December 10, 2025

Now Live: onX’s New Film Highlights Access Barriers to Public Lands

Watch the full film below to learn more

onX’s new film, Inaccessible, tells the story of the access barriers surrounding America’s public lands (which hunters and anglers deeply understand) through the lens of a ski mission deep in Montana’s Crazy Mountains.

Joel Webster, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership’s Chief Conservation Officer, appears in the film and shares the history of how checkerboarded land ownership came to be as a result of 19th century railroad land grants. He also explains how these inaccessible acres reduce hunting and fishing opportunities for Americans as well as other forms of recreation.

This story is more than a ski film, it’s about our country’s past, the complexities of land ownership, and the 16 million acres of public land that remain out of reach. 

Watch the full film below.

Ski athletes Griffin Post, Emilé Zynobia, and Eric Jackson traverse snowy terrain searching for the best backcountry lines as they explore the public-private checkerboard in the high elevations of the Crazy Mountains. These three athletes hunt, fish, and shred to find common ground across outdoor user groups and unite to protect access to our shared spaces. 

America’s 640 million acres of national public lands provide irreplaceable hunting, fishing, hiking, mountain biking, skiing, snowboarding, off-roading, and other recreation opportunities to millions of Americans. That’s why TRCP is committed to protecting public access to our nation’s public lands. Learn more about TRCP’s work to enhance public land access HERE.

Watch the film HERE.

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November 25, 2025

Signs of a River Herring Resurgence in Connecticut Ignite Hope 

Rebound closely linked to reduced industrial fishing for Atlantic herring and Atlantic mackerel – fisheries known for incidental bycatch of blueback herring and alewives

I can still hear the animated phone call from a breathless childhood friend after observing his first school of truly giant striped bass feeding during a local river herring run in the early 2000s. Being a few years older than me, he had just gotten his driver’s license and couldn’t wait to share his discovery with me the next evening. He said there were stripers feeding in the mouth of the brook last night that were so big “it sounded like Volkswagens being thrown in the water.”

Not one to ever turn down such an opportunity, we headed off that night to figure out the most creative way to get access to the location without trespassing. Unfortunately, the only access we uncovered required blindly inching our way along a quarter-mile of steep banks and knee-deep mud as we pushed toward the sounds of splashing fish. By the time we had finally dragged ourselves into position, the tide had fallen, the bass had moved out of casting range, and we were forced to listen to the commotion where they continued their assault on the large schools of alewives.

We repeated this trip for dozens of nights over the next few springs, ultimately landing many striped bass up to thirty-five pounds amongst the spawning herring. These were nights that I will never forget. The kind where friends stayed up until deep into the wee hours, laughing, celebrating, and lamenting over legendary fish that were hooked and many lost. But sadly, as time marched on, the alewives returned less and less each season, and the giant bass disappeared with them. By the time I graduated high school in 2007, this small herring run, along with most others in Connecticut, was gone and I wouldn’t see another alewife or striped bass in this location again until the spring of 2025, when another much-needed phone call finally came in.

Blueback herring populations in Connecticut have decreased 99.9 percent since 1985.

Working to Restore Plummeting Populations

Since beginning my career as a river herring biologist with the state of Connecticut in 2018, I have been working to build a network of professionals, researchers, and stakeholders, hoping to track population recovery of blueback herring and alewives, collectively known as river herring, across southern New England. We communicate constantly during the spring, and I am always hoping for a call like the ones I used to receive when river herring were plentiful.

Sadly, the majority of the calls I’ve received were from curious and often frustrated stakeholders asking where the herring had gone, or when were we lifting the harvest ban. These stakeholders remembered the “glory days” and were frustrated that decades of hard work had not brought these fish back. I too was frustrated, wondering why the investment of tens of millions of dollars across the state on projects that included the removal of dozens of dams, the construction of over fifty fishways, and the re-introduction of 156,000 pre-spawn alewives were not restoring herring runs. This lack of significant success occurred despite a full moratorium on the take of both river herring species in place in Connecticut since 2002, as in-river protections and restoration work were not enough to bring river herring back.

