Read John Beuttler's comments
State's halibut gamble: Don't worry, be happy
By Nels Johnson Marin Independent Journal
June 27, 2008. California's top recreational fisheries advocate
says regulators are rolling the dice on San Francisco Bay's
halibut fishery. John Beuttler, conservation director of the
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, said the fishery is
at risk as it gets hammered by hundreds of anglers day after
day.
Because salmon fishing has been shut down, regional
recreational and commercial fleets are focusing on bay halibut,
and thousands of fish have been decked following unprecedented
pressure during the peak spawning season.
"The impact on this year's spawning could seriously set
back the whole fishery," said Marin Assemblyman Jared
Huffman.
But Steve Wertz, 47, a senior marine biologist for the
Department of Fish and Game, says there is "no indication
there is any problem with the fishery."
Wertz, a department veteran based in Los Alamitos, said no
study has been done but asserted halibut are "very well
regulated" in light of a 22-inch length restriction. The
size limit allows females to spawn at least once or twice.
A colleague, senior marine biologist Paul N. Reilly in
Monterey, said the department is collecting data and
"monitoring halibut fisheries statewide, including the San
Francisco Bay halibut fishery." A stock assessment later
this year "will be the first statewide evaluation of the
halibut resource and it is designed to give us a good estimate
of the population size, as well as the amount of fishing
pressure that it can safely sustain," he said.
Some fear the state is moving too slowly to do too little,
too late.
"Since the DFG doesn't have a halibut management plan
for the bay fishery, they have no idea what is sustainable or
what isn't," Beuttler noted.
Beuttler, 64, a founder and first executive of the United
Anglers of California, has little faith in fishery managers with
whom he has tangled for decades. Beuttler helped draft the
federal Klamath River Basin Fishery Resources Restoration Act
and other laws restoring salmon habitat. He helped write the
Central Valley Project Improvement Act to boost fish
populations, and played a pivotal role in Proposition 132, which
banned gill nets in state waters. He is a key player in efforts
to curb fresh water exports from the Delta.
The Department of Fish and Game "is the same agency
charged with the management of our salmon, steelhead, striped
bass, American shad and sturgeon fisheries that have tanked
compared to their population levels 20 years ago," Beuttler
said. "The DFG has failed repeatedly in their
mission."
He noted the department has collected information about the
party boat and commercial halibut catch for years, but has not
analyzed it. "The department says the Fish and Game
Commission could make emergency regulation changes if the DFG
had good data to support such actions," Beuttler said.
"Unfortunately they haven't analyzed the data so they can't
make an informed recommendation."
Furthermore, "if the near-shore trawlers and gill net
fishery were not stopped more than a decade ago, there would be
no bay and coastal halibut fishery of any magnitude today,"
he said. "The DFG supported those commercial
fisheries," he added.
"Do we want to err on the side of conservation and
reduce the bag limit and bump up the minimum size to accommodate
increased natural production, or do we want to run the risk of
having a boon or bust fishery?"
Common sense, he concluded, demands "precautionary
conservation actions to protect the public's fishery
resources."
But Wertz isn't worried. "We shouldn't be panicked right
now to think that the resource will be wiped out," Wertz
said. "You can't be reactionary without supporting
data."
Before the Fish and Game Commission restricts halibut
fishing, it will ask the department for a recommendation - which
could be issued only after a study.
And since there is no such analysis, there can be no
recommendation despite the extraordinary harvest of spawners.
It's a Fish and Game Catch 22.
Caught a big one lately? Contact Nels Johnson, an IJ
assistant city editor,at Marin Independent Journal, 150 Alameda
del Prado, Novato, 94948. His phone number is 382-7288; fax
884-1478; e-mail njohnson@marinij.com. Fish Wrap appears
Fridays.