[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 125 (Wednesday, June 29, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 42268-42285]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-15101]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 223

[Docket No. 1206013326-6497-03]
RIN 0648-XA984


Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Final Listing 
Determination on the Proposal To List the Nassau Grouper as Threatened 
Under the Endangered Species Act

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

ACTION: Final rule; request for information.

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SUMMARY: We, NMFS, are publishing this final rule to implement our 
determination to list the Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus) as 
threatened under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (ESA). 
We have completed a status review of the Nassau grouper in response to 
a petition submitted by WildEarth Guardians. After reviewing the best 
scientific and commercial data available, including the status review 
and comments received on the proposed rule, we have determined that the 
Nassau grouper

[[Page 42269]]

meets the definition of a threatened species. While the species still 
occupies its historical range, overutilization through historical 
harvest has reduced the number of individuals which in turn has reduced 
the number and size of spawning aggregations. Although harvest of 
Nassau grouper has diminished due to management measures, the reduced 
number and size of spawning aggregations and the inadequacy of law 
enforcement continue to present extinction risk to Nassau grouper. 
Based on these considerations, described in more detail within this 
action, we conclude that the Nassau grouper is not currently in danger 
of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range, but 
is likely to become so within the foreseeable future. We also solicit 
information that may be relevant to the designation of critical habitat 
for Nassau grouper, including information on physical or biological 
features essential to the species' conservation, areas containing these 
features, and potential impacts of a designation.

DATES: The effective date of this final rule is July 29, 2016. 
Information on features, areas, and potential impacts, that may support 
designation of critical habitat for Nassau grouper must be received by 
August 29, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Information regarding this final rule may be obtained by 
contacting NMFS, Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th Avenue South, 
Saint Petersburg, FL 33701. Supporting information, including the 
Biological Report, is available electronically on the NMFS Web site at: 
http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/protected_resources/listing_petitions/species_esa_consideration/index.html.
    You may submit information regarding potential critical habitat 
designation to the Protected Resources Division by either of the 
following methods:
     Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic comments via 
the Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2015-0130, click the ``Comment Now!'' icon, 
complete the required fields, and enter or attach your comments.
     Mail: Submit written information to the Protected 
Resources Division, NMFS Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th Avenue 
South, Saint Petersburg, FL 33701.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Adam Brame, NMFS, Southeast Regional 
Office (727) 209-5958; or Lisa Manning, NMFS, Office of Protected 
Resources (301) 427-8466.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    On September 3, 2010, we received a petition from the WildEarth 
Guardians to list speckled hind (Epinephelus drummondhayi), goliath 
grouper (E. itajara), and Nassau grouper (E. striatus) as threatened or 
endangered under the ESA. The petition asserted that (1) the present or 
threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of habitat or 
range; (2) overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or 
educational purposes; (3) inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; 
and (4) other natural or manmade factors are affecting the continued 
existence of and contributing to the imperiled statuses of these 
species. The petitioner also requested that critical habitat be 
designated for these species concurrent with listing under the ESA. Due 
to the scope of the WildEarth Guardians' petition, as well as the 
breadth and extent of the required evaluation and response, we provided 
species-specific 90-day findings (76 FR 31592, June 1, 2011; 77 FR 
25687, May 1, 2012; 77 FR 61559, October 10, 2012).
    On October 10, 2012, we published a 90-day finding for Nassau 
grouper with our determination that the petition presented substantial 
scientific and commercial information indicating that the petitioned 
action may be warranted (77 FR 61559). At that time, we announced the 
initiation of a formal status review and requested scientific and 
commercial information from the public on: (1) The status of historical 
and current spawning aggregation sites; (2) historical and current 
distribution, abundance, and population trends; (3) biological 
information (life history, genetics, population connectivity, etc.); 
(4) management measures, regulatory mechanisms designed to protect 
spawning aggregations, and enforcement information; (5) any current or 
planned activities that may adversely impact the species; and (6) 
ongoing or planned efforts to protect and restore the species and its 
habitat.
    As part of the status review process to determine whether the 
Nassau grouper warrants listing under the ESA, we completed a 
Biological Report and an extinction risk analysis (ERA). The Biological 
Report summarizes the taxonomy, distribution, abundance, life history, 
and biology of the species. The Biological Report also identifies 
threats or stressors affecting the status of the species as well as a 
description of the fisheries, fisheries management, and conservation 
efforts. The Biological Report incorporates information received in 
response to our request for information (77 FR 61559, October 10, 2012) 
and comments from three independent peer reviewers. We used the 
Biological Report to complete a threats evaluation and an ERA to 
determine the status of the species.
    After completing the Biological Report and considering the 
information received on the 90-day finding, we published a proposed 
rule to list Nassau grouper as a threatened species on September 2, 
2014 (79 FR 51929). During a 90-day comment period, we solicited 
comments on our proposal from the public and any other interested 
parties.

Listing Determinations Under the ESA

    We are responsible for determining whether the Nassau grouper is 
threatened or endangered under the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). 
Section 4(b)(1)(A) of the ESA requires us to make listing 
determinations based solely on the best scientific and commercial data 
available after conducting a review of the status of the species and 
after taking into account efforts being made by any state or foreign 
nation to protect the species. To be considered for listing under the 
ESA, a group of organisms must constitute a ``species,'' which is 
defined in section 3 of the ESA to include taxonomic species and ``any 
subspecies of fish, or wildlife, or plants, and any distinct population 
segment of any species of vertebrate fish or wildlife which interbreeds 
when mature.''
    Section 3 of the ESA defines an endangered species as ``any species 
which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant 
portion of its range'' and a threatened species as one ``which is 
likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future 
throughout all or a significant portion of its range.'' Thus, we 
interpret an ``endangered species'' to be one that is presently in 
danger of extinction. A ``threatened species,'' on the other hand, is 
not currently in danger of extinction but is likely to become so in the 
foreseeable future. In other words, a key statutory difference between 
a threatened and endangered species is the timing of when a species may 
be in danger of extinction, either presently (endangered) or in the 
foreseeable future (threatened).
    Under section 4(a) of the ESA, we must determine whether any 
species is endangered or threatened due to any of the following five 
factors: (A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or 
curtailment of its habitat or range; (B) overutilization for 
commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; (C) 
disease or predation; (D) the inadequacy of

[[Page 42270]]

existing regulatory mechanisms; or (E) other natural or manmade factors 
affecting its continued existence (sections 4(a)(1)(A) through (E)). We 
are required to make listing determinations based solely on the best 
scientific and commercial data available after conducting a review of 
the status of the species and after taking into account efforts being 
made by any state or foreign nation to protect the species.
    In determining whether the Nassau grouper meets the standard of 
endangered or threatened, we followed a stepwise approach. First we 
considered the specific life history, ecology, and status of the 
species as documented in the Biological Report. We then considered 
information on factors adversely affecting and posing extinction risk 
to the species in a threats evaluation. In this evaluation we assessed 
the threats affecting the status of the species using the factors 
identified in ESA section 4(a)(1). We considered the nature of the 
threats and the species response to those threats. We also considered 
each threat identified, both individually and cumulatively. Once we 
evaluated the threats, we assessed the efforts being made to protect 
the species to determine if these conservation efforts were adequate to 
mitigate the existing threats and alter extinction risk. Finally, we 
considered the public comments received in response to the proposed 
rule. In making this finding, we have relied on the best available 
scientific and commercial data.

Summary of Comments Received

    Below we address the comments received on the proposed listing for 
Nassau grouper. In response to our request for public comments, we 
received 17 written responses. The overall feedback was supportive of 
the rule with the exception of three commenters, who believe current 
regulations within the United States are sufficient in protecting this 
species. No comments addressed threats to Nassau grouper throughout the 
rest of their range. We did not receive any information on additional 
conservation efforts being taken.
    Comment 1: Multiple commenters supported the proposed rule to list 
Nassau grouper as a threatened species and further encouraged regional 
collaboration to develop adequate management measures.
    Response: We agree that regional collaboration will strengthen 
efforts to consistently manage and conserve the species, and we hope 
this listing will encourage collaborative efforts. In some cases, 
adding a species to the endangered species list leads to increased 
funding opportunities and potential for collaboration between state and 
federal partners, as well as stakeholders. We will seek regional 
collaborative conservation efforts within the Caribbean region to 
further the conservation of the species.
    Comment 2: We received comments that the existing management 
measures implemented by Fishery Management Councils are already 
effective at protecting Nassau grouper within U.S. waters, (including 
U.S. territorial waters of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and 
that the listing may add unnecessary burdens on our domestic fisheries.
    Response: We agree that the South Atlantic Fishery Management 
Council and the Caribbean Fishery Management Council have taken 
significant steps to protect and rebuild the Nassau grouper population 
in U.S. waters. Unfortunately, a large part of the species' range and 
population is outside of U.S. jurisdiction and is therefore not 
directly aided by Council protections. We must make our determination 
based on the best scientific and commercial data available, independent 
of the potential burdens to our other domestic fisheries. This standard 
has been applied when making the Nassau grouper final listing 
determination.
    Comment 3: Some comments expressed concern over the economic 
consequences of listing Nassau grouper, including possible effects on 
commercial fishermen.
    Response: We are unable to consider economic impacts in a listing 
determination. The ESA requires us to make listing determinations by 
evaluating the standards and factors in section 4 of the ESA, and based 
solely on the best scientific and commercial data available. Listing 
Nassau grouper as a threatened species would not create any immediate 
additional regulatory requirements directly affecting commercial 
fishermen. Potential future regulations affecting conservation of 
Nassau grouper, including take and import regulations may be proposed 
via a separate rulemaking process which would include consideration of 
certain economic impacts (e.g., impacts on small businesses) and 
opportunities for public input. Individuals that require federal 
permits or funding for actions that might affect Nassau grouper might 
need to make adjustments to their activities to avoid jeopardizing 
Nassau grouper, and to avoid or minimize take of the species, but that 
would be a determination for a specific section 7 consultation in the 
future.
    Comment 4: Several comments indicated that spawning aggregation 
sites need to be protected and that proper enforcement of both existing 
and future rules is paramount in protecting the species.
    Response: We agree that the lack of adequate protections for Nassau 
grouper spawning aggregations and the inadequacy of law enforcement are 
major contributors to the species' decline throughout its range. These 
threats were rated `high' during the ERA as explained in the proposed 
rule and, as such, were taken into consideration when making our final 
listing determination.
    Comment 5: One commenter supported the rule stating, ``We agree 
that the best available science demonstrates that Nassau grouper is 
likely to be at risk of extinction in the foreseeable future, and may 
in fact be in danger of extinction now.'' They further encouraged swift 
designation of critical habitat to protect spawning aggregation sites, 
nursery and juvenile habitat, and feeding habitat.
    Response: We acknowledge the concern raised by the commenter that 
the species may be in danger of extinction now and provide further 
detail below as to how we reached our listing determination in this 
final rule. With regard to critical habitat, section 4(a)(3)(A) of the 
ESA (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)(A)) requires that, if prudent and 
determinable, critical habitat be designated concurrently with the 
listing of a species. We do not currently have sufficient information 
to determine what physical and biological features within Nassau 
grouper habitats facilitate the species' life history strategy and thus 
are essential to the species' conservation. Therefore, we cannot yet 
determine what areas meet the definition of critical habitat under the 
ESA. Because critical habitat is not currently determinable, we will 
not designate critical habitat concurrently with this final rule. 
Designation of critical habitat may occur via a subsequent rule-making 
process if we can identify critical habitat and designation is prudent. 
We are soliciting information on features, areas, and impacts of 
designation, that may support designation of critical habitat for 
Nassau grouper.
    Comment 6: One commenter suggested the use of size restrictions, 
monitoring, closed fishing seasons for the protection of spawning 
aggregations, and the use of marine protected areas as measures to 
protect the species.
    Response: We summarize in this rule the existing regulations 
currently in place throughout the Caribbean Sea that

