Guy Harvey Magazine — Spring 2014

Page 60

BY EDITOR NICK HONACHEFSKY

KEEP STRIPERS STRONG Striper numbers are tailing off. Is it time to worry? Anyone who lived through the 1980s knows just how bad it got for the striped

Maryland and Chesapeake Bay from 1984 to 1989, and the population rebounded

bass population. As a kid in 1986, I remember surfcasting with my dad at Island

to allow the stocks to recover. That gave way to a mid to late 1990’s explosion

Beach State Park in New Jersey, and in a stroke of luck, we caught and released

where recruitment classes allowed young-of-the-year bass to live their life cycle

two stripers on clams. I was written up in the local newspapers for catching not

and replenish the stocks.”

one, but two 26-in. bass, because it was an unusual accomplishment during that

Many states such as New York, Virginia and Maryland still have a commercial

time. Now, fast forward to the late ‘90s into the mid-2000s. Every angler, whether

fshery for bass. Without a doubt, the commercial fshery for stripers knocks of

a frst-timer or a seasoned striper hound, was bailing dozens upon dozens of

tens to hundreds of thousands of fsh each season, and the black market for bass

stripers per man each day, with plenty of fsh in the 30- to 45-lb. class. It was

may be twofold of what commercial angling legally nets. So an obvious answer

unreal. From Maine to North Carolina, recreational anglers were stacking trophy-

to protect the stocks is to eliminate the commercial fshery completely on the

caliber bass up like cordwood along the docks. Then photos surfaced that spread

East Coast and delineate the striper to gamefsh status, as states such as Maine,

like wildfre on the internet. They showed tens of thousands of trophy bass being

New Hampshire, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and South Carolina have

illegally gillnetted in Chesapeake Bay, and that sent of an alarm in the fshing

already done.

community. From 2009 until now, something has changed. Today, striper catches,

But it’s not all about curbing commercial interests. Next is the recreational

though still a quality afair, have been diminishing. The schools are thinner and

side of management. There is no reason to stack big breeder bass up on the docks

the catches of trophy-caliber fsh are harder to come by again. Some areas in the

each and every day.

Northeast see only a handful of younger bass of 20 to 28 inches. So now what? Is it an alarmist point of view to worry about the stocks right now? Maybe,

“It’s a matter of education as I see it,” says Jim Hutchinson, managing director of the Recreational Fishing Alliance (RFA). “Guaranteed, there are some individuals,

maybe not. Brad Burns, president of Stripers Forever, ofers his take on what

or a bunch of friends, or a charter boat that will catch a limit of bass, and will eat

caused the major decline of striper stocks in the ‘80s and what could possibly

all that fsh—there’s no shame in that. But other anglers who are frst-timers or

be happening now. “In the 1970s, overfshing from legal commercial angling

tourists looking for a trophy, keep a mess of big breeder fsh, but then when they

and a recreational angling minimum 16-in. size limit with no bag limit reduced

are at the dock, have no clue what to do with the catch, saying they can’t possibly

the biomass quickly, where plenty of bass over 16 in. were being plucked from

eat all this fsh. It’s about education of the angler, teaching them about the

the waters at an alarming rate. Swift actions came to institute a moratorium in

species, its growth and history to instill respect for what they are fshing for.”


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