anticipated the stock 
assessment would determine that ``the commercial smoothhound shark 
quota should be set at approximately equal to or greater than 1,739.9 
mt dw.'' As acknowledged in the EA, even with a higher quota, effort is 
likely to remain the same relative to current effort. Thus the 
ecological, economic and social impacts of quota establishing a quota 
greater than 1,739.9 mt would be within the range analyzed in the Draft 
EA. In the final rule, the combined regional commercial quotas (1,538.1 
mt) are twelve percent less than the original proposed overall quota 
(1,739.9 mt) but higher than recent annual commercial landings. Both 
the commercial quotas and the overall TAC in this final rule are within 
the range of actions considered in the proposed rule and analyzed in 
the draft EA.
    With regard to the regional quota approach, in the Draft EA, NMFS 
acknowledged that the stock could be split between two regions based on 
the SEDAR 39 stock assessments and that the analyses performed for one 
over-arching quota could apply to multiple regions. Based on 
information supplied during the Data Workshop for SEDAR 39, including 
tagging data, the stock assessment scientists decided to split 
smoothhound sharks into two regional stocks, with smooth dogfish in the 
Atlantic and smooth dogfish, Florida smoothhound, and Gulf smoothhound 
in the Gulf of Mexico. This regional split, however, does not affect 
the impact analyses detailed in the Draft EA under Alternative B4, 
scenario 4. As noted in Section 3.4 of the Draft EA and as confirmed in 
the SEDAR 39 stock assessments, the smoothhound shark fishery primarily 
occurs in the Mid-Atlantic region and is composed entirely of smooth 
dogfish catch. In the Gulf of Mexico region, only a very small, 
negligible, number of commercial landings occur and there is no 
commercial fishery. Thus, the Draft EA Alternative B4 quota analyses 
were informed entirely by data from the Atlantic region including catch 
location, price data, landings data, and fishery operations. If NMFS 
applied the single over-arching quota analyses to regional smoothhound 
shark quotas at the Draft stage, there would have been no information 
available for the Gulf of Mexico and, with no commercial fishery in 
that region, a finding of neutral impact. In the Atlantic region where 
the fishery is located, all impacts detailed in the Draft EA would 
apply because all data, including catch location, price data, landings 
data, and fishery operations, came from the Atlantic. Furthermore, the 
Atlantic smoothhound shark stock assessment would not have resulted in 
any new impacts because the assessment found current harvest levels and 
effort are sustainable with no changes required. In summary, the impact 
analyses detailed in the Draft EA under Alternative B4, scenario 4 are 
equally applicable to two regional quotas as to one over-arching quota. 
The changes in this final rule are consistent with the conservation and 
management objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and Amendment 9 and 
based on the best scientific information available. Implementing TACs 
based on the stock assessment results would ensure continued 
sustainable harvest of smoothhound sharks in the Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico regions and increase the likelihood of maintaining healthy 
smoothhound shark stocks in both regions.
    3. Administrative changes (Sec. Sec.  635.2, 635.7(g)). NMFS is 
making minor clarifications to the drift and sink gillnet definitions 
at Sec.  635.2 to indicate that drift gillnets typically are 
``floating'' in the water column and that sink gillnets are fished on 
or near the ``ocean'' bottom and can have weights ``and/or'' anchors. 
Additionally, NMFS is changing the administrative processes by which 
vessels are selected for at-sea observer coverage at Sec.  635.7(g). 
The changes were made, in part, based on consultation with the 
Northeast and Southeast Observer Programs so that smoothhound shark 
observer selection is consistent with both programs. The administrative 
changes to this section should not have any practical effect; rather, 
they will ensure that the selection processes currently in place may 
continue.
    4. Administrative Additions (Sec.  635.19(d)). NMFS is adding 
language to Sec.  635.19(d) to indicate that trawl gear is an 
authorized gear for the capture and retention of smoothhound sharks 
subject to the restrictions specified in Sec.  635.24(a)(7). Regulatory 
text to authorize retention of smoothhound sharks caught in trawl gear 
was added to other sections of Sec.  635, including Sec.  635.24(a)(7), 
and was discussed in the proposed rule but was inadvertently omitted 
from this part of the regulatory text itself. No substantive changes 
will occur as a result.

[[Page 73138]]

Commercial Fishing Season Notification

    Pursuant to the measures being implemented in this final rule, the 
2016 base quotas for smoothhound sharks in the Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico regions would be 1,201.7 mt dw and 336.4 mt dw, respectively. 
The fishing season for the smoothhound shark fishery will open on 
January 1, 2016.

Classification

    The AA has determined that this final rule is consistent with the 
2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP and its amendments, the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, and other applicable law.
    This final rule has been determined to be not significant for 
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
    A Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) was prepared for 
this rule. The FRFA incorporates the Initial Regulatory Flexibility 
Analysis (IRFA), and a summary of the analyses completed to support the 
action. The full FRFA and analysis of economic and ecological impacts 
are available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of the FRFA follows.
    Section 604(a)(1) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires 
a succinct statement of the need for and objectives of the rule. 
Chapter 1 of the Final EA and the final rule fully describe the need 
for and objectives of this final rule. The purpose of this final 
rulemaking, consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the ESA, and the 
MMPA, and the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP and its amendments, is to 
provide for the sustainable management of smoothhound sharks and 
Atlantic shark species. The management objectives are to achieve the 
following: Implement the smooth dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA; 
implement smoothhound shark quotas based on the results of SEDAR 39; 
implement Term and Condition 4 of the 2012 Shark BiOp related to 
gillnet impacts on ESA-listed species; and revise Atlantic shark 
gillnet VMS regulations in compliance with the ALWTRP, per the MMPA.
    Section 604(a)(2) of the RFA requires a summary of the significant 
issues raised by the public comments in response to the IRFA and a 
summary of the assessment of the Agency of such issues, and a statement 
of any changes made in the rule as a result of such comments. NMFS 
received many comments on the proposed rule and the Draft EA during the 
public comment period. A summary of these comments and the Agency's 
responses, including changes as a result of public comment, are 
included above. NMFS did not receive comments specifically on the IRFA.
    Section 604(a)(4) of the RFA requires agencies to provide an 
estimate of the number of small entities to which the rule would apply. 
The small business size standard for Finfish Fishing is $ 20.5 million, 
for Shellfish Fishing is $5.5 million, and for Other Marine Fishing is 
$7.5 million. See 79 FR 33647 (June 24, 2014). Under any of these 
standards, all Atlantic HMS permit holders subject to this rulemaking 
would be considered small entities.
    NMFS does not have exact numbers on affected commercial fishermen. 
The smoothhound shark commercial permit has not yet been established, 
so NMFS does not know how many smoothhound shark fishermen will be 
impacted. An annual average of 169 vessels reported retaining smooth 
dogfish through VTR from 2003-2014. This is NMFS' best estimate of 
affected smoothhound shark fishermen.
    Additionally, while the retention of sharks in Federal waters 
requires one of two limited access commercial shark permits, these 
permits do not specific gear type, including gillnets. For this reason, 
NMFS does not know the exact number of affected shark gillnet 
fishermen. As of May 21, 2015, there are 208 directed shark and 253 
incidental shark permit holders. Logbook records indicate that there 
are usually about 18 Atlantic shark directed permit holders that use 
gillnet gear in any year. However, the universe of directed permit 
holders using gillnet gear can change from year to year and could 
include anyone who holds an Atlantic shark directed permit.
    As of May 21, 2015, there are 97 Atlantic shark dealers. These 
dealers could be affected by these measures to varying degrees. Not all 
of these dealers purchase smoothhound sharks and those that do are 
concentrated in the Mid-Atlantic region. NMFS will know more about the 
number of affected dealers when smoothhound reporting requirements 
become effective. Similarly, not all of these dealers purchase Atlantic 
sharks caught with gillnet gear. The number is likely low and is 
concentrated in Florida and the Gulf of Mexico.
    Section 604(a)(5) of the RFA requires Agencies to describe any new 
reporting, record-keeping and other compliance requirements. The 
Federal commercial smoothhound shark permit requirement analyzed in 
Amendment 3 will become effective upon the effective date of this rule. 
NMFS submitted a PRA change request to The Office of Management and 
Budget (OMB) to add this permit to the existing HMS permit PRA package 
(OMB control number 0648-0327). OMB subsequently approved the change 
request to add the Federal commercial smoothhound shark permit to the 
HMS permit PRA package in May 2011. In November 2015, NMFS submitted a 
revision to transfer the previously approved commercial smoothhound 
shark permit from the HMS permit PRA package (OMB Control Number 0648-
0327) to the Southeast Regional Office (SERO) permit PRA package (OMB 
Control Number 0648-0205). That request is still pending approval. Once 
OMB approves the request, NMFS will issue a notice in the Federal 
Register announcing the approval of the information collection 
requirements and the availability of applications for the commercial 
smoothhound shark permit. This final rule contains a collection-of-
information requirement subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) 
and which has been approved by OMB under OMB Control number 0648-0372. 
Public reporting burden will be reduced under the modified VMS 
requirements under this final rule. The burden estimate burden will be 
reduced by this rule, but the changes will be requested as part of the 
2016 extension, at which time the estimate of the burden change will be 
more accurate.
    The RFA requires a description of the steps the Agency has taken to 
minimize any significant economic impact on small entities consistent 
with the stated objectives of applicable statutes, including a 
statement of the factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the 
alternative adopted in the final rule and the reason that each one of 
the other significant alternatives to the rule considered by the Agency 
that affect small entities was rejected. These impacts are discussed 
below and in the FRFA for Amendment 9. Additionally, the RFA (5 U.S.C. 
603 (c)(1)-(4)) lists four general categories of ``significant'' 
alternatives that could assist an agency in the development of 
significant alternatives. These categories of alternatives are: 
Establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or 
timetables that take into account the resources available to small 
entities; clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance 
and reporting requirements under the rule for such small entities; use 
of performance rather than design standards; and, exemptions from 
coverage of the rule for small entities.
    In order to meet the objectives of this rule, consistent with 
Magnuson-Stevens Act and ESA, we cannot exempt small entities or change 
the reporting requirements only for small entities because all the 
entities affected are

[[Page 73139]]

considered small entities. Thus, there are no alternatives discussed 
that fall under the first and fourth categories described above. NMFS 
does not know of any performance or design standards that would satisfy 
the aforementioned objectives of this rulemaking while, concurrently, 
complying with the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Thus, there are no 
alternatives considered under the third category. As described below, 
NMFS analyzed several different alternatives in this rulemaking and 
provided the rationale for identifying the preferred alternative to 
achieve the desired objective.
    The alternatives considered and analyzed are described below. The 
FRFA assumes that each vessel will have similar catch and gross 
revenues to show the relative impact of the final action on vessels.

Alternatives To Implement the Smooth Dogfish-Specific Provisions of the 
Shark Conservation Act of 2010

    With regard to the implementation of the SCA, NMFS considered two 
alternatives. Alternative A1, which would not implement the smooth 
dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA and would instead implement the 
fins-attached requirement finalized in Amendment 3, and Alternative A2, 
which would implement the smooth dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA 
and has sub-alternatives that address the specific elements of the of 
the smooth dogfish-specific provisions.
    Alternative A1 would not implement the smooth dogfish-specific 
provisions of the SCA and would require all smooth dogfish to be landed 
with fins naturally attached. This alternative would change current 
fishing practices since smooth dogfish caught in the directed and 
incidental fisheries are fully processed while at sea. As a result, 
this Alternative A1 would likely lead to reduced landings and a lower 
ex-vessel price because the product would not be fully processed. This 
could lead to adverse socioeconomic impacts.
    Under Alternative A2, the preferred alternative, an allowance for 
the removal of smooth dogfish fins at sea would increase efficiency in 
the smooth dogfish fishery and provide a more highly processed product 
for fishermen to sell to dealers. Quantifying the financial benefits is 
difficult because baseline effort and increases in efficiency cannot be 
calculated, but the benefit would fall somewhere between the two 
extremes of $0 and $699,364, the ex-vessel value of the entire fishery 
(Section 3.6.2). Assuming that amount is spread evenly across all 169 
vessels per year that retain smooth dogfish (Section 6.1), the benefit 
to individual vessels would be $4,138. However, vessels and trips 
retain smooth dogfish in widely varying amounts, thus, this per vessel 
estimate may not provide an accurate picture of individual revenues.
    Supporting entities, such as bait and tackle suppliers, ice 
suppliers, dealers, and other similar businesses, could experience 
increased revenue if the efficiency of fin removal at sea results in a 
higher quality product. However, while supporting businesses would 
benefit from the increased profitability of the fishery, they do not 
solely rely on the smooth dogfish fishery. In the long-term, it is 
likely that changes in the smooth dogfish fishery would not have large 
impacts on these businesses.

Catch Composition Sub-Alternatives

    Under Sub-Alternative A2-1a, smooth dogfish could make up any 
portion of the retained catch on board provided that no other sharks 
are retained. This sub-alternative would authorize smooth dogfish 
fishermen to retain any non-shark species of fish while still availing 
themselves of the at-sea fin removal allowance. Smooth dogfish are 
often caught incidentally during other fishing operations, thus, this 
sub-alternative would allow fishermen to maximize the profitability of 
each trip and allow individual operators the flexibility to make 
decisions, before the trip and while on the water, as to the retained 
catch composition that would maximize ex-vessel revenues. Under this 
alternative, fishermen could remove smooth dogfish fins at sea during 
any type of trip including those trips that are directing effort on 
other non-shark species. This alternative would maintain the current 
practice in the fishery and vessels could continue to have ex-vessel 
revenues of $699,364 per year across the entire fishery (Section 
3.6.2).
    Under Sub-Alternative A2-1b, fishermen could avail themselves of 
the at-sea fin removal allowance only if smooth dogfish comprise 25 
percent of the retained catch on board. This sub-alternative would 
authorize smooth dogfish fishermen to retain some non-shark species of 
fish while still availing themselves of the at-sea fin removal 
allowance. This sub-alternative would allow some fishermen to maintain 
the profitability of each trip and allow individual operators some 
flexibility to make decisions, before the trip and while on the water, 
as to the retained catch composition that would increase ex-vessel 
revenues. This increase in flexibility would be to a lesser extent than 
Sub-Alternative A2-1a which would not have a catch composition 
requirement, but greater than the other sub-alternatives that limit the 
fins-attached exception to higher catch composition percentages. This 
sub-alternative would decrease total ex-vessel revenues relative to the 
current level of $699,364 per year (Section 3.6.2).
    Under Sub-Alternative A2-1c fishermen could avail themselves of the 
at-sea fin removal allowance only if smooth dogfish comprise 75 percent 
of the retained catch on board. This sub-alternative would allow 
fishermen limited flexibility to maintain the profitability of each 
trip and would allow fishermen to make decisions, before the trip and 
while on the water, as to the retained catch composition that would 
increase ex-vessel revenues. While limited, the flexibility in this 
alternative would be greater than in sub-alternative A2-1d, which would 
require smooth dogfish catch composition of 100 percent. Because some 
fishermen catch smooth dogfish along with other species, this sub-
alternative could decrease the number of mixed species trips where 
fishermen could take advantage of the at-sea fin removal allowance. 
This sub-alternative would likely decrease total ex-vessel revenues 
relative to the current level of $699,364 per year.
    Sub-Alternative A2-1d would require smooth dogfish to comprise 100 
percent of the retained catch on board the vessel in order for 
fishermen to avail themselves of the at-sea fin removal allowance for 
smooth dogfish. This sub-alternative would eliminate the ability of 
mixed trips to take advantage of the at-sea fin removal, and would 
reduce flexibility in deciding which species to retain on each fishing 
trip. However, approximately 31 vessels (annual average 2003-2014) on 
directed smooth dogfish trips often only retain smooth dogfish due to 
the processing practices in place. Thus, these fishermen would not be 
impacted by a 100 percent smooth dogfish requirement and would benefit 
from the ability to remove the smooth dogfish fins at sea. This sub-
alternative would likely decrease total ex-vessel revenues relative to 
the current level of $699,364 per year.
    Sub-Alternative A2-1e, the preferred sub-alternative, would, 
similar to Sub-Alternative A2-1b, allow fishermen to avail themselves 
of the at-sea fin removal allowance only if smooth dogfish comprise 25 
percent of the retained catch on board. However, under Sub-Alternative 
A2-1e, other sharks could be retained as well, provided they are 
maintained with the fins naturally attached to the carcass. This sub-
alternative would allow some

[[Page 73140]]

fishermen to maintain the profitability of each trip and allow 
individual operators some flexibility to make decisions, before the 
trip and while on the water, as to the retained catch composition that 
would increase ex-vessel revenues. This increase in flexibility would 
be to a lesser extent than Sub-Alternative A2-1a, which would not have 
a catch composition requirement, but greater than the other sub-
alternatives that limit the fins-attached exception to higher catch 
composition percentages. This sub-alternative would decrease total ex-
vessel revenues relative to the current level of $699,364 per year 
(Section 3.6.2).

State Fishing Permit Requirement Sub-Alternatives

    Sub-Alternative A2-2a would require federal smoothhound permitted 
fishermen to obtain a smooth dogfish-specific state commercial fishing 
license in order to be able to remove smooth dogfish fins at sea. The 
requirement to obtain a smooth dogfish-specific state commercial 
fishing license may be more difficult for fishermen who are in states 
that do not have smooth dogfish-specific permits in place. This sub-
alternative would result in the increased burden on fishermen to obtain 
another permit, and depending upon the state, could result in an 
additional permit charge. Since most permits are valid for one year, 
fishermen would likely need to renew the permit each year for as long 
as they wish to retain smooth dogfish and remove the fins while at sea. 
Because not all states have smooth dogfish-specific permits, NMFS does 
not prefer this alternative.
    Sub-Alternative A2-2b, the preferred alternative, would require 
fishermen to hold any state commercial fishing permit that allows 
retention of smooth dogfish. It is likely, however, that most smooth 
dogfish fishermen already hold this type of state permit and would be 
unaffected by this requirement. This sub-alternative would likely be 
the most straightforward for regulatory compliance because the permit 
requirement would be the simpler than sub-alternative A2-2a. Thus, NMFS 
prefers this sub-alternative.

Geographic Applicability of Exception Sub-Alternatives

    NMFS considered two alternatives for Geographic Application of the 
SCA exception. Under Sub-Alternative A2-3a, the exception would apply 
along the Atlantic Coast and the Florida west coast in the Gulf of 
Mexico. As explained earlier, as a practical matter, smooth dogfish and 
other smoothhound species are indistinguishable, although smoothhound 
are distinguishable from other ridgeback sharks by the presence of a 
pre-dorsal ridge. The best available scientific information indicates 
that smooth dogfish are likely the only smoothhound shark species along 
the Atlantic coast. In the Gulf of Mexico, however, there are at least 
three different smoothhound species, with no practical way to 
distinguish among them. This sub-alternative would apply the smooth 
dogfish exception 50 nautical miles from the baseline of all the States 
that fall under the SCA definition of ``State.'' This sub-alternative 
could result in other smoothhound sharks indirectly falling under the 
exception, because they cannot be distinguished from smooth dogfish. 
NMFS does not expect any impacts because there is no commercial fishery 
for smooth dogfish in the Gulf of Mexico at this time. However, NMFS 
does not prefer this sub-alternative because, if a fishery does 
develop, species misidentification could result in enforcement action.
    Under Sub-Alternative 3b, the preferred sub-alternative, the 
exception would only apply along the Atlantic coast and not the Florida 
west coast in the Gulf of Mexico. By not extending the exception into 
the Gulf of Mexico, this sub-alternative would ensure that the SCA's 
exception to the fins-attached requirements for smooth dogfish would 
only apply along the Atlantic Coast where the population is almost 
entirely smooth dogfish, reducing identification problems and 
inadvertent finning violations. NMFS does not expect any impacts 
because, at this time, there is no commercial fishery for smooth 
dogfish in the Gulf of Mexico. NMFS prefers this sub-alternative 
because it simplifies enforcement and compliance without adverse 
impacts. This sub-alternative would not affect total ex-vessel revenues 
relative to the current level of $699,364 per year.

Smoothhound Shark Commercial Quotas

    With regard to the smoothhound quota alternatives, NMFS considered 
four alternatives. Alternative B1, which would implement the 
smoothhound shark quota finalized in Amendment 3; Alternative B2, which 
would establish a rolling quota based on the most recent five years of 
landings data; Alternative B3, which would calculate the smoothhound 
quota using the same method as in Amendment 3 but would use updated 
smoothhound landings information; and Alternative B4, which would 
establish smoothhound shark quotas that reflects the results of the 
SEDAR 39 smoothhound shark stock assessments.
    Alternative B1 would implement the quota finalized in Amendment 3 
(715.5 mt dw), which was based on highest annual landings from (1998 to 
2007) and adding two standard deviations. Current reported smoothhound 
shark landings are higher than the quota level in Alternative B1. As 
such, implementing this quota would prevent fishermen from fishing at 
current levels, resulting in lost revenues. In 2010 when landings 
peaked, total smoothhound shark landings totaled 2,688,249 lb dw (ACCSP 
data) resulting in ex-vessel revenues across the entire smoothhound 
sink gillnet fishery of $2,458,135 (2,688,249 lb of meat, 322,590 lb of 
fins). Implementation of the Amendment 3 quota (715.5 mt dw) would 
result in ex-vessel revenues of only $1,442,367 (1,577,391 lb of meat, 
189,287 lb of fins), which is $1,015,768 less than current ex-vessel 
revenues. Both of these estimates assume $1.62/lb for fins, $0.72/lb 
for meat, and a 12 percent fin-to-carcass ratio (prices based on 2014 
dealer data and fin-to-carcass ratio based on the SCA). Seventy-five 
percent of all landings in the smoothhound shark fishery come from sink 
gillnets and there are approximately 77 vessels that use sink gillnet 
gear to fish for smoothhound sharks in any given year. Assuming an 
average of 77 sink gillnet vessels fishing for smoothhound sharks, the 
quota in this alternative would result in annual ex-vessel revenues of 
$18,732 per vessel which is less than 2010 ex-vessel revenues of 
$31,923 per vessel. This is an average across all directed and 
incidental sink gillnet vessels and this individual annual vessel ex-
vessel revenue may fluctuate based on the degree to which fishermen 
direct on smoothhound sharks.
    The quota in Alternative B1 does not accurately characterize 
current reported landings of smoothhound sharks. Vessels that fish for 
smoothhound sharks likely fished opportunistically on multiple species 
of coastal migratory fish and elasmobranches, and it is unlikely that 
any sector within the fishing industry in the Northeast (fisherman, 
dealer, or processor) relies wholly upon smoothhound sharks. Longer-
term impacts are expected to be neutral given the small size of the 
fishery and the generalist nature of the sink gillnet fishery.
    Alternative B2 would establish a rolling smoothhound shark quota 
set above the maximum annual landings for the preceding five years; 
this quota would be recalculated annually to account for the most 
recent landing

