Fleet Profiles 412
Fleet Profiles 412
Fleet Profiles 412
Fishing Fleet
Profiles
April 2012
Alaska fisheries are managed to be sustainable and profitable. The fisheries provide jobs for tens of thousands
of fishermen, processors, and those in supply industries, and provide quality products for markets and
consumers. To achieve these goals, federal managers have limited the number of vessels participating in each
fishery, limited the annual catch of every fish stock to scientifically sustainable amounts, established strict
monitoring and enforcement provisions, and regulated how, when, and where fisheries occur to maintain
productive habitats and healthy ecosystems. Understanding how and where the fishing fleets operate, and
predicting how participating vessels would be affected by (and respond to) proposed changes in regulations, is
critical to effective management of the fisheries.
The purpose of this publication is to provide the public with readily available and accessible information about
the fishing fleets prosecuting federally managed fisheries off Alaska. For more information on the
management of these fleets and fisheries, I invite you to visit the North Pacific Fishery Management Council’s
website at www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/npfmc.
David Witherell
Deputy Director, NPFMC
This report was prepared by David Witherell (NPFMC), Michael Fey (PSMFC-AKFIN), and Mark Fina (NPFMC).
About the Cover: The F/T Cape Horn is a vessel in the Amendment 80 fleet, which catches and processes Atka mackerel,
Pacific Ocean Perch, flatfish, and Pacfic cod (Photo credit: SeaAlliance/Alaska Fisheries Science Center). The back cover
image is of the F/T American Dynasty, of the AFA catcher processor fleet, which catches and processes pollock in the
Bering Sea (Photo credit: SeaAlliance/Marine Conservation Alliance).
Acknowledgements: The homeport maps were made by Robert Ames (PSMFC), and the catch by area maps were made
by Steve Lewis (NMFS) and Josh Keaton (NMFS). The report benefitted from review comments from Nicole Kimball, Chris
Oliver, Lew Queirolo, Gretchen Harrington, Jesse Gharrett, Mary Furuness, Tom Pearson, Gwen Herrewig, Jeff Hartman,
Craig Rose, Steve Kasperski, Edward Poulsen, Linda Kozak, Andy Mezirow, Kenny Down, Theresa Peterson, Darius
Kasprzak, Julianne Curry, Jim Hubbard, John Gauvin, Lori Swanson, Julie Bonney, and Paul MacGregor. Many people
generously provided images used in this report including Karla Bush, Julianne Curry, Kenny Down, Tim Evers, John
Henderschedt, Rhoda Hubbard, Darius Kaspazak, Steve Minor, Brent Paine, Melinda Madsen Schmitt, Herman Savikko,
Jeff Stephen, Jim Stone, Justin Wilson, NPFMC staff and others identified in the photo credits.
Table of Contents
Executive Summary ............................................................................ 1
Forward.................................................................................................... 4
Pot Gear
Groundfish Pot Vessels ............................................................................... 51
SeaAlliance/Poulsen
Dredge Gear
Scallop Fleet ................................................................................................ 59
Charters
Andy Mezirow
Common Acronyms
Regulatory Areas
ABC Acceptable Biological Catch
ACL Annual Catch Limit
AFA American Fisheries Act
AI Aleutian Islands
AP Advisory Panel
ADF&G Alaska Department of Fish and Game
AFSC Alaska Fisheries Science Center
BSAI Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
CDQ Community Development Quota
CP Catcher Processor
CV Catcher Vessel
EBS Eastern Bering Sea
ESA Endangered Species Act
F/V Fishing Vessel
FMP Fishery Management Plan
GOA Gulf of Alaska Groundfish Regulatory Areas
GRT Gross Registered Tons
IFQ Individual Fishing Quotas
LLP License Limitation Program
LOA Length Overall
MSA Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation
and Management Act
MSST Minimum Stock Size Threshold
MSY Maximum Sustainable Yield
mt Metric Ton
NMFS National Marine Fisheries Service
NPFMC North Pacific Fishery Management Council
OFL Overfishing Level
POP Pacific ocean perch
PSC Prohibited species catch
QS Quota Share
SAFE Stock Assessment and Fishery Evaluation
SSC Scientific and Statistical Committee Halibut Regulatory Areas
TAC Total allowable catch
Executive Summary
The federally managed fisheries off Alaska are prosecuted by a wide variety of fishing vessels. Vessels participating in the
commercial fisheries range from small skiffs using longlines to catch halibut, to the largest catcher-processors, which catch
and process pollock in the Bering Sea. Vessels participating in the recreational for-hire charter fisheries for halibut range
from smaller nearshore boats to larger party boats and multiday excursion boats.
SablefishIFQFleet
FreezerLongliners
HalibutCDQFleet
LonglineCatcher
AFAMothership
HalibutIFQFleet
GroundfishPot
BSAICrabFleet
NonAFABSAI
WesternGOA
CentralGOA
AFACatcher
AFACatcher
ScallopFleet
Am80fleet
Processors
Trawlers
Trawlers
trawlers
JigFleet
Vessels
Vessels
Fleet
Fleet
Amendment80Fleet 24 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 13 0 0 0 0 0
AFACatcherProcessors 1 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
AFAMothershipFleet 0 0 16 8 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
AFACatcherVessels 0 0 8 83 0 0 0 0 0 19 5 3 0 0 2 0
NonAFABSAITrawlers 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 2 0 6 4 3 0 2 0 1
FreezerLongliners 0 0 0 0 0 39 0 3 0 0 0 5 0 17 1 0
LonglineCatcherVessels 0 0 0 0 0 0 74 2 4 0 0 61 2 43 0 0
GroundfishPotFleet 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 123 0 2 11 53 2 26 31 0
JigFleet 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 77 0 0 13 0 2 0 0
CentralGOATrawlers 10 0 1 19 6 0 0 2 0 53 11 6 0 2 0 0
WesternGOATrawlers 13 1 1 5 4 0 0 11 0 11 42 12 0 4 0 0
HalibutIFQFleet 0 0 0 3 3 5 61 53 13 6 12 1060 19 357 7 0
HalibutCDQFleet 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 19 211 6 0 0
SablefishIFQFleet 0 0 0 0 2 17 43 26 2 2 4 357 6 397 8 0
BSAICrabFleet 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 31 0 0 0 7 0 8 79 1
ScallopFleet 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4
1
For each fleet, we provide data summaries on participating vessels’ length
overall, year built, reported hailing port, and catch. This information is shown as
a series of histograms, and a pie chart of catch composition of participating
vessels. Note that for each fleet, the pie chart includes all catch by the fleet
vessels while participating in all federal fisheries, across all fleets. The adjacent
figures show these data for the 2010 federal managed groundfish and shellfish
fishing fleets, in total.
Although most of the vessels participating in the commercial fisheries were built
in the last 40 years, there are some vessels that were built prior to the Fishery
Conservation and Management Act of 1976. Of these older vessels, some were
converted from other uses, and some had been fishing off Alaska for many years.
A dozen or so of the original wooden halibut schooners from the early 1900’s are
still active in the halibut and sablefish fisheries. Several older vessels that were
converted from other service also participate in the freezer longliner fleet.
Large quantities of fish are caught in the federally managed fisheries off Alaska.
In 2010, the total commercial catch
included 1.5 million metric tons
(3,510,000,000 lbs) of groundfish
(round weight), 32,608 metric tons
of crabs, 25,742 metric tons of
halibut, and 3,095 metric tons of
scallop meats. As shown in the pie
chart, a majority of the total catch
in 2010 was pollock (54%),
Mark Fina, NPFMC
2
$1,300,000,000 to catcher processors (first
wholesale value).
3
Forward
The wide variety of fishing vessels participating in the federal regulated fisheries off Alaska can be grouped into different
fishing fleets based on the fish species they target and the gear used. These fleets have become further defined over time
through licenses and endorsements, eligibility to participate in catch share programs, and other regulations that have affected
fleet composition. The following is a summary of the major license and catch share programs that have shaped the fishing
fleets of Alaska.
Fishing Permits
A federal fisheries permit (FFP) is required for all vessels fishing for
groundfish, halibut, crab, salmon, scallops, and herring, and other
fisheries that are conducted in federal waters and in which operators
are required to retain any bycatch of groundfish. An FFP authorizes a
vessel owner to deploy a vessel to conduct operations in the GOA or
In addition to FFPs issued for vessels, individuals may also be required to obtain other permits for themselves or their vessels
depending upon their operation. For example, in the halibut and sablefish IFQ fisheries, a fishermen must obtain a permit to
harvest IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish; a hired master permit is needed to fish someone else’s IFQ; a registered buyer permit is
needed to receive IFQ halibut, CDQ halibut, or IFQ sablefish; a CDQ group must obtain a halibut CDQ permit; and CDQ
halibut fishermen must obtain a CDQ hired master permit to harvest and land halibut.
License Programs
The growth of the domestic fishing fleet, particularly in Alaska, was promoted by provisions contained in the 1976 passage
of the Fishery Conservation and Management Act (most recently renamed the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act; MSA). By the early 1990s, however, many of these fisheries had reached full capacity, and the fleet could
fully harvest the total allowable annual catches. Competition among vessels participating in target fisheries began to increase
dramatically, and in the mid-1990s, the Council began discussing ways to address overcapacity concerns. A limited entry
license program was proposed, and in 1995, a moratorium on entry of new vessels was implemented to limit speculative
entry into the groundfish and crab fisheries while a more comprehensive program was being developed. The License
Limitation Program (LLP) implemented in 2000 limits access to the federal groundfish and crab fisheries. The LLP
established criteria for issuing licenses to persons, based on fishing history of vessels. The initial criteria for general
qualification were relatively minimal: one landing during a five year
period (1988 – 1992).
GOA, Southeast GOA), and also carry designations for operation type
(catcher processor or catcher vessel), gear (trawl, non-trawl, or both), and
maximum vessel length. Over time, several changes were made to the
program to further pare down the number of qualified vessels by
eliminating unused (latent) licenses. These licenses are required for
4
directed fishing of most federally managed groundfish, and there are four
exceptions to the LLP license requirement: vessels that do not exceed 26
feet in length overall (LOA) in the GOA; vessels that do not exceed 32
feet LOA in the BSAI; vessels that do not exceed 60 feet LOA and that
are using jig gear (but no more than 5 jig machines, one line per
machine, and 15 hooks per line in BSAI or 30 hooks per line in the
GOA) are exempt from the LLP requirements; and, certain vessels
SeaAlliance/AGDB
constructed for, and used exclusively in, CDQ fisheries. Gear
endorsements are required for non-trawl vessels 60’ to participate in the
BSAI fixed gear Pacific cod fishery including hook-and-line catcher
processors, pot catcher processors, hook-and-line catcher vessels, and
pot catcher vessels. Additionally, because the LLP is a federal program,
LLP licenses are not required for participation in fisheries that occur in
the waters of the State of Alaska.
In the BSAI crab license program, in addition to the original qualification requirements, the Council implemented recent
participation requirements to further reduce capacity. To qualify, a vessel must also have made a legal landing of any LLP
crab species between 1996 and February 7, 1998 (with several exemptions to accommodate vessels with a Norton Sound
endorsement, small vessels <60’, as well as transferred, lost or destroyed vessels). With the exception of Norton Sound king
crab and Western Aleutian red king crab fisheries, the LLP program has been superseded by the crab IFQ/IPQ rationalization
program and LLP permits are no longer required.
