section_id,title_number,title_name,chapter,subchapter,part_number,part_name,subpart,subpart_name,section_number,section_heading,agency,authority,source_citation,amendment_citations,full_text 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.1,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.1 Purpose and scope.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 80 FR 62501, Oct. 16, 2015; 84 FR 2768, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) The regulations in this part govern fishing for Pacific Island management unit species (MUS) and ecosystem component species (ECS) by vessels of the United States that operate or are based inside the outer boundary of the U.S. EEZ around American Samoa, Hawaii, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Palmyra Atoll, Kingman Reef, Jarvis Island, Baker Island, Howland Island, Johnston Atoll, and Wake Island. (b) General regulations governing fishing by all vessels of the United States and by fishing vessels other than vessels of the United States are contained in 50 CFR parts 300 and 600. (c) Regulations governing the harvest, possession, landing, purchase, and sale of shark fins are found in 50 CFR part 600 subpart N. (d) This subpart contains regulations that are common to all western Pacific fisheries managed under Fishery Ecosystem Plans (FEPs) prepared by the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council under the Magnuson-Stevens Act. (e) Regulations specific to individual areas and fisheries are included in subparts B through F of this part. (f) Nothing in subparts B through F of this part is intended to supersede any valid state or Federal regulations that are more restrictive than those published here." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.10,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.16 Vessel identification.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 75 FR 3417, Jan. 21, 2010; 78 FR 33003, June 3, 2013; 78 FR 39583, July 2, 2013]","(a) Applicability. Each fishing vessel subject to this part, except those identified in paragraph (e) of this section, must be marked for identification purposes, as follows: (1) A vessel that is registered for use with a valid permit issued under § 665.801 and used to fish on the high seas within the Convention Area as defined in § 300.211 of this title must be marked in accordance with the requirements at §§ 300.14 and 300.217 of this title. (2) A vessel that is registered for use with a valid permit issued under § 665.801 of this part and not used to fish on the high seas within the Convention Area must be marked in accordance with either: (i) Sections 300.14 and 300.217 of this title, or (ii) Paragraph (b) of this section. (3) A vessel that is registered for use with a valid permit issued under subparts B through E and subparts G through I of this part must be marked in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Identification. Each vessel subject to this section must be marked as follows: (1) The vessel's official number must be affixed to the port and starboard sides of the deckhouse or hull, and on an appropriate weather deck, so as to be visible from enforcement vessels and aircraft. Marking must be legible and of a color that contrasts with the background. (2) For fishing and receiving vessels of 65 ft (19.8 m) LOA or longer, the official number must be displayed in block Arabic numerals at least 18 inches (45.7 cm) in height, except that vessels in precious coral fisheries that are 65 ft (19.8 m) LOA or longer must be marked in block Arabic numerals at least 14 inches (35.6 cm) in height. (3) For all other vessels, the official number must be displayed in block Arabic numerals at least 10 inches (25.4 cm) in height. (c) The vessel operator must ensure that the official number is clearly legible and in good repair. (d) The vessel operator must ensure that no part of the vessel, its rigging, or its fishing gear obstructs the view of the official number from an enforcement vessel or aircraft. (e) The following fishing vessels are exempt from the vessel identification requirements in this section: (1) A vessel registered for use under a MHI non-commercial bottomfish permit that is in compliance with State of Hawaii bottomfish vessel registration and marking requirements. (2) A vessel less than 40 ft (12.2 m) LOA registered for use under a CNMI commercial bottomfish permit that is in compliance with CNMI bottomfish vessel registration and marking requirements." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.11,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.17 Experimental fishing.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2769, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) General. The Regional Administrator may authorize, for limited purposes, the direct or incidental harvest of MUS or ECS that would otherwise be prohibited by this part. No experimental fishing may be conducted unless authorized by an EFP issued by the Regional Administrator in accordance with the criteria and procedures specified in this section. EFPs will be issued without charge. (b) Observers. No experimental fishing for crustacean MUS or ECS may be conducted unless a NMFS observer is aboard the vessel. (c) Application. An applicant for an EFP must submit to the Regional Administrator at least 60 days before the desired date of the EFP a written application including, but not limited to, the following information: (1) The date of the application. (2) The applicant's name, mailing address, and telephone number. (3) A statement of the purposes and goals of the experiment for which an EFP is needed, including a general description of the arrangements for disposition of all species harvested under the EFP. (4) A statement of whether the proposed experimental fishing has broader significance than the applicant's individual goals. (5) For each vessel to be covered by the EFP: (i) Vessel name. (ii) Name, address, and telephone number of owner and operator. (iii) USCG documentation, state license, or registration number. (iv) Home port. (v) Length of vessel. (vi) Net tonnage. (vii) Gross tonnage. (6) A description of the species (directed and incidental) to be harvested under the EFP and the amount of such harvest necessary to conduct the experiment. (7) For each vessel covered by the EFP, the approximate times and places fishing will take place, and the type, size, and amount of gear to be used. (8) The signature of the applicant. (d) Incomplete applications. The Regional Administrator may request from an applicant additional information necessary to make the determinations required under this section. An applicant will be notified of an incomplete application within 10 working days of receipt of the application. An incomplete application will not be considered until corrected in writing. (e) Issuance. (1) If an application contains all of the required information, NMFS will publish a notice of receipt of the application in the Federal Register with a brief description of the proposal and will give interested persons an opportunity to comment. The Regional Administrator will also forward copies of the application to the Council, the USCG, and the fishery management agency of the affected state, accompanied by the following information: (i) The current utilization of domestic annual harvesting and processing capacity (including existing experimental harvesting, if any) of the directed and incidental species for which an EFP is being requested. (ii) A citation of the regulation or regulations that, without the EFP, would prohibit the proposed activity. (iii) Biological information relevant to the proposal. (2) At a Council meeting following receipt of a complete application, the Regional Administrator will consult with the Council and the Director of the affected state fishery management agency concerning the permit application. The applicant will be notified in advance of the meeting at which the application will be considered, and invited to appear in support of the application, if the applicant desires. (3) Within 5 working days after the consultation in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, or as soon as practicable thereafter, NMFS will notify the applicant in writing of the decision to grant or deny the EFP and, if denied, the reasons for the denial. Grounds for denial of an EFP include, but are not limited to, the following: (i) The applicant has failed to disclose material information required, or has made false statements as to any material fact, in connection with his or her application. (ii) According to the best scientific information available, the harvest to be conducted under the permit would detrimentally affect any species of fish in a significant way. (iii) Issuance of the EFP would inequitably allocate fishing privileges among domestic fishermen or would have economic allocation as its sole purpose. (iv) Activities to be conducted under the EFP would be inconsistent with the intent of this section or the management objectives of the FEP. (v) The applicant has failed to demonstrate a valid justification for the permit. (vi) The activity proposed under the EFP would create a significant enforcement problem. (4) The decision to grant or deny an EFP is final and unappealable. If the permit is granted, NMFS will publish a notice in the Federal Register describing the experimental fishing to be conducted under the EFP. The Regional Administrator may attach terms and conditions to the EFP consistent with the purpose of the experiment including, but not limited to: (i) The maximum amount of each species that can be harvested and landed during the term of the EFP, including trip limits, where appropriate. (ii) The number, sizes, names, and identification numbers of the vessels authorized to conduct fishing activities under the EFP. (iii) The times and places where experimental fishing may be conducted. (iv) The type, size, and amount of gear which may be used by each vessel operated under the EFP. (v) The condition that observers be carried aboard vessels operating under an EFP. (vi) Data reporting requirements. (vii) Such other conditions as may be necessary to assure compliance with the purposes of the EFP consistent with the objectives of the FEP. (f) Duration. Unless otherwise specified in the EFP or a superseding notice or regulation, an EFP is effective for no longer than one (1) year from the date of issuance, unless revoked, suspended, or modified. EFPs may be renewed following the application procedures in this section. (g) Alteration. Any EFP that has been altered, erased, or mutilated is invalid. (h) Transfer. EFPs issued under subparts B through F of this part are not transferable or assignable. An EFP is valid only for the vessel(s) for which it is issued. (i) Inspection. Any EFP issued under subparts B through F of this part must be carried aboard the vessel(s) for which it was issued. The EFP must be presented for inspection upon request of any authorized officer. (j) Sanctions. Failure of the holder of an EFP to comply with the terms and conditions of an EFP, the provisions of subparts A through F of this part, any other applicable provision of this part, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, or any other regulation promulgated thereunder, is grounds for revocation, suspension, or modification of the EFP with respect to all persons and vessels conducting activities under the EFP. Any action taken to revoke, suspend, or modify an EFP will be governed by 15 CFR part 904 subpart D. Other sanctions available under the statute will be applicable. (k) Protected species. Persons fishing under an EFP must report any incidental take or fisheries interaction with protected species on a form provided for that purpose. Reports must be submitted to the Regional Administrator within 3 days of arriving in port." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.12,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.18 Framework adjustments to management measures.,FWS,,,,"Framework measures described below for each specific fishery are valid for all management areas, except where specifically noted in this section. (a) Pelagic measures —(1) Introduction. Adjustments in management measures may be made through rulemaking if new information demonstrates that there are biological, social, or economic concerns in the fishery. The following framework process authorizes the implementation of measures that may affect the operation of the fisheries, gear, harvest guidelines, or changes in catch and/or effort. (2) Annual report. By June 30 of each year, the Council-appointed pelagics monitoring team will prepare an annual report on the fisheries in the management area. The report shall contain, among other things, recommendations for Council action and an assessment of the urgency and effects of such action(s). (3) Procedure for established measures. (i) Established measures are regulations for which the impacts have been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council may recommend to the Regional Administrator that established measures be modified, removed, or reinstituted. Such recommendation shall include supporting rationale and analysis, and shall be made after advance public notice, public discussion, and consideration of public comment. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (4) Procedure for new measures. (i) New measures are regulations for which the impacts have not been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council will publicize, including by Federal Register notice, and solicit public comment on, any proposed new management measure. After a Council meeting at which the measure is discussed, the Council will consider recommendations and prepare a Federal Register notice summarizing the Council's deliberations, rationale, and analysis for the preferred action, and the time and place for any subsequent Council meeting(s) to consider the new measure. At subsequent public meeting(s), the Council will consider public comments and other information received to make a recommendation to the Regional Administrator about any new measure. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (b) Crustacean measures —(1) Introduction. New management measures may be added through rulemaking if new information demonstrates that there are biological, social, or economic concerns in Permit Areas 1, 2, or 3. The following framework process authorizes the implementation of measures that may affect the operation of the fisheries, gear, harvest guidelines, or changes in catch and/or effort. (2) Annual report. By June 30 of each year, the Council-appointed team will prepare an annual report on the fisheries in the management area. The report shall contain, among other things, recommendations for Council action and an assessment of the urgency and effects of such action(s). (3) Procedure for established measures. (i) Established measures are regulations for which the impacts have been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council may recommend to the Regional Administrator that established measures be modified, removed, or reinstituted. Such recommendation shall include supporting rationale and analysis, and shall be made after advance public notice, public discussion, and consideration of public comment. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (4) Procedure for new measures. (i) New measures are regulations for which the impacts have not been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council will publicize, including by a Federal Register document, and solicit public comment on, any proposed new management measure. After a Council meeting at which the measure is discussed, the Council will consider recommendations and prepare a Federal Register document summarizing the Council's deliberations, rationale, and analysis for the preferred action, and the time and place for any subsequent Council meeting(s) to consider the new measure. At subsequent public meeting(s), the Council will consider public comments and other information received to make a recommendation to the Regional Administrator about any new measure. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (c) Bottomfish measures —(1) Annual reports. By June 30 of each year, a Council-appointed bottomfish monitoring team will prepare an annual report on the fishery by area covering the following topics: (i) Fishery performance data. (ii) Summary of recent research and survey results. (iii) Habitat conditions and recent alterations. (iv) Enforcement activities and problems. (v) Administrative actions (e.g., data collection and reporting, permits). (vi) State and territorial management actions. (vii) Assessment of need for Council action (including biological, economic, social, enforcement, administrative, and state/Federal needs, problems, and trends). Indications of potential problems warranting further investigation may be signaled by the following indicator criteria: (A) Mean size of the catch of any species in any area is a pre-reproductive size. (B) Ratio of fishing mortality to natural mortality for any species. (C) Harvest capacity of the existing fleet and/or annual landings exceed best estimate of MSY in any area. (D) Significant decline (50 percent or more) in bottomfish catch per unit of effort from baseline levels. (E) Substantial decline in ex-vessel revenue relative to baseline levels. (F) Significant shift in the relative proportions of gear in any one area. (G) Significant change in the frozen/fresh components of the bottomfish catch. (H) Entry/exit of fishermen in any area. (I) Per-trip costs for bottomfish fishing exceed per-trip revenues for a significant percentage of trips. (J) Significant decline or increase in total bottomfish landings in any area. (K) Change in species composition of the bottomfish catch in any area. (L) Research results. (M) Habitat degradation or environmental problems. (N) Reported interactions between bottomfish fishing operations and protected species in the NWHI. (viii) Recommendations for Council action. (ix) Estimated impacts of recommended action. (2) Recommendation of management action. (i) The team may present management recommendations to the Council at any time. Recommendations may cover actions suggested for Federal regulations, state/territorial action, enforcement or administrative elements, and research and data collection. Recommendations will include an assessment of urgency and the effects of not taking action. (ii) The Council will evaluate the team's reports and recommendations, and the indicators of concern. The Council will assess the need for one or more of the following types of management action: Catch limits, size limits, closures, effort limitations, access limitations, or other measures. (iii) The Council may recommend management action by either the state/territorial governments or by Federal regulation. (3) Federal management action. (i) If the Council believes that management action should be considered, it will make specific recommendations to the Regional Administrator after requesting and considering the views of its Scientific and Statistical Committee and Bottomfish Advisory Panel and obtaining public comments at a public hearing. (ii) The Regional Administrator will consider the Council's recommendation and accompanying data, and, if he or she concurs with the Council's recommendation, will propose regulations to carry out the action. If the Regional Administrator rejects the Council's proposed action, a written explanation for the denial will be provided to the Council within 2 weeks of the decision. (iii) The Council may appeal a denial by writing to the Assistant Administrator, who must respond in writing within 30 days. (iv) The Regional Administrator and the Assistant Administrator will make their decisions in accord with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, other applicable law, and the bottomfish measures of the FEPs. (v) To minimize conflicts between the Federal and state management systems, the Council will use the procedures in paragraph (c)(2) of this section to respond to state/territorial management actions. Council consideration of action would normally begin with a representative of the state or territorial government bringing a potential or actual management conflict or need to the Council's attention. (4) Access limitation procedures. (i) Access limitation may be adopted under this paragraph (c)(4) only for the NWHI, American Samoa, and Guam. (ii) If access limitation is proposed for adoption or subsequent modification through the process described in this paragraph (c)(4), the following requirements must be met: (A) The bottomfish monitoring team must consider and report to the Council on present participation in the fishery; historical fishing practices in, and dependence on, the fishery; economics of the fishery; capability of fishing vessels used in the fishery to engage in other fisheries; cultural and social framework relevant to the fishery; and any other relevant considerations. (B) Public hearings must be held specifically addressing the limited access proposals. (C) A specific advisory subpanel of persons experienced in the fishing industry will be created to advise the Council and the Regional Administrator on administrative decisions. (D) The Council's recommendation to the Regional Administrator must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the voting members. (5) Five-year review. The Council will conduct a comprehensive review on the effectiveness of the Mau Zone limited access program 5 years following implementation of the program. The Council will consider the extent to which the FEP objectives have been met and verify that the target number of vessels established for the fishery is appropriate for current fishing activity levels, catch rates, and biological condition of the stocks. The Council may establish a new target number based on the 5-year review. (d) Precious coral measures —(1) Introduction. Established management measures may be revised and new management measures may be established and/or revised through rulemaking if new information demonstrates that there are biological, social, or economic concerns in a precious coral permit area. The following framework process authorizes the implementation of measures that may affect the operation of the fisheries, gear, quotas, season, or levels of catch and/or in effort. (2) Annual report. By June 30 of each year, the Council-appointed precious coral team will prepare an annual report on the fisheries in the management area. The report will contain, among other things, recommendations for Council action and an assessment of the urgency and effects of such action(s). (3) Procedure for established measures. (i) Established measures are regulations for which the impacts have been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council may recommend to the Regional Administrator that established measures be modified, removed, or reinstituted. Such recommendation will include supporting rationale and analysis and will be made after advance public notice, public discussion, and consideration of public comment. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (4) Procedure for new measures. (i) New measures are regulations for which the impacts have not been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council will publicize, including by a Federal Register document, and solicit public comment on, any proposed new management measure. After a Council meeting at which the measure is discussed, the Council will consider recommendations and prepare a Federal Register document summarizing the Council's deliberations, rationale, and analysis for the preferred action and the time and place for any subsequent Council meeting(s) to consider the new measure. At a subsequent public meeting, the Council will consider public comments and other information received before making a recommendation to the Regional Administrator about any new measure. If approved by the Regional Administrator, NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking. (e) Coral reef ecosystem measures —(1) Procedure for established measures. (i) Established measures are regulations for which the impacts have been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. (ii) The Council may recommend to the Regional Administrator that established measures be modified, removed, or reinstituted. Such recommendation shall include supporting rationale and analysis, and shall be made after advance public notice, public discussion and consideration of public comment. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (2) Procedure for new measures. (i) New measures are regulations for which the impacts have not been evaluated in Council or NMFS documents in the context of current conditions. New measures include, but are not limited to, catch limits, resource size limits, closures, effort limitations, reporting and recordkeeping requirements. (ii) The Regional Administrator will publicize, including by Federal Register notice, and solicit public comment on, any proposed new management measure. After a Council meeting at which the measure is discussed, the Council will consider recommendations and prepare a document summarizing the Council's deliberations, rationale, and analysis for the preferred action, and the time and place for any subsequent Council meeting(s) to consider the new measure. At subsequent public meeting(s), the Council will consider public comments and other information received to make a recommendation to the Regional Administrator about any new measure. NMFS may implement the Council's recommendation by rulemaking if approved by the Regional Administrator. (A) The Regional Administrator will consider the Council's recommendation and supporting rationale and analysis, and, if the Regional Administrator concurs with the Council's recommendation, will propose regulations to carry out the action. If the Regional Administrator rejects the Council's proposed action, the Regional Administrator will provide a written explanation for the denial within 2 weeks of the decision. (B) The Council may appeal a denial by writing to the Assistant Administrator, who must respond in writing within 30 days. (C) The Regional Administrator and the Assistant Administrator will make their decisions in accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, other applicable laws, and the FEPs. (D) To minimize conflicts between the Federal and state/territorial/commonwealth management systems, the Council will use the procedures in this paragraph (e)(2)(ii) to respond to state/territorial/commonwealth management actions. The Council's consideration of action would normally begin with a representative of the state, territorial or commonwealth government bringing a potential or actual management conflict or need to the Council's attention. (3) Annual report. By July 31 of each year, a Council-appointed coral reef ecosystem monitoring team will prepare an annual report on coral reef fisheries of the western Pacific region. The report will contain, among other things: (i) Fishery performance data, summaries of new information and assessments of need for Council action. (ii) Recommendation for Council action. The Council will evaluate the annual report and advisory body recommendations and may recommend management action by either the state/territorial/commonwealth governments or by Federal regulation. (iii) If the Council believes that management action should be considered, it will make specific recommendations to the Regional Administrator after considering the views of its advisory bodies." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.13,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.19 Vessel monitoring system.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 86 FR 55745, Oct. 7, 2021]","(a) Applicability. The holder of any of the following permits is subject to the vessel monitoring system requirements in this part: (1) Hawaii longline limited access permit issued pursuant to § 665.801(b); (2) American Samoa large vessel longline limited entry permit issued pursuant to § 665.801(c); (3) Vessels permitted to fish in Crustacean Permit Area 1 VMS Subarea; or (4) CNMI commercial bottomfish permit, if the vessel is a medium or large bottomfish vessel, issued pursuant to § 665.404(a)(2). (b) VMS unit. Only a VMS unit owned by NMFS and installed by NMFS complies with the requirement of this subpart. (c) Notification. After a permit holder subject to § 665.19(a) has been notified by the SAC of a specific date for installation of a VMS unit on the permit holder's vessel, the vessel must carry and operate the VMS unit after the date scheduled for installation. (d) Fees and charges. During the experimental VMS program, the holder of a permit subject to § 665.19(a) shall not be assessed any fee or other charges to obtain and use a VMS unit, including the communication charges related directed to requirements under this section. Communication charges related to any additional equipment attached to the VMS unit by the owner or operator shall be the responsibility of the owner or operator and not NMFS. (e) Permit holder duties. The holder of a permit subject to § 665.19(a) and master of the vessel must: (1) Provide opportunity for the SAC to install and make operational a VMS unit after notification. (2) Carry and continuously operate the VMS unit on board whenever the vessel is at sea. (3) Not remove, relocate, or make non-operational the VMS unit without prior approval from the SAC. (f) Authorization by the SAC. The SAC has authority over the installation and operation of the VMS unit. The SAC may authorize the connection or order the disconnection of additional equipment, including a computer, to any VMS unit when deemed appropriate by the SAC." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.14,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.20 Western Pacific Community Development Program.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 54046, Sept. 3, 2010]","(a) General. In accordance with the criteria and procedures specified in this section, the Regional Administrator may authorize the direct or incidental harvest of management unit species that would otherwise be prohibited by this part. (b) Eligibility. To be eligible to participate in the western Pacific community development program, a community must meet the following criteria: (1) Be located in American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, or the Northern Mariana Islands (collectively, the western Pacific); (2) Consist of community residents descended from aboriginal people indigenous to the western Pacific who conducted commercial or subsistence fishing using traditional fishing practices in the waters of the western Pacific; (3) Consist of individuals who reside in their ancestral homeland; (4) Have knowledge of customary practices relevant to fisheries of the western Pacific; (5) Have a traditional dependence on fisheries of the western Pacific; (6) Are currently experiencing economic or other constraints that have prevented full participation in the western Pacific fisheries and, in recent years, have not had harvesting, processing or marketing capability sufficient to support substantial participation in fisheries in the area; and (7) Develop and submit a community development plan to the Council and the NMFS that meets the requirements in paragraph (c) of this section. (c) Community development plan. An eligible community seeking access to a fishery under the authority of the Council and NMFS must submit to the Council a community development plan that includes, but is not limited to, the following information: (1) A statement of the purposes and goals of the plan. (2) A description and justification for the specific fishing activity being proposed, including: (i) Location of the proposed fishing activity. (ii) Management unit species to be harvested, and any potential bycatch. (iii) Gear type(s) to be used. (iv) Frequency and duration of the proposed fishing activity. (3) A statement describing the degree of involvement by the indigenous community members, including the name, address, telephone and other contact information of each individual conducting the proposed fishing activity. (4) A description of how the community and or its members meet each of the eligibility criteria in paragraph (b) of this section. (5) If a vessel is to be used by the community to conduct fishing activities, for each vessel: (i) Vessel name and official number (USCG documentation, state, territory, or other registration number). (ii) Vessel length overall, displacement, and fish holding capacity. (iii) Any valid federal fishing permit number(s). (iv) Name, address, and telephone number of the vessel owner(s) and operator(s). (d) Council review. The Council will review each community development plan to ensure that it meets the intent of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and contains all required information. The Council may consider advice of its advisory panels in conducting this review. If the Council finds the community development plan is complete, it will transmit the plan to the Regional Administrator for review. (e) Agency review and approval. (1) Upon receipt of a community development plan from the Council, the Regional Administrator will review the plan for consistency with paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section, and other applicable laws. The Regional Administrator may request from the applicant additional information necessary to make the determinations pursuant to this section and other applicable laws before proceeding with the review pursuant to paragraph (e)(2) of this section. (2) If the Regional Administrator determines that a plan contains the required information and is consistent with paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section, and other applicable laws, NMFS will publish a notice in the Federal Register to solicit public comment on the proposed plan and any associated environmental review documents. The notice will include the following: (i) A description of the fishing activity to be conducted. (ii) The current utilization of domestic annual harvesting and processing capacity (including existing experimental harvesting, if any) of the target, incidental, and bycatch species. (iii) A summary of any regulations that would otherwise prohibit the proposed fishing activity. (iv) Biological and environmental information relevant to the plan, including appropriate statements of environmental impacts on target and non-target stocks, marine mammals, and threatened or endangered species. (3) Within 90 days from the end of the comment period on the plan, the Regional Administrator will notify the applicant in writing of the decision to approve or disapprove the plan. (4) If disapproved, the Regional Administrator will provide the reasons for the plan's disapproval and provide the community with the opportunity to modify the plan and resubmit it for review. Reasons for disapproval may include, but are not limited to, the following: (i) The applicant failed to disclose material information or made false statements related to the plan. (ii) The harvest would contribute to overfishing or would hinder the recovery of an overfished stock, according to the best scientific information available. (iii) The activity would be inconsistent with an applicable law. (iv) The activity would create a significant enforcement, monitoring, or administrative problem, as determined by the Regional Administrator. (5) If approved, the Regional Administrator will publish a notice of the authorization in the Federal Register, and may attach limiting terms and conditions to the authorization including, but not limited to, the following: (i) The maximum amount of each management unit species and potential bycatch species that may be harvested and landed during the term of the authorization. (ii) The number, sizes, names, identification numbers, and federal permit numbers of the vessels authorized to conduct fishing activities. (iii) Type, size, and amount of gear used by each vessel, including trip limits. (iv) The times and places where fishing may or may not be conducted. (v) Notification, observer, vessel monitoring, and reporting requirements. (f) Duration. Unless otherwise specified, and unless revoked, suspended, or modified, a plan may be effective for no longer than five years. (g) Transfer. Plans authorized under this section are not transferable or assignable. (h) Sanctions. The Regional Administrator may revoke, suspend or modify a community development plan in the case of failure to comply with the terms and conditions of the plan, any other applicable provision of this part, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, or other applicable laws. (i) Program review. NMFS and the Council will periodically review and assess each plan. If fishery, environmental, or other conditions have changed such that the plan's goals or requirements are not being met, or the fishery has become in an overfished state or overfishing is occurring, the Regional Administrator may revoke, suspend, or modify the plan." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.2,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.2 Relation to other laws.,FWS,,,,"NMFS recognizes that any state law pertaining to vessels registered under the laws of that state while operating in the fisheries regulated under this part, that is consistent with this part and the FEPs implemented by this part, shall continue in effect with respect to fishing activities regulated under this part." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.3,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.3 Licensing and registration.,FWS,,,,Any person who is required to do so by applicable state law or regulation must comply with licensing and registration requirements in the exact manner required by applicable state law or regulation. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.4,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.4 Annual catch limits.,FWS,,,"[76 FR 37286, June 27, 2011, as amended at 84 FR 2768, Feb. 8, 2019; 85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020]","(a) General. For each fishing year, the Regional Administrator shall specify an annual catch limit, including any overage adjustments, for each stock or stock complex of management unit species defined in subparts B through F of this part, as recommended by the Council, and considering the best available scientific, commercial, and other information about the fishery for that stock or stock complex. The annual catch limit shall serve as the basis for invoking accountability measures in paragraph (f) of this section. (b) Overage adjustments. If landings of a stock or stock complex exceed the specified annual catch limit in a fishing year, the Council will take action in accordance with 50 CFR 600.310(g), which may include recommending that the Regional Administrator reduce the annual catch limit for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage or other measures, as appropriate. (c) Exceptions. The Regional Administrator is not required to specify an annual catch limit for an ECS, or for an MUS that is statutorily excepted from the requirement pursuant to 50 CFR 600.310(h)(1). (d) Annual catch target. For each fishing year, the Regional Administrator may also specify an annual catch target that is below the annual catch limit of a stock or stock complex, as recommended by the Council. When used, the annual catch target shall serve as the basis for invoking accountability measures in paragraph (f) of this section. (e) Procedures and timing. (1) No later than 60 days before the start of a fishing year, the Council shall recommend to the Regional Administrator an annual catch limit, including any overage adjustment, for each stock or stock complex. The recommended limit should be based on a recommendation of the SSC of the acceptable biological catch for each stock or stock complex. The Council may not recommend an annual catch limit that exceeds the acceptable biological catch recommended by the SSC. The Council may also recommend an annual catch target below the annual catch limit. (2) No later than 30 days before the start of a fishing year, the Regional Administrator shall publish in the Federal Register a notice of the proposed annual catch limit specification and any associated annual catch target, and request public comment. (3) No later than the start of a fishing year, the Regional Administrator shall publish in the Federal Register and use other methods to notify permit holders of the final annual catch limit specification and any associated annual catch target. (f) Accountability measures. When any annual catch limit or annual catch target is projected to be reached, based on available information, the Regional Administrator shall publish notification to that effect in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify permit holders. (1) The notice will include an advisement that fishing for that stock or stock complex will be restricted beginning on a specified date, which shall not be earlier than 7 days after the date of filing the notice for public inspection at the Office of the Federal Register. The restriction may include, but is not limited to, closure of the fishery, closure of specific areas, changes to bag limits, or restrictions in effort. The restriction will remain in effect until the end of the fishing year, except that the Regional Administrator may, based on a recommendation from the Council, remove or modify the restriction before the end of the fishing year. (2) It is unlawful for any person to conduct fishing in violation of the restrictions specified in the notification issued pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of this section." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.5,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§§ 665.5-665.11 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.6,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.12 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 76 FR 37286, June 27, 2011; 78 FR 33003, June 3, 2013; 79 FR 64111, Oct. 28, 2014; 84 FR 2768, Feb. 8, 2019; 84 FR 29396, June 24, 2019; 86 FR 55745, Oct. 7, 2021]","In addition to the definitions in the Magnuson-Stevens Act, § 600.10 of this chapter, and subparts B through F of this part, general definitions for western Pacific fisheries have the following meanings: American Samoa FEP means the Fishery Ecosystem Plan for American Samoa, available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council or PIRO. Bottomfish FMP means the Fishery Management Plan for Bottomfish and Seamount Groundfish of the Western Pacific Region established in 1986 and replaced by FEPs. Carapace length means a measurement in a straight line from the ridge between the two largest spines above the eyes, back to the rear edge of the carapace of a spiny lobster (see Figure 1 to this part). Circle hook means a fishing hook with the point turned perpendicularly back towards the shank. Commercial fishing means fishing in which the fish harvested, either in whole or in part, are intended to enter commerce or enter commerce through sale, barter, or trade. All lobster fishing in Crustacean Permit Area 1 is considered commercial fishing. Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) means the Northern Mariana Islands. Coral Reef Ecosystems FMP means the Fishery Management Plan for Coral Reef Ecosystems of the Western Pacific Region established in 2004 and replaced by FEPs. Council means the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council. Crustacean receiving vessel means a vessel of the United States to which lobsters taken in a crustacean management area are transferred from another vessel. Crustaceans FMP means the Fishery Management Plan for Crustacean Fisheries of the Western Pacific Region established in 1982 and replaced by FEPs. Customary exchange means the non-market exchange of marine resources between fishermen and community residents, including family and friends of community residents, for goods, and/or services for cultural, social, or religious reasons. Customary exchange may include cost recovery through monetary reimbursements and other means for actual trip expenses, including but not limited to ice, bait, fuel, or food, that may be necessary to participate in fisheries in the western Pacific. Actual trip expenses do not include expenses that a fisherman would incur without making a fishing trip, including expenses relating to dock space, vessel mortgage payments, routine vessel maintenance, vessel registration fees, safety equipment required by U.S. Coast Guard, and other incidental costs and expenses normally associated with ownership of a vessel. Dead coral means any precious coral that no longer has any live coral polyps or tissue. Ecosystem component species (ECS) means a stock that a Council or the Secretary has determined does not require conservation and management, but is identified in an FEP to achieve ecosystem management objectives. EFP means an experimental fishing permit. First level buyer means: (1) The first person who purchases, with the intention to resell, management unit species (MUS) or ECS, or portions thereof, that were harvested by a vessel that holds a permit or is otherwise regulated under crustacean fisheries in subparts B through E of this part; or (2) A person who provides recordkeeping, purchase, or sales assistance in the first transaction involving MUS or ECS (such as the services provided by a wholesale auction facility). Fishing gear, as used in regulations for the American Samoa, CNMI, Hawaii, and PRIA bottomfish fisheries in subparts B through E of this part, includes: (1) Bottom trawl, which means a trawl in which the otter boards or the footrope of the net are in contact with the sea bed; (2) Gillnet, (see § 600.10); (3) Hook-and-line, which means one or more hooks attached to one or more lines; (4) Set net, which means a stationary, buoyed, and anchored gill net; and (5) Trawl, (see § 600.10). Fishing trip means a period of time during which fishing is conducted, beginning when the vessel leaves port and ending when the vessel lands fish. Fishing year means the year beginning at 0001 local time on January 1 and ending at 2400 local time on December 31, with the exception of fishing for Deep 7 bottomfish and any precious coral MUS. Freeboard means the straight line vertical distance between a vessel's working deck and the sea surface. If the vessel does not have gunwale door or stern door that exposes the working deck, freeboard means the straight line vertical distance between the top of a vessel's railing and the sea surface. Harvest guideline means a specified numerical harvest objective. Hawaiian Archipelago means the Main and Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, including Midway Atoll. Hawaii FEP means the Fishery Ecosystem Plan for the Hawaiian Archipelago, available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council or PIRO. Hookah breather means a tethered underwater breathing device that pumps air from the surface through one or more hoses to divers at depth. Incidental catch or incidental species means species caught while fishing for the primary purpose of catching a different species. Land or landing means offloading fish from a fishing vessel, arriving in port to begin offloading fish, or causing fish to be offloaded from a fishing vessel. Large vessel means, as used in this part, any vessel equal to or greater than 50 ft (15.2 m) in length overall. Length overall (LOA) or length of a vessel as used in this part, means the horizontal distance, rounded to the nearest foot (with any 0.5 foot or 0.15 meter fraction rounded upward), between the foremost part of the stem and the aftermost part of the stern, excluding bowsprits, rudders, outboard motor brackets, and similar fittings or attachments (see Figure 2 to this part). “Stem” is the foremost part of the vessel, consisting of a section of timber or fiberglass, or cast forged or rolled metal, to which the sides of the vessel are united at the fore end, with the lower end united to the keel, and with the bowsprit, if one is present, resting on the upper end. “Stern” is the aftermost part of the vessel. Live coral means any precious coral that has live coral polyps or tissue. Live rock means any natural, hard substrate, including dead coral or rock, to which is attached, or which supports, any living marine life form associated with coral reefs. Low-use marine protected area (MPA) means an area of the U.S. EEZ where fishing operations have specific restrictions in order to protect the coral reef ecosystem, as specified under area restrictions in subparts B through F of this part. Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) means the islands of the Hawaii Archipelago lying to the east of 161° W. long. Mariana Archipelago means Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. Mariana FEP means the Fishery Ecosystem Plan for the Mariana Archipelago, available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council or PIRO. Medium vessel, as used in this part, means any vessel equal to or more than 40 ft (12.2 m) and less than 50 ft (15.2 m) LOA. Non-commercial fishing means fishing that does not meet the definition of commercial fishing in the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, and includes, but is not limited to, sustenance, subsistence, traditional indigenous, and recreational fishing. Non-precious coral means any species of coral other than those listed under the definitions for precious coral in §§ 665.161, 665.261, 665.461, and 665.661. Non-selective gear means any gear used for harvesting coral that cannot discriminate or differentiate between types, size, quality, or characteristics of living or dead coral. Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI) means the islands of the Hawaiian Archipelago lying to the west of 161° W. long. No-take MPA means an area of the U.S. EEZ that is closed to fishing for or harvesting of any MUS or ECS, as defined in subparts B through F of this part. Offload means to remove MUS or ECS from a vessel. Offset circle hook means a circle hook in which the barbed end of the hook is displaced relative to the parallel plane of the eyed end, or shank, of the hook when laid on its side. Owner, as used in the regulations for the crustacean fisheries in subparts B through E of this part and § 665.203(i) and (j), means a person who is identified as the current owner of the vessel as described in the Certificate of Documentation (Form CG-1270) issued by the United States Coast Guard (USCG) for a documented vessel, or in a registration certificate issued by a state, a territory, or the USCG for an undocumented vessel. As used in the regulations for the precious coral fisheries in subparts B through E of this part and § 665.203(c) through (h), the definition of “owner” in § 600.10 of this chapter continues to apply. Pacific Islands Regional Office (PIRO) means the headquarters of the Pacific Islands Region, NMFS, located at 1845 Wasp Blvd., Bldg. 176, Honolulu, HI 96818; telephone number: 808-725-5000. Pacific remote island areas (PRIA, or U.S. island possessions in the Pacific Ocean) means Palmyra Atoll, Kingman Reef, Jarvis Island, Baker Island, Howland Island, Johnston Atoll, Wake Island, and Midway Atoll. Pelagics FEP means the Fishery Ecosystem Plan for Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific, available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council or PIRO. Pelagics FMP means the Fishery Management Plan for Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific Region that was established in 1987 and replaced by the western Pacific pelagic FEP. Precious Corals FMP means the Fishery Management Plan for Precious Corals of the Western Pacific Region established in 1983 and replaced by fishery ecosystem plans (FEPs). PRIA FEP means the Fishery Ecosystem Plan for the Pacific Remote Island Areas of Palmyra Atoll, Kingman Reef, Jarvis Island, Baker Island, Howland Island, Johnston Atoll, and Wake Island, available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council or PIRO. Protected species means an animal protected under the MMPA, as amended, listed under the ESA, as amended, or subject to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, as amended. Receiving vessel means a vessel that receives fish or fish products from a fishing vessel, and with regard to a vessel holding a permit under § 665.801(e), that also lands western Pacific pelagic MUS taken by other vessels using longline gear. Recreational fishing means fishing conducted for sport or pleasure, including charter fishing. Regional Administrator means Regional Administrator, Pacific Islands Region, NMFS (see Table 1 of § 600.502 of this chapter for address). Selective gear means any gear used for harvesting coral that can discriminate or differentiate between type, size, quality, or characteristics of living or dead coral. Small vessel means, as used in this part, any vessel less than 50 ft (15.2 m) in length overall. Special Agent-In-Charge (SAC) means the Special Agent-In-Charge, NMFS, Pacific Islands Enforcement Division, located at 1845 Wasp Blvd., Bldg. 176, Honolulu, HI 96818; telephone number: 808-725-6100, or a designee. Special permit means a permit issued to allow fishing for coral reef ECS in low-use MPAs or with any gear not specifically allowed under § 665.127, § 665.227, or § 665.427. SSC means the Scientific and Statistical Committee of the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council. State of Hawaii commercial marine license means the license required by the State of Hawaii for anyone to take marine life for commercial purposes (also known as the commercial fishing license). Transship means to offload or otherwise transfer MUS or ECS or products thereof to a receiving vessel. Trap means a box-like device used for catching and holding lobsters or fish. U.S. harvested coral means coral caught, taken, or harvested by vessels of the United States within any fishery for which an FMP or FEP has been implemented under the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Vessel monitoring system unit (VMS unit) means the hardware and software owned by NMFS, installed on vessels by NMFS, and required to track and transmit the positions of certain vessels. Western Pacific fishery management area means those waters shoreward of the outer boundary of the EEZ around American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, CNMI, Midway, Johnston and Palmyra Atolls, Kingman Reef, and Wake, Jarvis, Baker, and Howland Islands." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.7,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.13 Permits and fees.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 78 FR 33003, June 3, 2013; 78 FR 39583, July 2, 2013; 84 FR 2769, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Applicability. The requirements for permits for specific western Pacific fisheries are set forth in subparts B through I of this part. (b) Validity. Each permit is valid for fishing only in the specific fishery management areas identified on the permit. (c) Application. (1) An application for a permit to operate in a Federal western Pacific fishery that requires a permit and is regulated under subparts B through I of this part may be obtained from NMFS PIRO. The completed application must be submitted to PIRO for consideration. In no case shall PIRO accept an application that is not on a Federal western Pacific fisheries permit application form. (2) A minimum of 15 days after the day PIRO receives a complete application should be allowed for processing the application for fisheries under subparts B through I of this part. If an incomplete or improperly completed application is filed, NMFS will notify the applicant of the deficiency. If the applicant fails to correct the deficiency within 30 days following the date of the letter of notification of deficiency, the application will be administratively closed. (d) Change in application information. Any change in the permit application information or vessel documentation, submitted under paragraph (c) of this section, must be reported to PIRO in writing within 15 days of the change to avoid a delay in processing the permit application. A minimum of 10 days from the day the information is received by PIRO should be given for PIRO to record any change in information from the permit application submitted under paragraph (c) of this section. Failure to report such changes may result in a delay in processing an application, permit holders failing to receive important notifications, or sanctions pursuant to the Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16 U.S.C. 1858(g) or 15 CFR part 904, subpart D. (e) Issuance. After receiving a complete application submitted under paragraph (c) of this section, the Regional Administrator will issue a permit to an applicant who is eligible under this part, as appropriate. (f) Fees. (1) PIRO will not charge a fee for a permit issued under §§ 665.142, 665.162, 665.242, 665.262, 665.442, 665.462, 665.642, or 665.662 of this part, for a Ho'omalu limited access permit issued under § 665.203, or for a Guam bottomfish permit issued under § 665.404. (2) PIRO will charge a non-refundable processing fee for each application (including transfer and renewal) for each permit listed in paragraphs (f)(2)(i) through (f)(2)(xiii) of this section. The amount of the fee is calculated in accordance with the procedures of the NOAA Finance Handbook for determining the administrative costs incurred in processing the permit. The fee may not exceed such costs. The appropriate fee is specified with each application form and must accompany each application. Failure to pay the fee will preclude the issuance, transfer, or renewal of any of the following permits: (i) Hawaii longline limited access permit. (ii) Mau Zone limited access permit. (iii) Coral reef ecosystem special permit. (iv) American Samoa longline limited access permit. (v) MHI non-commercial bottomfish permit. (vi) Western Pacific squid jig permit. (vii) Crustacean permit. (viii) CNMI commercial bottomfish permit. (ix) Marianas Trench Monument non-commercial permit. (x) Marianas Trench Monument recreational charter permit. (xi) Pacific Remote Islands Monument recreational charter permit. (xii) Rose Atoll Monument non-commercial permit. (xiii) Rose Atoll Monument recreational charter permit. (g) Expiration. A permit issued under subparts B through I of this part is valid for the period specified on the permit unless revoked, suspended, transferred, or modified under 15 CFR part 904. (h) Replacement. Replacement permits may be issued, without charge, to replace lost or mutilated permits. An application for a replacement permit is not considered a new application. (i) Transfer. An application for a permit transfer under §§ 665.203(d), 665.242(e), or 665.801(k), or for registration of a permit for use with a replacement vessel under § 665.203(i), must be submitted to PIRO as described in paragraph (c) of this section. (j) Alteration. Any permit that has been altered, erased, or mutilated is invalid. (k) Display. Any permit issued under this subpart, or a facsimile of such permit, must be on board the vessel at all times while the vessel is fishing for, taking, retaining, possessing, or landing MUS or ECS shoreward of the outer boundary of the fishery management area. Any permit issued under this section must be displayed for inspection upon request of an authorized officer. (l) Sanctions. Procedures governing sanctions and denials are found at subpart D of 15 CFR part 904. (m) Permit appeals. Procedures for appeals of permitting and administrative actions are specified in the relevant subparts of this part." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.8,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.14 Reporting and recordkeeping.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 78 FR 33003, June 3, 2013; 78 FR 39583, July 2, 2013; 84 FR 2769, Feb. 8, 2019; 86 FR 42745, Aug. 5, 2021; 86 FR 60182, Nov. 1, 2021; 86 FR 55745, Oct. 7, 2021]","(a) State reporting. Except for precious coral and crustacean fisheries, any person who is required to do so by applicable state law or regulation must make and/or file all reports of MUS or ECS landings containing all data and in the exact manner required by applicable state law or regulation. (b) Fishing record forms —(1) Applicability —(i) Paper records. The operator of a fishing vessel subject to the requirements of § 665.124, § 665.142, § 665.162, § 665.203(a)(2), § 665.224, § 665.242, § 665.262, § 665.404, § 665.424, § 665.442, § 665.462, § 665.603, § 665.624, § 665.642, § 665.662, § 665.801, § 665.905, § 665.935, or § 665.965 must maintain on board the vessel an accurate and complete record of catch, effort, and other data on paper report forms provided by the Regional Administrator, or electronically as specified and approved by the Regional Administrator, except as required in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section or as allowed in paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of this section. (ii) Electronic records. (A) The operator of a fishing vessel subject to the requirements of § 665.801(b) or a large vessel subject to the requirements of § 665.801(c) must maintain on board the vessel an accurate and complete record of catch, effort, and other data electronically using a NMFS-certified electronic logbook, and must record and transmit electronically all information specified by the Regional Administrator within 24 hours after the completion of each fishing day. (B) After the Regional Administrator has notified a permit holder subject to this section of the requirement to submit records electronically, and after the vessel has acquired the necessary NMFS-certified equipment, the vessel and any vessel operator must use the electronic logbook. A vessel operator must obtain an individually assigned user account from NMFS for use with the electronic logbook. (C) Permit holders and vessel operators shall not be assessed any fee or other charges to obtain and use an electronic logbook that is owned and provided by NMFS. If a permit holder or vessel operator subject to this section does not use a NMFS-owned electronic logbook, the permit holder and operator must provide and maintain an alternative NMFS-certified electronic logbook. (D) If a vessel operator is unable to maintain or transmit electronic records because NMFS has not provided an electronic logbook, or if NMFS or a vessel operator identifies that the electronic logbook has experienced equipment (hardware or software) or transmission failure, the operator must maintain on board the vessel an accurate and complete record of catch, effort, and other data electronically or on paper report forms provided by the Regional Administrator. (iii) Recording. The vessel operator must record on paper or electronically all information specified by the Regional Administrator within 24 hours after the completion of each fishing day. The information recorded must be signed and dated, or otherwise authenticated, in the manner determined by the Regional Administrator, and be submitted or transmitted via an approved method as specified by the Regional Administrator, and as required by this section. (iv) State reporting. In lieu of the requirements in paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, the operator of a fishing vessel registered for use under a Western Pacific squid jig permit pursuant to the requirements of § 665.801(g) may participate in a state reporting system. If participating in a state reporting system, all required information must be recorded and submitted in the exact manner required by applicable state law or regulation. (2) Timeliness of submission. (i) If fishing was authorized under a permit pursuant to § 665.142, § 665.242, § 665.442, § 665.404, § 665.162, § 665.262, § 665.462, § 665.662, or § 665.801, and if the logbook information was not submitted to NMFS electronically within 24 hours of the end of each fishing day while the vessel was at sea, the vessel operator must submit the original logbook information for each day of the fishing trip to the Regional Administrator within 72 hours of the end of each fishing trip, except as allowed in paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section. (ii) If fishing was authorized under a permit pursuant to § 665.203(a)(2), the vessel operator or vessel owner must submit the original logbook form for each day of the fishing trip to the Regional Administrator within 72 hours of the end of each fishing trip. (iii) If fishing was authorized under a PRIA bottomfish permit pursuant to § 665.603(a), PRIA pelagic troll and handline permit pursuant to § 665.801(f), crustacean fishing permit for the PRIA (Permit Area 4) pursuant to § 665.642(a), or a precious coral fishing permit for Permit Area X-P-PI pursuant to § 665.662, the original logbook form for each day of fishing within EEZ waters around the PRIA must be submitted to the Regional Administrator within 30 days of the end of each fishing trip. (iv) If fishing was authorized under a permit pursuant to § 665.124, § 665.224, § 665.424, § 665.624, § 665.905, § 665.935, or § 665.965, the original logbook information for each day of fishing must be submitted to the Regional Administrator within 30 days of the end of each fishing trip. (c) Transshipment logbooks. Any person subject to the requirements of § 665.124(a)(2), § 665.224(a)(2), § 665.424(a)(2), § 665.624(a)(2), or § 665.801(e) must maintain on board the vessel an accurate and complete NMFS transshipment logbook containing report forms provided by the Regional Administrator. All information specified on the forms must be recorded on the forms within 24 hours after the day of transshipment. Each form must be signed and dated by the receiving vessel operator. The original logbook for each day of transshipment activity must be submitted to the Regional Administrator within 72 hours of each landing of western Pacific pelagic MUS. The original logbook for each day of transshipment activity must be submitted to the Regional Administrator within 7 days of each landing of coral reef ECS. (d) Sales report. The operator of any fishing vessel subject to the requirements of § 665.142, § 665.242, § 665.442, or § 665.642, or the owner of a medium or large fishing vessel subject to the requirements of § 665.404(a)(2) must submit to the Regional Administrator, within 72 hours of offloading of crustacean MUS or ECS, an accurate and complete sales report on a form provided by the Regional Administrator. The form must be signed and dated by the fishing vessel operator. (e) Packing or weigh-out slips. The operator of any fishing vessel subject to the requirements of §§ 665.142, 665.242, 665.442, or 665.642 must attach packing or weighout slips provided to the operator by the first-level buyer(s), unless the packing or weighout slips have not been provided in time by the buyer(s). (f) Modification of reporting and recordkeeping requirements. The Regional Administrator may, after consultation with the Council, initiate rulemaking to modify the information to be provided on the fishing record forms, transshipment logbook, and sales report forms and timeliness by which the information is to be provided, including the submission of packing or weighout slips. (g) Availability of records for inspection. (1) Western Pacific pelagic MUS. Upon request, any fish dealer must immediately provide an authorized officer access to inspect and copy all records of purchases, sales, or other transactions involving western Pacific pelagic MUS taken or handled by longline vessels that have permits issued under this subpart or that are otherwise subject to subpart F of this part, including, but not limited to, information concerning: (i) The name of the vessel involved in each transaction and the owner and operator of the vessel. (ii) The weight, number, and size of each species of fish involved in each transaction. (iii) Prices paid by the buyer and proceeds to the seller in each transaction. (2) Crustaceans. Upon request, any first-level buyer must immediately allow an authorized officer and any employee of NMFS designated by the Regional Administrator, to access, inspect, and copy all records relating to the harvest, sale, or transfer of crustacean MUS or ECS taken by vessels that have permits issued under this subpart or §§ 665.140 through 665.145, §§ 665.240 through 665.252, §§ 665.440 through 665.445, or §§ 665.640 through 665.645. This requirement may be met by furnishing the information on a worksheet provided by the Regional Administrator. The information must include, but is not limited to: (i) The name of the vessel involved in each transaction and the owner or operator of the vessel. (ii) The amount, number, and size of each MUS or ECS involved in each transaction. (iii) Prices paid by the buyer and proceeds to the seller in each transaction. (3) Bottomfish and seamount groundfish. Any person who is required by state laws and regulations to maintain records of landings and sales for vessels regulated by this subpart and by §§ 665.100 through 665.105, 665.200 through 665.212, 665.400 through 665.407, and 665.600 through 665.606 must make those records immediately available for Federal inspection and copying upon request by an authorized officer. (4) Coral reefs. Any person who has a special permit and who is required by state laws and regulations to maintain and submit records of catch and effort, landings and sales for coral reef ECS by this subpart and §§ 665.120 through 665.128, §§ 665.220 through 665.228, §§ 665.420 through 665.428, or §§ 665.620 through 665.628 must make those records immediately available for Federal inspection and copying upon request by an authorized officer as defined in § 600.10 of this chapter. (h) State reporting. Any person who has a permit under §§ 665.124, 665.203, 665.224, 665.404, 665.424, 665.603, or 665.624 and who is regulated by state laws and regulations to maintain and submit records of catch and effort, landings and sales for vessels regulated by subparts B through F of this part must maintain and submit those records in the exact manner required by state laws and regulations." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.1.1.9,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,A,Subpart A—General,,§ 665.15 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 76 FR 37287, June 27, 2011; 84 FR 2769, Feb. 8, 2019]","In addition to the prohibitions in § 600.725 of this chapter, it is unlawful for any person to: (a) Engage in fishing without a valid permit or facsimile of a valid permit on board the vessel and available for inspection by an authorized officer, when a permit is required under §§ 665.13 or 665.17, unless the vessel was at sea when the permit was issued under § 665.13, in which case the permit must be on board the vessel before its next trip. (b) File false information on any application for a fishing permit under § 665.13 or an EFP under § 665.17. (c) Fail to file reports in the exact manner required by any state law or regulation, as required in § 665.14. (d) Falsify or fail to make, keep, maintain, or submit any logbook or logbook form or other record or report required under §§ 665.14 and 665.17. (e) Refuse to make available to an authorized officer or a designee of the Regional Administrator for inspection or copying, any records that must be made available in accordance with § 665.14. (f) Fail to affix or maintain vessel or gear markings, as required by §§ 665.16, 665.128, 665.228, 665.246, 665.428, 665.628, or 665.804. (g) Violate a term or condition of an EFP issued under § 665.17. (h) Fail to report any take of or interaction with protected species as required by § 665.17(k). (i) Fish without an observer on board the vessel after the owner or agent of the owner has been directed by NMFS to make accommodations available for an observer under §§ 665.17, 665.105, 665.145, 665.207, 665.247, 665.407, 665.445, 665.606, 665.645, or 665.808. (j) Refuse to make accommodations available for an observer when so directed by the Regional Administrator under §§ 665.105, 665.145, 665.207, 665.247, 665.407, 665.445, 665.606, 665.645, or 665.808, or under any provision in an EFP issued under § 665.17. (k) Fail to notify officials as required in §§ 665.126, 665.144, 665.205, 665.226, 665.244, 665.426, 665.444, 665.626, 665.644, 665.803, or 665.808. (l) Fish for, take or retain within a no-take MPA, defined in § 665.99, § 665.199, § 665.399, or § 665.599, any bottomfish MUS or ECS, crustacean MUS or ECS, western Pacific pelagic MUS, precious coral MUS or ECS, seamount groundfish MUS, or coral reef ecosystem ECS. (m) Fail to comply with a term or condition governing the vessel monitoring system in violation of § 665.19. (n) Fish for, catch, or harvest MUS or ECS without an operational VMS unit on board the vessel after installation of the VMS unit by NMFS, in violation of § 665.19(e)(2). (o) Possess MUS or ECS, that were harvested after NMFS has installed the VMS unit on the vessel, on board that vessel without an operational VMS unit, in violation of § 665.19(e)(2). (p) Interfere with, tamper with, alter, damage, disable, or impede the operation of a VMS unit or attempt any of the same; or move or remove a VMS unit without the prior permission of the SAC in violation of § 665.19(e)(3). (q) Make a false statement, oral or written, to an authorized officer, regarding the use, operation, or maintenance of a VMS unit, in violation of § 665.19(e). (r) Interfere with, impede, delay, or prevent the installation, maintenance, repair, inspection, or removal of a VMS unit, in violation of § 665.19(e). (s) Interfere with, impede, delay, or prevent access to a VMS unit by a NMFS observer, in violation of § 665.808(f)(4). (t) Connect or leave connected additional equipment to a VMS unit without the prior approval of the SAC, in violation of § 665.19(f). (u) Fail to comply with the restrictions specified in the notification issued pursuant to § 665.4(f)(1), in violation of § 665.15(f)(2)." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.1,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.98 Management area.,FWS,,,,"The American Samoa fishery management area is the EEZ seaward of the Territory of American Samoa with the inner boundary coterminous with the seaward boundaries of the Territory of American Samoa and the outer boundary designated as a line drawn in such a manner that each point on it is 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the territorial sea is measured, or is coterminous with adjacent international maritime boundaries." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.10,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.120 American Samoa coral reef ecosystem fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.11,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.121 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.120 through 665.139, American Samoa coral reef ecosystem component species (American Samoa coral reef ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the American Samoa FEP and not defined as MUS or another ECS in this subpart." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.12,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.122 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.13,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.123 Relation to other laws.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","To ensure consistency between the management regimes of different Federal agencies with shared management responsibilities of fishery resources within the American Samoa fishery management area, fishing for American Samoa coral reef ECS is not allowed within the boundary of a National Wildlife Refuge unless specifically authorized by the USFWS, regardless of whether that refuge was established by action of the President or the Secretary of the Interior." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.14,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.124 Permits and fees.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Applicability. Unless otherwise specified in this subpart, § 665.13 applies to coral reef ecosystem permits. (1) Special permit. Any person of the United States fishing for, taking or retaining American Samoa coral reef ECS must have a special permit if they fish, or if a vessel which they operate is used to fish, for any: (i) American Samoa coral reef ECS in low-use MPAs as defined in § 665.99; (ii) American Samoa coral reef ECS in the coral reef ecosystem management area; or (iii) American Samoa coral reef ECS in the coral reef ecosystem management area with any gear not specifically allowed in this subpart. (2) Transshipment permit. A receiving vessel must be registered for use with a transshipment permit if that vessel is used in the American Samoa coral reef ecosystem management area to land or transship American Samoa coral reef ECS harvested within low-use MPAs. (3) Exceptions. The following persons are not required to have a permit under this section: (i) Any person issued a permit to fish under any FEP who incidentally catches American Samoa coral reef ECS while fishing for bottomfish MUS or ECS, crustacean ECS, western Pacific pelagic MUS, precious coral ECS, or seamount groundfish MUS; (ii) Any person fishing for American Samoa coral reef ECS outside of an MPA, who does not retain any American Samoa coral reef ECS; and (iii) Any person collecting marine organisms for scientific research as described in § 665.17, or § 600.745 of this chapter. (b) Validity. Each permit will be valid for fishing only in the fishery management area specified on the permit. (c) General requirements. General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits are contained in § 665.13. (d) Special permit. The Regional Administrator shall issue a special permit in accordance with the criteria and procedures specified in this section. (1) Application. An applicant for a special or transshipment permit issued under this section must complete and submit to the Regional Administrator, a Special Coral Reef Ecosystem Fishing Permit Application Form issued by NMFS. Information in the application form must include, but is not limited to, a statement describing the objectives of the fishing activity for which a special permit is needed, including a general description of the expected disposition of the resources harvested under the permit ( i.e., stored live, fresh, frozen, preserved; sold for food, ornamental, research, or other use; and a description of the planned fishing operation, including location of fishing and gear operation, amount and species (directed and incidental) expected to be harvested and estimated habitat and protected species impacts). (2) Incomplete applications. The Regional Administrator may request from an applicant additional information necessary to make the determinations required under this section. An applicant will be notified of an incomplete application within 10 working days of receipt of the application. An incomplete application will not be considered until corrected and completed in writing. (3) Issuance. (i) If an application contains all of the required information, the Regional Administrator will forward copies of the application within 30 days to the Council, the USCG, the fishery management agency of the affected state, and other interested parties who have identified themselves to the Council, and the USFWS. (ii) Within 60 days following receipt of a complete application, the Regional Administrator will consult with the Council through its Executive Director, USFWS, and the Director of the affected state fishery management agency concerning the permit application and will receive their recommendations for approval or disapproval of the application based on: (A) Information provided by the applicant; (B) The current domestic annual harvesting and processing capacity of the directed and incidental species for which a special permit is being requested; (C) The current status of resources to be harvested in relation to the overfishing definition in the FEP; (D) Estimated ecosystem, habitat, and protected species impacts of the proposed activity; and (E) Other biological and ecological information relevant to the proposal. The applicant will be provided with an opportunity to appear in support of the application. (iii) Following a review of the Council's recommendation and supporting rationale, the Regional Administrator may: (A) Concur with the Council's recommendation and, after finding that it is consistent with the goals and objectives of the FEP, the national standards, the Endangered Species Act, and other applicable laws, approve or deny a special permit; or (B) Reject the Council's recommendation, in which case, written reasons will be provided by the Regional Administrator to the Council for the rejection. (iv) If the Regional Administrator does not receive a recommendation from the Council within 60 days of Council receipt of the permit application, the Regional Administrator can make a determination of approval or denial independently. (v) Within 30 working days after the consultation in paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section, or as soon as practicable thereafter, NMFS will notify the applicant in writing of the decision to grant or deny the special permit and, if denied, the reasons for the denial. Grounds for denial of a special permit include the following: (A) The applicant has failed to disclose material information required, or has made false statements as to any material fact, in connection with his or her application. (B) According to the best scientific information available, the directed or incidental catch in the season or location specified under the permit would detrimentally affect any coral reef resource or coral reef ecosystem in a significant way, including, but not limited to issues related to, spawning grounds or seasons, protected species interactions, EFH, and habitat areas of particular concern (HAPC). (C) Issuance of the special permit would inequitably allocate fishing privileges among domestic fishermen or would have economic allocation as its sole purpose. (D) The method or amount of harvest in the season and/or location stated on the permit is considered inappropriate based on previous human or natural impacts in the given area. (E) NMFS has determined that the maximum number of permits for a given area in a given season has been reached and allocating additional permits in the same area would be detrimental to the resource. (F) The activity proposed under the special permit would create a significant enforcement problem. (vi) The Regional Administrator may attach conditions to the special permit, if it is granted, consistent with the management objectives of the FEP, including, but not limited to: (A) The maximum amount of each resource that can be harvested and landed during the term of the special permit, including trip limits, where appropriate. (B) The times and places where fishing may be conducted. (C) The type, size, and amount of gear which may be used by each vessel operated under the special permit. (D) Data reporting requirements. (E) Such other conditions as may be necessary to ensure compliance with the purposes of the special permit consistent with the objectives of the FEP. (4) Appeals of permit actions. (i) Except as provided in subpart D of 15 CFR part 904, any applicant for a permit or a permit holder may appeal the granting, denial, conditioning, or suspension of their permit or a permit affecting their interests to the Regional Administrator. In order to be considered by the Regional Administrator, such appeal must be in writing, must state the action(s) appealed, and the reasons therefore, and must be submitted within 30 days of the original action(s) by the Regional Administrator. The appellant may request an informal hearing on the appeal. (ii) Upon receipt of an appeal authorized by this section, the Regional Administrator will notify the permit applicant, or permit holder, as appropriate, and will request such additional information and in such form as will allow action upon the appeal. Upon receipt of sufficient information, the Regional Administrator will rule on the appeal in accordance with the permit eligibility criteria set forth in this section and the FEP, as appropriate, based upon information relative to the application on file at NMFS and the Council and any additional information, the summary record kept of any hearing and the hearing officer's recommended decision, if any, and such other considerations as deemed appropriate. The Regional Administrator will notify all interested persons of the decision, and the reasons therefore, in writing, normally within 30 days of the receipt of sufficient information, unless additional time is needed for a hearing. (iii) If a hearing is requested, or if the Regional Administrator determines that one is appropriate, the Regional Administrator may grant an informal hearing before a hearing officer designated for that purpose after first giving notice of the time, place, and subject matter of the hearing in the Federal Register. Such a hearing shall normally be held no later than 30 days following publication of the notice in the Federal Register, unless the hearing officer extends the time for reasons deemed equitable. The appellant, the applicant (if different), and, at the discretion of the hearing officer, other interested parties, may appear personally and/or be represented by counsel at the hearing and may submit information and present arguments as determined appropriate by the hearing officer. Within 30 days of the last day of the hearing, the hearing officer shall recommend in writing a decision to the Regional Administrator. (iv) The Regional Administrator may adopt the hearing officer's recommended decision, in whole or in part, or may reject or modify it. In any event, the Regional Administrator will notify interested persons of the decision, and the reason(s) therefore, in writing, within 30 days of receipt of the hearing officer's recommended decision. The Regional Administrator's action constitutes final action for the agency for the purposes of the Administrative Procedure Act. (5) The Regional Administrator may, for good cause, extend any time limit prescribed in this section for a period not to exceed 30 days either upon his or her own motion or upon written request from the Council, appellant or applicant stating the reason(s) therefore." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.15,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.125 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and § 665.15 of this part, it is unlawful for any person to do any of the following: (a) Fish for, take, retain, possess or land any American Samoa coral reef ecosystem ECS in any low-use MPA as defined in § 665.99 unless: (1) A valid permit has been issued for the hand harvester or the fishing vessel operator that specifies the applicable area of harvest; (2) A permit is not required, as outlined in § 665.124; or (3) The American Samoa coral reef ECS possessed on board the vessel originated outside the management area, and this can be demonstrated through receipts of purchase, invoices, fishing logbooks or other documentation. (b) Fish for, take, or retain any American Samoa coral reef ECS: (1) That is determined overfished with subsequent rulemaking by the Regional Administrator; (2) By means of gear or methods prohibited under § 665.127; (3) In a low-use MPA without a valid special permit; or (4) In violation of any permit issued under §§ 665.13, 665.123, or 665.124. (c) Fish for, take, or retain any wild live rock or live hard coral except under a valid special permit for scientific research, aquaculture seed stock collection or traditional and ceremonial purposes by indigenous people." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.16,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.126 Notifications.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","Any special permit holder subject to the requirements of this subpart must contact the appropriate NMFS enforcement agent in American Samoa, Guam, or Hawaii at least 24 hours before landing any American Samoa coral reef ECS harvested under a special permit and report the port and the approximate date and time at which the catch will be landed." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.17,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.127 Allowable gear and gear restrictions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) American Samoa coral reef ECS may be taken only with the following allowable gear and methods: (1) Hand harvest; (2) Spear; (3) Slurp gun; (4) Hand net/dip net; (5) Hoop net for Kona crab; (6) Throw net; (7) Barrier net; (8) Surround/purse net that is attended at all times; (9) Hook-and-line (includes handline (powered or not), rod-and-reel, and trolling); (10) Crab and fish traps with vessel ID number affixed; and (11) Remote-operating vehicles/submersibles. (b) American Samoa coral reef ECS may not be taken by means of poisons, explosives, or intoxicating substances. Possession or use of these materials by any permit holder under this subpart who is established to be fishing for coral reef ECS in the management area is prohibited. (c) Existing FEP fisheries shall follow the allowable gear and methods outlined in their respective plans. (d) Any person who intends to fish with new gear not included in this section must describe the new gear and its method of deployment in the special permit application. A decision on the permissibility of this gear type will be made by the Regional Administrator after consultation with the Council and the director of the affected state fishery management agency." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.18,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.128 Gear identification.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Gear marking. The vessel number must be affixed to all fish and crab traps on board the vessel or deployed in the water by any vessel or person holding a permit under § 665.13 or § 665.124 or that is otherwise established to be fishing for American Samoa coral reef ecosystem ECS in the management area. (b) Enforcement action. (1) Traps not marked in compliance with paragraph (a) of this section and found deployed in the coral reef ecosystem management area will be considered unclaimed or abandoned property, and may be disposed of in any manner considered appropriate by NMFS or an authorized officer. (2) Unattended surround nets or bait seine nets found deployed in the coral reef ecosystem management area will be considered unclaimed or abandoned property, and may be disposed of in any manner considered appropriate by NMFS or an authorized officer." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.19,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§§ 665.129-665.139 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.2,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.99 Area restrictions.,FWS,,,,"Fishing is prohibited in all no-take MPAs. The following U.S. EEZ waters around American Samoa are no-take MPAs: Landward of the 50 fm (91.5 m) curve around Rose Atoll, as depicted on National Ocean Survey Chart Number 83484." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.20,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.140 American Samoa Crustacean Fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.21,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.141 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.140 through 665.159: American Samoa crustacean ecosystem component species (American Samoa crustacean ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the American Samoa FEP. Crustacean Permit Area 3 (Permit Area 3) includes the EEZ around American Samoa." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.22,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.142 Permits.,FWS,,,,"(a) Applicability. (1) The owner of any vessel used to fish for lobster in Permit Area 3 must have a permit issued for that vessel. (2) The owner of any vessel used to fish for deepwater shrimp in Crustacean Permit Area 3 must have a permit issued for that vessel. (b) General requirements. General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits issued under this section, as applicable, are contained in § 665.13. (c) Application. An application for a permit required under this section will be submitted to PIRO as described in § 665.13. If the application for a limited access permit is submitted on behalf of a partnership or corporation, the application must be accompanied by a supplementary information sheet obtained from PIRO and contain the names and mailing addresses of all partners or shareholders and their respective percentage of ownership in the partnership or corporation." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.23,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.143 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,,"In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and § 665.15, in Crustacean Permit Area 3, it is unlawful for any person to fish for, take, or retain deepwater shrimp without a permit issued under § 665.142." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.24,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.144 Notifications.,FWS,,,,"(a) The operator of any vessel fishing subject to the requirements of this subpart must: (1) Report, not less than 24 hours, but not more than 36 hours, before landing, the port, the approximate date and the approximate time at which spiny and slipper lobsters will be landed. (2) Report, not less than 6 hours and not more than 12 hours before offloading, the location and time that offloading of spiny and slipper lobsters will begin. (b) The Regional Administrator will notify permit holders of any change in the reporting method and schedule required in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section at least 30 days prior to the opening of the fishing season." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.25,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.145 At-sea observer coverage.,FWS,,,,All fishing vessels subject to §§ 665.140 through 665.145 and subpart A of this part must carry an observer when requested to do so by the Regional Administrator. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.26,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§§ 665.146-665.159 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.27,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.160 American Samoa precious coral fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.28,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.161 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.160 through 665.169: American Samoa precious coral ecosystem component species (American Samoa precious coral ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the American Samoa FEP. American Samoa precious coral permit area means the area encompassing the precious coral beds within the U.S. EEZ around American Samoa. Each bed is designated by a permit area code and assigned to one of the following four categories: (1) Established beds. [ Reserved ] (2) Conditional beds. [ Reserved ] (3) Refugia. [ Reserved ] (4) Exploratory Area. Permit Area X-P-AS includes all coral beds, other than established beds, conditional beds, or refugia, in the EEZ seaward of American Samoa." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.29,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.162 Permits.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Any vessel of the United States fishing for, taking, or retaining American Samoa precious coral ECS in any American Samoa precious coral permit area must have a permit issued under § 665.13. (b) Each permit will be valid for fishing only in the permit area specified on the permit. Precious Coral Permit Areas are defined in § 665.161. (c) No more than one permit will be valid for any one vessel at any one time. (d) No more than one permit will be valid for any one person at any one time. (e) The holder of a valid permit to fish one permit area may obtain a permit to fish another permit area only upon surrendering to the Regional Administrator any current permit for the precious coral fishery issued under § 665.13. (f) General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits for the precious coral fishery are contained in § 665.13." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.3,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.100 American Samoa bottomfish fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.30,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.163 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and in § 665.15, it is unlawful for any person to: (a) Use any vessel to fish for, take, retain, possess or land precious coral in any precious coral permit area, unless a permit has been issued for that vessel and area as specified in § 665.13 and that permit is on board the vessel. (b) Fish for, take, or retain any species of American Samoa precious coral ECS in any precious coral permit area: (1) By means of gear or methods prohibited by § 665.164. (2) In refugia specified in § 665.161. (3) In a bed for which the quota specified in § 665.167 has been attained. (4) In violation of any permit issued under § 665.13 or § 665.17. (5) In a bed that has been closed pursuant to §§ 665.166 or 665.169. (c) Take and retain, possess, or land any live Hemicorallium laauense, Pleurocorallium secundum, Corallium sp., or live black coral from any precious coral permit area that is less than the minimum height specified in § 665.165 unless: (1) A valid EFP was issued under § 665.17 for the vessel and the vessel was operating under the terms of the permit; or (2) The coral originated outside coral beds listed in this paragraph, and this can be demonstrated through receipts of purchase, invoices, or other documentation." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.31,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.164 Gear restrictions.,FWS,,,,Only selective gear may be used to harvest coral from any precious coral permit area. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.32,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.165 Size restrictions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019]","The height of a live coral specimen shall be determined by a straight line measurement taken from its base to its most distal extremity. The stem diameter of a living coral specimen shall be determined by measuring the greatest diameter of the stem at a point no less than 1 inch (2.54 cm) from the top surface of the living holdfast. (a) Live Hemicorallium laauense, Pleurocorallium secundum, or Corallium sp. harvested from any precious coral permit area must have attained a minimum height of 10 inches (25.4 cm). (b) Live black coral harvested from any precious coral permit area must have attained either a minimum stem diameter of 1 inch (2.54 cm), or a minimum height of 48 inches (122 cm)." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.33,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.166 Closures.,FWS,,,,"(a) If the Regional Administrator determines that the harvest quota for any coral bed will be reached prior to the end of the fishing year, NMFS shall publish a notice to that effect in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify permit holders. Any such notice must indicate the reason for the closure, the bed being closed, and the effective date of the closure. (b) A closure is also effective for a permit holder upon the permit holder's actual harvest of the applicable quota." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.34,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.167 Quotas.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) General. The quotas limiting the amount of precious coral that may be taken in any precious coral permit area during the fishing year are listed in § 665.167(d). Only live coral is counted toward the quota. The accounting period for all quotas begins July 1, 1983. (b) Conditional bed closure. A conditional bed will be closed to all nonselective coral harvesting after the quota for one species of coral has been taken. (c) Reserves and reserve release. The quotas for exploratory area X-P-AS will be held in reserve for harvest by vessels of the United States in the following manner: (1) At the start of the fishing year, the reserve for the American Samoa exploratory area will equal the quota minus the estimated domestic annual harvest for that year. (2) As soon as practicable after December 31 each year, the Regional Administrator will determine the amount harvested by vessels of the United States between July 1 and December 31 of the year that just ended on December 31. (3) NMFS will release to TALFF an amount of precious coral for each exploratory area equal to the quota minus two times the amount harvested by vessels of the United States in that July 1-December 31 period. (4) NMFS will publish in the Federal Register a notification of the Regional Administrator's determination and a summary of the information on which it is based as soon as practicable after the determination is made. (d) Exploratory areas. The American Samoa exploratory permit area X-P-AS has an annual quota of 1,000 kg for all American Samoa precious coral ECS combined with the exception of black corals." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.35,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.168 Seasons.,FWS,,,,The fishing year for precious coral begins on July 1 and ends on June 30 the following year. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.36,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.169 Gold coral harvest moratorium.,FWS,,,"[88 FR 88836, Dec. 26, 2023]","Fishing for, taking, or retaining any gold coral in any precious coral permit area is prohibited through June 30, 2028." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.4,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.101 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2769, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.100 through 665.119: American Samoa bottomfish ecosystem component species (American Samoa bottomfish ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the American Samoa FEP and not defined as American Samoa bottomfish MUS. American Samoa bottomfish management unit species (American Samoa bottomfish MUS) means the following species:" 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.5,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.103 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[89 FR 88171, Nov. 7, 2024]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and § 665.15, it is unlawful for any person to fish for American Samoa bottomfish MUS or ECS using gear prohibited under § 665.104." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.6,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.104 Gear restrictions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2770, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Bottom trawls and bottom set gillnets. Fishing for American Samoa bottomfish MUS or ECS with bottom trawls and bottom set gillnets is prohibited. (b) Possession of gear. The possession of a bottom trawl or bottom set gillnet within the American Samoa fishery management area is prohibited. (c) Poisons and explosives. The possession or use of any poisons, explosives, or intoxicating substances for the purpose of harvesting bottomfish is prohibited." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.7,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.105 At-sea observer coverage.,FWS,,,,All fishing vessels subject to §§ 665.100 through 665.105 must carry an observer when directed to do so by the Regional Administrator. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.8,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§ 665.106 American Samoa annual catch limits (ACL).,FWS,,,"[89 FR 88171, Nov. 7, 2024]","(a) Annual catch limits (ACL). In accordance with § 665.4, the ACLs for American Samoa bottomfish MUS during fishing years 2024, 2025 and 2026 are as follows: Table 1 to Paragraph ( a ) (b) Post-season accountability measure (AM). If the average catch of any species in the most recent three years exceeds its specified ACL, the Regional Administrator will make an overage adjustment in a separate rulemaking to reduce the ACL for that species for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage. All ACLs for species for which the three most recent years of catch did not exceed the ACL will remain unchanged. (c) Indicator species. E. coruscans will serve as an indicator species for E. carbunculus and P. flavipinnis will serve as an indicator species for P. filamentosus. There are no separate ACLs and AMs for E. carbunculus and P. filamentosus. E. carbunculus will be subject to the post-season AM if E. coruscans exceeds the ACL. P. filamentosus will be subject to the post-season AM if P. flavipinnis reaches exceeds the ACL." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.2.1.9,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,B,Subpart B—American Samoa Fisheries,,§§ 665.107-665.119 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.1,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.198 Management area.,FWS,,,,"The Hawaii fishery management area is the EEZ seaward of the State of Hawaii, including the Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) and Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI), with the inner boundary a line coterminous with the seaward boundaries of the State of Hawaii and the outer boundary a line drawn in such a manner that each point on it is 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the territorial sea is measured." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.10,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.207 At-sea observer coverage.,FWS,,,,"(a) All fishing vessels subject to §§ 665.200 though 665.212 must carry an observer when directed to do so by the Regional Administrator. (b) PIRO will advise the vessel owner or operator of any observer requirement within 72 hours (not including weekends or holidays) of receipt of the notice provided pursuant to § 665.205(a). If an observer is required, the owner or operator will be informed of the terms and conditions of observer coverage, and the time and place of embarkation of the observer. (c) All observers must be provided with sleeping, toilet, and eating accommodations at least equal to that provided to a full crew member. A mattress or futon on the floor, or a cot, is not acceptable in place of a regular bunk. Meal and other galley privileges must be the same for the observer as for other crew members. (d) Female observers on a vessel with an all-male crew must be accommodated either in a single-person cabin or, if reasonable privacy can be ensured by installing a curtain or other temporary divider, in a two-person cabin shared with a licensed officer of the vessel. If the cabin assigned to a female observer does not have its own toilet and shower facilities that can be provided for the exclusive use of the observer, then a schedule for time-sharing of common facilities must be established and approved by the Regional Administrator prior to the vessel's departure from port." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.11,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.208 Protected species conservation.,FWS,,,,"The Regional Administrator may change the size of the protected species study zones defined in § 665.201 of this subpart: (a) If the Regional Administrator determines that a change in the size of the study zones would not result in fishing for bottomfish in the NWHI that would adversely affect any species listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA. (b) After consulting with the Council. (c) Through notification in the Federal Register published at least 30 days prior to the effective date or through actual notice to the permit holders." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.12,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.209 Fishing moratorium at Hancock Seamounts.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019]","Fishing for, and possession of, Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS, or seamount groundfish MUS in the Hancock Seamounts Ecosystem Management Area is prohibited until the Regional Administrator determines that the armorhead stock is rebuilt." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.13,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.210 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.14,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.211 Annual Catch Limits (ACL) and Annual Catch Targets (ACT).,FWS,,,"[85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020, as amended at 87 FR 3047, Jan. 20, 2022; 87 FR 17196, Mar. 28, 2022; 87 FR 78876, Dec. 23, 2022]","(a) In accordance with § 665.4, the ACLs and ACTs for MHI bottomfish fisheries for each fishing year are as follows: (b) When a bottomfish ACL or ACT is projected to be reached based on analyses of available information, the Regional Administrator shall publish a document to that effect in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify permit holders. The document will include an advisement that the fishery will be closed beginning at a specified date, which is not earlier than seven days after the date of filing the closure notice for public inspection at the Office of the Federal Register, until the end of the fishing year in which the ACL or ACT is reached. (c) On and after the date specified in paragraph (b) of this section, no person may fish for or possess any bottomfish MUS from a closed fishery in the MHI management subarea, except as otherwise allowed in this section. (d) On and after the date specified in paragraph (b) of this section, no person may sell or offer for sale any bottomfish MUS from a closed fishery, except as otherwise authorized by law. (e) If landings of MHI Deep 7 bottomfish exceed the specified ACL in a fishing year, the Regional Administrator will reduce the ACL for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage in a separate rulemaking. (f) If the average total landings of uku in the most recent three years exceed the specified ACL in a fishing year, the Regional Administrator will reduce the uku ACL and ACT for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage in a separate rulemaking. (g) Fishing for, and the resultant possession or sale of, any bottomfish MUS by vessels legally registered to Mau Zone, Ho'omalu Zone, or PRIA bottomfish fishing permits and conducted in compliance with all other laws and regulations, is exempted from this section." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.15,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.212 Non-commercial bag limits.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 29397, June 24, 2019]","No more than a total of five fish (all species combined) identified as Deep 7 bottomfish may be harvested, possessed, or landed by any individual participating in a non-commercial vessel-based fishing trip in the MHI management subarea. Charter boat customers are also subject to the non-commercial bag limit." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.16,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§§ 665.213-665.219 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.17,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.220 Hawaii coral reef ecosystem fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.18,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.221 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.220 through 665.239, Hawaii coral reef ecosystem component species (Hawaii coral reef ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the Hawaii FEP and are not defined as MUS or another ECS in this subpart." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.19,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.222 Management area.,FWS,,,,"The Hawaii coral reef ecosystem management area is as follows: (a) The U.S. EEZ around the Hawaiian Archipelago lying to the east of 160°50′ W. long. (b) The inner boundary of the management area is the seaward boundary of the State of Hawaii. (c) The outer boundary of the management area is the outer boundary of the U.S. EEZ." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.2,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.199 Area restrictions [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.20,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.223 Relation to other laws.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019]","To ensure consistency between the management regimes of different Federal agencies with shared management responsibilities of fishery resources within the Hawaii coral reef ecosystem management area, fishing for Hawaii coral reef ECS is not allowed within the boundary of a National Wildlife Refuge unless specifically authorized by the USFWS, regardless of whether that refuge was established by action of the President or the Secretary of the Interior." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.21,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.224 Permits and fees.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Applicability. Unless otherwise specified in this subpart, § 665.13 applies to Hawaii coral reef ecosystem permits. (1) Special permit. Any person of the United States fishing for, taking or retaining Hawaii coral reef ECS must have a special permit if they, or a vessel which they operate, is used to fish for any: (i) Hawaii coral reef ECS in low-use MPAs as defined in § 665.199; (ii) Hawaii coral reef ECS in the coral reef ecosystem management area; or (iii) Hawaii coral reef ECS in the coral reef ecosystem management area with any gear not specifically allowed in this subpart. (2) Transshipment permit. A receiving vessel must be registered for use with a transshipment permit if that vessel is used in the Hawaii coral reef ecosystem management area to land or transship Hawaii coral reef ECS harvested within low-use MPAs. (3) Exceptions. The following persons are not required to have a permit under this section: (i) Any person issued a permit to fish under any FEP who incidentally catches Hawaii coral reef ECS while fishing for bottomfish MUS or ECS, crustacean MUS, western Pacific pelagic MUS, precious corals, or seamount groundfish; (ii) Any person fishing for Hawaii coral reef ECS outside of an MPA, who does not retain any Hawaii coral reef ECS; and (iii) Any person collecting marine organisms for scientific research as described in § 665.17, or § 600.745 of this chapter. (b) Validity. Each permit will be valid for fishing only in the fishery management area specified on the permit. (c) General requirements. General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits are contained in § 665.13. (d) Special permit. The Regional Administrator shall issue a special permit in accordance with the criteria and procedures specified in this section. (1) Application. An applicant for a special or transshipment permit issued under this section must complete and submit to the Regional Administrator a Special Coral Reef Ecosystem Fishing Permit Application Form issued by NMFS. Information in the application form must include, but is not limited to a statement describing the objectives of the fishing activity for which a special permit is needed, including a general description of the expected disposition of the resources harvested under the permit ( i.e., stored live, fresh, frozen, preserved, sold for food, ornamental, research, or other use, and a description of the planned fishing operation, including location of fishing and gear operation, amount and species (directed and incidental) expected to be harvested and estimated habitat and protected species impacts). (2) Incomplete applications. The Regional Administrator may request from an applicant additional information necessary to make the determinations required under this section. An applicant will be notified of an incomplete application within 10 working days of receipt of the application. An incomplete application will not be considered until corrected in writing. (3) Issuance. (i) If an application contains all of the required information, the Regional Administrator will forward copies of the application within 30 days to the Council, the USCG, the fishery management agency of the affected state, and other interested parties who have identified themselves to the Council, and the USFWS. (ii) Within 60 days following receipt of a complete application, the Regional Administrator will consult with the Council through its Executive Director, USFWS, and the Director of the affected state fishery management agency concerning the permit application and will receive their recommendations for approval or disapproval of the application based on: (A) Information provided by the applicant; (B) The current domestic annual harvesting and processing capacity of the directed and incidental species for which a special permit is being requested; (C) The current status of resources to be harvested in relation to the overfishing definition in the FEP; (D) Estimated ecosystem, habitat, and protected species impacts of the proposed activity; and (E) Other biological and ecological information relevant to the proposal. The applicant will be provided with an opportunity to appear in support of the application. (iii) Following a review of the Council's recommendation and supporting rationale, the Regional Administrator may: (A) Concur with the Council's recommendation and, after finding that it is consistent with the goals and objectives of the FEP, the national standards, the Endangered Species Act, and other applicable laws, approve or deny a special permit; or (B) Reject the Council's recommendation, in which case, written reasons will be provided by the Regional Administrator to the Council for the rejection. (iv) If the Regional Administrator does not receive a recommendation from the Council within 60 days of Council receipt of the permit application, the Regional Administrator can make a determination of approval or denial independently. (v) Within 30 working days after the consultation in paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section, or as soon as practicable thereafter, NMFS will notify the applicant in writing of the decision to grant or deny the special permit and, if denied, the reasons for the denial. Grounds for denial of a special permit include the following: (A) The applicant has failed to disclose material information required, or has made false statements