[[Page 73141]]

trends within the smoothhound complex (2016 quota would be 1,729 mt dw 
based on 2010-2014 data). The 2016 quota under this alternative is 
likely to result in annual revenues of $3,485,466 (3,811,753 lb of 
meat, 457,410 lb of fins) assuming an ex-vessel price of $1.62 lb for 
fins and $0.72 lb for meat. Seventy-five percent of all landings in the 
smoothhound shark fishery come from sink gillnets and there are 
approximately 77 vessels that use sink gillnet gear to fish for 
smoothhound sharks. Assuming an average of 77 sink gillnet vessels 
fishing for smoothhound sharks, the quota in this alternative would 
result in individual vessel annual revenues of $45,266 which is more 
than 2010 ex-vessel revenues of $31,923 per vessel. This is an average 
across all sink gillnet vessels, regardless of catch levels, and this 
individual annual vessel revenue may fluctuate based on the degree to 
which fishermen direct on smoothhound sharks.
    Setting the quota above current landings levels should allow the 
fishery to continue, rather than be closed, allowing for NMFS to 
collect more information that can be used in future stock assessments. 
Alternative B2 is consistent with the intent of Amendment 3, which was 
to minimize changes to the fishery while information on catch and 
participants was collected. Because landings in the smoothhound shark 
fishery are likely underreported, it is unclear at this time whether 
the increase in reported landings is due to existing smoothhound 
fishermen reporting in anticipation of future management or increased 
effort (e.g., new entrants into the fishery). While a rolling quota 
would cover all current reporting and likely cover all underreporting 
of landings, the fishery could grow exponentially if reported landings 
continue to increase over consecutive years, possibly resulting in 
stock declines and in turn a potential loss of revenue to the fishing 
industry. The rolling quota could also lead to lower quotas in 
consecutive years if landings decrease over time. Thus, the changing 
nature of the rolling quota could lead to uncertainty in the fishery 
and could cause direct and indirect minor adverse socioeconomic impacts 
in the long term.
    Alternative B3 would create a smoothhound quota equal to the 
maximum annual landings from 2005-2014 plus two standard deviations and 
would equal 1,733.9 mt dw. This alternative would establish a 
smoothhound quota two standard deviations above the maximum annual 
landings reported over the last ten years which is the method used to 
calculate the smoothhound shark quota that was finalized in Amendment 
3. This quota would result in potential annual revenues in the entire 
fishery of $3,495,345 (3,822,556 lb of meat, 458,707 lb of fins) 
assuming an ex-vessel price of $1.62 lb for fins and $0.72 for meat. 
Seventy-five percent of all landings in the smoothhound shark fishery 
come from sink gillnets and there are approximately 77 vessels that use 
sink gillnet gear to fish for smoothhound sharks. Assuming an average 
of 77 sink gillnet vessels fishing for smoothhound sharks, the quota 
proposed in this alternative would result in individual vessel annual 
revenues of $45,394. This is an average across all sink gillnet 
vessels, regardless of catch levels, and this individual annual vessel 
revenue may fluctuate based on the degree to which fishermen direct on 
smoothhound sharks.
    At the time of publication for the Draft EA, the SEDAR 39 
smoothhound stock assessments were underway, but not yet complete. In 
anticipation that the final stock assessments could be finalized before 
this final rule, NMFS considered a range of scenarios under Alternative 
B4 to implement potential results and scenarios, recognizing that 
results beyond the scope of those analyzed could require additional 
analysis or regulatory action. The SEDAR 39 stock assessment is now 
final; thus, the scenarios considered in the Draft EA are no longer 
appropriate to consider. Rather, NMFS has analyzed the actual results 
of the stock assessments, which would establish an Atlantic smoothhound 
commercial quota of 1,201.7 mt dw and a Gulf of Mexico smoothhound 
shark quota of 336.4 mt dw. These quotas would result in annual 
revenues of $2,422,251.54 (2,649,006 lb of meat, 317,881 lb fins), 
assuming an ex-vessel price of $1.62 lb for fins and $0.72 lb for meat. 
Seventy-five percent of all landings in the smoothhound shark fishery 
come from sink gillnets and there are approximately 77 vessels that use 
sink gillnet gear to fish for smoothhound sharks. Assuming an average 
of 77 sink gillnet vessels fishing for smoothhound sharks, the quota in 
this alternative would result in individual vessel annual revenues of 
$31,458. This is an average across all sink gillnet vessels, regardless 
of catch levels, and this individual annual vessel revenue may 
fluctuate based on the degree to which fishermen direct on smoothhound 
sharks. The quotas under Alternative B4 are both consistent with the 
intent of Amendment 3, which was to minimize changes to the fishery 
while information on catch and participants was collected, while also 
implementing science-based quotas to ensure continued sustainable 
harvest of smoothhound sharks in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico 
regions. NMFS anticipates short-term, direct minor beneficial 
socioeconomic impacts under this alternative given the combined 
commercial quotas for the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions under 
this alternative would result in increased revenues compared to the 
commercial quota under Alternative B1, though lower than those 
anticipated under Alternatives B2 or B3. These commercial quotas would 
allow the fishery to continue at the rate and level observed in recent 
years into the future without having to be shut down prematurely. Given 
that the fishery would expect to operate as it currently does, NMFS 
anticipates in the short term, indirect, minor, positive socioeconomic 
impacts for shark dealers and processor. Since this alternative 
establishes scientifically-based quotas and would result in beneficial 
socioeconomic impacts, NMFS prefers this alternative.

Biological Opinion Implementation

    In order to implement TC 4 of the 2012 Shark BiOp in the 
smoothhound shark fishery, NMFS considered 4 alternatives. The No 
Action alternative, which would not implement TC 4 of the 2012 Shark 
BiOp; alternative C2, which would require smoothhound shark fishermen 
to conduct net checks at least every 2 hours; alternative C3, which 
would require smoothhound shark fishermen to limit their gillnet soak 
time to 24 hours and those smoothhound shark fishermen that also have a 
Atlantic shark limited access permit to check their nets at least every 
2 hours; and finally, Alternative C4, which would require smoothhound 
and Atlantic shark fishermen using sink gillnet to soak their nets no 
longer than 24 hours and those fishermen using drift gillnets to check 
their nets at least every 2 hours.
    Alternative C1 would not implement the BiOp term and condition that 
would require all smoothhound shark permit holders to either check 
their gillnet gear at least every 2.0 hours or limit their soak time to 
no more than 24 hours. This alternative would likely result in short 
and long-term neutral direct socioeconomic impacts. Under Alternative 
C1, smoothhound shark fishermen would continue to fish as they do now 
and so this alternative would not have economic impacts that differ 
from the status quo. Similarly, this alternative would likely result in 
neutral short and long-term indirect

[[Page 73142]]

socioeconomic impacts since supporting businesses including dealers and 
bait, tackle, and ice suppliers would not be impacted.
    Alternative C2 would require smoothhound shark fishermen using 
gillnet gear to conduct net checks at least every 2.0 hours to check 
for and remove any protected species, and would likely result in short 
and long-term direct moderate adverse socioeconomic impacts. Some 
smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen fish multiple nets at one time or 
deploy their net(s), leave the vicinity, and return later. Alternative 
C2 would require these fishermen to check each gillnet at least once 
every 2 hours, making fishing with multiple nets or leaving nets 
unattended difficult. This would likely lead to a reduction in effort 
and landing levels, resulting in lower ex-vessel revenues. Quantifying 
the loss of income is difficult without information characterizing the 
fishery including the number of nets fished. However, limiting the 
amount of fishing effort in this manner is likely to reduce total 
landings of smoothhound sharks or, in order to keep landing levels 
high, extend the length of trips. Landings of incidentally caught fish 
species could be reduced as well, although under preferred Sub-
Alternative A2-1c, smoothhound shark fishermen that wish to remove 
smooth dogfish fins at sea could not retain other species. This 
alternative would not have a large impact on supporting businesses such 
as dealers or bait, tackle, and ice suppliers since these businesses do 
not solely rely on the smoothhound shark fishery. The smoothhound shark 
fishery is small relative to other fisheries. Thus, Alternative C2 
would likely result in short and long-term indirect neutral 
socioeconomic impacts. Alternative C2 would impact the approximately 77 
vessels that annually catch smoothhound sharks with gillnet gear 
(annual average from 2003-2014, Table 3.1).
    Alternative C3 would establish a gillnet soak time limit of 24 
hours for smoothhound shark permit holders. Under this alternative, 
fishermen holding both an Atlantic shark limited access permit and a 
smoothhound shark permit must abide by the 24 hour soak time 
restriction and conduct net checks at least every 2 hours. This 
alternative would likely result in short- and long-term direct minor 
adverse socioeconomic impacts to those smoothhound permitted fishermen 
that also have an Atlantic shark limited access permit and therefore 
would be required to check their nets at least every 2 hours. 
Currently, smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen sometimes fish multiple 
nets or leave nets unattended for short periods of time. Rarely are 
these nets soaked for more than 24 hours, thus, this alternative would 
not impact smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen that do not have an 
Atlantic shark limited access permit. Adverse socioeconomic impacts 
resulting from this alternative would likely occur to the subset of 
smoothhound shark fishermen that also hold an Atlantic shark limited 
access permit. These smoothhound shark fishermen would be at a 
disadvantage to other smoothhound shark fishermen that do not have an 
Atlantic shark limited access permit because they would be required to 
check their gillnets at least every 2 hours which is a large change in 
the way the smoothhound shark fishery currently operates. Dropping the 
Atlantic shark permit to avoid the net check requirement is unlikely to 
be feasible because Atlantic shark permits allow limited access (NMFS 
is no longer issuing new permits) and cannot be easily obtained. 
Additionally, pelagic longline fishermen are required to have an 
incidental or directed shark permit when targeting swordfish or tunas, 
even if they are not fishing for sharks, due to the likelihood of 
incidental shark catch. In practical terms, this could result in 
smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen abiding by the 2 hour net check 
requirement even if they do not fish for Atlantic sharks and only hold 
a Atlantic shark limited access permit to fish for swordfish or tunas 
(note that gillnets cannot be used to target swordfish or tunas, but 
some vessels may switch gears between trips). For this subset of 
fishermen, basing gillnet requirements on permit types could introduce 
fishing inefficiencies when compared to other smoothhound fishermen, 
likely resulting in adverse socioeconomic impacts to these fishermen. 
It is unlikely that this alternative would have a large impact on 
supporting businesses such as dealers or bait, tackle, and ice 
suppliers since these businesses do not solely rely on the smoothhound 
shark fishery. The smoothhound shark fishery is small relative to other 
fisheries. It is difficult to determine the number of fishermen that 
would be adversely affected because NMFS does not yet know which 
vessels will obtain a smoothhound shark fishing permit. However, it is 
likely that this number will be approximately equal to 169 which is the 
average annual number of vessel that retain smoothhound sharks (Section 
3.4).
    Alternative C4, the preferred alternative, would establish a soak 
time limit of 24 hours for fishermen using sink gillnet gear and a 2 
hour net check requirement for fishermen using drift gillnet gear in 
the Atlantic shark and smoothhound shark fisheries. Drift gillnets 
would be defined as those that are unattached to the ocean bottom with 
a float line at the surface and sink gillnet gear would be defined as 
those with a weight line that sinks to the ocean bottom, has a 
submerged float line, and is designed to be fished on or near the 
bottom. Alternative C4 would likely result in neutral short and long-
term direct socioeconomic impacts. Smoothhound shark fishermen, who 
typically use sink gillnets, would be required to limit soak times to 
24 hours and as discussed above, this requirement is unlikely to 
significantly alter smoothhound shark fishing practices. Drift gillnet 
fishermen, who are more likely to target Atlantic sharks rather than 
smoothhound sharks, would be required to check their nets at least 
every 2 hours, as is currently required. Thus, this alternative is 
unlikely to have any socioeconomic impacts to Atlantic shark and 
smoothhound shark fishermen because it would not change current fishing 
practices. Similarly, this alternative would likely result in neutral 
short and long-term indirect socioeconomic impacts because supporting 
businesses including dealers and bait, tackle, and ice suppliers should 
not be impacted. Alternative C4 would impact the approximately 77 
vessels that annually catch smoothhound sharks with gillnet gear 
(annual average from 2003-2014, Table 3.1). Because Alternative C4 
would have minimal economic impact but is still consistent with the 
2012 Shark BiOp, NMFS prefers this alternative.

Atlantic Shark Gillnet Vessel Monitoring System Requirements

    NMFS also considered two alternatives to streamline the current VMS 
requirements for Atlantic shark fishermen with gillnet gear on board. 
The No Action alternative would maintain the current requirement to 
have VMS on board when fishing for Atlantic sharks with gillnet 
regardless of where the vessel is fishing and alternative D2 would 
require VMS on board only for Atlantic shark fishermen using gillnet 
gear in an area specified by the ALWTRP requirements at 50 CFR 229.32.
    Alternative D1 would maintain the current requirement of requiring 
Atlantic shark permit holders fishing with gillnet gear to have VMS on 
board, regardless of where the vessel is fishing.

[[Page 73143]]

These VMS requirements were put in place as an enforcement tool for 
complying with the ALWTRP requirements set forth in 50 CFR 229.32. 
Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen are only required to have VMS if they 
are fishing in the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area. See 50 CFR 
229.32(h)(2)(i). Purchasing and installing a VMS unit costs 
approximately $3,500, and monthly data transmission charges cost, on 
average, approximately $44.00. Because these monthly costs are 
currently incurred whenever a shark gillnet fishermen is fishing, these 
costs can affect the fishermen's annual revenues. Although the affected 
fishermen already have VMS installed, they continue to pay for 
transmission and maintenance costs, and could need to buy a new unit if 
theirs fails. It is possible that a NMFS VMS reimbursement program 
could defray part of the purchase cost, but is not certain. Thus, it is 
likely that this alternative could have short and long-term direct 
minor adverse socioeconomic impacts to fishermen due to the cost of 
purchasing and maintaining a VMS unit. While the retention of sharks in 
federal waters requires one of two limited access commercial shark 
permits, these permits do not specify gear type, including gillnets. 
For this reason, NMFS does not know the exact number of affected shark 
gillnet fishermen. As of October 11, 2014, there are 206 directed shark 
and 258 incidental shark permit holders. Logbook records indicate that 
there are usually about 18 Atlantic shark directed permit holders that 
use gillnet gear in any year. However, the universe of directed permit 
holders using gillnet gear can change from year to year and could 
include anyone who holds an Atlantic shark directed permit.
    Alternative D2, the preferred alternative, would change the gillnet 
VMS requirements and would require federal directed shark permit 
holders with gillnet gear on board to use VMS only in the vicinity of 
the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area, pursuant to ALWTRP requirements, 
and would have short and long-term direct minor beneficial 
socioeconomic impacts. Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen fishing in the 
vicinity of the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area would still incur the 
installation costs of the VMS, but data transmission would be limited 
to those times when the vessel is in this area. Furthermore, shark 
gillnet fishermen outside of this area that do not fish in the vicinity 
of the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area would not need to install a VMS 
unit or, if they already have one, maintain the VMS unit or replace a 
malfunctioning one. Thus, the socioeconomic impacts from this 
alternative, while still adverse, are of a lesser degree than those 
under Alternative D1, the No Action alternative. This alternative would 
likely result in neutral short and long-term indirect socioeconomic 
impacts because supporting businesses, including dealers and bait, 
tackle, and ice suppliers, would not be impacted. While the retention 
of sharks in federal waters requires one of two limited access 
commercial shark permits, these permits do not specify gear type, 
including gillnets. For this reason, NMFS does not know the exact 
number of shark gillnet fishermen that would be affected by this 
alternative. As of October 11, 2014, there are 206 directed shark and 
258 incidental shark permit holders. Logbook records indicate that 
there are usually about 18 Atlantic shark directed permit holders that 
use gillnet gear in any year. However, the universe of directed permit 
holders using gillnet gear can change from year to year and could 
include anyone who holds an Atlantic shark directed permit. Because 
this alternative is more in line with the requirements of the ALWTRP, 
and because it would reduce socioeconomic impacts while still 
maintaining beneficial ecological impacts for protected whale species, 
NMFS prefers this alternative.
    This final rule contains a collection-of-information requirement 
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and which has been 
approved by OMB under control number 0648-0372. Public reporting burden 
will be reduced under the modified VMS requirements under this final 
rule. The burden estimate burden will be reduced by this rule, but the 
changes will be requested as part of the 2016 extension, at which time 
the estimate of the burden change will be more accurate.
    Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness 
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for 
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish 
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule, 
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance 
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is 
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of 
this rulemaking process, a letter to permit holders that also serves as 
small entity compliance guide (the guide) was prepared. Copies of this 
final rule are available from the HMS Management Division (see 
ADDRESSES) and the guide (i.e., permit holder letter) will be sent to 
all holders of permits for the Atlantic shark and smoothhound shark 
commercial fisheries. The guide and this final rule will be available 
upon request.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 635

    Fisheries, Fishing, Fishing vessels, Foreign relations, Imports, 
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Treaties.

    Dated: November 12, 2015.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.

    For reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 635 is amended as 
follows:

PART 635--ATLANTIC HIGHLY MIGRATORY SPECIES

0
1. The authority citation for part 635 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq.; 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.


0
2. In Sec.  635.2, add definitions for ``Atlantic States,'' ``Drift 
gillnet,'' ``Sink gillnet,'' and ``Smoothhound shark(s)'' in 
alphabetical order to read as follows:


Sec.  635.2  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Atlantic States, consistent with section 803 of Public law 103-206 
(16 U.S.C. 5102), refers to Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode 
Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, 
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, 
the District of Columbia, and the Potomac River Fisheries Commission, 
for purposes of applying the Shark Conservation Act exception at 50 CFR 
635.30(c)(5).
* * * * *
    Drift gillnet means a gillnet that is floating unattached to the 
ocean bottom and not anchored, secured, or weighted to the ocean 
bottom.
* * * * *
    Sink gillnet means a gillnet that is designed to be or is fished on 
or near the ocean bottom in the lower third of the water column by 
means of a weight line or enough weights and/or anchors that the bottom 
of the gillnet sinks to, on, or near the ocean bottom.
* * * * *
    Smoothhound shark(s) means one of the species, or part thereof, 
listed in section E of Table 1 in Appendix A to this part.
* * * * *

0
3. In Sec.  635.4, add paragraph (e)(4) and revise paragraph (m)(2) to 
read as follows:

[[Page 73144]]

Sec.  635.4  Permits and fees.

* * * * *
    (e) * * *
    (4) Owners of vessels that fish for, take, retain, or possess the 
Atlantic oceanic sharks listed in section E of Table 1 of Appendix A to 
this part with an intention to sell them must obtain a Federal 
commercial smoothhound permit. In addition to other permits issued 
pursuant to this section or other authorities, a Federal commercial 
smoothhound permit may be issued to a vessel alone or to a vessel that 
also holds either a Federal Atlantic commercial shark directed or 
incidental limited access permit.
* * * * *
    (m) * * *
    (2) Shark and swordfish permits. A vessel owner must obtain the 
applicable limited access permit(s) issued pursuant to the requirements 
in paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section and/or a Federal commercial 
smoothhound permit issued under paragraph (e) of this section; or an 
HMS Commercial Caribbean Small Boat permit issued under paragraph (o) 
of this section, if: The vessel is used to fish for or take sharks 
commercially from the management unit; sharks from the management unit 
are retained or possessed on the vessel with an intention to sell; or 
sharks from the management unit are sold from the vessel. A vessel 
owner must obtain the applicable limited access permit(s) issued 
pursuant to the requirements in paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section, 
a Swordfish General Commercial permit issued under paragraph (f) of 
this section, an Incidental HMS Squid Trawl permit issued under 
paragraph (n) of this section, an HMS Commercial Caribbean Small Boat 
permit issued under paragraph (o) of this section, or an HMS Charter/
Headboat permit issued under paragraph (b) of this section, which 
authorizes a Charter/Headboat to fish commercially for swordfish on a 
non for-hire trip subject to the retention limits at Sec.  635.24(b)(4) 
if: The vessel is used to fish for or take swordfish commercially from 
the management unit; swordfish from the management unit are retained or 
possessed on the vessel with an intention to sell; or swordfish from 
the management unit are sold from the vessel. The commercial retention 
and sale of swordfish from vessels issued an HMS Charter/Headboat 
permit is permissible only when the vessel is on a non for-hire trip. 
Only persons holding non-expired shark and swordfish limited access 
permit(s) in the preceding year are eligible to renew those limited 
access permit(s). Transferors may not renew limited access permits that 
have been transferred according to the procedures in paragraph (l) of 
this section.
* * * * *

0
4. Revise Sec.  635.7 to read as follows:


Sec.  635.7  At-sea observer coverage.

    (a) Applicability. NMFS may select for at-sea observer coverage any 
vessel that has an Atlantic HMS, tunas, shark, or swordfish permit 
issued under Sec.  635.4 or Sec.  635.32. When selected, vessels are 
required to take observers on a mandatory basis. Vessels permitted in 
the HMS Charter/Headboat and Angling categories may be requested to 
take observers on a voluntary basis.
    (b) Selection of vessels. NMFS will notify a vessel owner, in 
writing, by email, by phone, or in person when his or her vessel is 
selected for observer coverage. Vessels will be selected to provide 
information on catch, bycatch and other fishery data according to the 
need for representative samples.
    (c) Notification of trips. If selected to carry an observer, it is 
the responsibility of the vessel owner to arrange for and facilitate 
observer placement. The owner or operator of a vessel that is selected 
under paragraph (b) of this section must notify NMFS, at an address or 
by phone at a number designated by NMFS, before commencing any fishing 
trip that may result in the incidental catch or harvest of Atlantic 
HMS. Notification procedures and information requirements will be 
specified in a selection letter sent by NMFS.
    (d) Assignment of observers. Once a selected vessel notifies NMFS 
or its designee, NMFS will assign an observer for that trip based on 
current information needs relative to the expected catch and bycatch 
likely to be associated with the indicated gear deployment, trip 
duration and fishing area. If an observer is not assigned for a fishing 
trip, NMFS, or their designated observer service provider, will issue a 
waiver for that trip to the owner or operator of the selected vessel, 
so long as the waiver is consistent with other applicable laws. If an 
observer is assigned for a trip, the operator of the selected vessel 
must arrange to embark the observer and shall not fish for or retain 
any Atlantic HMS unless the NMFS-assigned observer is aboard.
    (e) Requirements. The owner or operator of a vessel on which a 
NMFS-approved observer is embarked, regardless of whether required to 
carry the observer, must comply with safety regulations in Sec.  
600.725 and Sec.  600.746 of this chapter and--
    (1) Provide accommodations and food that are equivalent to those 
provided to the crew.
    (2) Allow the observer access to and use of the vessel's 
communications equipment and personnel upon request for the 
transmission and receipt of messages related to the observer's duties.
    (3) Allow the observer access to and use of the vessel's navigation 
equipment and personnel upon request to determine the vessel's 
position.
    (4) Allow the observer free and unobstructed access to the vessel's 
bridge, working decks, holding bins, weight scales, holds, and any 
other space used to hold, process, weigh, or store fish.
    (5) Allow the observer to inspect and copy the vessel's log, 
communications logs, and any records associated with the catch and 
distribution of fish for that trip.
    (6) Notify the observer in a timely fashion of when fishing 
operations are to begin and end.
    (f) Vessel responsibilities. An owner or operator of a vessel 
required to carry one or more observer(s) must provide reasonable 
assistance to enable observer(s) to carry out their duties, including, 
but not limited to:
    (1) Measuring decks, codends, and holding bins.
    (2) Providing the observer(s) with a safe work area.
    (3) Collecting bycatch when requested by the observer(s).
    (4) Collecting and carrying baskets of fish when requested by the 
observer(s).
    (5) Allowing the observer(s) to collect biological data and 
samples.
    (6) Providing adequate space for storage of biological samples.

0
5. In Sec.  635.19, revise paragraph (d) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.19  Authorized gears.

* * * * *
    (d) Sharks. No person may possess a shark in the EEZ taken from its 
management unit without a permit issued under Sec.  635.4. No person 
issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit under Sec.  635.4 may 
possess a shark taken by any gear other than rod and reel, handline, 
bandit gear, longline, or gillnet, except that smoothhound sharks may 
be retained incidentally while fishing with trawl gear subject to the 
restrictions specified in Sec.  635.24(a)(7). No person issued an HMS 
Commercial Caribbean Small Boat permit may possess a shark taken from 
the U.S. Caribbean, as defined at Sec.  622.2 of this chapter, by any 
gear other than with rod and reel, handline or bandit gear. No person 
issued an HMS Angling permit or an HMS Charter/Headboat permit under 
Sec.  635.4 may possess a shark if the shark was taken from its

[[Page 73145]]

management unit by any gear other than rod and reel or handline, except 
that persons on a vessel issued both an HMS Charter/Headboat permit and 
a Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit may possess sharks taken 
with rod and reel, handline, bandit gear, longline, or gillnet if the 
vessel is not engaged in a for-hire fishing trip.
* * * * *

0
6. In Sec.  635.20, add paragraph (e)(5) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.20  Size limits.

