Striped Bass Spawning in Chesapeake Bay Still Below Average

<p>The state of Maryland has released the annual young of the year index for striped bass, and while the number is better than last year, it is still well below the 60-year average.</p> <p>The index measures how well striped bass spawn each year in the Chesapeake Bay. Numbers were released on Friday by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.</p>

The state of Maryland has released the annual young of the year index for striped bass, and while the number is better than last year, it is still well below the 60-year average.

The index measures how well striped bass spawn each year in the Chesapeake Bay. Numbers were released on Friday by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.

This year’s index is 5.8. Last year, the Maryland index for striped bass was .9, a historic low. The 60-year average is 11.7. “Several years of average reproduction mixed with large and small year-classes are typical for striped bass,” said Maryland state fisheries Director Tom O’Connell, in a release published on the state web page Friday. “As recently as 2011, we saw the fourth-highest spawning success in the survey’s history,” the release said. The Maryland index that year was 34.6

It takes at least six years for a striped bass to reach a length of 28 inches, the minimum size allowed for harvest by recreational fishermen in Massachusetts. It takes up to 10 years for a bass to reach 34 inches, the minimum size allowed for commercial harvest in the commonwealth.

With the Vineyard fishing derby just ending, fishermen report seeing smaller stripers this year. A total of 487 striped bass were weighed in during the monthlong contest. Last year 466 bass were weighed in.

Statewide, commercial and rod and reel fishermen landed over a million pounds of striped bass this year.

Mike Armstrong, assistant director for the state Division of Marine Fisheries, said the young of the year index will be on the agenda for discussion at the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission meeting this week in Philadelphia. Mr. Armstrong said fisheries managers are watching the striped bass closely; he described the numbers as low, but within sustainable range.

“We see that the legal-size striped bass will be sparse in the next few years,” Mr. Armstrong said. “We have a six-year hole that we have to weather.” He noted that the last big spawning of striped bass was in 2011 and those fish are the schoolies that are being seen in the state waters now.

Buddy Vanderhoop, a charter fisherman from Aquinnah, said while he had a good summer for catching striped bass, the numbers of fish seen around the Vineyard were down this fall, which he blamed on above-normal water temperatures for the area. He said the big fish are still north of the Cape and have yet to migrate south.

Mr. Vanderhoop said he had a conversation recently with a fisherman who is still seeing big fish in Maine. “We have another glut of fish coming our way,” Mr. Vanderhoop said.

Mr. Armstrong said the ASMFC meeting this week will examine the overall health of striped bass and discuss whether further conservation measures are needed. “It will be the topic, do we need to do anything?” he said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 10/21/2013 - 17:01

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Paulli D Edgartown

Up the keep size - create a slot in the middle that can not be kept so that promotion of spawning age fish are kept in the cycle

Reduce or eliminate the commercial fishery. (That ought to get people going)

Joe Fishked NY

It is appalling to see all the illegal fishing activities in recent years, as commercial poachers have become a constant news story. And for each one they catch, there must be at least 20 others who are not been caught.

Regulation enforcement is in some states like NY is very limited, due to recent state cutbacks.

There should be a rotating slot limit to reduce the killing of the larger female breeders, which are slaughtered mostly by the charter boats.

There should also be an educational campaign to alert everyone of the potential health hazards associated with consuming older fish.

jeff nichols Long Island

Joe,I wrote a book called "Caught" about this issue.... I had a well know fishing Journalist (Zack Harvey) write a afterwards... re subject...where is the bass it being sold?.. under what name etc.... only a vast black market, I feel, can knock a fishing population in half. Montauk was off by 2/3 this year..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/22/2013 - 07:50

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Alex Boston

Has anybody noticed that the size limit for stripers in the area in which they spawn is 18". At least MA has set size limits to ensure the fish can reach maturity and have a chance to return home to spawn. Its time for states on the Chesapeake to raise their size limits. Or the MFC should push for a federal size limit rather than state to state size limits.

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