Blueback herring (left) and alewife during sampling at Pequonnock River fishway in Connecticut, May 2025. Credit: Marly Laberge

In the spring of 2022 and again in 2023, fisheries biologists, Tribal Elders, birdwatchers, herring wardens, and recreational anglers across Southern New England again watched with heavy hearts as the already minuscule river herring numbers collapsed further. Here in Connecticut, alewife runs diminished by 63 percent and 69 percent, respectively (a reduction of 350,000 fish), and we saw our second worst blueback herring returns since 1975, with only 570 fish returning to state-monitored runs in 2022. This was an astounding 99.9 percent decrease in blueback herring populations across Connecticut since 1985. In other words, this species was essentially extirpated in the state and alewives were holding on by only a thread with just 152,000 fish across Connecticut in 2023.

Dismal southern New England river herring runs forced biologists to look for answers outside restored rivers to the open ocean, where herring spend most of their lives.

So as the 2023 river herring runs ended, it was fair to say that many of us had all but lost hope in achieving a recovery for these species in southern New England. We had been watching each year with great envy and confusion as river herring runs in the Gulf of Maine continued to rebound in response to in-river restoration efforts nearly identical to ours. This reality forced managers in southern New England to again explain to our stakeholders that our runs were still too small to allow in-river harvest, while states outside our region like Maine and South Carolina continued to have enough river herring to keep their fisheries open. Our goal has been to reopen in-river recreational and commercial river herring fisheries that fuel local economies and inspire stewardship of the runs, but we are nowhere near the “escapement” goals (of enough fish surviving and escaping fishing pressure to return to freshwater spawning grounds) required to meet the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s requirements to open these fisheries to harvest.

This clear geographic bias that seemed to only be affecting the southern New England and Mid-Atlantic river herring runs forced many of us to look for answers outside the rivers, where the restoration work was completed, and inside the ocean where river herring spend the majority of their life.

Signs of Hope

In April 2025, I received the first of what would end up being dozens of phone calls and emails from stakeholders across Connecticut who were not only finally seeing river herring, but seeing large numbers in places they hadn’t seen them in decades. This first call was special, though, because it came from one of my seasonal resource technicians, and she was calling me from the very run I fished for striped bass over two decades earlier.

She said there were thousands of alewives there. Thousands. I’m pretty sure I blacked out from shock the moment I heard those words because I cannot remember anything about that day until the moment I finally climbed down the bank and peered into the pool myself. Swimming in front of me were scores of spawning alewives in a scene that put me right back where I had left off in high school, a scene I had been hoping to relive each spring since 2007.

A Connecticut alewife run thick with alewives (see lower part of image) during the strong 2025 herring runs. Credit: Kevin Job

In the weeks that followed, I would receive phone calls and emails like this from people across the state highlighting their amazement that they were seeing river herring again. Alewives running up small streams into people’s backyards, osprey dropping them in town parks and on roadways, anglers rediscovering large striped bass hot on the tails of the baitfish, and, most shockingly, a call describing “thousands of herring” at an alewife run in the center of Connecticut’s largest city. This was especially shocking because the call was in late May and alewives don’t usually run in Connecticut in late May; blueback herring do. Having never seen a blueback herring at that location, we quickly packed up the sampling gear and drove west to find roughly 10,000 blueback herring working their way up the fishway.

Searching for Answers

Where were these fish coming from? When I sat down and reflected upon the season, I wasn’t as surprised as I thought. Because the answer, after years of research, was very likely the result of increased at-sea survival of adult river herring.

The river herring rebound is likely the result of increased at-sea survival, following restrictions on industrial Atlantic herring and mackerel fisheries.

