Striped bass are arguably the single most important
recreational fish species on the Atlantic Coast of the United States--and probably on any coast of this nation. Last
year, anglers took approximately 15.6 million trips primarily targeting striped
bass, dwarfing the number of trips primarily targeting other popular sport fish
such as summer flounder (9.1 million), red drum (8.9 million), spotted seatrout
(3.9 million), scup (2.8 million), or black sea bass (1.5 million).
Given that fact, one might expect that everyone, and
particularly angler-dependent businesses, would be eager to rebuild the
currently overfished striped bass stock, and to do it as quickly as
possible. However, that has not been the case. There are significant
headwinds hampering the striped bass rebuilding process, being generated in
part by advocates for the commercial fishing industry, but also, illogically,
by individuals who would have much to gain from greater striped bass abundance.
Consider a
letter sent to the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s Atlantic
Striped Bass Management Board in advance of last week’s meeting. Submitted by a Rhode Island charter boat
captain, its contents are...somewhat puzzling.
After a brief introduction, the letter begins
“Regarding Striped Bass management, I am concerned that the
poor recruitment that has been reported over the past several years is being
influenced by management decisions that are designed to protect as much
[spawning stock biomass] as possible. I
would like the board to consider the possibility that the large [spawning stock
biomass] we currently have is actually limiting spawning triggers within the
stock. We have had a variety of
environmental conditions over the past 6 years, yet no real change in the
spawning output. Maybe something else is
in play, like the stock does not feel compelled to spawn due to excessive
[spawning stock biomass] in the water.”
It’s hard to get so much wrong in just one paragraph, but
let’s take things a point at a time.
First, we have to point out that the references to “the
large [spawning stock biomass] we currently have,” and “excessive
[spawning stock biomass] in the water [emphasis added]” are completely divorced
from reality. The
striped bass stock is currently overfished, which means that
far from being “large,” or even “excessive,” the spawning stock biomass has
been badly depleted, and has fallen below the threshold that biologists have
established to better ensure long-term sustainability.
Thus, the assertion that striped bass recruitment failure
could be based on an overly-abundant spawning stock necessarily fails, as it’s
based on a false premise.
But even if that was not the case, a search of the
literature failed to turn up evidence that striped bass spawning is, in any
way, density-dependent, although the
survival and fitness of juvenile striped bass probably is affected by the density of the juvenile population.
But what is really shocking is how that paragraph ends:
“I would ask the board to consider giving a management
strategy that reduces the [spawning stock biomass] a chance. We know a low [spawning stock biomass] can
produce healthy year classes so the risk of testing this hypothesis seems
limited. [emphasis added]”
Let that sink in for a moment. This particular charter boat captain is suggesting that the Management Board abandon its years-long effort to rebuild the overfished striped bass stock, which is finally showing signs of crawling over the biomass threshold and reach the point where it is no longer overfished—but will still be well below its target level—and allow the stock to decline deeper into “overfished” territory, even though that stock has experienced spawning failure in three of its four most important spawning areas—Maryland, Virginia, and the Delaware River—and, if the 2025 data indicates another poor spawn this year, will experience failure in the Hudson River as well.
He justifies such
approach by saying that the stock “can” produce healthy year classes even when
spawning stock biomass is low.
That latter assertion is true.
But there is a big difference between “can” and “will,”
particularly in the face of a changing environment and warming Bay, and
conditions that are not the same as they were the last time a relative handful
of females produced an exceptional spawn.
Which may be why the commenter’s next step was to
effectively discount the importance of the Chesapeake data by claiming that
“the Chesapeake Bay is not as influencing as it was 20 years
ago. In Southern New England, we
regularly see smaller fish from 10-25 inches and I believe they are coming from
other spawning areas. There are good
numbers of fish entering the fishery each year that are not considered in the
current assessment model.”
Of course, what the commenter doesn’t suggest is just where
the fish that he sees might come from, if not from the known spawning
areas. He claims that fish “[enter] the
fishery each year that are not considered in the assessment model,” but doesn’t
explain how he knows that to be true.