For the scallop fishery, the Council adopted a vessel moratorium in 1997,
under which 18 vessels qualified for federal moratorium permits to fish
weathervane scallops in federal waters off Alaska. The Council later developed
a Scallop License Limitation Program, which became effective in 2001, to
further limit the number of participants and reduce fishing capacity. A total of
9 licenses were issued, with two licenses restricted to the use of up to two 10-
foot dredges in the statewide fishery (the other 7 licenses are unrestricted and
can use two dredges up to the maximum size regulated which is 15-foot). All
9 licenses allow vessel owners to fish inside Cook Inlet with a single 6-foot
dredge. Vessel length is limited to that of the qualifying period. The scallop
fleet has operated as a voluntary cooperative since 2000.
For the halibut charter fishery in Area 2C and 3A, a limited entry (moratorium)
program was implemented in 2011 to provide stability for the guided sport halibut fishery and decrease the need for
regulatory adjustments to the fishery. Under the program, permits were issued to qualifying individuals or businesses that
documented fishing trips during both a qualifying year (2004 or 2005) and the recent participation year (2008). Charter
halibut business operators are required to have a charter halibut permit on board to fish for halibut, and permit holders are
subject to limits on the number of permits they can hold and on the number of charter boat anglers who can catch and retain
halibut on their charter boats. Permits were also issued to community quota entities representing specific rural communities
in Area 2C and 3A.
5
listed as eligible to participate in the offshore sector, and eligibility
requirements were established for catcher vessels and processing plants to
participate in the inshore sector. The Act included provisions for fishery
cooperatives and also included U.S. ownership requirements and a
permit/vessel buyout.
The BSAI trawl catcher-processors that target species other than pollock were defined as a sector by the U.S. Congress, and a
history-based catch share cooperative program for this fleet was implemented in 2008. The program allocates a portion of the
total allowable catch (TACs) of Atka mackerel, Pacific ocean perch, three flatfish species (yellowfin sole, rock sole, and
flathead sole), and Pacific cod, that are issued to cooperatives as quota share based on member vessel catch history.
The Central GOA Rockfish Program was originally established by the U.S.
Congress as a two year pilot program (2007-08) for managing rockfish trawl
Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers
fisheries, and later extended to 5 years. Under this program, 95% of the TACs for
Pacific ocean perch, northern rockfish, and pelagic shelf rockfish, as well as
allocation of valuable secondary species (sablefish, Pacific cod, and thornyhead,
shortraker, and rougheye rockfish), are allocated to cooperatives based on
members’ catch history. The Council developed a modified rockfish program for
implementation in 2012.
The Western Alaska CDQ Program was established in 1992, as a provision to the
inshore/offshore pollock allocation. The program allocated 7.5% of the BSAI
pollock TAC to 6 regional non-profit corporations (CDQ groups) representing 56 coastal western Alaska communities. The
CDQ program was later expanded to include allocations or halibut, groundfish, and crab; to include 65 communities on the
Bering Sea coast; and institutionalized in the MSA. A number of vessels participating in Bering Sea fisheries are either
partially or wholly owned by CDQ groups. The CDQ halibut allocation, in particular, has allowed the development of a small
vessel longline fleet in several BSAI coastal communities.
Other Regulations
Other management measures have affected the makeup of the fleets. In 1990, a groundfish observer program was
implemented that required on-board observer coverage based on vessel length, with vessels 60-125’ LOA required to have
30% observer coverage, and vessels >125’ required to have 100% observer coverage. Vessels < 60’ do not presently require
an observer. Because each vessel must pay its own observer costs, many of the newer vessels were built to avoid or minimize
this cost by having a LOA of just under 60’ or 125’. A restructured observer program, which will be in effect in 2013,
eliminates the coverage requirements by length, as well as the individual vessel payment for coverage, thereby removing
incentives to build replacement vessels to limited lengths. It also includes groundfish vessels <60’ and commercial halibut
vessels, both of which are excluded from coverage under the existing program.
A Community Quota Entity (CQE) program was implemented in 2004 to provide 42 small, remote communities in the GOA
with long-term access to the halibut and sablefish fisheries through the ability to form a non-profit entity to purchase GOA
catcher vessel QS and lease it to community residents. CQEs in total are allowed to purchase up to 21% of the halibut QS and
21% of the sablefish QS in each Gulf area. Since implementation of the CQE program, the Council has extended the program
by authorizing the issuance of Pacific cod LLPs for eligible CQEs that request them, expanding the list of eligible CQE
communities to 45, and authorizing the issuance of halibut charter permits to 18 CQEs in Area 2C (up to four permits per
community) and 14 CQEs in Area 3A (up to seven permits per community). A community charter halibut permit issued to a
CQE is non-transferable, and has an angler endorsement of six. There are 21 eligible communities in the Western and Central
GOA that can request a limited number of nontransferable Pacific cod endorsed LLP licenses (85 LLPs in total), endorsed for
hook-and-line or pot gear, with a maximum length of 60 feet. Once the community entity receives the LLP license, the
community entity can assign that LLP license for use on a vessel designated by the entity. The CQE concept was more
recently expanded to include a similar program for eligible communities in Area 4B (i.e, Adak).
6
AFA Catcher Vessel Fleet
Prohibited species catch (PSC) sideboard allowances have also been established. AFA
catcher vessels have a PSC sideboard limit of 410 mt of halibut in the GOA. That
equates to 20.5 percent of the GOA trawl apportionment of halibut PSC.
The prohibited species catch of Chinook salmon and chum salmon in the
7
AFA Catcher Vessel Fleet
pollock fisheries has been a major issue for the fleet and users of
the salmon resource, and numerous regulations and voluntary
measures have been implemented over the years to limit the catch
Gear Used: All vessels in the AFA fleet target pollock with pelagic
otter trawls. To achieve large net openings with a minimum of
drag, the mesh sizes are very large, and twine size is relatively
small. The trawl nets have meshes in the front end as large as 32 m
to 64 m (105’ to 210’) and typically have a headrope to footrope
vertical distance rise of 10 fathoms to 30 fathoms (60’ to 180’). The
size of the gear used is dependent on the size and horsepower of
the vessel, such that the larger and more powerful vessels tow the
larger trawls. Net mesh gets smaller towards the intermediate and
codend, with the codend typically having 4” to 4.5” stretched
mesh. Otter boards (or doors), which are used to spread the net
and keep it open during towing, are made of steel and range in
size from 5 m2 to 14 m2. In the pelagic fishery the doors do not
8
AFA Catcher Vessel Fleet
haulback, the setting procedure is reversed, and the codend is dumped into the
fish-hold below decks. Catcher vessels delivering to the inshore sector have
Maria Shawback, NPFMC
traditionally fished the area north of Unimak Island during the A-season,
venturing further north along the shelf break during the B-season.
Vessels: This fleet primarily targets pollock in the Bering Sea. Several vessels
also participate in other groundfish and crab fisheries to the extent they are
authorized to do so under the AFA provisions and sideboards
Economics: For the fleet’s primary target, BSAI pollock, the estimated gross ex-
vessel value in 2010 was $133.6M. This was a decrease of $19.8M from 2009,
below the five year high in 2008 of $197.6M. AFA catcher vessels deliver whole
fish to the processing plants, who then convert the landings to a range of
product that typically includes fillets, surimi, roe, minced fish, and fish meal.
The fleet delivered 90% of its primary target to Dutch Harbor and Akutan. The
2010 average ex-vessel price per pound was 15.5₵, a decrease of 2.4₵ from the
Peggy Kircher, NPFMC
9
AFA Catcher Vessel Fleet
Year Built
30
20
10
0
Length
Peggy Kircher, NPFMC
Diana Stram, NPFMC
40
30
20
10
0
30-59 60-89 90-124 125-200
10
AFA Catcher Vessel Fleet
AFA Catcher Processor Fleet
Fishery Management: As previously noted, the AFA allocates the BSAI pollock TAC among sectors.
The CDQ Program allocation of the BSAI pollock total allowable catch increased from 7.5% to 10%.
The remaining pollock quota is allocated as follows: 50% to the inshore sector (catcher vessels
delivering onshore), 40% to the offshore (catcher processors), and 10% to motherships. Further, not
less than 8.5% of the catcher processors’ directed allocation is available to the 7 eligible catcher vessels
in the catcher processor sector (to date, however, all of the catcher vessels have leased all of their
harvest rights back to the catcher processors and have not fished for BSAI pollock).
Sideboards prevent the fleet from impacting participants in other fisheries. The 20 catcher processors
listed in the Act are prohibited from harvesting any GOA groundfish. In the Bering Sea, AFA catcher
processors are allowed to harvest no more than their “traditional catch” levels in the non-pollock
BSAI groundfish fisheries. The Council has generally defined traditional catch to be the retained catch
in 1995-97 from all fisheries by the 29 active and ineligible catcher processors listed in the Act, relative
to the total catch.
The AFA catcher processor fleet is also sideboarded by PSC limit amounts, based on the percentage
of PSC limits used from 1995 through1997. Specifically, AFA catcher processors are capped at 8.4
percent of the halibut PSC, 15.3 percent of the opilio PSC, 14.0
percent of the bairdi in Zone 1, and 5.0 percent of the Zone 2
bairdi crab PSC each year.
Gear Used: All vessels in this sector use pelagic trawls, with
the catcher processors generally using larger gear than many
catcher vessels. The trawl gear used has meshes in the front
end as large as 32 m to 64 m (105’ to 210’) and typically has a
11
AFA Catcher Processor Fleet
headrope to footrope vertical distance rise of 10 fathoms to 30 fathoms (60’ to 180’). Net mesh gets
smaller towards the intermediate and codend, with the codend typically having 4”to 4.5” stretched
mesh. Doors are made of steel and range in size from 5 m2 to 14 m2. Door spread in most fishing
depths ranges from 100 m to 180 m (328’ to 590’), and
trawl warp/scope to depth ratio is typically 3 to 1. Long
wire rope bridles attach the net to the doors, which
remain off the bottom. Contact with the seafloor is from
weight clumps and the footrope. Unlike other groundfish
trawl fisheries, there are no discs attached to the
footropes on these trawls. Footropes typically extend 180
m to 450 m.
Vessels: Of the 21 AFA qualified catcher processor vessels, 15 vessels actively fished in 2010, as
determined by landing targeted and processed pollock, by a vessel holding an AFA permit. One
vessel, the F/V Ocean Peace, is also listed in the Amendment 80 fleet and the Western GOA trawl fleet
and is also active in those fisheries.Economics: The first wholesale value of the fleet’s primary target,
pollock in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, was $495.7M in 2010. This was an increase of $25.7M
from 2009, but was below the five year high in 2008 of $591.7M. Fillets were the primary product,
accounting for 43% of these revenues. Surimi was the second most valuable product, followed by
roe. Roe was valued at $51.8M in 2010 for the fleet, the lowest value in the preceeding five years and
less than half the five year average. Roe was the highest priced product, at $3.52 a pound followed
by fillets and surimi, both at approximately $1.75. The average price per pound for all products was
$1.58.
