A new National Oceanic and  Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientific assessment of the Chesapeake Bay’s blue  crab stock has been released, setting higher  abundance thresholds and crab population targets.
According to the National Oceanic and  Atmospheric Administration assessment, the Chesapeake Bay Blue Crab population  indicates significantly more work needs to be done to fully rebuild the  stock to sustainable levels.
The study concludes that although the stock has increased  substantially in response to three years of rebuilding efforts by  Virginia, Maryland and the Potomac River Fisheries Commission, the stock  was more depleted than originally believed and will take longer to  rebuild than had been expected.
The assessment sets a new  overfishing threshold as well as a new safe abundance level for female  crabs. According to NOAA, the project took three years to complete and represents the best available  science on the stock’s reproductive capabilities, lifespan, gender and  size distributions.
Until now,  fishery managers used an interim target of 200 million total adult crabs  in the bay as the threshold of a healthy stock and considered  overfishing to occur if 53 percent of adult (age 1+) crabs were  harvested in a year. Regulations were established to meet these  benchmarks, which were based on 2005 bay-wide crab assessment data.
The  new stock assessment sets a new healthy-species abundance level of 215  million female crabs, with overfishing occurring if 34 percent of the  female crabs are harvested in a year.
Put into context, this means that fishery managers have only come close to achieving this level of female abundance three times over the past 22 years, in 2010, 1993 and 1991.
These  more stringent assessments of the stock’s health will allow fishery  managers to set more precise female harvest limits in order to fully  rebuild the stock. Virginia, Maryland and the PRFC remain committed to  working together to rebuild the bay’s crab population to meet the new  female population threshold and abundance target.
In September the  Chesapeake Bay Stock Assessment Committee will meet to consider the new  assessment, examine data from the past two years and provide management  recommendations to Maryland, Virginia and the Potomac River Fisheries  Commission.
The bay-wide crab harvest in 2010 was in the 90  million-pound range, confirming that a healthy harvesting industry can  coexist with regulations designed to rebuild a self-sustaining, healthy  blue crab population.
Through a historic collaboration in 2008,  Maryland, Virginia and the Potomac River Fisheries Commission took  strong, coordinated action to reduce harvest pressure on female crabs by  34 percent. At that time, scientists deemed conservation measures  necessary as blue crab suffered near historic lows in spawning stock.
Dr. Tom Miller, University of Maryland  Center for Environmental Science, lead author of the stock assessment commented on the assessment, stating: "Overall, crabs in the bay are doing well. Implementing recommendations developed  in the stock assessment, like focusing fishing regulations on female  crabs, will help even more,"
The stock assessment can be viewed in its entirety at: http://hjort.cbl.umces.edu/crabs/Assessment.html
source: Virginia Marine Resources Commission/Maryland Department of Natural Resources
 
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