* * * * *
    (e) * * *
    (5) There is no size limit for smoothhound sharks taken under the 
recreational retention limits specified at Sec.  635.22(c)(6).
* * * * *

0
7. In Sec.  635.21, revise the section heading, and paragraphs (g)(2) 
and (3) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.21  Gear operation and deployment restrictions.

* * * * *
    (g) * * *
    (2) While fishing with a drift gillnet, a vessel issued or required 
to be issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark limited access permit 
and/or a Federal commercial smoothhound permit must conduct net checks 
at least every 2 hours to look for and remove any sea turtles, marine 
mammals, Atlantic sturgeon, or smalltooth sawfish, and the drift 
gillnet must remain attached to at least one vessel at one end, except 
during net checks. Smalltooth sawfish must not be removed from the 
water while being removed from the net.
    (3) While fishing with a sink gillnet, vessels issued or required 
to be issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark limited access permit 
and/or a Federal commercial smoothhound permit must limit the soak time 
of the sink gillnet gear to no more than 24 hours, measured from the 
time the sink gillnet first enters the water to the time it is 
completely removed from the water. Smalltooth sawfish must not be 
removed from the water while being removed from the net.
* * * * *

0
8. In Sec.  635.22, add paragraph (c)(6) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.22  Recreational retention limits.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (6) The smoothhound sharks listed in Section E of Table 1 of 
Appendix A to this part may be retained and are subject only to the 
size limits described in Sec.  635.20(e)(5).
* * * * *

0
9. In Sec.  635.24, add paragraph (a)(7) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.24  Commercial retention limits for sharks, swordfish, and 
BAYS tunas.

* * * * *
    (a) * * *
    (7) A person who owns or operates a vessel that has been issued a 
Federal commercial smoothhound permit may retain, possess, and land 
smoothhound sharks if the smoothhound fishery is open in accordance 
with Sec. Sec.  635.27 and 635.28. Persons aboard a vessel in a trawl 
fishery that has been issued a Federal commercial smoothhound permit 
and are in compliance with all other applicable regulations, may 
retain, possess, land, or sell incidentally-caught smoothhound sharks, 
but only up to an amount that does not exceed 25 percent, by weight, of 
the total catch on board and/or offloaded from the vessel. A vessel is 
in a trawl fishery when it has no commercial fishing gear other than 
trawls on board and when smoothhound sharks constitute no more than 25 
percent by weight of the total catch on board or offloaded from the 
vessel.
* * * * *

0
10. In Sec.  635.27, add paragraphs (b)(1)(i)(E), (b)(1)(ii)(F), and 
(b)(4)(iv) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.27  Quotas.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (E) Atlantic smoothhound sharks. The base annual commercial quota 
for Atlantic smoothhound sharks is 1,201.7 mt dw.
    (ii) * * *
    (F) Gulf of Mexico smoothhound sharks. The base annual commercial 
quota for Gulf of Mexico smoothhound sharks is 336.4 mt dw.
* * * * *
    (4) * * *
    (iv) The base annual quota for persons who collect smoothhound 
sharks under a display permit or EFP is 6 mt ww (4.3 mt dw).
* * * * *

0
11. In Sec.  635.30, revise paragraphs (c)(1) through (3), and add 
paragraph (c)(5) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.30  Possession at sea and landing.

* * * * *
    (c) Shark. (1) In addition to the regulations issued at part 600, 
subpart N, of this chapter, a person who owns or operates a vessel 
issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit under Sec.  635.4 
must maintain all the shark fins including the tail naturally attached 
to the shark carcass until the shark has been offloaded from the 
vessel, except for under the conditions specified in paragraph (c)(5) 
of this section. While sharks are on board and when sharks are being 
offloaded, persons issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit 
under Sec.  635.4 are subject to the regulations at part 600, subpart 
N, of this chapter.
    (2) A person who owns or operates a vessel that has a valid Federal 
Atlantic commercial shark permit may remove the head and viscera of the 
shark while on board the vessel. At any time when on the vessel, sharks 
must not have the backbone removed and must not be halved, quartered, 
filleted, or otherwise reduced. All fins, including the tail, must 
remain naturally attached to the shark through offloading, except under 
the conditions specified in paragraph (c)(5) of this section. While on 
the vessel, fins may be sliced so that the fin can be folded along the 
carcass for storage purposes as long as the fin remains naturally 
attached to the carcass via at least a small portion of uncut skin. The 
fins and tail may only be removed from the carcass once the shark has 
been landed and offloaded, except under the conditions specified in 
paragraph (c)(5) of this section.
    (3) A person who owns or operates a vessel that has been issued a 
Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit and who lands sharks in an 
Atlantic coastal port, including ports in the Gulf of Mexico and 
Caribbean Sea, must have all fins and carcasses weighed and recorded on 
the weighout slips specified in Sec.  635.5(a)(2) and in accordance 
with part 600, subpart N, of this chapter. Persons may not possess any 
shark fins not naturally attached to a shark carcass on board a fishing 
vessel at any time, except under the conditions specified in paragraph 
(c)(5) of this section. Once landed and offloaded, sharks that have 
been halved, quartered, filleted, cut up, or reduced in any manner may 
not be brought back on board a vessel that has been or should have been 
issued a Federal Atlantic commercial shark permit.
* * * * *
    (5) A person who owns or operates a vessel that has been issued a 
Federal commercial smoothhound permit may remove the fins and tail of a 
smooth dogfish shark prior to offloading if the conditions in 
paragraphs (c)(5)(i) through (iv) of this section have been met. If the 
conditions in paragraphs (c)(5)(i) through (iv) of this section have

[[Page 73146]]

not been met, all fins, including the tail, must remain naturally 
attached to the smooth dogfish through offloading from the vessel:
    (i) The smooth dogfish was caught within waters of the United 
States located shoreward of a line drawn in such a manner that each 
point on it is 50 nautical miles from the baseline of an Atlantic State 
from which the territorial sea is measured, from Maine south through 
Florida to the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico shark regional boundary 
defined in Sec.  635.27(b)(1).
    (ii) The vessel has been issued both a Federal commercial 
smoothhound permit and a valid State commercial fishing permit that 
allows for fishing for smooth dogfish.
    (iii) Smooth dogfish make up at least 25 percent of the catch on 
board at the time of landing.
    (iv) Total weight of the smooth dogfish fins landed or found on 
board a vessel cannot exceed 12 percent of the total dressed weight of 
smooth dogfish carcasses on board or landed from the fishing vessel.
* * * * *

0
12. In Sec.  635.69, revise paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.69  Vessel monitoring systems.

    (a) * * *
    (3) Pursuant to Atlantic large whale take reduction plan 
requirements at 50 CFR 229.32(h), whenever a vessel issued a directed 
shark LAP has a gillnet(s) on board.
* * * * *

0
13. In Sec.  635.71, revise paragraphs (d)(6) and (7), and add 
paragraph (d)(18) to read as follows:


Sec.  635.71  Prohibitions.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (6) Fail to maintain a shark in its proper form, as specified in 
Sec.  635.30(c). Fail to maintain naturally attached shark fins through 
offloading as specified in Sec.  635.30(c), except for under the 
conditions specified in Sec.  635.30(c)(5).
    (7) Sell or purchase smooth dogfish fins that are disproportionate 
to the weight of smooth dogfish carcasses, as specified in Sec.  
635.30(c)(5).
* * * * *
    (18) Retain or possess on board a vessel in the trawl fishery 
smoothhound sharks in an amount that exceeds 25 percent, by weight, of 
the total fish on board or offloaded from the vessel, as specified at 
Sec.  635.24(a)(7).
* * * * *

0
14. In Appendix A to Part 635, add Section E to Table 1 to read as 
follows:

Appendix A to Part 635--Species Tables

    Table 1 of Appendix A to Part 635--Oceanic Sharks
* * * * *

E. Smoothhound Sharks

Smooth dogfish, Mustelus canis
Florida smoothhound, Mustelus norrisi
Gulf smoothhound, Mustelus sinusmexicanus Mustelus species

[FR Doc. 2015-29516 Filed 11-23-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3510-22-P



                                                73128            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                be unacceptable to conduct a test with                  a test failure and, in such a situation,              establishes Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico
                                                a well-worn, faded blue flag.                           request that a new test be conducted                  regional smoothhound shark annual
                                                   iv. Consider Daylight, Darkness, and                 with a different testing officer.                     commercial quotas based on recent
                                                Weather Conditions to the Extent Those                     ii. Create Adequate Records and                    stock assessments; implements the
                                                Factors Might Skew the Test Results.                    Provide to Examinee. Because an                       shark gillnet requirements of the 2012
                                                The railroad’s procedures should allow                  examinee who fails a field test and is                Shark and Smoothhound Biological
                                                a medical examiner to inform the testing                subsequently denied certification or                  Opinion (BiOp); and modifies current
                                                officer that a particular examinee must                 recertification may request FRA to                    regulations related to the use of vessel
                                                be tested at night (i.e., under darkness)               review that decision, each railroad                   monitoring systems (VMS) by Atlantic
                                                or during the day with bright sunshine,                 should be prepared to provide the                     shark fishermen using gillnet gear. The
                                                or under some other condition, so that                  examinee with the results of any field                term ‘‘smoothhound sharks’’
                                                the test can appropriately focus on the                 tests. A railroad should consider                     collectively refers to smooth dogfish
                                                examinee’s known color vision                           developing a method or protocol by                    (Mustelus canis), Florida smoothhound
                                                deficiency found during the initial                     which the testing officer offers a copy of            (M. norrisi), Gulf smoothhound (M.
                                                medical testing and will be an accurate                 the completed test form to the examinee               sinusmexicanus), small eye
                                                indicator of whether the examinee can                   upon completion of the test. The                      smoothhound (M. higmani), and any
                                                safely perform anticipated locomotive                   railroad may want the testing officer to              other Mustelus spp. that might be found
                                                engineer or conductor duties. For most                  record on the form whether the                        in U.S. waters of the Atlantic, Gulf of
                                                people, signal visibility will be the                   examinee was offered a copy of the                    Mexico, and Caribbean, collectively.
                                                greatest at night and more challenging                  form, and whether the examinee                        This rule also implements the smooth
                                                during the daytime in bright sun when                   accepted receipt. The form may also                   dogfish specific provisions in the Shark
                                                the sky is clear. Field testing conducted               include a signature line for the                      Conservation Act of 2010 (SCA). The
                                                at sunrise or sunset may pose a greater                 examinee to acknowledge receipt of the                SCA requires that all sharks landed from
                                                likelihood that severe glare could skew                 completed test form.                                  Federal waters in the United States be
                                                test results such that it would be                                                                            landed with their fins naturally attached
                                                                                                          Issued in Washington, DC, on November
                                                difficult for individuals with normal                   17, 2015.                                             to the carcass, but includes a limited
                                                color vision to identify a signal                                                                             exception for smooth dogfish. For the
                                                                                                        Robert C. Lauby,
                                                indication or aspect. FRA’s regulations                                                                       Federal Atlantic shark fisheries, current
                                                do not prohibit a railroad from requiring               Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety,
                                                                                                        Chief Safety Officer.                                 HMS regulations require federally-
                                                multiple field tests under different                                                                          permitted shark fishermen to land all
                                                operating or working conditions, and                    [FR Doc. 2015–29640 Filed 11–23–15; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                        BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
                                                                                                                                                              sharks with fins naturally attached to
                                                certainly some examinees will warrant                                                                         the carcass. The SCA’s fins-attached
                                                such testing based on their known                                                                             requirement is being addressed
                                                vision deficiency. Likewise, if a test is                                                                     nationwide through a separate ongoing
                                                conducted during a snowstorm,                           DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                                                                                                                                                              rulemaking. This final rule only
                                                rainstorm, fog, or other weather                                                                              addresses the provision contained in the
                                                conditions that would inhibit a person’s                National Oceanic and Atmospheric
                                                                                                        Administration                                        SCA that allows at-sea fin removal of
                                                vision, acceptable sight distances                                                                            Atlantic smooth dogfish.
                                                should be adjusted accordingly, and in
                                                some instances, may suggest that a test                 50 CFR Part 635                                         Additionally, NMFS will hold an
                                                cannot be verified as reliable and should               [Docket No. 110819516–5913–02]
                                                                                                                                                              operator-assisted, public conference call
                                                be voided.                                                                                                    and webinar on December 15, 2015, to
                                                   d. Comparability.                                    RIN 0648–BB02                                         discuss the methodology used to
                                                   i. Implement Procedures To Address                                                                         calculate the Atlantic and Gulf of
                                                Bias Accusations. To effectively address                Atlantic Highly Migratory Species;                    Mexico smoothhound shark quotas (see
                                                accusations that a particular test was                  Smoothhound Shark and Atlantic                        ADDRESSES).
                                                unfairly designed, implemented, or                      Shark Management Measures
                                                                                                                                                              DATES: Effective March 15, 2016. An
                                                scored, a railroad should allow the                     AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                    operator-assisted, public conference call
                                                examinee to bring along a volunteer                     Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                  and webinar will be held on December
                                                witness of the examinee’s choosing, and                 Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),                    15, 2015, from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.,
                                                all participants, including witnesses,                  Commerce.                                             EST.
                                                should be afforded an opportunity to                    ACTION: Final rule; fishery notification.
                                                record their observations regarding                                                                           ADDRESSES:   The conference call-in
                                                whether testing procedures were                         SUMMARY:  This final rule implements                  phone number is 1–800–857–9816;
                                                followed and the conditions under                       Amendment 9 to the 2006 Consolidated                  participant pass code is 9776014.
                                                which the test was conducted. The                       Atlantic Highly Migratory Species                     Participants are strongly encouraged to
                                                testing officer should have a standard                  (HMS) Fishery Management Plan (FMP)                   log/dial in 15 minutes prior to the
                                                method that will capture the names and                  (Amendment 9) to bring smoothhound                    meeting. NMFS will show a brief
                                                contact information of any witnesses                    sharks under Federal management and                   presentation via webinar followed by
                                                who observe the test, and the railroad                  establishes an effective date for                     public questions. To join the webinar go
                                                should permit the examinee and any                      previously-adopted shark management                   to: https://noaa-meets.webex.com/noaa-
                                                witnesses an opportunity to submit their                measures finalized in Amendment 3 to                  meets/j.php?MTID=m812c15f48b46787
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                observations in writing for direct review               the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS                    ea7475fc010c7099e, enter your name
                                                by the railroad’s medical examiner. The                 FMP (Amendment 3) and the 2011 Final                  and email address, and click the ‘‘JOIN’’
                                                railroad should provide the medical                     Rule to Modify the Retention of                       button. If requested, the meeting
                                                examiner with the authority to void any                 Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory                  number is 991 661 137 and the meeting
                                                test in which the examinee or another                   Species in Atlantic Trawl Fisheries                   password is NOAA. Participants who
                                                witness makes a substantial showing                     (August 10, 2011) (2011 HMS Trawl                     have not used WebEx before will be
                                                that bias or prejudice may have led to                  Rule). Specifically, this final rule                  prompted to download and run a plug-


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00042   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                     73129

                                                in program that will enable them to                     adjusting the smoothhound shark quota                 in the Gulf of Mexico. During the public
                                                view the webinar.                                       finalized in Amendment 3; and                         comment period, NMFS received
                                                   Copies of Amendment 9, including                     modifying the VMS requirements for                    support for the two proposed sub-
                                                the Final Environmental Assessment                      shark gillnet vessels. The full                       alternatives related to state fishing
                                                (EA) and other relevant documents, are                  description of the management and                     permits and geographic applicability of
                                                available from the HMS Management                       conservation measures considered is                   the SCA provisions. However, NMFS
                                                Division Web site at http://www.nmfs.                   included in both the Final EA for                     received many comments opposing the
                                                noaa.gov/sfa/hms/. Copies of the 2015                   Amendment 9 and the proposed rule                     catch composition requirement of 75
                                                smoothhound shark stock assessment                      and is not repeated here.                             percent and the ‘‘no other sharks on
                                                results are available on the Southeast                     The comment period for the Draft EA                board’’ provision. Commenters
                                                Data Assessment and Review (SEDAR)                      and proposed rule for Amendment 9                     expressed concern that these
                                                Web site at http://sedarweb.org/sedar-                  ended on November 14, 2014. The                       requirements do not meet the intent of
                                                39.                                                     comments received, and responses to                   the statutory exception because they do
                                                                                                        those comments, are summarized below                  not reflect the mixed nature of catch in
                                                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                        under the heading labeled Response to                 the smooth dogfish fishery and would
                                                Steve Durkee by phone: 202–670–6637
                                                                                                        Comments.                                             render the exception largely
                                                or Karyl Brewster-Geisz by phone: 301–                     Management measures in Amendment
                                                427–8503 or by fax: 301–713–1917.                                                                             meaningless. They also stated that the
                                                                                                        9 will impact both the smoothhound                    catch composition requirement would
                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Atlantic                     shark and Atlantic shark fisheries. This              lead to excessive dead discards and
                                                sharks are managed under the authority                  rule finalizes most of the management                 would be burdensome.
                                                of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery                         measures, but modifies others, that were                 As detailed under the Changes from
                                                Conservation and Management Act                         contained in the Draft EA and proposed                the Proposed Rule heading, NMFS is
                                                (Magnuson-Stevens Act), and the                         rule for Amendment 9. This section                    implementing the two sub-alternatives
                                                authority to promulgate regulations                     provides a summary of the final                       related to state fishing permits and
                                                under the Magnuson-Stevens Act has                      management measures being                             geographic applicability of the
                                                been delegated from the Secretary to the                implemented by Amendment 9 and                        exception as originally proposed. NMFS
                                                Assistant Administrator (AA) for                        notes changes from the proposed rule to               is changing the catch composition
                                                Fisheries, NOAA. On October 2, 2006,                    this final rule. Measures that are                    requirement and will require smooth
                                                NMFS published in the Federal Register                  different from the proposed rule, or                  dogfish to make up at least 25 percent
                                                (71 FR 58058) final regulations, effective              measures that were proposed but not                   of the total retained catch in order to
                                                November 1, 2006, which detailed                        implemented, are described in detail                  remove the fins of smooth dogfish while
                                                management measures for Atlantic HMS                    under the heading titled Changes from                 at sea. Additionally, fishermen may
                                                fisheries, including for the                            the Proposed Rule.                                    retain other sharks on board provided
                                                smoothhound shark and Atlantic shark                       This final rule implements the smooth              that the fins of other shark species
                                                fisheries. The implementing regulations                 dogfish-specific measures in the SCA to               remain naturally attached to the carcass
                                                for the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP                       establish an allowance for the removal                through offloading. Only fishermen
                                                and its amendments are at 50 CFR part                   of smooth dogfish fins while at sea. To               adhering to the measures in the three
                                                635. This final rule implements the                     implement the measures, the proposed                  sub-alternatives, as well as fishing
                                                conservation and management measures                    rule considered three categories of                   within 50 nautical miles of shore and
                                                from Amendment 9 in the Atlantic                        requirements—catch composition, state                 possessing fins in an amount that does
                                                shark and smoothhound shark fisheries                   permitting, and geographic applicability              not exceed 12 percent of the carcass
                                                and the measures in Amendment 3 and                     of the exceptions—and a range of                      weight, will be authorized to remove
                                                2011 HMS Trawl Rule in the Atlantic                     alternatives within each category (‘‘sub-             smooth dogfish fins at sea.
                                                smoothhound shark fishery.                              alternatives’’). Only fishermen that meet                This final rule also establishes
                                                                                                        the requirements under all three of these             separate Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico
                                                Background                                              categories and that are, as specified in              regional smoothhound shark total
                                                   A brief summary of the background of                 the Act, fishing within 50 nautical miles             allowable catches (TACs) and
                                                this final action is provided below. A                  of shore and possess fins in an amount                commercial quotas based on the results
                                                more detailed history of the                            that does not exceed 12 percent of the                of the 2015 Southeast Data Assessment
                                                development of these regulations and                    carcass weight, would be authorized to                and Review (SEDAR) 39 stock
                                                the alternatives considered are                         remove smooth dogfish fins at sea.                    assessments for smoothhound sharks.
                                                described in the Final Environmental                       For catch composition, NMFS                        The assessments were finalized and
                                                Assessment (EA) for Amendment 9,                        preferred in the proposed rule a sub-                 peer reviewed in March 2015. On June
                                                which can be found online on the HMS                    alternative that would have required                  29, 2015, NMFS issued a stock status
                                                Web site (see ADDRESSES).                               that smooth dogfish make up at least 75               determination notice (80 FR 36974) that
                                                   NMFS published a proposed rule on                    percent of the retained catch on board                stated that ‘‘[d]ata from tagging and
                                                August 7, 2014 (79 FR 46217), outlining                 and that no other sharks could be                     genetic research in SEDAR 39 support
                                                the alternatives analyzed in the Draft                  retained. For state permitting, the                   the existence of two distinct Atlantic
                                                EA, identifying preferred alternatives,                 proposed rule included a sub-alternative              and Gulf of Mexico stocks of smooth
                                                and soliciting public comments on the                   that would have required an individual                dogfish separated by peninsular Florida.
                                                measures, which would impact the                        to hold a state commercial fishing                    Therefore, smooth dogfish was treated
                                                smoothhound shark and Atlantic shark                    permit that allows smooth dogfish                     as two separate stocks, one in the
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                fisheries. Specifically, the proposed rule              retention, in addition to a Federal                   Atlantic region and one in the Gulf of
                                                included the following measures: For                    smoothhound permit. With regard to                    Mexico region.’’ 80 FR 36974 (June 29,
                                                smooth dogfish only, modifying                          geographic applicability, the proposed                2015). Each stock had a status of not
                                                prohibitions on at-sea fin removal to be                rule included a sub-alternative that                  overfished with no overfishing
                                                consistent with the SCA; implementing                   would have applied the SCA exception                  occurring. Based on public comments
                                                Term and Condition 4 of the 2012 Shark                  for smooth dogfish along the entire                   requesting that commercial quotas be
                                                BiOp; based on updated catch data,                      Atlantic coast but not to Florida’s coast             based on stock assessments and not