Distribution of pollock catch in the A-season (left) and B-season (right) in 2011, all sectors combined. Source: NMFS.
12
AFA Catcher Processor Fleet
At Sea Processors Association Herman Savikko, ADF&G At Sea Processors Association
13
At Sea Processors Association At Sea Processors Association
At Sea Processors Association
Length
15
10
0
200+
At Sea Processors Association
Hailing Port
15
10
0
Vessels active in the
AFA catcher
processor fleet, 2010.
Alaska Ocean
American Dynasty
American Triumph
Arctic Fjord
0% Catch by Weight
Arctic Storm 2%
Island Enterprise 0% Atka Mackerel
0% 10%
Kodiak Enterprises 1% Flatfish
0%
At Sea Processors Association
14
AFA Catcher Processor Fleet
AFA Mothership Fleet
The actual catching of the fish with the trawl is the same as
described for the AFA catcher vessel fleet. The difference is
that once the catcher vessel has a full codend, the vessel will
tow the codend to the mothership for transfer, unloading, and
processing of the catch.
John Hendershedt
15
AFA Mothership Fleet
harvesting fish in the inshore sector. However, these dual qualified vessels
fish under the mothership sector groundfish and PSC sideboards in the BSAI
Pacific cod fishery, and fish under the inshore sideboards in other groundfish Year Built
fisheries. Of the 16 catcher vessels delivering pollock to motherships in 2010,
eight also participated in the AFA inshore fleet, one vessel in the Western 10
GOA trawl fisheries and one in the Central GOA trawl fisheries. One of the
three motherships was not active 5
in 2010.
0
Economics: The fleet’s primary
target, pollock in the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands, had a gross
ex-vessel value of $32.0M in 2010.
John Hendershedt
Hailing Port
Vessels active in the 15
AFA Mothership fleet,
10
2010.
5
Motherships: 0
Golden Alaska
Ocean Phoenix
Catcher Vessels:
Aleutian Challenger
American Beauty
Mick Stevens
California Horizon
Forum Star
Mark 1
Misty Dawn 0% Catch
0%
by Weight
Muir Milach 0% 0% 2% Atka Mackerel
Nordic Fury 0% 0% Flatfish
5%
Ocean Leader Other
Oceanic Pacific Cod
Pacific Challenger
Pollock
Pacific Fury
Traveler Rockfish
Vanguard Sablefish
93%
Jay Orr, AFSC
Vesteraalen Shellfish
Western Dawn Halibut
16
AFA Mothership Fleet
Non-AFA Bering Sea Trawlers
Fishery Management: Vessels in this fleet harvest primarily Pacific cod under the limited entry,
License Limitation Program. To protect this fleet from encroachment by AFA trawl catcher vessels,
the Council adopted a suite of catcher vessel sideboard limits. Sideboards are based on landed catch
and managed through directed fishing closures. Exempt from Pacific cod sideboards are AFA catcher
vessels less 125’ LOA whose annual BSAI pollock landings averaged less than 5,100 metric tons from
1995-1997, and that made 30 or more landings of BSAI Pacific cod during that time period. In
addition, AFA catcher vessels with mothership endorsements are exempt from Pacific cod sideboard
closures after March 1 of each year. The sideboard limit, 86.09% of the TAC, is based on the retained
catch of AFA catcher vessels of Pacific cod from 1995-1997, divided by the available TAC over the
same period.
17
Non-AFA Bering Sea Trawlers
along the length of the codend to counteract the weight of the steel
components. Container lines around the circumference are attached along
the length of the codend to restrict the expansion of the netting, prevent Year Built
damage and allow the codend to be hauled up a stern ramp. Sacrificial 4
chafing gear, typically polyethylene fiber, is attached to the codend to
3
protect it from abrasion from contact with the stern ramp and the seafloor.
2
Sweeps are made of wire or combination rope, and may be threeaded with
rubber disks ranging from 4 to 8 inches in diameter. Footropes, constructed 1
of chain or steel cable, typically extend 100’ to 200’ and are threaded with 0
rubber discs and larger bobbins, which are 8” to 18” in diameter and are
designed to roll along the bottom to limit contact with the bottom and
protect the net. The larger diameter bobbins are spaced at intervals of 12” to
48”.
Length
Vessels: In 2010, the non AFA BSAI Trawl fleet had 1 catcher processor and
5
12 catcher vessels active in the fishery. About half of the vessels also
4
participate in WGOA and CGOA trawl fisheries.
3
2
Economics: The fleet’s primary target, Pacific cod in the Bering Sea and
1
Aleutian Islands, had a combined wholesale and ex-vessel value of $8.1M.
0
The catcher vessel portion of the fleet delivered 57% of its primary target to 30-59 60-89 90-124 125-200 200+
Akutan and Dutch Harbor processors. The average gross ex-vessel price
per pound for Pacific cod was 23.4₵, a decrease of 1.1₵ from the prior year.
Hailing Port
6
4
Jim Stone, Alaska Scallop Assn.
Vessels active in
the Non- AFA
BSAI trawl fleet,
2010.
Advancer
Cape Reliant 1% Catch by Weight
Equinox
1% 1% 0%
Icy Mist 4% Atka Mackerel
Katie Ann
Lone Star 3% Flatfish
14%
Marauder Other
Miss Leona 29%
Pacific Cod
Northwest
Mark Fina, NPFMC
Explorer Pollock
47%
Ocean Harvester Rockfish
Ocean Hunter
Pacific Star Sablefish
Windjammer
18
Non-AFA Bering Sea Trawlers
Amendment 80 Fleet
SeaAlliance/AFSC
Discarding had long been a management
concern for this fleet. Historically, in the
multi-species flatfish fisheries, the lower
valued fish (less valuable species, smaller
fish, and fish without roe) were discarded,
and only the more valuable fish retained.
Vessels did not have meal plants to accommodate fish that were discarded at sea. The race for fish
exacerbated this economic discarding as less valuable fish used up processing time and limited
freezer space. To address these discards, the Council required full retention of pollock and Pacific
cod, and a minimum groundfish retention standard of 85%, which was later dropped due to non-
enforceability and the fleet achieving a retention rate higher than the standard once operating under
a cooperative program.
To provide the tools for the fleet to increase retention, the Council initiated development of
cooperatives in October 2002, and took final action to adopt the program in June 2006, as Amendment
80 to the BSAI Groundfish FMP. Prior to final action, participation in these fisheries was defined by
Congress in Section 219 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005, thus defining the sector and
the participants in the Amendment 80 program. To qualify, a vessel must have been a non-AFA trawl
catcher processor, be assigned a valid license limitation permit (LLP) with a BSAI catcher processor
endorsement, and have processed more than 150 mt of groundfish (other than pollock) during the
period 1997-2002. A total of 28 vessels met this qualification.
19
Amendment 80 Fleet
Amendment 80 limited access sector), and must compete with each other for catch and PSC.
Allocations of target species to the Amendment 80 sector are as follows:
Yellowfin sole (up to 93% of the TAC, depending on overall TAC)
Rock sole (100%)
Flathead sole (100%)
Atka mackerel (90% - 100% of the TAC depending on sub- area)
Aleutian Islands Pacific ocean perch (90% - 98% depending on sub-area)
Subsequent to the adoption of Amendment 80, the sector was specifically allocated 13.4% of the BSAI
Pacific cod TAC, after CDQ apportionment. Beginning in 2012, trawl catcher processors are allocated
2.4% of the Western GOA Pacific cod TAC and 4.2% of the Central GOA Pacific cod TAC.
Allotment of halibut and crab PSC are made to the Amendment 80 sector and the BSAI trawl limited
access sector. For the Amendment 80 sector, PSC limits are reduced annually over the first 5 years
following implementation, down to 2,235 mt in 2012 (An additional 875 mt is apportioned to the
BSAI trawl limited access sector and 326 mt for trawl CDQ). In 2010, 2,425 mt of halibut PSC was
assigned to the Amendment 80 sector, which was further sub-allocated to Amendment 80
cooperatives as PSC CQ and to the Amendment 80 limited access fishery. PSC CQ assigned to
Amendment 80 cooperatives is not allocated to specific fishery categories. The PSC allocations
between Amendment 80 cooperatives and the Amendment 80 limited access sector are not known
until eligible participants apply for participation in the program by November 1 each year.
20
Amendment 80 Fleet
The flatfish fishery uses a two-seam or four-
seam trawl with a relatively low vertical
opening (typically 1 fathom to 3 fathoms). Nets
are made of polyethylene netting, with codends
and intermediates using 5.5” to 8” mesh in
square or diamond configuration. Trawl
codends are usually made with polyethylene
netting attached to four longitudinal riblines.
The riblines are typically chain, wire, or
synthetic rope. Floats are attached along the
length of the codend to counteract the weight of
the steel components. Container lines around
the circumference are attached along the length
of the codend to restrict the expansion of the
netting, prevent damage and allow the codend
to be hauled up a stern ramp. Sacrificial chafing
gear, typically polyethylene fiber, is attached to
the codend to protect it from abrasion on the
Distribution of flatfish species caught by trawl gear in the BSAI, 2011. Source: NMFS.
stern ramp and contact with the seafloor. Steel
trawl doors ranging in size from 5 m2 to 11 m2 spread the nets horizontally. Some vessels use off-
bottom doors. The door spread varies with fishing depth and rigging style, but generally ranges from
40 m to 200 m (131’ to 656’). The rigging between the net and the doors includes bridles and sweeps
(mudgear), ranging in length from 30 m to 400 m (98’ to 1,312’), which herd fish into the path of the
trawl. Sweeps are made of steel cable or synthetic combination rope with bobbins to lift the sweep off
the bottom. Footropes keep the front of the net off the bottom to protect it from damage. They are
made of rubber disks or bobbins strung on chain or wire, with large diameter (12”-24”) disks or
bobbins separated by 18”-48” long sections of smaller disks (4”-8” diameter). Bobbins are mostly
rubber, but sometimes are hollow steel balls designed to roll along the seabed. A design objective for
flatfish nets is to herd fish into the net with minimum bottom contact, reducing gear damage and
drag and maintaining fish quality by keeping sand out of the catch.
The rockfish and Atka mackerel fisheries are prosecuted with bottom trawls rigged to fish over
rougher substrates. The gear used is a four-seam otter trawl with a headrope to footrope vertical
distance rise of about 1 fathom to 4 fathoms for mackerel and 4 to 6 fathoms for rockfish. Nets are
made of polyethylene. Net mesh is 8-inch diamond in the wings and forward belly and 5.5” diamond
in the intermediate and codend. Double meshes may be used in the codend, which is equipped with
chafing gear. Doors are made of steel and range in size from 6.5 m2 to 12 m2. The door spread in most
fishing depths and trawl warp/scope combinations is typically 45 m to 50 m (148’ to 164’). Bridles are
made of steel cable and are generally 90’ long on each side.