Each year, the industrial Atlantic mackerel and Atlantic herring fisheries off the coast of New England are allowed to land and sell a combined total of roughly 5 million river herring and shad, fish not targeted but that swim with other species and are allowed to be retained, before they are shut down by catch limits. Since the river herring and shad catch cap program started, the overwhelming majority of all species landed by the fishery have been alewife and blueback herring, and the majority of those fish have been landed from the waters off southern New England.

When researchers looked at the river herring landed in the Atlantic herring fishery, they unsurprisingly found that the majority are genetically linked to the runs of southern New England and the mid-Atlantic states struggling to restore their river herring runs. The Gulf of Maine, where river herring runs are recovering at lightning pace, make up less than 10 percent of the reported catch cap landings since this program started. So why the sudden spike in southern New England in 2025?

Industrial Fishing Closures Coincide with the Rebound

In October of 2023, the industrial Atlantic mackerel fishery was essentially closed by low quotas, following concerns of mackerel stock collapse. This kept these large boats from targeting mackerel in the waters off southern New England and prevented the utilization of the 129-metric-ton river herring and shad quota each year. Similarly, the Atlantic herring stock has collapsed, and the allowed quotas are now the lowest in decades, forcing that industry to focus its limited efforts on a small and productive area off of Cape Cod each winter. As a result, the industry is now largely avoiding areas off Rhode Island and New York that they historically targeted, where the river herring/shad quota is the highest.

This has meant that the southern New England catch cap area, where historically high river herring catches have occurred as a result of fishing for Atlantic herring, has essentially been unfished by the fleet during the last couple years. Additionally, in 2023 and 2024, the now-limited fishery was prematurely shut down by river herring/shad catch cap quota triggers off this area near Cape Cod and was shut down again this year by extremely low Atlantic herring quotas that were reached after just a few days of fishing in January.

Together, these closures afforded southern New England river herring at-sea protections not seen since the late ’70s and ’80s when the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act forced foreign trawling vessels, which had collapsed our Atlantic herring, Atlantic mackerel, and river herring stocks back then, at least 200 miles offshore. So, in essence, management restrictions of two marine species – Atlantic herring and mackerel – also appear to have already allowed for the early recovery of river herring and alewives.

A striped bass caught during a blueback herring run in Connecticut, May 2025. Credit: Kevin Job

Ensuring a Return to the “Glory Days”

This spring, I found myself being pulled back to the herring runs I had haunted as a teenager, not as a biologist but with a fishing rod in hand and a smile on my face. As I quietly waded into position on my first night back, I could hear the telltale sound of herring spawning and striped bass in tow, while that long forgotten feeling of youthful excitement quickly flooded my veins. The first striped bass I hooked that night was only around 10 pounds, but it might as well have been 50 the way it made me feel as it screamed across the shallow pool, sending herring in all directions. As I released it, in the very place that brought me so much joy in my youth, I knew I had a lot of calls to make that night and a lot of joy to share.

This was a transformative year for river herring in southern New England, and I don’t want that to be lost on anyone. But this recent resurgence is by no means guaranteed to continue. Now is the time to stand up for the science and continue supporting regulations and protections that will help keep this momentum moving forward. The people of southern New England deserve to again harvest river herring and we have the ability to make that happen.

I think the English writer and philosopher Aldous Huxley put it best when he said, “That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that history has to teach.” So let us learn from the overfishing that has been allowed to occur in our waters and take great care moving forward to not let the same mistakes happen again. It’s time to learn from history.

Kevin Job, a native New Englander, is a fisheries biologist with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. His work focuses on diadromous fishes including river herring and shad.


Here at TRCP, we have been keeping tabs on the upcoming decision points for Atlantic mackerel and Atlantic herring at their respective regional councils. There are multiple ways you can get involved to make public comments to let decisionmakers know that the recovery of these two species, and that of river herring and shad, should remain a top priority when setting commercial catch limits and bycatch caps. Now that the link between all these fish has been made clear, it is imperative that managers stay on track to keep rebuilding all of these critical forage fish – for future generations of predators on the water, and future generations of anglers.  

