[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 244 (Thursday, December 23, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 72911-72916]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-27845]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 622

RIN 0648-BL00


Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; 
Dolphin and Wahoo Fishery of the Atlantic; Amendment 10

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

ACTION: Announcement of availability of fishery management plan 
amendment; request for comments.

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SUMMARY: The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council (Council) 
submitted Amendment 10 to the Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the 
Dolphin and Wahoo Fishery of the Atlantic (Dolphin and Wahoo FMP) for 
review, approval, and implementation by NMFS. If approved by the 
Secretary of Commerce, Amendment 10 to the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP 
(Amendment 10) would revise the acceptable biological catch (ABC), 
annual catch limits (ACLs), sector allocations, accountability measures 
(AMs), and additional management measures for dolphin and wahoo. The 
additional management measures would address commercial trip limits, 
authorized fishing gear, the operator permit (card) requirement for 
dolphin and wahoo, and the recreational vessel limit for dolphin. The 
purpose of Amendment 10 is to base conservation and management measures 
for dolphin and wahoo on the best scientific information available and 
increase net benefits from the fishery.

DATES: Written comments must be received on or before February 22, 
2022.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on Amendment 10, identified by 
``NOAA-NMFS-2021-0093,'' by either of the following methods:
     Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public 
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov 
and enter ``NOAA-NMFS-2021-0093'' in the Search box. Click the 
``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or attach 
your comments.
     Mail: Submit written comments to Nikhil Mehta, Southeast 
Regional Office, NMFS, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701.
    Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other 
address or individual, or received after the end of

[[Page 72912]]

the comment period, may not be considered by NMFS. All comments 
received are a part of the public record and will generally be posted 
for public viewing on www.regulations.gov without change. All personal 
identifying information (e.g., name, address), confidential business 
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily 
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous 
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain 
anonymous).
    Electronic copies of Amendment 10, which includes a fishery impact 
statement and a regulatory impact review, may be obtained from the 
Southeast Regional Office website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/amendment-10-changes-catch-levels-sector-allocations-accountability-measures-and-management.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nikhil Mehta, telephone: 727-824-5305, 
or email: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation 
and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) requires each regional 
fishery management council to submit any FMP or FMP amendment to the 
Secretary of Commerce (the Secretary) for review and approval, partial 
approval, or disapproval. The Magnuson-Stevens Act also requires that 
NMFS, upon receiving an FMP or amendment, publish an announcement in 
the Federal Register notifying the public that the FMP or amendment is 
available for review and comment.
    The Council prepared the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP that is being 
revised by Amendment 10. If approved, Amendment 10 would be implemented 
by NMFS through regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the authority of 
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.