[[Page 42271]]

include many of these suggested practices. Within U.S. waters, measures 
to protect Nassau grouper are already in place under the Magnuson-
Stevens Act and State and Territorial fishery management authorities. 
As a species listed as threatened under the ESA, any federal action 
implemented, authorized or funded that ``may affect'' Nassau grouper 
will require consultation to ensure the action is not likely to 
jeopardize the species' continued existence. We may also implement 
additional protective regulations for Nassau grouper under section 4(d) 
of the ESA if we determine such regulations are necessary and advisable 
for the conservation of this threatened species. Issuance of a 4(d) 
rule would be a separate rule-making process that would include 
specific opportunities for public input.
    Comment 7: The U.S. Navy identified three Navy installations or 
properties that are within the geographic range of Nassau grouper. They 
expressed concern over their ability to utilize and maintain those 
areas with a listing and designation of critical habitat. In 
particular, the Navy expressed concern over their ability to conduct 
maintenance dredging and requested we consult with them prior to 
proposing critical habitat.
    Response: A rule to list Nassau grouper will require federal 
agencies to assess whether any actions implemented, authorized, or 
funded within the range of the species ``may affect'' Nassau grouper, 
and consult with NMFS to ensure their actions are not likely to 
jeopardize the species' continued existence. The rule-making process 
for identifying critical habitat is separate from this final listing 
rule and would include opportunities for public participation and 
input, as well as coordination with all military branches. Unlike ESA 
listing decisions, the designation of critical habitat requires us to 
consider economic, national security, and other impacts of the 
designation.
    Comment 8: One commenter opposed the proposed rule to list Nassau 
grouper as a threatened species stating this is ``merely a precursor to 
an attempt to form a basis for a push for Marine Protection Areas.''
    Response: The proposed rule to list Nassau grouper was the result 
of the petition we received from WildEarth Guardians, our 90-day 
finding that the petition presented substantial information that 
listing may be warranted, and our 12-month finding that listing as a 
threatened species was warranted. Section 4(b)(1)(A) of the ESA 
requires us to make listing determinations based solely on the best 
scientific and commercial data available after conducting a review of 
the status of the species and after taking into account efforts being 
made by any state or foreign nation to protect the species. We have not 
proposed any additional regulations affecting management of Nassau 
grouper as a result of the proposed listing rule. However, we will need 
to determine whether we can identify critical habitat for this species, 
and if so, make an appropriate designation of critical habitat. A 
critical habitat designation could have implications for fishing 
activities. Any designation of critical habitat would include 
opportunities for public input. As previously mentioned, we could also 
implement additional protective regulations for Nassau grouper under 
section 4(d) of the ESA, if we determine they are necessary and 
advisable for the conservation of this threatened species. Issuance of 
a 4(d) rule would be a separate rule-making process that would include 
specific opportunities for public input.

Changes From the Proposed Rule

    In addition to responding to the comments, we made a number of 
changes in this final rule. These included making revisions to the 
Biological Review section (most notably in the Population Structure and 
Genetics, and the Fishing Impacts on Spawning Aggregations 
subsections), including a more detailed description of our role in the 
Threats Evaluation, providing more detail in the Extinction Risk 
Analysis section, and clarifying the role of foreign conservation 
measures as they relate to making our final listing determination. We 
made several of these changes to provide clarity on how we reached our 
listing determination in response to the comment that, ``. . . Nassau 
grouper is likely to be at risk of extinction in the foreseeable 
future, and may in fact be in danger of extinction now.''

Biological Review

    This section provides a summary of key biological information 
presented in the Biological Report (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013), 
which provides the baseline context and foundation for our listing 
determination.

Species Description

    The Nassau grouper, E. striatus (Bloch 1792), is a long-lived, 
moderate sized serranid fish with large eyes and a robust body. 
Coloration is variable, but adult fish are generally buff, with five 
dark brown vertical bars, a large black saddle blotch on top of the 
base of the tail, and a row of black spots below and behind each eye. 
Color pattern can also change within minutes from almost white to 
bicolored to uniformly dark brown, according to the behavioral state of 
the fish (Longley 1917, Colin 1992, Heemstra and Randall 1993, Carter 
et al. 1994). A distinctive bicolor pattern is seen when two adults or 
an adult and large juvenile meet and is frequently observed at spawning 
aggregations (Heemstra and Randall 1993). There is also a distinctive 
dark tuning-fork mark that begins at the front of the upper jaw, 
extends back between the eyes, and then divides into two branches on 
top of the head behind the eyes. Another dark band runs from the tip of 
the snout through the eye and then curves upward to meet its 
corresponding band from the opposite side just in front of the dorsal 
fin. Juveniles exhibit a color pattern similar to adults (e.g., Silva 
Lee 1977).
    Maximum age has been estimated as 29 years, based on an ageing 
study using sagittal otoliths (Bush et al. 2006). Most studies indicate 
a rapid growth rate for juveniles, which has been estimated to be about 
10 mm/month total length (TL) for small juveniles, and 8.4 to 11.7 mm/
month TL for larger juveniles (Beets and Hixon 1994, Eggleston 1995). 
Maximum size is about 122 cm TL and maximum weight is about 25 kg 
(Heemstra and Randall 1993, Humann and Deloach 2002, Froese and Pauly 
2010). Generation time (the interval between the birth of an individual 
and the subsequent birth of its first offspring) is estimated as 9-10 
years (Sadovy and Eklund 1999).

Distribution

    The Nassau grouper's confirmed distribution currently includes 
``Bermuda and Florida (USA), throughout the Bahamas and Caribbean Sea'' 
(e.g., Heemstra and Randall 1993). The occurrence of Nassau grouper 
from the Brazilian coast south of the equator as reported in Heemstra 
and Randall (1993) is ``unsubstantiated'' (Craig et al. 2011). The 
Nassau grouper has been documented in the Gulf of Mexico, at Arrecife 
Alacranes (north of Progreso) to the west off the Yucatan Peninsula, 
Mexico, (Hildebrand et al. 1964). Nassau grouper is generally replaced 
ecologically in the eastern Gulf by red grouper (E. morio) in areas 
north of Key West or the Tortugas (Smith 1971). They are considered a 
rare or transient species off Texas in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico 
(Gunter and Knapp 1951 in Hoese and Moore 1998). The first confirmed 
sighting of Nassau grouper in the Flower Garden Banks National Marine 
Sanctuary, which is located in the northwest Gulf of Mexico

[[Page 42272]]

approximately 180 km southeast of Galveston, Texas, was reported by 
Foley et al. (2007). Many earlier reports of Nassau grouper up the 
Atlantic coast to North Carolina have not been confirmed. The 
Biological Report (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson, 2013) provides a 
detailed description of their distribution.

Habitat and Depth

    The Nassau grouper is primarily a shallow-water, insular fish 
species that has long been valued as a major fishery resource 
throughout the wider Caribbean, South Florida, Bermuda, and the Bahamas 
(Carter et al. 1994). The Nassau grouper is considered a reef fish, but 
it transitions through a series of developmental shifts in habitat. As 
larvae, they are planktonic. After an average of 35-40 days and at an 
average size of 32 mm TL, larvae recruit from an oceanic environment 
into demersal habitats (Colin 1992, Eggleston 1995). Following 
settlement, juvenile Nassau grouper inhabit macroalgae (primarily 
Laurencia spp.), coral clumps (Porites spp.), and seagrass beds 
(Eggleston 1995, Dahlgren 1998). Recently-settled Nassau grouper have 
also been collected from rubble mounds, some from tilefish (Malacanthus 
plumieri), at 18 m depth (Colin et al. 1997). Post-settlement, small 
Nassau grouper have been reported with discarded queen conch shells 
(Strombus gigas) and other debris around Thalassia beds (Randall 1983, 
Eggleston 1995).
    Juvenile Nassau grouper (12-15 cm TL) are relatively solitary and 
remain in specific areas for months (Bardach 1958). Juveniles of this 
size class are associated with macroalgae, and both natural and 
artificial reef structure. As juveniles grow, they move progressively 
to deeper areas and offshore reefs (Tucker et al. 1993, Colin et al. 
1997). Schools of 30-40 juveniles (25-35 cm TL) were observed at 8-10 m 
depths in the Cayman Islands (Tucker et al. 1993). No clear distinction 
can be made between types of adult and juvenile habitats, although a 
general size segregation with depth occurs--with smaller Nassau grouper 
in shallower inshore waters (3.7-16.5 m) and larger individuals more 
common on deeper (18.3-54.9 m) offshore banks (Bardach et al. 1958, 
Cervig[oacute]n 1966, Silva Lee 1974, Radakov et al. 1975, Thompson and 
Munro 1978).
    Recent work by Nemeth and coworkers in the U. S. Virgin Islands 
(U.S.V.I.; manuscript, in prep) found more overlap in home ranges of 
smaller juveniles compared to larger juveniles and adults have larger 
home ranges with less overlap. Mean home range of adult Nassau grouper 
in the Bahamas was 18,305 m\2\  5,806 (SD) with larger 
ranges at less structurally-complex reefs (Bolden 2001). The 
availability of habitat and prey was found to significantly influence 
home range of adults (Bolden 2001).
    Adult Nassau grouper tend to be relatively sedentary and are 
generally associated with high-relief coral reefs or rocky substrate in 
clear waters to depths of 130 m. Generally, adults are most common at 
depths less than 100 m (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson, 2013) except when 
at spawning aggregations where they are known to descend to depths of 
255 m (Starr et al. 2007).

Diet and Feeding

    Adult Nassau grouper are unspecialized, bottom-dwelling, ambush-
suction predators (Randall 1965, Thompson and Munro 1978). Numerous 
studies describe adult Nassau grouper as piscivorous (Randall and Brock 
1960, Randall 1965, Randall 1967, Carter et al. 1994, Eggleston et al. 
1998). Feeding can take place around the clock although most fresh food 
is found in stomachs collected in the early morning and at dusk 
(Randall 1967). Young Nassau grouper (20.2-27.2 mm standard length; SL) 
feed on a variety of plankton, including pteropods, amphipods, and 
copepods (Greenwood 1991, Grover et al. 1998).

Population Structure and Genetics

    Early genetic analyses indicated high gene flow throughout the 
geographic range of Nassau grouper but were unable to determine the 
relative contributions of populations (Hinegardner and Rosen 1972, 
Hateley 2005). A study of Nassau grouper genetic population structure, 
using mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear microsatellite DNA, 
revealed no clearly defined population substructuring based on samples 
from Belize, Cuba, Bahamas, and Florida. These data indicated that 
spawning aggregations are not exclusively self-recruiting and that 
larvae can disperse over great distances, but the relative importance 
of self-recruitment and larval immigration to local populations was 
unclear (Sedberry et al. 1996). Similarly, a study by Hateley (2005) 
that analyzed samples from Belize, Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, and 
Cayman Islands using enzyme electrophoresis indicated low to 
intermediate levels of genetic variability. Results from this study 
provided no evidence for population substructuring by sex or small-
scale spatial distribution, or for macrogeographic stock separation. 
These results are consistent with a single panmictic population within 
the northern Caribbean basin with high gene flow through the region.
    A recent study, published subsequent to the Biological Report, 
analyzed genetic variation in mtDNA, microsatellites, and single 
nucleotide polymorphisms for Nassau grouper (Jackson et al. 2014). The 
study identified three potential ``permeable'' barriers to dispersal 
and concluded that large-scale oceanographic patterns likely influence 
larval dispersal and population structuring (regional genetic 
differentiation). However, the evidence of population structuring was 
limited. In pairwise analyses of genetic distance between the sample 
populations (using Fst for microsatellites and [Fcy]st for mtDNA), zero 
(of 171) comparisons based on microsatellite DNA were statistically 
signficant, only 47 (of 153) comparisons based on mtDNA were 
statistically significant (p < 0.00029), and there was no indication of 
isolation by distance in any of the genetic datasets. Overall, while 
this study indicated some instances of genetic differentiation, the 
results do not indicate a high degree of population structuring across 
the range. When the Jackson et al. study is considered in the context 
of the larger body of literature, there remains some uncertainty as to 
population substructuring for Nassau grouper.

Reproductive Biology

    The Nassau grouper was originally considered to be a monandric 
protogynous hermaphrodite, meaning males derive from adult females that 
undergo a change in sex (Smith 1971, Claro et al. 1990, Carter et al. 
1994). While it is taxonomically similar to other hermaphroditic 
groupers, the Nassau grouper is now primarily considered a gonochore 
with separate sexes (Sadovy and Colin 1995). Juveniles were found to 
possess both male and female tissue, indicating they can mature 
directly into either sex (Sadovy and Colin 1995). Other characteristics 
such as the strong size overlap between males and females, the presence 
of males that develop directly from the juvenile phase, the 
reproductive behavior of forming spawning aggregations, and the mating 
system were found to be inconsistent with the protogynous reproductive 
strategy (Colin 1992, Sadovy and Colin 1995).
    Both male and female Nassau grouper typically mature at 4-5 years 
of age and at lengths between 40 and 45 cm SL (44 and 50 cm TL). Size, 
rather than age, may be the major determinant of sexual maturation 
(Sadovy and Eklund 1999).

