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Descriptions of Selected Fishery Landings and Estimates of Vessel Revenue from Areas: A Planning-level Assessment


Prepared by:
National Marine Fisheries Service


February 27, 2025



OCS-A-0544



Data sources:
Commercial Fisheries landings data, Vessel Trip Reports, and Surfclam/OceanQuahog Logbooks


In order to meet requirements of maintaining data confidentiality, these strata are presented individually. In addition, for records that did not meet the rule of three (>=3 unique dealers and >= 3 unique permits), values were summarized as ‘ALL OTHERS’.

Some caveats/notes:

  • The lease area and any export cable corridor(s) for approved projects, as applicable, used for this report reflect areas posted on the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) website as of November 16, 2023.
  • Values are reported in real 2023 dollars as calculated using the GDP Implicit Price Deflator.
  • Pounds are reported in landed (dressed) pounds.
  • Data summarized here is based on vessels that are required to provide federal VTRs for GARFO managed species (check here for more information).
  • Federal lobster vessels with only lobster permits do not have a VTR requirement. Many vessels issued an Atlantic Highly Migratory Species or Southeast Regional Office permit also do not have a Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office (GARFO) VTR requirement. Trips with no GARFO VTR are not reflected in this summary and impacts to these fisheries may be underrepresented.
  • The ASMFC FMP includes the following species: American Lobster, Cobia, Atlantic Croaker, Black Drum, Red Drum, Menhaden, NK Sea Bass, NK Seatrout, Spot, Striped Bass, Tautog, Jonah Crab, and Pandalid Shrimp.
  • The SERO FMP includes the following species: Amber Jack, Brown Shrimp, Dolphinfish, Greater Amberjack, Grouper, Grunts, Hogfish, King Mackerel, Long Tail Grouper, NK Porgy, Penaeid Shrimp, Red Grouper, Red Hind, Red Porgy, Red Snapper, Rock Hind, Sand Tilefish, Scamp Grouper, Snapper, Snowy Grouper, Spadefish, Spanish Mackerel, Speckled Hind, Spiny American Lobster, Triggerfish, Vermillion Snapper, Wahoo, Wreckfish, Yellowedge Grouper.
  • There exist other fisheries in State waters that may not be reflected in data from federal sources (e.g. whelk, bluefish, and menhaden). It is recommended to query state agencies for additional data within state waters.
  • All summaries presented here are built from percentages of a trip that overlapped spatially with the WEAs. These percentages were applied to landings and values for that trip and summed. This differs from simply using the self-reported VTR/clam logbook locations as those place all value from that trip at a single point. Use of the VTR raster model is more representative as smoothing reported locations reduces the effect of location inaccuracy.
  • The information reported for 2020 should be interpreted with caution due to the generalized impacts the COVID-19 pandemic had across many fisheries in the Greater Atlantic Region resulting in reduced landings and lower prices; hence lower revenues as well as unusually low numbers of vessels that fished during the year.
  • The number of small businesses changes over time both because of changes in affiliated ownership and fluctuations in revenue. For this reason, we use and report only the most recent three years’ revenue in the Small Business Analysis section of this report, consistent with historical guidance provided by the Small Business Administration.
  • Recent changes to the reporting of Surfclam and Ocean Quahog fisheries data in 2023 have likely affected the accuracy of estimated fishing footprints for effort, landings, and revenue within wind energy areas. Users should interpret these data with caution.
  • Confidential data is listed as “Suppressed” or “All Others.”
  • All numbers have been rounded to the nearest thousand.


References
DePiper GS (2014) Statistically assessing the precision of self-reported VTR fishing locations.
Benjamin S, Lee MY, DePiper G. 2018. Visualizing fishing data as rasters. NEFSC Ref Doc 18-12; 24 p.



Most Impacted FMPs

We define “most impacted” as the FMPs deriving the most revenue from the area over the sixteen year analysis period of 2008 to 2023, indicating the highest potential for impact to industry from a reduction in fishing area. The top 5 FMPs by revenue in OCS-A-0544 were Sea Scallop, Surfclam, Ocean Quahog, Summer Flounder, Scup, Black Sea Bass, Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish and Monkfish. Revenue values have been deflated to 2023 dollars. Specific figures on these FMPs within the area follow. See Table 5.1 for area totals for all FMPs and species.