The Mid Atlantic Fishery Management Council meets on Dec. 16 to set the Atlantic mackerel quotas for 2026-2027 and to discuss river herring and shad catch caps. You can submit written public comments here by Thursday, Dec. 11, speak in-person at the meeting in Washington, D.C., or participate remotely via webinar.  

The New England Fishery Management Council meets on Dec. 4 to set 2026 priorities, which will hopefully include Amendment 10 to the Atlantic herring fishery management plan. We have been working to support Amendment 10 action since 2023, and it’s imperative that the Council doesn’t keep kicking the can down the road regarding this important potential management measure. The written comment deadline has passed for this meeting, but you can still speak in-person at the meeting in Newport, R.I., or remotely via webinar.  

Bipartisan Caucus Backs Public Lands in Public Hands Act

Members of the Public Lands Caucus unite behind legislation designed to continue transparency and uphold long-standing public land policies

The Bipartisan Public Lands Caucus officially endorsed the Public Lands in Public Hands Act, marking an important moment for lawmakers working together to safeguard America’s system of public lands. Formed earlier this year by Representatives Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.) and Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.) and co-chaired alongside Representatives Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) and Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), the Caucus was created to provide a Bully Pulpit – a term coined by President Theodore Roosevelt, a staunch advocate for public lands – for members to speak on issues important to preserving our country’s public land legacy with support from their colleagues. 

The Public Lands in Public Hands Act aims to prevent certain public lands from being sold or transferred without extra oversight. Among its key highlights, the bill:

  • Prohibits the sale or transfer of most federal public lands managed by the Department of the Interior and U.S. Forest Service, except where already required by law.

  • Requires Congressional approval before publicly accessible federal land tracts larger than 300 acres can be disposed of.

  • Requires Congressional approval for disposal of land tracts over five acres that are publicly accessible by water.

These provisions are intended to maintain public access to activities such as hunting, fishing, camping, and hiking, while ensuring transparency and accountability around any future land transactions.

The endorsement reflects ongoing bipartisan support in the stewardship of public lands, which bolster rural economies, contribute to cultural traditions, provide habitat for fish and wildlife, and ensure our nation’s outdoor legacy. Earlier this year, members of the Caucus collaborated across party lines to remove a proposal that would have authorized the sale of 500,000 acres of public lands, underscoring the role the group aims to play in reviewing and discussing major public land decisions.

“Public lands are a defining feature of the American landscape, and clear, consistent policy helps safeguard these places for future generations,” said Joel Pedersen, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “The TRCP commends this bipartisan endorsement, which highlights how lawmakers can come together around shared values that have long mattered to hunters, anglers, and outdoor recreationists.”

With the Caucus’s endorsement, the Public Lands in Public Hands Act now proceeds through the House legislative process. TRCP will continue to monitor the bill and provide information to hunters, anglers, and the broader public as it advances.

Learn more about the Public Lands in Public Hands Act HERE.

Photo Credit: Tristan Henry

October 30, 2025

In the Arena: Saravanakumar “Sav” Sankaran

TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation.

Saravanakumar “Sav” Sankaran

Hometown: Asheville, NC
Occupation: Advocate for diverse, inclusive outdoor spaces
Conservation credentials: On top of playing bass and singing for the popular bluegrass band Unspoken Tradition, Sankaran has spent his professional life championing conservation and ensuring that those who might feel alienated by the outdoor community feel welcome.

The son of immigrants, Sav Sankaran was introduced to hunting and fishing by a friend’s family while growing up in Pennsylvania. These early experiences set the foundation for a life of chasing trout and birds with good friends behind good dogs. Working for over a decade in the outdoor retail industry, Sankaran has the expertise and passion to be a loud and persistent advocate for conservation and strives to make the outdoors a more welcoming place for all.

