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ACROSS SESSIONS
- Subject Index: Since 1995
- Bills & Resolutions: Since 1994
- Summaries: Since 1994
Developed and maintained by the Division of Legislative Automated Systems.
1995 SESSION
LD6456127WHEREAS, the blue crab fishery is the most important commercial and recreational fishery in the Chesapeake Bay; and
WHEREAS, the blue crab is currently in a low phase of population abundance; and
WHEREAS, factors such as the increased harvest pressure on the blue crab due in part to the decline of other Chesapeake Bay fisheries, particularly the oyster and rockfish fisheries, may prevent the blue crab population from recovering from its present low levels; and
WHEREAS, the blue crab population is also threatened by habitat loss due to the disappearance of submerged aquatic vegetation, which is particularly important for juveniles, and low oxygen levels in deep waters; and
WHEREAS, increased survival of juvenile crabs so that they may reproduce or be harvested at a larger size may contribute to the stability of the crab population; and
WHEREAS, a preliminary Virginia Institute of Marine Science investigation has concluded that the effect of the peeler crab harvest on the blue crab population is uncertain and requires study; and
WHEREAS, because large female crabs produce more eggs than smaller female crabs, and because there appears to be at least a partial genetic basis for blue crab size at maturity, the importance of increased survival of large female crabs to the stability of the crab population should be investigated; and
WHEREAS, the practice of capturing peeler crabs too early during the molting cycle may cause the crabs to die before they can be harvested as soft-shelled crabs; and
WHEREAS, the use of cull rings in peeler pots may have a positive impact on the crab population by preventing harvest of juvenile crabs; and
WHEREAS, it has been proposed that the minimum size of crabs allowed to be taken be changed from five inches in the transverse direction, which applies only to male crabs, to two and five sixteenths inches in the longitudinal direction for male crabs in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries and two and three sixteenths inches in the longitudinal direction for male crabs in other waters and for all female crabs; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED by the House of Delegates, the Senate concurring, That the Virginia delegation to the Chesapeake Bay Commission and the Virginia Marine Resources Commission be requested to undertake a joint study of the proposed change in crab size limits, other possible changes in crab size limits, the likely effect of requiring that peeler crab pots include one or two cull rings, and ways to prevent the capture of peeler crabs that are in an early stage of molting, and the effect of such measures.
All agencies of the Commonwealth shall provide assistance to the Virginia delegation to the Chesapeake Bay Commission and the Virginia Marine Resources Commission for this study, upon request.
The Virginia delegation to the Chesapeake Bay Commission and Virginia Marine Resources Commission shall complete its work in time to submit its findings and recommendations to the Governor and the 1996 Session of the General Assembly as provided in the procedures of the Division of Legislative Automated Systems for the processing of legislative documents.