Figure 1.1 Landings from the Most Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544

Table 1.1 Sixteen Year Total Landings (Pounds) from the Most Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544
FMP Sixteen Year Landings
Sea Scallop 2,131,000
Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish 1,738,000
Surfclam, Ocean Quahog 888,000
Summer Flounder, Scup, Black Sea Bass 363,000
Monkfish 256,000
Total 5,376,000

Figure 1.2 Revenue from the Most Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544

Table 1.2 Sixteen Year Total Revenue from the Most Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544
FMP Sixteen Year Revenue
Sea Scallop $27,199,000
Surfclam, Ocean Quahog $995,000
Summer Flounder, Scup, Black Sea Bass $731,000
Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish $645,000
Monkfish $555,000
Total $30,125,000


Other Impacted FMPs

We analyzed other impacted FMPs separately in order to better visualize the estimated landings and revenues. The other impacted FMPs are: All Others, ASMFC FMP, Atlantic Herring, Bluefish, Highly Migratory Species, Northeast Multispecies, SERO FMP, Skates, Small-Mesh Multispecies, Spiny Dogfish, Tilefish and “No Federal FMP.” The category “No Federal FMP” contains a variety of species that are not federally regulated, such as: lobster, Jonah crab, smooth and chain dogfish, whelk, and menhaden, (there are close to 70 species without federal FMPs caught in the OCS-A-0544 area). The category “All Others” refers to FMPs with less than three permits or dealers impacted to protect data confidentiality. Revenue values have been deflated to 2023 dollars. See Table 5.1 for area totals for all FMPs and species.

Figure 2.1 Landings from the Other Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544

Table 2.1 Sixteen Year Total Landings (Pounds) from the Other Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544
FMP Sixteen Year Landings
Atlantic Herring 2,057,000
All Others 497,000
ASMFC FMP 97,000
Skates 97,000
No Federal FMP 48,000
Highly Migratory Species 11,000
Small-Mesh Multispecies 10,000
Spiny Dogfish 9,000
Bluefish 7,000
Northeast Multispecies 1,000
SERO FMP 1,000
Tilefish 1,000
Total 2,835,000

Figure 2.2 Revenue from the Other Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544

Table 2.2 Sixteen Year Total Revenue from the Other Impacted FMPs within OCS-A-0544
FMP Sixteen Year Revenue
All Others $411,000
Atlantic Herring $309,000
ASMFC FMP $86,000
Skates $36,000
No Federal FMP $36,000
Highly Migratory Species $8,000
Small-Mesh Multispecies $8,000
Bluefish $8,000
Tilefish $3,000
Spiny Dogfish $2,000
Northeast Multispecies $2,000
SERO FMP <$500
Total $909,000


Most Impacted Species

We analyzed the top ten species due to their economic importance in the area and to isolate them from combined FMPs. The top ten species by revenue are: Scallop,Sea, All Others, Angler, Mackerel,Atlantic, Flounder,Summer, Herring,Atlantic, Squid (Loligo), Sea Bass,Black, Clam,Surf and Scup. The category “All Others” refers to species with less than three permits or dealers impacted to protect data confidentiality. Revenue values have been deflated to 2023 dollars. See Table 5.1 for area totals for all FMPs and species.


Figure 3.1 Landings from the Most Impacted Species within OCS-A-0544

Table 3.1 Sixteen Year Total Landings (Pounds) from the Most Impacted Species within OCS-A-0544
Species Sixteen Year Landings
Scallop,Sea 2,131,000
Herring,Atlantic 2,057,000
Mackerel,Atlantic 1,436,000
All Others 1,167,000
Clam,Surf 263,000
Angler 256,000
Squid (Loligo) 199,000
Scup 182,000
Flounder,Summer 117,000
Sea Bass,Black 65,000
Total 7,872,000

Figure 3.2 Revenue from the Most Impacted Species within OCS-A-0544