Dennis Forney of capegazette.com reported first: For months now I’ve heard there are plenty of striped bass out in the ocean – about seven miles out.“They’re out there and they’ll bite, but that’s in federal waters where it’s illegal to take or target striped bass. And the feds are enforcing with drones. No sense in risking it.”
I heard that on a number of occasions.
At the same time, the consensus has been that very few keeper-sized stripers were around for the late fall and early winter season this year in coastal waters inside the three-mile line. Way off from previous years in the past 20 when we counted on a decent late striper season in those waters.
In the 1990s, there was a moratorium on all striper harvest due to concerns that the overall population of this popular East Coast fishery had fallen to unsustainable levels. With that moratorium, striper numbers gradually started to rebound. Limited harvest levels eventually returned with the lifting of the moratorium in coastal waters, and there was a sense that a solid recovery was underway.
I started wondering why the moratorium is still in place for the federally controlled waters of the Atlantic – also known as the Exclusive Economic Zone – which extends from three miles off the coast out to the 200-mile line. There are plenty of people who would like to get out there where the fish have apparently decided to migrate.
I’m not the only person thinking that way. Roy Miller, who lives in Lewes, is one of three Delaware representatives on the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission for Delaware. He is a fisheries biologist by training and served as administrator for the fisheries section of Delaware’s Division of Fish and Wildlife for many years. The commission meets periodically to review fishery stocks in coastal waters and make management recommendations – harvest seasons, sizes and catch quotas for recreational and commercial fishermen – in an attempt to keep populations healthy and sustainable.
“They [the stripers] bypassed us apparently this year,” said Miller. ”Stayed outside our state waters. Now we’re all waiting to see the results of the overall stock assessment that was completed in November.” Miller said he hasn’t seen the results which were scheduled to be presented to members of the council at their February meeting. “But there are rumors out there that we may be in a condition of overfishing and that could change our management approach. That concerns those of us who sport fish and commercially fish for striped bass. The council might end up tightening limits or sizes or length of season.”
John Clark is current fisheries administrator for Delaware’s Division of Fish and Wildlife and also a member of the ASMFC. He said striped bass management is another area being affected by the partial government shutdown. “The survey results should have been released by now, but the shutdown has halted the review process, so I don’t know how much talk there will even be about striped bass at that meeting in the first week of February if we don’t get survey information.”
He was in agreement with Miller about the rumors. “What we’re hearing is that the numbers aren’t indicating the kind of recovery in the fishery we would like to see.”
It was hoped that a 25 percent reduction in the permitted overall take by recreational and commercial fishermen instituted in 2015 would lead to more of a recovery than has been seen. He noted that Delaware’s commercial fishermen have no trouble catching the permitted quota poundage for striped bass. “From a monetary point of view, they’re our most valuable species,” he said.
Easing offshore restrictions? Continue reading here >>> https://www.capegazette.com/article/shutdown-stalling-striped-bass-management-decisions/
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