Categories: General Outdoor

Red snapper quotas … part 2

The recreational Red Snapper season shrank to a record of nine days this past year. Federal fisheries managers point to data showing recreational anglers, who are limited to keeping no more than two red snapper per day, are catching and keeping increasingly larger snapper and reaching their annual poundage quota quicker.

Recreational anglers chafe at the data, arguing the surveys used to gauge harvest are seriously flawed and greatly overestimate angler harvest.

Gulf states, especially Louisiana, have begun conducting their own snapper harvest surveys. Their surveys indicate the federal surveys far overestimate recreational angler snapper landings.

Under a plan devised by the five Gulf states – Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas – the Gulf States Red Snapper Management Authority (GSRSMA) replaces the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council plan for setting quotas. The principal fishery managers from each state would be responsible for approving each state’s red snapper management plan.

The GSRSMA plan specially makes sense because snapper populations are not evenly distributed throughout the Gulf. One quota for the entire Gulf doesn’t make sense. Estimates indicate more than 70 percent of the Gulf’s red snapper are in the area west of the Mississippi River, off of Louisiana and Texas. However, more than 70 percent of the annual recreational harvest of red snapper is taken in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, with most off Florida and Alabama.

“The GSRSMA framework outlines a straight forward process that would allow states to use flexible management approaches to manage red snapper to meet local needs as well as Gulf wide conservation goals,” says a letter announcing the plan and signed by the marine fisheries directors of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.

The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council meets March 30-April 2 in Biloxi, Mississippi where the GSRSMA plan will be officially presented. Don’t expect a slam dunk.

Tom Behrens

Recent Posts

Rabbit Disease Detected In Jim Wells County

Based on results from the National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) in Madison, Wisc., Texas Parks and…

6 hours ago

TPWD Seeks Comment On “Canned Hunts” of Mountain Lions

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) is seeking public comment until May 22 on…

6 hours ago

Feral Hog Poisoning: Are Some Using Rat Poison To Illegally Kill Hogs?

A legal toxicant for feral hogs has been given the green light in Texas for…

6 hours ago

Forgotten Stories of World Record and TX State Record Flounder

How would you like to catch a 13-pound flounder? A man from Groves, TX did…

7 hours ago

AWSC Deploys Second-Ever Camera Tag On A Great White Shark

The Atlantic White Shark Conservancy (AWSC) has successfully deployed the second-ever camera tag on a…

17 hours ago

Breaking Down Jetty Fishing

Jetty fishing presents anglers with a unique set of challenges and opportunities. From fluctuating tides…

17 hours ago