Hi everyone! I received permission from Kim Healey to share the attached information with our networks. If anyone would like additional information on the DE regulations, she suggests that you contact Charlie Lesser at the DE Division of Fish and Wildlife. We would also appreciate you sending many letters to Gov. Gilmore in VA to express your concern for the Horseshoe Crabs and your outrage over VA's lack of regulations to reduce the landings of crabs in Virginia. Honorable James S. Gilmore, III Governor of Virginia Office of the Governor State Capitol, 3rd Floor Richmond, VA 23219 FAX: (804) 371-6351 On behalf of the National Audubon Society, VSO, WWF, and birders everywhere, thank you for your support !!! Larry Larry Lynch, VP VA Society of Ornithology Chesterfield Co, VA birder6@juno.com --------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Kim Healey <Kim.Healey@WWFUS.ORG> Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 13:34:52 -0400 Subject: Horseshore Crabs Larry- According to the ASMFC Management Plan, Delaware's regulations for HSC collection are as follows: 1) Anyone collecting HSC must possess a HSC collection permit or an eel license. Cost (of HSC permit) is $100/yr for DE residents and $1000 a year for non residents. Permittees must have had HSC collection permits in two previous years. (This was an attempt to keep the # of permits from increasing further). 2) No collection is allowed on state or federal lands between May 1 and June 30th except Tuesday and Thursdays on state owned lands east of State Road No. 89. Collectors must possess either a valid HSC collection permit or an American eel license. 3) No collection is allowed on private lands between May 1 and June 30th except permittees on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. 4) All permittees (including eel fishermen) must report their catch monthly. Eel collectors can only hand collect HSC for personal (non-commercial) use. 5) No dredging is allowed on leased shellfish grounds (unless you own the grounds or have the permission of the owner) 6) Harvest by vessels are limited to 1500 HSC/24 hours. (Eg. a daily trip limit for vessel collectors). 7) No harvest by scraping, trawling, dredging is allowed from May 1 to June 30th. **8) HSC cannot be transported or contained in vehicles with more than 300 cubic feet of space (this is an attempt to prevent tractor trailers from filling up with crabs. Now, it appears that pickup trucks have replaced the tractor trailers. I think pick up trucks are small enough to transport HSC without violating this portion of the law). As you can probably tell from this list, USFWS is not tasked with counting the number of HSC which are removed from area beaches. It is left to the collectors to report their catch on a monthly basis (to the DE Division of Fish and Wildlife, I believe), and there is NO limit to the number they can hand collect daily. The limits, rather, have been placed on the # of days they can legally collect, the locations in which they can legally collect, and on the size of the vehicle which can be used to transport caught crabs. DE's approach to the HSC fishery is relatively similar to NJs (NJ prohibits trawling and dredging and allows hand harvest two days a week in back bays only.), but is different from that of Maryland. MD "bit the bullet" and placed an overall landings cap on its HSC fishery. I have heard rumors that DE's strategy has not worked as well as they had hoped -- overall harvest have not declined that much -- though I have not seen the 1998 numbers to confirm this. Virginia's ballooning landings suggest that whatever efforts MD, DE, and NJ are making to conserve crabs are having some deterrent effect since VA landed 740,000 crabs last year (as compared with 26,000 crabs the year before). Fishermen seem inclined to take their crabs to VA rather than to deal with the less permissive regulatory environment in MD, DE, and NJ. Hope this helps. (P.S. I do not know of any DE regulations about non-harassment of birds. Perhaps the (federal) Endangered Species Act would cover this situation IF and only if the birds are listed as endangered or threatened.) Kim Healey World Wildlife Fund