Here is his story.

TRCP: How were you introduced to hunting, fishing, and the outdoors? Who introduced you? 

Sav Sankaran: Despite growing up in an immigrant family with no direct outdoor mentors, I was lucky enough to have been introduced to the outdoors by a childhood friend and his dad, who included me in their adventures fishing for brook trout and hunting ruffed grouse and deer in Pennsylvania.

Those experiences were the genesis of my deep-rooted belief in creating outdoor experiences for people who may otherwise not have those opportunities.

The first time I walked a grouse cover in the Bald Eagle valley in central Pennsylvania, I was enamored with all the sights, sounds, and smells of the autumnal Allegheny woods. On that first hunt, a bird wild flushed and scared the daylights out of me, but I caught a glimpse as it disappeared, and I was hooked. I connected in that moment with the place I called home in a way I had never experienced and have found passion and purpose in the outdoors ever since.

Sav walks in on Chai’s point in Oregon’s Owyhee country.

TRCP: Tell us about one of your most memorable outdoor adventures. 

Sav Sankaran: In 2023, with the support of TRCP, my dear friend and fellow outdoor inclusion advocate Durrell Smith and I drove 2,500 miles across the country with our dogs to explore and hunt the Owyhee in eastern Oregon. To see one of the wildest and most remote areas in the Lower 48 was an incredible experience, and to top it off, my dog, Chai, who was just over a year old at the time, pointed and retrieved her first wild birds—chukar—on that trip!

I made the trip with trepidation because of Chai’s relative inexperience and set my expectations low. If she could find her legs and stay out of the way of the more experienced dogs, I would have considered the trip a success. To my surprise and delight, she handled like a dream and loved every minute of it. We were walking the canyon rim above camp, and I saw one of our companions waving me over towards him and spied his German Shorthair on point. With little to no cues from me, Chai immediately backed the other dog, and they worked in tandem to relocate when the birds started to run. Before I knew what was happening, the flush came, I instinctively shouldered, shot, and dropped a double! Having done little to no work on retrieving yet, I didn’t expect Chai to know what to do next, but she immediately located and retrieved both birds to hand. I could not have asked for a better experience for her first wild birds, and it’s a memory I will treasure forever.

Sav and Chai take a quick break in the quail cover.

TRCP: If you could hunt or fish anywhere, where would it be and why?

Sav Sankaran: As a grouse hunter at heart, my dream is to hunt all the North American grouse species and experience the variety of habitats and ecosystems they reside in. What cooler way would there be to see the country and gain a greater appreciation for the many species that I already love?

TRCP: How does conservation help enhance your outdoor life? 

Sav Sankaran: So many of the environments in which I have had my most impactful outdoor experiences have been public lands that organizations like TRCP help support. Without robust support of conservation of public lands, folks like me would have a dearth of recreation opportunities.

TRCP: What are the major conservation challenges where you live?

Sav Sankaran: Unregulated development, habitat loss, and erosion are all huge conservation issues in Southern Appalachia. We are also a community that continues to recover from the devastating economic and ecological damage of Hurricane Helene, which has introduced a variety of challenges that compound the existing ones.

Sav casts on a southeast trout tailwater.

TRCP: Why is it important to you to be involved in conservation? 

Sav Sankaran: As the beneficiary of the devoted work of conservationists to preserve and protect the landscapes I hold dear, I feel a responsibility to continue that work, and to ensure that those who feel othered or alienated by the outdoor community feel welcome. The future of public lands depends on a diverse set of stakeholders!

TRCP: Why should conservation matter to the next generation of hunters and anglers?

Sav Sankaran: Public lands and programs are under threat on a variety of fronts, there has never been a more important time to be a loud and persistent advocate for conservation! I also believe that a sustainable future for the outdoors relies on an inclusive, diverse set of outdoor advocates. 

