Harvest limit set for Sardines
The Pacific sardine fishery continues to contribute to California’s economy. In 2013, the fishery for Pacific sardine was the fourth largest commercial fishery in the state of California by volume, according to the Department of Fish and Wildlife. These landings were valued at over $1.5 million dollars.
Since 2000, the commercial fishery off California, Oregon, and Washington has been managed by the Pacific Fishery Management Council under theCoastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan. The commercial fishing season for Pacific sardine runs from July 1 through June 30 of the following year.
The Sardines fishing season is split up into three periods: July 1 – September 14, September 15 – December 31, and January 1 – June 30, each with an assigned harvest limit. Based on 2014 landings information to date from the second period September 15- December 31. The preliminary harvest amount for the third period January 1 – June 30, 2015 will be 5,084 metric tons.
The Sardine fishery began in the early 1900s, peaked in the late 1930s, and then declined rapidly in the 1940s during a well-known population downturn fueled by oceanic regime changes and fishing pressure. A moratorium was placed on the Pacific sardine fisheryfrom 1967 to 1986. Then, beginning in the 1990s, Pacific sardine landings increased as the population recovered.
For more information about coastwide Pacific sardine landings, please visit the NOAA Fisheries Pacific sardine landingsweb page.
For more information about Pacific sardine history, research, and management, please visit CDFW’s Pacific sardineweb page.