By Nancy Gaines
Times Correspondent
—
In response to a controversial new federal study showing a drastically diminished quantity of cod in the waters off New England, U.S. Sen. John Kerry called Thursday for a new assessment, because, in his words, "we simply need to get this right, right from the start."
In a sharply worded letter to U.S. Commerce Secretary John Bryson, NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco, and Eric Schwaab, who heads NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service, Kerry said he "could not underscore how urgent and sensitive this is for Massachusetts fishermen."
The assessment has already been called into question by experts, including some who built the boat that measured the catch and others who participated in the research..
Said Steve Cadrin of the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, who worked with the NOAA study group, "I told the (New England) fishing council that I believed the biomass estimates of the fish were too low, the mortality rates too high, based on my investigations."
Kerry called for "further action" beyond the latest cod assessment.
"As you know, I have long urged NMFS to improve the quantity and quality of its stock assessments and to take steps to collaborate with local stakeholders," Kerry wrote. "The (Gulf of Maine) cod situation is further proof that the entire research and data process needs to be completely overhauled.
"Therefore, .." he continued, "I ask that you undertake an end-to-end review of the stock assessment process that includes the analysis and recommendations of outside parties...," including "industry leaders," he added.
A subcommittee of the fishing council will develop a recommendation for consideration at its meeting next month.
For more on this story, look to tomorrow's print and online editions of the Gloucester Daily Times and gloucestertimes.com.
Correspondent Nancy Gaines co-authored the Times' 2010 special series, "Fishery Under Siege." She is a veteran reporter and editor for Boston and national publications.