Friday, January 16, 2026

Maryland Cuts Recreational Yellow Perch Limit

Chesapeake Bay Mag, Maryland lowers recreational catch limit for struggling yellow perch

“I like them better than rockfish,” said Lay, a waterman and outdoorsman who’s been fishing and crabbing the upper Chesapeake Bay for decades. No disrespect to the Bay’s iconic striped bass, but Lay prefers the taste and firm flesh of a pan-fried “cold water fish” like yellow perch.

Now, though, recreational anglers will have to bring home fewer to fry up. Citing a six-year run of poor spawning or survival of young fish, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources on Jan. 8 halved the allowable daily recreational catch from 10 fish a day to five.

It’s a sobering caution flag for a colorful fish that once drew crowds. Bright yellow with orange pelvic fins and dark vertical bars down their sides, yellow perch are harbingers of spring. They live year-round in the rivers and creeks of the Bay, but in late February and early March they swim far upstream to spawn in shallow fresh water. The females lay gelatinous streamers of eggs that often end up festooning tree branches and other debris in the water.

Their spawning runs used to draw scads of anglers eager to leave winter behind and catch their first fish of the year. On the January morning in question, some did so from kayaks or small boats, but many simply lined up along creek banks and cast from shore.

There was once a robust yellow perch commercial fishery, too, which topped 200,000 pounds in the late 1990s, with much of the catch shipped live to stock freshwater lakes and ponds in the Midwest.

Not so much lately. The yellow perch population in Maryland has been up and down over the decades, but mostly down lately. The commercial harvest, limited to a four-month season from December through March, was just 16,000 pounds in 2025, well below the annually adjusted catch limit. The recreational catch isn’t tracked, but anecdotally, it is believed to be down considerably as well.

“You used to see 10 boats fishing in a particular area. Now you see two,” said Scott Lenox, an avid angler from Ocean City who pursues yellow perch in Eastern Shore streams. He also chairs DNR’s Sport Fisheries Advisory Commission. “It’s been really hit or miss the last couple years.”

Fisheries managers describe the recreational catch restriction as a precaution while they try to figure out what’s going on with yellow perch.

“It’s not like taking a nosedive, but it’s definitely not getting better,” saidCarrie Kennedy, director of tidal and coastal monitoring and assessment in DNR’s fishing and boating service.

Surveys indicate yellow perch are experiencing “recruitment challenges,” Kennedy explained. Though there still seem to be enough adult fish to sustain the population, the number of recently spawned juveniles showing up in annual net surveys has been low for the last six years straight.

This isn’t the first time yellow perch have struggled. Their numbers began to swoon in the 1970s, leading DNR to clamp down in 1989. Several rivers on both sides of the Bay were closed to commercial and recreational harvest — and some still are. Elsewhere, anglers were put on a five-fish a day creel limit, while commercial harvest was shut down statewide for all of February that year.

The population recovered some in the 1990s, leading DNR to relax regulations. The recreational creel limit went back up to 10 fish a day, and the Chester and Patuxent rivers reopened to limited commercial harvest.

While recreational regulations have remained unchanged for years, the commercial fishery has operated under a catch cap that is set annually based on trawl surveys. In the upper Bay, which has accounted for 80% to 90% of the statewide commercial landings, the cap was reduced nearly 70% overall from 2018 through 2025, yet the harvest came up short most years.

It's not impossible that Blue Catfish have something to do with Yellow Perch's current problems, they certainly occupy a similar salinity range. 

Yellow Perch in Chesapeake Bay are unusual in that, unlike in most places in the US, the adults live in the upper estuarine area, and spawn in the small creeks and rivers. Years ago, I was involved with an effort to stock Yellow Perch back into a stream that they had once used, but had disappeared from. We collected strings of eggs from a stream with a healthy population, hatched and raised them to fingerling size in a large outside lab facility, and move them to the new creek. I don't know that it worked.

I've fished for Yellow Perch a few times, with a bit of success. They are, indeed, delicious to eat.

1 comment:

  1. The same thing happened in Lake Michigan and the Bay of Green Bay. The number of Perch dropped considerably. Speculation was that it was due to overseas invaders brought into the lake by foreign freighters in their bilgewater, but I don't know that they ever did figure out why. Population is coming back up now, somewhat.

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