US fishery managers are considering new regulatory alternatives for Atlantic bluefin tuna majestic fish that can fetch thousands of dollars each but New England fishermen fear the rules changes could result in smaller quotas for them.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been holding hearings on various options that will be developed into new regulations aimed at protecting and rebuilding tuna populations. The new regulations will go into effect in 2014.

The possible measures focus on bluefin that are inadvertently caught by boats fishing for swordfish, yellowfin tuna and other species in the Gulf of Mexico and off the Eastern Seaboard. Those boats can keep a small number of the bluefin they catch, but have to throw most of them back into the sea, even though they’re dead.

New England fishermen who catch bluefin with rods and reels and harpoons are worried their quotas could be cut to account for the “sins” of other boats with their dead discards, said Rich Ruais, executive director of the Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Association, which represents rod-and-reel and harpoon fishermen.

In a worst-case scenario, he said New England fishermen could lose more than 100 tons of annual quota, a catch worth millions of dollars. Last year, U.S. commercial and recreational fishermen were limited to about 950 metric tons, which equates to about 3,800 fish.

“We’re afraid they’re going to take this quota away from the artisanal rod-and-reel category and artisanal harpoon category and put it into a discard slush fund,” Ruais said.

NOAA held a public hearing on the rules amendment, which modifies existing bluefin management regulations, in Portland on Monday night.

Bluefin tuna, sometimes called the king of the sea, can grow to more than half a ton in size and travel faster than 50 mph while swimming thousands of miles across the Atlantic Ocean.

The fish are lucrative, with fishermen able to get thousands of dollars for a single fish. Most of the fish are shipped to Japan, where their fatty richness is prized for sushi.

The average Atlantic bluefin is about 6 1/2 feet long and weighs about 550 pounds, according to NOAA. A single bluefin tuna caught off northeastern Japan sold for a record 56 million yen, or $736,000, in January in the first auction of the year at Tokyo’s Tsukiji fish market.

Bluefin tuna populations worldwide have come under scrutiny for decades, as heavy fishing pressure has caused their numbers to decline.

They are managed globally by the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, a multi-governmental organization based in Spain. NOAA sets quotas for commercial and recreational fishermen in the U.S.

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