Atka mackerel nets use footropes equipped with tire gear,
large disk tires (24” diameter airplane tires), 21” discs or
bobbins, or a combination of these. Footropes typically extend
100’ to 200’, plus an additional 40-foot extension from net
wing ends on both sides. Steel cable and chain used for the
SeaAlliance/AFSC
21
Amendment 80 Fleet
around depth contours, and to avoid locations of known hangs and fixed
gear. At haulback, the setting procedure is reversed, and the codend is
Year Built
unloaded into the fish-hold below deck. Because rockfish and mackerel are
fished over rough bottom adjacent to areas with large potential for hangs in 15
some areas, the net is usually fished with very short scope (the ratio of warp
10
to towing depth) to minimize contact with the substrate and to allow the net
to be lifted quickly if a hangup is sighted. 5
0
Vessels: Of the 24 Amendment 80 catcher processor vessels participating in
Amendment 80 fisheries in 2010, 12 vessels also participated in Western GOA
trawl fisheries and 10 in Central GOA trawl fisheries. One vessel participates
as an AFA catcher processor for pollock.
Length
Economics: The primary targets for this fleet are Pacific cod, flatfish, Atka
10
mackerel, and rockfish, with a 2010 wholesale value of $278.2M. This was an
8
increase of $52.4M from the preceding year, yet below the five year high in
6
2008 of $319.1M. Over 50% of the total value was derived from Atka
4
mackerel and yellowfin sole. The average price per pound was 70.0₵ (all
2
targets combined), with the highest price per pound from rockfish and
0
Greenland turbot. Over 96% was processed as headed and gutted product. 60-89 90-124 125-200 200+
Much of the production is frozen at sea for transhipment to China, Korea,
and Japan for reprocessing or consumption.
Alaska Spirit
Alaska Victory
Alaska Warrior
American No. 1
Arica
Cape Horn
Constellation
Defender
Enterprise
Epic Explorer
Catch by Weight
Golden Fleece 0% Atka Mackerel
Legacy 0% 0% Flatfish
Ocean Alaska 5% Other
Ocean Cape 9% 18%
8% Pacific Cod
Ocean Peace
Rebecca Irene 2% Pollock
Sandra Lowe, AFSC
Seafisher Rockfish
Seafreeze Alaska Sablefish
U S Intrepid 58%
Shellfish
Unimak
Halibut
Vaerdal
22
Amendment 80 Fleet
Western GOA Trawlers
Justin Wilson
operation type (catcher processor or catcher
vessel), gear (trawl and/or fixed gear), and
maximum vessel length. The LLP thus established
separate categories of vessels based on these
characteristics. Since the program was first established, many trawl and fixed gear groundfish
licenses were inactive, or ‘latent’. In 2008, the Council took final action on amendments to remove
latent trawl licenses, to prevent their future re-entry into the groundfish fisheries. The Council’s
action removed the area endorsements (excluding Southeast GOA) from trawl catcher vessel and
catcher processor licenses, if the license did not meet the harvest threshold of two groundfish
landings during 2000 – 2006. This action, which became effective in
September 2009, further defined the Western GOA trawl sector.
TAC, with 72.3% apportioned to the A season and 27.7% to the B season.
Beginning in 2012, trawl catcher processors are allocated 2.4% of the
Western GOA Pacific cod TAC.
Gear Used: The fleet consists of small catcher vessels and large catcher
processors. The smaller vessels generally use smaller sized bottom
trawls that take less horsepower to tow. The fleet fishes for a wide
variety of species, with targets varying across seasons. The catcher
vessels begin the year by targeting Pacific cod, moving on to catch
pollock, then other species. Several of the Amendment 80 vessels also
participate in the Western GOA fisheries, targeting flatfish, Pacific cod,
and rockfish using the same gear they use in the Bering Sea.
The Pacific cod bottom trawl fishery in the GOA takes place throughout
Karla Bush, ADF&G
the eastern portion of the Western GOA, with effort concentrated to the
east of Sanak Island. Pacific cod tend to aggregate in areas with sand,
sandy mud, cobble, and gravel, at depths of 100’ to 600’. The fisheries for
23
Western GOA Trawlers
northern rockfish and Pacific ocean perch are prosecuted in much deeper water,
along the upper slope. Year Built
15
Vessels: The smaller catcher vessels in this fleet participate in many other
fisheries and can switch out trawl gear to allow vessels to use longlines in halibut 10
and groundfish fisheries, or pot gear in groundfish and crab fisheries, or seine
5
gear for salmon. The catcher processors in the fleet are Amendment 80 vessels.
0
Economics: The fleet’s primary targets (flatfish, Pacific cod, pollock, and rockfish
in the Western GOA) had a combined value of $20.5M in 2010; gross ex-vessel
value was $13.6M (catcher vessels) and wholesale value was $7.7M (catcher
processors). Catcher processors in the fleet produced 92% headed and gutted
products, with the remaining 8% as whole fish. The catcher vessel portion of the Length
fleet delivered 85% of its Western GOA groundfish catch to Sand Point and King 25
Cove. The average ex-vessel price per pound (all targets combined), was 16.3₵, a 20
decrease of 1.8₵ from the prior year and 4.1₵ below the five year average. The 15
wholesale value was 95.3₵ per pound, an increase of 13.7₵ from the previous 10
year and above the five year average by 4.2₵. Rockfish was the most valuable 5
species on a per pound basis for the catcher processors and catcher vessels. 0
30-59 60-89 90-124 125-200 200+
46%
Shawna-Rae Shellfish
Temptation 2%
Halibut
Tern
24
Western GOA Trawlers
Central GOA Trawlers
Fishery Management: The Central GOA trawl fisheries are generally regulated by target species
TACs and seasons, and seasonal releases of halibut PSC limits. With the exception of the rationalized
rockfish fishery, these vessels race for TAC and PSC in a derby style fishery. Most vessels participate
in the Central GOA pollock fisheries when the A-season opens on January 20. Vessels then target
Pacific cod, followed by flatfish, rockfish, and other seasonal releases of pollock and Pacific cod TAC.
The 2,000 mt GOA trawl halibut PSC limit is apportioned among seasons, and further apportioned
among target fisheries for shallow-water stocks (pollock, Pacific cod, shallow-water flatfish, flathead
sole, Atka mackerel, skates, and other species) and deep-water stocks (sablefish, rockfish, deep-water
flatfish, rex sole, and arrowtooth flounder). These apportionments are shared by all trawl fisheries in
the GOA, at times exacerbating the race for fish, as the effects of PSC usage is realized across all
management areas of the GOA.
Beginning in 2012, the apportionment of Central GOA Pacific cod to trawl catcher vessels was 41.6%
of the Central GOA Pacific cod TAC, with 50.8% apportioned to the A season, and 49.2% to the B
season. Beginning in 2012, trawl catcher processors are allocated 4.2% of the Central GOA Pacific cod
TAC.
Gear Used: Central GOA trawl vessels change their gear depending upon the target fishery being
prosecuted. When fishing pollock, most of the fleet uses large mesh mid-water trawls. Pelagic trawls
typically have a headrope to footrope vertical distance rise of 20 fathoms and a horizontal opening of
40 fathoms (wing-end spread of 60 fathoms) for vessels with an average 1,000 hp. Front meshes of
large mid-water nets may be as large as 120 feet. Net mesh gets smaller towards the intermediate and
codend, with the codend typically having 5-inch stretched mesh. Doors are made of steel and range
in size from 3 m2 up to 7 m2. Door spread in most fishing depths and trawl warp/scope combinations
is typically 100 m to 180 m. There are no discs attached to the footropes on pelagic trawls. Trawls may
be fitted with sonar systems designed to monitor net performance remotely. These third wire systems
may improve catching efficiency and help vessel operators avoid net damage.
25
Central GOA Trawlers
The slope rockfish fishery is prosecuted by bottom and
pelagic trawls. Mid-water configuration is similar to the
pelagic pollock net configuration, but the nets are smaller.
Bottom trawls used in this fishery are rigged to fish over
rougher substrates. The gear used is a four-seam otter
trawl with a headrope to footrope vertical distance rise of
about 4 fathoms to 6 fathoms (24’ to 36’). Nets are made of
polyethylene. Net mesh is 8” diamond in the wings and
forward belly and 5.5” diamond in the intermediate and
codend. Double meshes may be used in the codend, which
26
Central GOA Trawlers
The pollock trawl fishery in the GOA Year Built
operates all around Kodiak Island, with
25
effort concentrated on the southern side
20
of Kodiak, off Cape Chiniak. Pollock tend
15
to aggregate in large groups, and the
10
fishery generally occurs in areas with
5
sand, sandy silt, muddy bottom, and
0
pelagic over hard rocky bottoms at
depths of 20 fathoms to 250 fathoms.
The trawl fishery for slope rockfish occurs all along the slope areas of the GOA. The Pacific ocean
perch fishery occurs over sand, gravel, and mud in 90 fathoms to 200 fathoms. The northern and
pelagic shelf rockfish fisheries occur over rock, gravel, and hard sand at depths of 40 fathoms to 80
fathoms. The Pacific cod trawl fishery occurs south and east of Kodiak Island. Pacific cod tend to
aggregate in areas with sand, sandy mud, cobble, and gravel, at depths of 20 fathoms to 100 fathoms.
Vessels: The Central GOA trawl fleet had 10 catcher processors (Amendment 80 vessels) and 43
catcher vessels participating in 2010. Many of the vessels also participate in other fleets including 19
in the AFA catcher vessel fleet, 11 in the Western GOA trawl fleet, and a few in other fleets using
longline or pot gear.
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
Diana Evans, NPFMC
27
Central GOA Trawlers
Economics: The fleet’s primary targets (flatfish, Pacific cod, pollock, and
rockfish in the Cental GOA) had a combined value of $48.2M in 2010, gross ex- Year Built
vessel value was $31.8M and wholesale value was $16.4M. Catcher processors 25
in the fleet produced 64% head and gut with the remaining 36% as whole fish. 20
The catcher vessels delivered 97% of its primary target to Kodiak. The 15
average ex-vessel price per pound (all targets combined), was 16.0₵, an 10
increase of 2.0₵ from the prior year and .1₵ above the five year average. The 5
wholesale value was 81.8₵ per pound, an increase of 6.5₵ from the previous 0
year and below the five year average by 1.9₵. Pacific cod was the most
valuable species on a per pound basis for the catcher processors and catcher
vessels.
Length
30
25
20
15
10
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
Hailing Port
20
15
Vessels active in the CGOA trawl fleet, 2010. 10
5
Catcher Vessels Catcher Processors
0
Alaskan Lisa Melinda Alaska Spirit
Bay Islander Lone Star Alaska Victory
Cape Kiwanda Mar Del Norte American No. 1
Cape Reliant Mar Pacifico Golden Fleece
Caravelle Marathon Legacy
Chellissa Marcy J Ocean Alaska
Coho Michelle Renee Seafisher
Collier Brothers Miss Leona U. S. Intrepid
Columbia Miss Sarah Unimak
Dawn New Life Vaerdal
0% Catch by Weight
Dusk Ocean Storm
Elizabeth F Pacific Ram 0% 0% Atka Mackerel
Excalibur II Pacific Star 8% 11% Flatfish
Gold Rush Peggy Jo Other
Half Moon Bay Progress Pacific Cod
Hazel Lorraine Sea Mac
Pollock
Hickory Wind Stella 30%
Icy Mist Topaz 38% Rockfish
Karen Evich Vanguard Sablefish
Laura Viking Explorer Shellfish
Leslie Lee Walter N 11% Halibut
Windjammer 2%
28
Central GOA Trawlers
Freezer Longliners
In December 2010, the Longline Catcher Processor Subsector Single Fishery Conservation Act became
law (PL 111-335), authorizing the Secretary of Commerce to approve a single cooperative for the
freezer longline sector that holds at least 80% of the licenses issued for the subsector. With all of the
vessels in the sector currently members of the Freezer Longline Conservation Cooperative, there has
been no proposal to petition the Secretary for a cooperative under this Act. Should such a cooperative
form in the future, an allocation to vessels not in the cooperative would be defined, based on vessel
history from 2006-2008, together with pro-rated shares of PSC allowance. Cooperative members get
their relative proportion of the longline catcher processor Pacific cod sector allocation, corresponding
PSC apportionment, and any and all reallocation of Pacific cod to the longline catcher processor
sector during a fishing year.
