Sunday, July 28, 2019

YOU CAN'T CATCH FISH THAT AREN'T THERE


The striped bass debate will hit one of its short-term milestones on August 8.



While, under the management plan, it should be taking both actions right now, we should note that even ending overfishing has become a controversial issue, with some Management Board members arguing that standards should be relaxed in order to allow a higher annual kill and smaller spawning stock biomass.  One of the most vocal proponents of allowing more harvest has been Michael Luisi, a fishery manager from Maryland, who has claimed that

He has also claimed that


“One of the reasons for those impacts to the state of Maryland is the lack of variety of other fish to target.  The charterboat industry has been built around striped bass fishing.  We don’t have the same opportunity given the proximity of Maryland’s portion of the Chesapeake Bay to the ocean.  We don’t have the variety to bring people in.”
He told other members of the Management Board that

“If you’re not catching striped bass you can move on to another species, it is just not available for us…”
It’s an interesting argument, because it underlines something that has become more and more true as a number of recreationally-important fish stocks decline, and some, for all practical purposes, disappear:  You can’t catch fish that aren’t there, and it’s very hard to maintain a viable recreational fishing industry with a shrinking handful of species.

In the long term, a healthy industry depends on healthy fish populations.

Abundance matters.

Yet abundance often seems like a bad word to members of the charter boat fleet, who often show up at hearings to oppose needed regulation and demanding things be kept at the status quo.  At the same time that some charter boat operators are demanding more—or, at the least, not fewer—fish for their customers, their opposition to science-based regulation ignores the effects of dwindling fish stocks on their fleet.

Here in New York, the charter boats striped bass landings declined from nearly 120,000 fish in 2014 to 72,000 fish in 2015, which is understandable given the bag limit reduction in Addendum IV.  But the downhill trend continued after that, while regulations remained the same, dropping to 42,500 fish in 2016, 37,300 fish in 2017 and a mere 13,800 fish last year.  Given the overfished stock and continued overfishing, it’s hard to believe that things won’t keep getting worse unless new regulations reverse the trend and build up bass abundance again.

Yet I’m constantly hearing rumors that much of the industry stands opposed to the 35-inch minimum size (or equivalent slot limit with a 40-inch cap) needed to end overfishing.  If those rumors are true, it seems that the fleet is ready to shoot itself in both feet, and oppose the only action likely to improve stock abundance and give their customers reason to leave the dock.


But that doesn’t tell the whole story.  Take Maryland out of the picture—and remember that Maryland was fishing on the dominant 2011 year class while it was still immature and unavailable to fishermen on the coast—and the numbers tell a different and more truthful tale, with landings going from 267,000 in 2014 to 246,000 in 2015, then to down to 90,000 in 2016, up to 120,000 in 2017 as the 2011s recruited into the fishery, and then back down to just 82,000 in 2018, suggesting that the 2011s might not have as long-lasting impact on the coast as we may have hoped.

Yes, there is a problem with stripers.

So perhaps it is time to take a deeper look at Mr. Luisi’s claim that charter boats along most of the coast have something else to fish for when striped bass become scarce.  Between Maine and North Carolina, the most logical replacement species to look at are probably bluefish, which are often caught along with striped bass, and summer flounder, scup and black sea bass, which form the heart of the region’s “meat” fishery.

The good news is that black sea bass and scup are doing well, with a current biomass well in excess of the target level.  While neither bluefish nor summer flounder have been declared overfished, and neither has yet been found to experiencing overfishing (although the stock assessment update for bluefish, expected to be released in September, ought to be watched in that regard) numbers of both seem to have been falling coastwide, as have charter boat landings.


We also see a robust black sea bass stock, that saw charterboat landings rise sharply from nearly 380,000 in 2014 to 870,000 in 2015, when substantial overfishing occurred in states between New Jersey and New England, but then also stabilize in the mid- to high 200,000s as a new 2016 stock assessment provided regulators with better insights needed to manage the fishery.

On the other hand, both bluefish and summer flounder saw sharp declines in charter boat landings, which are suggestive of a decline in abundance.  

Bluefish landings in the New England/Mid-Atlantic region increased from 310,000 in 2014 to 470,000 in 2015, then dropped sharply, to 155,000 in 2016, 130,000 in 2017, and just 65,000 in 2018, a trend that makes it very clear that bluefish won’t provide much of an alternative to declining striped bass abundance.


So summer flounder don’t seem to be providing striped bass fishermen with another alternative, either.

What we’re seeing seems to be a declining abundance of striped bass, bluefish and summer flounder, with a healthy and stable abundance of black sea bass and scup.

