====== Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC): The Ultimate Guide to America's Sustainable Fishing Laws ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine our nation's fish populations are like a shared bank account for everyone. This account, filled with cod, snapper, salmon, and tuna, grows each year as fish reproduce. We can all make "withdrawals" from this account by fishing. But if we withdraw too much, too quickly, the account will shrink and eventually go bankrupt, leaving nothing for future generations. The **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** is like the strict, scientifically-determined annual withdrawal limit set by the bank's most conservative financial advisors. It's not the absolute maximum you *could* take out; it's the maximum you can take out while leaving a hefty safety buffer to account for unpredictable "market fluctuations"—things like changing ocean temperatures, disease, or errors in our fish counting methods. This safety buffer is the key. The ABC is a core legal and scientific concept in U.S. law designed to ensure our national "fish bank account" remains healthy, profitable, and sustainable forever. For fishermen, it dictates their livelihood. For seafood lovers, it ensures the fish on their plate was caught responsibly. For the nation, it's a promise to manage one of our most vital natural resources with wisdom and foresight. * **The Safety Net for Our Oceans:** The **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** is a scientifically-derived fishing limit that is legally required to be set at or below the [[overfishing_limit_(ofl)]] to account for [[scientific_uncertainty]], acting as the cornerstone of preventing [[overfishing]] in the United States. * **Direct Impact on Business and Consumers:** This limit directly determines the total amount of a specific fish species that can be caught in a year, which in turn influences the seasons, quotas, and economic viability for commercial fishermen, charter boat captains, and ultimately, the price and availability of seafood for consumers. [[regional_fishery_management_councils]]. * **A Mandate, Not a Suggestion:** Under the [[magnuson-stevens_fishery_conservation_and_management_act]], setting an [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]] that does not exceed the **Acceptable Biological Catch** recommendation from scientific advisors is a legal requirement, making it one of the most powerful tools for enforcing sustainable fishery management in the world. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Acceptable Biological Catch ===== ==== The Story of ABC: A Historical Journey ==== Before the 1970s, the waters off the U.S. coast were a chaotic free-for-all. Massive foreign factory trawlers, some so large they could process and freeze thousands of tons of fish at sea, decimated fish populations within sight of American shores. Local fishermen in smaller boats watched helplessly as their traditional fishing grounds were scraped clean. Stocks of haddock, herring, and yellowfin sole plummeted. The nation was witnessing the large-scale collapse of its marine ecosystems, driven by unchecked foreign effort. This crisis spurred Congress to act. In 1976, it passed the landmark Fishery Conservation and Management Act, now known as the **[[magnuson-stevens_fishery_conservation_and_management_act]] (MSA)**. The original MSA was revolutionary for its time: it extended U.S. jurisdiction from 12 to 200 nautical miles offshore, effectively kicking out the foreign fleets and claiming American control over these resources. It also created a system of eight **[[regional_fishery_management_councils]]** to manage fisheries locally. However, the early MSA had a critical weakness. While it aimed for sustainability, it lacked teeth. The definitions of "overfishing" were often vague, and economic pressure frequently led councils to set catch limits higher than what science recommended. As a result, domestic fishing pressure replaced foreign pressure, and many crucial fish stocks continued to decline. The turning point came with the 1996 and 2007 reauthorizations of the MSA. These amendments, known as the Sustainable Fisheries Act and the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act, respectively, were a direct response to past failures. Congress inserted strict new requirements into the law. It mandated that all fishery management plans have a clear, scientific definition of [[overfishing]], and more importantly, that they implement "accountability measures" to prevent it. This is where the concept of **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** was born and codified. The law now required the councils' **[[scientific_and_statistical_committee_(ssc)]]**, an independent body of experts, to calculate an [[overfishing_limit_(ofl)]]—the absolute maximum catch that can be sustained. Then, crucially, the SSC must recommend an ABC that is *at or below* the OFL to buffer against the inherent [[scientific_uncertainty]] in their calculations. The law then mandated that the council's final [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]] could not exceed the ABC. This created a clear, science-based "cascade" of limits that put a