as to any material fact, in connection with his or her application. (B) According to the best scientific information available, the directed or incidental catch in the season or location specified under the permit would detrimentally affect any coral reef resource or coral reef ecosystem in a significant way, including, but not limited to, issues related to spawning grounds or seasons, protected species interactions, EFH, and habitat areas of particular concern (HAPC). (C) Issuance of the special permit would inequitably allocate fishing privileges among domestic fishermen or would have economic allocation as its sole purpose. (D) The method or amount of harvest in the season and/or location stated on the permit is considered inappropriate based on previous human or natural impacts in the given area. (E) NMFS has determined that the maximum number of permits for a given area in a given season has been reached and allocating additional permits in the same area would be detrimental to the resource. (F) The activity proposed under the special permit would create a significant enforcement problem. (vi) The Regional Administrator may attach conditions to the special permit, if it is granted, consistent with the management objectives of the FEP, including, but not limited to: (A) The maximum amount of each resource that can be harvested and landed during the term of the special permit, including trip limits, where appropriate. (B) The times and places where fishing may be conducted. (C) The type, size, and amount of gear which may be used by each vessel operated under the special permit. (D) Data reporting requirements. (E) Such other conditions as may be necessary to ensure compliance with the purposes of the special permit consistent with the objectives of the FEP. (4) Appeals of permit actions. (i) Except as provided in subpart D of 15 CFR part 904, any applicant for a permit or a permit holder may appeal the granting, denial, conditioning, or suspension of their permit or a permit affecting their interests to the Regional Administrator. In order to be considered by the Regional Administrator, such appeal must be in writing, must state the action(s) appealed, and the reasons therefore, and must be submitted within 30 days of the original action(s) by the Regional Administrator. The appellant may request an informal hearing on the appeal. (ii) Upon receipt of an appeal authorized by this section, the Regional Administrator will notify the permit applicant, or permit holder as appropriate, and will request such additional information in such form as will allow action upon the appeal. Upon receipt of sufficient information, the Regional Administrator will rule on the appeal in accordance with the permit eligibility criteria set forth in this section and the FEP, as appropriate, based on information relative to the application on file at NMFS and the Council and any additional information, the summary record kept of any hearing and the hearing officer's recommended decision, if any, and such other considerations as deemed appropriate. The Regional Administrator will notify all interested persons of the decision, and the reasons therefore, in writing, normally within 30 days of the receipt of sufficient information, unless additional time is needed for a hearing. (iii) If a hearing is requested, or if the Regional Administrator determines that one is appropriate, the Regional Administrator may grant an informal hearing before a hearing officer designated for that purpose after first giving notice of the time, place, and subject matter of the hearing in the Federal Register. Such a hearing shall normally be held no later than 30 days following publication of the notice in the Federal Register, unless the hearing officer extends the time for reasons deemed equitable. The appellant, the applicant (if different), and, at the discretion of the hearing officer, other interested parties, may appear personally and/or be represented by counsel at the hearing and submit information and present arguments as determined appropriate by the hearing officer. Within 30 days of the last day of the hearing, the hearing officer shall recommend in writing a decision to the Regional Administrator. (iv) The Regional Administrator may adopt the hearing officer's recommended decision, in whole or in part, or may reject or modify it. In any event, the Regional Administrator will notify interested persons of the decision, and the reason(s) therefore, in writing, within 30 days of receipt of the hearing officer's recommended decision. The Regional Administrator's action constitutes final action for the agency for the purposes of the Administrative Procedure Act. (5) Any time limit prescribed in this section may be extended for good cause, for a period not to exceed 30 days, by the Regional Administrator, either upon his or her own motion or upon written request from the Council, appellant or applicant stating the reason(s) therefore." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.22,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.225 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and § 665.15 of this part, it is unlawful for any person to do any of the following: (a) Fish for, take, retain, possess or land any Hawaii coral reef ECS in any low-use MPA as defined in § 665.99 unless: (1) A valid permit has been issued for the hand harvester or the fishing vessel operator that specifies the applicable area of harvest; (2) A permit is not required, as outlined in § 665.224; or (3) The Hawaii coral reef ECS possessed on board the vessel originated outside the management area and this can be demonstrated through receipts of purchase, invoices, fishing logbooks or other documentation. (b) Fish for, take, or retain any Hawaii coral reef ECS: (1) That is determined overfished with subsequent rulemaking by the Regional Administrator. (2) By means of gear or methods prohibited under § 665.227. (3) In a low-use MPA without a valid special permit. (4) In violation of any permit issued under §§ 665.13 or 665.224. (c) Fish for, take, or retain any wild live rock or live hard coral except under a valid special permit for scientific research, aquaculture seed stock collection or traditional and ceremonial purposes by indigenous people." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.23,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.226 Notifications.,FWS,,,"[84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","Any special permit holder subject to the requirements of this subpart must contact the appropriate NMFS enforcement agent in American Samoa, Guam, or Hawaii at least 24 hours before landing any Hawaii coral reef ECS harvested under a special permit, and report the port and the approximate date and time at which the catch will be landed." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.24,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.227 Allowable gear and gear restrictions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Hawaii coral reef ECS may be taken only with the following allowable gear and methods: (1) Hand harvest; (2) Spear; (3) Slurp gun; (4) Hand net/dip net; (5) Hoop net for Kona crab; (6) Throw net; (7) Barrier net; (8) Surround/purse net that is attended at all times; (9) Hook-and-line (includes handline (powered or not), rod-and-reel, and trolling); (10) Crab and fish traps with vessel ID number affixed; and (11) Remote-operating vehicles/submersibles. (b) Hawaii coral reef ECS may not be taken by means of poisons, explosives, or intoxicating substances. Possession or use of these materials by any permit holder under this subpart who is established to be fishing for coral reef ECS in the management area is prohibited. (c) Existing FEP fisheries shall follow the allowable gear and methods outlined in their respective plans. (d) Any person who intends to fish with new gear not included in this section must describe the new gear and its method of deployment in the special permit application. A decision on the permissibility of this gear type will be made by the Regional Administrator after consultation with the Council and the director of the affected state fishery management agency." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.25,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.228 Gear identification.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) The vessel number must be affixed to all fish and crab traps on board the vessel or deployed in the water by any vessel or person holding a permit under § 665.13 or § 665.124 or that is otherwise established to be fishing for Hawaii coral reef ECS in the management area. (b) Enforcement action. (1) Traps not marked in compliance with paragraph (a) of this section and found deployed in the Hawaii coral reef ecosystem management area will be considered unclaimed or abandoned property, and may be disposed of in any manner considered appropriate by NMFS or an authorized officer. (2) Unattended surround nets or bait seine nets found deployed in the Hawaii coral reef ecosystem management area will be considered unclaimed or abandoned property, and may be disposed of in any manner considered appropriate by NMFS or an authorized officer." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.26,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§§ 665.229-665.239 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.27,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.240 Hawaii crustacean fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.28,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.241 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.240 through 665.259: Hawaii crustacean management area is divided into the following areas: (1) Crustacean Permit Area 1 (Permit Area 1) means the EEZ around the NWHI. (2) Crustacean Permit Area 2 (Permit Area 2) means the EEZ around the MHI. (3) Crustacean Permit Area 1 VMS Subarea means an area within the EEZ around the NWHI 50 nm from the center geographical positions of the islands and reefs in the NWHI as follows: Hawaii crustacean ecosystem component species (Hawaii crustacean ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the Hawaii FEP. Hawaii crustacean management unit species (Hawaii crustacean MUS) means the following crustaceans: Interested parties means the State of Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources, the Council, holders of permits issued under § 665.242, and any person who has notified the Regional Administrator of his or her interest in the procedures and decisions described in § 665.248, and who has specifically requested to be considered an “interested party.” Lobster grounds refers, singularly or collectively, to the following four areas in Crustacean Permit Area 1 that shall be used to manage the lobster fishery: (1) Necker Island Lobster Grounds—waters bounded by straight lines connecting the following coordinates in the order presented: 24°00′ N. lat., 165°00′ W. long.; 24°00′ N. lat., 164°00′ W. long.; 23°00′ N. lat., 164°00′ W. long.; and 23°00′ N. lat., 165°00′ W. long. (2) Gardner Pinnacles Lobster Grounds—waters bounded by straight lines connecting the following coordinates in the order presented: 25°20′ N. lat., 168°20′ W. long.; 25°20′ N. lat., 167°40′ W. long.; 24°20′ N. lat., 167°40′ W. long.; and 24°20′ N. lat., 168°20′ W. long. (3) Maro Reef Lobster Grounds—waters bounded by straight lines connecting the following coordinates in the order presented: 25°40′ N. lat., 171°00′ W. long.; 25°40′ N. lat., 170°20′ W. long.; 25°00′ N. lat., 170°20′ W. long.; and 25°00′ N. lat., 171°00′ W. long. (4) General NWHI Lobster Grounds—all waters within Crustacean Permit Area 1 except for the Necker Island, Gardner Pinnacles, and Maro Reef Lobster Grounds." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.29,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.242 Permits.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Applicability. (1) The owner of any vessel used to fish for lobster in Permit Area 1 must have a limited access permit issued for such vessel. (2) The owner of any vessel used to fish for lobster in Permit Area 2 must have a permit issued for such a vessel. (3) The owner of any vessel used to fish for deepwater shrimp in Crustacean Permit Areas 1 or 2 must have a permit issued for that vessel. (4) Harvest of Hawaii crustacean MUS or ECS within the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument is subject to the requirements of 50 CFR part 404. (b) General requirements. General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits issued under this section, as applicable, are contained in § 665.13. (c) Application. An application for a permit required under this section will be submitted to PIRO as described in § 665.13. If the application for a limited access permit is submitted on behalf of a partnership or corporation, the application must be accompanied by a supplementary information sheet obtained from PIRO and contain the names and mailing addresses of all partners or shareholders and their respective percentage of ownership in the partnership or corporation. (d) Lobster Limited Access Permit Requirements. (1) A lobster limited access permit is valid for fishing only in Crustacean Permit Area 1. (2) Only one permit will be assigned to any vessel. (3) No vessel owner will have permits for a single vessel to harvest lobsters in Permit Areas 1 and 2 at the same time. (4) A maximum of 15 limited access permits can be valid at any time. (e) Transfer or sale of limited access permits. (1) Permits may be transferred or sold, but no one individual, partnership, or corporation will be allowed to hold a whole or partial interest in more than one permit, except that an owner who qualifies initially for more than one permit may maintain those permits, but may not obtain additional permits. Layering of partnerships or corporations shall not insulate a permit holder from this requirement. (2) If 50 percent or more of the ownership of a limited access permit is passed to persons other than those listed on the permit application, PIRO must be notified of the change in writing and provided copies of the appropriate documents confirming the changes within 30 days. (3) Upon the transfer or sale of a limited access permit, a new application must be submitted by the new permit owner according to the requirements of § 665.13. The transferred permit is not valid until this process is completed. (f) Replacement of a vessel covered by a limited access permit. A limited access permit issued under this section may, without limitation as to frequency, be transferred by the permit holder to a replacement vessel owned by that person. (g) Issuance of limited access permits to future applicants. (1) The Regional Administrator may issue limited access permits under this section when fewer than 15 vessel owners hold active permits. (2) When the Regional Administrator has determined that limited access permits may be issued to new persons, a notice shall be placed in the Federal Register, and other means will be used to notify prospective applicants of the opportunity to obtain permits under the limited access management program. (3) A period of 90 days will be provided after publication of the Federal Register notice for submission of new applications for a limited access permit. (4) Limited access permits issued under this paragraph (g) will be issued first to applicants qualifying under paragraph (g)(4)(i) of this section. If the number of limited access permits available is greater than the number of applicants that qualify under paragraph (g)(4)(i) of this section, then limited access permits will be issued to applicants under paragraph (g)(4)(ii) of this section. (i) First priority to receive limited access permits under this paragraph (g) goes to owners of vessels that were used to land lobster from Permit Area 1 during the period 1983 through 1990, and who were excluded from the fishery by implementation of the limited access system. If there are insufficient permits for all such applicants, the new permits shall be issued by the Regional Administrator through a lottery. (ii) Second priority to receive limited access permits under paragraph (g) goes to owners with the most points, based upon a point system. If two or more owners have the same number of points and there are insufficient permits for all such owners, the Regional Administrator shall issue the permits through a lottery. Under the point system, limited access permits will be issued, in descending order, beginning with owners who have the most points and proceeding to owners who have the least points, based on the following: (A) Three points shall be assigned for each calendar year after August 8, 1985, that the applicant was the operator of a vessel that was used to land lobster from Permit Area 1. (B) Two points shall be assigned for each calendar year or partial year after August 8, 1985, that the applicant was the owner, operator, or crew member of a vessel engaged in either commercial fishing in Permit Area 2 for lobster, or fishing in Permit Area 1 for fish other than lobster with an intention to sell all or part of the catch. (C) One point shall be assigned for each calendar year or partial year after August 8, 1985, that the applicant was the owner, operator, or crew member of a vessel engaged in any other commercial fishing in the EEZ surrounding Hawaii. (5) A holder of a new limited access permit must own at least a 50 percent share in the vessel that the permit would cover." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.3,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.200 Hawaii bottomfish and seamount groundfish fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.30,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.243 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 85 FR 79929, Dec. 11, 2020]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in 50 CFR §§ 600.725 and 665.15, it is unlawful for any person to do any of the following: (a) In Permit Area 1, it is unlawful for any person to— (1) Fish for, take, or retain lobsters— (i) Without a limited access permit issued under § 665.242. (ii) By methods other than lobster traps or by hand for lobsters, as specified in § 665.245. (iii) From closed areas for lobsters, as specified in § 665.251. (iv) During a closed season, as specified in § 665.250. (v) After the closure date, as specified in § 665.252, and until the fishery opens again in the following calendar year. (vi) In a lobster grounds after closure of that grounds as specified in § 665.252(b). (2) Fail to report before landing or offloading as specified in § 665.244. (3) Fail to comply with any protective measures implemented under § 665.248. (4) Leave a trap unattended in the Hawaii crustacean management area except as provided in § 665.245. (5) Maintain on board the vessel or in the water more than 1,200 traps per fishing vessel, of which no more than 1,100 can be assembled traps, as specified in § 665.245. (6) Land lobsters taken in Permit Area 1 after the closure date, as specified in § 665.252, until the fishery opens again the following year. (7) Refuse to make available to an authorized officer and employee of NMFS designated by the Regional Administrator for inspection and copying any records that must be made available in accordance with § 665.14(g)(2). (8) Possess on a fishing vessel that has a limited access permit issued under § 665.242 any lobster trap in Crustacean Permit Area 1 when fishing for lobster is prohibited as specified in §§ 665.248, 665.250(a), or 665.252, or except as allowed under § 665.245(a)(7). (9) Possess on a fishing vessel that has a limited access permit issued under this subpart any lobster trap in Crustacean Permit Area 1 VMS Subarea when fishing for lobsters is prohibited as specified in §§ 665.248, 665.250(a), or 665.252, except as allowed under § 665.245(a)(8). (10) Interfere with, tamper with, alter, damage, disable, or impede the operation of a VMS unit or to attempt any of the same while engaged in the Permit Area 1 fishery; or to move or remove a VMS unit while engaged in the Permit Area 1 fishery without first notifying the Regional Administrator. (11) Make a false statement, oral or written, to the Regional Administrator or an authorized officer, regarding the certification, use, operation, or maintenance of a VMS unit used in the fishery. (12) Fail to allow an authorized officer to inspect and certify a VMS unit used in the fishery. (13) Possess, on a fishing vessel that has a limited access permit issued under this subpart, any lobster trap in a lobster grounds that is closed under § 665.252(b), unless the vessel has an operational VMS unit, certified by NMFS, on board. (b) In Permit Area 2, it is unlawful for any person to— (1) Fish for, take, or retain lobsters— (i) By methods other than lobster traps or by hand, as specified in § 665.245; or (ii) During a closed season, as specified in § 665.250(b). (2) Retain or possess on a fishing vessel any lobster taken in Permit Area 2 that is less than the minimum size specified in § 665.249. (3) Possess on a fishing vessel any lobster or lobster part taken in Permit Area 2 in a condition where the lobster is not whole and undamaged as specified in § 665.249. (4) Retain or possess on a fishing vessel, or remove the eggs from, any egg-bearing lobster, as specified in § 665.249. (5) Possess on a fishing vessel that has a permit for Permit Area 2 issued under this subpart any lobster trap in Permit Area 2 when fishing for lobster in the MHI is prohibited during the months of May, June, July, and August. (c) In Crustacean Permit Areas 1 and 2, it is unlawful for any person to fish for, take, or retain deepwater shrimp without a permit issued under § 665.242. (d) In Crustacean Permit Area 2, it is unlawful for any person to fish for, possess, sell, or offer for sale any Kona crab from a closed fishery in the Federal waters of the MHI in violation of § 665.253(b)." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.31,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.244 Notifications.,FWS,,,,"(a) The operator of any vessel subject to the requirements of this subpart must: (1) Report, not less than 24 hours, but not more than 36 hours, before landing, the port, the approximate date and the approximate time at which spiny and slipper lobsters will be landed. (2) Report, not less than 6 hours and not more than 12 hours before offloading, the location and time that offloading of spiny and slipper lobsters will begin. (b) The Regional Administrator will notify permit holders of any change in the reporting method and schedule required in paragraph (a) of this section at least 30 days prior to the opening of the fishing season." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.32,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.245 Gear restrictions.,FWS,,,,"(a) Permit Area 1. (1) Lobsters may be taken only with lobster traps or by hand. Lobsters may not be taken by means of poisons, drugs, other chemicals, spears, nets, hook, or explosives. (2) The smallest opening of an entry way of any lobster trap may not allow any sphere or cylinder greater than 6.5 inches (16.5 cm) in diameter to pass from outside the trap to inside the trap. (3) Each lobster trap must have a minimum of two escape vent panels that meet the following requirements: (i) Panels must have at least four unobstructed circular holes no smaller than 67 mm in diameter, with centers at least 82 mm apart. (ii) The lowest part of any opening in an escape vent panel must not be more than 85 mm above the floor of the trap. (iii) Panels must be placed opposite one another in each trap. (4) A vessel fishing for or in possession of lobster in any permit area may not have on board the vessel any trap that does not meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1), (2), and (3) of this section. (5) A maximum of 1,200 traps per vessel may be maintained on board or in the water, provided that no more than 1,100 assembled traps are maintained on board or in the water. If more than 1,100 traps are maintained, the unassembled traps may be carried as spares only, in order to replace assembled traps that may be lost or become unusable. (6) Traps shall not be left unattended in any permit area, except in the event of an emergency, in which case the vessel operator must notify the SAC of the emergency that necessitated leaving the traps on the grounds, and the location and number of the traps, within 24 hours after the vessel reaches port. (7) A vessel whose owner has a limited access permit issued under this subpart and has an operating VMS unit certified by NMFS may enter Crustacean Permit Area 1 with lobster traps on board on or after June 25, but must remain outside the Crustacean Permit Area 1 VMS Subarea until the NWHI lobster season opens on July 1. (8) A vessel whose owner has a limited access permit issued under this subpart and has on board an operational VMS unit certified by NMFS may transit Crustacean Permit Area 1, including Crustacean Permit Area 1 VMS Subarea, with lobster traps on board for the purpose of moving to another lobster grounds or returning to port following the closure date, as specified in § 665.252, providing the vessel does not stop or fish and is making steady progress to another lobster grounds or back to port as determined by NMFS. (9) The operator of a permitted vessel must notify the Regional Administrator or an authorized officer no later than June 15 of each year if the vessel will use a VMS unit in the fishery and allow for inspection and certification of the unit. (b) Permit Area 2. Lobsters may be taken only with lobster traps or by hand. Lobsters may not be taken by means of poisons, drugs, other chemicals, spears, nets, hooks, or explosives." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.33,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.246 Gear identification.,FWS,,,,"In Permit Area 1, the vessel's official number must be marked legibly on all traps and floats maintained on board the vessel or in the water by that vessel." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.34,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.247 At-sea observer coverage.,FWS,,,,All fishing vessels subject to §§ 665.240 though 665.252 and subpart A of this part must carry an observer when requested to do so by the Regional Administrator. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.35,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.248 Monk seal protective measures.,FWS,,,,"(a) General. This section establishes a procedure that will be followed if the Regional Administrator receives a report of a monk seal death that appears to be related to the lobster fishery in Permit Area 1. (b) Notification. Upon receipt of a report of a monk seal death that appears to be related to the lobster fishery, the Regional Administrator will notify all interested parties of the facts known about the incident. The Regional Administrator will also notify them that an investigation is in progress, and that, if the investigation reveals a threat of harm to the monk seal population, protective measures may be implemented. (c) Investigation. (1) The Regional Administrator will investigate the incident reported and will attempt to: (i) Verify that the incident occurred. (ii) Determine the extent of the harm to the monk seal population. (iii) Determine the probability of a similar incident recurring. (iv) Determine details of the incident such as: (A) The number of animals involved. (B) The cause of the mortality. (C) The age and sex of the dead animal(s). (D) The relationship of the incident to the reproductive cycle, for example, breeding season (March-September), non-breeding season (October-February). (E) The population estimates or counts of animals at the island where the incident occurred. (F) Any other relevant information. (v) Discover and evaluate any extenuating circumstances. (vi) Evaluate any other relevant factors. (2) The Regional Administrator will make the results of the investigation available to the interested parties and request their advice and comments. (d) Determination of relationship. The Regional Administrator will review and evaluate the results of the investigation and any comments received from interested parties. If there is substantial evidence that the death of the monk seal was related to the lobster fishery, the Regional Administrator will: (1) Advise the interested parties of his or her conclusion and the facts upon which it is based. (2) Request from the interested parties their advice on the necessity of protective measures and suggestions for appropriate protective measures. (e) Determination of response. The Regional Administrator will consider all relevant information discovered during the investigation or submitted by interested parties in deciding on the appropriate response. Protective measures may include, but are not limited to, changes in trap design, changes in gear, closures of specific areas, or closures for specific periods of time. (f) Action by the Regional Administrator. If the Regional Administrator decides that protective measures are necessary and appropriate, the Regional Administrator will prepare a document that describes the incident, the protective measures proposed, and the reasons for the protective measures; provide it to the interested parties; and request their comments. (g) Implementation of protective measures. (1) If, after completing the steps described in paragraph (f) of this section, the Regional Administrator concludes that protective measures are necessary and appropriate, the Regional Administrator will recommend the protective measures to the Assistant Administrator and provide notice of this recommendation to the Chairman of the Council and the Director of the Division of Aquatic Resources, Department of Land and Natural Resources, State of Hawaii. (2) If the Assistant Administrator concurs with the Regional Administrator's recommendation, NMFS will publish an action in the Federal Register that includes a description of the incident that triggered the procedure described in this section, the protective measures, and the reasons for the protective measures. (h) Notification of “no action.” If, at any point in the process described in this section, the Regional Administrator or Assistant Administrator decides that no further action is required, the interested parties will be notified of this decision. (i) Effective dates. (1) The protective measures will take effect 10 days after the date of publication in the Federal Register. (2) The protective measures will remain in effect for the shortest of the following time periods: (i) Until the Hawaii FEP and this section are amended to respond to the problem; (ii) Until other action that will respond to the problem is taken under the ESA; (iii) Until the Assistant Administrator, following the procedures set forth in paragraph (j) of this section, decides that the protective measures are no longer required and repeals the measures; or (iv) For the period of time set forth in the Federal Register notification, not to exceed 3 months. The measures may be renewed for 3 months after again following procedures in paragraphs (b) through (g) of this section. (j) Repeal. (1) If the Assistant Administrator decides that protective measures may no longer be necessary for the protection of monk seals, the Assistant Administrator will notify the interested parties of this preliminary decision and the facts upon which it is based. The Assistant Administrator will request advice on the proposed repeal of the protective measures. (2) The Assistant Administrator will consider all relevant information obtained by the Regional Administrator or submitted by interested parties in deciding whether to repeal the protective measures. (3) If the Assistant Administrator decides to repeal the protective measures— (i) Interested parties will be notified of the decision; and (ii) Notification of repeal and the reasons for the repeal will be published in the Federal Register. (k) Monk seal emergency protective measures —(1) Determination of emergency. If, at any time during the process described in paragraphs (a) through (j) of this section, the Regional Administrator determines that an emergency exists involving monk seal mortality related to the lobster fishery and that measures are needed immediately to protect the monk seal population, the Regional Administrator will— (i) Notify the interested parties of this determination and request their immediate advice and comments. (ii) Forward a recommendation for emergency action and any advice and comments received from interested parties to the Assistant Administrator. (2) Implementation of emergency measures. If the Assistant Administrator agrees with the recommendation for emergency action— (i) The Regional Administrator will determine the appropriate emergency protective measures. (ii) NMFS will publish the emergency protective measures in the Federal Register. (iii) The Regional Administrator will notify the interested parties of the emergency protective measures. Holders of permits to fish in Permit Area I will be notified by certified mail. Permit holders that the Regional Administrator knows are on the fishing grounds also will be notified by radio. (3) Effective dates. (i) Emergency protective measures are effective against a permit holder at 12:01 a.m., local time, of the day following the day the permit holder receives actual notice of the measures. (ii) Emergency protective measures are effective for 10 days from the day following the day the first permit holder is notified of the protective measures. (iii) Emergency protective measures may be extended for an additional 10 days, if necessary, to allow the completion of the procedures set out in § 665.252." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.36,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.249 Lobster size and condition restrictions in Permit Area 2.,FWS,,,,"(a) Only spiny lobsters with a carapace length of 8.26 cm or greater may be retained (see Figure 1 to this part). (b) Any lobster with a punctured or mutilated body, or a separated carapace and tail, may not be retained. (c) A female lobster of any size may not be retained if it is carrying eggs externally. Eggs may not be removed from female lobsters." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.37,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.250 Closed seasons.,FWS,,,,"(a) Lobster fishing is prohibited in Permit Area 1 during the months of January through June, inclusive. (b) Lobster fishing is prohibited in Permit Area 2 during the months of May, June, July, and August." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.38,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.251 Closed areas.,FWS,,,,"All lobster fishing is prohibited: (a) Within 20 nm of Laysan Island. (b) Within the EEZ landward of the 10-fathom curve as depicted on National Ocean Survey Charts, Numbers 19022, 19019, and 19016." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.39,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.252 Harvest limitation program.,FWS,,,,"(a) General. Harvest guidelines for the Necker Island Lobster Grounds, Gardner Pinnacles Lobster Grounds, Maro Reef Lobster Grounds, and General NWHI Lobster Grounds for Permit Area 1 will be set annually for the calendar year and shall: (1) Apply to the total catch of spiny and slipper lobsters. (2) Be expressed in terms of numbers of lobsters. (b) Harvest guideline. (1) The Regional Administrator shall use information from daily lobster catch reports and lobster sales reports from previous years, and may use information from research sampling and other sources to establish the annual harvest guideline in accordance with the FEP after consultation with the Council. (2) NMFS shall publish a document indicating the annual harvest guideline in the Federal Register by February 28 of each year and shall use other means to notify permit holders of the harvest guideline for the year. (3) The Regional Administrator shall determine, on the basis of the information reported to NMFS by the operator of each vessel fishing, when the harvest guideline for each lobster ground will be reached. (4) Notice of the date when the harvest guideline for a lobster ground is expected to be reached and specification of the closure date of the lobster grounds will be provided to each permit holder and/or operator of each permitted vessel at least 24 hours in advance of the closure. After a closure, the harvest of lobster in that lobster ground is prohibited, and the possession of lobster traps on board the vessel in that lobster ground is prohibited unless allowed under § 665.245(a)(8). (5) With respect to the notification in paragraph (b)(4) of this section, NMFS shall provide each permit holder and operator of each permitted vessel with the following information, as appropriate: (i) Determination of when the overall harvest guideline for Crustacean Permit Area 1 will be reached; (ii) Closure date after which harvest of lobster or possession of lobster traps on board the vessel in a lobster grounds is prohibited; (iii) Closure date after which the possession of lobster traps on board the vessel in Crustacean Permit Area 1 is prohibited by any permitted vessel that is not operating a VMS unit certified by NMFS; and (iv) Specification of when further landings of lobster will be prohibited by permitted vessels not carrying an operational VMS unit, certified by NMFS, on board. (c) Monitoring and adjustment. The operator of each vessel fishing during the open season shall report lobster catch (by species) and effort (number of trap hauls) data while at sea to NMFS in Honolulu. The Regional Administrator shall notify permit holders of the reporting method, schedule, and logistics at least 30 days prior to the opening of the fishing season." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.4,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.201 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2771, Feb. 8, 2019; 84 FR 29396, June 24, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.200 through 665.219: Deep 7 bottomfish means the following species: Deep 7 bottomfish fishing year means the year beginning at 0001 local time on September 1 and ending at 2400 HST on August 31 of the next calendar year. Hawaii bottomfish ecosystem component species (Hawaii bottomfish ECS) means those species that are not listed as Hawaii bottomfish MUS and that are identified as ECS in Table 4 of the Hawaii FEP. Hawaii bottomfish management unit species (Hawaii bottomfish MUS) means the following species: Main Hawaiian Islands non-commercial bottomfish permit means the permit required by § 665.203(a)(2) to own or fish from a vessel that is used in any non-commercial vessel-based fishing, landing, or transshipment of any Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS in the MHI Management Subarea. Protected species study zone means the waters within 50 nm, as designated by the Regional Administrator pursuant to § 665.208, around the following islands of the NWHI and as measured from the following coordinates: Seamount Groundfish means the following species:" 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.40,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.253 Annual Catch Limits (ACL) and Annual Catch Targets (ACT).,FWS,,,"[85 FR 79929, Dec. 11, 2020, as amended at 88 FR 14082, Mar. 7, 2023; 89 FR 37986, May 7, 2024]","(a) Deepwater Shrimp. (1) In accordance with § 665.4, the ACLs for each fishing year are as follows: Table 1 to Paragraph (a) (1) (2) If the average catch of the three most recent years of deepwater shrimp exceeds the specified ACL in a fishing year, the Regional Administrator will reduce the ACL for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage. (b) MHI Kona crab. (1) In accordance with § 665.4, the ACLs and ACTs for each fishing year are as follows: Table 1 to Paragraph ( b )(1) (2) When the ACT is projected to be reached based on analyses of available information, the Regional Administrator shall publish a document to that effect in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify affected fishermen. The document will include an advisement that the fishery will be closed beginning on a specified date, which is not earlier than 7 days after the date of filing the closure notice for public inspection at the Office of the Federal Register, until the end of the fishing year in which the ACL is reached. (3) On and after the date specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, no person may fish for, possess, sell, or offer for sale any Kona crab from a closed fishery in the Federal waters of the MHI, except as otherwise allowed in this section. (4) If landings exceed the specified ACL in a fishing year, the Regional Administrator will reduce the ACL and the ACT for the subsequent year by the amount of the overage." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.41,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§§ 665.254-665.259 [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.42,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.260 Hawaii precious coral fisheries. [Reserved],FWS,,,, 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.43,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.261 Definitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","As used in §§ 665.260 through 665.270: Hawaii precious coral ecosystem component species (Hawaii precious coral ECS) means those species identified as ECS in the Hawaii FEP. Hawaii precious coral management unit species (Hawaii precious coral MUS) means the following species: Hawaii precious coral permit area means the area encompassing the precious coral beds within the EEZ around Hawaii. Each bed is designated by a permit area code and assigned to one of the following four categories: (1) Established beds. (i) Makapu'u (Oahu), Permit Area E-B-1, includes the area within a radius of 2.0 nm of a point at 21°18.0′ N. lat., 157°32.5′ W. long. (ii) Au'au Channel (Maui), Permit Area E-B-2, includes the area west and south of a point at 21°10′ N. lat., 156°40′ W. long., and east of a point at 21° N. lat., 157° W. long., and west and north of a point at 20°45′ N. lat., 156°40′ W. long. (2) Conditional beds. (i) Keahole Point (Hawaii), Permit Area C-B-1, includes the area within a radius of 0.5 nm of a point at 19°46.0′ N. lat., 156°06.0′ W. long. (ii) Kaena Point (Oahu), Permit Area C-B-2, includes the area within a radius of 0.5 nm of a point at 21°35.4′ N. lat., 158°22.9′ W. long. (iii) Brooks Bank, Permit Area C-B-3, includes the area within a radius of 2.0 nm of a point at 24°06.0′ N. lat., 166°48.0′ W. long. (iv) 180 Fathom Bank, Permit Area C-B-4, N.W. of Kure Atoll, includes the area within a radius of 2.0 nm of a point at 28°50.2′ N. lat., 178°53.4′ W. long. (3) Refugia. Westpac Bed, Permit Area R-1, includes the area within a radius of 2.0 nm of a point at 23°18′ N. lat., 162°35′ W. long. (4) Exploratory areas. Permit Area X-P-H includes all coral beds, other than established beds, conditional beds, or refugia, in the EEZ seaward of the State of Hawaii." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.44,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.262 Permits.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Any vessel of the United States fishing for, taking, or retaining Hawaii precious coral MUS or ECS in any Hawaiian Archipelago precious coral permit area must have a permit issued under § 665.13. (b) Each permit will be valid for fishing only in the permit area specified on the permit. Precious Coral Permit Areas are defined in § 665.261. (c) No more than one permit will be valid for any one vessel at any one time. (d) No more than one permit will be valid for any one person at any one time. (e) The holder of a valid permit to fish one permit area may obtain a permit to fish another permit area only upon surrendering to the Regional Administrator any current permit for the precious coral fishery issued under § 665.13. (f) General requirements governing application information, issuance, fees, expiration, replacement, transfer, alteration, display, sanctions, and appeals for permits for the precious coral fishery are contained in § 665.13." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.45,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.263 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2773, Feb. 8, 2019; 85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in 50 CFR 600.725 and in 665.15, it is unlawful for any person to: (a) Use any vessel to fish for, take, retain, possess or land precious coral in any Hawaii precious coral permit area, unless a permit has been issued for that vessel and area as specified in § 665.13 and that permit is on board the vessel. (b) Fish for, take, or retain any species of Hawaii precious coral MUS or Hawaii precious coral ECS in any precious coral permit area: (1) By means of gear or methods prohibited by § 665.264. (2) In refugia specified in § 665.261. (3) In a bed for which the ACL specified in § 665.269 has been attained. (4) In violation of any permit issued under §§ 665.13 or 665.17. (5) In a bed that has been closed pursuant to §§ 665.268 or 665.270. (c) Take and retain, possess, or land any live Hemicorallium laauense, Pleurocorallium secundum, Corallium sp., or live black coral from any precious coral permit area that is less than the minimum height specified in § 665.265 unless: (1) A valid EFP was issued under § 665.17 for the vessel and the vessel was operating under the terms of the permit; or (2) The coral originated outside coral beds listed in this paragraph, and this can be demonstrated through receipts of purchase, invoices, or other documentation." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.46,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.264 Gear restrictions.,FWS,,,,Only selective gear may be used to harvest coral from any precious coral permit area. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.47,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.265 Size restrictions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2774, Feb. 8, 2019]","The height of a live coral specimen shall be determined by a straight line measurement taken from its base to its most distal extremity. The stem diameter of a living coral specimen shall be determined by measuring the greatest diameter of the stem at a point no less than 1 inch (2.54 cm) from the top surface of the living holdfast. (a) Live Hemicorallium laauense, Pleurocorallium secundum, or Corallium sp. harvested from any precious coral permit area must have attained a minimum height of 10 inches (25.4 cm). (b) Live black coral harvested from any precious coral permit area must have attained either a minimum stem diameter of 1 inch (2.54 cm), or a minimum height of 48 inches (122 cm)." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.48,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.266 Area restrictions.,FWS,,,,"Fishing for coral on the WestPac Bed is not allowed. The specific area closed to fishing is all waters within a 2-nm radius of the midpoint of 23°18.0′ N. lat., 162°35.0′ W. long." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.49,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.267 Seasons.,FWS,,,"[85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020]",The fishing year for precious coral begins on July 1 and ends on June 30 the following year. 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.5,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.202 Management subareas.