Background

    The Council manages the dolphin and wahoo fishery in Federal waters 
from Maine south to the Florida Keys in the Atlantic under the Dolphin 
and Wahoo FMP.
    The current ABC for dolphin and wahoo was implemented in 2014 by 
Amendment 5 to the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP (Amendment 5), and are based 
on the Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee's (SSC) 
recommendations using the third highest annual landings value during 
1999-2008 (79 FR 32878; June 9, 2014). The landings did not include 
recreational landings from Monroe County, Florida, and were based on 
recreational data from the Marine Recreational Information Program's 
(MRIP) Coastal Household Telephone Survey (CHTS) method. In April 2020, 
the Council's SSC recommended new ABC levels for dolphin and wahoo 
using the third highest annual landings value during 1994-2007. These 
landings include recreational landings from Monroe County, Florida, and 
used MRIP's Fishing Effort Survey (FES) method, which is considered 
more reliable by the Council's SSC, the Council, and NMFS, and more 
robust compared to the CHTS survey method. The new ABC recommendations 
within Amendment 10 for dolphin and wahoo are also based on the new 
weight estimation procedure from NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science 
Center (SEFSC) that uses a 15 fish minimum sample size and represents 
the best scientific information available.
    The current total ACLs for both dolphin and wahoo were implemented 
in 2014 by Amendment 5 and are equal to the ABCs for dolphin and wahoo. 
Amendment 10 would revise the total ACLs for dolphin and wahoo to equal 
the new ABC values.
    The current sector allocations for dolphin were implemented in 2016 
by Amendment 8 to the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP (Amendment 8), with 10.00 
percent of the total ACL to the commercial sector and 90.00 percent of 
the total ACL to the recreational sector (81 FR 3731; January 22, 
2016). In 2015, the commercial sector was closed because the commercial 
ACL was met during that fishing year. In Amendment 8, the Council set 
the commercial allocation at the average of the percentages of the 
total commercial catch for 2008-2012, and the resulting 10 percent of 
the total ACL for the commercial allocation was expected to prevent 
subsequent closures of the commercial sector. The current sector 
allocations for wahoo were implemented in 2014 by Amendment 5, with 
3.93 percent of the total ACL to the commercial sector and 96.07 
percent of the total ACL to the recreational sector. The Council 
decided on these wahoo allocations by balancing long-term catch history 
with recent catch history, and determined this method as the most fair 
and equitable way to allocate fishery resources since it considered 
past and present participation. The current allocations for both 
dolphin and wahoo were applied to the respective species' total ACLs 
(equal to the ABCs) to obtain the sector ACLs.
    Amendment 10 would specify commercial and recreational allocations 
for dolphin at 7.00 percent and 93.00 percent, respectively. For wahoo, 
Amendment 10 would specify commercial and recreational allocations at 
2.45 percent and 97.55 percent, respectively. These proposed 
allocations would be applied to the respective species' proposed total 
ACLs (equal to the proposed ABCs) using the third annual highest 
landings value during 1994-2007 to determine the proposed sector ACLs. 
The proposed sector ACLs for dolphin and wahoo were derived from 
landings which include recreational landings from Monroe County, 
Florida, use MRIP's FES method, and SEFSC'S new weight estimation 
procedure. For dolphin, the Council has determined that the proposed 
allocations and revised sector ACLs could avoid a decrease in the 
current pounds of dolphin available to either sector's ACL. For wahoo, 
the Council's intent is to maintain the current commercial ACL and 
allocate the remaining revised ACL to the recreational sector.
    Amendment 10 does not propose any changes to the commercial AMs for 
dolphin or wahoo. The current recreational AMs for dolphin and wahoo 
were implemented in 2014 by Amendment 5, and do not contain an in-
season AM but instead require a monitoring for persistence in 
recreational landings during the year following any recreational ACL 
overage. Further, the current recreational post-season AMs state that 
if the combined commercial and recreational landings exceed the 
combined commercial and recreational ACLs, and dolphin and wahoo are 
overfished, the recreational ACL for the following year will be reduced 
by the amount of the recreational overage in the prior fishing year, 
and the recreational fishing season will be reduced by the amount 
necessary to ensure recreational landings do not exceed the reduced 
ACL. The Regional Administrator (RA) will determine using the best 
scientific information available if a reduction in the recreational ACL 
and a reduction in the length of the following fishing season is 
unnecessary. These recreational post-season AMs for dolphin and wahoo 
are not viable because the post-season AMs would not be triggered as 
there is not a peer-reviewed stock assessment for dolphin and wahoo, 
and such an assessment is unlikely to be conducted in the near future. 
Therefore, there is no likely method to determine their stock status. 
Amendment 10 would establish a trigger to implement post-season AMs and 
once triggered, specify the post-season AMs for dolphin and wahoo that 
would not be based on their stock status.
    In 2017, Regulatory Amendment 1 to the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP and