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00043   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73130            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                landings, NMFS is implementing                          requirements (50 CFR 229.32). However,                a dealer permit to purchase
                                                regional smoothhound shark TACs and                     since implementation, it has become                   smoothhound sharks; a requirement for
                                                commercial quotas based on SEDAR 39,                    apparent that while some fishermen do                 dealers to report smoothhound shark
                                                instead of the proposed, single overall                 fish in multiple regions, many do not                 purchases; a smoothhound permit
                                                quota based on landings data.                           fish in or even near the Southeast U.S.               requirement for commercial and
                                                Specifically, while we proposed an                      Monitoring Area. As such, this final rule             recreational fishing and retention; a
                                                overall commercial quota of 1,739.9 mt                  will require federal directed shark                   requirement for vessels fishing for
                                                dw covering both the Atlantic and Gulf                  permit holders with gillnet gear on                   smoothhound sharks to carry an
                                                of Mexico regions (using commercial                     board to use VMS only in the vicinity                 observer, if selected; a requirement for
                                                landings data in the absence of a stock                 of the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area,                vessels fishing for smoothhound sharks
                                                assessment), this final rule establishes                pursuant to ALWTRP requirements.                      to comply with applicable Take
                                                separate regional TACs and commercial                   Requirements to minimize large whale                  Reduction Plans pursuant to the Marine
                                                quotas within those TACs as follows:                    interactions would not change; rather,                Mammal Protection Act (MMPA); and a
                                                An Atlantic regional smoothhound                        only the geographic area of the VMS                   requirement for commercial vessels to
                                                shark TAC of 1,430.6 mt dw with a                       requirement would change, consistent                  sell catch only to Federally-permitted
                                                commercial quota of 1,201.7 mt dw, and                  with the ALWTRP.                                      shark dealers. Management measures
                                                a Gulf of Mexico regional smoothhound                      This final rule also establishes an                affecting smoothhound sharks in the
                                                shark TAC of 509.6 mt dw with a                         effective date for previously-adopted                 HMS Trawl Rule will allow retention of
                                                commercial quota of 336.4 mt dw.                        smoothhound shark management                          smoothhound sharks caught
                                                Implementing these science-based TACs                   measures in Amendment 3 and the 2011                  incidentally with trawl gear, provided
                                                and commercial quotas will ensure                       HMS Trawl Rule. The final rule                        that the total smoothhound shark catch
                                                continued sustainable harvest of                        implementing conservation and                         on board or offloaded does not exceed
                                                smoothhound sharks in the Atlantic and                  management measures in Amendment 3                    25 percent of the total catch by weight.
                                                Gulf of Mexico regions and increase the                                                                          Finally, this rule makes
                                                                                                        published on June 1, 2010 (75 FR 30484)
                                                likelihood of maintaining healthy                                                                             administrative changes to the observer
                                                                                                        but delayed the effective date of the
                                                smoothhound shark stocks in both                                                                              regulations. Currently, the Atlantic
                                                                                                        smoothhound shark management
                                                regions. Additional details are provided                                                                      shark fishery observer program is
                                                                                                        measures until approximately 2012
                                                below under the heading Changes from                                                                          administered by the Southeast Fisheries
                                                                                                        pending approval for the data collection              Science Center (SEFSC). However, a
                                                the Proposed Rule.
                                                   Term and Condition (TC) 4 of the                     measures under the Paperwork                          portion of the commercial smoothhound
                                                2012 Shark BiOp addressed soak time                     Reduction Act (PRA) by the Office of                  shark fishery occurs in the Northeast
                                                and net check requirements for gillnet                  Management and Budget (OMB), to                       region in an area typically covered by
                                                gear. In order to comply with TC 4, this                provide time for implementation of a                  observer programs administered out of
                                                final rule modifies the soak time and net               permit requirement, to provide time for               the Northeast Fisheries Science Center
                                                check requirements based on the type of                 NMFS to complete a Biological Opinion                 (NEFSC). Since the fishery spans the
                                                gillnet gear used in the Atlantic shark                 under Section 7 of the Endangered                     geographic area of both the NEFSC and
                                                and smoothhound shark fisheries.                        Species Act (ESA), and to provide time                SEFSC, smoothhound shark observer
                                                NMFS has determined that current                        for affected fishermen to change                      regulations need to accommodate the
                                                regulations meet the specifications for                 business practices, particularly as it                administrative processes of both
                                                other TCs in the 2012 BiOp. This final                  related to keeping shark fins attached to             programs. The two regional science
                                                rule will establish a soak time limit of                the carcass through offloading. OMB                   center observer program processes are
                                                24 hours for sink gillnet gear and a 0.5                approved the PRA data collection in                   slightly different. The SEFSC process is
                                                to 2 hour net check requirement for drift               May of 2011 and NMFS met informally                   currently outlined in the 50 CFR part
                                                gillnet gear in the Atlantic shark and                  with smoothhound shark fishermen                      635 regulations but the NEFSC process
                                                smoothhound shark fisheries. This                       along the east coast in the fall of 2010.             is not. Thus, this final rule implements
                                                requirement would not significantly                     In November 2011, NMFS published a                    changes to the observer regulations in
                                                change smoothhound shark fishing                        rule (76 FR 70064, November 10, 2011)                 50 CFR part 635 to incorporate the
                                                practices, since most smoothhound                       that indefinitely delayed the effective               relevant portions of the NEFSC observer
                                                shark gillnet fishermen primarily use                   date for all smoothhound shark                        regulations found at 50 CFR part 648.
                                                sink gillnet gear and those fishermen                   management measures in both
                                                                                                        Amendment 3 and in another rule, the                  Response to Comments
                                                already use a soak time of 24 hours or
                                                less.                                                   2011 Final Rule to Modify the Retention                  During the proposed rule stage, NMFS
                                                   This final rule also modifies current                of Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory               received approximately 500 written
                                                regulations related to the use of VMS by                Species in Atlantic Trawl Fisheries (76               comments from fishermen, States,
                                                federal directed shark permit holders                   FR 49368, August 10, 2011 (2011 HMS                   environmental groups, academia and
                                                using gillnet gear. Before this rule,                   Trawl Rule)), to provide time for NMFS                scientists, and other interested parties.
                                                federal directed shark permit holders                   to consider the smooth dogfish-specific               NMFS also received feedback from the
                                                with gillnet gear on board were required                provisions in the SCA and for NMFS to                 HMS Advisory Panel; constituents who
                                                to use VMS regardless of vessel location                finalize a Biological Opinion on the                  attended the two public hearings in
                                                in order to simplify compliance and                     federal actions in Amendment 3, among                 October 2014 in Toms River, New
                                                outreach for fishermen operating across                 other things. Previously-adopted                      Jersey, and Manteo, North Carolina; and
                                                multiple regions. This requirement was                  management measures from                              constituents who attended the
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                implemented as part of the 2003                         Amendment 3 that will become effective                conference calls/webinars held on
                                                Amendment 1 to the 1999 FMP for                         on January 1, 2016, include: A research               September 24 and November 4, 2014.
                                                Atlantic Tunas, Swordfish, and Sharks                   set-aside quota; an accountability                    Additionally, NMFS consulted with the
                                                to ensure shark gillnet vessels were                    measure (AM), which closes the fishery                New England, Mid-Atlantic, South
                                                complying with the Atlantic Large                       when smoothhound shark landings                       Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean
                                                Whale Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP)                      reach, or are expected to reach, 80                   Regional Fishery Management Councils,
                                                time/area closures and observer                         percent of the quota; a requirement for               along with the Atlantic States and Gulf


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00044   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                       73131

                                                States Marine Fisheries Commissions. A                  of New Jersey and New Carolina                        mangers. NMFS received support from
                                                summary of the comments received on                     provided analyses of smooth dogfish                   the MAFMC and the state of New Jersey
                                                the proposed rule during the public                     fin-to-carcass ratios using both landings             for sub-alternative A2–1b that would
                                                comment period is provided below with                   data and direct measurements of                       require smooth dogfish make up at least
                                                NMFS’s responses. All written                           processed sharks. Those analyses found                25 percent of the retained catch. NMFS
                                                comments submitted during the                           a range of fin-to-carcass ratios from 7.5             also received some limited support for
                                                comment period can be found at                          percent to 13 percent, depending on the               the 75 percent catch composition.
                                                http://www.regulations.gov by searching                 level of processing (e.g. whether the                    Response: In the Draft EA and
                                                for NOAA–NMFS–2014–0100.                                belly flaps were removed, whether the                 proposed rule, NMFS interpreted the
                                                                                                        tail was retained).                                   phrase ‘‘fishing for smooth dogfish’’ to
                                                Implementation of the Smooth-Dogfish                       Comment 3: NMFS received a large                   mean fishing with the object of
                                                Specific Provisions of the Shark                        volume of comments expressing                         commercially harvesting smooth
                                                Conservation Act                                        concern that the smooth dogfish-specific              dogfish, but also emphasized that the
                                                   Comment 1: NMFS received                             provision of the Shark Conservation Act               SCA had specified that the exception
                                                comments in support of Alternative A1,                  allows finning of sharks. These                       applies when an individual is fishing
                                                which would not implement the smooth                    commenters asked NMFS not to                          ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish as opposed to
                                                dogfish-specific measures in the Shark                  implement this provision and many of                  fishing ‘‘for’’ other species and
                                                Conservation Act of 2010 and would                      the comments provided information                     incidentally catching smooth dogfish or
                                                require fins and tails of all smooth                    about the negative ecological impacts of              simply stating that it applies ‘‘when
                                                dogfish to remain naturally attached                    sharks finning.                                       fishing.’’ We then preferred a sub-
                                                through offloading. Commenters felt                        Response: The large volume of                      alternative that smoothhound sharks
                                                that these exceptions to the U.S. ban on                comments opposing finning of smooth                   must make up 75 percent of the retained
                                                at-sea shark fin removal would                          dogfish appears to be based on a                      catch on board a vessel to constitute a
                                                jeopardize our nation’s reputation as a                 misunderstanding on this action.                      trip fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish and
                                                shark conservation champion, and hurt                   Finning, which is the removal of shark                stated that this would preclude
                                                U.S. arguments in support of Regional                   fins and disposal of the carcass at sea,              fishermen on trips for other species but
                                                Fishery Management Organizations’                       has been prohibited in Atlantic U.S.                  who incidentally catch smooth dogfish
                                                adoption of fins attached requirements.                 shark fisheries since 1993, and will                  from removing smooth dogfish fins at
                                                Commenters also felt that the fins                      continue to be prohibited in all Atlantic             sea. The catch composition threshold of
                                                naturally attached method was widely                    shark fisheries. The exception in the Act             75 percent is used in other fisheries that
                                                recognized as the best practice for                     allows for the removal of the fins at sea             interact with HMS (e.g., incidental
                                                accurate data collection and                            rather than requiring the sharks to be                swordfish catch in the squid trawl
                                                enforcement of finning bans.                            landed with their fins attached as the                fishery) to distinguish between directed
                                                Commenters felt that adopting a fins                    Act requires for other shark species. The             and incidental fisheries and NMFS felt
                                                attached exception for smooth dogfish                   fins and the carcasses still must be                  this high level of retention was an
                                                would undermine state bans on finning                   landed together.                                      appropriate way to identify those
                                                and would widen loopholes in certain                                                                          fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish.
                                                                                                        Sub-Alternatives—Issue 1: Catch
                                                state bans on the trade in shark fin                                                                             Based on public comments, however,
                                                                                                        Composition
                                                products.                                                                                                     it has become apparent that the 75
                                                   Response: The Shark Conservation                        Comment 4: NMFS received several                   percent level used in other fisheries is
                                                Act of 2010, which includes the smooth                  comments, including from the SAFMC,                   not appropriate in the smooth dogfish
                                                dogfish-specific exception, became                      MAFMC, and the States of New Jersey,                  fishery and does not accurately reflect
                                                Federal law upon Presidential signature                 North Carolina and Maryland, opposing                 fishing practices in that fishery. To
                                                on January 4, 2011. Thus, NMFS must                     the proposed sub-alternative A2–1c that               verify the feedback from commenters,
                                                implement the law in a manner that                      smooth dogfish must make up at least                  NMFS reviewed data on the mixed
                                                reflects Congressional intent. The                      75 percent of the retained catch (no                  nature of the smoothhound shark
                                                Congressional provision clearly creates                 other sharks can be retained).                        fishery and how well catch composition
                                                an exception that allows removal of                     Commenters felt that the 75 percent                   reflects the fishery and discovered that,
                                                smooth dogfish shark fins at sea under                  catch composition would be difficult to               as asserted by the commenters, the
                                                certain circumstances and did not leave                 enforce and burdensome for fishermen.                 smooth dogfish fishery is far more
                                                the Agency discretion to forego                         Some felt that the 75 percent would lead              mixed than NMFS assumed in the
                                                implementation of the exception.                        to waste and discarding in cases where                proposed rule. As a result,
                                                   Comment 2: NMFS received a                           fishermen found that their catch                      implementing a 75 percent catch
                                                comment stating that the 12 percent fin-                percentages did not qualify them for the              composition requirement would make
                                                to-carcass ratio included in the smooth                 at-sea processing allowance. Others                   the exception largely meaningless.
                                                dogfish-specific provision of the SCA                   emphasized that the smoothhound                       Thus, while NMFS’ objective for the
                                                was too high and should be lower.                       fishery is a mixed fishery, and that                  implementation of the smooth dogfish-
                                                   Response: The 12 percent fin-to-                     fishermen needed more flexibility if the              specific provision of the SCA remains
                                                carcass ratio is explicitly included in                 SCA exception were to have any utility.               the same as described in the Draft EA,
                                                the smooth dogfish-specific provision of                NMFS also received comments that the                  and NMFS still needs to give meaning
                                                the SCA. Thus, NMFS must implement                      75 percent catch composition was                      to the phrase ‘‘fishing for smooth
                                                the provision as mandated.                              inconsistent with ASMFC requirements                  dogfish’’ as opposed to simply
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                Nevertheless, some data support that a                  and that the new federal requirements                 ‘‘fishing,’’ NMFS agrees with the
                                                12 percent fin-to-carcass ratio may be a                might push fishermen into state waters                majority of the commenters that a catch
                                                close approximation of the true ratio for               where there are no catch composition                  composition requirement of 25 percent
                                                smooth dogfish. In the Atlantic States                  requirements. Commenters felt that as a               is more appropriate. This is consistent
                                                Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC)                     consequence, fishermen may avoid                      with the smooth dogfish-specific
                                                Shark Board briefing materials prepared                 obtaining a federal smoothhound shark                 provision in the SCA that limits the
                                                for a May 21, 2013 meeting, the States                  permit, leading to less data for federal              exception to those fishermen that are


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00045   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73132            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish while                    provides a greater amount of flexibility              and that it is inconsistent with ASMFC
                                                acknowledging the need for enhanced                     and reduces the instances of regulatory               requirements. Additionally, NMFS
                                                flexibility in a mixed fishery. The                     discards, consistent with National                    received comments stating that a large
                                                reasons for the change include the four                 Standard 9.                                           number of common thresher sharks are
                                                following factors, which were reflected                    • Smooth dogfish, and the fishery                  often caught with smooth dogfish and if
                                                in public comment on the proposed                       that targets them, closely follow specific            these species had to be discarded, this
                                                rule:                                                   water temperature gradients. Fisherman                would be wasteful and could lead to
                                                   • Sink gillnet gear, the predominant                 intending to land primarily smooth                    economic impacts to shark fishermen.
                                                gear used in the directed smooth dogfish                dogfish may find their gear in sub-                      Response: After considering public
                                                fishery, often catches other species                    optimal water temperatures leading to                 comment, NMFS has determined that it
                                                along with the targeted species. If a                   lower smooth dogfish catch despite the                is more appropriate and consistent with
                                                fisherman retains other legal species in                intention to directly target the species              the SCA to implement Sub-Alternative
                                                an amount greater than 25 percent of the                and resulting in a lower catch                        A2–1e, which allows other sharks to be
                                                total retained catch, it does not                       composition than expected.                            retained when removing smooth dogfish
                                                necessarily mean that effort was not                       Comment 5: NMFS received                           fins at seas, provided those sharks are
                                                being directed on smooth dogfish, it                    comments that NMFS was interpreting                   maintained in a condition where the
                                                could simply mean that other species                    the smooth dogfish-specific provisions                fins and tail remain naturally attached
                                                were encountered in a greater amount                    in the SCA incorrectly because the                    to the carcass through landing. This
                                                than anticipated.                                       provision does not specify its                        measure is included in the new sub-
                                                   • Although a 75 percent catch                        application to the directed or incidental             alternative based on public comment
                                                composition is an appropriate indicator                 smooth dogfish fishery and that limiting              and additional analyses, and in
                                                of target species in other HMS fisheries,               fishermen to a directed fishery would                 recognition that a prohibition on having
                                                such as the squid trawl fishery, it is not              only serve to inflict financial hardships             other sharks on board would likely
                                                appropriate at this time in the smooth                  on fishermen.                                         increase regulatory discards, contrary to
                                                dogfish fishery. In the squid trawl                        Response: The SCA does not                         National Standard 9. The smooth
                                                fishery, swordfish caught in squid                      explicitly state that it applies only to              dogfish fishery is more mixed than
                                                trawls can only be retained if at least 75              directed fisheries; however, the relevant             previously thought, and other sharks,
                                                percent of the retained catch is squid,                 SCA statutory text, (‘‘an individual                  particularly spiny dogfish and common
                                                indicating that squid is the targeted                   engaged in commercial fishing for                     thresher sharks, make up a portion of
                                                fishery. In that fishery, the catch is                  smooth dogfish (Mustelus canis)’’)                    the catch and contribute considerable
                                                predominantly squid but swordfish that                  included descriptive language such as                 revenue to fishermen participating in
                                                are feeding on the squid are sometimes                  ‘‘engaged in’’ and ‘‘for’’ that NMFS                  the smooth dogfish fishery. Under the
                                                inadvertently caught. The smooth                        understood to be more limiting than if                new preferred sub-alternative,
                                                dogfish fishery is a more mixed fishery                 the statute had simply said ‘‘while                   fishermen would not have to choose
                                                and the target species is often co-located              fishing.’’ We thus interpreted ‘‘fishing              whether to land smooth dogfish with
                                                with other species, resulting in less                   for smooth dogfish’’ to limit the                     the fins removed or another species of
                                                certainty of target species catch levels                exception to those fishing primarily for              shark. This is a change from the
                                                   • When fishermen decide to remove                    smooth dogfish, as reflected by the 75                proposed rule, which would have
                                                fins from smooth dogfish while at sea,                  percent retention requirement. Had                    prohibited retention of other sharks
                                                the fins are not removed at the end of                  Congress intended to allow all trips to               when removing the fins from smooth
                                                the trip. Rather, the fins are removed                  remove smooth dogfish fins at sea, this               dogfish at sea. As proposed, a fisherman
                                                shortly after the smooth dogfish is                     qualifying language and emphasis on                   who wanted to remove fins of smooth
                                                brought on board in order to maintain                   fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish would not              dogfish at sea would have had to
                                                the highest quality product. This                       have been included. As explained in the               discard all non-smooth dogfish sharks
                                                processing method negates the benefits                  previous response, the final rule’s lower             even if they were dead and were
                                                of a high catch composition                             percentage requirement for smooth                     otherwise legal to retain based on
                                                requirement. For example: If a                          dogfish catch composition (25 percent v.              species, size, and permits. Alternatively,
                                                fishermen is directing effort on smooth                 75 percent) should address some of the                as proposed, a fisherman could decide
                                                dogfish and removing the fins as the                    concerns about the practicality of the                to retain non-smooth dogfish sharks and
                                                smooth dogfish are brought on board,                    proposed rule’s catch composition                     discard any smooth dogfish carcasses
                                                that fishermen does not know what the                   requirements in light of the very mixed               and fins that had already been
                                                final catch composition will be. The                    nature of the fishery, while still                    processed. In either situation, as
                                                first part of the trip could be 100 percent             ensuring that the exception is limited to             proposed, dead discards would likely
                                                smooth dogfish, but if the catch                        those fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish.                 increase, given the mixed catches in the
                                                transitions to predominantly other                         Comment 6: NMFS received                           smooth dogfish fishery.
                                                species, the fishermen may have found                   comments, including from the SAFMC,                      Allowing other sharks onboard is
                                                that he no longer meets the high catch                  MAFMC, NCDMR, and the States of                       consistent with the objective of
                                                composition requirement. In that case,                  New Jersey and Maryland opposing the                  Amendment 9 to narrowly focus the at-
                                                the fisherman has two options: To either                ‘‘no other sharks on board’’ provision.               sea fin removal allowance for the
                                                discard all the smooth dogfish carcasses                The commenters stated that this                       smooth dogfish fishery and would not
                                                and fins that have been processed or                    provision would be burdensome for                     undermine the enforcement of the
                                                discard the non-smooth dogfish catch in                 fishermen and would lead to                           limited smooth dogfish exception or
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                an amount that will meet the catch                      unnecessary waste and discards of other               impact the conservation of non-smooth
                                                composition requirement. Either way, a                  valuable shark species since it is a                  dogfish sharks because smooth dogfish
                                                high catch composition could lead to                    mixed, variable fishery. Others noted                 carcasses can be readily differentiated
                                                unnecessary regulatory discards.                        that NMFS is interpreting the smooth                  from other non-smoothhound shark
                                                Although this last example could also                   dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA                carcasses by the presence of a pre-dorsal
                                                pertain to the preferred 25 percent catch               incorrectly because ‘‘no other sharks on              ridge. As a practical matter, smooth
                                                composition, the lower threshold                        board’’ is never mentioned in the statute             dogfish and other smoothhound species


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00046   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                       73133

                                                are indistinguishable in the field. But                 Councils are honored and the State of                 mt dw in the Atlantic region, and a TAC
                                                geographically, smooth dogfish largely                  Florida can manage the fishery in a                   of 509.6 mt dw and commercial quota
                                                are the only smoothhound species                        balanced way.                                         of 336.4 mt dw in the Gulf of Mexico
                                                found in the Atlantic, which is the only                   Response: As a practical matter,                   region, based on results of SEDAR 39.
                                                place where smooth dogfish fins can be                  smooth dogfish and other smoothhound                  Section 2 of the Final EA provides a
                                                removed, thus largely alleviating that                  species are indistinguishable in the                  summary of the calculations used to
                                                identification concern. Under the new                   field. The best available scientific                  determine these quotas.
                                                preferred sub-alternative, other sharks                 information indicates that smooth                       Comment 10: NMFS received a
                                                would be allowed on board while                         dogfish are the predominant                           comment asking NMFS not to wait until
                                                removing smooth dogfish fins at sea as                  smoothhound shark species along the                   the stock assessment was completed and
                                                long as the fins of non-smooth dogfish                  Atlantic coast (only a handful of Florida             to implement Alternative B1, the
                                                sharks remain naturally attached                        smoothhound have ever been recorded                   smoothhound quota of 715.5 mt dw
                                                through offloading as currently                         in the Atlantic and those have been near              established in Amendment 3 to the 2006
                                                required. NMFS will monitor all shark                   southern Florida). In the Gulf of Mexico,             Consolidated HMS FMP.
                                                catches and discards and dead discards                  however, there are at least three                       Response: NMFS recognizes the
                                                to ensure the conservation of all shark                 different smoothhound species, with no                benefits of establishing a quota to limit
                                                species and will take the additional                    practical way to readily distinguish                  mortality in the commercial fisheries.
                                                action, as necessary, to address any                    among them. By limiting the exception                 However, based on the timing of both
                                                conservation or management issues that                  to the Atlantic region, as specified at               this action and the SEDAR 39 stock
                                                may arise.                                              § 635.27(b)(1), this sub-alternative will             assessments, NMFS determined that
                                                                                                        ensure that the exception only applies                establishing scientifically-based quotas
                                                Sub-Alternatives—Issue 2: State Fishing                 where the population is almost entirely               using results of the stock assessments
                                                Permit                                                  smooth dogfish, reducing identification               outweigh benefits of implementing a
                                                   Comment 7: NMFS received several                     problems and inadvertent finning                      landings-based quota. Since the stock
                                                comments, including from the MAFMC                      violations. Furthermore, the State of                 assessments are now available, NMFS is
                                                and the States of New Jersey and                        Florida found the preferred sub-                      establishing quotas based on those stock
                                                Maryland, supporting the preferred Sub-                 alternative limiting the exception to the             assessments.
                                                Alternative A2–2b to require any state                  Atlantic to be consistent with the                    Biological Opinion Implementation
                                                commercial fishing permit appropriate                   Florida Coastal Management Program.
                                                for the retention of smoothhound sharks                                                                          Comment 11: NMFS received support
                                                when removing smooth dogfish fins at                    Commercial Quota Adjustment for the                   for the preferred alternative C4 to
                                                sea. Some of these comments noted the                   Smoothhound Shark Fishery                             establish a 24-hour soak time limit for
                                                non-preferred sub-alternative, which                       Comment 9: Multiple commenters,                    sink gillnets and a 0.5 to 2 hour net
                                                would require a smoothhound-specific                    including the SAFMC, the States of                    check requirement for drift gillnet gear.
                                                state commercial fishing permit, could                  Maryland, New Jersey, Georgia, and the                The MAFMC and State of New Jersey
                                                require new regulations and may                         Commonwealth of Virginia, suggested                   also expressed support for the preferred
                                                necessitate cost recovery of permit                     that none of the landings-based                       alternative but asked that the definitions
                                                administration.                                         methodologies should be used to                       of sink and drift gillnets be clarified so
                                                   Response: NMFS agrees that requiring                 establish a smoothhound shark quota.                  that a sink gillnet cannot be mistaken
                                                a smoothhound-specific state fishing                    Instead, NMFS should base the quota on                for a net that is drifting in the water
                                                permit could be burdensome to states                    the SEDAR 39 smoothhound shark stock                  column. The State of Maryland
                                                and fishermen. In the Draft EA and                      assessment that was underway at that                  expressed support for alternative C3 (24-
                                                proposed rule, NMFS asked for                           time, and which was proposed as an                    hour soak time for smoothhound permit
                                                comment on this issue, particularly                     alternative, although the results had not             holders) stating that net checks are not
                                                from the states that would need to                      yet been finalized at the time of                     enforceable. NMFS also received
                                                develop and administer a smoothhound-                   proposed rule publication. NMFS also                  comments suggesting that gillnet
                                                specific permit. The states that                        received comments opposing the                        fishermen should be required to do both
                                                commented on this issue were                            preferred alternative B3, establishing a              net checks and limit soak time to 24
                                                unanimously opposed to a                                smoothhound quota equal to the                        hours. Other commenters asked NMFS
                                                smoothhound-specific permit and                         maximum annual landings from 2004–                    to consider a reduced soak time because
                                                favored the preferred Sub-Alternative                   2013 plus two standard deviations                     they felt that 24 hours was too long and
                                                A2–2b. For these reasons, NMFS will                     because some commenters thought this                  would not reduce the risk of large whale
                                                implement Sub-Alternative A2–2b as                      quota was too high and seemed contrary                interactions.
                                                proposed.                                               to a risk averse approach.                               Response: NMFS agrees that a 24-hour
                                                                                                           Response: NMFS agrees that it is                   soak time limit for sink gillnets and a
                                                Sub-Alternatives—Issue 3: Geographic                    preferable to establish scientifically-               0.5 to 2 hour net check requirement for
                                                Applicability                                           based quotas using results from the                   drift gillnet gear are appropriate ways to
                                                  Comment 8: NMFS received                              SEDAR 39 stock assessments. Since                     implement the Term and Condition 4 of
                                                comments, including from the MAFMC                      publication of the proposed rule, the                 the 2012 Shark BiOp. NMFS also agrees
                                                and the State of Florida, in support of                 SEDAR 39 stock assessments have been                  that the definitions of sink and drift
                                                the preferred Sub-Alternative A2–3b to                  completed. Based on the availability of               gillnet need to be clear so as not to
                                                apply the exception for smooth dogfish                  the stock assessment results and public               confuse fishery participants and
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                along the Atlantic Coast and not to                     comments, NMFS no longer prefers the                  enforcement officials. As detailed in the
                                                Florida’s coast in the Gulf of Mexico.                  alternative to establish a landings-based             Final EA, most smoothhound shark
                                                Conversely, NMFS also received a                        quota and now is basing the quotas on                 gillnet fishermen will be required to
                                                comment stating that the exception                      the results of the stock assessments.                 limit soak times to 24 hours since they
                                                should be applicable in the Gulf of                     Thus, NMFS is establishing a                          primarily use sink gillnet gear. This
                                                Mexico so that the historical boundaries                smoothhound shark TAC of 1,430.6 mt                   requirement will not significantly
                                                between the Gulf and South Atlantic                     dw and a commercial quota of 1,201.7                  change smoothhound shark fishing