[[Page 42273]]

Nassau grouper raised from eggs in captivity matured at 40-45 cm SL 
(44-50 cm TL) in just over 2 years (Tucker and Woodward 1994). Yet, the 
minimum age at sexual maturity based on otoliths is between 4 and 8 
years (Bush et al. 1996, 2006). Most fish have spawned by age 7+ years 
(Bush et al. 2006).
    Fecundity estimates vary by location throughout the Caribbean. Mean 
fecundity estimates are generally between 3 and 5 eggs/mg of ripe 
ovary. For example, Carter et al. (1994) found female Nassau grouper 
between 30-70 cm SL from Belize yielded a mean relative fecundity of 
4.1 eggs/mg ovary weight and a mean total number of 4,200,000 oocytes 
(range = 350,000-6,500,000). Estimated number of eggs in the ripe ovary 
(90.7 g) of a 44.5 cm SL Nassau grouper from Bermuda was 785,101 
(Bardach et al. 1958). In the U.S.V.I., mean fecundity was 4.97 eggs/mg 
of ovary (s.d. = 2.32) with mean egg production of 4,800,000 eggs 
(Olsen and LaPlace 1979); however, this may be an overestimate as it 
included premature eggs that may not develop. Fecundity estimates based 
only on vitellogenic oocytes, from fish captured in the Bahamas 
indicated a mean relative fecundity of 2.9 eggs/mg ripe ovary (s.d. = 
1.09; n = 64) and a mean egg production of 716,664 (range = 11,724-
4,327,440 for females between 47.5-68.6 cm SL). Estimates of oocyte 
production from Nassau grouper induced to spawn in captivity are closer 
to the lower estimates based solely on vitellogenic oocyte counts.

Spawning Behavior and Habitat

    Nassau grouper form spawning aggregations at predictable locations 
around the winter full moons, or between full and new moons (Smith 
1971, Colin 1992, Tucker et al. 1993, Aguilar-Perera 1994, Carter et 
al. 1994, Tucker and Woodward 1994). Aggregations consist of hundreds, 
thousands, or, historically, tens of thousands of individuals. Some 
aggregations have persisted at known locations for periods of 90 years 
or more (see references in Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). Pair 
spawning has not been observed.
    About 50 individual spawning aggregation sites have been recorded, 
mostly from insular areas in the Bahamas, Belize, Bermuda, British 
Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Puerto 
Rico, Turks and Caicos, and the U.S.V.I.; however, many of these may no 
longer form (Figure 10 in Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). Recent 
evidence suggests that spawning is occurring at what may be 
reconstituted or novel spawning sites in both Puerto Rico and the 
U.S.V.I. (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). Suspected or anecdotal 
evidence also identifies spawning aggregations in Los Roques, Venezuela 
(Boomhower et al. 2010) and Old Providence in Colombia's San 
Andr[eacute]s Archipelago (Prada et al. 2004). Neither aggregation nor 
spawning has been reported from South America, despite the fact ripe 
Nassau grouper are frequently caught in certain areas (F. 
Cervig[oacute]n, Fundacion Cientifica Los Roques-Venezuela, pers. comm. 
to Y. Sadovy, NMFS, 1991). Spawning aggregation sites have not been 
reported in the Lesser Antilles, Central America south of Honduras, or 
Florida.
    ``Spawning runs,'' or movements of adult Nassau grouper from coral 
reefs to spawning aggregation sites, were first described in Cuba in 
1884 by Vilaro Diaz, and later by Guitart-Manday and Juarez-Fernandez 
(1966). Nassau grouper migrate to aggregation sites in groups numbering 
between 25 and 500, moving parallel to the coast or along shelf edges 
or even inshore reefs (Colin 1992, Carter et al. 1994, Aguilar-Perera 
and Aguilar-Davila 1996, Nemeth et al. 2009). Distance traveled by 
Nassau grouper to aggregation sites is highly variable; some fish move 
only a few kilometers (km), while others move up to several hundred km 
(Colin 1992, Carter et al. 1994, Bolden 2000). Ongoing research in the 
Exuma Sound, Bahamas has tracked migrating Nassau grouper up to 200 km, 
with likely estimates of up to 330 km, as they move to aggregation 
sites (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013).
    Observations suggest that individuals can return to their original 
home reef following spawning. Bolden (2001) reported 2 out of 22 tagged 
fish returning to home reefs in the Bahamas one year after spawning. 
Sonic tracking studies around Little Cayman Island have demonstrated 
that spawners may return to the aggregation site in successive months 
with returns to their residential reefs in between (Semmens et al. 
2007). Sixty percent of fish tagged at the west end spawning 
aggregation site in Little Cayman in January 2005 returned to the same 
aggregation site in February 2005 (Semmens et al. 2007). Larger fish 
are more likely to return to aggregation sites and spawn in successive 
months than smaller fish (Semmens et al. 2007).
    It is not known how Nassau grouper select and locate aggregation 
sites or why they aggregate to spawn. Spawning aggregation sites are 
typically located near significant geomorphological features, such as 
projections (promontories) of the reef as little as 50 m from the 
shore, and close to a drop-off into deep water over a wide (6-60 m) 
depth range (Craig 1966, Smith 1972, Burnett-Herkes 1975, Olsen and 
LaPlace 1979, Colin et al. 1987, Carter 1989, Fine 1990, Beets and 
Friedlander 1998, Colin 1992, Aguilar-Perera 1994). Sites are 
characteristically small, highly circumscribed areas, measuring several 
hundred meters in diameter, with soft corals, sponges, stony coral 
outcrops, and sandy depressions (Craig 1966, Smith 1972, Burnett-Herkes 
1975, Olsen and LaPlace 1979, Colin et al. 1987, Carter 1989, Fine 
1990, Beets and Friedlander 1999, Colin 1992, Aguilar-Perera 1994). 
Recent work has identified geomorphological similarities in spawning 
sites that may be useful in applying remote sensing techniques to 
discover previously unknown spawning sites (Kobara and Heyman 2010).
    The link between spawning sites and settlement sites is also not 
well understood. Researchers speculate the location of spawning sites 
assists offshore transport of fertilized eggs. However, currents nearby 
aggregation sites do not necessarily favor offshore egg transport, 
indicating some locations may be at least partially self-recruiting 
(e.g., Colin 1992). In a study around a spawning aggregation site at 
Little Cayman, surface velocity profile drifters released on the night 
of peak spawning tended to remain near or returned to the spawning reef 
due to eddy formation, while drifters released on the days preceding 
the peak spawn tended to move away from the reef in line with the 
dominant currents (Heppell et al. 2011).
    Spawning aggregations form around the full moon between December 
and March (reviewed in Sadovy and Eklund 1999), though this may occur 
later (May-August) in more northerly latitudes (La Gorce 1939, Bardach 
et al. 1958, Smith 1971, Burnett-Herkes 1975). The formation of 
spawning aggregations is triggered by a very narrow range of water 
temperatures between 25[deg]-26 [deg]C. While day length has also been 
considered as a trigger for aggregation formation (Colin 1992, Tucker 
et al. 1993, Carter et al. 1994), temperature is evidently a more 
important stimulus (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). The narrow 
range of water temperature is likely responsible for the later 
reproductive season in more northerly latitudes like Bermuda.
    Spawning occurs for up to 1.5 hours around sunset for several days 
(Whaylen et al. 2007). At spawning aggregation sites, Nassau grouper 
tend to mill around for a day or two in a ``staging area'' adjacent to 
the core area where

[[Page 42274]]

spawning activity later occurs (Colin 1992, Kadison et al. 2010, Nemeth 
2012). Courtship is indicated by two behaviors that occur late in the 
afternoon: ``following'' and ``circling'' (Colin 1992). The aggregation 
then moves into deeper water shortly before spawning (Colin 1992, 
Tucker et al. 1993, Carter et al. 1994). Progression from courtship to 
spawning may depend on aggregation size, but generally fish move up 
into the water column, with an increasing number exhibiting the bicolor 
phase (Colin 1992, Carter et al. 1994).
    Spawning involves a rapid horizontal swim or a ``rush'' of bicolor 
fish following dark fish closely in either a column or cone rising to 
within 20-25 m of the water surface where group-spawning occurs in sub-
groups of 3-25 fish (Olsen and LaPlace 1979, Carter 1986, Aguilar-
Perera and Aguilar-Davila 1996). Following the release of sperm and 
eggs, there is a rapid return of the fragmented sub-group to the 
bottom. All spawning events have been recorded within 20 minutes of 
sunset, with most within 10 minutes of sunset (Colin 1992).
    Repeated spawning occurs at the same site for up to three 
consecutive months generally around the full moon or between the full 
and new moons (Smith 1971, Colin 1992, Tucker et al. 1993, Aguilar-
Perera 1994, Carter et al. 1994, Tucker and Woodward 1994). 
Participation by individual fish across the months is unknown. 
Examination of female reproductive tissue suggests multiple spawning 
events across several days at a single aggregation (Smith 1972, Sadovy, 
NMFS, pers. obs.). A video recording shows a single female in repeated 
spawning rushes during a single night, repeatedly releasing eggs (Colin 
1992). It is unknown whether a single, mature female will spawn 
continuously throughout the spawning season or just once per year.

Status Assessments

    Few formal stock assessments have been conducted for the Nassau 
grouper. The most recent published assessment, conducted in the 
Bahamas, indicates fishing effort, and hence fishing mortality (F), in 
the Bahamas needs to be reduced from the 1998-2001 levels, otherwise 
the stocks are likely to be overexploited relative to biological 
reference points (Cheung et al. 2013). The population dynamic modeling 
by Cheung et al. (2013) found: ``assuming that the closure of the 
spawning aggregation season is perfectly implemented and enforced, the 
median value of FSPR (the fishing mortality rate that 
produces a certain spawning potential ratio) = 35 percent on non-
spawning fish would be 50 percent of the fishing mortality of the 1998 
to 2001 level. The 5 percent and 95 percent confidence limits are 
estimated to be less than 20 percent and more than 100 percent of the 
fishing mortality at the 1998 to 2001 level, respectively. In other 
words, if (1) fishing mortality (F) rates of non-spawning fish are 
maintained at the 1998 to 2001 level, and (2) fishing on spawning 
aggregations is negligible, the median spawning potential (spawner 
biomass relative to the unexploited level) is expected to be around 25 
percent (5 and 95 percent confidence interval (CI) of 20 and 30 
percent, respectively). This level is significantly below the reference 
limit of 35 percent of spawning potential, meaning that there is a high 
chance of recruitment overfishing because of the low spawning stock 
biomass.''
    The Nassau grouper was formerly one of the most common and 
important commercial groupers in the insular tropical western Atlantic 
and Caribbean (Smith 1978, Randall 1983, Appeldoorn et al. 1987, Sadovy 
1997). Declines in landings and catch per unit of effort (CPUE) have 
been reported throughout its range, and it is now considered to be 
commercially extinct (i.e., the species is extinct for fishery purposes 
due to low catch per unit effort) in a number of areas, including 
Jamaica, Dominican Republic, U.S.V.I., and Puerto Rico (Sadovy and 
Eklund 1999). Information on past and present abundance and density, at 
coral reefs and aggregation sites, is based on a combination of 
anecdotal accounts, visual census surveys, and fisheries data. Because 
grouper species are reported collectively in landings data, there are 
limited species-specific data to determine catch of Nassau grouper 
throughout its range.
    While fisheries dependent data are generally limited for the 
species throughout its range, there are some 1970s and 1980s port-
sampling data from the U.S.V.I. and Puerto Rico. In the U.S.V.I., 
Nassau grouper accounted for 22 percent of total grouper landings, and 
85 percent of the Nassau grouper catch came from spawning aggregations 
(D. Olsen, Chief Scientist--St. Thomas Fishermen's Association, pers. 
comm. to J. Rueter, NMFS, October 2013). The first U.S. survey of the 
fishery resources of Puerto Rico noted the Nassau grouper was common 
and a very important food fish, reaching a weight of 22.7 kg or more 
(Evermann 1900). The Nassau grouper was still the fourth-most common 
shallow-water species landed in Puerto Rico in the 1970s (Thompson 
1978), and it was common in the reef fish fishery of the U.S.V.I. 
(Olsen and LaPlace 1979). By 1981, ``the Nassau grouper ha[d] 
practically disappeared from the local catches and the ones that d[id] 
appear [were] small compared with previous years'' (CFMC 1985). By 
1986, the Nassau grouper was considered commercially extinct in the 
U.S. Caribbean (Bohnsack et al. 1986). About 1,000 kg of Nassau grouper 
landings were reported in the Puerto Rico Reef Fish Fishery during the 
latter half of the 1980s, and most of them were less than 50 cm 
indicating they were likely sexually immature (Sadovy 1997).
    A number of organizations and agencies have conducted surveys to 
examine the status of coral reefs and reef-fish populations throughout 
the western Atlantic. Results from these monitoring studies offer some 
indication of relative abundance of Nassau grouper in various 
locations, although different methods are often employed and thus 
results of different studies cannot be directly compared (Kellison et 
al. 2009). The Atlantic and Gulf Rapid Reef Assessment Program (AGRRA), 
which samples a broad spectrum of western Atlantic reefs, includes few 
reports of Nassau grouper, as sighting frequency (proportion of all 
surveys with at least one Nassau grouper present) ranged from less than 
1 percent to less than 10 percent per survey from 1997-2000. Density of 
Nassau grouper ranged from 1 to 15 fish/hectare with a mean of 5.6 
fish/hectare across all areas surveyed (AGRRA). NOAA's Coral Reef 
Ecosystem Monitoring Program (CREMP) has conducted studies on coral 
reefs in Puerto Rico and the U.S.V.I. since 2000, and sighting 
frequency of Nassau grouper has ranged from 0 to 0.5 percent with 
density between 0 to 0.5 fish/hectare. Data from SCUBA surveys 
conducted by the University of the Virgin Islands report a density of 4 
Nassau grouper/hectare per survey across reef habitat types in the 
U.S.V.I. SCUBA surveys by NOAA in the Florida Keys across reef habitat 
types have sighting frequencies of 2-10 percent per survey, with a 
density of 1 Nassau grouper/hectare (NOAA's NMFS FRVC). In addition to 
these surveys, Hodgson and Liebeler (2002) noted that Nassau grouper 
were absent from 82 percent of shallow Caribbean reefs surveyed (3-10 
m) during a 5-year period (1997-2001) for the ReefCheck project.