Did he, perhaps, perform genetic testing on those fish, to
determine their place of origin? Not
that I know. Or did he, perhaps, conduct
biological surveys in candidate rivers, to determine where those “other
spawning areas” might be? Again, not to
my knowledge.
However, other people have done such things, and their
conclusions should come to no one’s surprise.
Two percent isn’t very much, while the 80 to 88 percent of
the fish being of Chesapeake origin suggest that, contrary to the commenter’s
assertions, the Chesapeake by is still “as influencing as it was
20 years ago.”
If we look at the samples unique to the commenters home
grounds off Rhode Island, we find that, in 2018, 86.8 percent of the Rhode Island bass
sampled were spawned in the Chesapeake, and only 1.6 percent in the Roanoke or
in “unknown” waters. In 2019, the Chesapeake
share increased to 88.8 percent, while the Roanoke/unknown percentage fell to
0.9 percent, very strongly suggesting that the commenter’s assertions have no factual basis at
all.
“I think it is pretty easy to dismiss that striped bass spawn
in the Housatonic or Thames Rivers. The
head of tide extends almost up to the most downstream dams in both systems—there’s
very little freshwater habitat available below those dams—just not suitable spawning
habitat for striped bass.”
Dr. Davis said that striped bass probably do spawn—although perhaps
not every year—in the Connecticut River, as river herring surveys conducted in
that river have come across both juvenile and Year 1 bass, along with females
bearing ripe eggs and males with ripe, flowing milt. However, with respect to both the Connecticut
and other possible, “unknown” spawning sites in the northeast, Dr. Davis observed,
“While I agree that there are coastal rivers where striped
bass spawn where no one is doing a scientific survey to produce annual indices
of [young-of-the-year] relative abundance in those rivers, and therefore
trends in YOY production in those rivers are not incorporated in the
assessment—but—it is not then a logical step to assume there is
some body of striped bass out there on the coast that is somehow “invisible” to
the assessment and therefore the management process. The striped bass spawned in those rivers will
leave those rivers and recruit to the coastal stock—and when they do—they will
be caught by recreational anglers, they will be harvested by commercial
harvesters, and they will be captured by the many scientific surveys operating
along the coast—and all of this information feeds into the assessment to
produce estimates of [spawning stock biomass], fishing mortality, relative
strength of various year classes, etc. It’s
a fallacy to assume that just because we don’t have a YOY survey in a given
river, that somehow the fish produced in that river are never “counted” in the
stock assessment over the course of their lifetimes. [emphasis added]”
So once again, the Rhode Island charter boat operator/commenter
based his position on a false premise.
The problem is that, while he doesn’t seem to grasp, or
doesn’t choose to grasp, generally accepted striped bass science, he is
nonetheless influential, either heading or playing a major role in no less than
two for-hire industry organizations.
Thus, he has substantial opportunity to propagate his erroneous views,
and have them accepted by other members of the for-hire organizations. In addition, he has ready access to, and apparently
the ear of, the fishery managers in his home state, and seems able to convince
them of the need to elevate his and his organizations’ priorities when the
Management Board meets.
Such industry voices, scattered along the coast from
Virginia to Maine, create a substantial headwind, that makes it far more
difficult to convince the Management Board to adopt needed conservation
measures.
Unfortunately, headwinds are also generated by members of
the Management Board itself, who have their own agendas and, more importantly, a vote
that can push their state in the wrong direction, and are typically cast
against the interests of the striped bass and the angling public.
We saw it at last week’s meeting, too, when Maryland fisheries
manager Michael Luisi suggested that anglers might be able to avoid unpopular—and
unenforceable, and probably ineffective—season closures in which even
catch-and-release is outlawed, if they would be willing to lower the biomass
target and threshold—moving the goalposts in, to make it easier to claim that
the stock was fully rebuilt, while not coincidentally increasing the number of
dead fish available to Maryland’s
commercial and for-hire fleets, which Luisi has long done his best to protect,
even if doing so meant taking fish away from Maryland’s anglers.
