FWC plays it cool on snook protection
As I See It
Monday, December 06, 2010
Media contact: Rodney Barreto
Winter is on the way, and for many Florida
saltwater fishing enthusiasts, the soon-to-come first frosty
breezes are sure to trigger chilling memories of last January's
severe cold snap that stunned both fish and anglers alike. That's
when the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC)
fielded hundreds of reports from anglers, fishing guides and the
general public that they were seeing thousands of dead snook, which
presumably were killed by the unusually cold weather and low water
temperatures.
These reports came from areas where most common
snook live along Florida's Atlantic and Gulf coasts; they involved
a wide range of snook sizes, including small fish and large
spawners. Consequently, the FWC issued a series of executive orders
beginning last January that temporarily extended closed harvest
seasons for snook statewide until mid-September.
The FWC took these proactive, precautionary
measures to protect surviving snook during their spring
reproductive season and to give FWC biologists time to evaluate the
extent of the damage caused by the prolonged cold weather.
In early September, FWC staff presented a report to
the members of the Commission and the public on the status of
Florida's snook population. This report suggested that snook on
Florida's Atlantic coast were less severely impacted by the
extensive cold weather than Gulf coast snook. Based on this
information and the public comments received, the FWC decided to
reopen snook harvest season this fall in Atlantic waters while
maintaining a catch-and-release-only snook fishery in Florida's
Gulf waters.
Snook have been strictly regulated in Florida for
more than 50 years, and the FWC's current management approach for
this premier game fish includes summer and winter closed harvest
seasons, a one-fish bag limit during open seasons, restrictive
slot-size limits, and a prohibition on the sale of snook.
We believe these measures helped ensure that snook
abundance was healthy enough before last winter's freeze to enable
the fishery to rebound and continue to grow in spite of the
cold-weather impacts.
That's why the FWC decided to allow the harvest of
snook this fall in Florida's Atlantic coastal and inland waters,
including Lake Okeechobee and the Kissimmee River, until the
regular winter season closure begins on Dec. 15. We believe this
limited open season will have little effect on snook populations in
these areas. It also will allow us to collect valuable information
on the adult snook population through normal harvest sampling and
give anglers a chance to keep a few snook this fall on the Atlantic
coast. The regular daily bag limit of one snook per recreational
angler applies in these areas, as does the 28-32 inches total
length slot limit.
As a further precautionary measure, the FWC decided
to extend snook harvest closures statewide into next year. The
harvest of Atlantic snook will close beginning Dec. 15 until next
September to protect snook populations this coming winter and
during next spring and summer's spawning months. The current
prohibition of snook harvest in all of Florida's Gulf, Everglades
National Park and Monroe County state and federal waters will
remain in effect until next September for the same reason.
I want to emphasize that anglers may still catch and release snook
during the snook harvest closures, and we ask everyone to handle
and release these fish carefully to help ensure their survival upon
release.
We hope to have a more typical, milder winter this
season, which we usually enjoy here in Florida. Whatever happens,
our experienced FWC research and management team will continue to
carefully monitor our snook populations, and we will do whatever is
necessary to maintain abundant snook stocks for anglers to enjoy in
the future.
More information regarding the management of snook
in Florida is available online at MyFWC.com/Rules (click on
"Fishing - Saltwater").