Fishing Impacts on Spawning Aggregations

    Because we lack sufficient stock assessments or population 
estimates, we considered the changes in spawning aggregations as a 
proxy for the status of the current population. We believe the

[[Page 42275]]

status of spawning aggregations is likely to be reflective of the 
overall population because adults migrate to spawning aggregations for 
the only known reproductive events. Historically, 50 spawning 
aggregation sites had been identified throughout the Caribbean (Sadovy 
de Mitcheson et al. 2008). Of these 50, less than 20 probably still 
remain (Sadovy de Mitcheson et al. 2008). Furthermore, while numbers of 
fish at aggregation sites once numbered in the tens of thousands 
(30,000-100,000 fish; Smith 1972), they have now been reduced to less 
than 3,000 at those sites where counts have been made (Sadovy de 
Mitcheson et al. 2008). Based on the size and number of current 
spawning aggregations the Nassau grouper population appears to be just 
a fraction of its historical size.
    In general, slow-growing, long-lived species (such as snappers and 
groupers) with limited spawning periods, and possibly with narrow 
recruitment windows, are susceptible to overexploitation (Bannerot et 
al. 1987, Polovina and Ralston 1987). The strong appeal of spawning 
aggregations as targets for fishing, their importance in many seasonal 
fisheries, and the apparent abundance of fish at aggregations make 
spawning aggregations particularly susceptible to over-exploitation. 
There are repeated reports from across the Caribbean where Nassau 
grouper spawning aggregations have been discovered and fished to the 
point that the aggregation ceased to form, or formed at such low 
densities that spawning was no longer viable. For example, the 
commercial fishing of Nassau grouper aggregations in Bermuda resulted 
in decreased landings from 75,000 tons in 1975 to 10,000 tons by 1981 
(Luckhurst 1996, Sadovy de Mitcheson and Erisman 2012). The four known 
spawning aggregation sites in Bermuda ceased to form shortly thereafter 
and have yet to recover (Sadovy de Mitcheson and Erisman 2012). 
However, Nassau grouper are still present in Bermuda and reported 
observations have slightly increased over the last 10-15 years (B. 
Luckhurst, Bermuda Department of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Parks, 
Division of Fisheries, pers. comm. to Y. Sadovy, University of Hong 
Kong, 2012). In Puerto Rico, historical spawning aggregations no longer 
form, though a small aggregation has recently been found, and may be a 
reconstitution of one of the former aggregations (Sch[auml]rer et al. 
2012). In Mahahual, Quintana Roo, Mexico, aggregations of up to 15,000 
fish formed each year, but due to increased fishing pressure in the 
1990's, aggregations have not formed in Mahahual since 1996 (Aguilar-
Perera 2006). Inadequate enforcement of management measures designed to 
protect spawning aggregations in Mexico has further affected 
aggregations (Aguilar-Perera 2006), though at least three aggregation 
sites remain viable. In Cuba, Nassau grouper were almost exclusively 
targeted during aggregation formation; because of this, there have been 
severe declines in the number of Nassau grouper at 8 of the 10 
aggregations and moderate declines in the other 2 (Claro et al. 2009). 
Similar situations are known to have occurred in the Bahamas, U.S.V.I., 
Puerto Rico, and Honduras (Sadovy de Mitcheson and Erisman 2012, see 
also Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013).
    Overexploitation has also occurred in Belize. Between 1975 and 2001 
there was an 80 percent decline in the number of Nassau grouper (15,000 
fish to 3,000) at the Glover's Reef aggregation (Sala et al. 2001). 
Additionally, a 2001 assessment concluded that only 2 of the 9 
aggregation sites identified in 1994 remained viable, and those had 
been reduced from 30,000 fish to 3,000-5,000 fish (Heyman 2002). More 
recent monitoring (2003-2012) at the two sites at Glover's Reef 
indicates further declines in the sizes of these aggregations. A 
maximum of 800-3,000 Nassau grouper were counted per year at these 
sites over the ten years of monitoring (Belize SPAG Working Group 
2012).
    Further indicators of population decline through over-exploitation 
include reduced size and/or age of fish harvested compared to maximum 
sizes and ages. Nassau grouper can attain sizes of greater than 120 cm 
(Heemstra and Randall 1993, Humann and Deloach 2002, Froese and Pauly 
2010) and live as long as 29 years (Bush et al. 2006). However, it is 
unusual to obtain individuals of more than 12 years of age in exploited 
fisheries, and more heavily fished areas yield much younger fish on 
average. The maximum age estimates in heavily exploited areas are 
depressed--9 years in the U.S.V.I. (Olsen and LaPlace 1979), 12 years 
in northern Cuba, 17 years in southern Cuba (Claro et al. 1990), and 21 
years in the Bahamas (Sadovy and Colin 1995). Similarly, there is some 
indication that size at capture of both sexes declined in areas of 
higher exploitation versus unexploited populations within a specific 
region (Carter et al 1994). When exploitation is high, catches are 
largely comprised of juveniles. For example, most catches of Nassau 
grouper in heavily exploited areas of Puerto Rico, Florida (Sadovy and 
Eklund 1999), and Cuba (Espinosa 1980) consisted of juveniles. In 
exploited U.S.V.I. aggregations, harvest of Nassau grouper larger than 
70 cm TL was uncommon (Olsen and LaPlace 1979).
    While direct fishing of spawning aggregations was a primary driver 
of Nassau grouper population declines as indicated by the observed 
declines in spawning aggregations (Sadovy de Mitcheson and Erisman 
2012), other factors also affect abundance. For example, removal of 
adults from spawning runs and intensive capture of juveniles, either 
through direct targeting (e.g., spearfishing) or using small mesh traps 
or nets, also occur (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). In addition to 
the high fishing pressure in some areas, poaching also appears to be 
affecting some populations (e.g., in the Cayman Islands; Semmens et al. 
2012).

NMFS's Conclusions From the Biological Report

    The species is made up of a single population over its entire 
geographic range. As summarized above, multiple genetic analyses 
indicate that there is high gene flow throughout the geographic range 
of the Nassau grouper, and no clearly defined population substructuring 
has been identified (Hinegardner and Rosen 1972, Sedberry et al. 1996, 
Hateley 2005). Although a recent study (Jackson et al. 2014) reported 
genetic differentiation, it does not provide evidence to support 
biological differences between populations. We believe further studies 
are needed to verify and expand upon the work presented by Jackson et 
al (2014). Based on the best available information, we conclude there 
is a single population of Nassau grouper throughout the Caribbean.
    The species has patchy abundance, with declines identified in many 
areas. The Biological Report describes the reduction in both size and 
number of spawning aggregations throughout the range. Patchy abundance 
throughout the range of a species is common due to differences in 
habitat quality/quantity or exploitation levels at different locations. 
However, dramatic, consistent declines of Nassau grouper have been 
noted throughout its range. In many areas throughout the Caribbean, the 
species is now considered commercially extinct and numerous spawning 
aggregations have been extirpated with no signs of recovery.
    The species possesses life history characteristics that increase 
vulnerability to harvest, including slow growth to a large size, late 
maturation, formation of large spawning aggregations, and occurrence in 
shallow

[[Page 42276]]

habitat. This conclusion is based on the Description of the Species in 
the Biological Report (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). Slow growth 
and late maturation expose sub-adults to harvest prior to reproduction. 
Sub-adult and adult Nassau grouper form large conspicuous spawning 
aggregations. These aggregations are often in shallow habitat areas 
that are easily accessible to fishermen and thus heavily exploited. 
Despite these life-history vulnerabilities, there are remaining 
spawning aggregations that, while reduced in size and number, still 
function and provide recruits into the population.
    The species is broadly distributed, and its current range is 
similar to its historical range. The Range-wide Distribution section of 
the Biological Report (Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013) concluded 
that the current range is equivalent to the historical range, though 
abundance has been severely depleted.

Threats Evaluation

    The threats evaluation was the second step in the process of making 
an ESA listing determination for Nassau grouper as described above in 
``Listing Determinations under the ESA''. The Extinction Risk Analysis 
Group (ERAG), which consisted of 12 NOAA Fisheries Science Center and 
Regional Office personnel, was asked to independently review the 
Biological Report and assess 4 demographic factors (abundance, growth 
rate/productivity, spatial structure/connectivity, and diversity) and 
13 specific threats (see ERA Threat Table under supporting documents). 
The group members were asked to provide qualitative scores based on 
their perceived severity of each factor and threat.
    Members of the ERAG were asked to independently evaluate the 
severity, scope, and certainty for these threats currently and in the 
foreseeable future (30 years from now). The foreseeable future was 
based on the upper estimate of generation time for Nassau grouper (9-10 
years) as described by Sadovy and Eklund (1999) and an age at maturity 
of 8 years (Bush et al. 1996, 2006). We chose 30 years, which would 
potentially allow recruitment of 2-3 generations of mature individuals 
to appear in spawning aggregations as a result of fishery management 
actions. Given the limited information we have to predict the impacts 
of threats, we felt the 30 year timeframe was the most appropriate to 
assess threats in the foreseeable future.
    Members of the ERAG were asked to rank each of four demographic 
factors and 13 identified threats as ``very low risk,'' ``low risk,'' 
``moderate risk,'' ``increasing risk,'' ``high risk,'' or ``unknown.'' 
``Very low risk'' meant that it is unlikely that the demographic factor 
or threat affects the species' overall status. ``Low risk'' meant that 
the demographic factor may affect species' status, but only to a degree 
that it is unlikely that this factor significantly elevates risk of 
extinction now or in the future. ``Moderate risk'' meant that the 
demographic factor or threat contributes significantly to long term 
risk of extinction, but does not constitute a danger of extinction in 
the near future. ``Increasing risk'' meant that the present demographic 
risk or threat is low or moderate, but is likely to increase to high 
risk in the foreseeable future if present conditions continue. Finally, 
``high risk'' meant that the demographic factor or threat indicates 
danger of extinction in the near future. Each member of the ERAG 
evaluated risk on this scale, and we then interpreted these rankings 
against the statutory language for threatened or endangered to 
determine the status of Nassau grouper. We did not directly relate the 
risk levels with particular listing outcomes, because the risk levels 
alone are not very informative. Acknowledging the differences in 
terminology between the ERAG risk scale and the ESA statutory 
definitions of threatened and endangered, we relied upon our own 
judgment and expertise in reviewing the ERA to determine the status of 
Nassau grouper and form our final listing determination.
    ERAG members were also asked to consider the potential interactions 
between demographic factors and threats. If the demographic factor or 
threat was ranked higher due to interactions with other demographic 
factors or threats, each member was asked to then identify those 
factors or threats that caused them to score the risk higher or lower 
than it would have been if it were considered independently. We then 
examined the independent responses from each ERAG member for each 
demographic factor and threat and used the modal response to determine 
the level of threat to Nassau grouper.
    Climate change and international trade regulations (e.g., the 
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), as 
described in the Biological Report) were categorized by the ERAG as 
``unknown.'' Habitat alteration, U.S. federal regulations, disease/
parasites/abnormalities, and aquaculture were ranked as ``very low 
risk'' to ``low risk.'' State/territorial regulations, growth rate/
productivity, abundance, spatial structure/connectivity, commercial 
harvest, foreign regulations, artificial selection, and diversity were 
ranked as ``moderate risk'' to ``increasing risk.'' Historical harvest 
(the effect of prior harvest on current population status), fishing at 
spawning aggregations, and inadequate law enforcement were classified 
as ``high risk.'' The demographic factors and threats are described 
below by the five ESA factors with the corresponding ERAG ranking and 
our analysis.