29
Freezer Longliners
The freezer longline fleet operates within constraints of halibut PSC
limits. In the BSAI, the nontrawl halibut limit is 900 mt, which is
apportioned to CDQ fisheries (67 mt) and non-CDQ fisheries (833 mt).
In the GOA, the hook and line halibut PSC limit is 300 mt, apportioned
into 3 seasons.
Gear Used: The freezer longline fleet fishes primarily for Pacific cod
with stationary lines, onto which baited hooks are attached by gangions.
Catcher-processors use 9 mm to 11.5 mm groundline employed with 10”
to 14” gangions, spaced 3.5’ to 4’ apart, and No. 6 to 14 modified
“J” or full circle hooks. Most vessels use swivel gear. The ends of
each set are anchored and marked with buoys.
When fishing for Pacific cod, the gear is normally set in a straight
line, with most sets about 8 miles long. An 8 mile set would
deploy 12,320 hooks. When fishing for Pacific cod, the gear is set
30
Freezer Longliners
roughly the same depth. In the
Greenland turbot fishery, the gear
is set in 250 fathoms to 500 fathoms
of water. The sets are 4 miles to 5
miles long. Normally two sets are
made each day, with a minimum
soak time of 5 hours.
Vessels: There were 39 vessels in this fleet in 2010. The fleet consists of both newer vessels that were
designed a built specifically as freezer longliners, and a number of older vessels that were converted
from some other use. Nearly all of the vessels fish in both the Bering Sea and GOA, only one or two
vessels fish exclusively in the GOA. Of the 39 total vessels, 3 vessels are also in the Groundfish Pot
Fleet; 5 vessels are also in the Halibut IFQ Fleet; 17 vessels are also in the Sablefish IFQ Fleet; and one
vessel is also in the Crab Fleet.
Economics: The freezer longine fleet targets Pacific cod, and some vessels may also target sablefish or
Greenland turbot. In 2010, this fleet retained 87,477 mt of Pacific cod from the BSAI and 7,380 mt from
the GOA. In addition, the fleet retained 3,387 mt of pollock, 3,626 mt of skates, 2,400 mt of turbot, and
855 mt of sablefish.
Freezer Longline Coalition
31
Freezer Longliners
Pacific cod and flatfish combined had a wholesale value of $165.2M in 2010,
an increase of $20.1M over the previous year. Processed dressed fish Year Built
accounted for 96% of the revenue. The wholesale value (all targets combined) 10
was $1.47 per pound, up 21₵ from the previous year and below the five year 8
average by 17₵. Flatfish was the most valuable species on a per pound basis
6
for the fleet. The primary product produced by the fleet is eastern and western
4
cut Pacific cod that are frozen in 20 kg average blocks. Ancillary products also
2
produced onboard the vessels include roe, collars, heads, cheeks, chins, belly
0
flaps, milt, and stomachs.
Alaska Mist 15
Alaska Patriot
10
Alaskan Leader
Aleutian Lady 5
Alpine Cove
0
Baranof 30-59 60-89 90-124 125-200
Beauty Bay
Bering Leader
Bering Prowler
Blue Ace
Blue Attu
Blue Ballard Hailing Port
Blue Gadus
Blue North 30
Blue Pacific 20
Blue Pearl
Sarah Melton, NPFMC
Bristol Leader 10
Clipper Endeavor
0
Clipper Epic
Clipper Express
Clipper Surprise
Courageous
Deep Pacific
Frontier Explorer
Frontier Mariner
Frontier Spirit
Glacier Bay
Judi B 1% Catch by Weight
Kjevolja 1% 0%0% Atka Mackerel
3% 1% 4%
Kruzof Flatfish
11%
Lilli Ann Other
North Cape
Freezer longline coalition
Pacific Cod
Norton Sound
Pollock
Ocean Prowler
Pathfinder Rockfish
Prowler Sablefish
Siberian Sea Shellfish
US Liberator 79% Halibut
Zenith
32
Freezer Longliners
Halibut Longliners
To qualify for an initial allocation of quota share, a person must have made legal landings of halibut
or sablefish, harvested with fixed gear, during 1988-1990. Generally, if a vessel owner or lessee
qualified, his/her initial quota share was based on his/her highest total landing of halibut for any 5
years of the 7-year base period 1984-1990. For sablefish, the initial quota share was based on the
highest total landing of sablefish for 5 years of the 6-year base period 1985-1990. Each person eligible
to receive quota share had it assigned to one of four vessel categories: “A”-freezer vessels of any
length; “B”- catcher vessels greater than 60'; “C”- catcher vessels less than or equal to 60' for sablefish,
or between 35'-60' for halibut; “D”- catcher vessels less than or equal to 35' for halibut. Restrictions on
transfer, together with use and ownership caps, were designed to maintain the owner/operator
characteristics of the fleet, and to prevent consolidation of QS in the hands of a few participants.
Fishery Management: Pacific halibut fisheries are regulated by International Pacific Halibut
Commission (in compliance with the terms of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act between the United
States and Canada) and the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council. In practice, the Halibut
Commission establishes total annual catch limits and
other conservation measures, and the Council develops
regulations to govern the fishery including limited
access and allocation decisions.
33
Halibut Longliners
than 55’ in length to use paired streamer lines. Longline vessels
26’ to 55’ in length are required to use either a single streamer or a
buoy bag, depending on the fishing location.
Jeff Farvour
#72 to #86 twine, and 14/0 - 16/0 circle hooks. Some catcher vessels
use snap-on gear with 3’ to 4’ long gangions spaced at 10’ to 20’
intervals. Some vessels use stuck gear (not snap on) with 12” to
16” gangions spaced at 10’ to 20’ intervals. Other vessels use
combination gear (used to target both halibut and sablefish) with
shorter gangions, shorter hook spacing (4’ to 6’), and smaller
hooks (13/0-15/0). Automatic baiting machines are used on many
vessels. An average set consists of 10 to 20 skates of groundline,
with each skate 100 fathoms to 150 fathoms long. Squid and
herring are the preferred baits, although pink salmon and Pacific
cod may also be used. The ends of each set are anchored and
Rhonda Hubbard
marked with buoys. The lower shot(s) (33 fathoms each) of the
anchor line is (are) made of up to 3/4-inch floating poly, and the
upper shot of line is made of up to 5/8-inch sinking line. A buoy
marks the beginning of a set, and a flag (up to 10’ high) typically
marks the end of a set (“bag and flag” set-up).
To make a set, the first anchor is dropped and the boat steams
ahead with the groundline and baited hooks being set off the
stern of the boat. The set is not necessarily made in a straight line;
rather, the boat will steer to ensure that the groundline is set in
the preferred areas based on depth contour and bottom structure.
The second anchor is deployed, and the line is left to fish for 5
hours to 24 hours, depending upon the catch rates. Upon
haulback, the groundline is fed through a hauler, and the fish are
carefully taken off the hooks. The fish are bled and gutted, and
put on ice, or in a hold of slush-ice on shorter trips.
34
Halibut Longliners
Economics: The fleet’s primary target is Pacific halibut, which
had a gross ex-vessel value of $191.8M for this fleet in 2010.
Year Built
400
The fleet delivered to 34 different ports, Kodiak and Homer
were the top two ports and received 33% of the landings. The 300
average ex-vessel price per pound for halibut was $3.65, an 200
increase of $1.26 from the prior year. Ex-vessel price per pound
100
was highest for sablefish and halibut, and lower for Pacific cod,
pollock, and other species landed by participating vessels. 0
Length
800
600
Karla Bush, ADF&G
400
200
0
<30 30-59 60-89 90-124 125-200
Hailing Port
Julianne Curry, PVOA
600
Megan Peterson
400
200
Catch by Weight
0% Atka Mackerel
4%
3% Flatfish
Other
22%
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
Pacific Cod
4% Pollock
8% 39% Rockfish
Sablefish
2% 18%
Shellfish
Halibut
35
Halibut Longliners
Vessels active in the halibut longline fleet, 2010.
36
Halibut Longliners
Vessels active in the halibut longline fleet, 2010 (continued).
37
Halibut Longliners
Vessels active in the halibut longline fleet, 2010 (continued).
38
Halibut Longliners
Halibut CDQ Fleet
The 2006 Magnuson-Stevens Act amendments made significant changes to all aspects of the CDQ
Program. Part of the overall intent of the amendments was to reduce the government’s role in
program oversight, understanding that there remain continued responsibilities for the Department of
Commerce, the Council, and the State of Alaska. In June 2006, the Council articulated its interest in
being directly involved in CDQ actions related directly to fishery management or conservation, but
only to be apprised of other actions.
39
Halibut CDQ Fleet
presence of Short-tailed Albatross.
Year Built
Unlike participants in the halibut and sablefish IFQ fisheries, who must retain
80
and deliver all catch of Pacific cod and rockfish taken when IFQ halibut or
IFQ sablefish are onboard (unless the Pacific cod and rockfish fisheries are on 60
PSC status), fishermen in the CDQ fisheries do not need to retain these fish. 40
These retention and reporting requirements were deemed to be overly
20
burdensome to the mostly small vessels fishing CDQ halibut.
0
Economics: The fleet targets halibut, but on the smaller vessels, other
groundfish species may be caught and retained for personal use. Hailing Port
Additionally, CDQ fishermen are allowed to retain their undersized halibut 200
for personal use, provided they hold a Subsistence Halibut Registration
Certificate from NMFS Restricted Access Management. 100
The fleet’s primary target, CDQ halibut, had an ex-vessel value of $7.0M in 0
2010. The fleet delivered 69% of its landings to Atka and St. Paul. The
average ex-vessel price per pound for halibut was $2.91, an increase of $1.06
from the prior year.
Catch by Weight
Atka Mackerel
1%
0% 2% Flatfish
Other
Pacific Cod
47% 36% Pollock
Nicole Kimball, NPFMC
Rockfish
Sablefish
1% Shellfish
10% Halibut
3% 0%
40
Halibut CDQ Fleet
Vessels active in the Halibut CDQ Fleet, 2010.
41
Halibut CDQ Fleet
Sablefish Longliners
Jeb Morrow
ownership provisions; QS blocks to ensure small
allocations are available for entry; the annual process
for allocating QS; and the establishment of halibut and
sablefish Community Development Quotas (CDQ).
