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Slow Blackfishing This Spring
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Had a few days that were OK but most were a tough grind still fun but not the great fishing we're used to and a lot of shorts around...
I'm thinking that Blackfish are the new vanity fish so more people are targeting them. Couple that with the technologies like detailed relief GPS mapping and spot lock tolling motors, it's a lot less challenging. I'm told that the smaller fish swim all over the place but the larger fish usually return to the same areas every year and only migrate east to west. They go east off into the deep when it cools off inshore and come back to the exact same piece of structure each year when the water warms up. This might explain all the shorts and a lack of larger fish since they are pressured on the same spots every year and sooner or later the spot is fished out. I do however notice a lot more people are into catch and release, especially the larger females and I think that's a good thing.. Anyone else have any thoughts? Is there a Marine Biologist here? |
Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
NY opening before NJ and NY boats fishing off NJ kills fall bite, live market for tog, way too much pressure and majority of population not releasing and just filling coolers. I'm from south Jersey granted lot less pressure but as stated above lot of guys keep 1 or 2 and no females and seems to be helping. Fishing mohawk back in day was best black fishing I saw but those days sadly long gone.
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Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
As stated, Tautog migrate a limited distance.. "In and out" shallow to deep-as opposed to "up and down"-north and south.. They are homebodies, and as such, are easy to wipe out in heavily fished areas. I am no expert, certainly not a marine biologist, but I still have a remnant of my sight, and am not yet yet senile.. Years ago, the best blackfish habitat was not as easy to access as it is in the modern age, and a LOT more people want to catch them, and a lot more people want to eat them, and will pay big money for the privilege.. a bad combination... We may see the day of a 1 fish limit in the not too distant future... Blackfish are notorious slow growers, and every large one removed takes many years to replace.. sad state of affairs really... bob
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Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
Completely agree with points made on the thread. Slow growing fish, too much pressure, spot lock changing morons who previously couldn't anchor on the Titanic now can sit on small pieces, commercial fish pots employed during the spawn, the pressure from live markets and an insane amount of sub legal fish retained in support of these live markets. The fishery will and should be at a 1 fish limit or closed for 3-5 years to rebuild. The stock will not rebound without a completely different approach to how it's being managed. Blackfish will certainly be the next stock we talk about in past tense.
We did it to ourselves. This isn't environmental, it's not climate change or warming ocean temps, it's mismanagement and focus on short term harvest and exploitation of a resource without consideration of the associated long term consequences. People will balk about a closure to this fishery but when you do who do we really have to blame. Black fishing is another stock which was an absolute robust can't fail fishery which is now hanging on for its mere existence. |
Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
If whiting, ling and cod were restored and sea bass limits were sane, blackfish pressure would drop a bit.
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Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
It wouldn't go back to no pressure, but it would help. Sea bass limits have led to the decimation of ling as they are the only game in town for non-fluke bottom boats. Also, when blues are scarce, bluefish boats anchor up in the Hole and hit ling too. Porgies are good when they get here, but that is usually once sea bass opens in the Fall. Don't know what to do with whiting, but I don't understand how the season is open 365 days a year with no limits for them.
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Re: Slow Blackfishing This Spring
No easy way around it.. Even the lowly atlantic Mackerel, and once stupidly abundant American Eel are decimated .. I blame the worldwide raw fish eating craze... people around the world, in "advanced" countries pay big money to eat raw fish, and glazed barbecued eels , and the demand for fish is up exponentially compared to years ago... I can remember as a kid, a LOT of people would not eat any fish.. Now people think nothing at all of blowing $100 or more on a skimpy meal of thinly sliced raw fish, totaling only a few ounces of actual fish flesh, along with some skinny fancy sliced vegetable fragments, and a bowl of soy sauce.
When even Eels are struggling you know there are problems. The problem is demand is outstripping supply for many saltwater species.. I don't think aquaculture is going to be much help, because freshwater fish are not as popular,,, Maybe with time, that will change..... blackfish are facing the perfect storm.. They are great sportfish, great eating, yet have limited habitat range , don't move around much, are not prolific breeders, and are slow growers. Yet they are in big demand in the modern age. Not a good scenario....They are also targeted by those that have NO desire to follow the rule of law, because of the prices they bring,,, |
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