A. The Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or Curtailment 
of Its Habitat or Range

    Spatial structure/connectivity and habitat alteration were 
considered under ESA Factor A; this included habitat loss or 
degradation, and the loss of habitat patches, critical source 
populations, subpopulations, or dispersal among populations.
    Nassau grouper use many different habitat types within the coral 
reef ecosystem. The increase in urban, industrial, and tourist 
developments throughout the species range impacts coastal mangroves, 
seagrass beds, estuaries, and live coral (Mahon 1990). Loss of juvenile 
habitat, such as macroalgae, seagrass beds, and mangrove channels is 
likely to negatively affect recruitment rates. Habitat alteration was 
ranked by the ERAG as a ``low risk'' threat to Nassau grouper. We agree 
with the ERAG that habitat alteration presents a low risk to the 
species and is unlikely to contribute to the threat of extinction 
presently or over the foreseeable future. The use of many different 
habitat types by Nassau grouper may spread the risk of impacts 
associated with habitat loss to a point that reduces overall extinction 
risk to the species.
    The range of Nassau grouper is influenced by spatial structure and 
connectivity of the population. As described in Hill and Sadovy de 
Mitcheson (2013), a study of genetic population structure in Nassau 
grouper revealed no clearly defined population substructuring at the 
geographic locations sampled, i.e., Belize, Cuba, Bahamas, and Florida 
(Sedberry et al. 1996). Based on ERAG scores, spatial structure/
connectivity was characterized as an ``increasing'' risk for Nassau 
grouper. We agree with the ERAG ranking and believe this increasing 
risk is due, in part, to the declining number and size of spawning 
aggregations, which affects population structure. Given the increasing 
risk associated with this demographic factor we believe it could lead 
the species to become endangered over the foreseeable future.

[[Page 42277]]

B. Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or 
Educational Purposes

    Based on ERAG rankings, historical harvest and fishing at spawning 
aggregations are two of the three most severe threats (the third being 
inadequate law enforcement) to Nassau grouper. Historical harvest and 
fishing at spawning aggregations were both classified as ``high'' risk 
threats to Nassau grouper. Curiously, the ERAG rankings for commercial 
harvest, which often includes the fishing on spawning aggregations, 
were lower and indicated current commercial harvest was a ``moderate'' 
threat for Nassau grouper. We believe this lower ranking may be related 
to the fact that the species has declined to the point that commercial 
harvest is not as large a threat as in decades past. This is also 
related to abundance which was similarly classified as a ``moderate'' 
risk for Nassau grouper.
    Two different aspects of fishing affect Nassau grouper abundance: 
Fishing effort throughout the non-spawning months and directed fishing 
at spawning aggregations or on migrating adults. In some countries 
Nassau grouper are fished commercially and recreationally throughout 
the year by handline, longline, fish traps, spear guns, and gillnets 
(NMFS General Canvas Landing System). Fishing at spawning aggregations 
is mainly conducted by handlines or by fish traps, although gillnets 
were being used in Mexico in the early to mid-1990s (Aguilar-Perera 
2004). Declines in landings, catch per unit effort (CPUE) and, by 
implication, abundance in the late 1980s and early 1990s occurred 
throughout its range, which has led Nassau grouper to now be considered 
commercially extinct in a number of areas (Sadovy and Eklund 1999). 
Population declines and loss of spawning aggregations continue 
throughout the Nassau grouper's range (Sadovy de Mitcheson 2012).
    We agree with the ERAG's assessment for the threat of abundance. It 
is clear that the abundance of Nassau grouper has diminished 
dramatically over the past several decades. This decline is a direct 
impact of historical harvest and the overfishing of spawning 
aggregations. The current abundance of Nassau grouper is not causing or 
contributing to the species currently being in danger of extinction but 
does raise concern for the status of the species over the foreseeable 
future if abundance continues to decline.
    We disagree with the ERAG's ``high risk'' rating for historical 
harvest. We believe that while historical harvest has reduced the 
population size of Nassau grouper, which has in turn affected the 
ability of the population to recover, we don't agree that this threat 
continues to be a ``high risk''. It seems more appropriate to consider 
the ERAG's risk assessment for the abundance of the current population 
in making our listing determination.
    Predictable spawning aggregations make Nassau grouper a vulnerable 
fishing target. In many places, annual landings for Nassau grouper were 
mostly from aggregation-fishing (e.g., Claro et al. 1990, Bush et al. 
2006). Because Nassau grouper are only known to reproduce in spawning 
aggregations, removing ripe individuals from the spawning aggregations 
greatly influences population dynamics and future fishery yields 
(Shapiro 1987). Harvesting a species during its reproductive period 
increases adult mortality and diminishes juvenile recruitment rates. 
The loss of adults and the lack of recruitment greatly increase a 
species' extinction risk. The collapse of aggregations in many 
countries (Sadovy de Mitcheson 2012) was likely a result of 
overharvesting fish from spawning aggregations (Olsen and LaPlace 1979, 
Aguilar-Perera 1994, Sadovy and Eklund 1999). As Semmens et al. (2012) 
noted from the results of a mark-recapture study on Cayman Brac, Cayman 
Island fishermen appear to catch sufficient adult grouper outside the 
spawning season to seriously impact population size. It appears that 
fishing at spawning aggregations has depressed population size such 
that fishing operations away from the aggregations are also impacting 
population status.
    We agree that fishing at spawning aggregations has reduced the 
population of Nassau grouper and has affected its current status. While 
the ERAG determined this is a ``high risk'' threat, we are less certain 
about our determination. We believe that this threat is in large part 
exacerbated by the inadequacy of regulatory mechanisms as discussed 
further below under Factor D. If existing regulatory mechanisms and 
corresponding law enforcement were adequate, this threat would be less 
of a concern. In the absence of adequate law enforcement, we believe 
that fishing at spawning aggregations is increasing the extinction risk 
of Nassau grouper.
    The final threat analyzed for Factor B was artificial selection. 
The ERAG scores indicated artificial selection was a ``moderate'' 
threat; however, ranking of this threat was widely distributed amongst 
ERAG members, indicating a high level of uncertainty about the effects 
of artificial selection on Nassau grouper. We recognize the uncertainty 
associated with this threat and believe more information is needed. 
That said, we do not believe available information indicates artificial 
selection is currently impacting the species' risk of extinction.

C. Disease

    There is very little information on the impacts of disease, 
parasites, and abnormalities on Nassau grouper, yet the species is not 
known to be affected by any specific disease or parasite. Given this, 
NMFS agrees with the ERAG ranking indicating a ``very low risk'' threat 
from disease, parasites, and abnormalities. We do not believe any of 
these threats will rise to the level of impacting the species' status 
over the foreseeable future.

D. Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms

    Consideration of the inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms, 
includes whether enforcement of those mechanisms is adequate. The 
relevance of existing regulatory mechanisms to extinction risk for an 
individual species depends on the vulnerability of that species to each 
of the threats identified under the other factors of ESA section 4, and 
the extent to which regulatory mechanisms could or do control the 
threats that are contributing to the species' extinction risk. If a 
species is not currently, and not expected within the foreseeable 
future to become, vulnerable to a particular threat, it is not 
necessary to evaluate the adequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms 
for addressing that threat. Conversely, if a species is vulnerable to a 
particular threat (now or in the foreseeable future), we do evaluate 
the adequacy of existing measures, if any, in controlling or mitigating 
that threat. In the following paragraphs, we will discuss existing 
regulatory mechanisms for addressing the threats to Nassau grouper 
generally, and assess their adequacy for controlling those threats. In 
the Extinction Risk Analysis section, we determine if the inadequacy of 
regulatory mechanisms is a contributing factor to the species' status 
as threatened or endangered because the existing regulatory mechanisms 
fail to adequately control or mitigate the underlying threats.
Summary of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
    As discussed in detail in the Biological Report (Hill and Sadovy de 
Mitcheson 2013), a wide array of regulatory mechanisms exists 
throughout the range of Nassau grouper that are intended to limit 
harvest and

[[Page 42278]]

thus maintain abundance. Existing regulatory mechanisms include minimum 
size restrictions, seasonal closures, spatial closures, and gear and 
access restrictions. We summarize some of these regulatory mechanisms 
below by country.
    The Bahamas has implemented a number of regulatory mechanisms to 
limit harvest. In the 1980s, the Bahamas introduced a minimum size of 3 
lbs. (1.36 kg) for Nassau grouper. This was followed in 1998 with a 10-
day seasonal closure at several spawning aggregations. An annual ``two-
month'' fishery closure was added in December 2003 to coincide with the 
spawning period and was extended to three months in 2005 to encompass 
the December through February spawning period. Up until 2015, the 
implementation of the 3-month closure was determined annually and could 
be shortened or otherwise influenced by such factors as the economy 
(Sadovy and Eklund 1999). In 2015, the annual assessment of the closure 
was removed ensuring a fixed 3-month closure each year moving forward 
(Fisheries Resources [Jurisdiction and Conservation] [Amendment] 
Regulations 2015). During the 3-month closure there is a national ban 
on Nassau grouper catches; however, the Bahamas Reef Educational 
Foundation (BREEF; unpub. data), has reported large numbers of fish 
being taken according to fisher accounts with photo-documentation and 
confirming reports of poaching of the species during the aggregation 
season.
    The Bahamas has implemented several other actions that aid the 
conservation of Nassau grouper. There are marine parks in the Bahamas 
that are closed to fishing year round and therefore protect Nassau 
grouper. The Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park, first established in 1959, 
has been closed to fishing since 1986, thus protecting both nursery and 
adult habitat for Nassau grouper and other depleted marine species. 
Other sites, including the South Berry Islands Marine Reserve 
(established on December 29, 2008), Southwest New Providence National 
Park, and North Exumas Study Site have also been established and closed 
to fishing. Several gear restrictions in the Bahamas are also 
protective of Nassau grouper. Fishing with SCUBA and the use of 
explosives, poisons, and spearguns is prohibited in the Bahamas, 
although snorkeling with sling spears is allowed. The use of bleach or 
other noxious or poisonous substances for fishing, or possession of 
such substances on board a fishing vessel, without written approval of 
the Minister, is prohibited. Commercial fishing in the Bahamas is 
restricted to only the native population and, as a consequence, all 
vessels fishing within the Bahamas Exclusive Fishery Zone must be fully 
owned by a Bahamian citizen residing in the Bahamas.
    In Belize, the first measure to protect Nassau grouper was a 
seasonal closure within the Glover's Reef Marine Reserve in 1993; the 
area was closed from December 1 to March 1 to protect spawning 
aggregations. A seasonal closure zone to protect Nassau grouper 
spawning aggregations was included when the Bacalar Chico marine 
reserve was established in 1996 (Paz and Truly 2007). Minimum and 
maximum capture sizes were later introduced (Hill and Sadovy de 
Mitcheson 2013 and citations therein).
    In 2001 the Belize National Spawning Aggregation Working Group 
established protective legislation for 11 of the known Nassau grouper 
spawning sites within Belize. Seven of those 11 sites are monitored as 
regularly as possible. The Working Group meets regularly to share data 
and develop management strategies (www.spagbelize.org; retrieved on 15 
April 2012). In 2003, Belize introduced a four-month closed season to 
protect spawning fish (O'Connor 2002, Gibson 2008). However, the 2003 
legislation also allowed for exemptions to the closures by special 
license granted by the Fisheries Administrator, provided data be taken 
on any Nassau grouper removed. These special licenses made it difficult 
to enforce the national prohibition and in 2010 Belize stopped issuing 
permits to fish for Nassau grouper during the 4-month spawning period, 
except at Maugre Caye and Northern Two Caye.
    In 2009, Belize issued additional protective measures to help 
manage and protect the Nassau grouper. These include minimum and 
maximum size limits of 20 inches and 30 inches, respectively. Belize 
has also introduced a plan to ban spear fishing within all marine 
reserves (yet to be implemented). Furthermore, as a large proportion of 
finfish are landed as fillets, the new regulations require that all 
Nassau grouper be landed whole, and if filleted must have a 1-inch by 
2-inch skin patch (The Belize Spawning Aggregation Working Group 2009). 
Other gear restrictions are in place to generally aid in the management 
of reef fish, such as no spearfishing on compressed air.
    Although Bermuda closed red hind aggregation sites in 1974, Nassau 
grouper aggregation sites located seaward of these sites were not 
included and continued to be fished. In 1990, a two-fish bag limit and 
minimum size restriction (35.6 cm FL) were enacted in Bermuda 
(Luckhurst 1996). Since 1996, Nassau grouper has been completely 
protected through a prohibition on take and possession and likely 
benefits from numerous no-take marine reserves (Hill and Sadovy de 
Mitcheson 2013).
    In the Cayman Islands, the three main (``traditional'') grouper 
``holes'' were officially protected in the late 1970's and only 
residents were allowed to fish by lines during the spawning season 
(Hill and Sadovy de Mitcheson 2013). In 1986, increasing complaints 
from fishermen of a decline in both numbers and size of Nassau grouper 
taken from the fishery prompted the implementation of a monitoring 
program by the Department of the Environment (Bush et al. 2006).
    Following the development of the monitoring program, the Cayman 
Islands implemented a number of management measures. In the early 
1990s, legislation prohibited spearfishing at spawning aggregation 
sites. In 1998, the three main grouper holes at the eastern end of the 
islands were formally designated as ``Restricted Marine Areas'' where 
access requires licensing by the Marine Conservation Board (Bush et al. 
2006). In February 2002, protective legislation defined a spawning 
season as November 1 to March 31, and an ``Alternate Year Fishing'' 
rule was passed. This law allowed fishing of the spawning aggregations 
to occur every other year with the first non-fishing year starting in 
2003. A catch limit of 12 Nassau grouper per boat, per day during 
fishing years was also set. The 2002 law defined a one nautical mile 
(nm) ``no trapping'' zone around each spawning site, and set a minimum 
size limit of 12 inches for Nassau grouper in response to juveniles 
being taken by fish traps inside the sounds (Whaylen et al. 2004, Bush 
et al. 2006). In 2003, spearguns were restricted from use within 1 nm 
of any designated grouper spawning area from November through March. In 
2008, it was prohibited to take any Nassau grouper by speargun anywhere 
in Cayman waters. Effective December 29, 2003, the Marine Conservation 
Board, closed fishing at all designated Nassau grouper spawning sites 
for a period of 8 years. The conservation measure was renewed for a 
further 8 years in 2011.
    In Cuba, there is a minimum size limit for Nassau grouper though 
this regulation is largely unprotective. The minimum size of 32 cm TL 
(or 570g) for Nassau grouper is less than the reported average size at 
maturity of 50 cm TL, indicating that Nassau grouper can be harvested 
before having the opportunity