[[Page 72913]]

associated final rule implemented the current commercial trip limit for 
dolphin of 4,000 lb (1,814 kg), round weight, once 75 percent of the 
commercial ACL is reached (82 FR 8820; January 31, 2017). Prior to 
reaching 75 percent of the commercial ACL, there is no commercial trip 
limit for dolphin. In 2004, the original Dolphin and Wahoo FMP and 
associated final rule implemented the current commercial trip limit for 
wahoo of 500 lb (227 kg); and a commercial trip limit of 200 lb (91 kg) 
of dolphin and wahoo, combined, provided that all fishing on and 
landings from that trip are north of 39[deg] N latitude, for a vessel 
that does not have a Federal commercial vessel permit for dolphin and 
wahoo but has a Federal commercial vessel permit in any other fishery.
    In 2004, the original Dolphin and Wahoo FMP and associated final 
rule also implemented the currently authorized commercial gear types in 
the dolphin and wahoo fishery in the Atlantic Exclusive Economic Zone 
(EEZ) as automatic reel, bandit gear, handline, pelagic longline, rod 
and reel, and spearfishing gear (including powerheads). A person aboard 
a vessel in the Atlantic EEZ that has on board gear types (including 
trap, pot, or buoy gear) other than authorized gear types may not 
possess dolphin or wahoo. In 2016, the Atlantic Offshore Lobstermen's 
Association initially requested that the Council modify the fishing 
gear regulations to allow the lobster fishery's historical practice of 
harvesting dolphin while in the possession of lobster pots to continue. 
Amendment 10 would allow a vessel in the Atlantic EEZ that possesses 
both a Federal Atlantic Dolphin/Wahoo commercial permit and any valid 
Federal commercial permit(s) required to fish using trap, pot, or buoy 
gear; or is in compliance with permit requirements specified for the 
spiny lobster fishery in 50 CFR 622.400 to retain dolphin and wahoo 
caught by rod and reel while in possession of such gear types.
    In 2004, the original Dolphin and Wahoo FMP and associated final 
rule implemented the requirement for a vessel operator or a crewmember 
to hold a valid operator permit (also called an operator card) for the 
Atlantic dolphin and wahoo commercial permit or a charter vessel/
headboat permit for Atlantic dolphin and wahoo to be valid. The 
operator permit requirement was implemented to improve enforcement 
within the fishery, aid in data collection, and decrease costs to 
vessel owners from fishery violations by vessel operators. However, in 
actuality, the benefits of operator permits to improve enforcement have 
not occurred as they have not been widely used as an enforcement tool 
since implementation. Rather, other methods of fishery enforcement, 
such as vessel permits and landings, have been used by law enforcement 
for the fishery. Because the expected benefits from operator permits 
are not being realized, Amendment 10 would remove the requirement for 
operator permits in the dolphin and wahoo fishery.
    The current dolphin recreational bag limit of 10 fish per person, 
not to exceed 60 fish per vessel in the Atlantic EEZ, was implemented 
by the final rule for the original Dolphin and Wahoo FMP in 2004. Since 
then, interest in recreational harvest of dolphin has increased and 
Council public testimony, especially from Florida and its constituents, 
has recommended a decrease in the recreational retention limits to 
further control recreational harvest. Amendment 10 would decrease the 
dolphin recreational vessel limit for charter vessels and private 
recreational vessels, excluding headboats. The dolphin individual 
recreational bag limit or 10 fish per person in the Atlantic EEZ 
remains unchanged.

Actions Contained in Amendment 10

    Amendment 10 would revise the catch levels (ABCs and ACLs), sector 
allocations, AMs, and management measures for dolphin and wahoo. 
Management measures would address commercial trip limits, authorized 
fishing gear, the operator permit requirement for dolphin and wahoo, 
and the recreational vessel limit for dolphin.
    If approved and implemented, Amendment 10 and the proposed rule 
could be expected to result in potential positive direct and indirect 
benefits to managing the dolphin and wahoo fishery and its commercial 
and recreational fishers. Revisions to the ABCs, ACLs, sector 
allocations, and AMs incorporate best scientific information available. 
Changes to recreational vessel limits for dolphin would reduce the 
likelihood of recreational landings reaching the revised recreational 
ACL. Commercial trip limits, authorized gear, and operator permit 
requirements respond to requests from the public in managing the 
dolphin and wahoo fishery more efficiently.