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00047   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73134            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                practices. With regard to other Atlantic                Sustainable Fisheries consulted with the              faveolata, Orbicella franksi, and
                                                shark fishermen, fishermen who use                      NMFS Protected Resources Division                     Mycetophyllia ferox); and 15 in the
                                                sink gillnet gear will be required to limit             (PRD) over proposed Atlantic shark                    Indo-Pacific (Acropora globiceps,
                                                soak times to 24 hours and those that                   fishery management measures in                        Acropora jacquelineae, Acropora
                                                use drift gillnets will be required to                  December 2009. That consultation was                  lokani, Acropora pharaonis, Acropora
                                                perform net checks at least every 2                     completed in 2012, and the Shark BiOp                 retusa, Acropora rudis, Acropora
                                                hours. Currently, all Atlantic shark                    was issued in December 2012. The                      speciosa, Acropora tenella, Anacropora
                                                fishermen that use gillnet gear to fish for             Biological Opinion concluded that the                 spinosa, Euphyllia paradivisa, Isopora
                                                or who are in possession of any large                   actions as proposed—including the                     crateriformis, Montipora australiensis,
                                                coastal, small coastal, or pelagic shark,               operation of the smoothhound fishery—                 Pavona diffluens, Porites napopora, and
                                                regardless of gillnet type, are required to             were not likely to jeopardize the
                                                                                                                                                              Seriatopora aculeata). Two Caribbean
                                                perform net checks at least every 2                     continued existence of Atlantic
                                                hours (see § 635.21(e)(3)(v)). During the               sturgeon, smalltooth sawfish or any                   species currently listed as threatened
                                                net checks, fishermen are required to                   species of ESA-listed large whales or sea             (Acropora cervicornis and Acropora
                                                look for and remove any sea turtles,                    turtles.                                              palmata) still warranted listing as
                                                marine mammals, or smalltooth sawfish.                     Section 9 and regulations                          threatened. The Central and Southwest
                                                In the 2012 Shark BiOp, the requirement                 implementing section 4(d) of the ESA                  Atlantic DPS of scalloped hammerhead
                                                to use either net checks or the 24-hour                 prohibit the ‘‘take’’ or incidental take of           shark and the seven Caribbean species
                                                set limitation was determined to ensure                 listed species without an exemption.                  of coral occur within the boundary of
                                                that any incidentally taken ESA-listed                  Under the terms of Section 7(b)(4) and                Atlantic HMS commercial and
                                                species are detected and released in a                  Section 7(o)(2), otherwise prohibited                 recreational fisheries.
                                                timely manner, reducing the likelihood                  take that is incidental to and not                       On October 30, 2014, based on the
                                                of mortality. As such, NMFS has                         intended as part of the agency action                 new listings, NMFS requested re-
                                                determined that this alternative will                   may be permitted if it complies with
                                                                                                                                                              initiation of ESA section 7 consultation
                                                likely have short and long-term minor                   reasonable and prudent measures
                                                                                                                                                              on the continued operation and use of
                                                beneficial ecological impacts on                        (RPMs) and terms and conditions of an
                                                                                                        incidental take statement (ITS). Two                  HMS gear types (bandit gear, bottom
                                                protected resources because it will
                                                implement one of the Terms and                          RPMs were included in the 2012 Shark                  longline, buoy gear, handline, and rod
                                                Conditions of the 2012 Shark BiOp to                    BiOp to minimize the effects of the                   and reel) and associated fisheries
                                                minimize impacts on protected                           action on sea turtles, smalltooth                     management actions in the 2006
                                                resources. Because this alternative                     sawfish, and Atlantic sturgeon by the                 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP and its
                                                complies with the 2012 Shark BiOp, has                  smoothhound and Atlantic shark                        amendments. NMFS has preliminarily
                                                beneficial ecological impacts to                        fisheries and to monitor the level of                 determined that the ongoing operation
                                                protected species, and allows all                       incidental take: (1) Minimize the                     of the fisheries is consistent with
                                                smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen to                  Potential Effects to Sea Turtles,                     existing biological opinions and is not
                                                continue current fishing practices,                     Smalltooth Sawfish, Atlantic Sturgeon                 likely to jeopardize the continued
                                                NMFS will implement soak time limits                    and Marine Mammals, and (2) Monitor                   existence of the Central and Southwest
                                                for sink gillnets and net checks for drift              the Frequency and Magnitude of                        DPS of scalloped hammerhead sharks or
                                                gillnets, as proposed, in the final rule.               Incidental Take. One remaining term                   the threatened coral species or result in
                                                   Comment 12: NMFS received a                          and condition will be implemented in                  an irreversible or irretrievable
                                                comment stating that NMFS has not                       this final rule and will require gillnet              commitment of resources which would
                                                received authorization of the incidental                fishermen to conduct net checks and                   foreclose formulation or implementation
                                                take of endangered large whales that                    limit gillnet soak times mitigating or                of any reasonable and prudent
                                                may result due to the operation of the                  reducing interactions with protected                  alternative measures for these species.
                                                fishery. The comment stated that                        species.
                                                without incidental take of endangered                      Since finalizing the 2012 BiOp, NMFS                  Regarding marine mammals, the final
                                                whales authorized under both the                        issued a final determination to list four             2014 MMPA List of Fisheries classified
                                                MMPA and ESA, federal management                        separate DPSs of the scalloped                        the southeastern Atlantic shark gillnet
                                                violates those laws. The commenter                      hammerhead shark (Sphyrna lewini)                     fishery as Category II (occasional serious
                                                stated that NMFS must acquire take                      under the ESA (79 FR 38214, July 3,                   injuries and mortalities). The
                                                authorization under the MMPA section                    2014). The DPSs are Central and                       southeastern Mid-Atlantic and Gulf of
                                                101(a)(5)(E) for the expected whale takes               Southwest Atlantic, Indo-West Pacific,                Mexico shark BLL shark fishery is
                                                associated with the smoothhound                         Eastern Atlantic, and Eastern Pacific.                classified as Category III (remote
                                                fishery and that NMFS must delay                        The Eastern Atlantic and Eastern Pacific              likelihood or no known serious injuries
                                                Amendment 9 until completion of a                       DPSs are listed as endangered, and the                or mortalities). Commercial passenger
                                                negligible impact analysis for North                    Central and Southwest Atlantic and the                fishing vessel (charter/headboat)
                                                Atlantic right whale, humpback whale                    Indo-West Pacific DPSs are listed as                  fisheries are subject to Section 118 and
                                                and fin whale. NMFS also received                       threatened. NMFS determined that each                 are listed as a Category III fishery. This
                                                comments stating that (1) since the                     of the DPSs was significant and distinct
                                                                                                                                                              action would not significantly increase
                                                completion of the BiOp, critical habitat                based on genetic, behavioral, and
                                                                                                        physical factors, and in some cases,                  fishing effort rates, levels, or locations
                                                has been designated for loggerhead sea
                                                                                                        differences in the control of exploitation            or fishing mortality. The preferred
                                                turtles, which triggers the requirement
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                to reinitiate consultation in the shark                 of the species across international                   alternatives would not increase effort
                                                fishery, and (2) the Draft EA fails to                  boundaries. On August 27, 2014, NMFS                  because the smoothhound quotas are
                                                discuss effects of the fishery on                       published a final rule to list the                    based on the most recent smoothhound
                                                loggerhead critical habitat.                            following 20 coral species as threatened:             shark stock assessments (SEDAR 39). In
                                                   Response: As required by section                     Five in the Caribbean, including Florida              addition, final management measures
                                                7(a)(2) of the ESA, the HMS                             and the Gulf of Mexico (Dendrogyra                    are not expected to alter interactions
                                                Management Division of NMFS Office of                   cylindrus, Orbicella annularis, Orbicella             with protected species.


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00048   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                      73135

                                                Atlantic Shark Gillnet Vessel Monitoring                   Response: Based on the nature of the               is an important and effective way to
                                                System Requirements                                     fishery, which is labor-intensive and                 ensure that the sustainability of the
                                                   Comment 13: NMFS received support                    high-volume, additional management                    smoothhound shark fishery is not
                                                for the preferred alternative of requiring              burdens such as permit requirements                   jeopardized by overharvests.
                                                                                                        are unlikely to result in an increase in                 Comment 17: NMFS received a
                                                directed shark permit holders with
                                                                                                        effort. In fact, a slight reduction is more           comment stating that NMFS should not
                                                gillnet gear on board to use VMS only
                                                                                                        likely. Since effort increases are not                implement the smoothhound retention
                                                in the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area,
                                                                                                        expected, NMFS does not believe that                  allowance from the 2011 HMS Trawl
                                                including from the States of North
                                                                                                        introducing a limited access permit in                Rule because the increased retention
                                                Carolina, New Jersey, and Maryland,
                                                                                                        this fishery is necessary at this time.               will lead to increased fishing mortality
                                                and the MAFMC. NMFS also received                                                                             and this mortality will not be
                                                                                                        Nevertheless, this action will implement
                                                comments preferring the status quo                                                                            adequately quantified and counted
                                                                                                        scientifically-based quotas and landings
                                                stating that VMS should be required                                                                           against the quota. There are no reporting
                                                                                                        will be closely monitored to ensure that
                                                regardless of where the vessel is fishing.                                                                    requirements with open access permits
                                                                                                        total mortality does not exceed
                                                   Response: Currently, under Federal                                                                         and fisheries tend to underreport
                                                                                                        scientifically-determined limits. If, in
                                                HMS regulations, Atlantic shark gillnet                                                                       incidental catches.
                                                                                                        fact, directed smooth dogfish effort
                                                fishermen are required to use VMS at                                                                             Response: Since January 1, 2013, all
                                                                                                        increases, protections will be in place to
                                                certain times of the year regardless of                                                                       commercial landings of Atlantic HMS,
                                                                                                        ensure that fishing pressure does not
                                                where they are fishing. However, per 50                                                                       regardless of gear type or permit, are
                                                                                                        exceed sustainable levels while NMFS
                                                CFR 229.32(h)(2)(i), the implementing                   considers if additional measures are                  required to be reported on a weekly
                                                regulations for the Atlantic Large Whale                necessary.                                            basis. Through these weekly reports,
                                                Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP),                              Comment 16: NMFS received a                        NMFS monitors commercial landings of
                                                Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen are only               comment from the State of Maryland                    Atlantic HMS, which will include
                                                required to have VMS if they are fishing                stating that they are concerned about the             smoothhound sharks upon
                                                in the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area.                  measure to close the fishery when 80                  implementation of this action. Trawl
                                                Because NMFS has determined that                        percent of the smoothhound quota has                  gear and open access permits do not
                                                VMS is not necessary for Atlantic shark                 been caught. They feel that this measure              present unique reporting concerns.
                                                gillnet fishermen in the other ALWTRP                   may limit access to some states later in              Allowing smoothhound sharks to be
                                                restricted areas through the                            the year. The State of Maryland                       landed by fishermen who use trawl gear
                                                implementation of the ALWTRP                            recommends working with the other                     or possess an open access permit does
                                                regulations, NMFS believes it is best to                Atlantic states to close each state’s                 not raise unique concerns about the
                                                maintain consistency with these                         smoothhound fishery once 80 percent of                sustainability of the fishery.
                                                regulations. Maintaining consistency                    the state’s allocation has been harvested.
                                                between the Atlantic HMS and                                                                                  General Comments
                                                                                                           Response: In all quota-managed
                                                ALWTRP regulations will reduce                          Atlantic shark fisheries, NMFS closes                    Comment 18: NMFS received
                                                confusion, help fishermen comply with                   the applicable fishery when landings                  comments that Amendment 9 is too
                                                these regulations more easily, and will                 reach, or are expected to reach, 80                   narrowly focused on smoothhound
                                                avoid unnecessary economic burdens on                   percent of the quota. This measure                    sharks and should instead consider all
                                                shark fishery participants.                             mitigates for possible late reporting,                species managed under the 2006
                                                                                                        which could result in quota                           Consolidated HMS FMP. The
                                                Previously Adopted Smoothhound                                                                                commenter asserts that a multispecies
                                                Shark Measures in Amendment 3 and                       overharvests. Based on the success of
                                                                                                        this measure in the other shark fisheries,            management approach is preferable.
                                                the HMS Trawl Rule                                                                                            Furthermore, the commenter noted that
                                                                                                        NMFS prefers to implement the 80-
                                                   Comment 14: NMFS received a                          percent accountability measure (AM) in                NMFS’ decision to include all HMS in
                                                comment stating that smoothhound                        the smoothhound shark fisheries as                    a single, consolidated FMP effectively
                                                sharks should be managed by the                         finalized in Amendment 3 to the 2006                  categorizes all HMS fisheries as a single
                                                Regional Fishery Management Councils                    Consolidated HMS FMP rather than risk                 ‘‘fishery.’’ Thus, all National Standards
                                                in cooperation with ASMFC.                              exceeding the quotas in the                           (NS) under the Magnuson-Stevens Act
                                                   Response: As detailed in Amendment                   smoothhound fisheries.                                must be considered in the context of all
                                                3 to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic                        Through Addendum II to the Coastal                 HMS, not just smoothhound sharks and
                                                HMS FMP, smoothhound sharks are                         Sharks Interstate FMP, the ASMFC                      Atlantic sharks. Specifically, the
                                                ‘‘oceanic sharks’’ as defined by the                    instituted state shares of the Federal                commenter suggested that NS 3 (‘‘To the
                                                Magnuson-Stevens Act and are subject                    smoothhound shark quota. Although                     extent practicable, an individual stock
                                                to management by the Secretary of                       this system was finalized in May 2013                 of fish shall be managed as a unit
                                                Commerce under that Act. Please refer                   before the Federal smoothhound shark                  throughout its range, and interrelated
                                                to Amendment 3 to the 2006                              quota was effective, Addendum II                      stocks of fish shall be managed as a unit
                                                Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP for a                     proactively divided the quota among                   or in close coordination’’) requires
                                                detailed explanation of why                             several of the Atlantic states in an                  NMFS to optimize access and
                                                smoothhound sharks are appropriately                    amount that would total 100 percent of                management of all HMS, not just
                                                subject to Federal management.                          the Federal quota. This agreement                     smoothhound sharks and Atlantic
                                                   Comment 15: NMFS received a                          among the Atlantic states to limit each               sharks. Additionally, the commenter felt
                                                comment stating that the Federal                        state’s harvest does not impact nor                   that NS 1, which mandates achieving
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                smoothhound permit could trigger an                     influence the Federal quota. Although                 optimum yield from each fishery,
                                                increase in directed smooth dogfish                     NMFS recognizes that closing the                      should be applied across all HMS since
                                                effort. A comment was also received                     fishery when landings reach, or are                   all HMS should be categorized as one
                                                suggesting that the fishery, once                       expected to reach, 80 percent of the                  single fishery.
                                                permitted, should not be open access                    quota could prevent some states from                     Response: While a multispecies
                                                and that a control date should be set to                harvesting their full state share of the              management approach is advantageous
                                                discourage new entrants.                                quota per the ASMFC plan, the measure                 in some instances, NMFS disagrees that


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00049   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73136            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Amendment 9 should broadly consider                     affected HMS. For detailed information                measure is included based on public
                                                all HMS (including tunas, billfish, and                 about Amendment 9’s consistency with                  comment and additional analyses and
                                                swordfish) as a single fishery. In 2006,                National Standards, please see Section                recognizing that a prohibition on having
                                                NMFS merged all Atlantic HMS                            10 of the Final EA.                                   other sharks on board would likely
                                                management into a single, consolidated                                                                        increase regulatory discards.
                                                                                                        Changes From the Proposed Rule (79
                                                FMP. In the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic                                                                        Specifically, additional analyses
                                                                                                        FR 46217, August 7, 2014)
                                                HMS FMP, NMFS noted that the                                                                                  indicate that the smooth dogfish fishery
                                                interrelated nature of HMS fisheries and                   NMFS made several changes from the                 is more mixed than previously thought,
                                                the need to consider management                         proposed rule, as described below.                    and that other sharks, particularly spiny
                                                actions together necessitated merging                      1. Catch Composition and ‘‘No Other                dogfish and common thresher sharks,
                                                the two existing HMS FMPs into one                      Sharks’’ Requirements for Removing                    make up a portion of the catch and
                                                                                                        Smooth Dogfish Fins at Sea                            revenue for fishermen also fishing for
                                                FMP. In addition, NMFS identified
                                                                                                        (§ 635.30(c)(5)(iii)). The SCA has                    smooth dogfish. Given that fishermen
                                                some adverse ramifications stemming
                                                                                                        provisions related to the removal of                  process smooth dogfish as they are
                                                from separation of the plans, including
                                                                                                        smooth dogfish fins while at sea that                 brought on board, including removing
                                                unnecessary administrative redundancy
                                                                                                        apply when an individual is fishing                   the fins where allowable, the proposed
                                                and complexity, loss of efficiency, and                 ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish. Thus, the
                                                public confusion over the management                                                                          rule approach would have forced
                                                                                                        proposed rule considered sub-                         fishermen to choose whether to land
                                                process. It is important to note that                   alternatives to apply the exception only
                                                NMFS consolidated management of all                                                                           smooth dogfish with the fins removed
                                                                                                        to those fishing with the object of                   (and discard the other species) or land
                                                HMS under one FMP because of the                        commercially harvesting smooth dogfish
                                                interrelated nature of some of the                                                                            the other species of shark with the fins
                                                                                                        by focusing on catch composition. This                attached and discard the smooth dogfish
                                                fisheries and to streamline                             final rule is not implementing the
                                                administration, not because all HMS                                                                           with their fins removed at sea. As
                                                                                                        preferred catch composition sub-                      proposed, a fisherman who wanted to
                                                constitute a single fishery. As                         alternative (75 percent of retained catch
                                                appropriate, NMFS analyzes the impacts                                                                        remove smooth dogfish fins at sea
                                                                                                        must be smooth dogfish), but another                  would not have been able to retain non-
                                                of management actions for each HMS                      sub-alternative (25 percent smooth                    smooth dogfish sharks even if those
                                                fishery and optimizes management for                    dogfish) that had been discussed in the               sharks were dead and otherwise legally
                                                all affected HMS fisheries. The                         proposed rule and analyzed in the draft               retainable based on species, size, and
                                                Environmental Assessment                                EA.                                                   permits. In either situation, as proposed,
                                                appropriately considers any effects on                     NMFS received numerous public                      dead discards would likely have
                                                the environment, including effects on                   comments that the 75 percent catch                    increased given the mixed catches in the
                                                other fish stocks or fisheries that may                 composition requirement did not                       smooth dogfish fishery. Thus, other
                                                result from the actions in Amendment 9.                 adequately reflect the mixed nature of                sharks will be allowed on board when
                                                The analyses show that the actions                      the smooth dogfish fishery and would                  smooth dogfish fins have been removed
                                                considered in Amendment 9 are                           lead to excessive dead discards. Based                at sea as long as the fins of the non-
                                                unlikely to affect non-smoothhound                      on this public comment, NMFS                          smooth dogfish sharks remain naturally
                                                shark fisheries or Atlantic shark                       reconsidered the 75 percent smooth                    attached through offloading, as is
                                                fisheries. The management objectives                    dogfish requirement, and determined                   currently required.
                                                are narrowly focused on smoothhound                     that it does not properly reflect fishing                Allowing other sharks on board
                                                sharks, smooth dogfish, and/or Atlantic                 ‘‘for’’ smooth dogfish. According to                  should not raise enforcement concerns
                                                sharks caught in gillnet gear, the                      public comment, fishermen that fish for               or impact the conservation of non-
                                                predominant gear type used in the                       smooth dogfish often encounter and                    smooth dogfish sharks because smooth
                                                directed smoothhound shark fishery.                     retain other species of fish. NMFS                    dogfish carcasses can be readily
                                                None of the fisheries considered in this                verified this by evaluating data from                 differentiated from other shark carcasses
                                                action are likely to encounter other non-               vessel trip reports (VTR). On trips that              by the presence of a pre-dorsal ridge.
                                                smoothhound shark or Atlantic shark in                  landed smooth dogfish caught in sink                  While other ‘‘ridgeback sharks’’ have an
                                                large numbers. Billfish, swordfish,                     gillnet gear between 2003 and 2014,                   interdorsal ridge, smooth dogfish are the
                                                tunas, and pelagic sharks are unlikely to               smooth dogfish only made up 36                        only shark species in the Atlantic that
                                                co-occur with the smoothhound sharks                    percent of the total retained catch while             have a pre-dorsal ridge. We will work
                                                nor can swordfish or tunas be retained                  other species such as croaker, bluefish,              with the Office of Law Enforcement to
                                                if caught in gillnet gear. The one                      monkfish, and spiny dogfish made up                   ensure that they are aware of this
                                                exception is the measure to establish an                the remainder. See Final EA at Section                identifying feature and will update
                                                effective date for the 2011 HMS Trawl                   3.4.1 for further detail. If NMFS retained            outreach information for shark
                                                Rule. Trawl gear does have the potential                the 75 percent requirement, then this                 identification including relevant
                                                to interact with a variety of HMS,                      could result in dead discards as well as              workshops as appropriate to make
                                                including smoothhound sharks, Atlantic                  lost revenues from those species. The 25              permitted shark fishermen and dealers
                                                sharks, and swordfish. The 2011 HMS                     percent requirement adopted in the final              aware of the distinction. NMFS will also
                                                Trawl rule, recognizing the potential                   rule better reflects fishing ‘‘for’’ smooth           continue to monitor all shark catches
                                                interaction between trawl gear and some                 dogfish, and is within the range of                   and discards and take additional action,
                                                HMS, considered an allowance for the                    alternatives considered and analyzed in               if necessary to address non-compliance.
                                                limited retention of incidentally caught                the proposed rule.                                       The changes in this final rule are
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                swordfish and smoothhound sharks. As                       Related to the catch composition                   consistent with the conservation and
                                                such, that action considered impacts                    change and concern about discards, this               management objectives of the
                                                and explicitly optimized access to                      final rule also makes a change from the               Magnuson-Stevens Act and Amendment
                                                affected HMS. With respect to                           proposed rule by allowing retention of                9 and the SCA. These changes will not
                                                consistency with NS 1 and 3, each HMS                   other shark species provided that their               impact the conservation of smooth
                                                management action considers all                         fins remain naturally attached to the                 dogfish or other sharks because landings
                                                National Standards in the context of the                carcass through offloading. This                      of these species, regardless of catch