[[Page 42279]]

to reproduce. Of some benefit to Nassau grouper are more general 
fishing regulations such as bag limits for recreational fishing, 
regulations to increase selectivity of fishing gears to avoid the catch 
of juveniles, limits of net use during spawning aggregation time, and 
controls of speargun use, both commercially and recreationally. Marine 
protected areas have also been introduced throughout the country. In 
2002, the total number of recreational licenses was limited to 3,500 
for the whole country hoping to reduce directed fishing pressure 
nationally.
    In Mexico, following scientific documentation of declines of Nassau 
grouper at Mahahual (Aguilar-Perera 1994), two regulations were 
enacted: (1) In 1993 spear-fishing was banned at any spawning 
aggregation site in southern Quintana Roo; and (2) in 1997 the fishing 
of any grouper species was banned during December and January (Aguilar-
Perera 2006). Then, in 2003, a closed season for all grouper was 
implemented from February 15 to March 15 in all waters of the Mexican 
Exclusive Economic Zone. Although aimed at protecting red grouper this 
closure also protects Nassau grouper during a part of its spawning 
season (Aguilar-Perera et al. 2008). A management plan was to have gone 
into effect in 2012 to protect all commercially exploited groupers in 
Mexico's southern Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea; yet at this time 
the plan has not been implemented.
    In the Turks and Caicos Islands, the only documented Nassau grouper 
spawning aggregation site is protected from fishing in Northwest Point 
Marine National Park, Providenciales (DECR 2004; National Parks 
Ordinance and Subsidiary Legislation CAP. 80 of 1988). Similar to 
situations in other countries, protection of Nassau grouper habitat and 
spawning migration corridors on the narrow ledge of Caicos Bank is 
problematic as it would impose economic hardship on local fishers who 
depend on those areas for commercial species (e.g., spiny lobsters) and 
subsistence fishing (Rudd 2001).
    In U.S. federal waters, including those federal waters around 
Puerto Rico and the U.S.V.I., take and possession of Nassau grouper 
have been prohibited since 1990. Since 1993, a ban on fishing/
possessing Nassau grouper was implemented for the state of Florida and 
has since been enacted in all U.S. state waters. The species was fully 
protected in both state and federal waters of Puerto Rico by 2004. The 
Caribbean Fishery Management Council, with support of local fishermen, 
established a no-take marine protected area off the southwest coast of 
St. Thomas, U.S.V.I. in 1990. This area, known as the Hind Bank Marine 
Conservation District (HBMCD), was intended to protect red hind and 
their spawning aggregations, as well as a former Nassau grouper 
spawning site (Brown 2007). The HBMCD was first subject to a seasonal 
closure beginning in 1990 (Beets and Friedlander 1999, Nemeth 2005, 
Nemeth et al. 2006) to protect spawning aggregations of red hind, and 
was later closed to fishing year-round in 1998 (DPNR 2005). Additional 
fishing restrictions in the U.S.V.I. such as gear restrictions, rules 
on the sale of fish, and protected areas such as the Virgin Islands 
Coral Reef National Monument and Buck Island Reef National Monument 
where all take is prohibited, Virgin Islands National Park (commercial 
fishing prohibited), and several U.S.V.I. marine reserves offer 
additional protection to Nassau grouper. In 2006, the U.S.V.I. 
instituted regulations to prohibit harvest and possession of Nassau 
grouper in territorial waters and filleting at sea was prohibited 
(Garc[iacute]a-Moliner and Sadovy 2008).
    In Colombia, the San Andr[eacute]s Archipelago has a number of 
areas that are designated as no-take fishing zones, and in 2000 the 
entire archipelago was declared by the United Nations Educational, 
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as the Seaflower 
Biosphere Reserve. In 2004, large portions of the archipelago were 
declared as a system of marine protected areas with varying zones of 
fisheries management; however, enforcement is largely lacking (M. 
Prada, Coralina, San Andres, Colombia, pers. comm. R. Hill, NMFS, 
2010). Right-to-fish laws in Colombia also require that fishermen be 
allowed to fish at a subsistence level even within the no-take zones 
(M. Prada, Coralina, San Andres, Colombia, pers. comm. R. Hill, NMFS, 
2010).
    There are other Caribbean countries that have either few management 
measures in place or have yet to implement any conservation measures 
for Nassau grouper. We are not aware of special conservation or 
management regulations for Nassau grouper in Anguilla. In Antigua-
Barbuda, while Nassau grouper is not specifically managed or protected, 
closed seasons were considered in 2008 for Nassau grouper and red hind, 
though the status of these closed seasons is not known. In the British 
Virgin Islands, there is a closed season for landing Nassau grouper 
between March 1 and May 31 (Munro and Blok 2005). In the Dominican 
Republic the catch and sale of ripe female Nassau grouper during the 
spawning season is not allowed (Bohnsack 1989, Sadovy and Eklund 1999, 
Box and Bonilla Mejia 2008) and at least one marine park has been 
established with fishing regulations. In Guadeloupe and Martinique, 
there are plans to protect the species (F. Gourdin, Regional Activity 
Center for Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife--UNEP, pers. comm. to 
Y. Sadovy, University of Hong Kong, 2011) although no details are 
available at this time. In Honduras, there is no legislation that 
controls fishing in the snapper/grouper fishery; however, traps and 
spears are illegal in the Bay Islands. There are no Nassau grouper 
special regulations in Jamaica; yet, some marine protected areas were 
designated in 2011.
Analysis of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
    The ERAG considered several threats under Factor D including law 
enforcement, international trade regulations, foreign regulations in 
their jurisdictional waters, U.S. federal laws, and U.S. state and 
territorial laws. The ERAG determined that these threats substantially 
contribute to the overall risk to the species. Inadequate law 
enforcement was noted by several ERAG members as influencing their 
scoring for abundance, fishing of spawning aggregations, commercial 
harvest, and historical harvest. Inadequate law enforcement led to 
higher risk scores for each of these threats. The ERAG scored law 
enforcement as a ``high risk'' threat for Nassau grouper. ERAG rankings 
for the other threats were widely distributed. The inadequacy of 
foreign regulations in jurisdictional waters was considered an 
``increasing'' risk while the risk of international trade regulations 
was ``unknown.'' The remaining two categories of regulations (U.S. 
Federal and State of Florida/U.S. territory regulations) were 
considered ``low risk'' and ``moderate risk'' respectively. While the 
ERAG rankings for threats impacting the adequacy of regulatory 
mechanisms were generally moderate, we believe the concern about 
fishing at spawning aggregations (``high risk'' according to the ERAG) 
is due in part to the inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms.
    Overall, we believe existing regulatory mechanisms throughout the 
species' range (international trade, foreign, U.S. federal, and U.S. 
state and territorial regulations) vary in their effectiveness, 
especially in addressing the most serious threat to Nassau grouper--
fishing of spawning aggregations. In some countries, an array of 
national regulatory mechanisms, increases in marine protected areas, 
and customary

[[Page 42280]]

management may be effective at addressing fishing of spawning 
aggregations. For example, the Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park (Bahamas), 
has been closed to fishing for over 25 years and protects both nursery 
and adult habitat for Nassau grouper and other marine species. In that 
park, there is a clear difference in the number, biomass, and size of 
Nassau grouper in comparison to adjacent areas where fishing is 
permitted (Sluka et al. 1997).
    We note, however, that many countries have few, if any, specific 
Nassau grouper regulations. Instead they rely on general fisheries 
regulations (e.g., Anguilla, Antigua-Barbuda, Colombia, and Cuba all 
rely only on size limits, while Guadeloupe and Martinique, Honduras, 
Jamaica, Mexico, St. Lucia, and the Turks and Caicos rely on a variety 
of general fishing regulations). Additionally, where Nassau grouper-
specific regulations do exist, the ERAG scores indicated that law 
enforcement still presents a high risk threat to the species. We agree 
with the ERAG's risk assessment and believe that law enforcement in 
many foreign countries is less than adequate, thus rendering the 
regulations ineffective.
    Some foreign regulations may be ephemeral, unprotective of 
migrating adults, or inadequate to conserve the viability of a species. 
In some cases, regulations do not completely protect all known spawning 
aggregations (e.g., Belize, where 2 spawning aggregations are fished by 
license). In another instance, we found no protections for Nassau 
grouper in any foreign country during the period they move to and from 
spawning aggregation sites. Foreign regulations in some countries 
specify exemptions for ``historical,'' ``local,'' or artisanal 
fishermen (e.g., Colombia). Finally, some particular types of 
regulations are insufficient to protect the species (e.g., minimum size 
limits in both the Bahamas and Cuba are less than size-at-maturity).
    In some places, such as Bermuda, no recovery has been documented 
after years of regulations (B. Luckhurst, Bermuda Department of 
Agriculture, Fisheries, and Parks, pers. comm. to Y. Sadovy, University 
of Hong Kong, September, 2012). In other places (e.g., Cayman Islands) 
there are indications of potential recovery at spawning aggregation 
sites, but fishing continues to keep the population depressed (Semmens 
et al. 2012) and inconsistent surveys do not provide data adequate to 
realize impacts. Additionally, larval recruitment is highly variable 
due to currents in the Caribbean basin. Some populations may receive 
larval input from neighboring spawning aggregations, while other local 
circulation patterns may entrain larvae (Colin et al. 1987) making the 
population entirely self-recruiting.
    In conclusion, although many countries have taken regulatory 
measures to conserve Nassau grouper, the species faces an ongoing 
threat due to the inadequacy of regulatory mechanisms to prevent or 
remediate the impacts of other threats that are elevating the species' 
extinction risk, particularly fishing of spawning aggregations.