ABC

    As discussed, Amendment 10 would revise the ABC based on the new 
MRIP FES catch estimation procedures and new SEFSC fish weight 
estimation procedure, which represent the best scientific information 
available. The proposed ABC was also recommended by the Council's SSC.

ACLs

Dolphin

    The current total ACL for dolphin is 15,344,846 lb (6,960,305 kg), 
round weight. Amendment 10 would revise the total ACL for dolphin to 
24,570,764 lb (11,145,111 kg), round weight, based on the ABC 
recommended by the Council's SSC. The revised total ACL is equal to the 
ABC as described in Amendment 10 and is based upon best scientific 
information available. As a species, dolphin are highly fecund, spawn 
throughout a wide geographical range, have an early age at first 
maturity, and a short generation time and so therefore, dolphin's life-
history could support the increase in the total ACL. The Report to 
Congress on the Status of U.S. Stocks indicates dolphin is not 
overfished, and is not undergoing overfishing. Additionally, the 
Council noted that based on the last 20 years of total landings data 
for dolphin, it appears unlikely that harvest would consistently exceed 
the proposed total ACL, commercial landings are well tracked through 
electronic dealer reporting requirements, there is a commercial trip 
limit in place, and recreational landings for dolphin exhibit 
relatively low percent standard errors (PSE). The Council also noted 
that setting the ACL equal to the ABC may allow dolphin fishers to take 
advantage of years of exceptionally high abundance of dolphin.
    The current commercial and recreational ACLs for dolphin are and 
1,534,485 lb (696,031 kg), round weight, and 13,810,361 lb (6,264,274 
kg), round weight, respectively. These are based on the current 
commercial and recreational allocations of 10.00 percent and 90.00 
percent, respectively. The proposed commercial and recreational ACLs 
for dolphin in Amendment 10 are 1,719,953 lb (780,158 kg), round 
weight, and 22,850,811 lb (10,364,954 kg), round weight, respectively. 
The proposed dolphin sector ACLs in Amendment 10 would be based on the 
commercial and recreational allocations of 7.00 percent and 93.00 
percent, respectively.

Wahoo

    The current total ACL for wahoo is 1,794,960 lb (814,180 kg), round 
weight. Amendment 10 would revise the total ACL for wahoo to 2,885,303 
lb (1,308,751 kg), round weight based upon the ABC recommended by the 
Council's SSC. The revised total ACL is

[[Page 72914]]

equal to the ABC and is based upon best scientific information 
available. Wahoo also exhibit rapid growth rates, are highly migratory, 
and are sexually mature at an early age and so their life history also 
supports an increase in the ACL. The overfishing and overfished status 
of wahoo is unknown, however, recent studies found that wahoo did not 
show a negative decline in relative abundance in recent years. The 
Council noted that commercial landings for wahoo are also well tracked 
through electronic dealer reporting requirements, there is a commercial 
trip limit of 500 lb (227 kg), and that recreational landings for wahoo 
exhibit relatively low PSEs. The Council also noted that setting the 
ACL equal to the ABC will allow wahoo fishers to take advantage of 
years when there is exceptionally high abundance of wahoo.
    The current commercial and recreational ACLs for wahoo are 70,542 
lb (31,997 kg), round weight, and 1,724,418 lb (782,183 kg), round 
weight, respectively. These are based on the current commercial and 
recreational allocations of 3.93 percent and 96.07 percent, 
respectively. The proposed commercial and recreational ACLs for wahoo 
in Amendment 10 are 70,690 lb (32,064 kg), round weight, and 2,814,613 
lb (1,276,687 kg), round weight, respectively. The proposed wahoo 
sector ACLs in Amendment 10 are based on the commercial and 
recreational allocations of 2.45 percent and 97.55 percent, 
respectively.
    No biological effects are expected to the dolphin and wahoo stocks 
from these allocation changes because the proposed sector ACLs would 
not change the proposed total ACLs for dolphin and wahoo. The 
commercial sector for dolphin and wahoo has effective in-season AM 
already in place to help constrain commercial harvest, and Amendment 10 
considers modifications to the post-season AMs to both stocks to reduce 
the risk of the recreational ACL from being exceeded. In deciding on 
new sector allocations, the Council wanted to recognize the needs of 
the recreational sector for dolphin and wahoo which would exhibit 
higher landings than previously estimated with the new accounting of 
recreational landings using MRIP's FES method. At the same time the 
Council did not want to reduce the commercial ACLs on a pound basis for 
dolphin and wahoo and noted that the proposed allocations and sector 
ACLs would strike a balance between the needs of both sectors.