Fishery Management: The sablefish longline fleet has the potential to be constrained by seabird
“takes”. USFWS has issued an incidental take limit of endangered short-tailed albatross of 4 birds
during a two-year period in the longline groundfish fisheries and two birds during a two-year period
in the longline Pacific halibut fisheries. Current regulations require all longline vessels greater than
55’ in length to use paired streamer lines. Longline vessels 26’ to 55’ in length are required to use
either a single streamer or a buoy bag, depending on the fishing location.
Since implementation of the IFQ program in 1995, the sablefish longline fishery has been exempted
from halibut PSC limits. Legally retainable halibut taken while fishing with hook and line gear must
be retained and counted against a person’s halibut IFQ, if anyone onboard has unused halibut IFQ.
Gear Used: The sablefish fisheries are prosecuted with stationary lines, onto which baited hooks are
attached. Gear components that contact the bottom include the anchors, groundline, gangions, and
hooks. In the sablefish fishery, anchors are two-prong standard 50 lb to 90 lb anchors, and
groundlines are generally constructed of 3/8-inch sinking line, with 6”to 18” long gangions of #72 to
#86 twine, spaced 30” to 48” apart, with 9/0- 15/0 circle hooks. Some catcher vessels use snap-on gear
with gangions spaced at 3’ to 4’ intervals. On catcher vessels, an average set consists of 20 skates of
groundline, with each skate 100 fathoms to 150 fathoms long. Preferred baits are squid, pollock, and
herring. Automatic baiting machines are used on many vessels. The ends of each set are anchored
and marked with buoys. The lower shot(s) (33
fathoms each) of the anchor line is (are) made
of 3/4-inch floating poly, and the upper shot of
line is made of 5/8-inch sinking line. A buoy
marks the beginning of a set, and a flag (up to
10’ high) typically marks the end of a set (“bag
and flag” set-up).
42
Sablefish Longliners
contour and bottom structure. The second anchor is deployed,
and the line is left to fish for 5 hours to 24 hours depending
upon the catch rates. Upon haulback, the groundline is fed Year Built
through a hauler, and the fish are carefully taken off the hooks. 150
Fish are packed in the round, or bled and gutted, and put in the
hold on ice or slush-ice. Catcher processors freeze headed and 100
gutted sablefish.
50
200
three ports (Seward, Sitka and Kodiak) 150
accounting for 40% of the landings. The average
100
ex-vessel price per pound for sablefish was
50
$3.66, an increase of 75₵ from the prior year.
0
Catch by Weight
Atka Mackerel
0% 4%
Flatfish
7%
17% Other
3%
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
Pacific Cod
Pollock
11%
Rockfish
1% Sablefish
53%
4% Shellfish
Halibut
43
Sablefish Longliners
Vessels active in the Sablefish IFQ Fleet, 2010.
Advantage Chandalar Gaff Rk Kingfisher New Day Rose Lee Tiffany Lee
Adventure Chaos Glacier Kjevolja Nickelodeon Rose Lynn Tombo
Alaska Mist Charity Glacier Bay Kodiak Isle Nikka Rose Marie Toni Marie
Alaskan Charles T Golden Chalice Kraken Nip 'N Tuck Roshell Tordenskjold
Alaskan Dream Chelsea Dawn Golondrina Kristiana Nite Lite Ruff & Reddy Tradition
Alaskan Rose Cherokee Good Hope Kristina Nomad II Runaway Trask
Aleutian Beauty Chikamin Grant Kruzof Nora C San Juan Tribute
Aleutian Belle Chisik Island Grizzly Lady Jo Norcoaster Sandra-Jo Trinket
Aleutian Isle Christi-Rob Gulf Maiden Larisa M Norfjord Sara B. Trumpeter
Aleutian Lady Clarena Hallark Laura S North Light Sara Dawn Tsiu
Aleutian Spirit Clipper Endeavor Hannah Point Leeward North Point Sea Angel Vagabond Queen
Aleutian Sun Clipper Epic Hans Halvor Lesley Ann North Star Sea Barb Valle Lee
Alexandra Clipper Express Hardy Letun Northrn Endurance Sea Dream Vansee
Alitak Clipper Surprise Harlequin Lindsey Marie Northern Mariner Sea Racer Varag
Alliance Clyde Heather D Lindy Northern Prince Sea Roamer Venus
Allstar Commander Heritage Lisa Jean Norton Sound Sea Valley II Vigorous
Aloma Competition Highliner Lisa Marie Obsession Sea View Viking Maid
Alrita Conquest Hotspur Lisa Michelle Ocean Bay Seanna Viking Spirit
Andronica Cora J Hukilau Lisov Ocean Cape Seazone Vis
Angelette Coral Huntress Littleton Ocean Harvester Sebrika Vixen
Angelique Coral Lee Icelander Lively Jane Ocean Oasis Sedna Wendy Anne
Ann Coral Sea Icy Queen Logan T Ocean Ranger Selah West Bank
Anna D Cormorant Isle Ida June Lone Fisherman Oceanaire Sequioa Westerly
Anna Lane Crusader Ida Lee Lorelei Ii Odin Seymour Western Freedom
Anne Louise Cuatro Vidas Independence Lucky Lady Olympic Shannon Western Mariner
Archangel Currency Indigo Lucy O Orion Shemya Western Queen
Arizona Cynosure Intangible Major Outlook Sherrie Marie Wilma Mae
Arlice Day Star Intrepid Makai Pacific Dawn Shinaku Woniya
Arrow Defender Inua Malachite Pacific Sojourn Shuyak Yankee
Artemis Deliverance Island Pride Malia Pacific Sounder Sierra Mar Zealot
Atka Pride Devyn Nicole Jackpine Mar-Jo II Pacific Sun Silver Lady Zenith
Augustine Discovery Jaeger Martin Pacific Wind Silver Storm
Avalanche Distant Janene Martina Pat Silver Tip
Ballad Dolphin Jani K Masonic Patriot Siren
Ballyhoo Drake Janis M Maverick Pelican Southeast
Baranof Dream Maid Jean C Memories Peril Strait Southern Seas
Barbara J Dues Payer II Jeanoah Middle Pass Perseverance Spectre
Bavaria Dynasty Jennifer Lee Middleton Petrof Spicy Lady
Bear Claw Early Times Jenny Marie Mikado Phoenix Spirit
Beauty Bay El Tiburon Jersey Girl Mindalina Phyllis Ann St John II
Bergen Emily Nicole Jetta D Minke Pierce St Nicholas
Big Blue Endurance Joann Marie Miss Corinne Pillar Bay Stillwater
Black Pearl Equinox Jon-K Miss Emily Polar Star Stingray
Blue Attu Erika Ann Judi B Miss Lori Polaris Stjilbe
Blue Dolphin Eve Kaia Miss Norma Prime Time Stormbird
Bold Pacific Evening Star Kalliste Miss Roxanne Primus Stormbringer
Bravado Exception Kamilar Miss Susan Providence Stress Pt
Cape Alava Exodus Karelia Monarch Provider Sulina
Cape Blanco Expatriate Kariel Mongoose Quest Sunbeam
Cape Enchantment F/V Cobra Kasatka Monique Quiana Sundancer
Cape Falcon F/V Julia Breeze Kathleen Jo Morgan Anne Radiance Sunward
Cape Fear F/V Lucky Island Katie J Motive Raidawn Talia
Cape Reliant Faith Katie Jean Myra Raven Bay Tamarack
Captain Cook Falcon Katrina Myriad Reiver Tana C
Carlynn Fazan Kayleigh Ann Mystery Renegade Tara Lee
Carole D Foreigner Kelly Marie Nancy Ellen Republic Teasha
Cascade Frigidland Keltie Navigator Resolute Tempest
Casino Frontier Explorer Kema Sue Nekton Resurrection Terrigail
Castaway Frontier Mariner Kesia Dawn Neptune Rocinante The Compromise
Castle Cape Frontier Spirit Kimber Nestor Rocky B The Hungry Raven
44
Sablefish Longliners
Groundfish Longline Catcher Vessels
Eligible CQE communities can also request Pacific cod endorsed non-trawl groundfish licenses for
use on a designated vessel (which must be < 60’ LOA) to catch Pacific cod with longlines or pots: a
total of 27 licenses may be requested by Western GOA CQEs, and 58 licenses by Central GOA CQEs.
Fishery Management: Beginning in 2012, the GOA Pacific cod TAC is allocated among sectors. In the
Western GOA, the longline apportionment is 1.4% for catcher vessels and 19.8% to catcher
processors. In the Central GOA, the apportionment to hook and line is 14.6% to catcher vessels <50’
LOA, 6.7% to catcher vessels >50’ LOA, and 5.1% to catcher processors. These allocation are further
apportioned between A and B seasons. In the BSAI, 2% of the Pacific cod TAC is allocated to a
longline/pot catcher vessel sector < 60’LOA, and 0.2% to longline catcher vessels > 60’ LOA. The BSAI
Pacific cod TAC is allocated such that the longline catcher vessels <60’ LOA share a 2% allocation of
the TAC with vessels < 60’ using pot gear.
Gear Used: The cod longline fishery is prosecuted with stationary lines, onto which baited hooks are
attached by gangions. For catcher vessels, anchors are two-prong standard anchors weighing 50
pounds, groundlines are generally constructed of 3/8-inch sinking line, 16” to 18” long gangions of
#72 twine, and 12/0-14/0 circle hooks. Many of the catcher vessels use snap-on gear with gangions
spaced at approximately 3’ to 4’ intervals. On catcher vessels, an average
set consists of 12 skates of groundline, with each skate 300 fathoms long,
for a total length of 3.5 nm. Squid is the preferred bait. Automatic baiting
machines are used on some vessels. The ends of each set are anchored
and marked with buoys. The lower shot(s) (33 fathoms each) of the
anchor line is (are) made of 3/4-inch floating poly, and the upper shot of
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
line is made of 5/8-inch sinking line. Attached to the line are plastic
buoys or flags. Gear is set and retrieved similar to the halibut fishery.
The line is left to fish for 2 hours to 24 hours depending upon the catch
rates. Upon haulback, the groundline is fed through a hauler, and the
fish are stripped off the hooks.
The Pacific cod longline fishery in the GOA takes place on the east side
of Kodiak Island in the Central GOA and throughout the Western GOA.
45
Groundfish Longline Catcher Vessels
The fishery occurs over gravel, cobble, mud, sand, and rocky bottom, in depths
of 25 fathoms to 140 fathoms (150’ 840’).
Year Built
Vessels: There were 74 vessels participating in the groundfish longline catcher 40
fleet in 2010, based on the criteria of having an LLP and landing Pacific cod as 30
the target species. Most of these vessels also fish for halibut and sablefish.
20
10
Economics: The fleet’s primary target; Pacific cod, had an ex-vessel value of
$5.2M in 2010. This was down $.1M from 2009. A large portion of the fleet is 0
also active in the halibut and sablefish IFQ fleets, 12 vessels targeted solely
groundfish, while the other 62 vessels received a great portion of annual
revenue from the IFQ fisheries. The fleet delivered 55% of its Pacific cod to
Kodiak. The average gross ex-vessel price per pound for Pacific cod was 27.3₵, Length
an increase of 3.5₵ per pound from the prior year.
