[va-bird] Re: Horseshoe Crabs - deja vu all over again

  • From: jfox <jjfoxfox@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2006 22:57:02 -0500

Va birders

I took off work early to start Aldo Leopold's "A Sound County Almanac". From the first chapter, as he is felling a lightning killed oak:

Our saw cut into the 1920's. The last marten seen in the state is 1925. The first Starling arrives in 1923.

We cut 1908, Wisconsin says goodbye to it's last Cougar.

We cut 1899, when the last Passenger Pigeon collided with a charge of shot, and 1896 when 25,000 Prairie Chickens were sent to market from one town alone.

In 1873 Chicago traded 600,000 Prairie Chickens at $3.25 per dozen. In 1872 the last Wild Turkey in Wisconsin was killed.

In 1871 it is estimated that 136 million Passenger Pigeons nested within 50 miles. "Pigeon hunters by scores plied their trade with net and gun, club and salt lick, and trainloads of prospective pigeon pie moved southward and eastward toward the cities. It was the last big nesting in Wisconsin , and nearly the last in any state."

In 1870 a market gunner boasted of killing 6,000 ducks in one year.

When I checked my email and read Rich's post, tears ran down my cheeks as I tried to make out the words. It takes a Commission and a scientist to determine that "a moratorium of horseshoe crab harvest could provide more eggs for the birds to feed upon"? As another population is wiped out in a few short years so a few profit, a state legislator who owns a Horseshoe Crab plant votes against protecting them?

Please do comment, sorry if I'm too wound up,

John Fox
Arlington, VA






On Fri, 24 Feb 2006 16:30:39 -0500, <Zelig88@xxxxxxx> wrote:

OK Folks, we lose some we win some the wheels continue to turn - this just
happened yesterday. Being as this meeting was in Crystal City, I was able to
attend. The meeting in May will be in Crystal City as well, meet me
there...meanwhile, let's all get ready to publically comment...

Rich Rieger

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, FEBRUARY 23, 2006
PRESS CONTACT, TINA BERGER (202)289-6400

Horseshoe Crab Board Approves Draft Addendum for Public Comment
Addendum Considers Additional Harvest Reductions


The Commission's Horseshoe Crab Management Board approved releasing Draft
Addendum IV to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for Horseshoe Crab
for public comment. The Draft Addendum proposes a number of options to reduce
or eliminate harvest of horseshoe crabs of Delaware Bay origin.

The Draft Addendum responds to public concern regarding the horseshoe crab
populations and their ecological role in the Delaware Bay. While there are a
number of scientific reviews on the status of horseshoe crabs, there is no
peer-reviewed coastwide estimate of horseshoe crab abundance. The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service Shorebird Technical Committee has indicated that the red knot,
one of many shorebird species that feed upon horseshoe crab eggs, is at low
population levels. Red knots have shown no sign of recovery, despite a four-fold
reduction in horseshoe crab landings since 1998. The Shorebird Technical
Committee concluded a moratorium of horseshoe crab harvest could provide more eggs
for the birds to feed upon. The Board initiated the addendum process to
evaluate further restrictions on crab harvest in the Delaware Bay region. The area is
considered the epicenter of horseshoe crab production along the coast as well
as a critical stopover area for many migratory shorebirds including the red
knot.

States will be conducting public hearings on the Draft Addendum throughout
March and early April. Information on those hearings will be released once it is
available. The Management Board will meet in May 2006 to review public
comment, select the management measures to be contained in the Addendum, and
consider its final approval. Copies of the Draft Addendum will be available by
mid-March via the Commission’s website at www.asmfc.org or by contacting the
Commission at (202) 289-6400. For more information, please contact Braddock Spear,
Fisheries Management Plan Coordinator, at (202) 289-6400 or <bspear@xxxxxxxxx>.


###

 PR06-07


*************************
Tina Berger
Public Affairs Specialist
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
1444 I Street. NW, Sixth Floor
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: (202)289-6400
FAX: (202)289-6051
Email: tberger@xxxxxxxxx
www.asmfc.org

ASMFC Vision: Healthy, self-sustaining populations of all Atlantic coast fish
species or successful restoration well in progress by the year 2015.



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