AMs

Dolphin

    Amendment 10 would revise the recreational AMs for dolphin. The 
current in-season closure and stock status based post-season AM would 
be replaced. The proposed recreational AM in Amendment 10 would be a 
post season AM that would be triggered in the following fishing year if 
the total ACL (commercial and recreational ACLs, combined) is exceeded. 
The Council's intent is to avoid closing recreational harvest in-season 
and extend maximum fishing opportunities to the recreational sector 
without triggering the recreational AM, as long as the commercial 
sector is under harvesting its sector ACL. The revised recreational AM 
trigger would also help ensure sustainable harvest by preventing the 
total ACL from being exceeded on a consistent basis. Once triggered, 
the proposed post-season recreational AM would reduce the length of the 
following recreational fishing season by the amount necessary to 
prevent the recreational ACL from being exceeded in the following year. 
However, the length of the recreational season would not be reduced if 
the RA determines, using the best available science, that the season 
reduction is not necessary. The Council noted that there would be a 
relatively low likelihood of the recreational AM for dolphin being 
triggered, because the proposed recreational ACL is based on the 
proposed ABC which is set at a relatively high level of landings that 
has not often been observed in the dolphin portion of the dolphin and 
wahoo fishery. Additionally, any determination that the total ACL had 
been exceeded would allow for the monitoring of landings during the 
following season to evaluate whether the elevated landings from the 
previous fishing year are continuing to persist in the fishery. That 
information would inform decisions on whether a fishing season closure 
would actually need to occur to constrain harvest to the ACL.

Wahoo

    Amendment 10 would revise the recreational AMs for wahoo. The 
current in-season closure and stock status based post-season AM would 
be replaced. The proposed recreational AM in Amendment 10 would be a 
post season AM that would be triggered in the following fishing year if 
the recreational ACLs are constant and the 3-year geometric mean of 
landings exceeds the recreational ACL. As described in Amendment 10, 
whenever the recreational ACL is changed, a single year of landings 
would be used an overage determination, beginning with the most recent 
available year of landings, then a 2-year average of landings from that 
single year and the subsequent year, then a 3-year average of landings 
from those 2 years and the subsequent year, and thereafter a 
progressive running 3-year average would be used to determine if the 
recreational AM trigger has been met. The Council noted this approach 
would allow the recreational AM to be triggered if the ACL was exceeded 
on a consistent basis. A 3-year geometric mean would help to smooth the 
data and potentially avoid implementing restrictive recreational post-
season AMs unnecessarily if there was an anomaly in the recreational 
landings estimates during those 3 years that was not accurately 
reflecting an actual increase in the harvest of wahoo. It was also 
noted by the Council that a geometric mean is less sensitive to being 
affected by abnormally large variations in landings estimates than 
using the arithmetic mean or using a single year point estimate. Once 
triggered, the post-season recreational AM would reduce the length of 
the following recreational fishing season by the amount necessary to 
prevent the recreational ACL from being exceeded in that year. However, 
the length of the recreational season would not be reduced if the RA 
determines, using the best available science, that a fishing season 
reduction is not necessary. Additionally, any determination that the 
ACL had been exceeded would allow for the monitoring of landings for 
the following season to evaluate whether the elevated landings from the 
previous year are continuing to persist in the fishery. That 
information would inform decisions on whether a late season harvest 
closure would actually need to occur to constrain harvest to the ACL. 
The Council also noted the relatively equitable nature and equally 
distributed effects of a shortening of the recreational season, as 
wahoo are often targeted and caught late in the year in many areas of 
the Atlantic region.

