Fishery Management
- NOAA Fisheries and the North Pacific Fishery Management Council manage the Pacific ocean perch fishery in Alaska.
- Managed under the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Groundfish Fishery Management Plans:
- Permits are required and the number of available permits is limited to control the amount of fishing.
- Managers determine how much Pacific ocean perch can be caught and then allocate this catch quota among groups of fishermen.
- Catch is monitored through record keeping, reporting requirements, and observer monitoring.
- A percentage of the Aleutian Islands catch is allocated to the Community Development Quota Program, which benefits fishery-dependent communities in western Alaska. The rest is allocated among the BSAI trawl sectors, based on historic harvest and future harvest needs, to improve retention and utilization of fishery resources by the trawl fleet.
- The Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Program allows harvesters to fish together in cooperatives. These cooperatives are allocated specific amounts of the allowed catches of rockfish and species harvested incidentally to rockfish. The goal of the program is to spread out the fishery in time and space, allowing fishermen more flexibility to sell their catch for better prices and reducing the pressure of what was once an approximately 2-week fishery in July.
- NOAA Fisheries and the Pacific Fishery Management Council manage the Pacific ocean perch fishery on the West Coast.
- Managed under the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan:
- NOAA Fisheries declared the Pacific coast stock of Pacific ocean perch overfished in 1999. The council adopted a rebuilding plan for the stock in 2000, which prohibited a directed fishery for the species. The stock was declared rebuilt in 2017.
- The regulations listed below that apply to all Pacific groundfish fisheries also provide for the conservation and management of Pacific ocean perch:
- Limit on how much may be harvested in one fishing trip.
- Certain seasons and areas are closed to fishing.
- Gear restrictions help reduce bycatch and impacts on habitat.
- A trawl rationalization catch share program that includes:
- Catch limits that are based on the population status of each fish stock and divided into shares that are allocated to individual fishermen or groups.
- Provisions that allow fishermen to decide how and when to catch their share.