New
England’s ocean ecosystems and fishing fleets are facing unprecedented
challenges. Greenhouse-gas emissions are making ocean waters warmer and more
acidic. Combined with decades of intense fishery exploitation and habitat loss,
this has led to big changes. (Eating with the Ecosystem)
By KEVIN PROFT/ecoRI News staff
NEWPORT, R.I. — Cashes Ledge, a pristine marine habitat in the
Gulf of Maine, will maintain its protected status, but large swaths of other
habitat in New England waters are one step closer to losing protection from
various types of fishing gear.
The New England Fisheries Management Council (NEFMC) met last week
in the City by the Sea to vote on its recommended approach to habitat protection
in New England waters. The council’s recommendations will eventually be
considered by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries), which has
the option to approve, disapprove or partially approve them.
Many of NEFMC’s decisions, including the decision to maintain
protections for Cashes Ledge, were made at the council’s April 21-23 meeting in
Mystic, Conn. At that meeting, a last-minute proposal concerning the protected
areas on Georges Bank pushed some votes to the June meeting.
The lead up to the NEFMC’s April and June meetings had
environmental organizations butting heads with the fishing industry. NEFMC’s
Habitat Committee had recently recommended that
the full council adopt a strategy that catered to fishing interests at the
expense of habitat protection, despite the committee’s mission to enhance
habitat protection, according to conservationists.
“After a decade of development, the Council may take actions that
significantly weaken, rather than improve, essential fish habitat protection,”
he wrote.
According to Bullard, NOAA Fisheries would be unable to approve
many of the Habitat Committee’s recommendations if they were adopted by the
NEFMC.
During the course of the April and June meetings, the NEFMC
adopted a set of recommendations that severely reduce the amount of protected
habitat in New England waters. While the closed area around Cashes Ledge — the
gem of the region’s protected areas — withstood the Habitat Committee’s
recommendation to reduce its size by 60 percent, and a new protected area was
added to the eastern Gulf of Maine, other closed areas were left on the
chopping block.
Twenty-five percent of the area currently closed to fishing in the
western Gulf of Maine would be reopened under the recommendations of the NEFMC.
The Nantucket Lightship Closed Area would be eliminated entirely, though a
limited area would be preserved by the creation of the Great South Channel
Protected Area. Georges Bank would lose about 80 percent of its protected area,
and what remained would be open to some fishing gear, including scallop
dredges, clam dredges and trawls.
In all, protected areas outside of Cashes Ledge would be reduced
by 60 percent, according to the Conservation Law Foundation (CLF).
Greg Cunningham, CLF vice president, said the NEFMC’s
recommendation concerning Georges Bank is contrary to its own science. “They
are following the guidance of industry, and (allowing fishing) even in areas
they are purporting to protect,” he said.
Cox Ledge, south of Rhode Island, which was included as a new
protected area, would remain open to fishermen using a gear modification that
the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS), written to offer guidance to
members of NEFMC, says is unsupported by science as a habitat protection
measure.
Similarly, in a new protected area in the Great South Channel, east
of Nantucket, surf clam dredges will be permitted for at least one year; the
DEIS describes surf clam dredges as the most damaging fishing gear.
The NEFMC’s collective set of recommendations don’t meet the legal
requirements of the Magnuson–Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act,
according to Cunningham.
“If (NOAA Fisheries) is going to uphold the requirements of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, it would have to reject this,” he said.
NOAA’s Bullard, a voting member of NEFMC, voted with the minority
against the Georges Bank alternative that would reduce the size of the
protected areas.
At the end of the June NEFMC meeting, Bullard noted that NOAA
Fisheries had reservations about the Georges Bank recommendation. He said he
would submit a letter to the council expressing his concerns. According to
Cunningham, this letter could result in the NEFMC reconsidering the
recommendation at its September meeting.
“Bullard increasingly appreciates the need to protect marine
habitat for the purpose of enhancing fisheries,” Cunningham said.
After the NEFMC’s recommendations are finalized, they will be
submitted to NOAA Fisheries for review. Prior to the review, NOAA Fisheries
will accept public comments for 60 days. Within 30 days of the end of the
comment period, the recommendations must be approved, disapproved or partially
approved.
Should NOAA Fisheries disapprove all or portions of the NEFMC’s
recommendations, the council will have a final opportunity to revise the
recommendations to an acceptable state. Should the council fail to do so, NOAA
Fisheries would have the option to undertake the process of rewriting
problematic recommendations unilaterally. NEFMC would lose its influence,
except for the ability to offer comment, according to Cunningham.