What we’re also seeing is a steady decline in the number of charter boat trips that people are taking in the New England/Mid-Atlantic region.  

For the five year period 2014-2018, that effort has dropped from a high of more than 950,000 trips in 2015 to a low of 455,000 trips—a bit less than half of the trips taken one year before—in 2016, and a seeming stabilization in the low 500,000s.

If I was in the charter boat business, that trend would have me concerned.

While we all know the old saying that “correlation does not necessarily indicate causation,” it’s hard not to believe that a lot more people would be going fishing, and patronizing the charter boat trade, if fish were more abundant.  Because fishing in a depleted ocean isn’t too much fun, and paying a charter boat in order to do so makes less and less sense as the fish disappear.

Thus, you would think that charter boat captains would be some of the most vocal supporters of fisheries conservation, and some—mostly those in the small boat/lighttackle “guide” business—are.  

But the fact is that, throughout the New England/Mid-Atlantic region, far too many in the charter boat business still tell regulators that there are no problems with any fish stocks, and that rules should remain as they are.

I keep hoping for some kind of breakthrough.

I keep telling myself that, one of these days, people will realize that if they want to have a fishing industry, they also need to have fish.

I hope that the striped bass decline will finally force folks to accept the fact that, far from hurting their businesses, good fishery management is the only thing that keeps them alive.  Because, Mr. Luisi’s statements to the contrary, no one will have too much to fish for if we don’t staunch the striped bass decline.


10 comments:

  1. Due to the word limitation on this website, this rebuttal will be split into a few parts.


    Charles…

    Some things just never change when you put your thoughts to the keyboard and it seems these days that we at the NY RFHFA have to conduct a ‘Myth Busters’ discussion as we read through your latest bloviation. For the reader who visits this blog, let’s review five quick low lights which Charles has recently written about to remind everyone about Charles so-called facts….

    1- We debunked the legality of the guide service as far as federal licensing and catch reporting as per the USCG and NOAA regulations.
    2- We exposed the fallacy on Charles using some number as a percentage to show the current size or biomass of the Black Sea Bass stock as this was fact checked the previously year in directly contacting the former MAFMC BSB fishery specialist Brandon Muffley.
    3- We highlighted his so-called concern about the ‘unborn’ fishermen yet supports a governor noted for signing into law the most radical abortion policies in the country.
    4- We asked Charles to send in a public comment concerning improvements to the quality of data and information provided to regulators on the MRIP ‘Recreational Fishing Survey Transition Policy’ and Charles had no time or concern about sending in a comment.
    5- We asked Charles since he pontificates about fairness and equity, to put forward as a MRAC agenda item for a vote for new representation for recreational NYS MRAC advisors and of course he has not (or will not step up and better yet, step down in putting this forward at a MRAC meeting who has exceeded more than 3 – three year terms).

    Next we get to Charles who then goes about a discussion in his latest bloviation on July 28, 2019 in not only telling the charter industry what is best for their business, but in continually emphasizing conservation from this particular mode in the for-hire industry! How pompously aloof one must be and once again we have Charles figuratively “stretching and tightening the regulatory strike zone” to suit his agenda about conservation measures from the for-hire industry when we currently have in NYS these freshwater-like inshore summer fisheries with five or less fish to take home after a day of fishing:
    Striped Bass (1), Weakfish (1), Winter Flounder (0), Black Sea Bass (3 at 15” or greater), Blackfish (0 with either 3 or 4 fish @ 16” or greater during a 75 or so open season in the fall), Fluke (4 @ 19” or greater).

    We also currently had a nature induced phenomena that is noted in most MAFMC and ASMFC staff documents, NEFSC workshop and assessment reports as well as with the feedback from stakeholders during the seasonal Advisory Panel fishery performance meetings on warming waters resulting in north and eastward stock shifting within the whole Mid-Atlantic and New England eco-system. It is part of the reason at this time for the current high abundance of chub mackerel in numbers caught than our traditional summer bluefish, or that there are more Atlantic Bonito off the shorelines of New Jersey and New York than both bluefish and striped bass combined.

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  2. Folks consider what Charles continues to rant about abundance being the primary driver in fishermen going fishing and then do a ‘Back to the Future’ and consider the dark days of summer flounder fishing from the late 1980s through mid-1990s when old time skippers and fishermen would tell stories about the captain who would late in the trip and go about hunting for any fluke to making the minimum legal size to keep in order to settle a pool winner amongst 40, 50, 60 or more customers on their party boat? Remember those times when the Atlantic Highlands party boat fleet was fluke fishing central in New Jersey with Captree and Sheepshead Bay having numerous railed fluke fishing boats during this time period, or is this just some fishing urban legend being repeated here?

