FWC is mandated by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission to monitor young-of-year and adult yellow eels in
Florida. Since 2001, data have been collected for eels that inhabit
northeast Florida waterways.
Recent reports have raised concerns over the status of the
American eel stock and have urged increased protection.
Observed declines in the abundance and recruitment of this stock
may be due to overfishing, habitat degradation, chemical
contamination, and/or oceanographic changes. An exotic swim
bladder nematode, Anguillicola crassus, has infected some
U.S. populations; this parasite may affect eel behavior and even
cause death. Other factors in the decline may include
mortality due to turbine operations of hydroelectric dams and the
harvest of sargassum weed from its breeding habitat. Due to
its complex life history, it is extremely difficult to determine
cause and effect between these factors and the observed
declines. Furthermore, because it is a panmictic spawner
(meaning all individuals are considered one interbreeding stock),
populations throughout its entire range must be monitored
simultaneously using similar methods to determine what factors are
most important and how best to protect the species.
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Glass eel which
can range in size from approximately 1.5 to 2.5 inches.
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In 1999, the ASMFC developed a Fishery Management Plan for
American eel, which is an interstate cooperative effort to protect
and enhance the Atlantic stock of American eel in the United States
while providing for a sustainable harvest of the species. A
total of 15 Atlantic coast states are involved in this
effort. Each of these state agencies is mandated to collect
both specific fishery-independent and -dependent data. As
part of this requirement, FWC and University of
Florida personnel conduct routine monitoring of young-of-year
(also known as glass) eels at Guana River Dam (St. Johns County)
and juvenile eels at Rodman Reservoir or Kirkpatrick Dam (Putnam
County), from January to March. Over an eight-week period in
January and February, dip-net sweeps are made twice every half-hour
during flood tide at the Guana River Dam site on four randomly
selected nights each week. During February and March, lift
nets are used to sample juvenile eels twice per week at Rodman
Reservoir Dam during randomly selected periods at night. In
addition to obtaining catch data, the eels' length, weight, and
pigmentation stage are recorded. These data have been
collected since 2001 and, along with data from the other
participating states, were used in the 2005 coast-wide stock
assessment. Environmental parameters, such as conductivity,
flow, and moon phase, are also recorded to determine what factors
may be driving the inland migration and movement of this
species.
For results of these and other American eel monitoring efforts,
view Florida's most recent ASMFC American eel compliance report,
which was submitted in September of 2007.
Download the
compliance report (PDF File - 199 KB)
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