Portland, ME – The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s Northern Shrimp Section (Section) initiated an amendment to consider implementing a new stock monitoring tool, termed the wake-up index, for Gulf of Maine northern shrimp which would inform when an ongoing moratorium should be re-evaluated if there are signs of improved stock condition. While the amendment is under development, the Section maintained the current moratorium through the 2024 fishing year. The Section also passed a motion tasking the Northern Shrimp Technical Committee to evaluate the potential for an industry-based research program given the Northeast Fisheries Science Center’s (NEFSC) suspension of the Summer Northern Shrimp Survey.
This action is in response to the northern shrimp stock remaining at low levels of biomass over the past decade despite the fishing moratorium, first implemented in 2014. The 2023 data update revealed new time series lows for indices of abundance, biomass, and recruitment. Additionally, environmental conditions for the species remain unfavorable with high water temperatures and increased predation in recent years compared to historical levels.
The current management plan for northern shrimp requires specifications to be set and reviewed on an annual basis. However, given the continued poor condition of the stock, the Section supported initiation of a new plan amendment to consider extending the current moratorium until signs of recovery are indicated as opposed to taking action each year to continue the moratorium. To monitor signs of stock recovery, the draft amendment will propose the use of Northern Shrimp Technical Committee-proposed wake-up index, a tool comprised of biological indicators to serve as a trigger to indicate when the northern shrimp stock approaches a healthy population level that may be able to
support a viable fishery. If the wake-up index were to be triggered, it would prompt a more thorough evaluation of stock health to inform the Section’s consideration of reopening the northern shrimp fishery.
Although the Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) suspended the long-running Summer Northern Shrimp Survey after the 2023 sampling season, two other surveys in the Gulf of Maine will continue to provide information on northern shrimp stock status and inform the wake-up index: the Maine-New Hampshire Inshore Trawl Survey and the NEFSC Fall Bottom Trawl Survey. The Commission’s Northern Shrimp Advisory Panel proposed an industry-based sampling program due to the suspension of the NEFSC Summer Survey. The Section supported exploring an industry-based research program, acknowledging that some Section members expressed concerns about the impact of allowing any level of removals when the stock was in such poor conditions. The Section tasked the Technical Committee with investigating methods, research goals, cost, and catch caps for an industry-based research program to ensure that such a program could provide useful scientific and management information with minimal risk to the stock. The Technical Committee will consult with the Advisory Panel for industry input and report back to the Section at its next meeting.
Finally, the Section elected Doug Grout of New Hampshire as Section Chair. For more information, please contact Chelsea Tuohy, Fishery Management Coordinator, at ctuohy@asmfc.org.