E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting Its Continued Existence

    The ERAG considered climate change as a threat to Nassau grouper 
including global warming, sea level rise, and ocean acidification for 
Factor E. Although Nassau grouper occur across a range of temperatures, 
spawning occurs when sea surface temperatures range between 25 [deg]C-
26 [deg]C (Colin 1992, Tucker and Woodward 1996). Because Nassau 
grouper spawn in a narrow window of temperatures, a rise in sea surface 
temperature outside that range could impact spawning or shift the 
geographic range of it to overlap with waters within the required 
temperature parameters. Increased sea surface temperatures have also 
been linked to coral loss through bleaching and disease. Further, 
increased global temperatures are also predicted to change parasite-
host relationships and may present additional unknown concerns (Harvell 
et al. 2002, Marcogliese 2001). Rising sea surface temperatures are 
also associated with sea level rise. If sea level changed rapidly, 
water depth at reef sites may be modified with such rapidity that coral 
and coral reefs could be affected (Munday et al. 2008).
    Another potential effect of climate change could be the loss of 
structural habitat in coral reef ecosystems as ocean acidification is 
anticipated to affect the integrity of coral reefs (Munday et al. 
2008). Bioerosion may reduce the 3-dimensional structure of coral reefs 
(Alvarez-Filip et al. 2009), reducing adult habitat for Nassau grouper 
(Coleman and Koenig 2010, Rogers and Beets 2001). Results of the ERAG 
scores indicated that climate change was an ``unknown risk'' to Nassau 
grouper. We agree with the assessment of the ERAG and believe there is 
not enough information at this time to determine how climate change is 
affecting the extinction risk of Nassau grouper now or in the 
foreseeable future.
    The ERAG also considered threats from aquaculture to Nassau grouper 
under Factor E and determined that aquaculture was a ``very low'' risk 
threat to Nassau grouper. Experiments to determine the success rate of 
larval Nassau grouper culture (Watanabe et al. 1995a, 1995b) and 
survival of released hatchery-reared juveniles have been conducted and 
feasibility of restocking reefs has been tested (Roberts et al. 1995) 
in St. Thomas, U.S.V.I. However, the potential of Nassau grouper stock 
enhancement, as with any other grouper species, has yet to be 
determined (Roberts et al. 1995). Serious concerns about the genetic 
consequences of introducing Nassau grouper raised in facilities, 
possible problems of juvenile habitat availability, introduction of 
maladapted individuals, and the inability of stocked individuals to 
locate traditional spawning locations, continue to be raised. Given the 
number of concerns with aquaculture and the fact that some spawning 
aggregations remain, we believe that it is unlikely that Nassau grouper 
aquaculture will develop further. Therefore we agree with the ERAG that 
aquaculture presents a very low extinction risk to Nassau grouper and 
is not contributing to the species' current status.
    Demographic factors of abundance, population growth rate/
productivity and diversity were also considered by the ERAG under 
Factor E. Each ERAG member considered whether the species is likely to 
be able to maintain a sustainable population size and adequate genetic 
diversity. They also considered whether the species is at risk due to a 
loss in the breeding population, which leads to a reduction in survival 
and production of eggs and offspring. Trends or shifts in demographic 
or reproductive traits were considered when assessing the ranking of 
threats by each ERAG member to identify a decline in population growth 
rate. The ERAG scores indicated that abundance of Nassau grouper was a 
``moderate risk,'' growth rate/productivity was an ``increasing risk,'' 
and that diversity was a ``moderate risk.'' We agree with these 
rankings and believe they are supported by the declining number and 
size of spawning aggregations, which affects growth rate/productivity 
and diversity.
NMFS's Conclusions From Threats Evaluation
    The most serious threats to Nassau grouper are fishing at spawning 
aggregations and inadequate law enforcement. These threats, considered 
under Factors B and D, were rated by the ERAG as ``high risk'' threats 
to the species. We agree with the ERAG's assessment that these threats 
are currently affecting the status of Nassau grouper, putting it at a 
heightened risk

[[Page 42281]]

of extinction. A variety of other threats were identified by the ERAG 
as also impacting the status of this species. Growth rate/productivity 
(Factor E), spatial structure/connectivity (Factors A and E), and 
effectiveness of foreign regulations (Factor D) were identified by the 
ERAG as ``increasing risks.'' Artificial selection (Factor B), 
abundance (Factors B and E), diversity (Factor E), commercial harvest 
(Factors B and D), and effectiveness of state and territory regulations 
(Factor D) were determined to be ``moderate risks.'' NMFS concurs that 
these threats have the potential to adversely affect the status of 
Nassau grouper over the foreseeable future.

Extinction Risk Analysis

    We must assess the ERA results and make a determination as to 
whether the Nassau grouper is currently in danger of extinction, or 
likely to become so within the foreseeable future. We first evaluated 
the current status of the Nassau grouper in light of the four 
demographic factors. Based on our assessment of the ERA in regards to 
these demographic factors (abundance, growth rate/productivity, spatial 
structure and connectivity, and diversity) we do not believe the Nassau 
grouper is currently in danger of extinction. Each of these demographic 
factors was ranked by the ERAG as a moderate or increasing risk to the 
species' current status.
    We acknowledge that the abundance of Nassau grouper has been 
dramatically reduced in relation to historical records, but we do not 
believe abundance is currently so low that the species is at risk of 
extinction from stochastic events, environmental variation, 
anthropogenic perturbations, lack of genetic diversity, or depensatory 
processes. Although the reduced abundance of Nassau grouper has 
diminished the size and number of spawning aggregations, spawning is 
still occurring and abundance is increasing in some locations (e.g. 
Cayman Islands and Bermuda) where adequate protections are effectively 
being implemented. The abundance of Nassau grouper is now patchily 
distributed throughout the Caribbean with areas of higher abundance 
correlated with those areas with effective regulations. We believe the 
abundance of Nassau grouper in these protected areas is large enough to 
sustain the overall population and limit extinction risk. However, we 
also believe that further regulations will be necessary in other 
countries to counteract past population declines and ultimately recover 
the population of Nassau grouper throughout the Caribbean.
    Abundance is closely related with the other three demographic 
factors. Growth rate/productivity, spatial structure and connectivity, 
and diversity are all negatively affected by decreased abundance 
associated with overexploitation. Historical overfishing has led to a 
decreased average length and earlier age at maturity in exploited 
populations, which affects the species' ability to maintain the 
population growth rate above replacement level. Reductions in the 
number and distribution of spawning aggregations has the potential to 
affect larval and juvenile dispersal. This can further affect genetic 
diversity within the population. However, we don't believe that any of 
these demographic factors have been adversely affected to the point 
that Nassau grouper is currently in danger of extinction. As described 
previously, the species continues to occupy its current range, spawning 
is still occurring in several locations thus continuing to deliver new 
recruits to the population, and recovery of spawning aggregations has 
been documented in locations with adequate regulatory mechanisms and 
enforcement. The size of Nassau grouper is also increasing in areas 
where protections are in place (e.g., Belize and U.S.V.I.), indicating 
that current abundance is not adversely affecting growth rate and 
productivity at these locations.
    After considering the current status of Nassau grouper based on the 
four demographic factors, we next assessed how the identified threats 
are expected to affect the status of the species, including its 
demographic factors, over the foreseeable future. The ERAG identified a 
variety of threats that have the potential to impact Nassau grouper. 
The ERAG ranked and we agreed that several threats (habitat alteration, 
disease, aquaculture, and U.S. federal regulations) ranked as ``very 
low'' or ``low'' risk, will have little to no effect on the extinction 
risk of Nassau grouper within the foreseeable future. Several other 
threats (commercial harvest, artificial selection, foreign regulations 
within jurisdictional waters, and regulations of the U.S. and its 
territories), were ranked as moderate or increasing risks to the status 
of Nassau grouper. We agree that collectively these threats could cause 
Nassau grouper to become in danger of extinction within the foreseeable 
future.
    Finally, the ERAG identified three threats that present a ``high'' 
risk to the status of Nassau grouper over the foreseeable future. We 
agree with the ERAG's assessment that fishing of spawning aggregations 
combined with inadequate law enforcement is currently adversely 
affecting the status of Nassau grouper as discussed above, but disagree 
with the ERAG's ranking of historic harvest as a high risk. These high 
risk threats will continue to elevate the extinction risk of Nassau 
grouper over the foreseeable future. Both threats directly affect the 
current abundance of the species, its ability to maintain population 
growth rate, the population structure of the species, and its diversity 
in terms of genetics and overall ecology.
    As previously described, the ERAG analyzed inadequate law 
enforcement as a standalone threat under Factor D, inadequacy of 
existing regulatory mechanisms, and ranked it as a ``high risk'' 
threat. We agree that existing regulations, and enforcement of existing 
regulations, are inadequate to control the threat posed by fishing on 
spawning aggregations, and thus this threat under Factor D is 
contributing to the extinction risk and status of Nassau grouper.
    Based on the information in the Biological Report and the results 
from the ERA, we conclude that ESA Factors B (overutilization for 
commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes), D 
(inadequacy of regulatory mechanisms), and E (other natural or manmade 
factors) are contributing to a threatened status for Nassau grouper. 
Overutilization in the form of historical harvest has reduced 
population size and led to the collapse of spawning aggregations in 
many locations. While some countries have made efforts to curb harvest, 
fishing at spawning aggregation sites remains a ``high risk'' threat. 
Further contributing to the risk of Nassau grouper extinction is the 
inadequacy of regulatory control and law enforcement, which leads to 
continued overutilization (low abundance), reduced reproductive output, 
and reduced recruitment. If growth and sexual recruitment rates cannot 
balance the loss from these threats, populations will become more 
vulnerable to extinction over the future (Primack 1993).

Protective Efforts

    Section 4(b)(1)(A) of the ESA requires the Secretary, when making a 
listing determination for a species, to take into consideration those 
efforts, if any, being made by any State or foreign nation to protect 
the species. To evaluate the efficacy of domestic efforts that have not 
yet implemented or that have been implemented, but have not yet 
demonstrated to be effective, the Services developed a joint ``Policy 
for Evaluation of Conservation Efforts When Making Listing Decisions'' 
(``PECE''; 68 FR 15100; March 28, 2003).

[[Page 42282]]

The PECE is designed to ensure consistent and adequate evaluation on 
whether domestic conservation efforts that have been recently adopted 
or implemented, but not yet proven to be successful, will result in 
recovering the species to the point at which listing is not warranted 
or contribute to forming the basis for listing a species as threatened 
rather than endangered. The PECE is expected to facilitate the 
development of conservation efforts by states and other entities that 
sufficiently improve a species' status so as to make listing the 
species as threatened or endangered unnecessary.
    The PECE establishes two overarching criteria to use in evaluating 
efforts identified in conservations plans, conservation agreements, 
management plans or similar documents: (1) The certainty that the 
conservation efforts will be implemented; and (2) the certainty that 
the efforts will be effective. While section 4(b)(1)(A) requires that 
we evaluate both domestic and foreign conservation efforts, it does not 
set out particular criteria for doing so. While the particular 
framework of the PECE policy only directly applies to consideration of 
domestic efforts, we have discretion to evaluate foreign efforts using 
a similar approach and find that it is reasonable to do so here. In our 
discretion, we evaluated foreign conservation efforts to protect and 
recover Nassau grouper that are either underway, but not yet fully 
implemented, or are only planned, using these overarching criteria.
    Conservation efforts with the potential to address identified 
threats to Nassau grouper include, but are not limited to, fisheries 
management plans, education about overfishing and fishing of spawning 
aggregations, and projects addressing the health of coral reef 
ecosystems. These conservation efforts may be conducted by countries, 
states, local governments, individuals, NGOs, academic institutions, 
private companies, individuals, or other entities. They also include 
global conservation organizations that conduct coral reef and/or marine 
environment conservation projects, global coral reef monitoring 
networks and research projects, regional or global conventions, and 
education and outreach projects throughout the range of Nassau grouper.
    The Biological Report summarizes known conservation efforts, 
including those that have yet to be fully implemented or have yet to 
demonstrate effectiveness. Conservation efforts that we considered that 
are yet to be fully implemented include Mexico's 2012 proposed 
management plan, Antigua-Barbuda's 2008 closed season proposal, and 
Guadeloupe and Martinique's plans to protect the species. Because these 
proposed plans are several years old with no updates or known 
implementation, we find that there is not a sufficient basis to 
conclude that there is a reasonable certainty of implementation or 
effectiveness. We also considered the marine protected areas 
implemented by Jamaica in 2011, though based on Jamaica's historic 
overfishing and difficulty in enforcing existing regulations, we find 
that there is not a sufficient basis to conclude that these marine 
protected areas present a reasonable certainty of effectiveness in 
reducing threats that contribute to Nassau grouper's extinction risk. 
We carefully considered the other conservation efforts summarized in 
the Biological Report and acknowledge that time is required to see the 
benefit of mature adults in the spawning aggregations; however, the 
continued decline in number and size of Nassau grouper spawning 
aggregations indicates the effectiveness of those conservation efforts 
is currently unknown and thus there is insufficient basis to conclude 
there is a reasonable certainty of effectiveness. While some 
conservation efforts have been partially successful on localized 
scales, Nassau grouper appear to still be overutilized and at 
heightened risk of extinction based on the ERA. After taking into 
account these conservation efforts, our evaluation of the section 
4(a)(1) factors is that the conservation efforts do not reduce the risk 
of extinction of Nassau grouper to the point at which listing is not 
warranted.