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 75 FR 69015, Nov. 10, 2010]","(a) The Hawaii fishery management area is divided into subareas with the following designations and boundaries: (1) Main Hawaiian Islands means the U.S. EEZ around the Hawaiian Archipelago lying to the east of 161°20′ W. long. (2) Northwestern Hawaiian Islands means the EEZ around the Hawaiian Archipelago lying to the west of 161°20′ W. long. For the purposes of regulations issued under this subpart, Midway Island is treated as part of the NWHI Subarea. (i) Ho'omalu Zone means that portion of the EEZ around the NWHI west of 165° W. long. (ii) Mau Zone means that portion of the EEZ around the NWHI between 161°20′ W. long. and 165° W. long. (3) Hancock Seamounts Ecosystem Management Area means that portion of the EEZ in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands west of 180° W. long. and north of 28° N. lat. (b) The inner boundary of each management subarea is a line coterminous with the seaward boundaries of the State of Hawaii. (c) The outer boundary of each management subarea is a line drawn in such a manner that each point on it is 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the territorial sea is measured." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.50,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.268 Closures.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020]","(a) If the Regional Administrator determines that the ACL for any coral bed will be reached prior to the end of the fishing year, NMFS shall publish a document to that effect in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify permit holders. Any such notice must indicate the fishery shall be closed, the reason for the closure, the specific bed being closed, and the effective date of the closure. (b) A closure is also effective for a permit holder upon the permit holder's actual harvest of the applicable quota." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.51,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.269 Annual Catch Limits (ACL).,FWS,,,"[85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020, as amended at 88 FR 14082, Mar. 7, 2023; 88 FR 88836, Dec. 26, 2023]","(a) General. The ACLs limiting the amount of precious coral that may be taken in any precious coral permit area during the fishing year are listed in paragraph (c) of this section. Only live coral is counted toward the ACL. The accounting period for each fishing year for all precious coral ACLs begins July 1 and ends June 30 of the following year. (b) Reserves and reserve release. The ACL for exploratory area X-P-H will be held in reserve for harvest by vessels of the United States in the following manner: (1) At the start of the fishing year, the reserve for the Hawaii exploratory areas will equal the ACL minus the estimated domestic annual harvest for that year. (2) As soon as practicable after December 31 each year, the Regional Administrator will determine the amount harvested by vessels of the United States between July 1 and December 31 of the year that just ended on December 31. (3) NMFS will release to TALFF an amount of Hawaii precious coral for each exploratory area equal to the ACL minus two times the amount harvested by vessels of the United States in that July 1-December 31 period. (4) NMFS will publish in the Federal Register a notification of the Regional Administrator's determination and a summary of the information on which it is based as soon as practicable after the determination is made. (c) Precious coral. In accordance with § 665.4, the ACLs for MHI precious coral permit areas for each fishing year are as follows: Table 1 to Paragraph (c) No fishing for coral is authorized in refugia. A moratorium on gold coral harvesting is in effect through June 30, 2028." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.52,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.270 Gold coral harvest moratorium.,FWS,,,"[88 FR 88836, Dec. 26, 2023]","Fishing for, taking, or retaining any gold coral in any precious coral permit area is prohibited through June 30, 2028." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.6,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.203 Permits.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019]","(a) Applicability —(1) Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. The owner of any vessel used to fish for, land, or transship Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS shoreward of the outer boundary of the NWHI subarea must have a permit issued under this section, and the permit must be registered for use with that vessel. PIRO will not register a single vessel for use with a Ho'omalu Zone permit and a Mau Zone permit at the same time. Mau Zone permits issued before June 14, 1999, became invalid June 14, 1999, except that a permit issued to a person who submitted a timely application under paragraph (b)(3) of this section is valid until the permit holder either receives a Mau Zone limited entry permit or until final agency action is taken on the permit holder's application. The Ho'omalu Zone and the Mau Zone limited entry systems described in this section are subject to abolition, modification, or additional effort limitation programs. (2) MHI non-commercial. The owner of a vessel that is used for and any person who participates in non-commercial, vessel-based fishing, landing, or transshipment of Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS in the MHI management subarea is required to obtain an MHI non-commercial bottomfish permit or a State of Hawaii Commercial Marine License. If one or more persons on a vessel-based bottomfish fishing trip holds an MHI non-commercial permit, then the entire trip is considered non-commercial, and not commercial. However, if any commercial fishing occurs during or as a result of a vessel-based fishing trip, then the fishing trip is considered commercial, and not non-commercial. Charter boat customers are not subject to the requirements of the section. (b) Submission. (1) An application for a permit required under this section must be submitted to PIRO as described in § 665.13. (2) Ho'omalu Zone limited access permit. In addition to an application under § 665.13(c), each applicant for a Ho'omalu Zone permit must also submit a supplementary information sheet provided by PIRO, which must be signed by the vessel owner or a designee and include the following information: (i) The qualification criterion that the applicant believes he or she meets for issuance of a limited access permit; (ii) A copy of landings receipts or other documentation, with a certification from a state or Federal agency that this information is accurate, to demonstrate participation in the NWHI bottomfish fishery; and (iii) If the application is filed by a partnership or corporation, the names of each of the individual partners or shareholders and their respective percentages of ownership of the partnership or corporation. (3) Mau Zone limited access permit. PIRO will not accept applications for a new Mau Zone permit after June 14, 1999. In addition to an application under § 665.13(c), each applicant for a Mau Zone permit must also submit a supplementary information sheet provided by PIRO, which must be signed by the vessel owner or a designee and include the following information: (i) The qualification criterion that the applicant believes he or she meets for issuance of a limited access permit; (ii) Copy of State of Hawaii catch report(s) to demonstrate that the permitted vessel had made qualifying landings of bottomfish from the Mau Zone; and (iii) If the application is filed by a partnership or corporation, the names of each of the individual partners or shareholders and their respective percentage of ownership of the partnership or corporation. (c) Sale or transfer of Ho'omalu limited access permits to new vessel owners. (1) A Ho'omalu zone permit may not be sold or otherwise transferred to a new owner. (2) A Ho'omalu zone permit or permits may be held by a partnership or corporation. If 50 percent or more of the ownership of the vessel passes to persons other than those listed in the original application, the permit will lapse and must be surrendered to the Regional Administrator. (d) Transfer of Ho'omalu Zone limited access permits to replacement vessels. (1) Upon application by the owner of a permitted vessel, the Regional Administrator will transfer that owner's permit to a replacement vessel owned by that owner, provided that the replacement vessel does not exceed 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA. The replacement vessel must be put into service no later than 12 months after the owner applies for the transfer, or the transfer shall be void. (2) An owner of a permitted vessel may apply to the Regional Administrator for transfer of that owner's permit to a replacement vessel greater than 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA. The Regional Administrator may transfer the permit upon determining, after consultation with the Council and considering the objectives of the limited access program, that the replacement vessel has catching power that is comparable to the rest of the vessels holding permits for the fishery, or has catching power that does not exceed that of the original vessel, and that the transfer is not inconsistent with the objectives of the program. The Regional Administrator shall consider vessel length, range, hold capacity, gear limitations, and other appropriate factors in making determinations of catching power equivalency and comparability of the catching power of vessels in the fishery. (e) Ho'omalu Zone limited access permit renewal. (1) A qualifying landing for Ho'omalu Zone permit renewal is a landing of at least 2,500 lb (1,134 kg) of Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS from the Ho'omalu Zone or a landing of at least 2,500 lb (1,134 kg) of fish from the Ho'omalu Zone, of which at least 50 percent by weight was Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS. A permit is eligible for renewal for the next calendar year if the vessel covered by the permit made three or more qualifying landings during the current calendar year. (2) The owner of a permitted vessel that did not make three or more qualifying landings of bottomfish in a year may apply to the Regional Administrator for a waiver of the landing requirement. If the Regional Administrator finds that failure to make three landings was due to circumstances beyond the owner's control, the Regional Administrator may renew the permit. A waiver may not be granted if the failure to make three landings was due to general economic conditions or market conditions, such that the vessel operations would not be profitable. (f) Issuance of new Ho'omalu Zone limited access permits. The Regional Administrator may issue new Ho'omalu Zone limited access permits under § 665.13 if the Regional Administrator determines, in consultation with the Council, that bottomfish stocks in the Ho'omalu Zone are able to support additional fishing effort. (g) Eligibility for new Ho'omalu Zone limited access permits. When the Regional Administrator has determined that new permits may be issued, they shall be issued to applicants based upon eligibility, determined as follows: (1) Point system. (i) Two points will be assigned for each year in which the applicant was owner or captain of a vessel that made three or more of any of the following types of landings in the NWHI: (A) Any amount of Hawaii bottomfish MUS, regardless of weight, if made on or before August 7, 1985; (B) At least 2,500 lb (1,134 kg) of Hawaii bottomfish MUS, if made after August 7, 1985; or (C) At least 2,500 lb (1,134 kg) of any fish lawfully harvested from the NWHI, of which at least 50 percent by weight was bottomfish, if made after August 7, 1985. (ii) One point will be assigned for each year in which the applicant was owner or captain of a vessel that landed at least 6,000 lb (2,722 kg) of bottomfish from the MHI. (iii) For any one year, points will be assigned under either paragraph (g)(1)(i) or (g)(1)(ii) of this section, but not under both paragraphs. (iv) Before the Regional Administrator issues a Ho'omalu zone permit to fish for bottomfish under this section, the primary operator and relief operator named on the application form must have completed a protected species workshop conducted by NMFS. (2) Restrictions. An applicant must own at least a 25 percent share in the vessel that the permit would cover, and only one permit will be assigned to any vessel. (3) Order of issuance. New permits shall be awarded to applicants in descending order, starting with the applicant with the largest number of points. If two or more persons have an equal number of points, and there are insufficient new permits for all such applicants, the new permits shall be awarded by the Regional Administrator through a lottery. (4) Notification. The Regional Administrator shall place a notice in the Federal Register and shall use other means to notify prospective applicants of the opportunity to file applications for new permits under this program. (h) Eligibility for new Mau Zone limited access permits. (1) PIRO will issue an initial Mau Zone permit to a vessel owner who qualifies for at least three points under the following point system: (i) An owner who held a Mau Zone permit on or before December 17, 1991, and whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS on or before December 17, 1991, shall be assigned 1.5 points. (ii) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1991 shall be assigned 0.5 point. (iii) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1992 shall be assigned 1.0 point. (iv) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1993 shall be assigned 1.5 points. (v) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1994 shall be assigned 2.0 points. (vi) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1995 shall be assigned 2.5 points. (vii) An owner whose permitted vessel made at least one qualifying landing of Hawaii bottomfish MUS during 1996 shall be assigned 3.0 points. (viii) Before PIRO issues a Mau Zone permit to fish for bottomfish under this section, the primary operator and relief operator named on the application form must have completed a protected species workshop conducted by NMFS. (2) For purposes of this paragraph (h), a “qualifying landing” means any amount of Hawaii bottomfish MUS lawfully harvested from the Mau Zone and offloaded for sale. No points shall be assigned to an owner for any qualifying landings reported to the State of Hawaii more than 1 year after the landing. (3) More than one Mau Zone permit may be issued to an owner of two or more vessels, provided each of the owner's vessels for which a permit will be registered for use has made the required qualifying landings for the owner to be assigned at least three eligibility points. (4) A Mau Zone permit holder who does not own a vessel at the time initial permits are issued must register the permit for use with a vessel owned by the permit holder within 12 months from the date the permit was issued. In the interim, the permit holder may register the permit for use with a leased or chartered vessel. If within 12 months of initial permit issuance, the permit holder fails to apply to PIRO to register the permit for use with a vessel owned by the permit holder, then the permit shall expire. (5) For each of paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (h)(1)(viii) of this section, PIRO shall assign points based on the landings of one permitted vessel to only one owner if the vessel did not have multiple owners during the time frame covered by the subordinate paragraphs. If a vessel had multiple owners during a time frame covered by any of paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (h)(1)(viii) of this section (including joint owners, partners, or shareholders of a corporate owner), PIRO will assign the points for that subordinate paragraph to a single owner if only one owner submits an application with respect to the landings of that vessel during that time frame. If multiple owners submit separate applications with respect to the same landings of the same vessel during the same time frame, then PIRO shall: (i) Adhere to any written agreement between the applicants with respect to who among them shall be assigned the aggregate point(s) generated by landings during such time frame(s), or (ii) If there is no agreement: (A) Shall issue the applicants a joint permit provided the vessel's landings during such time frames generated at least three points, or (B) In the event the vessel's landings during such time frame(s) generated less than three points, shall not assign any points generated by the vessel's landings during such time frame(s). (i) Ownership requirements and registration of Mau Zone limited access permits for use with other vessels. (1) A Mau Zone permit may be held by an individual, partnership, or corporation. No more than 49 percent of the underlying ownership interest in a Mau Zone permit may be sold, leased, chartered, or otherwise transferred to another person or entity. If more than 49 percent of the underlying ownership of the permit passes to persons or entities other than those listed in the original permit application supplemental information sheet, then the permit expires and must be surrendered to PIRO. (2) A Mau Zone permit holder may apply under § 665.13 to PIRO to register the permit for use with another vessel if that vessel is owned by the permit holder, and is no longer than 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA. (3) If a Mau Zone permit holder sells the vessel for which the permit is registered for use, the permit holder must, within 12 months of the date of sale, apply to PIRO to register the permit for use with a vessel owned by the permit holder. If the permit holder has not applied to register a replacement vessel within 12 months, then the permit expires. (4) If a permitted vessel owned by the permit holder is sold or becomes unseaworthy, the Mau Zone permit with which the vessel was registered may be registered for use with a leased or chartered vessel for a period not to exceed 12 months from the date of registration of the leased or chartered vessel. If by the end of that 12-month period the permit holder fails to apply to PIRO to register the permit for use with a vessel owned by the permit holder, then the permit expires. (j) Mau Zone limited access permit renewal. (1) A Mau Zone permit will be eligible for renewal if the vessel for which the permit is registered for use made at least five separate fishing trips with landings of at least 500 lb (227 kg) of Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS per trip during the calendar year. Only one landing of bottomfish MUS or ECS per fishing trip to the Mau Zone will be counted toward the landing requirement. (2) If the vessel for which the permit is registered for use fails to meet the landing requirement of paragraph (j)(1) of this section, the owner may apply to the Regional Administrator for a waiver of the landing requirement. Grounds for a waiver are limited to captain incapacitation, vessel breakdowns, and the loss of the vessel at sea if the event prevented the vessel from meeting the landing requirement. Unprofitability is not sufficient for waiver of the landing requirement. (3) Failure of the permit holder to register a vessel for use under the permit does not exempt a permit holder from the requirements specified in this paragraph. (k) Appeals of permit actions. (1) Except as provided in subpart A of 15 CFR part 904, any applicant for a permit or a permit holder may appeal the granting, denial, or revocation of his or her permit to the Regional Administrator. (2) In order to be considered by the Regional Administrator, such appeal must be in writing, must state the action appealed, and the reasons therefore, and must be submitted within 30 days of the appealed action. The appellant may request an informal hearing on the appeal. (3) The Regional Administrator, in consultation with the Council, will decide the appeal in accordance with the FEP and implementing regulations and based upon information relative to the application on file at NMFS and the Council, the summary record kept of any hearing, the hearing officer's recommended decision, if any, and any other relevant information. (4) If a hearing is requested, or if the Regional Administrator determines that one is appropriate, the Regional Administrator may grant an informal hearing before a hearing officer designated for that purpose. The applicant or permit holder may appear personally and/or be represented by counsel at the hearing and submit information and present arguments as determined appropriate by the hearing officer. Within 30 days of the last day of the hearing, the hearing officer shall recommend in writing a decision to the Regional Administrator. (5) The Regional Administrator may adopt the hearing officer's recommended decision, in whole or in part, or may reject or modify it. The Regional Administrator's decision on the application is the final administrative decision of the Department of Commerce, and is effective on the date the Administrator signs the decision." 50:50:13.0.1.1.2.3.1.7,50,Wildlife and Fisheries,VI,,665,PART 665—FISHERIES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC,C,Subpart C—Hawaii Fisheries,,§ 665.204 Prohibitions.,FWS,,,"[75 FR 2205, Jan. 14, 2010, as amended at 75 FR 69015, Nov. 10, 2010; 84 FR 2772, Feb. 8, 2019; 84 FR 29397, June 24, 2019; 85 FR 26624, May 5, 2020]","In addition to the general prohibitions specified in § 600.725 of this chapter and § 665.15, it is unlawful for any person to do any of the following: (a) Fish for Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS, or seamount groundfish MUS using gear prohibited under § 665.206. (b) Fish for, or retain on board a vessel, Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS in the Ho'omalu Zone or the Mau Zone without the appropriate permit registered for use with that vessel issued under § 665.13. (c) Serve as primary operator or relief operator on a vessel with a Mau or Ho'omalu Zone permit without completing a protected species workshop conducted by NMFS, as required by § 665.203. (d) Fail to notify the USCG at least 24 hours prior to making any landing of bottomfish taken in the Ho'omalu Zone, as required by § 665.205. (e) Fish within any protected species study zone in the NWHI without notifying the Regional Administrator of the intent to fish in these zones, as required under § 664.205. (f) Falsify or fail to make or file reports of all fishing activities shoreward of the outer boundary of the MHI management subarea, in violation of § 665.14(a) or (b). (g) Own a vessel or fish from a vessel that is used to fish non-commercially for any Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS in the MHI management subarea without either a MHI non-commercial bottomfish permit or a State of Hawaii Commercial Marine License, in violation of § 665.2 or § 665.203(a)(2). (h) Fish for or possess any bottomfish MUS as defined in § 665.201, in the MHI management subarea after a closure of its respective fishery, in violation of § 665.211. (i) Sell or offer for sale any bottomfish MUS as defined in § 665.201, after a closure of its respective fishery, in violation of § 665.211. (j) Harvest, possess, or land more than a total of five fish (all species combined) identified as Deep 7 bottomfish in § 665.201 from a vessel in the MHI management subarea, while holding a MHI non-commercial bottomfish permit, or while participating as a charter boat customer, in violation of § 665.212. (k) Fish for or possess any Hawaii bottomfish MUS or ECS, or seamount groundfish MUS in the Hancock Seamounts Ecosystem Management Area, in violation of § 665.209."