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| NJFishing.com Salt Water Fishing Use this board to post all general salt water fishing information. Please use the appropriate boards below for all other information. General information about sailing times, charter availability and open boats trips can be found and should be posted in the open boat forum. |
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#11
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Reason 162, You a little passionate on this subject? First off I speak for myself. Im not real big on You People. Well I don't agree with science that I feel is flawed. From the mortality rate to the biomass estimates. Not just on Stripers but most of the other species they try to manage like Dogfish and Seabass. I believe what I have seen with my own eyes and what my friends and former co-workers who are on the water almost every day have told me.
We will see if there will be a crash in 5 years. I'm glad that we can fish Stripers without any further restrictions this season. Again this is how I feel . |
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#12
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i miss when you could come on here and read fishing reports instead of *every thread* turning into a pissing match about the regs
__________________
I ♥ fishing I ♥ New Jersey I ♥ the USA |
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#13
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Quote:
__________________
Gerry Zagorski <>< Founder/Owner of NJFishing.com since 1997 Proud Supporter of Heroes on the Water NJFishing@aol.com Obsession 28 Carolina Classic Sandy Hook Area |
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#14
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And also let's keep in mind that the only reason MRIP is undergoing correction is due to better science. Not you or anybody else making claims on the internet - but trained professionals crunching the numbers and doing the work so you can then turn around and misunderstand its implications. |
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#15
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MRIP is and has been a complete and unmitigated disaster. MRIP was first introduced in 2008, overhauled in 2018 which screwed the recreational sector, and then New MRIP was found to be 40% overstated which means after 16 years of scientific effort it was probably more likely overstated by much more. Have you ever listened in to the calls about how MRIP was developed? If you have, you'd know there's no way it could be near accurate yet the scientists and bureaucrats involved were there to take their bows and accolades while everyone patted each other on the back for an outstanding job which turned out to be a complete debacle. MRIP is based on one set of wild ass assumptions applied to another set of wild ass assumptions compounded by another set of wild ass assumptions and then called best available science and rolled out. Less than 5 years later, it's publicly acknowledged by the same scientists that developed it as not being remotely representative of recreational catch values. Sorry but I can't applaud the same people who have caused irreparable harm since 2008 with maybe getting it right now because quite frankly there's no reason to believe they have. If the science and processes you worship so adamantly are as great as you believe, this would never happen. I agree this isn't an exact science and it's complex, but how does anyone justify results and the associated data which is 40% - 50% off the mark. The system is flawed, the data in too many cases in flawed and regardless the basis regulations are made on is as corrupt as it gets. We've known for decades summer flounder recruitment was tanking and the spawning stock biomass was shrinking because of the the regulations. We've known for years the Chesapeake was becoming more polluted, a complete cesspool, bass recruitment was at all time lows for the last 7-8 years yet fisheries management did nothing. Science has admitted they've grossly overstated menhaden reproduction rates and the size of the Chesapeake stock by as much as 50%. Again that's well beyond statistical margin of error, it's more in the category of we have no idea. We don't just need science, we need science that results in representative data that is then used to make intelligent practical policy decisions. How is Mark Terceiro Ph.D., who at the time was the top scientist at NMFS with the management of summer flounder under his jurisdiction, allowed to say for ten years recruitment levels are down with summer flounder YET we have no idea why. Simultaneously the regulations based on his data incentivized the exclusive harvest of breeders while killing tens of millions of juvenile fish in the process annually and allowed unabated netting of the spawning stock while NMFS admitted they had no idea what impacts that practice has on the overall efficacy of the spawn. And this is all based on decision from Peer Reviewed processes and systems which were wrong and used to make arguably the worst policy decisions for the stock and recreational community while greatly benefitting commercial sector catch values. We need science to provide key representative data and politicians and bureaucrats to use that data to manage stocks as opposed to managing commerce and their own bank accounts. We have neither. NMFS in more cases cause problems with their decisions or inaction as opposed to managing them from occurring as in the current case with stripers. NMFS has known for almost ten years the YOY in the Chesapeake has tanked yet chose to do nothing. They've known Virginia and ASMFC cut deals with Cooke Inc. / Omega Protein to pillage the bay of menhaden while killing hundreds of thousands of other non targeted species in the process including redfish and large breeder stripers, all for the benefit of Virginia and who ever else is being paid off to turn a blind eye. They've known for decades blue catfish, which Virginia stocked, were overtaking the entire ecosystem and did nothing to clean up their mistakes but now expect every other state and countless small business to pay for the consequences of their woeful decisions. In every