Significant Portion of Range

    There are two situations under which a species is eligible for 
listing under ESA: A species may be endangered or threatened throughout 
all of its range or a species may be endangered or threatened 
throughout only a ``significant portion of its range'' (SPOIR). 
Although the ESA does not define ``SPOIR,'' NMFS and the U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service (USFWS) published a final policy clarifying their 
interpretation of this phrase (79 FR 37577; July 7, 2014). Under the 
policy, if a species is found to be endangered or threatened throughout 
only a significant portion of its range, the entire species is subject 
to listing and must be protected everywhere. A portion of a species' 
range is ``significant'' if ``. . . the species is not currently 
endangered or threatened throughout its range, but the portion's 
contribution to the viability of the species is so important that, 
without the members in that portion, the species would be in danger of 
extinction, or likely to become so in the foreseeable future, 
throughout all of its range.'' Thus, if the species is found to be 
threatened or endangered throughout its range, we do not separately 
evaluate portions of the species' range.
    Although the SPOIR Policy had yet to go into effect during our 
status review of Nassau grouper, we considered the interpretations and 
principles contained in the 2014 Draft Policy with regards to the 
Nassau grouper and completed an assessment of potential ``SPOIR,'' 
which is documented in the ERA. However, throughout the status review 
process NMFS determined threats and risks to the status of Nassau 
grouper are affecting the species over the entirety of its range. 
Because the threats and risks are widespread throughout the entire 
range of this species, there is no portion of the range that can be 
considered ``significant.''

Listing Determination

    Based on the Biological Report, the Threats Evaluation, the 
Extinction Risk Analysis, and Protective Efforts we determined that the 
Nassau grouper warrants a threatened status under the ESA. We summarize 
the results of our comprehensive status review as follows: (1) The 
species is made up of a single population over a broad geographic 
range, and its current range is indistinguishable from its historical 
range; (2) the species possesses life history characteristics that 
increase vulnerability to unregulated harvest; (3) historical harvest 
greatly diminished the population of Nassau grouper and the species has 
yet to recover from this overexploitation; (4) spawning aggregations 
have drastically declined in size and number across the species' range; 
(5) there are two threats the ERAG rated as ``high risk,'' that we 
agree are affecting the current status of the species and will continue 
to do so over the foreseeable future--fishing at spawning aggregations 
and inadequate law enforcement; and (6) historical harvest has abated, 
though existing regulatory mechanisms and law enforcement have not been 
effective in preventing fishing at many spawning aggregation sites. 
Conservation efforts in some nations (U.S., Puerto Rico, U.S.V.I., and 
Belize) have almost certainly prevented further declines. Given the 
life history characteristics of Nassau grouper, more time will be 
needed to determine if these protective measures are successful in 
recovering the population. Collectively, the information obtained 
during the status review indicates the species is not currently in 
danger of extinction

[[Page 42283]]

(though reduced in number, the species maintains its historical range 
and still forms spawning aggregations at some sites), but it is likely 
to become endangered within the foreseeable future (based on continued 
risk of harvest, especially at spawning aggregation sites inadequately 
controlled by regulations and law enforcement). Accordingly, we have 
determined that the Nassau grouper warrants listing as a threatened 
species under the ESA.

Effects of Listing

    Conservation measures provided for species listed as endangered or 
threatened under the ESA include recovery plans (16 U.S.C. 1533(f)), 
critical habitat designations (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)(A)), Federal agency 
consultation requirements (16 U.S.C. 1536), and protective regulations 
(16 U.S.C. 1533(d)). Recognition of the species' status through listing 
promotes conservation actions by Federal and state agencies, private 
groups, and individuals, as well as the international community. Both a 
recovery program and designation of critical habitat could result from 
this final listing. Given its broad range across the Caribbean Sea, a 
regional cooperative effort to protect and restore Nassau grouper is 
necessary. We anticipate that protective regulations for Nassau grouper 
will also be necessary for the conservation of the species. Federal, 
state, and the private sectors will need to cooperate to conserve 
listed Nassau grouper and the ecosystems upon which they depend.

Identifying ESA Section 7 Consultation Requirements

    Section 7(a)(2) of the ESA and NMFS/FWS regulations require Federal 
agencies to consult with us on any actions they authorize, fund, or 
carry out if those actions may affect the listed species or designated 
critical habitat. Based on currently available information, we can 
conclude that examples of Federal actions that may affect Nassau 
grouper include, but are not limited to, artificial reef creation, 
dredging, pile-driving, military activities, and fisheries management 
practices.

Critical Habitat

    Critical habitat is defined in section 3 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 
1532(5)) as: (1) The specific areas within the geographical area 
occupied by a species, at the time it is listed in accordance with the 
ESA, on which are found those physical or biological features (a) 
essential to the conservation of the species and (b) that may require 
special management considerations or protection; and (2) specific areas 
outside the geographical area occupied by a species at the time it is 
listed upon a determination that such areas are essential for the 
conservation of the species. ``Conservation'' means the use of all 
methods and procedures needed to bring the species to the point at 
which listing under the ESA is no longer necessary. Critical habitat 
may also include areas unoccupied by Nassau grouper if those areas are 
essential to the conservation of the species.
    Section 4(a)(3)(A) of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)(A)) requires 
that, to the maximum extent prudent and determinable, critical habitat 
be designated concurrently with the listing of a species. Pursuant to 
50 CFR 424.12(a), designation of critical habitat is not determinable 
when one or both of the following situations exist: Data sufficient to 
perform required analyses are lacking; or the biological needs of the 
species are not sufficiently well known to identify any area that meets 
the definition of ``critical habitat.'' Although we have gathered 
information through the status review and public comment periods on the 
habitats occupied by this species, we currently do not have enough 
information to determine what physical and biological features within 
those habitats facilitate the species' life history strategy and are 
thus essential to the conservation of Nassau grouper, and may require 
special management considerations or protection. To the maximum extent 
prudent and determinable, we will publish a proposed designation of 
critical habitat for Nassau grouper in a separate rule. Designations of 
critical habitat must be based on the best scientific data available 
and must take into consideration the economic, national security, and 
other relevant impacts of specifying any particular area as critical 
habitat. Once critical habitat is designated, section 7 of the ESA 
requires Federal agencies to ensure that they do not fund, authorize, 
or carry out any actions that are likely to destroy or adversely modify 
that habitat. This requirement is in addition to the section 7 
requirement that Federal agencies ensure that their actions do not 
jeopardize the continued existence of listed species.

Identification of Those Activities That Would Constitute a Violation of 
Section 9 of the ESA

    Because we are proposing to list Nassau grouper as threatened, the 
ESA section 9 prohibitions do not automatically apply. Therefore, 
pursuant to ESA section 4(d), we will evaluate whether there are 
protective regulations we deem necessary and advisable for the 
conservation of Nassau grouper, including application of some or all of 
the take prohibitions. If protective regulations are deemed necessary, 
a proposed 4(d) rule would be subject to public comment.

Policies on Peer Review

    In December 2004, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued 
a Final Information Quality Bulletin for Peer Review establishing 
minimum peer review standards, a transparent process for public 
disclosure of peer review planning, and opportunities for public 
participation. The OMB Bulletin, implemented under the Information 
Quality Act (Pub. L. 106-554) is intended to enhance the quality and 
credibility of the Federal government's scientific information, and 
applies to influential or highly influential scientific information 
disseminated on or after June 16, 2005. To satisfy our requirements 
under the OMB Bulletin, we obtained independent peer review of the 
Biological Report. Five independent specialists were selected from the 
academic and scientific community, Federal and state agencies, and the 
private sector for this review (with three respondents). All peer 
reviewer comments were addressed prior to dissemination of the final 
Biological Report and publication of this final rule.

Solicitation of Information

    We are soliciting information on features and areas that may 
support designation of critical habitat for Nassau grouper. Information 
provided should identify the physical and biological features essential 
to the conservation of the species and areas that contain these 
features. Areas outside the occupied geographical area should also be 
identified if such areas themselves are essential to the conservation 
of the species. Essential features may include, but are not limited to, 
features specific to the species' range, habitats, and life history 
characteristics within the following general categories of habitat 
features: (1) Space for individual growth and for normal behavior; (2) 
food, water, air, light, minerals, or other nutritional or 
physiological requirements; (3) cover or shelter; (4) sites for 
reproduction and development of offspring; and (5) habitats that are 
protected from disturbance or are representative of the historical, 
geographical, and ecological distributions of the species (50 CFR 
424.12(b)). ESA implementing regulations at 50 CFR 424.12(h) specify 
that critical habitat shall not be

[[Page 42284]]

designated within foreign countries or in other areas outside of U.S. 
jurisdiction. Therefore, we request information only on potential areas 
of critical habitat within waters in U.S. jurisdiction.
    For features and areas potentially qualifying as critical habitat, 
we also request information describing: (1) Activities or other threats 
to the essential features or activities that could be affected by 
designating them as critical habitat, and (2) the positive and negative 
economic, national security and other relevant impacts, including 
benefits to the recovery of the species, likely to result if these 
areas are designated as critical habitat.

References

    A complete list of the references used in this final rule is 
available at: (http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/protected_resources/listing_petitions/species_esa_consideration/index.html).

Classifications

National Environmental Policy Act

    The 1982 amendments to the ESA, in section 4(b)(1)(A), restrict the 
information that may be considered when assessing species for listing. 
Based on this limitation of criteria for a listing decision and the 
opinion in Pacific Legal Foundation v. Andrus, 675 F. 2d 825 (6th Cir. 
1981), NMFS has concluded that ESA listing actions are not subject to 
the environmental assessment requirements of the National Environmental 
Policy Act (See NOAA Administrative Order 216-6).

Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Flexibility Act and Paperwork 
Reduction Act

    As noted in the Conference Report on the 1982 amendments to the 
ESA, economic impacts cannot be considered when assessing the status of 
a species. Therefore, the economic analysis requirements of the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act are not applicable to the listing process. 
In addition, this final rule is exempt from review under Executive 
Order 12866. This final rule does not contain a collection-of-
information requirement for the purposes of the Paperwork Reduction 
Act.

Executive Order 13132, Federalism

    In keeping with the intent of the Administration and Congress to 
provide continuing and meaningful dialogue on issues of mutual state 
and Federal interest, the proposed rule was provided to the relevant 
agencies in each state in which the subject species occurs, and these 
agencies were invited to comment. We did not receive comments from any 
state agencies.

Executive Order 12898, Environmental Justice

    Executive Order 12898 requires that Federal actions address 
environmental justice in the decision-making process. In particular, 
the environmental effects of the actions should not have a 
disproportionate effect on minority and low-income communities. This 
final rule is not expected to have a disproportionately high effect on 
minority populations or low-income populations.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 223

    Endangered and threatened species, Exports, Transportation.

    Dated: June 21, 2016.
Samuel D Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, we amend 50 CFR part 223 
as follows:

PART 223--THREATENED MARINE AND ANADROMOUS SPECIES

0
1. The authority citation for part 223 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1531-1543; subpart B, Sec.  223.201-202 
also issued under 16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.; 16 U.S.C. 5503(d) for 
Sec.  223.206(d)(9).


0
2. In Sec.  223.102, amend the table in paragraph (e) by adding an 
entry under the ``Fishes'' subheading for ``Grouper, Nassau'' in 
alphabetical order to read as follows:


Sec.  223.102  Enumeration of threatened marine and anadromous species.

* * * * *
    (e) * * *

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Species \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Citation(s) for listing      Critical        ESA rules
          Common name                   Scientific name          Description of listed entity      determination(s)         habitat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                                                      * * * * * * *
            Fishes
 
                                                                      * * * * * * *
Grouper, Nassau...............  Epinephelus striatus..........  Entire species...............  [Insert Federal                      NA               NA
                                                                                                Register citation],
                                                                                                June 29, 2016.
 
                                                                      * * * * * * *
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Species includes taxonomic species, subspecies, distinct population segments (DPSs) (for a policy statement, see 61 FR 4722, February 7, 1996), and
  evolutionarily significant units (ESUs) (for a policy statement, see 56 FR 58612, November 20, 1991).


[[Page 42285]]

* * * * *

[FR Doc. 2016-15101 Filed 6-28-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P