NMFS chief: Cod study is viable

The administrator of NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service has expressed confidence in the stock assessment science, that over a three-year period found nearly a 300 percent drop in the weight of spawning aged cod in the Gulf of Maine.

“It is quite possible that both surveys were right and that something happened in the ocean,” federal fisheries administrator Eric Schwaab said in a radio interview.

However, Schwaab also acknowledged that the likelihood that 22 million tons of spawning age Gulf of Maine cod had vanished between a study that showed the stock as healthy in 2008 and the more recent survey released in early December was “out of the norm.”

Schwaab did not speculate about what might have happened to the cod, a fish that represents upward of 60 percent of the income for the fleet of 60 to 100 Gloucester based boats, according to Vito Giacalone, policy director for the Northeast Seafood Coalition and whose three sons own one of the port's fish auctions.

Schwaab said the fisheries service was “open” to the request from members of the congressional delegation led by Sen. John Kerry as well as Reps. John Tierney and Barney Frank that a new Gulf of Maine cod assessment be undertaken.

Click here to read the full story from the Gloucester Times >

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