80
60
40
20
0
30-59 60-89
Hailing Port
Vessels active in the Catcher Longline fleet, 2010. 60
46
Groundfish Longline Catcher Vessels
Jig Fleet
Fishery Management: The jig sector is allocated 1.4% of the BSAI Pacific cod TAC, after subtraction
of the CDQ reserve. Beginning in 2012, the Federal GOA Pacific cod TAC will be allocated among
different sectors, with the jig sector allocation taken off the top. The initial jig gear allocation is 1.5%
in the Western GOA and 1% in the Central GOA. Stairstep provisions allow for increasing (up to 6%
maximum) and decreasing of the jig sectors portion of the TAC, based on performance (whether or
not the fleet harvests > 90% of its TAC allocation in any given year for an increase, or fails to do so for
2 consecutive years for a decrease). The jig allocation is apportioned 60:40 between the A season and
B season (which begins on June 10), and rollover of TAC from A
to B season is allowed. The A season opens on January 1 and
closes when the A season jig allocation is reached. Many of the jig
vessels also participate in the GOA State water fisheries, where
the GHL for Pacific cod is set at 25% of the acceptable biological
catch level in each subarea.
Gear Used: The fleet targets Pacific cod with actively fished
vertical lines, onto which baited hooks or surge tube jigs are
attached. Gear components include a 4 lb to 10 lb jig weight, a
200 lb to 900 lb test monofilament leader, clipped to a 300 lb to
700 lb test monofilament mainline, and long shank 8/0 to 11/0 J-
hooks or 12/0 to 14/0 circle hooks that are looped directly onto
the leader. The mainline remains constant, and interchangeable
monofilament leader “set ups” (with different strengths and
hook characteristics to reflect varying fishing conditions) are
clipped to the mainline. Jig weights are clipped to the bottom end
of leader “set ups” and are also interchangeable. Vessels employ
Darius Kasprzak
two to five jig machines per vessel. Hooks are dressed with
colorful segments of rubber surgical tubing and/or baited with
squid, herring, or strips of Atka mackerel.
47
Jig Fleet
The vessels look for concentrations of Pacific cod and
position their vessels to drift over the fish. The machines
drop the jig weight to the bottom (or higher in the water
column) and move the jigs up and down slightly to
induce the fish to bite. Each jig machine is adjusted to
haul back when the right amount of tension is on the
line (a set amount of fish). Machines haul up the fish,
which are then removed one by one. The vessels move
often to stay over fish concentrations. The fishery occurs
over gravel, cobble, sand, mud, and rocky bottom. In the
spring and summer, the fish are found nearshore in
Darius Kasprzak
shallow (5 fathoms to 40 fathoms) waters, but are
deeper (40 fathoms to 60 fathoms) in the winter. Jig
vessels fish primarily from the ports of Homer and
Kodiak in the Central GOA and Sand Point in the
Western GOA. In some areas, black and dusky rockfish
are commonly targeted along with Pacific cod on the same trip.
Vessels: One catcher processor and 76 catcher vessels made up the jig fleet in 2010, based on those
vessels that made a targeted groundfish landing with jig gear in Federal and “parallel” fisheries (not
just those vessels with an LLP, or those vessels that landed only Pacific cod in the Federally managed
jig fishery). Many of the vessels that fish with jig gear also participate in State managed fisheries for
salmon or other Alaska fisheries.
Economics: The fleet’s primary target; Pacific cod, had a gross ex-vessel value of $2.4M in 2010.
Over half of the fleet targeted solely groundfish with 36 vessels also targeting salmon in state
fisheries. The 36 vessels that targeted salmon received a great portion of their 2010 revenue from
salmon. The fleet delivered 62% of its Pacific cod to Kodiak. The average ex-vessel price per pound
for Pacific cod was 28.4₵, a decrease of 0.9₵ per pound from the prior year.
Camrin Dengel
Dave Fraser
48
Jig Fleet
Year Built
40
30
20
10
Length
80
60
40
20
0
<30 30-59
Hailing Port
Camrin Dengel
40
30
20
10
Catch by Weight
Atka Mackerel
0%
4% 0% 2% Flatfish
Other
1% 17% Pacific Cod
0% Pollock
0% Rockfish
Darius Kasprzak
76% Sablefish
Shellfish
Halibut
49
Jig Fleet
Vessels active in the jig fleet, 2010.
50
Jig Fleet
Groundfish Pot Vessels
In the BSAI, groundfish LLPs contain separate BS subarea and AI subarea endorsements, which were
earned based on historical fishing patterns. Licenses may contain endorsements for both subareas (BS
and AI), one of the two subareas, or neither of the subareas. Gear endorsements define what type of
gear may be used: non-trawl, trawl, or both. Further, cod gear endorsements are required for non-
trawl vessels ≥60’ to participate in the BSAI fixed gear Pacific cod fishery: hook-and-line catcher
processors, pot catcher processors, hook-and-line catcher vessel, and pot catcher vessel.
Fishery Management: In the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, the pot catcher vessel fleet is allocated
Pacific cod, depending upon vessel size. Pot vessels < 60’ LOA share an allocation of 2% with the
Herman Savikko, ADF&G
51
Groundfish Pot Vessels
hook-and-line catcher vessels < 60’, while pot
catcher vessels ≥ 60’ are allocated 8.4% of the
TAC. Pot catcher processors are allocated 1.5% of
the BSAI Pacific cod TAC.
Gear Used: The fleet targets Pacific cod with square or conical pots
usually set on single lines. Pots used in a directed cod fishery are
frequently modified crab pots, which are constructed with a steel bar
frame (1.25” diameter) and covered with tarred nylon mesh netting (3.5”
stretched mesh). Pot sizes range from 5’ to 8’ square. Each pot has two
tunnel openings on opposite sides, with plastic “finger” funnels to retain
the fish. The tunnel eye cannot be greater than 9” in any one dimension.
An escape panel of untreated cotton must be sewn into the mesh. The pot
is attached with a 6’ to 8’ bridle, generally constructed of 1” diameter poly
line. A 30’ to 60’ surge, constructed of heavy duty line, is attached to the
bridle. The lower shots (33 fathoms each) of line are made of ¾” floating
poly, and the upper shot of line is made of 5/8-inch sinking line. Attached
Patrick Pikus
to the line is a plastic buoy (bag), with an auxiliary buoy attached on a
tether line.
Pots are set in areas where Pacific cod are aggregated, and retrieved once
every 24 hours. Pots are baited with chopped herring placed in hanging
bait buckets in the
center of the pot. On
most vessels, the pot is
tipped into the sea
with a pot launcher.
The shots of line are
thrown overboard,
followed by the buoys,
Karla Bush, ADF&G
52
Groundfish Pot Vessels
Pots are retrieved as follows: the crewman throws a hook between
the buoys to get the line. The line is fed into the hauler, and the pot
is brought aboard by a crane and placed on the pot hauler. Pacific
cod are dumped into totes. On catcher vessels, the fish are put
below deck on ice or in refrigerated sea water. The pots are
Mark Fina, NPFMC
rebaited and reset or stored if they are being moved or it is the end
of the season. The average size of a Pacific cod caught by pot gear
is 8 to 9 pounds.
53
Groundfish Pot Vessels
Year Built
50
40
Justin Wilson
Justin Wilson
30
20
10
0
54
Groundfish Pot Vessels
BSAI Crab Fleet
Fishery Management: The Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crab FMP establishes a
State/Federal cooperative management regime that defers crab management to the State of Alaska
with Federal oversight. Measures under direct Federal authority include status determination criteria
and annual catch limits, essential fish habitat, and limited access (including the BSAI Crab
Rationalization program). ADF&G manages the fishery by setting the seasons, size limits, pot limits,
gear requirements, fishing districts, closed areas, and other measures as appropriate. Only male crabs
larger than a minimum carapace width can be retained. The FMP applies to 10 crab stocks in the
BSAI: 4 red king crab, Paralithodes camtschaticus, stocks (Bristol Bay, Pribilof Islands, Norton Sound
and Adak), 2 blue king crab, Paralithodes platypus, stocks (Pribilof District and St Matthew Island), 2
golden (or brown) king crab, Lithodes aequispinus, stocks (Aleutian Island and Pribilof Islands), EBS
Tanner crab Chionoecetes bairdi, and EBS snow crab
Chionoecetes opilio. The only crab fisheries not
included in the BSAI Crab Rationalization
Program are the Norton Sound red king crab and
the Pribilof Islands golden king crab fisheries.
Other BSAI crab stocks and GOA crab stocks are
exclusively managed by the State of Alaska.
55
BSAI Crab Fleet
sideboards for GOA pollock or Pacific cod, however. Vessels
with less than 750,000 lbs total snow crab QS and more than
680 mt of total cod history during the qualifying years are
exempt from the GOA Pacific cod sideboard cap. Vessels
with less than 0.22% of total Bering Sea snow crab catch
history from 1996 through 2000 and 20 or more deliveries of
pollock harvested in the GOA from 1996 through 2000 are
Gear Used: The BSAI crab fleet uses pot gear to catch crabs.
The fisheries for red and blue king crab, Tanner crab, and
snow crab use square pots that typically measure 7 feet by 7
feet by 3 feet deep, set one pot per line. Pots used in this
fishery are constructed with a steel bar frame (1.25-inch-
diameter) and covered with tarred nylon mesh netting (minimum 3.5-inch stretched mesh). Pots must
include escape rings or large mesh (size depending upon the fishery) to sort out sublegal size crab.
Pots are also equipped with a biodegradable panel that will open at least 18 inches. Pot sizes range
from 6’ to 8’ square, with the average vessel using 7’ by 7’ pots.
Pots are constructed as follows: There is an outer frame consisting of weight bars on the bottom of the
pot, typically 1.5-inch-diameter steel bar stock; a top frame and sides, typically 1 1/8-inch steel bar
stock, to provide the structure; and an inner frame of 5/8-inch web bars to support the mesh and
separate it from the sides and bottom of the pot. A rectangular door is hinged opposite the bridle, to
allow easy unloading of catch. Each pot weighs from 500 to 700
pounds dry weight. Each pot has two tunnel openings on opposite
sides, typically 9” by 36”, with no dimension less than 5” and a
perimeter of at least 36”. When fishing for snow crab, the tunnel height
cannot be greater than 4”, and 4” diameter escape rings are required.
via a buoy line or warp that consists of a 30’ to 60’ surge line,
constructed of heavy duty floating polypropylene and coils of line
sufficient to reach the surface. The lower coils of line (33 fathoms) are
made of ¾” floating polypropylene, and the upper coil of line is made
of sinking line. The length of the
floating line is not sufficient to reach
the surface. The floating line keeps from fouling on the bottom and
the sinking line avoids accidentally fouling in the vessel’s
propellers. Attached to the top coil is a plastic buoy (bag), with an
auxiliary buoy attached on a tether (trailer) line.
Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers
56
BSAI Crab Fleet
sea with a pot launcher. The coils of line are thrown overboard, followed
by the buoys, as the pot sinks to the bottom. The pot rests directly on the
bottom. The pot remains stationary on the bottom until it is retrieved.