legal firewall between scientific advice and socio-political pressure, fundamentally changing U.S. fisheries management from a system of aspiration to one of legal accountability. ==== The Law on the Books: The Magnuson-Stevens Act ==== The legal mandate for **Acceptable Biological Catch** is enshrined within the [[magnuson-stevens_fishery_conservation_and_management_act]], specifically in the National Standards for Fishery Conservation and Management. These are ten guiding principles that all fishery management plans must follow. **National Standard 1** is the foundation: > "Conservation and management measures shall prevent overfishing while achieving, on a continuing basis, the **[[optimum_yield_(oy)]]** from each fishery for the United States fishing industry." While "optimum yield" allows for some social and economic considerations, the mandate to "prevent overfishing" is absolute. The 2007 reauthorization of the MSA added the teeth needed to enforce this, specifying the exact mechanism. **Section 302(h)(6) of the MSA** is where the ABC gets its power. It states that each [[regional_fishery_management_councils|Regional Fishery Management Council]] shall: > "develop annual catch limits for each of its managed fisheries that may not exceed the fishing level recommendations of its scientific and statistical committee or the peer review process..." This short but powerful phrase is the core of the system. The "fishing level recommendations" from the **[[scientific_and_statistical_committee_(ssc)]]** is the **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)**. The law legally forbids the politically-appointed council from setting a catch limit higher than the level recommended by its independent scientific advisors. This ensures that science, not short-term economics or politics, drives the upper limit of fishing mortality. Furthermore, the law requires that if an [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]] is exceeded, "accountability measures" must be triggered to correct the overage, often through a reduction in the next year's catch limit. This creates a self-correcting system designed to keep fishing within sustainable bounds. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: How Regional Councils Apply ABC ==== While the MSA is a federal law, its implementation is decentralized through eight Regional Fishery Management Councils. Each council faces unique ecosystems, fish stocks, and scientific challenges. This leads to different approaches in how they determine the buffer between the [[overfishing_limit_(ofl)]] and the **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)**. This buffer is defined by a council's "ABC Control Rule." Here is a comparison of how different regions might approach this critical task: ^ **Region/Council** ^ **Typical Fishery Challenge** ^ **Approach to Setting the ABC Buffer** ^ **What This Means For You** ^ | New England Council | Data-rich, but complex, slow-growing groundfish stocks (e.g., Atlantic cod) with high historical fishing pressure. | Employs a tiered ABC control rule. Top-tier stocks with excellent [[stock_assessment]] data get a smaller buffer (ABC is closer to OFL). Data-poor stocks get a much larger, more precautionary buffer (ABC is set far below the best guess of OFL). | If you fish for cod, the science is constantly scrutinized and the limits are tight, reflecting a low tolerance for risk. For a less-studied species, limits might be set very low out of an abundance of caution, even if the stock seems healthy. | | Gulf of Mexico Council | Manages a mix of species, including long-lived, economically vital reef fish (e.g., Red Snapper) and fast-growing shrimp. Recreational fishing is a huge component. | Often deals with high scientific and management uncertainty. Their control rule may heavily factor in the type of data available and has historically faced pressure from both commercial and recreational sectors, leading to complex allocation debates under the ABC cap. | The Red Snapper season is a direct result of the ABC process. The intense scientific debate over stock size and the resulting ABC directly translates into how many days an angler can fish and the per-boat-quota for commercial vessels. | | North Pacific Council | Manages some of the largest, most valuable, and data-rich fisheries in the world (e.g., Alaska Pollock). Known for a highly conservative, science-driven approach. | Utilizes a very structured, tier-based system where the amount and quality of scientific information directly dictates the size of the uncertainty buffer. Their process is often held up as a model for science-based management. | The consistent supply of products like fish sticks and imitation crab is a direct result of this council's conservative ABC-setting process. The stability of the fishery provides economic predictability for fishermen and processors. | | Pacific Council | Manages highly migratory species (e.g., tuna) and diverse West Coast stocks (e.g., rockfish, salmon) that are highly sensitive to climate cycles like El Niño. | Their ABC control rules must account for significant environmental variability. For salmon, the ABC is tied to annual forecasts of returning spawners, making it highly dynamic year-to-year. For overfished rockfish stocks, [[rebuilding_plans]] dictate extremely low ABCs. | If you're a salmon fisherman in Oregon, your entire season is dictated by the forecast that feeds into the ABC. If you're a restaurant owner in California, the availability of local rockfish depends on whether the stock has been rebuilt to a level that allows for a higher ABC. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of Sustainable Fishing: The Catch Limit Cascade ==== The **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** is not a standalone number; it's a critical link in a chain of calculations designed to translate complex science into enforceable fishing rules. This "cascade" ensures that with each step, a greater margin of safety is built into the system. === Element: Overfishing Limit (OFL) === The **Overfishing Limit (OFL)** is the starting point. It represents the *maximum* amount of a stock that can be removed from the water in a year without the population's ability to replenish itself being jeopardized. Think of it as the absolute break-even point for the fish population. It is a purely scientific calculation based on a [[stock_assessment]], which estimates the fish population's size, reproductive rate, and natural mortality. * **Relatable Example:** Imagine your monthly salary is $5,000. Your absolute break-even spending limit—the point at which you have $0 left but haven't gone into debt—is $5,000. This is the OFL. Spending even one dollar more means you are "overspending" and depleting your savings. Fishing above the OFL is, by definition, [[overfishing]]. === Element: Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC) === The **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** is the most important step for sustainability. Scientists know their stock assessments are not perfect. There are uncertainties in counting fish, predicting ocean conditions, and understanding fish biology. This is [[scientific_uncertainty]]. The ABC is the OFL minus a buffer to account for this uncertainty. The size of this buffer is determined by the council's ABC control rule. The more uncertainty there is about a stock, the larger the buffer, and the lower the ABC will be relative to the OFL. **The ABC must be less than or equal to the OFL.** * **Relatable Example:** You know that your monthly expenses are *around* $5,000, but unexpected costs always pop up (a flat tire, a medical bill). To be safe, you set your personal budget at $4,500. That $500 difference is your safety buffer. The $4,500 is your ABC. It's an *acceptable* level of spending that has a very low risk of causing you to overspend (go into debt). === Element: Annual Catch Limit (ACL) === The **Annual Catch Limit (ACL)** is the final, legally enforceable limit for the entire fishery (commercial, recreational, and all other sectors combined). The MSA requires that the ACL cannot be set higher than the ABC. In many cases, the council may choose to set the ACL even lower than the ABC to account for *management uncertainty*. This includes things like imperfect catch monitoring or the potential for one sector of the fishery to accidentally go over its limit. **The ACL must be less than or equal to the ABC.** * **Relatable Example:** You've set your personal budget (ABC) at $4,500. Now you and your spouse need to set the actual household spending limit (ACL). Knowing that it's hard to track every single dollar perfectly, you might set the official target at $4,400 to build in an extra cushion against accidental overages. === Element: Annual Catch Target (ACT) === For some fisheries, especially those with high management uncertainty, a council may set an **Annual Catch Target (ACT)**. This is a voluntary target set below the ACL to provide an even greater buffer and ensure the legal ACL is not exceeded. * **Relatable Example:** Your official household spending limit (ACL) is $4,400. To be extra safe and ensure you meet your savings goals, you aim to spend only $4,200 each month. This is your ACT. This cascade—OFL -> ABC -> ACL -> ACT—is the legal and scientific framework that has made U.S. fisheries management a world leader in sustainability. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in the ABC Process ==== Setting the **Acceptable Biological Catch** is a complex public process involving scientists, managers, industry representatives, and the public. * **[[NOAA_Fisheries]] (The National Marine Fisheries Service):** This federal agency, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, is the lead scientific body. Its scientists conduct the complex [[stock_assessment]] reports that provide the scientific foundation for determining fish population health. They are the primary data-gatherers and analysts in the system. * **[[Regional_Fishery_Management_Councils]]:** These are the eight primary management bodies created by the MSA. Council members are appointed by the Secretary of Commerce and include state fishery managers, representatives from the commercial and recreational fishing industries, and other stakeholders. Their job is to develop and recommend [[fishery_management_plan_(fmp)|Fishery Management Plans (FMPs)]] for federal approval. They are the ones who ultimately