    Better yet with Atlantic Codfish and a similar time period where the winter king being caught in any numbers only on special wreck trips taken upon vessels operated by captains with the last name of Kessinger, Forsberg and Bogan?

    One such story directly told to me a few times is from Captain Richie Kessinger who operated his Starstream II and had to switch over from the dismal local cod fishing to multi-burlap bag filling whiting fishing around Ambrose Tower and the fishermen then dragging their bounty of whiting off his boat continually asking Captain Richie, “When are you going to start cod fishing again?” Politely Captain Richie would explain time and again to any customer that would ask that it is pretty tough to even catch ‘a’ codfish a man, and with these trips, at least fishermen could go home with an “abundance” of tasty eating fish.
    Eventually after a few weeks, Captain Richie relented and went back to the dribble pick of cod on his daily wreck trips and the fishermen came down and filled his, Captain Al and other Freeport and Captree party boats during a time where catching ‘a,’ that being either a medium size or ‘steaka-cod’ was akin to hitting the lottery.

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  3. Once again as I have previously written and source documented with the major socio and economic demographic changes over the last two decades not only within New York and Long Island, but expanding through New Jersey and the northeast region. In fact, Newsday just did this again last week. Recreational fishing behavior has changed and to no one’s surprise, and was noted at the MAFMC meetings when this discussion came up and was pointed out with the release of the Super Storm Sandy economic study to ground truth other data streams to get a more accurate perspective on what is being spent, number of registered private boats and how many times people are engaged in recreational fishing activities (unlike diving, cruising or living onboard there vessel tied to the dock)..

    Essentially less people are fishing….fishermen are making fewer trips during a season, young people have other activities that are unrelated to fishing on their own… angler perception on value in paying for a trip to what they can legally bring home has diminished the number of anglers fishing…and worse with fishing forum and socialized media reporting which has created a ‘pulse’ fishing driver mentality in that a growing number of fishermen only go fishing when there is hot bite - not only in the state they reside, but tin traveling and spending their money in other states for a fish they can catch in their own state.

    Charles simply point out that the reason for the troubling issues and regulatory cuts to striped bass is directly pointed out in MRIP reporting as seen in what the private vessel and shore bound mode are estimated to have caught.

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  4. Weren’t you the poster child MRAC advisor who for all too many years defended MRIP data, pontificated on the data at the meetings and even holding a piece of paper up at one winter meeting and stating, “I have the numbers, you can look at them?” Then when the re-calibration rolled out you exclaimed on socialized media that not only me, but others like Captain Monty Hawkins were “100 percent wrong?”

    This is the MRIP data Charles, whether you like it or not, and no spin about looking at PSEs can save you from denying that the reductions should be leveled directly to private vessel and shore bound fishermen where the numbers are so overwhelmingly – damning on what these two modes did to a rebuilt fishery.

    How many times have we heard during fishery meetings the problems when looking back, retrospectively at fishery data and the regulations derived from, and staff as well as councilors and stakeholders pointing out the mistakes made in those regulations as they were a “response to what we knew at that time?”

    We know without any doubt that the private vessel and shore mode sub-sectors never let up in the number of discards and the resulting discard mortality, as well as harvest, and somehow that the small for-hire industry and commercial fishermen who continue to under harvest their quota in this state, has to regulatory-pay for the reductions.

    ‘Sorry Charlie,’ as we have been to this clown-car circus one too many times over the years, especially as we read the contortions you have been doing on the Black Sea Bass fishery as I continue to point to the exact data tables and reference the documents. You have no professional on the water licensing, work activities on deck or involvement with the people in the for-hire industry who could give you “a clue” to what is going on in our waters from those who fish and work on boats for a living. You instead rely upon some search engine for information and then the cherry picking of data as a weak support for your discussion.

    Charles Witek you are the very essence of someone who doesn’t read the clearly labeled sign at the dock before going for a long walk on a short pier, and then has to be fished out of the water. You cannot admit to and direct your angst on the decline of the striped bass biomass issues being directly caused by the private vessel and shore bound mode fishermen. Maybe following and living rule number 6 in Jordan Peterson and his ’12 Rules for Life’ when you type out your future bloviations………..

    “Set your house in perfect order before you criticize the world.”

    In summation, you have spoken about not wanting to come back to the regulatory table on striped bass management, this after the fishery was cut from two fish to one just a few years ago. Charles we are here once again in 2019 and we do know the reason as MRIP estimates point out. We will have and present the data and will point it out.

    Before you are voted off or voluntarily resign from the MRAC, just maybe you can be honest with yourself and leave the MRAC with some modicum of respect from the stakeholders who always attend the meetings in supporting all of the proposed reduction with a size increase being directly applied to the private vessel and shore bound mode.

    What would the odds be that in directly targeting these two modes, private vessel and shore bound mode that the striped bass biomass would start to rebound and rebuild in the coming years?

    Steve EC Newellman
    NY RFHFA
    07.29.19

    Note: All comments made here are posted upon other relevant online websites.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for confirming that I was dead on target when I wrote this blog.

      Every time you enter on your wandering, vapid attacks that target the messenger but not the message, and deal with anecdote rather than fact, I know--and any intelligent reader knows--that I reached the heart of the matter, and that you feel compelled to try to undercut the message by throwing up clouds of smoke.

      It doesn't work, because anyone who reads your responses can easily see that they lack any contradictory fact. No data, no analysis, just noise.

      So feel free to carry on, but understand that if I don't answer you, it's becauwse youj have nothing of value to say. Should you ever respond with hard data, we have the basis for a conversation. But to the extent that you channel your own Kelly Ann Conway, and deal in "alternative facts," you can just keep on entertaining yourself.

      Until the bass meeting is over on August 8, I have too many other people who deal with, people who actually matter and have the abiliry to impact the outcome, for better or worse.

      Time is getting tight, and I have appointments to keep.

      But I will come back to your comments in the event I need a laugh, or get bored.

      Delete
  5. The only thing laughable here is that you continue to lambast the for hire industry when the data clearly shows that private boats, and surf fishermen are clearly responsible for any decline.

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  6. The only thing Charles has an appointment with us a jar of vasoline for the hand he's not using to type these eco terrorist ENGO propaganda blogs. Stick to fleecing Stony Brook your cookies.

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  7. Striped Bass have declined thanks to private boat fishermen and shore bound anglers. You should change gears and start bashing them. Your for hire rants are getting old.

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  8. You should move to Maryland.

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  9. Charles….

    One can understand when you look in any mirror that it brings you back to the reality that you’re not even half the woman that Kelli-Ann is. More so, why attack a woman in a fishery discussion while discussing Alt-facts when a more thoughtful answer would have made mention of Steve Bannon on this subject?

    Nonetheless Charles you again confirmed your smugness to the fishing public while exposing yourself as someone who has little connection to the “on the water fishing industry environment.” What I have pointed out is easily confirmed with a yes or no reply from you as you have made a number of factually inaccurate statements which I pointed out.

    What is there to say at this point Charles as MRIP data stands “as is” for technical and then management purposes? Catch estimates, especially the latest data sets from the new re-calibration has brought us to this point with striped bass with the catch and harvest by the private vessel and shore bound modes. Where is the Alt-facts on the numbers from a data query, as it literally “is what it is,” and in using your own words, “who is killing all the striped bass?”

    You have exposed yourself through your own words and repetitious statements over the years, and you nervously type out about coming to my last rebuttal as a source of humor and a few moments of self-indulgent levity, but anyone who has been around you will indicate that Charles Witek and his demeanor is of a dour, humorless, head hanging low elderly male who has not, nor will ever earn the respect of not only the stakeholders in the room, but from the current MRAC advisors who would like to see ‘YOU’ gone as you have become a distraction.

    How sad for a person who has reached a senior age and one who voluntarily gives their time, but who has been the definitive poster child MRAC advisor for causing economic harm to both the commercial and for-hire industry in New York State over the past two decades. One could even venture to ask if any of the MRAC advisors would want Charles Witek around anymore, and Vegas-odds are set at a sure thing that the vote would be close to unanimous for someone at the East Seatucket Bunker to roll out a Carvel Fudgie the Whale cake and quickly bid you “adieu.”

    Charles I understand that you’re trying as best to wiggle out of this jam you have put yourself in for being exposed as a double-talking and typing individual and who will go off and use a high powered rifle to shoot wild animals without any concern about people like me who believe in the ‘abundance’ of creatures on land such as the warthog, gemsbok, mountain zebra, kudu, springbok and steenbok. Did you get to kill the last three creatures on your exotic outfitter trips? Just asking, but one ventures to wonder about the conservationist Charles claims to be when it comes down to the taking of the heads of nature’s creatures in order for them to be hanging on some wall in your abode instead of living out in nature for everyone, even the future unborn to enjoy.

    We can sum up Charlie Witek at this point with an epitaph of. “Hooray for me, and not for thee…”

    Steve EC Newellman
    NY RFHFA
    O0.30.19

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