Photo credits: Sav Sankaran and Brian Grossenbacher


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on emerging habitat threats, legislation and proposals on the move, public land access solutions we’re spearheading, and opportunities for hunters and anglers to take action. Sign up now.

October 15, 2025

Menhaden Stock Assessment Indicates Catch Must Be Reduced to Benefit Striped Bass 

The 2025 Atlantic menhaden stock assessment updates connect menhaden harvest directly to the health of marine predators; ASMFC projections suggest cutting commercial catch limit by half

If you fish the Atlantic coast for striped bass, bluefish, or bluefin tuna, here’s the truth: your success depends on Atlantic menhaden. These small forage fish fuel the predators sought by recreational anglers and charter businesses, as well as whales, dolphins, ospreys, and many other species integral to a thriving food web.  

Last week, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission released the 2025 Atlantic Menhaden Ecological Reference Point Stock Assessment Report, which sets the stage for how Atlantic menhaden will be managed for the next few years. The update indicates that the coastwide menhaden biomass is lower than previously estimated and resulting projections now suggest that slashing the coastwide catch limit by more than 50 percent may be necessary to ensure sufficient forage for striped bass rebuilding. 

What Are ERPs & Why Do They Matter?

This latest benchmark stock assessment and peer review process for Atlantic menhaden uses ecosystem modeling to establish ecological reference points (ERPs) — clear, science-based limits that tie menhaden harvest directly to predator health. Unlike traditional single-species models that only measure the health of one species (how many fish there are, how fast they grow, how many are caught, etc.), ERPs explicitly weigh the tradeoffs between menhaden harvest and predator population outcomes — especially for striped bass. These numbers are our best tool to keep striped bass (also known as rockfish) and other sportfish thriving by ensuring they have adequate food left in the water.  

If we catch this many menhaden, what happens to the predators that rely on them?

A key outcome of “SEDAR 102,” the official name of the stock assessment update, is the update to ERPs. Utilizing ERPs means that menhaden are not just managed based on that sole fishery, but also through considering the needs of predators that eat them (i.e., striped bass), and the broader ecosystem. The assessment update draws on the best available science — everything from updated menhaden life history information to new predator diet data to account for complex predator-prey relationships. Importantly, both the latest single-species and ecosystem models went through independent peer review by external experts, and were found to be scientifically credible for management.

TRCP and partners successfully advocated for ERPs to be considered in menhaden management starting in 2020. With ERPs, the idea is: if we harvest menhaden at industrial scales, even if their own stock looks healthy, we might not leave enough in the water for predators that rely on them, like striped bass, bluefish, osprey, and bluefin tuna. In plain terms: ERPs help managers answer the question, “If we catch this many menhaden, what happens to the predators that rely on them?”

Photo Credit: David Mangum
Where We Stand Now

The ASMFC’s Menhaden Management Board should now approve these updated ERP values for management (a revised ERP fishing mortality target that balances menhaden harvest with the needs of striped bass and a new ERP “overfishing” threshold). The Board is gearing up to accept the new ERPs at their annual meeting on Oct. 28, and then update the coastwide total allowable catch for the 2026-2028 fishing seasons, based on those values.

The 2023 menhaden fishing mortality rate was estimated to be above the updated ERP target, meaning current menhaden fishing pressure won’t allow striped bass to rebuild to their biomass target. That tells managers that while neither stock is collapsing, the commercial menhaden fishery is removing more fish from the water than the ecosystem-based fishing target says will support striped bass rebuilding. In plain terms: menhaden are not technically “overfished” nor experiencing “overfishing,” but stripers and other predators aren’t getting all the menhaden they need to maintain healthy populations of their own.

Stripers Stand the Most to Gain (or Lose)

Rebuilding the Atlantic striped bass population isn’t just about regulating striped bass harvest. It’s also about ensuring that their main food source — Atlantic menhaden — is managed responsibly. The ERP framework is designed to link menhaden harvest levels directly to predator population outcomes. And no predator drives the ecosystem models more than striped bass.