choose the final [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]], but they are legally bound by the ABC. * **[[Scientific_and_Statistical_Committee_(SSC)]]:** This is arguably the most important body in the ABC process. Each council has its own SSC, composed of independent, highly qualified scientists from academia and other government agencies. They are not council members. Their role is to review the science from [[noaa_fisheries]], determine the level of [[scientific_uncertainty]], and formally recommend the **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)**. The council cannot legally exceed this recommendation. The SSC acts as the scientific firewall. * **Commercial and Recreational Fishermen:** Fishermen and their industry associations are vital participants. They provide testimony to the council, serve on advisory panels, and sometimes contribute data through cooperative research. Their livelihoods depend directly on the outcomes of the ABC process, and they bring invaluable on-the-water knowledge to the table. * **Environmental Groups and the Public:** Environmental NGOs and concerned citizens play a crucial watchdog role. They attend council meetings, submit public comments, and sometimes use litigation (filing a `[[lawsuit]]`) to ensure the council and [[noaa_fisheries]] are following the mandates of the MSA. All council meetings are open to the public, providing a forum for anyone to voice their opinion. ===== Part 3: Understanding the Impact: ABC in the Real World ===== The **Acceptable Biological Catch** is not just an abstract number; it's the starting point for decisions that have profound real-world consequences. Here is a step-by-step look at how the process unfolds and affects communities. === Step 1: The Stock Assessment Process === It all begins with science. Years before a fishing season starts, scientists at [[noaa_fisheries]] centers conduct a [[stock_assessment]]. This is a massive undertaking involving: * **Data Collection:** Gathering data from fishery-independent surveys (where scientists go out on research vessels to count fish) and fishery-dependent data (reports from commercial fishing logs and recreational catch surveys). * **Modeling:** Using complex statistical models to estimate the stock's size (biomass), death rate (mortality), and reproductive rate. * **Peer Review:** The resulting [[stock_assessment_report]] goes through a rigorous peer-review process, often called a Stock Assessment Review Workshop (SARW), where other independent scientists challenge and validate the methods and conclusions. **This is your first, albeit highly technical, opportunity to see the science that will eventually determine the catch limits.** === Step 2: The SSC Recommendation === The peer-reviewed stock assessment is then delivered to the council's **[[scientific_and_statistical_committee_(ssc)]]**. The SSC's job is to: * **Review the Science:** Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the assessment. * **Quantify Uncertainty:** Determine how much [[scientific_uncertainty]] exists. Is this a "gold standard" assessment, or one based on limited data? * **Apply the ABC Control Rule:** The SSC applies its council's pre-defined formula (the ABC Control Rule) to the OFL from the stock assessment. This rule mathematically calculates the appropriate buffer based on the level of uncertainty. * **Recommend the ABC:** The SSC formally recommends a numerical **Acceptable Biological Catch (ABC)** to the full council. This recommendation is made in a public meeting. === Step 3: The Council's Decision and Public Comment === This is where management and public input take center stage. The [[regional_fishery_management_councils|Regional Fishery Management Council]] receives the ABC recommendation from its SSC. The council must then decide on the [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]] and other management measures (e.g., season lengths, size limits, gear restrictions). * **The ABC is the Ceiling:** The council can debate for days about how to allocate the ACL between different fishing sectors or what the season should be, but they **cannot** set the ACL higher than the ABC. * **Public Comment is Critical:** This is the most important phase for public involvement. Fishermen, business owners, and citizens can provide written comments or testify in person at council meetings. This testimony can influence the council to set the ACL lower than the ABC or to choose certain management measures over others. === Step 4: Implementation and In-Season Adjustments === Once the council makes its final decision, the proposed rule is published in the **[[federal_register]]**, the official journal of the U.S. government. There is typically another public comment period before [[noaa_fisheries]] implements the final rule. * **In-Season Management:** During the fishing season, [[noaa_fisheries]] closely monitors the catch. If it appears the ACL is being approached too quickly, the agency has the authority to close the fishery early to prevent exceeding the limit. This is a critical "accountability measure" that ensures the ABC is respected in practice. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Documents to Follow ==== To follow this process, you don't need to be a lawyer, but you do need to know which documents to look for. * **[[Stock_Assessment_Report]]:** This is the foundational scientific document. While highly technical, the executive summary provides the key conclusions about the health of the fish stock. These are available on [[noaa_fisheries]] websites. * **[[Fishery_Management_Plan_(FMP)]]:** Every managed fishery has an FMP. This is the master document that outlines the long-term goals and rules for the fishery, including the specific ABC Control Rule being used. FMPs and their amendments are available on the websites of the [[regional_fishery_management_councils]]. * **[[Federal_Register]] Notices:** When a new catch limit is proposed or finalized, a notice is published in the Federal Register. This is the official legal notification. Subscribing to these notices for your fishery of interest is the best way to stay informed about upcoming rule changes and comment periods. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== While much of fishery law is made through the council process, key court battles have affirmed and strengthened the legal mandates that empower the **Acceptable Biological Catch**. ==== Case Study: Natural Resources Defense Council v. Daley (2000) ==== * **The Backstory:** In the late 1990s, the Atlantic flounder and mackerel fisheries were in trouble. The NRDC, an environmental group, sued the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS, now [[noaa_fisheries]]), arguing that the [[fishery_management_plan_(fmp)]] was illegal because it had a very low—less than 20%—chance of actually achieving its conservation goals and stopping [[overfishing]]. * **The Legal Question:** Does the [[magnuson-stevens_fishery_conservation_and_management_act]] require a management plan to have a high probability of success in preventing overfishing? * **The Court's Holding:** The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the NRDC. The court ruled that a plan that has only a "coin-flip's chance" of success does not meet the MSA's mandate. The law requires management measures to be risk-averse. * **Impact on ABC Today:** This ruling was a landmark. It established the legal principle that "maybe" isn't good enough. This risk-averse philosophy is now built directly into the ABC framework. The buffer between the OFL and the ABC is a direct result of this legal precedent. The SSC must set an ABC that gives the fishery a high probability of not exceeding the OFL, solidifying the precautionary approach in U.S. law. ==== Case Study: Guindon v. Pritzker (2017) ==== * **The Backstory:** In the Gulf of Mexico, the recreational sector for gag grouper exceeded its [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]]. As required by the MSA, [[noaa_fisheries]] implemented an "accountability measure" by shortening the next recreational fishing season to pay back the overage. A group of recreational charter boat captains sued, arguing the payback was unfair and economically harmful. * **The Legal Question:** Are the MSA's mandatory "accountability measures" for exceeding an ACL legally enforceable, even if they cause negative economic impacts in the short term? * **The Court's Holding:** The court upheld the government's actions. It found that the MSA clearly requires accountability measures to be in place and to be triggered when catch limits are exceeded. The agency was not only authorized but obligated to shorten the season to ensure the long-term health of the stock, regardless of short-term economic pain. * **Impact on ABC Today:** This case affirmed the power and necessity of the *entire* catch limit system that flows from the ABC. It confirmed that the ACL is a hard limit, not a soft target. This gives the ABC real teeth, as it ensures there are consequences for exceeding the limits that are based upon it. It reinforces the principle that long-term sustainability, as enforced by the ABC/ACL framework, takes precedence over short-term economic interests. ===== Part 5: The Future of Acceptable Biological Catch ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The ABC framework is a success, but it is not without its challenges. Today's debates focus on adapting this powerful tool to a rapidly changing world. * **[[Climate_Change]] and Shifting Stocks:** Fish aren't paying attention to the council boundaries drawn on a map. As oceans warm, stocks like summer flounder and black sea bass are shifting northward. This creates immense conflict: which council should manage them? How do you conduct a [[stock_assessment]] for a population that is constantly moving? The current ABC system, based on historical data, is struggling to keep up with the pace of climate-driven change. * **Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management (EBFM):** The current model sets the ABC for one species at a time (e.g., pollock, haddock, snapper). But fish don't live in a vacuum. They are part of a complex food web. EBFM is a new approach that seeks to set catch limits by considering the needs of predators, prey, and the habitat itself. For example, the ABC for a prey species like herring might be reduced to ensure there is enough food for predators like tuna and whales. This is scientifically very difficult but is seen as the next major evolution in fisheries management. * **Data Quality and Industry Input:** There is an ongoing debate about what kind of data should be used in stock assessments. Incorporating data collected by fishermen themselves (e.g., from advanced sonar on their boats) could dramatically improve our understanding of fish stocks, but there are concerns about potential bias. Finding a way to vet and use this data is a key challenge in reducing [[scientific_uncertainty]] and improving the accuracy of ABCs. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The future of the **Acceptable Biological Catch** will be shaped by technology and our evolving understanding of marine ecosystems. * **Advanced Stock Assessments:** Technologies like environmental DNA (eDNA), where scientists can estimate fish populations by analyzing DNA fragments in water samples, and the use of artificial intelligence to analyze vast datasets could revolutionize stock assessments. This could lead to more accurate OFLs and allow for smaller, less restrictive buffers between the OFL and ABC, potentially allowing for higher catches while maintaining sustainability. * **Dynamic Management:** Instead of setting an ABC once a year, new technology could allow for "dynamic" real-time management. If sensors and models show a stock is moving or is more abundant than predicted, the ABC and ACL could be adjusted in-season, providing more flexibility to fishermen while responding faster to environmental changes. * **Offshore Wind and Aquaculture:** The rapid growth of other ocean industries, particularly offshore wind energy and aquaculture (fish farming), creates new challenges. Scientists and managers will need to incorporate the impacts of these activities—both positive and negative—into the models used to calculate the ABC, ensuring that fisheries management accounts for all sources of mortality and habitat alteration. The **Acceptable Biological Catch** framework has been a resounding success, leading to the rebuilding of dozens of U.S. fish stocks. The challenges of the 21st century will require this legal and scientific tool to become even more sophisticated, adaptable, and holistic to ensure our oceans remain healthy and productive for generations to come. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[Accountability_Measures]]:** Pre-planned management controls that are triggered if a catch limit is exceeded, often involving a reduction in the following year's catch. * **[[Annual_Catch_Limit_(ACL)]]:** The total amount of a fish stock that can be caught by all sectors of a fishery in a given year; it cannot exceed the ABC. * **[[Annual_Catch_Target_(ACT)]]:** A voluntary fishing target set below the ACL to provide an additional buffer against exceeding the legal limit. * **[[Fishery_Management_Plan_(FMP)]]:** A legal document developed by a Regional Council that outlines the rules and long-term strategy for managing a specific fishery. * **[[Magnuson-Stevens_Fishery_Conservation_and_Management_Act]]:** The primary U.S. federal law governing marine fisheries management in federal waters. * **[[Maximum_Sustainable_Yield_(MSY)]]:** The largest long-term average catch that can be taken from a stock under prevailing ecological and environmental conditions. The OFL is typically based on MSY. * **[[NOAA_Fisheries]]:** The federal agency (also known as the National Marine Fisheries Service) responsible for the stewardship of the nation's ocean resources. * **[[Optimum_Yield_(OY)]]:** The amount of fish that will provide the greatest overall benefit to the Nation, prescribed on the basis of the MSY as reduced by any relevant social, economic, or ecological factor. * **[[Overfished]]:** A state where a fish stock's population size is too low to support maximum sustainable yield. * **[[Overfishing]]:** The act of catching fish at a rate that is too high, leading to the stock becoming overfished. Legally, it occurs when the catch exceeds the Overfishing Limit (OFL). * **[[Overfishing_Limit_(OFL)]]:** The maximum catch that can be taken from a stock in a year without causing overfishing. It is a scientific calculation of the break-even point. * **[[Rebuilding_Plans]]:** A legally required plan to restore an overfished stock to a healthy level, typically involving severely restricted catch limits. * **[[Regional_Fishery_Management_Councils]]:** Eight regional bodies established by the MSA to manage fisheries in their geographic areas. * **[[Scientific_and_Statistical_Committee_(SSC)]]:** An independent scientific body that advises a Regional Council and is responsible for recommending the ABC. * **[[Scientific_Uncertainty]]:** The inherent lack of perfect knowledge in stock assessments, which the ABC is legally designed to buffer against. * **[[Stock_Assessment]]:** A scientific process that uses data to estimate the abundance of a fish stock and predict how it will respond to management. ===== See Also ===== * [[magnuson-stevens_fishery_conservation_and_management_act]] * [[administrative_law]] * [[environmental_law]] * [[code_of_federal_regulations]] * [[annual_catch_limit_(acl)]] * [[overfishing_limit_(ofl)]] * [[scientific_and_statistical_committee_(ssc)]]