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00050   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                         73137

                                                composition percentage, will be capped                  level does not raise concerns about                   information available for the Gulf of
                                                at or under the commercial quota                        requiring additional environmental                    Mexico and, with no commercial fishery
                                                through AMs and/or closures. These                      analyses or additional regulatory action,             in that region, a finding of neutral
                                                changes thus will not have an effect on                 which may have been the case if the                   impact. In the Atlantic region where the
                                                the status of these stocks, nor are other               stock assessment had identified a                     fishery is located, all impacts detailed in
                                                adverse environmental impacts                           significantly greater allowable TAC (and              the Draft EA would apply because all
                                                anticipated. They will also provide for                 resultant commercial quota) than those                data, including catch location, price
                                                a flexible, profitable, and sustainable                 anticipated and analyzed in the                       data, landings data, and fishery
                                                smooth dogfish fishery.                                 proposed rule. The proposed rule                      operations, came from the Atlantic.
                                                   2. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico                       presented and analyzed an alternative                 Furthermore, the Atlantic smoothhound
                                                Regional Commercial Smoothhound                         that anticipated the stock assessment                 shark stock assessment would not have
                                                Shark Quotas (§ 635.27(b)(1)(xi)). NMFS                 would determine that ‘‘the commercial                 resulted in any new impacts because the
                                                proposed a smoothhound shark quota                      smoothhound shark quota should be set                 assessment found current harvest levels
                                                equal to the maximum annual landings                    at approximately equal to or greater than             and effort are sustainable with no
                                                from 2004–2013 plus two standard                        1,739.9 mt dw.’’ As acknowledged in                   changes required. In summary, the
                                                deviations (1,739.9 mt dw) using                        the EA, even with a higher quota, effort              impact analyses detailed in the Draft EA
                                                commercial landings data in the absence                 is likely to remain the same relative to              under Alternative B4, scenario 4 are
                                                of a stock assessment and methodology                   current effort. Thus the ecological,                  equally applicable to two regional
                                                outlined in Amendment 3. At that time,                  economic and social impacts of quota                  quotas as to one over-arching quota. The
                                                NMFS anticipated that the SEDAR 39                      establishing a quota greater than 1,739.9             changes in this final rule are consistent
                                                stock assessment for smoothhound                        mt would be within the range analyzed                 with the conservation and management
                                                sharks would be completed in 2014.                      in the Draft EA. In the final rule, the               objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act
                                                Consequently, the proposed rule                         combined regional commercial quotas                   and Amendment 9 and based on the
                                                discussed, and the draft EA analyzed, a                 (1,538.1 mt) are twelve percent less than             best scientific information available.
                                                quota alternative that would                            the original proposed overall quota                   Implementing TACs based on the stock
                                                ‘‘implement a TAC and smoothhound                       (1,739.9 mt) but higher than recent                   assessment results would ensure
                                                shark quota(s) consistent with the                      annual commercial landings. Both the                  continued sustainable harvest of
                                                results of the 2014 smoothhound shark                   commercial quotas and the overall TAC                 smoothhound sharks in the Atlantic and
                                                stock assessment if the results become                  in this final rule are within the range of            Gulf of Mexico regions and increase the
                                                available before publication of the final               actions considered in the proposed rule               likelihood of maintaining healthy
                                                rule for this action.’’ (See Alternative B4             and analyzed in the draft EA.                         smoothhound shark stocks in both
                                                in the Draft EA for Amendment 9). The                                                                         regions.
                                                proposed rule also stated that ‘‘[t]he                     With regard to the regional quota                     3. Administrative changes (§§ 635.2,
                                                2014 smoothhound shark stock                            approach, in the Draft EA, NMFS                       635.7(g)). NMFS is making minor
                                                assessment could separate one or more                   acknowledged that the stock could be                  clarifications to the drift and sink gillnet
                                                of the stocks into regional stocks                      split between two regions based on the                definitions at § 635.2 to indicate that
                                                between the Atlantic and Gulf of                        SEDAR 39 stock assessments and that                   drift gillnets typically are ‘‘floating’’ in
                                                Mexico,’’ and that for the purposes of                  the analyses performed for one over-                  the water column and that sink gillnets
                                                the environmental analyses, ‘‘NMFS                      arching quota could apply to multiple                 are fished on or near the ‘‘ocean’’
                                                assumes one overarching quota but                       regions. Based on information supplied                bottom and can have weights ‘‘and/or’’
                                                these alternatives and analyses could                   during the Data Workshop for SEDAR                    anchors. Additionally, NMFS is
                                                apply to multiple regions as well.’’                    39, including tagging data, the stock                 changing the administrative processes
                                                   During the public comment period on                  assessment scientists decided to split                by which vessels are selected for at-sea
                                                the proposed rule and draft EA,                         smoothhound sharks into two regional                  observer coverage at § 635.7(g). The
                                                commenters expressed concern about                      stocks, with smooth dogfish in the                    changes were made, in part, based on
                                                implementing a smoothhound shark                        Atlantic and smooth dogfish, Florida                  consultation with the Northeast and
                                                commercial quota based on historical                    smoothhound, and Gulf smoothhound                     Southeast Observer Programs so that
                                                landings, and requested that NMFS wait                  in the Gulf of Mexico. This regional                  smoothhound shark observer selection
                                                for SEDAR 39 to be completed. Based on                  split, however, does not affect the                   is consistent with both programs. The
                                                these comments, in this final rule,                     impact analyses detailed in the Draft EA              administrative changes to this section
                                                NMFS is implementing region-specific                    under Alternative B4, scenario 4. As                  should not have any practical effect;
                                                commercial quotas based on SEDAR 39.                    noted in Section 3.4 of the Draft EA and              rather, they will ensure that the
                                                Specifically, this final rule establishes               as confirmed in the SEDAR 39 stock                    selection processes currently in place
                                                an overall TAC of 1,940.2 mt                            assessments, the smoothhound shark                    may continue.
                                                implemented as follows: An Atlantic                     fishery primarily occurs in the Mid-                     4. Administrative Additions
                                                regional smoothhound shark TAC of                       Atlantic region and is composed                       (§ 635.19(d)). NMFS is adding language
                                                1,430.6 mt dw with a commercial quota                   entirely of smooth dogfish catch. In the              to § 635.19(d) to indicate that trawl gear
                                                of 1,201.7 mt dw, and a Gulf of Mexico                  Gulf of Mexico region, only a very                    is an authorized gear for the capture and
                                                regional smoothhound shark TAC of                       small, negligible, number of commercial               retention of smoothhound sharks
                                                509.6 mt dw with a commercial quota                     landings occur and there is no                        subject to the restrictions specified in
                                                of 336.4 mt dw. Although the TAC                        commercial fishery. Thus, the Draft EA                § 635.24(a)(7). Regulatory text to
                                                identified in the final rule is inclusive               Alternative B4 quota analyses were                    authorize retention of smoothhound
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                of sources of mortality other than a                    informed entirely by data from the                    sharks caught in trawl gear was added
                                                commercial quota (which is thus                         Atlantic region including catch location,             to other sections of § 635, including
                                                necessarily less than the TAC), the                     price data, landings data, and fishery                § 635.24(a)(7), and was discussed in the
                                                overall TAC in the final rule is only 201               operations. If NMFS applied the single                proposed rule but was inadvertently
                                                mt more than the 1,739.9 mt dw                          over-arching quota analyses to regional               omitted from this part of the regulatory
                                                commercial quota from the proposed                      smoothhound shark quotas at the Draft                 text itself. No substantive changes will
                                                rule. Thus, establishing a TAC of this                  stage, there would have been no                       occur as a result.


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00051   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73138            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Commercial Fishing Season                               receive comments specifically on the                  (OMB control number 0648–0327). OMB
                                                Notification                                            IRFA.                                                 subsequently approved the change
                                                                                                           Section 604(a)(4) of the RFA requires              request to add the Federal commercial
                                                  Pursuant to the measures being
                                                                                                        agencies to provide an estimate of the                smoothhound shark permit to the HMS
                                                implemented in this final rule, the 2016
                                                                                                        number of small entities to which the                 permit PRA package in May 2011. In
                                                base quotas for smoothhound sharks in
                                                                                                        rule would apply. The small business                  November 2015, NMFS submitted a
                                                the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions
                                                                                                        size standard for Finfish Fishing is $                revision to transfer the previously
                                                would be 1,201.7 mt dw and 336.4 mt
                                                                                                        20.5 million, for Shellfish Fishing is                approved commercial smoothhound
                                                dw, respectively. The fishing season for
                                                                                                        $5.5 million, and for Other Marine                    shark permit from the HMS permit PRA
                                                the smoothhound shark fishery will
                                                                                                        Fishing is $7.5 million. See 79 FR 33647              package (OMB Control Number 0648–
                                                open on January 1, 2016.                                (June 24, 2014). Under any of these                   0327) to the Southeast Regional Office
                                                Classification                                          standards, all Atlantic HMS permit                    (SERO) permit PRA package (OMB
                                                                                                        holders subject to this rulemaking                    Control Number 0648–0205). That
                                                   The AA has determined that this final
                                                                                                        would be considered small entities.                   request is still pending approval. Once
                                                rule is consistent with the 2006
                                                                                                           NMFS does not have exact numbers                   OMB approves the request, NMFS will
                                                Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP and its                   on affected commercial fishermen. The
                                                amendments, the Magnuson-Stevens                                                                              issue a notice in the Federal Register
                                                                                                        smoothhound shark commercial permit                   announcing the approval of the
                                                Act, and other applicable law.                          has not yet been established, so NMFS
                                                   This final rule has been determined to                                                                     information collection requirements and
                                                                                                        does not know how many smoothhound                    the availability of applications for the
                                                be not significant for purposes of                      shark fishermen will be impacted. An
                                                Executive Order 12866.                                                                                        commercial smoothhound shark permit.
                                                                                                        annual average of 169 vessels reported                This final rule contains a collection-of-
                                                   A Final Regulatory Flexibility                       retaining smooth dogfish through VTR
                                                Analysis (FRFA) was prepared for this                                                                         information requirement subject to the
                                                                                                        from 2003–2014. This is NMFS’ best                    Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and
                                                rule. The FRFA incorporates the Initial                 estimate of affected smoothhound shark                which has been approved by OMB
                                                Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA),                 fishermen.                                            under OMB Control number 0648–0372.
                                                and a summary of the analyses                              Additionally, while the retention of               Public reporting burden will be reduced
                                                completed to support the action. The                    sharks in Federal waters requires one of              under the modified VMS requirements
                                                full FRFA and analysis of economic and                  two limited access commercial shark                   under this final rule. The burden
                                                ecological impacts are available from                   permits, these permits do not specific                estimate burden will be reduced by this
                                                NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of                      gear type, including gillnets. For this               rule, but the changes will be requested
                                                the FRFA follows.                                       reason, NMFS does not know the exact                  as part of the 2016 extension, at which
                                                   Section 604(a)(1) of the Regulatory                  number of affected shark gillnet                      time the estimate of the burden change
                                                Flexibility Act (RFA) requires a succinct               fishermen. As of May 21, 2015, there are              will be more accurate.
                                                statement of the need for and objectives                208 directed shark and 253 incidental                    The RFA requires a description of the
                                                of the rule. Chapter 1 of the Final EA                  shark permit holders. Logbook records                 steps the Agency has taken to minimize
                                                and the final rule fully describe the                   indicate that there are usually about 18              any significant economic impact on
                                                need for and objectives of this final rule.             Atlantic shark directed permit holders                small entities consistent with the stated
                                                The purpose of this final rulemaking,                   that use gillnet gear in any year.                    objectives of applicable statutes,
                                                consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens                    However, the universe of directed                     including a statement of the factual,
                                                Act, the ESA, and the MMPA, and the                     permit holders using gillnet gear can                 policy, and legal reasons for selecting
                                                2006 Consolidated HMS FMP and its                       change from year to year and could                    the alternative adopted in the final rule
                                                amendments, is to provide for the                       include anyone who holds an Atlantic                  and the reason that each one of the other
                                                sustainable management of                               shark directed permit.                                significant alternatives to the rule
                                                smoothhound sharks and Atlantic shark                      As of May 21, 2015, there are 97                   considered by the Agency that affect
                                                species. The management objectives are                  Atlantic shark dealers. These dealers                 small entities was rejected. These
                                                to achieve the following: Implement the                 could be affected by these measures to                impacts are discussed below and in the
                                                smooth dogfish-specific provisions of                   varying degrees. Not all of these dealers             FRFA for Amendment 9. Additionally,
                                                the SCA; implement smoothhound                          purchase smoothhound sharks and                       the RFA (5 U.S.C. 603 (c)(1)–(4)) lists
                                                shark quotas based on the results of                    those that do are concentrated in the                 four general categories of ‘‘significant’’
                                                SEDAR 39; implement Term and                            Mid-Atlantic region. NMFS will know                   alternatives that could assist an agency
                                                Condition 4 of the 2012 Shark BiOp                      more about the number of affected                     in the development of significant
                                                related to gillnet impacts on ESA-listed                dealers when smoothhound reporting                    alternatives. These categories of
                                                species; and revise Atlantic shark gillnet              requirements become effective.                        alternatives are: Establishment of
                                                VMS regulations in compliance with the                  Similarly, not all of these dealers                   differing compliance or reporting
                                                ALWTRP, per the MMPA.                                   purchase Atlantic sharks caught with                  requirements or timetables that take into
                                                   Section 604(a)(2) of the RFA requires                gillnet gear. The number is likely low                account the resources available to small
                                                a summary of the significant issues                     and is concentrated in Florida and the                entities; clarification, consolidation, or
                                                raised by the public comments in                        Gulf of Mexico.                                       simplification of compliance and
                                                response to the IRFA and a summary of                      Section 604(a)(5) of the RFA requires              reporting requirements under the rule
                                                the assessment of the Agency of such                    Agencies to describe any new reporting,               for such small entities; use of
                                                issues, and a statement of any changes                  record-keeping and other compliance                   performance rather than design
                                                made in the rule as a result of such                    requirements. The Federal commercial                  standards; and, exemptions from
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                comments. NMFS received many                            smoothhound shark permit requirement                  coverage of the rule for small entities.
                                                comments on the proposed rule and the                   analyzed in Amendment 3 will become                      In order to meet the objectives of this
                                                Draft EA during the public comment                      effective upon the effective date of this             rule, consistent with Magnuson-Stevens
                                                period. A summary of these comments                     rule. NMFS submitted a PRA change                     Act and ESA, we cannot exempt small
                                                and the Agency’s responses, including                   request to The Office of Management                   entities or change the reporting
                                                changes as a result of public comment,                  and Budget (OMB) to add this permit to                requirements only for small entities
                                                are included above. NMFS did not                        the existing HMS permit PRA package                   because all the entities affected are


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00052   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                      73139

                                                considered small entities. Thus, there                  6.1), the benefit to individual vessels               requirement, but greater than the other
                                                are no alternatives discussed that fall                 would be $4,138. However, vessels and                 sub-alternatives that limit the fins-
                                                under the first and fourth categories                   trips retain smooth dogfish in widely                 attached exception to higher catch
                                                described above. NMFS does not know                     varying amounts, thus, this per vessel                composition percentages. This sub-
                                                of any performance or design standards                  estimate may not provide an accurate                  alternative would decrease total ex-
                                                that would satisfy the aforementioned                   picture of individual revenues.                       vessel revenues relative to the current
                                                objectives of this rulemaking while,                       Supporting entities, such as bait and              level of $699,364 per year (Section
                                                concurrently, complying with the                        tackle suppliers, ice suppliers, dealers,             3.6.2).
                                                Magnuson-Stevens Act. Thus, there are                   and other similar businesses, could                      Under Sub-Alternative A2–1c
                                                no alternatives considered under the                    experience increased revenue if the                   fishermen could avail themselves of the
                                                third category. As described below,                     efficiency of fin removal at sea results              at-sea fin removal allowance only if
                                                NMFS analyzed several different                         in a higher quality product. However,                 smooth dogfish comprise 75 percent of
                                                alternatives in this rulemaking and                     while supporting businesses would                     the retained catch on board. This sub-
                                                provided the rationale for identifying                  benefit from the increased profitability              alternative would allow fishermen
                                                the preferred alternative to achieve the                of the fishery, they do not solely rely on            limited flexibility to maintain the
                                                desired objective.                                      the smooth dogfish fishery. In the long-              profitability of each trip and would
                                                   The alternatives considered and                      term, it is likely that changes in the                allow fishermen to make decisions,
                                                analyzed are described below. The                       smooth dogfish fishery would not have                 before the trip and while on the water,
                                                FRFA assumes that each vessel will                      large impacts on these businesses.                    as to the retained catch composition that
                                                have similar catch and gross revenues to                                                                      would increase ex-vessel revenues.
                                                                                                        Catch Composition Sub-Alternatives
                                                show the relative impact of the final                                                                         While limited, the flexibility in this
                                                action on vessels.                                         Under Sub-Alternative A2–1a, smooth                alternative would be greater than in sub-
                                                                                                        dogfish could make up any portion of                  alternative A2–1d, which would require
                                                Alternatives To Implement the Smooth                    the retained catch on board provided                  smooth dogfish catch composition of
                                                Dogfish-Specific Provisions of the Shark                that no other sharks are retained. This               100 percent. Because some fishermen
                                                Conservation Act of 2010                                sub-alternative would authorize smooth                catch smooth dogfish along with other
                                                   With regard to the implementation of                 dogfish fishermen to retain any non-                  species, this sub-alternative could
                                                the SCA, NMFS considered two                            shark species of fish while still availing            decrease the number of mixed species
                                                alternatives. Alternative A1, which                     themselves of the at-sea fin removal                  trips where fishermen could take
                                                would not implement the smooth                          allowance. Smooth dogfish are often                   advantage of the at-sea fin removal
                                                dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA                  caught incidentally during other fishing              allowance. This sub-alternative would
                                                and would instead implement the fins-                   operations, thus, this sub-alternative                likely decrease total ex-vessel revenues
                                                attached requirement finalized in                       would allow fishermen to maximize the                 relative to the current level of $699,364
                                                Amendment 3, and Alternative A2,                        profitability of each trip and allow                  per year.
                                                which would implement the smooth                        individual operators the flexibility to                  Sub-Alternative A2–1d would require
                                                dogfish-specific provisions of the SCA                  make decisions, before the trip and                   smooth dogfish to comprise 100 percent
                                                and has sub-alternatives that address the               while on the water, as to the retained                of the retained catch on board the vessel
                                                specific elements of the of the smooth                  catch composition that would maximize                 in order for fishermen to avail
                                                dogfish-specific provisions.                            ex-vessel revenues. Under this                        themselves of the at-sea fin removal
                                                   Alternative A1 would not implement                   alternative, fishermen could remove                   allowance for smooth dogfish. This sub-
                                                the smooth dogfish-specific provisions                  smooth dogfish fins at sea during any                 alternative would eliminate the ability
                                                of the SCA and would require all                        type of trip including those trips that are           of mixed trips to take advantage of the
                                                smooth dogfish to be landed with fins                   directing effort on other non-shark                   at-sea fin removal, and would reduce
                                                naturally attached. This alternative                    species. This alternative would                       flexibility in deciding which species to
                                                would change current fishing practices                  maintain the current practice in the                  retain on each fishing trip. However,
                                                since smooth dogfish caught in the                      fishery and vessels could continue to                 approximately 31 vessels (annual
                                                directed and incidental fisheries are                   have ex-vessel revenues of $699,364 per               average 2003–2014) on directed smooth
                                                fully processed while at sea. As a result,              year across the entire fishery (Section               dogfish trips often only retain smooth
                                                this Alternative A1 would likely lead to                3.6.2).                                               dogfish due to the processing practices
                                                reduced landings and a lower ex-vessel                     Under Sub-Alternative A2–1b,                       in place. Thus, these fishermen would
                                                price because the product would not be                  fishermen could avail themselves of the               not be impacted by a 100 percent
                                                fully processed. This could lead to                     at-sea fin removal allowance only if                  smooth dogfish requirement and would
                                                adverse socioeconomic impacts.                          smooth dogfish comprise 25 percent of                 benefit from the ability to remove the
                                                   Under Alternative A2, the preferred                  the retained catch on board. This sub-                smooth dogfish fins at sea. This sub-
                                                alternative, an allowance for the                       alternative would authorize smooth                    alternative would likely decrease total
                                                removal of smooth dogfish fins at sea                   dogfish fishermen to retain some non-                 ex-vessel revenues relative to the
                                                would increase efficiency in the smooth                 shark species of fish while still availing            current level of $699,364 per year.
                                                dogfish fishery and provide a more                      themselves of the at-sea fin removal                     Sub-Alternative A2–1e, the preferred
                                                highly processed product for fishermen                  allowance. This sub-alternative would                 sub-alternative, would, similar to Sub-
                                                to sell to dealers. Quantifying the                     allow some fishermen to maintain the                  Alternative A2–1b, allow fishermen to
                                                financial benefits is difficult because                 profitability of each trip and allow                  avail themselves of the at-sea fin
                                                baseline effort and increases in                        individual operators some flexibility to              removal allowance only if smooth
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                efficiency cannot be calculated, but the                make decisions, before the trip and                   dogfish comprise 25 percent of the
                                                benefit would fall somewhere between                    while on the water, as to the retained                retained catch on board. However,
                                                the two extremes of $0 and $699,364,                    catch composition that would increase                 under Sub-Alternative A2–1e, other
                                                the ex-vessel value of the entire fishery               ex-vessel revenues. This increase in                  sharks could be retained as well,
                                                (Section 3.6.2). Assuming that amount is                flexibility would be to a lesser extent               provided they are maintained with the
                                                spread evenly across all 169 vessels per                than Sub-Alternative A2–1a which                      fins naturally attached to the carcass.
                                                year that retain smooth dogfish (Section                would not have a catch composition                    This sub-alternative would allow some