Soak times have increased since the fisheries were rationalized and in
recent years, have averaged about 60 hours in the Bristol Bay red king
crab and Bering Sea snow crab fisheries.
Mark Fina, NPFMC
In the golden king crab fishery, strings of multiple rectangular pots are
connected together to form a longline on the ocean floor. Vessels set 400
to 1,800 pots (700 pots each on average). Pots used in this fishery are
constructed with a steel bar frame and covered with nylon mesh netting.
A variety of pot sizes is used, largely depending on vessel size and area
fished. Pots range from 5 feet by 5 feet by 32 inches high to 6 feet by 7 feet
by 34 inches high. Pots are set in strings of 20 to 80 pots, each pot
connected to the other by 80 to 100 fathoms of floating polypropylene
line. Therefore, a single string may be 2 to 5 miles long. The ends of each
string are marked with four buoys. The average soak time to allow
Mark Fina, NPFMC
The Norton Sound red king crab fishery is prosecuted with smaller pots,
generally no larger than 6 feet in largest dimension, and conical pots are
used. Conical pots used in this fishery are constructed with a steel bar
frame and covered with tarred nylon mesh netting (3.5-inch stretched
mesh). Not all conical pots use an inner web bar frame. Conical pot sizes
are generally 4 to 6 feet on the base diameter. These pots are built with a
David Witherell, NPFMC
smaller diameter top ring and are designed to nest when stacked.
Tunnels may be similar to the square pots or consist of a plastic collar
approximately 18 inches in diameter and 10 inches high in the top of the
pot. Pots may weigh from 70 to several hundred pounds. The depth
fished is shallower, so the lines are short. Due to the small pot limits and
the super-exclusive registration area, almost all of the vessels that
participate in the Norton Sound fishery are < 32 feet and are from the
57
BSAI Crab Fleet
villages surrounding Norton Sound. The majority of the fleet is converted
herring gill net boats, many of which are skiffs that do not have wheel houses Year Built
or even lights. The Norton Sound winter fishery uses snowmachines instead
50
of boats to harvest crab. Approximately 10 snowmachines are permitted to
40
harvest king crab commercially by fishing small pots through the ice.
30
20
Vessels: The crab fleet had 3 catcher processors participating in 2010 and 76
10
catcher vessels participating in the rationalized BSAI crab fisheries.
0
Economics: The fleet’s primary targets; king crab, snow crab, and Tanner crab,
had a combined value including ex-vessel and wholesale value of $204.9M in
2010. Catcher processors in the fleet produced 99% sections. The catcher
vessel portion of the fleet delivered 38% of its primary targets to Dutch Length
Harbor. Akutan, King Cove, and St. Paul Island also received significant
landings. The average ex-vessel price (all targets) per pound was $2.83, an 80
40
20
0
60-89 90-124 125-200
58
BSAI Crab Fleet
Scallop Fleet
In March 1997, NPFMC approved Amendment 2, a vessel moratorium under which 18 vessels
qualified for federal moratorium permits to fish weathervane scallops in Federal waters off Alaska.
By February 1999, the Council recommended replacing the Federal moratorium program with a
license limitation program (LLP), which became Amendment 4 to the FMP. The LLP created a total
of nine licenses with no
area endorsements;
each vessel is permitted
to fish statewide.
However, vessels that
fished exclusively in the
Cook Inlet Registration
Area where a single 6-
foot dredge was the
legal gear type during
Jim Stone, Alaska Scallop Association
59
Scallop Fleet
dredges with a combined maximum width of 20 feet. Amendment 10
was approved on June 22, 2005. NMFS published final regulations on
July 11, 2005, which were effective August 10, 2005. NMFS
implemented Amendment 10 by re-issuing the two LLP licenses with
the larger gear restriction.
In May 2000, six of the nine LLP owners formed the North Pacific
Scallop Cooperative under authority of the Fishermen's Cooperative
Marketing Act. The cooperative is self-regulated with individual vessel
allocations within the guideline harvest range and crab bycatch caps
under the terms of their cooperative contract. Vessels not in the
cooperative are not bound by any contract provisions. The cooperative
does not receive an exclusive allocation of the scallop harvest. Some
Catch of scallops is limited by guideline harvest ranges (hard caps) established for each of the nine
registration areas. The upper end of the guideline harvest ranges summed together is equal to MSY of
1.24 million pounds. Within each range, a guideline harvest limit establishes a pre-season target for
each fishing area (registration area, district, or statistical area).
60
Scallop Fleet
fishing in any area before the GHL is reached due to concerns
about localized depletion, trends in CPUE, or bycatch rates.
Inseason data are also used by the scallop industry to avoid
areas of high bycatch.
Weathervane scallops occur in discrete beds in areas 60 m to 140 m (average of about 90 m) deep,
over predominantly clayey silt and sandy bottoms, but they are also found in areas with gravelly
sand and silty sand. Bottom type and depth depends on the area fished. For example, in the EBS, the
fishery occurs at depths of 100 m to 120 m, but
occurs at 60 m to 85 m near Kayak Island in the
eastern GOA. The fishery occurs from the
Southeast Alaska out to the AI and the EBS, with
the area fished each year equaling approximately
200 nautical square miles over the entire State.
61
Scallop Fleet
Economics: The fishery targets weathervane scallops. Catches have declined
from a high of 1.2 million pounds in 1994 to about 500,000 pounds in 2009.
This reduced catch is due to changes in regulations as well as fluctuations in
Year Built
crab bycatch limits and estimated scallop abundance. One of the vessels also
2
participates in BSAI Pacific cod trawl fishery.
1.5
Prior to 1996, almost all scallop meats were placed in muslin bags and iced 1
(not frozen) at sea. While some fresh product sales may continue to occur at 0.5
dockside or roadside in the Cook Inlet region, nearly all landed scallop meats 0
The ex-vessel price per pound (adjusted for inflation) has fluctuated during
the past; trending upwards from $6.95 in 1993/94 to $8.13 in 1997/98, then Length
falling to $5.88 in 2003/04, rebounding to $8.10 by 2006/07, and then falling to
$5.94 in 2007/08. The statewide average 2008/09 price increased to $6.34. 2
1.5
First wholesale revenue in this fishery has varied considerably as both price
1
and landings have varied. The peak value in the fishery, since 1993, occurred
0.5
in 1994/95 season when about $9.6 million was earned. Since that time, real
0
total first wholesale revenue in the fishery has fluctuated with prices. 60-89 90-124
Overall, the total value has trended downward as landings have fallen from
more than 1.2 million pounds down to a low in 2008/09 of 342,434 pounds.
The total real first wholesale revenue of a little less than $2.2 million in the Hailing Port
2008/09 season was the lowest revenue total since 1993. In 2010, weathervane
scallops had a wholesale value of $3.9M. The average wholesale price per
pound was $8.42, a large increase from the previous year. 5
0
Jim Stone, Alaska Scallop Association
Vessels active in
the Alaska scallop
fleet, 2010.
Arctic Hunter
Ocean Hunter
Provider
Kilkenny
62
Scallop Fleet
Charter Halibut Boats
Tim Evers
commercial halibut
Individual Fish Quota (IFQ)
fisheries to the charter
fisheries in Southeast (Area 2C) and Southcentral (Area 3A)
Alaska.
Tim Evers
charter harvest estimates, as
reported by ADF&G. The GHLs
were set at 1,432,000 lb net weight
in Area 2C and 3,650,000 lb net weight in Area 3A. In the event of a
reduction in either area’s halibut biomass, as determined by the
International Pacific Halibut Commission, the area GHL would be
reduced incrementally in proportion to the quota reduction.
In 2011, a limited entry program was implemented for the Area 2C and
Area 3A charter halibut fisheries to provide stability for the guided sport
halibut fishery and decrease the need for regulatory adjustments to the
Rex Murphy
63
Charter Halibut Boats
the number of fishing trips made by
the qualifying businesses. Charter
halibut business operators are
required to have a charter halibut
permit on board to fish for halibut,
and permit holders are subject to
limits on the number of permits they
can hold and on the number of
charter boat anglers who can catch
and retain halibut on their charter
boats. The permit does not limit the
number of trips an operator can take
each season. A total of 1,089 permits
(including interim permits) have been
issued through January 5, 2012, with
574 in 2C and 515 in 3A.In Area 3A,
most permits are endorsed for 6
anglers, with 100 permits for
endorsed for 7 or more. In 2C, almost
all the permits are endorsed for 4, 5,
or 6 anglers, with only 12 permits
endorsed for 7 or more anglers. In
addition, permits will be issued upon
request to community quota entities
representing specific rural
communities in Area 2C and 3A.
Gear Used: The fleet takes out clients who fish under State
Tim Evers
64
Charter Halibut Boats
per line. On most charter vessels, each fishermen
uses a fairly stout rod, 5’ to 7’ in length, equipped
with 60-130 pound test braided Dacron or a
braided superline. Terminal tackle consists of a 1-3
pound lead sinker and a single 8/0-16/0 circle hook
on a heavy monofilament leader, frequently
assembled as a slip sinker rig. Bait is usually whole
or cut herring, although squid, octopus, cod, or
salmon heads may also be used. The hooks are
dropped down to fish on the bottom. Once hooked,
the fish are reeled up and either retained, or
unhooked and released. In most cases, fishermen
Tim Evers
Tim Evers
65
Charter Halibut Boats
24 fishermen depending on their size.
Some are also used for multi-day long
range trip that travel outside of the
range of day charters. These vessels
are inspected by the USCG for safety
and stability in the waters where they
are licensed to operate.
Andy Mezirow
Alaska, many charters may provide a
combination trip for salmon, halibut,
rockfish, and lingcod, depending upon
the season. In Cook Inlet, boats may
target halibut exclusively, or do
combination trips if Chinook salmon or silver salmon are available, or if the lingcod season is open.
Charter businesses provide the necessary fishing equipment and knowledge to give clients the
opportunity to harvest halibut and other species. They also provide assistance in cleaning the harvest,
and may also help preserve, store, and ship the harvest back to the client’s home. Depending on client
needs and location, they may provide half-day trips, full-day trips, multi-day trips, or any
combination of those types of trips. Some operators are also part of a larger lodge business; their
clients often stay at the lodge and take halibut trips as part of their wilderness adventure. Some
charter operations also offer sightseeing trips, guided hunting trips, or water taxi service to drop off
locations.
The price of a halibut trip varies depending on time of the year, the type of vessel used, and the
length of the trip. In general, full-day trips originating from Homer in 3A, cost between $150 and $350
per day. Some trips are priced higher if the client wants to book a vessel with four or fewer clients for
private trips or more individualized attention. Discounted trips are offered by most of the charter
operators for trips outside of the most popular fishing season (before early June or after the middle of
August). Rates for Seward are similar to those out of Homer. Rates for trips from Area 2C ports (e.g.,
Sitka, Kechikan) vary more than in Area 3A ports because 2C trips are affected by cruise ship
timelines (four-hour trips or six-hour trips), are combined with other activities (e.g., salmon fishing),
or are part of a lodge package that also includes accommodations. In Area 2C, the price for a full-day
charter ranges from $250 to $350 per person.
66
Charter Halibut Boats
Council, SSC, AP Members and Staff
April 2012