50 CFR §300.110
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)An exploratory fishery, for purposes of this section, is a fishery that was previously defined as a new fishery under § 300.109.
- (b)A fishery continues to be classified by CCAMLR as an exploratory fishery until sufficient information is available to:
- (1)Evaluate the distribution, abundance, and demography of the target species, leading to an estimate of the fishery's potential yield;
- (2)Review the fishery's potential impacts on dependent and related species; and
- (3)Allow the CCAMLR Scientific Committee to formulate and provide advice to the Commission on appropriate harvest catch levels and fishing gear.
- (c)The operator of any vessel engaging in an exploratory fishery must submit, by the date specified in the vessel permit issued under § 300.107, catch, effort, and related biological, ecological, and environmental data as required by a data collection plan for the fishery formulated by the CCAMLR Scientific Committee.
- (d)In addition to the requirements in § 300.107, any person planning to enter an exploratory fishery must notify the Assistant Administrator no later than April 1 for the fishing season that will commence on or after December 1 and shall not enter the fishery pending NMFS and CCAMLR review or until a vessel permit has been used under this subpart. The Assistant Administrator will not issue a permit to enter an exploratory fishery until after the requirements of § 300.107 have been met and CCAMLR has considered the notification.
- (e)The notification shall be accompanied by a complete vessel permit application required under § 300.107 and information on:
- (1)The nature of the exploratory fishery, including target species, methods of fishing, proposed region and maximum catch levels proposed for the forthcoming season;
- (2)Specification and full description of the types of fishing gear to be used;
- (3)Biological information on the target species from comprehensive research/survey cruises, such as distribution, abundance, demographic data and information on stock identity; details of dependent and related species and the likelihood of their being affected by the proposed fishery;
- (4)Information from other fisheries in the region or similar fisheries elsewhere that may assist in the evaluation of potential yield;
- (5)If the proposed fishery will be undertaken using bottom trawl gear, information on the known and anticipated impacts of this gear on vulnerable marine ecosystems, including benthos and benthic communities; and
- (6)Any other information the Assistant Administrator requires to fully implement the relevant conservation measures.