
The Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC) on September 18 voted to bring groundfish depth restrictions for the balance of 2017 back to 2016 depths in California from Pt. Conception to the Oregon border.
The restrictions will go into effect after the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) publishes an official notice of the regulation changes. We expect the regulation change to be published in the Federal Register on or before October 16, said Marci Yaremko, the CDFW Designee on the PFMC. The CDFW was expected to issue a press release as this publication was going to press.
The CDFW states on its website that inseason changes to recreational regulations are pending, and expected to take effect in mid-October. Please check this webpage or call the regulations hotline at 831 649 2801 for updates before engaging in fishing for groundfish.
NMFS will need to issue regulations and California will automatically conform its regulations, explained Marc Gorelnik, CA sport fisheries member of the PFMC-SAS.
The reason is that the take of yelloweye rockfish is forecast to exceed harvest guidelines. The increased depths exposed more yelloweye and anglers have not been sufficiently careful about identifying these fish, he said.
Gorelnik emphasized that the result could have been worse. In Oregon, rockfishing is closed on September 17 because Oregon has already exceeded its yelloweye quota and a couple of other species.
The groundfish depth restrictions in each region will revert back to those in the 2016 regulations, according to Sherry Ingles of the Half Moon Bay Sportfishing Center. For example, the groundfish regulations in the San Francisco Management Area will go back from 40 fathoms to 30 fathoms for the remainder of the season ending December 31.
According to CDFW data, California recreational anglers are in danger of exceeding their allowable take of 3.9 metric tons of yelloweye rockfish, due to the mortality of fish released or those.