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00053   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73140            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                fishermen to maintain the profitability                 species are indistinguishable, although               SEDAR 39 smoothhound shark stock
                                                of each trip and allow individual                       smoothhound are distinguishable from                  assessments.
                                                operators some flexibility to make                      other ridgeback sharks by the presence                   Alternative B1 would implement the
                                                decisions, before the trip and while on                 of a pre-dorsal ridge. The best available             quota finalized in Amendment 3 (715.5
                                                the water, as to the retained catch                     scientific information indicates that                 mt dw), which was based on highest
                                                composition that would increase ex-                     smooth dogfish are likely the only                    annual landings from (1998 to 2007) and
                                                vessel revenues. This increase in                       smoothhound shark species along the                   adding two standard deviations. Current
                                                flexibility would be to a lesser extent                 Atlantic coast. In the Gulf of Mexico,                reported smoothhound shark landings
                                                than Sub-Alternative A2–1a, which                       however, there are at least three                     are higher than the quota level in
                                                would not have a catch composition                      different smoothhound species, with no                Alternative B1. As such, implementing
                                                requirement, but greater than the other                 practical way to distinguish among                    this quota would prevent fishermen
                                                sub-alternatives that limit the fins-                   them. This sub-alternative would apply                from fishing at current levels, resulting
                                                attached exception to higher catch                      the smooth dogfish exception 50                       in lost revenues. In 2010 when landings
                                                composition percentages. This sub-                      nautical miles from the baseline of all               peaked, total smoothhound shark
                                                alternative would decrease total ex-                    the States that fall under the SCA                    landings totaled 2,688,249 lb dw
                                                vessel revenues relative to the current                 definition of ‘‘State.’’ This sub-                    (ACCSP data) resulting in ex-vessel
                                                level of $699,364 per year (Section                     alternative could result in other                     revenues across the entire smoothhound
                                                3.6.2).                                                 smoothhound sharks indirectly falling                 sink gillnet fishery of $2,458,135
                                                                                                        under the exception, because they                     (2,688,249 lb of meat, 322,590 lb of
                                                State Fishing Permit Requirement Sub-                                                                         fins). Implementation of the
                                                                                                        cannot be distinguished from smooth
                                                Alternatives                                                                                                  Amendment 3 quota (715.5 mt dw)
                                                                                                        dogfish. NMFS does not expect any
                                                   Sub-Alternative A2–2a would require                  impacts because there is no commercial                would result in ex-vessel revenues of
                                                federal smoothhound permitted                           fishery for smooth dogfish in the Gulf of             only $1,442,367 (1,577,391 lb of meat,
                                                fishermen to obtain a smooth dogfish-                   Mexico at this time. However, NMFS                    189,287 lb of fins), which is $1,015,768
                                                specific state commercial fishing license               does not prefer this sub-alternative                  less than current ex-vessel revenues.
                                                in order to be able to remove smooth                    because, if a fishery does develop,                   Both of these estimates assume $1.62/lb
                                                dogfish fins at sea. The requirement to                 species misidentification could result in             for fins, $0.72/lb for meat, and a 12
                                                obtain a smooth dogfish-specific state                  enforcement action.                                   percent fin-to-carcass ratio (prices based
                                                commercial fishing license may be more                     Under Sub-Alternative 3b, the                      on 2014 dealer data and fin-to-carcass
                                                difficult for fishermen who are in states               preferred sub-alternative, the exception              ratio based on the SCA). Seventy-five
                                                that do not have smooth dogfish-specific                would only apply along the Atlantic                   percent of all landings in the
                                                permits in place. This sub-alternative                  coast and not the Florida west coast in               smoothhound shark fishery come from
                                                would result in the increased burden on                 the Gulf of Mexico. By not extending the              sink gillnets and there are
                                                fishermen to obtain another permit, and                 exception into the Gulf of Mexico, this               approximately 77 vessels that use sink
                                                depending upon the state, could result                  sub-alternative would ensure that the                 gillnet gear to fish for smoothhound
                                                in an additional permit charge. Since                   SCA’s exception to the fins-attached                  sharks in any given year. Assuming an
                                                most permits are valid for one year,                    requirements for smooth dogfish would                 average of 77 sink gillnet vessels fishing
                                                fishermen would likely need to renew                    only apply along the Atlantic Coast                   for smoothhound sharks, the quota in
                                                the permit each year for as long as they                where the population is almost entirely               this alternative would result in annual
                                                wish to retain smooth dogfish and                       smooth dogfish, reducing identification               ex-vessel revenues of $18,732 per vessel
                                                remove the fins while at sea. Because                   problems and inadvertent finning                      which is less than 2010 ex-vessel
                                                not all states have smooth dogfish-                     violations. NMFS does not expect any                  revenues of $31,923 per vessel. This is
                                                specific permits, NMFS does not prefer                  impacts because, at this time, there is no            an average across all directed and
                                                this alternative.                                       commercial fishery for smooth dogfish                 incidental sink gillnet vessels and this
                                                   Sub-Alternative A2–2b, the preferred                 in the Gulf of Mexico. NMFS prefers                   individual annual vessel ex-vessel
                                                alternative, would require fishermen to                 this sub-alternative because it simplifies            revenue may fluctuate based on the
                                                hold any state commercial fishing                       enforcement and compliance without                    degree to which fishermen direct on
                                                permit that allows retention of smooth                  adverse impacts. This sub-alternative                 smoothhound sharks.
                                                dogfish. It is likely, however, that most               would not affect total ex-vessel revenues                The quota in Alternative B1 does not
                                                smooth dogfish fishermen already hold                   relative to the current level of $699,364             accurately characterize current reported
                                                this type of state permit and would be                  per year.                                             landings of smoothhound sharks.
                                                unaffected by this requirement. This                                                                          Vessels that fish for smoothhound
                                                                                                        Smoothhound Shark Commercial                          sharks likely fished opportunistically on
                                                sub-alternative would likely be the most
                                                                                                        Quotas                                                multiple species of coastal migratory
                                                straightforward for regulatory
                                                compliance because the permit                              With regard to the smoothhound                     fish and elasmobranches, and it is
                                                requirement would be the simpler than                   quota alternatives, NMFS considered                   unlikely that any sector within the
                                                sub-alternative A2–2a. Thus, NMFS                       four alternatives. Alternative B1, which              fishing industry in the Northeast
                                                prefers this sub-alternative.                           would implement the smoothhound                       (fisherman, dealer, or processor) relies
                                                                                                        shark quota finalized in Amendment 3;                 wholly upon smoothhound sharks.
                                                Geographic Applicability of Exception                   Alternative B2, which would establish a               Longer-term impacts are expected to be
                                                Sub-Alternatives                                        rolling quota based on the most recent                neutral given the small size of the
                                                  NMFS considered two alternatives for                  five years of landings data; Alternative              fishery and the generalist nature of the
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                Geographic Application of the SCA                       B3, which would calculate the                         sink gillnet fishery.
                                                exception. Under Sub-Alternative A2–                    smoothhound quota using the same                         Alternative B2 would establish a
                                                3a, the exception would apply along the                 method as in Amendment 3 but would                    rolling smoothhound shark quota set
                                                Atlantic Coast and the Florida west                     use updated smoothhound landings                      above the maximum annual landings for
                                                coast in the Gulf of Mexico. As                         information; and Alternative B4, which                the preceding five years; this quota
                                                explained earlier, as a practical matter,               would establish smoothhound shark                     would be recalculated annually to
                                                smooth dogfish and other smoothhound                    quotas that reflects the results of the               account for the most recent landing


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00054   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        73141

                                                trends within the smoothhound                           the smoothhound shark quota that was                  on catch and participants was collected,
                                                complex (2016 quota would be 1,729 mt                   finalized in Amendment 3. This quota                  while also implementing science-based
                                                dw based on 2010–2014 data). The 2016                   would result in potential annual                      quotas to ensure continued sustainable
                                                quota under this alternative is likely to               revenues in the entire fishery of                     harvest of smoothhound sharks in the
                                                result in annual revenues of $3,485,466                 $3,495,345 (3,822,556 lb of meat,                     Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions.
                                                (3,811,753 lb of meat, 457,410 lb of fins)              458,707 lb of fins) assuming an ex-                   NMFS anticipates short-term, direct
                                                assuming an ex-vessel price of $1.62 lb                 vessel price of $1.62 lb for fins and                 minor beneficial socioeconomic impacts
                                                for fins and $0.72 lb for meat. Seventy-                $0.72 for meat. Seventy-five percent of               under this alternative given the
                                                five percent of all landings in the                     all landings in the smoothhound shark                 combined commercial quotas for the
                                                smoothhound shark fishery come from                     fishery come from sink gillnets and                   Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions
                                                sink gillnets and there are                             there are approximately 77 vessels that               under this alternative would result in
                                                approximately 77 vessels that use sink                  use sink gillnet gear to fish for                     increased revenues compared to the
                                                gillnet gear to fish for smoothhound                    smoothhound sharks. Assuming an                       commercial quota under Alternative B1,
                                                sharks. Assuming an average of 77 sink                  average of 77 sink gillnet vessels fishing            though lower than those anticipated
                                                gillnet vessels fishing for smoothhound                 for smoothhound sharks, the quota                     under Alternatives B2 or B3. These
                                                sharks, the quota in this alternative                   proposed in this alternative would                    commercial quotas would allow the
                                                would result in individual vessel annual                result in individual vessel annual                    fishery to continue at the rate and level
                                                revenues of $45,266 which is more than                  revenues of $45,394. This is an average               observed in recent years into the future
                                                2010 ex-vessel revenues of $31,923 per                  across all sink gillnet vessels, regardless           without having to be shut down
                                                vessel. This is an average across all sink              of catch levels, and this individual                  prematurely. Given that the fishery
                                                gillnet vessels, regardless of catch                    annual vessel revenue may fluctuate                   would expect to operate as it currently
                                                levels, and this individual annual vessel               based on the degree to which fishermen                does, NMFS anticipates in the short
                                                revenue may fluctuate based on the                      direct on smoothhound sharks.                         term, indirect, minor, positive
                                                degree to which fishermen direct on                        At the time of publication for the                 socioeconomic impacts for shark dealers
                                                smoothhound sharks.                                     Draft EA, the SEDAR 39 smoothhound                    and processor. Since this alternative
                                                   Setting the quota above current                                                                            establishes scientifically-based quotas
                                                                                                        stock assessments were underway, but
                                                landings levels should allow the fishery                                                                      and would result in beneficial
                                                                                                        not yet complete. In anticipation that
                                                to continue, rather than be closed,                                                                           socioeconomic impacts, NMFS prefers
                                                                                                        the final stock assessments could be
                                                allowing for NMFS to collect more                                                                             this alternative.
                                                information that can be used in future                  finalized before this final rule, NMFS
                                                stock assessments. Alternative B2 is                    considered a range of scenarios under                 Biological Opinion Implementation
                                                consistent with the intent of                           Alternative B4 to implement potential                    In order to implement TC 4 of the
                                                Amendment 3, which was to minimize                      results and scenarios, recognizing that               2012 Shark BiOp in the smoothhound
                                                changes to the fishery while information                results beyond the scope of those                     shark fishery, NMFS considered 4
                                                on catch and participants was collected.                analyzed could require additional                     alternatives. The No Action alternative,
                                                Because landings in the smoothhound                     analysis or regulatory action. The                    which would not implement TC 4 of the
                                                shark fishery are likely underreported, it              SEDAR 39 stock assessment is now                      2012 Shark BiOp; alternative C2, which
                                                is unclear at this time whether the                     final; thus, the scenarios considered in              would require smoothhound shark
                                                increase in reported landings is due to                 the Draft EA are no longer appropriate                fishermen to conduct net checks at least
                                                existing smoothhound fishermen                          to consider. Rather, NMFS has analyzed                every 2 hours; alternative C3, which
                                                reporting in anticipation of future                     the actual results of the stock                       would require smoothhound shark
                                                management or increased effort (e.g.,                   assessments, which would establish an                 fishermen to limit their gillnet soak time
                                                new entrants into the fishery). While a                 Atlantic smoothhound commercial                       to 24 hours and those smoothhound
                                                rolling quota would cover all current                   quota of 1,201.7 mt dw and a Gulf of                  shark fishermen that also have a
                                                reporting and likely cover all                          Mexico smoothhound shark quota of                     Atlantic shark limited access permit to
                                                underreporting of landings, the fishery                 336.4 mt dw. These quotas would result                check their nets at least every 2 hours;
                                                could grow exponentially if reported                    in annual revenues of $2,422,251.54                   and finally, Alternative C4, which
                                                landings continue to increase over                      (2,649,006 lb of meat, 317,881 lb fins),              would require smoothhound and
                                                consecutive years, possibly resulting in                assuming an ex-vessel price of $1.62 lb               Atlantic shark fishermen using sink
                                                stock declines and in turn a potential                  for fins and $0.72 lb for meat. Seventy-              gillnet to soak their nets no longer than
                                                loss of revenue to the fishing industry.                five percent of all landings in the                   24 hours and those fishermen using drift
                                                The rolling quota could also lead to                    smoothhound shark fishery come from                   gillnets to check their nets at least every
                                                lower quotas in consecutive years if                    sink gillnets and there are                           2 hours.
                                                landings decrease over time. Thus, the                  approximately 77 vessels that use sink                   Alternative C1 would not implement
                                                changing nature of the rolling quota                    gillnet gear to fish for smoothhound                  the BiOp term and condition that would
                                                could lead to uncertainty in the fishery                sharks. Assuming an average of 77 sink                require all smoothhound shark permit
                                                and could cause direct and indirect                     gillnet vessels fishing for smoothhound               holders to either check their gillnet gear
                                                minor adverse socioeconomic impacts                     sharks, the quota in this alternative                 at least every 2.0 hours or limit their
                                                in the long term.                                       would result in individual vessel annual              soak time to no more than 24 hours.
                                                   Alternative B3 would create a                        revenues of $31,458. This is an average               This alternative would likely result in
                                                smoothhound quota equal to the                          across all sink gillnet vessels, regardless           short and long-term neutral direct
                                                maximum annual landings from 2005–                      of catch levels, and this individual                  socioeconomic impacts. Under
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                2014 plus two standard deviations and                   annual vessel revenue may fluctuate                   Alternative C1, smoothhound shark
                                                would equal 1,733.9 mt dw. This                         based on the degree to which fishermen                fishermen would continue to fish as
                                                alternative would establish a                           direct on smoothhound sharks. The                     they do now and so this alternative
                                                smoothhound quota two standard                          quotas under Alternative B4 are both                  would not have economic impacts that
                                                deviations above the maximum annual                     consistent with the intent of                         differ from the status quo. Similarly,
                                                landings reported over the last ten years               Amendment 3, which was to minimize                    this alternative would likely result in
                                                which is the method used to calculate                   changes to the fishery while information              neutral short and long-term indirect


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00055   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73142            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                socioeconomic impacts since supporting                  shark gillnet fishermen sometimes fish                   Alternative C4, the preferred
                                                businesses including dealers and bait,                  multiple nets or leave nets unattended                alternative, would establish a soak time
                                                tackle, and ice suppliers would not be                  for short periods of time. Rarely are                 limit of 24 hours for fishermen using
                                                impacted.                                               these nets soaked for more than 24                    sink gillnet gear and a 2 hour net check
                                                   Alternative C2 would require                         hours, thus, this alternative would not               requirement for fishermen using drift
                                                smoothhound shark fishermen using                       impact smoothhound shark gillnet                      gillnet gear in the Atlantic shark and
                                                gillnet gear to conduct net checks at                   fishermen that do not have an Atlantic                smoothhound shark fisheries. Drift
                                                least every 2.0 hours to check for and                  shark limited access permit. Adverse                  gillnets would be defined as those that
                                                remove any protected species, and                       socioeconomic impacts resulting from                  are unattached to the ocean bottom with
                                                would likely result in short and long-                  this alternative would likely occur to                a float line at the surface and sink
                                                term direct moderate adverse                            the subset of smoothhound shark                       gillnet gear would be defined as those
                                                socioeconomic impacts. Some                             fishermen that also hold an Atlantic                  with a weight line that sinks to the
                                                smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen                     shark limited access permit. These                    ocean bottom, has a submerged float
                                                fish multiple nets at one time or deploy                                                                      line, and is designed to be fished on or
                                                                                                        smoothhound shark fishermen would be
                                                their net(s), leave the vicinity, and                                                                         near the bottom. Alternative C4 would
                                                                                                        at a disadvantage to other smoothhound
                                                return later. Alternative C2 would                                                                            likely result in neutral short and long-
                                                                                                        shark fishermen that do not have an
                                                require these fishermen to check each                                                                         term direct socioeconomic impacts.
                                                gillnet at least once every 2 hours,                    Atlantic shark limited access permit
                                                                                                                                                              Smoothhound shark fishermen, who
                                                making fishing with multiple nets or                    because they would be required to
                                                                                                                                                              typically use sink gillnets, would be
                                                leaving nets unattended difficult. This                 check their gillnets at least every 2                 required to limit soak times to 24 hours
                                                would likely lead to a reduction in effort              hours which is a large change in the                  and as discussed above, this
                                                and landing levels, resulting in lower                  way the smoothhound shark fishery                     requirement is unlikely to significantly
                                                ex-vessel revenues. Quantifying the loss                currently operates. Dropping the                      alter smoothhound shark fishing
                                                of income is difficult without                          Atlantic shark permit to avoid the net                practices. Drift gillnet fishermen, who
                                                information characterizing the fishery                  check requirement is unlikely to be                   are more likely to target Atlantic sharks
                                                including the number of nets fished.                    feasible because Atlantic shark permits               rather than smoothhound sharks, would
                                                However, limiting the amount of fishing                 allow limited access (NMFS is no longer               be required to check their nets at least
                                                effort in this manner is likely to reduce               issuing new permits) and cannot be                    every 2 hours, as is currently required.
                                                total landings of smoothhound sharks                    easily obtained. Additionally, pelagic                Thus, this alternative is unlikely to have
                                                or, in order to keep landing levels high,               longline fishermen are required to have               any socioeconomic impacts to Atlantic
                                                extend the length of trips. Landings of                 an incidental or directed shark permit                shark and smoothhound shark
                                                incidentally caught fish species could                  when targeting swordfish or tunas, even               fishermen because it would not change
                                                be reduced as well, although under                      if they are not fishing for sharks, due to            current fishing practices. Similarly, this
                                                preferred Sub-Alternative A2–1c,                        the likelihood of incidental shark catch.             alternative would likely result in neutral
                                                smoothhound shark fishermen that wish                   In practical terms, this could result in              short and long-term indirect
                                                to remove smooth dogfish fins at sea                    smoothhound shark gillnet fishermen                   socioeconomic impacts because
                                                could not retain other species. This                    abiding by the 2 hour net check                       supporting businesses including dealers
                                                alternative would not have a large                      requirement even if they do not fish for              and bait, tackle, and ice suppliers
                                                impact on supporting businesses such                    Atlantic sharks and only hold a Atlantic              should not be impacted. Alternative C4
                                                as dealers or bait, tackle, and ice                     shark limited access permit to fish for               would impact the approximately 77
                                                suppliers since these businesses do not                 swordfish or tunas (note that gillnets                vessels that annually catch
                                                solely rely on the smoothhound shark                    cannot be used to target swordfish or                 smoothhound sharks with gillnet gear
                                                fishery. The smoothhound shark fishery                  tunas, but some vessels may switch                    (annual average from 2003–2014, Table
                                                is small relative to other fisheries. Thus,             gears between trips). For this subset of              3.1). Because Alternative C4 would have
                                                Alternative C2 would likely result in                   fishermen, basing gillnet requirements                minimal economic impact but is still
                                                short and long-term indirect neutral                    on permit types could introduce fishing               consistent with the 2012 Shark BiOp,
                                                socioeconomic impacts. Alternative C2                   inefficiencies when compared to other                 NMFS prefers this alternative.
                                                would impact the approximately 77                       smoothhound fishermen, likely
                                                vessels that annually catch                                                                                   Atlantic Shark Gillnet Vessel Monitoring
                                                                                                        resulting in adverse socioeconomic                    System Requirements
                                                smoothhound sharks with gillnet gear
                                                                                                        impacts to these fishermen. It is                        NMFS also considered two
                                                (annual average from 2003–2014, Table
                                                                                                        unlikely that this alternative would                  alternatives to streamline the current
                                                3.1).
                                                   Alternative C3 would establish a                     have a large impact on supporting                     VMS requirements for Atlantic shark
                                                gillnet soak time limit of 24 hours for                 businesses such as dealers or bait,                   fishermen with gillnet gear on board.
                                                smoothhound shark permit holders.                       tackle, and ice suppliers since these                 The No Action alternative would
                                                Under this alternative, fishermen                       businesses do not solely rely on the                  maintain the current requirement to
                                                holding both an Atlantic shark limited                  smoothhound shark fishery. The                        have VMS on board when fishing for
                                                access permit and a smoothhound shark                   smoothhound shark fishery is small                    Atlantic sharks with gillnet regardless of
                                                permit must abide by the 24 hour soak                   relative to other fisheries. It is difficult          where the vessel is fishing and
                                                time restriction and conduct net checks                 to determine the number of fishermen                  alternative D2 would require VMS on
                                                at least every 2 hours. This alternative                that would be adversely affected                      board only for Atlantic shark fishermen
                                                would likely result in short- and long-                 because NMFS does not yet know which                  using gillnet gear in an area specified by
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                term direct minor adverse                               vessels will obtain a smoothhound                     the ALWTRP requirements at 50 CFR
                                                socioeconomic impacts to those                          shark fishing permit. However, it is                  229.32.
                                                smoothhound permitted fishermen that                    likely that this number will be                          Alternative D1 would maintain the
                                                also have an Atlantic shark limited                     approximately equal to 169 which is the               current requirement of requiring
                                                access permit and therefore would be                    average annual number of vessel that                  Atlantic shark permit holders fishing
                                                required to check their nets at least                   retain smoothhound sharks (Section                    with gillnet gear to have VMS on board,
                                                every 2 hours. Currently, smoothhound                   3.4).                                                 regardless of where the vessel is fishing.


