[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 50, Volume 7]
[Revised as of January 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 50CFR229.35]

[Page 627-629]
 
                    TITLE 50--WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES
 
  CHAPTER II--NATIONAL MARINE FISHERIES SERVICE, NATIONAL OCEANIC AND 
           ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
 
PART 229_AUTHORIZATION FOR COMMERCIAL FISHERIES UNDER THE MARINE 
 
   Subpart C_Take Reduction Plan Regulations and Emergency Regulations
 
Sec. 229.35  Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan.

    (a) Purpose and scope. The purpose of this section is to implement 
the Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan to reduce incidental 
mortality and serious injury of the western North Atlantic coastal 
bottlenose dolphin stock in specific Category I and Category II 
commercial fisheries from New Jersey through Florida. Specific Category 
I and II commercial fisheries within the scope of the BDTRP are 
identified and updated in the annual List of Fisheries. Gear restricted 
by this section includes small, medium, and large mesh gillnets. The 
geographic scope of the BDTRP is all tidal and marine waters within 6.5 
nautical miles (12 km) of shore from the New York-New Jersey border 
southward to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and within 14.6 nautical 
miles (27 km) of shore from Cape Hatteras southward to, and including, 
the east coast of Florida down to the fishery management council 
demarcation line between the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico (as 
described in Sec. 600.105 of this title).
    (b) Definitions. In addition to the definitions contained in the 
Act, Sec. 216.3 and Sec. 229.2 of this chapter, the terms defined in 
this section shall have the following definitions, even if a contrary 
definition exists in the Act, Sec. 216.3, or Sec. 229.2:
    Beach means landward of and including the mean low water line.
    Beach/water interface means the mean low water line.
    Large mesh gillnet means a gillnet constructed with a mesh size 
greater than or equal to 7-inches (17.8 cm) stretched mesh.
    Medium mesh gillnet means a gillnet constructed with a mesh size of 
greater than 5-inches (12.7 cm) to less than 7-inches (17.8 cm) 
stretched mesh.
    New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland State waters means the area 
consisting of all marine and tidal waters, within 3 nautical miles (5.56 
km) of shore, bounded on the north by 40o 30[min] N. (New York/New 
Jersey border at the coast) and on the south by 38o 01.6[min] N. 
(Maryland/Virginia border at the coast).
    Night means any time between one hour after sunset and one hour 
prior to sunrise.
    Northern North Carolina State waters means the area consisting of 
all marine and tidal waters, within 3 nautical miles (5.56 km) of shore, 
bounded on the north by 36[deg] 33[min] N. (Virginia/North Carolina 
border at the coast) and on the south by 34[deg] 35.4[min] N. (Cape 
Lookout, North Carolina).
    Northern Virginia State waters means the area consisting of all 
marine and tidal waters, within 3 nautical miles (5.56 km) of shore, 
bounded on the north by 38[deg] 01.6[min] N. (Virginia/Maryland border 
at the coast) and on the south by 37[deg] 07.23[min] N. (Cape Charles 
Light on Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay mouth).
    Small mesh gillnet means a gillnet constructed with a mesh size of 
less than or equal to 5-inches (12.7 cm) stretched mesh.
    South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida waters means the area 
consisting of all marine and tidal waters, within 14.6 nautical miles 
(27 km) of shore, between 33[deg] 52[min] N. (North Carolina/South 
Carolina border at the coast) and the fishery management council 
demarcation line between the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico (as 
described in Sec. 600.105 of this title).
    Southern North Carolina State waters means the area consisting of 
all marine and tidal waters, within 3 nautical miles (5.56 km) of shore, 
bounded on the north by 34[deg] 35.4[min] N. (Cape Lookout, North 
Carolina) and on the south by 33[deg] 52[min] N. (North Carolina/South 
Carolina border at the coast).
    Southern Virginia State waters means the area consisting of all 
marine and tidal waters, within 3 nautical miles (5.56 km) of shore, 
bounded on the north by 37[deg] 07.23[min] N. (Cape Charles Light on 
Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay mouth) and on the south by 36[deg] 
33[min] N. (Virginia/North Carolina border at the coast).
    (c) Regulated waters. The regulations in this section apply to New 
Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland State waters; Northern North Carolina 
State waters; Northern Virginia State waters; South Carolina, Georgia, 
and Florida waters;

