New limits posed for California’s abalone fishery amid poor ocean conditions
Concern about abnormal ocean conditions off the North Coast is prompting a move by state wildlife officials to restrict next year’s abalone fishery, perhaps halving the number of sea snails individual hunters would be permitted to harvest and even lopping a month or two off the traditional seven-month season.
The dramatic cutback proposed for the popular recreational fishery comes as red abalone stocks are showing the severe effects of wide-scale habitat disruption, including the die-off of kelp forests, leading to starvation for abalone and other sea life.
While the survival of the species is not currently in question, the sustainability of the fishery is “threatened,” said Sonke Mastrup, environmental program manager for California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s marine region.
“We should try to be a little conservative until we know what is going to transpire, because if you overdo it, it’s hard to take back,” Mastrup said. “Once you’ve killed too many, you’ve killed too many.”
The state Fish and Game Commission is set to decide Wednesday in San Diego on the abalone harvest limits, including several proposals meant to protect stocks that draw divers and pickers by the thousands to the wave-battered Sonoma and Mendocino coasts from April to November each year.
Longtime abalone hunters appear largely resigned to some kind of restrictions for next year, though they’re lobbying for what they believe is improved science to bolster future decisions on the fishery.
Wildlife officials say the declining abalone densities and poor conditions mandate action under a statewide management plan.
The emergency effort comes amid shocking reports of underwater landscapes barren of the lush kelp forests for which the region has long been known and overrun with small, voracious purple urchins that have stripped the ocean floor in some areas of virtually all available food.
The result is starvation among both abalone and urchins, though the latter can endure for years with little food, scientists said.
More than a quarter of the 6,000 harvested mollusks assessed at key sites during this past season were shrunken inside their shells and likely fated to die. Abalone shells that litter the coastline also attest to widespread weakness that leaves them unable to hold onto the ocean floor in rough conditions, experts say.
Urchins, meanwhile, have been observed under water “rasping away at the encrusting coral and algae on the rocks” and appear to be grazing on available abalone in some cases, said Ian Taniguchi, senior environmental scientist with the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Marine Region.
“In all my years - and I’ve been diving abalone since the ’70s - I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Mastrup, a longtime participant in the agency’s annual abalone surveys off the North Coast.
“It’s not to say we haven’t seen spots like this,” Mastrup said. “What was new was the extent of this. You could see it up and down the coast... It was the scale of it that was stunning.”
Before next week’s commission meeting in San Diego, Mastrup will attend a town hall meeting in Fort Bragg on Saturday to discuss the emergency proposals.
Currently, the abalone fishery opens April 1 and runs through June 30, then closes for the month of July. It reopens Aug. 1 and runs through Nov. 30.
Participants are now allowed to harvest 18 abalones total, only nine of which can be fished south of the Mendocino County line. The sport fishery is open only from waters north of San Francisco, and Sonoma and Mendocino counties account for all but 2 percent of the state’s annual abalone harvest, including an estimated 2015 catch of 155,000.
Proposals up for consideration next week include reducing the annual per-person limit to nine abalone, and closing the fishery in April or in both April and November.
At the suggestion of the Watermen’s Alliance, a statewide, grass-roots ocean fishing group, the commission also will consider cutting the annual limit to 12, with the closure of the fishery in April and November. The goal is to reduce the total harvest to about 107,000, officials said
Any emergency rule adopted would be in effect for 180 days, with the potential to be extended twice, for 90 days each, so it could remain in effect for the entirety of next season, officials said.
Guerneville resident Patrick Reesink, 60, was among those out on the coast Wednesday for the last day of the 2016 abalone season, continuing a cherished tradition and pastime with a friend.
“I’ve been diving for 40 years,” Reesink said. “It keeps getting more strict, and all the rules and regulations, but if it helps to keep the abalone alive, I’m all for it.”
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