Commercial Trip Limits and Authorized Gear Exemption

    For vessels with a commercial permit for Atlantic dolphin and 
wahoo, under the current trip limits, dolphin and wahoo may only be 
harvested and possessed with the authorized gear types onboard. These 
gear types are automatic reel, bandit gear, handline, pelagic longline, 
rod and reel, and spearfishing gear. Possession on the vessel of any 
other gear type results in

[[Page 72915]]

a prohibition of the possession of any dolphin or wahoo.
    American lobster fishers requested to the Council that they be 
allowed to possess dolphin or wahoo while they moved from one lobster 
pot to the next. The Council wanted to allow for the authorized gear 
exemption based on a request from the Atlantic Offshore Lobstermen's 
Association to allow the historical practice of harvesting dolphin with 
rod and reel while in the possession of lobster pots to continue and 
also take a broader approach to allow vessels fishing with trap, pot, 
or buoy gear to possess dolphin or wahoo as long as the fish were 
harvested with rod and reel gear. The Council decided to be more 
comprehensive and included other trap, pot, and buoy gear. Amendment 10 
would allow for a new category of commercial trip limits for dolphin 
and wahoo based on a proposed authorized gear exemption for trap, pot, 
and buoy gear. Amendment 10 would allow the harvest and retention of 
500 lb (227 kg), gutted weight, of dolphin and 500 lb (227 kg) of 
wahoo, on board a vessel in the Atlantic EEZ that possesses both an 
Atlantic Dolphin/Wahoo commercial permit and any valid Federal 
commercial permit(s) that allow a vessel to fish using trap, pot, or 
buoy gear or is in compliance with the permitting requirements for the 
spiny lobster of the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic as described at 
50 CFR 622.400, caught by rod and reel while in possession of such gear 
types. The proposed commercial trip limits in Amendment 10 under the 
authorized gear exemption may not be combined with the current 
commercial trip limits for commercially permitted dolphin and wahoo 
vessels. The Council determined that this additional regulatory 
flexibility would have positive economic effects within the fishery 
while also limiting the potential for any unforeseen significant 
increases in commercial landings through the specific setting of the 
500 lb (227 kg), gutted weight, trip limit.

Operator Permits

    Currently, an operator of a vessel with either a commercial permit 
or a charter vessel/headboat permit for dolphin and wahoo is required 
to have an operator permit. Such operator permit must be onboard the 
vessel and the vessel owner is required to have a permitted operator 
onboard the vessel while it is at sea or offloading. This operator 
permit requirement was implemented in 2004, through the original FMP 
for dolphin and wahoo, as a way to assist in law enforcement efforts 
within the fishery by holding the vessel operator accountable for any 
violation of regulations and to aid in data collection (69 FR 30235; 
May 27, 2004).
    Amendment 10 would remove the current requirements for operator 
permits and permitted operators for both the dolphin and wahoo 
commercial and charter vessel/headboat permitted vessels. At the March 
2016 Council meeting, the NMFS Office of Law Enforcement gave a 
presentation on operator permits, and stated that the operator permits 
are not actually used to a large extent by them or their law 
enforcement partners for gathering data, distributing information or 
enforcement. The Council noted that there is some potential value for 
operator permits in aiding law enforcement efforts, but the 
inconsistent requirements between Atlantic fisheries greatly diminishes 
this utility. Public testimony indicated that operator permits are 
rarely checked by enforcement personnel during fishing trips and are 
burdensome for fishermen to renew and maintain. The Council determined 
that the limited use of operator permits in the dolphin and wahoo 
fishery did not outweigh the cost to fishermen to obtain the permit, 
and removing this requirement would yield positive social, economic, 
and administrative benefits.

