baddawg,
I think the concern is that with the current crab catch records, WDFW doesn't see the cards until well after the end of the season when the card is turned in.
What they really need, though, is fairly accurate inseason catch totals to assure that the tribal/non-tribal and non-tribal commercial/sport allocations are being followed.
As it is now, they base the sport catch on a sample of fishermen extrapolated over the total shellfish license holders, some of which don't crab.
This leads to an over-estimate of the sport catch, which closes our seasons faster and more often than they need to be. It's like this...
If they sample a few dozen crabbers and find out that everyone is averaging, say, three crabs per day, and is crabbing three days a month. That means about nine crabs per person, per month.
They take that number and multiply it by the amount of shellfish licenses out there, which we'll say is 1000. That means that the sport catch is estimated to be 9000 per month.
The problem is, though, that of those 1000 shellfish licenses, maybe only 750 of them actually use their shellfish license to crab...they just gather seaweed and jig for squid.
If the 750 crabbers had an endorsement, then the estimate is made on the basis of 750 crabbers, rather than 1000. That would make the sport catch 6750 crabs per month.
This would give us a longer season as it doesn't overestimate the sport catch so badly.
Oops, I dropped the soap.
Knophish, you can probably pick up the soap and be all right, unless the few extra bucks, if that, to get the endorsement chaps you more than having your season unnecessarily shortened.
Though I don't like to spend more $$ for my licenses any more than anyone else does, at least this money is earmarked for monitoring and evaluating recreational crabbers, rather than charging sturgeon fishermen extra $$ so crabbers can get better monitoring.
Fish on...
Todd