Recreational, Commercial Fishermen to Reap Benefit from Spotted Seatrout Management
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Posted: 9:50 PM Nov 16, 2011
Recreational, Commercial Fishermen to Reap Benefit from Spotted Seatrout Management
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) voted Nov. 16 to increase both commercial and recreational fishing opportunities for the popular fish.
Reporter: FWC Press Release
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Recreational, commercial fishermen to reap benefit from spotted seatrout management

Thanks to successful spotted seatrout management, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) voted Nov. 16 to increase both commercial and recreational fishing opportunities for the popular fish.

“What we are trying to do is be fair in a fishery that is in abundance, and in some cases, way in abundance,” said Chairman Kathy Barco. “We are dealing with a success story.”

“At the end of the day, both commercial and recreational fishermen are getting something,” said Commissioner Brian Yablonski.

The decision came during day one of the two-day November Commission meeting in Key Largo.

Changes take effect Feb.1, 2012, and include:

§ Removing regional recreational season closures (removing the current February closure in northern Florida and the November-through-December closure in southern Florida);

§ Raising the recreational bag limit in northeast Florida from five to six;

§ Changing commercial seasons based on region – lengthening them from three months to five months in the northwest, southwest (June 1 - Oct. 31) and southeast (May 1 - Sept. 30) regions, and from three months to six months in the northeast region (June 1 - Nov. 30);

§ Allowing spotted seatrout to be sold 30 days after the close of the regional commercial season;

§ When there are two commercially licensed fishermen aboard, changing the commercial vessel limit to 150;

§ Redefining the areas where spotted seatrout are managed by splitting the state into four management zones instead of three.

The changes come after a 2010 spotted seatrout stock assessment indicated numbers were consistently exceeding the annual management goal across the state, and nearly double in the northeast region of Florida.

To learn more, visit MyFWC.com/Commission and click on “Commission Meetings,” then “Agenda.”


Latest Comments

Posted by: Ronnie Location: St, Marks on Nov 18, 2011 at 06:55 AM

Because they were asked to,we lose more trout to hard freezes,catch n release mortality and red tides every year than we harvest.
Posted by: Larry Location: Keaton Beach on Nov 17, 2011 at 12:54 PM

Can we have 2 redfish per person please! FWC said they were in decline...really? I can't remember when I've seen more reds...definately time for FWC to restore the redfish bag limit.
Posted by: Skip Clement Location: Ft Lauderdale on Nov 17, 2011 at 11:39 AM

It wasn't broken so why did you fix it?