Recreational Bag and Vessel Limits for Dolphin

    For Atlantic dolphin, the current bag and possession limits are 10 
fish per person, not to exceed 60 fish per vessel, whichever is less, 
except onboard a headboat where the limit is 10 per paying passenger. 
Amendment 10 would decrease the recreational dolphin vessel limit from 
60 fish per vessel to 54 fish per vessel for charter vessels and 
private recreational vessels, excluding headboats, in the Atlantic EEZ. 
The recreational bag limit for private recreational anglers and 
passengers onboard charter vessels and headboats will remain at 10 fish 
per person in the Atlantic EEZ. As a result of the proposed possession 
limit reduction in Amendment 10, the total estimated annual reduction 
in recreational landings is expected to be 114,051 lb (51,733 kg), 
round weight. Data analysis in Amendment 10 demonstrated that most of 
the recreational trips in the Atlantic EEZ targeting dolphin harvested 
less than 10 fish per vessel. Therefore, as a result of the very small 
proportion of recreational trips that might reach the proposed vessel 
limit of 54 fish per vessel, no change in fishing activity or behavior 
is anticipated. The Council noted that one of the goals of the Dolphin 
and Wahoo FMP is to maintain a precautionary approach to management. 
While there is no Southeast Data and Assessment Review stock assessment 
for dolphin and the stock is listed as not overfished or undergoing 
overfishing, the Council heard public testimony, particularly from 
anglers in Florida that dolphin abundance appears to be low and there 
was concern over the health of the dolphin stock and the associated 
fishery. The Council determined a coast-wide reduction in the vessel 
limit was appropriate to maintain consistency of regulations across the 
region in the retention limits for dolphin and noted that such a change 
in retention limits would lead to more substantial harvest reductions 
than a Florida-specific or regional approach.

Goals and Objectives

    The goals and objectives of the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP were 
implemented through the original fishery management plan in 2004 and 
have not been revised since then. In 2016, the Fisheries Allocation 
Review Policy (NMFS Policy Directive 01-119) encouraged the use of 
adaptive management with respect to allocation revisions, and 
recommended periodic re-evaluation and updating of the management goals 
and objectives of any FMP to ensure they are relevant to current 
conditions and needs. Amendment 10 would revise these Dolphin and Wahoo 
FMP goals and objectives in response to the 2016 Fisheries Allocation 
Review Policy and ensure the goals and objectives reflect the current 
dolphin and wahoo fishery. Specifically, the revised goals and 
objectives seek to manage the dolphin and wahoo fishery using a 
precautionary approach that maintains access, minimizes competition, 
preserves the social and economic importance of the fishery, as well as 
promotes research and incorporation of ecosystem considerations where 
practicable.

Proposed Rule for Amendment 10

    A proposed rule to implement Amendment 10 has been drafted. In 
accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, NMFS is evaluating the 
proposed rule for Amendment 10 to determine whether it is consistent 
with the Dolphin and Wahoo FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other 
applicable law. If that determination is affirmative, NMFS will publish 
the proposed rule in the Federal Register for public review and 
comment.

Consideration of Public Comments

    The Council has submitted Amendment 10 for Secretarial review,

[[Page 72916]]

approval, and implementation. Comments on Amendment 10 must be received 
by February 22, 2022. Comments received during the respective comment 
periods, whether specifically directed to Amendment 10 or the proposed 
rule, will be considered by NMFS in the decision to approve, partially 
approve, or disapprove, Amendment 10. All comments received by NMFS on 
the amendment or the proposed rule during their respective comment 
periods will be addressed in the final rule.

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

    Dated: December 17, 2021.
Ngagne Jafnar Gueye,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021-27845 Filed 12-22-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P