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00056   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                           73143

                                                These VMS requirements were put in                      replace a malfunctioning one. Thus, the               all holders of permits for the Atlantic
                                                place as an enforcement tool for                        socioeconomic impacts from this                       shark and smoothhound shark
                                                complying with the ALWTRP                               alternative, while still adverse, are of a            commercial fisheries. The guide and
                                                requirements set forth in 50 CFR 229.32.                lesser degree than those under                        this final rule will be available upon
                                                Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen are only               Alternative D1, the No Action                         request.
                                                required to have VMS if they are fishing                alternative. This alternative would
                                                                                                                                                              List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 635
                                                in the Southeast U.S. Monitoring Area.                  likely result in neutral short and long-
                                                See 50 CFR 229.32(h)(2)(i). Purchasing                  term indirect socioeconomic impacts                     Fisheries, Fishing, Fishing vessels,
                                                and installing a VMS unit costs                         because supporting businesses,                        Foreign relations, Imports, Penalties,
                                                approximately $3,500, and monthly data                  including dealers and bait, tackle, and               Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                transmission charges cost, on average,                  ice suppliers, would not be impacted.                 requirements, Treaties.
                                                approximately $44.00. Because these                     While the retention of sharks in federal                Dated: November 12, 2015.
                                                monthly costs are currently incurred                    waters requires one of two limited                    Samuel D. Rauch III,
                                                whenever a shark gillnet fishermen is                   access commercial shark permits, these                Deputy Assistant Administrator for
                                                fishing, these costs can affect the                     permits do not specify gear type,                     Regulatory Programs, National Marine
                                                fishermen’s annual revenues. Although                   including gillnets. For this reason,                  Fisheries Service.
                                                the affected fishermen already have                     NMFS does not know the exact number                     For reasons set out in the preamble,
                                                VMS installed, they continue to pay for                 of shark gillnet fishermen that would be              50 CFR part 635 is amended as follows:
                                                transmission and maintenance costs,                     affected by this alternative. As of
                                                and could need to buy a new unit if                     October 11, 2014, there are 206 directed              PART 635—ATLANTIC HIGHLY
                                                theirs fails. It is possible that a NMFS                shark and 258 incidental shark permit                 MIGRATORY SPECIES
                                                VMS reimbursement program could                         holders. Logbook records indicate that
                                                defray part of the purchase cost, but is                there are usually about 18 Atlantic shark             ■ 1. The authority citation for part 635
                                                not certain. Thus, it is likely that this               directed permit holders that use gillnet              continues to read as follows:
                                                alternative could have short and long-                  gear in any year. However, the universe                 Authority: 16 U.S.C. 971 et seq.; 16 U.S.C.
                                                term direct minor adverse                               of directed permit holders using gillnet              1801 et seq.
                                                socioeconomic impacts to fishermen                      gear can change from year to year and                 ■ 2. In § 635.2, add definitions for
                                                due to the cost of purchasing and                       could include anyone who holds an                     ‘‘Atlantic States,’’ ‘‘Drift gillnet,’’ ‘‘Sink
                                                maintaining a VMS unit. While the                       Atlantic shark directed permit. Because               gillnet,’’ and ‘‘Smoothhound shark(s)’’
                                                retention of sharks in federal waters                   this alternative is more in line with the             in alphabetical order to read as follows:
                                                requires one of two limited access                      requirements of the ALWTRP, and
                                                commercial shark permits, these permits                 because it would reduce socioeconomic                 § 635.2    Definitions.
                                                do not specify gear type, including                     impacts while still maintaining                       *     *      *    *     *
                                                gillnets. For this reason, NMFS does not                beneficial ecological impacts for                        Atlantic States, consistent with
                                                know the exact number of affected shark                 protected whale species, NMFS prefers                 section 803 of Public law 103–206 (16
                                                gillnet fishermen. As of October 11,                    this alternative.                                     U.S.C. 5102), refers to Maine, New
                                                2014, there are 206 directed shark and                     This final rule contains a collection-             Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode
                                                258 incidental shark permit holders.                    of-information requirement subject to                 Island, Connecticut, New York, New
                                                                                                        the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and                 Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware,
                                                Logbook records indicate that there are
                                                                                                        which has been approved by OMB                        Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina,
                                                usually about 18 Atlantic shark directed
                                                                                                        under control number 0648–0372.                       South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, the
                                                permit holders that use gillnet gear in
                                                                                                        Public reporting burden will be reduced               District of Columbia, and the Potomac
                                                any year. However, the universe of
                                                                                                        under the modified VMS requirements                   River Fisheries Commission, for
                                                directed permit holders using gillnet
                                                                                                        under this final rule. The burden                     purposes of applying the Shark
                                                gear can change from year to year and
                                                                                                        estimate burden will be reduced by this               Conservation Act exception at 50 CFR
                                                could include anyone who holds an
                                                                                                        rule, but the changes will be requested               635.30(c)(5).
                                                Atlantic shark directed permit.
                                                                                                        as part of the 2016 extension, at which               *     *      *    *     *
                                                   Alternative D2, the preferred                        time the estimate of the burden change
                                                alternative, would change the gillnet                                                                            Drift gillnet means a gillnet that is
                                                                                                        will be more accurate.                                floating unattached to the ocean bottom
                                                VMS requirements and would require                         Section 212 of the Small Business                  and not anchored, secured, or weighted
                                                federal directed shark permit holders                   Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of                to the ocean bottom.
                                                with gillnet gear on board to use VMS                   1996 states that, for each rule or group
                                                only in the vicinity of the Southeast                   of related rules for which an agency is               *     *      *    *     *
                                                U.S. Monitoring Area, pursuant to                                                                                Sink gillnet means a gillnet that is
                                                                                                        required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
                                                ALWTRP requirements, and would have                                                                           designed to be or is fished on or near the
                                                                                                        shall publish one or more guides to
                                                short and long-term direct minor                                                                              ocean bottom in the lower third of the
                                                                                                        assist small entities in complying with
                                                beneficial socioeconomic impacts.                                                                             water column by means of a weight line
                                                                                                        the rule, and shall designate such
                                                Atlantic shark gillnet fishermen fishing                                                                      or enough weights and/or anchors that
                                                                                                        publications as ‘‘small entity
                                                in the vicinity of the Southeast U.S.                                                                         the bottom of the gillnet sinks to, on, or
                                                                                                        compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
                                                Monitoring Area would still incur the                                                                         near the ocean bottom.
                                                                                                        explain the actions a small entity is
                                                installation costs of the VMS, but data                 required to take to comply with a rule                *     *      *    *     *
                                                transmission would be limited to those                  or group of rules. As part of this                       Smoothhound shark(s) means one of
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                times when the vessel is in this area.                  rulemaking process, a letter to permit                the species, or part thereof, listed in
                                                Furthermore, shark gillnet fishermen                    holders that also serves as small entity              section E of Table 1 in Appendix A to
                                                outside of this area that do not fish in                compliance guide (the guide) was                      this part.
                                                the vicinity of the Southeast U.S.                      prepared. Copies of this final rule are               *     *      *    *     *
                                                Monitoring Area would not need to                       available from the HMS Management                     ■ 3. In § 635.4, add paragraph (e)(4) and
                                                install a VMS unit or, if they already                  Division (see ADDRESSES) and the guide                revise paragraph (m)(2) to read as
                                                have one, maintain the VMS unit or                      (i.e., permit holder letter) will be sent to          follows:


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00057   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM    24NOR1


                                                73144            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                § 635.4   Permits and fees.                             access permits that have been                            (2) Allow the observer access to and
                                                *      *     *     *    *                               transferred according to the procedures               use of the vessel’s communications
                                                   (e) * * *                                            in paragraph (l) of this section.                     equipment and personnel upon request
                                                   (4) Owners of vessels that fish for,                 *     *    *     *      *                             for the transmission and receipt of
                                                take, retain, or possess the Atlantic                   ■ 4. Revise § 635.7 to read as follows:               messages related to the observer’s
                                                oceanic sharks listed in section E of                                                                         duties.
                                                Table 1 of Appendix A to this part with                 § 635.7   At-sea observer coverage.                      (3) Allow the observer access to and
                                                an intention to sell them must obtain a                    (a) Applicability. NMFS may select for             use of the vessel’s navigation equipment
                                                Federal commercial smoothhound                          at-sea observer coverage any vessel that              and personnel upon request to
                                                permit. In addition to other permits                    has an Atlantic HMS, tunas, shark, or                 determine the vessel’s position.
                                                issued pursuant to this section or other                swordfish permit issued under § 635.4                    (4) Allow the observer free and
                                                authorities, a Federal commercial                       or § 635.32. When selected, vessels are               unobstructed access to the vessel’s
                                                smoothhound permit may be issued to                     required to take observers on a                       bridge, working decks, holding bins,
                                                a vessel alone or to a vessel that also                 mandatory basis. Vessels permitted in                 weight scales, holds, and any other
                                                holds either a Federal Atlantic                         the HMS Charter/Headboat and Angling                  space used to hold, process, weigh, or
                                                commercial shark directed or incidental                 categories may be requested to take                   store fish.
                                                limited access permit.                                  observers on a voluntary basis.                          (5) Allow the observer to inspect and
                                                *      *     *     *    *                                  (b) Selection of vessels. NMFS will                copy the vessel’s log, communications
                                                   (m) * * *                                            notify a vessel owner, in writing, by                 logs, and any records associated with
                                                   (2) Shark and swordfish permits. A                   email, by phone, or in person when his                the catch and distribution of fish for that
                                                vessel owner must obtain the applicable                 or her vessel is selected for observer                trip.
                                                                                                        coverage. Vessels will be selected to                    (6) Notify the observer in a timely
                                                limited access permit(s) issued pursuant
                                                                                                        provide information on catch, bycatch                 fashion of when fishing operations are
                                                to the requirements in paragraphs (e)
                                                                                                        and other fishery data according to the               to begin and end.
                                                and (f) of this section and/or a Federal
                                                                                                        need for representative samples.                         (f) Vessel responsibilities. An owner
                                                commercial smoothhound permit issued
                                                                                                           (c) Notification of trips. If selected to          or operator of a vessel required to carry
                                                under paragraph (e) of this section; or an
                                                                                                        carry an observer, it is the responsibility           one or more observer(s) must provide
                                                HMS Commercial Caribbean Small Boat                     of the vessel owner to arrange for and                reasonable assistance to enable
                                                permit issued under paragraph (o) of                    facilitate observer placement. The                    observer(s) to carry out their duties,
                                                this section, if: The vessel is used to fish            owner or operator of a vessel that is                 including, but not limited to:
                                                for or take sharks commercially from the                selected under paragraph (b) of this                     (1) Measuring decks, codends, and
                                                management unit; sharks from the                        section must notify NMFS, at an address               holding bins.
                                                management unit are retained or                         or by phone at a number designated by                    (2) Providing the observer(s) with a
                                                possessed on the vessel with an                         NMFS, before commencing any fishing                   safe work area.
                                                intention to sell; or sharks from the                   trip that may result in the incidental                   (3) Collecting bycatch when requested
                                                management unit are sold from the                       catch or harvest of Atlantic HMS.                     by the observer(s).
                                                vessel. A vessel owner must obtain the                  Notification procedures and information                  (4) Collecting and carrying baskets of
                                                applicable limited access permit(s)                     requirements will be specified in a                   fish when requested by the observer(s).
                                                issued pursuant to the requirements in                  selection letter sent by NMFS.                           (5) Allowing the observer(s) to collect
                                                paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section, a                  (d) Assignment of observers. Once a                biological data and samples.
                                                Swordfish General Commercial permit                     selected vessel notifies NMFS or its                     (6) Providing adequate space for
                                                issued under paragraph (f) of this                      designee, NMFS will assign an observer                storage of biological samples.
                                                section, an Incidental HMS Squid Trawl                  for that trip based on current                        ■ 5. In § 635.19, revise paragraph (d) to
                                                permit issued under paragraph (n) of                    information needs relative to the                     read as follows:
                                                this section, an HMS Commercial                         expected catch and bycatch likely to be
                                                Caribbean Small Boat permit issued                      associated with the indicated gear                    § 635.19   Authorized gears.
                                                under paragraph (o) of this section, or                 deployment, trip duration and fishing                 *      *     *    *     *
                                                an HMS Charter/Headboat permit issued                   area. If an observer is not assigned for                 (d) Sharks. No person may possess a
                                                under paragraph (b) of this section,                    a fishing trip, NMFS, or their designated             shark in the EEZ taken from its
                                                which authorizes a Charter/Headboat to                  observer service provider, will issue a               management unit without a permit
                                                fish commercially for swordfish on a                    waiver for that trip to the owner or                  issued under § 635.4. No person issued
                                                non for-hire trip subject to the retention              operator of the selected vessel, so long              a Federal Atlantic commercial shark
                                                limits at § 635.24(b)(4) if: The vessel is              as the waiver is consistent with other                permit under § 635.4 may possess a
                                                used to fish for or take swordfish                      applicable laws. If an observer is                    shark taken by any gear other than rod
                                                commercially from the management                        assigned for a trip, the operator of the              and reel, handline, bandit gear, longline,
                                                unit; swordfish from the management                     selected vessel must arrange to embark                or gillnet, except that smoothhound
                                                unit are retained or possessed on the                   the observer and shall not fish for or                sharks may be retained incidentally
                                                vessel with an intention to sell; or                    retain any Atlantic HMS unless the                    while fishing with trawl gear subject to
                                                swordfish from the management unit are                  NMFS-assigned observer is aboard.                     the restrictions specified in
                                                sold from the vessel. The commercial                       (e) Requirements. The owner or                     § 635.24(a)(7). No person issued an HMS
                                                retention and sale of swordfish from                    operator of a vessel on which a NMFS-                 Commercial Caribbean Small Boat
                                                vessels issued an HMS Charter/                          approved observer is embarked,                        permit may possess a shark taken from
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                Headboat permit is permissible only                     regardless of whether required to carry               the U.S. Caribbean, as defined at § 622.2
                                                when the vessel is on a non for-hire trip.              the observer, must comply with safety                 of this chapter, by any gear other than
                                                Only persons holding non-expired shark                  regulations in § 600.725 and § 600.746                with rod and reel, handline or bandit
                                                and swordfish limited access permit(s)                  of this chapter and—                                  gear. No person issued an HMS Angling
                                                in the preceding year are eligible to                      (1) Provide accommodations and food                permit or an HMS Charter/Headboat
                                                renew those limited access permit(s).                   that are equivalent to those provided to              permit under § 635.4 may possess a
                                                Transferors may not renew limited                       the crew.                                             shark if the shark was taken from its


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00058   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        73145

                                                management unit by any gear other than                  only to the size limits described in                  Atlantic commercial shark permit under
                                                rod and reel or handline, except that                   § 635.20(e)(5).                                       § 635.4 must maintain all the shark fins
                                                persons on a vessel issued both an HMS                  *     *     *     *     *                             including the tail naturally attached to
                                                Charter/Headboat permit and a Federal                   ■ 9. In § 635.24, add paragraph (a)(7) to
                                                                                                                                                              the shark carcass until the shark has
                                                Atlantic commercial shark permit may                    read as follows:                                      been offloaded from the vessel, except
                                                possess sharks taken with rod and reel,                                                                       for under the conditions specified in
                                                handline, bandit gear, longline, or                     § 635.24 Commercial retention limits for              paragraph (c)(5) of this section. While
                                                gillnet if the vessel is not engaged in a               sharks, swordfish, and BAYS tunas.                    sharks are on board and when sharks are
                                                for-hire fishing trip.                                  *      *     *      *     *                           being offloaded, persons issued a
                                                *     *      *     *     *                                 (a) * * *                                          Federal Atlantic commercial shark
                                                                                                           (7) A person who owns or operates a                permit under § 635.4 are subject to the
                                                ■ 6. In § 635.20, add paragraph (e)(5) to               vessel that has been issued a Federal                 regulations at part 600, subpart N, of
                                                read as follows:                                        commercial smoothhound permit may                     this chapter.
                                                § 635.20   Size limits.                                 retain, possess, and land smoothhound                    (2) A person who owns or operates a
                                                *     *    *     *      *                               sharks if the smoothhound fishery is                  vessel that has a valid Federal Atlantic
                                                                                                        open in accordance with §§ 635.27 and                 commercial shark permit may remove
                                                  (e) * * *                                             635.28. Persons aboard a vessel in a                  the head and viscera of the shark while
                                                  (5) There is no size limit for                        trawl fishery that has been issued a                  on board the vessel. At any time when
                                                smoothhound sharks taken under the                      Federal commercial smoothhound                        on the vessel, sharks must not have the
                                                recreational retention limits specified at              permit and are in compliance with all                 backbone removed and must not be
                                                § 635.22(c)(6).                                         other applicable regulations, may retain,             halved, quartered, filleted, or otherwise
                                                *     *    *     *      *                               possess, land, or sell incidentally-caught            reduced. All fins, including the tail,
                                                ■ 7. In § 635.21, revise the section                    smoothhound sharks, but only up to an                 must remain naturally attached to the
                                                heading, and paragraphs (g)(2) and (3) to               amount that does not exceed 25 percent,               shark through offloading, except under
                                                read as follows:                                        by weight, of the total catch on board                the conditions specified in paragraph
                                                                                                        and/or offloaded from the vessel. A                   (c)(5) of this section. While on the
                                                § 635.21 Gear operation and deployment                  vessel is in a trawl fishery when it has              vessel, fins may be sliced so that the fin
                                                restrictions.                                           no commercial fishing gear other than                 can be folded along the carcass for
                                                *      *     *    *     *                               trawls on board and when smoothhound                  storage purposes as long as the fin
                                                   (g) * * *                                            sharks constitute no more than 25                     remains naturally attached to the
                                                   (2) While fishing with a drift gillnet,              percent by weight of the total catch on               carcass via at least a small portion of
                                                a vessel issued or required to be issued                board or offloaded from the vessel.                   uncut skin. The fins and tail may only
                                                a Federal Atlantic commercial shark                     *      *     *      *     *                           be removed from the carcass once the
                                                limited access permit and/or a Federal                  ■ 10. In § 635.27, add paragraphs                     shark has been landed and offloaded,
                                                commercial smoothhound permit must                      (b)(1)(i)(E), (b)(1)(ii)(F), and (b)(4)(iv) to        except under the conditions specified in
                                                conduct net checks at least every 2                     read as follows:                                      paragraph (c)(5) of this section.
                                                hours to look for and remove any sea                                                                             (3) A person who owns or operates a
                                                turtles, marine mammals, Atlantic                       § 635.27    Quotas.                                   vessel that has been issued a Federal
                                                sturgeon, or smalltooth sawfish, and the                *       *    *     *    *                             Atlantic commercial shark permit and
                                                drift gillnet must remain attached to at                   (b) * * *                                          who lands sharks in an Atlantic coastal
                                                least one vessel at one end, except                        (1) * * *                                          port, including ports in the Gulf of
                                                during net checks. Smalltooth sawfish                      (i) * * *                                          Mexico and Caribbean Sea, must have
                                                must not be removed from the water                         (E) Atlantic smoothhound sharks. The               all fins and carcasses weighed and
                                                while being removed from the net.                       base annual commercial quota for                      recorded on the weighout slips specified
                                                                                                        Atlantic smoothhound sharks is 1,201.7                in § 635.5(a)(2) and in accordance with
                                                   (3) While fishing with a sink gillnet,
                                                                                                        mt dw.                                                part 600, subpart N, of this chapter.
                                                vessels issued or required to be issued
                                                                                                           (ii) * * *                                         Persons may not possess any shark fins
                                                a Federal Atlantic commercial shark                        (F) Gulf of Mexico smoothhound                     not naturally attached to a shark carcass
                                                limited access permit and/or a Federal                  sharks. The base annual commercial                    on board a fishing vessel at any time,
                                                commercial smoothhound permit must                      quota for Gulf of Mexico smoothhound                  except under the conditions specified in
                                                limit the soak time of the sink gillnet                 sharks is 336.4 mt dw.                                paragraph (c)(5) of this section. Once
                                                gear to no more than 24 hours,
                                                                                                        *       *    *     *    *                             landed and offloaded, sharks that have
                                                measured from the time the sink gillnet
                                                                                                           (4) * * *                                          been halved, quartered, filleted, cut up,
                                                first enters the water to the time it is
                                                                                                           (iv) The base annual quota for persons             or reduced in any manner may not be
                                                completely removed from the water.
                                                                                                        who collect smoothhound sharks under                  brought back on board a vessel that has
                                                Smalltooth sawfish must not be
                                                                                                        a display permit or EFP is 6 mt ww (4.3               been or should have been issued a
                                                removed from the water while being
                                                                                                        mt dw).                                               Federal Atlantic commercial shark
                                                removed from the net.
                                                                                                        *       *    *     *    *                             permit.
                                                *      *     *    *     *
                                                                                                        ■ 11. In § 635.30, revise paragraphs                  *      *     *     *     *
                                                ■ 8. In § 635.22, add paragraph (c)(6) to               (c)(1) through (3), and add paragraph                    (5) A person who owns or operates a
                                                read as follows:                                        (c)(5) to read as follows:                            vessel that has been issued a Federal
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                                                                                                                              commercial smoothhound permit may
                                                § 635.22   Recreational retention limits.               § 635.30    Possession at sea and landing.            remove the fins and tail of a smooth
                                                *     *    *     *     *                                *     *     *     *     *                             dogfish shark prior to offloading if the
                                                  (c) * * *                                               (c) Shark. (1) In addition to the                   conditions in paragraphs (c)(5)(i)
                                                  (6) The smoothhound sharks listed in                  regulations issued at part 600, subpart               through (iv) of this section have been
                                                Section E of Table 1 of Appendix A to                   N, of this chapter, a person who owns                 met. If the conditions in paragraphs
                                                this part may be retained and are subject               or operates a vessel issued a Federal                 (c)(5)(i) through (iv) of this section have


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00059   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM   24NOR1


                                                73146            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 226 / Tuesday, November 24, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                not been met, all fins, including the tail,             carcasses on board or landed from the                    (7) Sell or purchase smooth dogfish
                                                must remain naturally attached to the                   fishing vessel.                                       fins that are disproportionate to the
                                                smooth dogfish through offloading from                  *     *     *     *     *                             weight of smooth dogfish carcasses, as
                                                the vessel:                                             ■ 12. In § 635.69, revise paragraph (a)(3)            specified in § 635.30(c)(5).
                                                   (i) The smooth dogfish was caught                    to read as follows:                                   *      *     *    *     *
                                                within waters of the United States                                                                               (18) Retain or possess on board a
                                                                                                        § 635.69    Vessel monitoring systems.                vessel in the trawl fishery smoothhound
                                                located shoreward of a line drawn in
                                                                                                          (a) * * *                                           sharks in an amount that exceeds 25
                                                such a manner that each point on it is                    (3) Pursuant to Atlantic large whale
                                                50 nautical miles from the baseline of an                                                                     percent, by weight, of the total fish on
                                                                                                        take reduction plan requirements at 50                board or offloaded from the vessel, as
                                                Atlantic State from which the territorial               CFR 229.32(h), whenever a vessel issued               specified at § 635.24(a)(7).
                                                sea is measured, from Maine south                       a directed shark LAP has a gillnet(s) on
                                                through Florida to the Atlantic and Gulf                                                                      *      *     *    *     *
                                                                                                        board.
                                                of Mexico shark regional boundary                                                                             ■ 14. In Appendix A to Part 635, add
                                                                                                        *     *     *     *     *                             Section E to Table 1 to read as follows:
                                                defined in § 635.27(b)(1).
                                                                                                        ■ 13. In § 635.71, revise paragraphs
                                                   (ii) The vessel has been issued both a               (d)(6) and (7), and add paragraph (d)(18)             Appendix A to Part 635—Species
                                                Federal commercial smoothhound                          to read as follows:                                   Tables
                                                permit and a valid State commercial                                                                            Table 1 of Appendix A to Part 635—
                                                fishing permit that allows for fishing for              § 635.71    Prohibitions.
                                                                                                                                                              Oceanic Sharks
                                                smooth dogfish.                                         *     *     *    *     *
                                                                                                                                                              *        *       *    *   *
                                                                                                          (d) * * *
                                                   (iii) Smooth dogfish make up at least                                                                      E. Smoothhound Sharks
                                                                                                          (6) Fail to maintain a shark in its
                                                25 percent of the catch on board at the                 proper form, as specified in § 635.30(c).             Smooth dogfish, Mustelus canis
                                                time of landing.                                        Fail to maintain naturally attached                   Florida smoothhound, Mustelus norrisi
                                                   (iv) Total weight of the smooth                      shark fins through offloading as                      Gulf smoothhound, Mustelus
                                                dogfish fins landed or found on board                   specified in § 635.30(c), except for                    sinusmexicanus Mustelus species
                                                a vessel cannot exceed 12 percent of the                under the conditions specified in                     [FR Doc. 2015–29516 Filed 11–23–15; 8:45 am]
                                                total dressed weight of smooth dogfish                  § 635.30(c)(5).                                       BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   23:14 Nov 23, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00060   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\24NOR1.SGM       24NOR1



Document Created: 2015-12-14 14:09:01
Document Modified: 2015-12-14 14:09:01
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule; fishery notification.
DatesEffective March 15, 2016. An operator-assisted, public conference call and webinar will be held on December 15, 2015, from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., EST.
ContactSteve Durkee by phone: 202-670-6637 or Karyl Brewster-Geisz by phone: 301-427-8503 or by fax: 301-713-1917.
FR Citation80 FR 73128 
RIN Number0648-BB02
CFR AssociatedFisheries; Fishing; Fishing Vessels; Foreign Relations; Imports; Penalties; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Treaties

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR