I’ve written about it before, but
still become dismayed when fishery managers attempting to address a real
problem seek public comment, and the public comes back with responses that
neither answer the questions the managers ask nor reflect reality.
The public was asked to comment
on the various forms that such additional restrictions might take. Nothing else was on the table.
Yet it was remarkable how many
comments ignored the proposed management measures and instead said things like
“Banning highly technology- assisted [sic]
commercial menhaden fishing, as it is currently practiced out of Reedville
[Virginia], is the only route to [striped bass] recovery…,”
“I would like to know why there is no
reference to the Menhaden Fishery in the bay as a contributing factor to the
health of the striped bass fishery,”
and
“Why is the ASMFC refusing to acknowledge
the effect of the menhaden reduction fishery on the ability of the striped bass
population to rebound? I don’t even
target striped bass anymore where I live in Virginia Beach so you could enact a
total moratorium for all I care. Even a
moratorium on recreational/commercial harvest won’t make a difference though,
the fish need forage to rebound and their forage is being removed. It’s really not that difficult to understand
but it is an inconvenient truth for those that have been bought by Omega and
its subsidiaries, and that’s why we are where we are. Until there is a meaningful change there won’t
be a meaningful recovery, either.”
What is most remarkable about
such comments and the other 90 or so similar missives scattered among the more
substantive comments addressing the issues described in Draft Addendum II—aside
from their complete failure to respond to the questions asked in the Draft
Addendum and their seeming attempt to convince the Atlantic Striped Bass Management
Board to regulate Atlantic Menhaden, something that it has absolutely no power
to do—is the authors’ failure to provide any factual support for their
allegations that a lack of menhaden is the, or at least one of the, primary reasons
for the decline of the striped bass population, despite their absolute
conviction that such is the case.
The simplest explanation for such
lack of supporting data is probably that the claims of a menhaden shortage are
just not true.
After all,
the most recent stock assessment update for Atlantic menhaden found that
“The fishing mortality rate for the
terminal year of 2021 was below the [Ecological Reference Point] target and
threshold and the fecundity [which is used as a proxy for spawning stock
biomass] was above the ERP target and threshold. Therefore, overfishing is not occurring and
the stock is not considered overfished.”
That is particularly relevant to
the debate over the health of the striped bass stock, because the
Ecological Reference Points used to evaluate the Atlantic menhaden population
are directly related to the menhaden’s role as a forage fish, and its ability
to support a fully-recovered striped bass population, for as an overview of the
Atlantic menhaden stock assessment notes, the
“ERP target was defined as the maximum
[fishing mortality rate] on Atlantic menhaden that would sustain striped bass
populations at their biomass target when striped bass were fished at their
[fishing mortality rate] target.”
If the fishing mortality
rate for Atlantic menhaden is below the target rate, as is the case, and if the
fecundity of the Atlantic menhaden stock is above the fecundity target, as is
also the case, then there is, by definition, an adequate supply of menhaden to
support a fully-recovered striped bass population, much less today’s overfished
stock.
Thus, claims that there are too
few menhaden to supply the striped bass population, and that a lack of menhaden
has led to a striped bass decline, are patently false.
However, that evaluation is made
on a coastwide basis. The question of
whether menhaden can be locally depleted, and whether intensive fishing in a single
location might cause ecosystem harm, remains.
That is a recurring question in the Virginia portion of the Chesapeake
Bay, the only such inland waters where the industrial-level harvest of Atlantic
menhaden is still allowed.
Thus, a
recent op-ed in the Daily Press, a Virginia news outlet, included
statements such as,
“Cooke Seafood of Brunswick Canada, and
its wholly owned subsidiary Omega Protein of Reedsville take up to 110 million
pounds on indiscriminately harvested menhaden every year from the Chesapeake
Bay…This practice depletes the Bay of one of the most important fish of the sea—menhaden—a
forage fish striped bass, ospreys and many other species are dependent upon. [emphasis added]”
Yet, once again, we need to ask
the question: Where is the data
supporting such assertion?
However, the state of menhaden
aside, there doesn’t seem to be any evidence that there is too little bait—the catch-all
term anglers often use to refer to forage species—to support the Chesapeake Bay
ecosystem.
“How is the Chesapeake Bay forage base
changing over time, and is there enough food available for key predators?”
It seems that, while anglers and
advocates tend to focus on the large, flashy forage such as menhaden, the fish
tend to focus elsewhere, with the humble polychaete worm, and not the much-touted
menhaden, being the most important forage in the Bay. And the worms are doing pretty well.
As the Forage Status and Trends
Report notes,
“Overall, forage abundance in the
Chesapeake Bay exhibits high interannual variability, although some long-term
trends were identified in the time series.
Abundances of young-of-the-year forage fishes have been relatively low
since the 2000s compared to historic estimates.
Total benthic invertebrate biomass throughout the Chesapeake Bay appears
to be relatively stable, fluctuating around an average, Tand perhaps exhibiting
a slight increase over time. The slight
increase is probably driven by polychaetes, whereas mysid [shrimp] biomass
appears to have declined over time. Diet
analyses determined that polychaetes were the most important prey taxa for a
suite of Chesapeake Bay fish predators, but relative contributions of Atlantic
menhaden and bay anchovy to diets have increased over time. Insects also play a large role in the diet of
resident striped bass in the shallow waters of the Bay tributaries. Total annual consumption by all Chesapeake
Bay predators examined (striped bass, summer flounder, Atlantic croaker, white
perch, weakfish, spot) decreased substantially since 2004, leveling out around
2011.”
Again, there is no suggestion
that there are too few menhaden in the Bay to support the striped bass. Graphs provided elsewhere in the
report illustrate the fact that, in the early 2000s, when striped bass biomass
was reaching its peak, the proportion of Atlantic menhaden consumed by striped
bass, as compared to other forage species, was at its lowest point in the time
series. The importance of menhaden, as a
fraction of total prey consumed, actually increased as the striped bass
declined; today, such importance is at or near its high level at any time in
the current century, a fact that seems to rebut some anglers’ and organizations’
claims that the current state of the striped bass was caused by insufficient
menhaden availability.
A similar pattern can be seen for
an aggregate of all six predator species considered in the Report, with
menhaden constituting a fairly low percentage of overall forage consumed for
most of the time series, before sharply spiking upward, then declining just as quickly,
in the mid-2010s.
So why are menhaden the focus of
so much debate, and why does menhaden receive so much attention in the
press? Part of it undoubtedly stems from
the fact that their big schools, frequently seen splashing across the surface
of the Bay, are a very obvious part of the ecosystem, and draw substantial
public attention. And, because menhaden
are such an obvious forage species compared to, for example, the small and rarely
noticeable polychaete worms, they draw a lot of funding from the big
foundations that finance conservation efforts by a host of non-governmental
organizations.
But even if that is true, why do
I keep harping on the issue? After all,
menhaden conservation is still a good thing, and increasing menhaden numbers
shouldn’t do any harm, either in the Bay or elsewhere along the East Coast.
I do so because
all of the hype about menhaden is providing some people and organizations an argument they can use in their efforts to thwart needed conservation measures for other, truly troubled
species.
“Our members have seen and experienced the
‘peaks and valleys’ of Striped Bass stocks, and are obviously very concerned regarding
the proper management of this fishery for the present and future. The Hi-Mar Striper Club does not
believe that the proposals included in Draft Addendum II will actually help with
the management of Striped Bass to attain ASMFC’s projected stock
rebuilding by 2029…Striped Bass stocks in Chesapeake Bay have been on the
decline for many years due to several factors, including lack of forage fish
(specifically, Menhaden due to the mismanagement of this fishery by
Virginia and Maryland)… [emphasis added]”
A similar sentiment was expressed
by another New Jersey organization, the Jersey Coast Anglers Association, which
commented that
“there are more than enough striped bass
in the [spawning stock biomass] to produce a very good spawn if we get the
right conditions. Further
restricting commercial and recreational fishermen may not do much good. However, one thing you can do is to
eliminate [sic] or reduce the number of menhaden that are netted commercially
in the Chesapeake Bay.
Increasing the number of menhaden would be beneficial to stripers of all
sizes in the bay… [emphasis added]”
Thus, the fallacy of a depleted
menhaden stock continues to haunt the management process, potentially
obstructing meaningful efforts to rebuild the striped bass stock. As we begin to approach the October meeting
of the ASMFC’s Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board, we need to be aware of
such red herring, and of the likelihood that some in both the recreational and
for-hire fisheries will attempt to use it to thwart needed harvest
restrictions.
For that reason alone, it’s
important to spread the word that there are plenty of menhaden on the East
Coast, and sufficient forage in the Chesapeake Bay, to support the striped
bass.
The answer to rebuilding the spawning
stock biomass of striped bass to target levels isn’t increasing menhaden abundance, but
reducing fishing mortality. So it is
today, and so it has always been.
It’s something that everyone
needs to remember when the time to make decisions draws near.
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