FINAL BILL REPORT

 

 

                                   SHB 1056

 

 

                                  C 176 L 89

 

 

BYHouse Committee on Fisheries & Wildlife (originally sponsored by Representatives Sayan, R. King, Smith, Vekich and Belcher; by request of Department of Fisheries)

 

 

Regulating herring spawn on kelp.

 

 

House Committe on Fisheries & Wildlife

 

 

Senate Committee on Environment & Natural Resources

 

 

                              SYNOPSIS AS ENACTED

 

BACKGROUND:

 

Two major herring fisheries are conducted in Puget Sound:  a sport bait fishery, and a sac-roe fishery.  A general purpose herring fishery has been conducted in Bellingham Bay, but this fishery has not occurred since 1984.

 

The sport bait fishery operates primarily in northern Hood Canal and central and south Puget Sound.  The fishery harvests primarily juvenile herring, with an average of approximately 550 tons harvested each year.

 

The sac-roe fishery operates in northern Puget Sound where commercial fishers harvest adult herring immediately prior to spawning.  The egg sacs are removed from the females and exported to Japan.  The number of fish available for this fishery has been low since 1983.  From 1983 through 1986, no sac-roe fishing took place, and in 1987 and 1988, only a limited amount of herring were harvested.

 

Another method of obtaining herring eggs is to have herring lay eggs on kelp, and then to harvest the kelp and eggs.  The egg-  covered kelp is cut into pieces, and sold as an oriental delicacy.

 

A spawn-on-kelp fishery can be conducted in two ways:  by placing the kelp in bays where the herring are likely to spawn, or by collecting the egg-filled herring and placing them in a closed saltwater net pen filled with kelp.  Of the two methods, closed net pens hold the most promise for Puget Sound.

 

Several Indian tribes have conducted closed net pen spawn-on-kelp fisheries in the last two years, and in 1988, the Department of Fisheries conducted a small experimental fishery to better understand the biology and economics of the fishery.  The experiment showed that a closed net pen spawn-on-kelp fishery can be very profitable with greater than 100 percent return on investment, and that the biological ramifications are minor if the fishery is permitted only when herring stocks are in abundance.

 

Spawn-on-kelp fisheries are allowed in Alaska, British Columbia,  and California.  In 1987, Oregon allowed an experimental fishery.

 

Washington's herring fishery is a limited-entry fishery, with a current total of 139 validations.  The validations are transferable,  and the Department of Fisheries may issue additional validations if the herring population would not be jeopardized.

 

SUMMARY:

 

A herring spawn-on-kelp permit, issued by the Department of Fisheries, is created.  No more than five permits may be issued annually.

 

In addition to a commercial fishing license and a herring validation, a herring spawn-on-kelp permit is required to commercially take herring eggs that have been deposited on vegetation of any type.

 

Herring spawn-on-kelp permits shall be sold at an auction to the highest bidder.  Only fishers with a herring validation may participate in the auction.

 

If the proceeds from the auction exceed estimates made in the department's legislatively approved budget, the excess proceeds may be allocated as unanticipated receipts.  These excess proceeds shall be used only for herring management, enhancement, and enforcement.

 

Spawn-on-kelp products are specifically exempted from the definition of "private sector cultured aquatic products" and, therefore, are not subject to oversight by the Department of Agriculture.

 

 

VOTES ON FINAL PASSAGE:

 

      House 96   0

      Senate    41     0 (Senate amended)

      House 93   0 (House concurred)

 

EFFECTIVE:July 23, 1989