[[Page 628]]

Southern North Carolina State waters; and Southern Virginia State waters 
as defined in Sec. 229.35(b), except for the waters identified in Sec. 
229.34(a)(2), with the following modification and addition. From 
Chincoteague to Ship Shoal Inlet in Virginia (37[deg] 52[min] N. 75[deg] 
24.30[min] W. to 37[deg] 11.90[min] N. 75[deg] 48.30[min] W) and South 
Carolina, Georgia, and Florida waters, those waters landward of the 72 
COLREGS demarcation line (International Regulations for Preventing 
Collisions at Sea, 1972), as depicted or noted on nautical charts 
published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Coast 
Charts 1:80,000 scale), and as described in 33 CFR part 80 are excluded 
from the regulations.
    (d) Regional management measures--(1) New Jersey, Delaware, and 
Maryland State waters''(i) Medium and large mesh. From June 1 through 
October 31, in New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland State waters, no 
person may fish with any medium or large mesh anchored gillnet gear at 
night unless such person remains within 0.5 nautical mile (0.93 km) of 
the closest portion of each gillnet and removes all such gear from the 
water and stows it on board the vessel before the vessel returns to 
port.
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (2) Virginia state waters--(i) Medium and large mesh. From June 1 
through October 31, in Southern Virginia State waters and Northern 
Virginia State waters, no person may fish with any medium or large mesh 
anchored gillnet gear at night unless such person remains within 0.5 
nautical mile (0.93 km) of the closest portion of each gillnet and 
removes all such gear from the water and stows it on board the vessel 
before the vessel returns to port.
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (3) Southern Virginia State waters--(i) Large mesh gillnets. From 
November 1 through December 31, in Southern Virginia State waters, no 
person may fish with, possess on board a vessel unless stowed, or fail 
to remove from the water, any large mesh gillnet gear at night.
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (4) Northern North Carolina State waters--(i) Small mesh gillnets. 
From May 1 through October 31, in Northern North Carolina State waters, 
no person may fish with any small mesh gillnet gear longer than 1,000 
feet (304.8 m).
    (ii) Medium mesh gillnets. From November 1 through April 30 of the 
following year, in Northern North Carolina State waters, no person may 
fish with any medium mesh gillnet at night. This provision expires on 
May 26, 2009.
    (iii) Large mesh gillnets. (A) From April 15 through December 15, in 
Northern North Carolina State waters, no person may fish with any large 
mesh gillnet.
    (B) From December 16 through April 14 of the following year, in 
Northern North Carolina State waters, no person may fish with any large 
mesh gillnet without tie-downs at night.
    (5) Southern North Carolina State waters--(i) Medium mesh gillnets. 
From November 1 through April 30 of the following year, in Southern 
North Carolina State waters, no person may fish with any medium mesh 
gillnet at night. This provision expires on May 26, 2009.
    (ii) Large mesh gillnets. (A) From April 15 through December 15, in 
Southern North Carolina State waters, no person may fish with any large 
mesh gillnet.
    (B) From December 16 through April 14 of the following year, in 
Southern North Carolina State waters, no person may fish, possess on 
board unless stowed, or fail to remove from the water, any large mesh 
gillnet at night.
    (6) South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida waters--(i) Gillnets. Year-
round, in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida waters, no person may 
fish with any gillnet gear unless such person remains within 0.25 
nautical miles (0.46 km) of the closest portion of the gillnet. Gear 
shall be removed from the water and stowed on board the vessel before 
the vessel returns to port.
    (ii) [Reserved]

[71 FR 24796, Apr. 26, 2006]

[[Page 629]]

 Figure 1 to Part 229--Drift Gillnet Pinger Configuration and Extender 
                              Requirements
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22JA99.001


[64 FR 3434, Jan. 22, 1999]

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