Thursday, December 19, 2024

Feds Punt on Striper Protection

Chesapeake Bay Mag, East Coast Managers Delay Tightening Striped Bass Limits Until 2026

Chesapeake Bay anglers, environmentalists, and charter business owners were all watching carefully this week as East Coast striped bass fishery managers held a special meeting in response to dismal rockfish population numbers.

Many believed the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s (ASMFC) Atlantic Striped Bass Management Board would likely impose new restrictions that could include additional season closures, on top of the mid-season closure Maryland put into effect during high-mortality summer temperatures. The Board considered taking immediate action to reduce fishing mortality in 2025.

However, the Board ultimately opted for “an addendum that would provide the Board more time to develop a fuller suite of management options,” delaying big changes until 2026.

In recent years, Maryland and Virginia have enacted measures to curb the striped bass catch, including a controversial move to allow anglers to keep only one fish per day during the season. While conservationists believe immediate action is necessary to keep the rockfish population, the prospect of limiting recreational fishing of the Bay’s most popular sport fish even further doesn’t sit well with charter fishing companies, who say their business has already suffered from the ever-tightening catch limits.

According to the 2024 Stock Assessment Update, striped bass have not recovered from past overfishing, but they are not experiencing overfishing currently. Biologists predict an increase in fishing mortality in 2025. The new 2026 measures aim to rebuild the stock using full 2024 fishing data, which wasn’t available in time to implement 2025 measures.

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation (CBF) points out that while the stock assessment doesn’t indicate overfishing currently taking place, ASMFC wasn’t taking into consideration the six straight years of below-average juvenile striped bass recruitment in the Chesapeake Bay.

Calling the low recruitment a “looming concern,” CBF leaders believe ASMFC should not have delayed action for another year. “Our only hope now is that 2026 will not be too late for striped bass,” said CBF Maryland Executive Director Allison Colden. “Given the uncertainty associated with the striped bass fishery and its incredible social and economic value to states along the East Coast, fisheries managers must err on the side of conservation.”

The next step is to introduce options for the proposed addendum at ASMFC’s winter meeting in February. The Board plans to take final action by October 2025 and implement the reductions in early 2026.

The longer they take to address the problem, the longer before any progress is made. 

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