Photo Credit: Tyler Nonn

Here’s the reality:

  • Unlike menhaden, striped bass are overfished. Their spawning stock biomass remains below target levels.
  • Menhaden are their primary forage. If menhaden fishing mortality levels rise above the ERP target, it reduces the availability of prey just when stripers need it most to rebuild.

So, fishing menhaden below the ERP fishing mortality target ensures sufficient forage is left in the water for striped bass rebuilding to be achieved. More food for stripers to grow, survive, and reproduce is exactly what’s needed to get the stock back on track.

Slashing the coastwide menhaden catch limit by more than 50 percent may be necessary to ensure sufficient forage for striped bass.

Why This Matters to Recreational Anglers

The ERPs give managers a roadmap to keep predators and prey in balance. But they don’t automatically trigger any fishery management changes. The coastwide menhaden quota still needs to be set, and projections by the Atlantic Menhaden Technical Committee indicate that the total allowable catch will need to be cut by over 50 percent to achieve even a 50/50 probability of not exceeding the ERP fishing mortality target next season. We know that Virginia’s menhaden reduction fishery will push for the allowable catch to remain high, but we can’t ignore what the updated ERP values indicate. The ERP target isn’t just a number on a chart — it’s a data-driven indicator that says: If we leave this much bait in the water, striped bass stand a chance to rebuild.

Remember, the new ERP values represent the best available science and rigorous peer review. Accepting these updated values is essential to:

  • Maintain the integrity of the ERP framework — the very system that puts predator needs at the heart of menhaden management.
  • Ensure sustainable menhaden harvests that don’t undermine the forage base critical to Atlantic predators.

If the Menhaden Management Board fails to adopt these science-based ERP values, the role of menhaden as a keystone forage species in the Atlantic ecosystem could be jeopardized — and recreational anglers will be among the first to feel the impact.

Two Possible Levers Toward One Outcome

The ASMFC has two main tools to help rebuild striped bass populations:

  • Reduce striped bass fishing mortality. The Atlantic Striped Bass Board has already acted, implementing new regulations that reduced striped bass fishing mortality to a 30-year low. In other words, anglers have already made sacrifices toward a solution.
  • Reduce menhaden fishing mortality. This is now the only key lever left for fisheries managers to support striped bass recovery.

If menhaden aren’t managed at or below the ERP fishing mortality target, striped bass rebuilding will remain constrained, no matter what’s done on the striped bass fishery side. Ecosystem models are complex, and uncertainty always exists in predator-prey interactions and environmental conditions. That’s why the ERP framework recommends a precautionary approach to leave a buffer of forage in the system to safeguard against uncertainty. This is the standard for managing a key forage fish — and it’s exactly what the peer-reviewed science supports.

What You Can Do
  • Stay informed: When you hear debates about updates to the coastwide quota, and see conflicting information about what should drive it, know that the latest ERP fishing mortality target is the line in the sand for predator health.
  • Speak up: Recreational voices matter at ASMFC and state agency meetings. Ask the Menhaden Management Board to accept the updated ERPs and set the 2026-2028 total allowable menhaden catch so there’s no more than a 50 percent chance of exceeding the ERP fishing mortality target. Anglers have a seat at this table — let’s use it.
  • Think long-term: More menhaden left in the water now means more fall striper blitzes, fatter fish, and better fishing in the years ahead for us and future generations.

For more information about how to tune in to the ASMFC annual meeting Oct. 27-30, when the Menhaden Management Board will discuss changes to the ERPs and total allowable catch as a result of the stock assessment update, visit the ASMFC meeting webpage.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

TRCP has partnered with Afuera Coffee Co. to further our commitment to conservation. $4 from each bag is donated to the TRCP, to help continue our efforts of safeguarding critical habitats, productive hunting grounds, and favorite fishing holes for future generations.

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