It
wasn’t the first time that Luisi has tried to get the reference points lowered
to increase the kill, and certainly won’t be the last.
But even before last week’s meeting, we saw Management Board
members’ hostility to striped bass conservation, striped bass anglers, and particularly catch-and-release anglers,
emerge.
“What I’m just looking for is some other way to possibly
interpret this information that would indicate that there is perhaps more
stability in the fishery with regard to recruitment…
“..if you didn’t have some of those super high years, that
recruitment mean would be lower, and maybe you would have a different
interpretation of recruitment…”
So yes, let’s throw all of the better years out of the time
series, and keep all of the bad ones.
Then when we calculate the long-term average, it will be lower, and
maybe current recruitment won’t be below-average any more...
“Obviously, the no-targeting aspect is something that has
generated a lot of discussion amongst people who have for a long time advocated
for conservation at all cost, but are now pulling back from that stance to some
degree, when they are faced with being directly affected by the need for
conservation.”
No, the opposition to no-target closures arises out of the
fact that the Law Enforcement Committee recognizes that they are practically
unenforceable, and has listed them dead-last on a preference list of 27
possible management measures. But
Nowalsky, the same guy who was willing to cook the recruitment books by leaving
out the highest-recruitment years, chose to make it a matter of personal
spite.
Believe it or not, some Management Board members really do
think that way.
And some just seem to believe that recreational fishermen, particularly those who practice catch-and-release, should sit on the bottom rung of management priorities.
Thus, Emerson
Hasbrouck, New York’s Governor’s Appointee, someone who has supported putting
all of the conservation burden on the shoulders of recreational anglers, while
leaving the commercial quota unchanged, and who
actively supports giving for-hire boats special regulations not
available to those fishing from private boats or who fish from shore, also tried
to convince the Management Board to devalue anglers’ comments on Addendum II, saying, at the January 2024 Board meeting,
“For most of the written comments and comments received at
the public hearing. The majority of
those commenters, again written and again at the public meetings, were
recreational fishermen primarily? Is
that correct?..
“However, on our own [Advisory Panel] we have a more balanced
representation between recreational anglers, the for-hire industry and
commercial fishermen, so that provides us with a more balanced
representation. As I recall from [Ms.
Emilie Franke’s] presentation, the [Advisory Panel] and the majority, actually
twice as many, I think, members of the [Advisory Panel] supported Option C [to
give the for-hire fleet special privileges not enjoyed by other anglers] for
the ocean fishery. There was also
overwhelming support for Option, I think it was, Option A, status quo for the
commercial reduction.”
So yes, let’s disregard the public comment with respect to
those options, give the for-hires special privileges that will allow them to
catch more fish, make no reductions in the
commercial quota, and place all of the burden on the shoulders of
the shore-based and private boat anglers, because one, unfortunately stacked, panel said that they wanted things that way.
Having such people sitting on the Management Board creates a
very big headwind, that isn’t easy to overcome.
Still, if we are to rebuild the striped bass stock and manage
it for long-term stability, and—and this is not unimportant, although less
important than conserving the stock—also preserve the interests of recreational
fishermen who, in 2024, were responsible for 84 percent of striped bass fishing
mortality and, here
in New York, accounted for over 99 percent of all directed striped bass fishing
trips, thus generating the lion’s share of the fishery's social and economic benefits, the headwinds must be overcome.
And the only way to do that is putting in the work and the time.
We have to show up at the hearings, and bring others with us, and let the managers know what we think. Grab some friends and offer to buy them a beer after the meeting. Believe me, by then, you'll all need more than one.
If we can’t show up at the hearings, we need to, at a minimum, submit
written comments that protect the bass’ interests, and also our own.
Don't doubt that the headwinds will be fierce, and it will take substantial effort to defeat them. But if enough people face them together, they can be overcome.