fishery three things need to happen. Recruitment needs to be protected at all costs, it's the future of every fishery. There needs to be regulations which don't target specific age classes as a healthy fishery is defined as one that has healthy age classes across the board and third quotas and seasons need to be set to insure a stock isn't being overly exploited. No stock should be harvested year round, period. Any stock which has a year round commercial presence is at major risk of collapse. At some point, and we've reached an inflection point where there's simply too much demand and pressure being placed on stocks and technology has become too advanced, every fishery without some degree of protection has one foot in the grave. The decision to not have a moratorium on stripers was the correct decision as many small businesses who had nothing to do with the creation of the problem would have been devastated, it wouldn't address the problem and it would cause negative ripple effects on other stocks. Management still refuses to address the root cause and goes right to shut down. They &*^&%$ it up so everyone else is going to feel the pain. You could have a moratorium for the next ten years and if the YOY index in the Chesapeake continues to be anemic, this fishery will never rebound. A closure won't make a dent. Stop commercial harvest of large breeders in states like Massachusetts, institute a moratorium on Cooke Inc. in Chesapeake Bay and limit their catch oceanside, figure out a way to treat urban and agricultural run off into the Chesapeake and a way to eradicate the bay of blue catfish. Menhaden, stripers and everything else in the bay will rebound within 3-5 years. Any other solutions is simply tits on a bull. Last edited by Broad Bill; 11-02-2025 at 10:59 AM.. |
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#16
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For anyone who cares, read the article in the attached link as you should find it an interesting read. Positive news on one hand but really sheds light and perspective of what's really the root cause of the striped bass problem as well as other species and the Chesapeake ecosystem as a whole.
https://www.savannahnow.com/story/ne...e/86983923007/ A few comments worth noting. First "But a 2025 stock assessment update found that Atlantic menhaden biomass and fecundity (reproduction potential) were lower and fishing mortality was higher than previously estimated in the 2022-2023 stock assessment. While menhaden was not found to be overfished or experiencing overfishing quite yet, other species that rely on them as prey, such as ospreys, spiny dogfish, bluefish, dolphins and the overfished popular catch, the Atlantic striped bass." What they fail to mention from another article I read is the biomass and reproductive rates of bunker were not only overestimated, they were overestimated by approximately 50%! Second. look at the chart titled "Mad for Menhaden" and notice the harvest dynamics between northern and southern states with southern states being predominantly Virginia and Cooke Inc. / Omega Protein. Third this is the problem plaguing every fishery with a commercial presence and why the recreational sector typically gets the proverbial short end of the stick. "The Oct. 28 meeting was packed with about 100 members of the public not including state representatives, estimated Hayman. More than 240 people listened in on the four- to five-hour call. "Omega Protein, or ocean harvesters in Reedsville, brought a busload of their employees to fill the room up," said Hayman. Virginia accounts for about 75% of the Atlantic Coast's landings." One state accounts for 75% of the harvest and every other Mid-Atlantic state pays for the cost of their greed as does not just the striped bass stock but so many other stocks which inhabit the bay as well as our coastal waters. At least it's good to hear someone finally speak the truth and while a 20% reduction is a good start, it won't be enough to counter 7 years of not just below average but absolutely anemic recruitment in the Chesapeake due to pollution and exploitation of nature natural filtration system and number one forage fish. |
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#17
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Omega Protein will go above and beyond their limit and be hit with a $200.00 fine.
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#18
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What bewilders me more than anything else with fisheries management and Virginia in this particular case is their insistence of focusing only on short term greed and economic impacts while completely ignoring long term consequences. If the fishery collapses or there's a moratorium, the economic impact will far outweigh a management plan that attempts to balance both over a manageable period. It's a formula for failure in every aspect. If we retain status quo regulations, it's simply a matter of time before the Chesapeake becomes a barren oxygen deprived polluted wasteland it's almost at already, the menhaden stock will disappear creating major consequences in the oceans food chain, Cooke Inc. only then will be forced to look elsewhere when there's nowhere else to look, Virginia fish houses will be shut causing hundreds if not thousands of jobs to be lost locally and up and down the coast. Absolutely perplexing.
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#19
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They think the exact same way rec do. They live for today because tomorrow might not happen . Thinking about life down the road is the furthest thing from their minds . . Sadly we live in a world of the desire for instant gratification. .
__________________
Captain Dan Bias Reelmusic IV Fifty pound + , Striped Bass live release club |
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#20
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Dan I agree with you, the difference is recs don't manage the resource they utilize it and are expected to play by the rules. Fisheries management are supposed to be and instead are managing these resources to fail. It's not hard to believe, it's hard to accept.
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