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Georgia recreational Bluefish fishery to close temporarily in March, April

To counter a larger problem and allow Bluefish to rebound, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) recently directed its 15 member states, including Georgia, to reduce harvest.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR) recently announced it will close the recreational Bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) fishery in March and April of 2020.

The move comes as state fishery managers seek to find a suitable solution to meet a mandate by an interstate fishery-management agency to reduce the number of Bluefish recreationally harvested every year.

“A recent stock assessment by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission found that Bluefish are overfished,” said Dr. Carolyn Belcher, chief of marine fisheries for DNR’s Coastal Resources Division (CRD). “This means that Bluefish populations have been reduced to a level where they’re in jeopardy of not reaching the maximum sustainable yield.”

To counter this problem and allow Bluefish to rebound, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) recently directed its 15 member states, including Georgia, to reduce harvest.

ASFMC directive was to place a limit of three Bluefish per angler or five fish per for-hire client per day.

Georgia’s current limit is 15 Bluefish per day, and the state’s annual harvest accounts for less than one percent of Atlantic coastwide recreational landings.

“Reducing the Bluefish limit from 15 to three overnight was a bit extreme in our situation,” Belcher said. “Bluefish account for such a small number of what anglers catch in Georgia, so we came up with an alternative solution to satisfy the ASMFC mandate to reduce Bluefish landings (in pounds) by about 8 percent while not reducing Georgia’s bag limit. By simply closing the Bluefish fishery for two months, our data says we can achieve the necessary reduction with minimal impact on anglers.”

The ASMFC’s Bluefish Management Board this month approved Georgia’s plan to close the Bluefish fishery for two months rather than reduce the bag limit year-round.

Georgia law allows for the Commissioner of Natural Resources, Mark Williams, to close a fishery for up to six months through an administrative order. This law gives the Commissioner flexibility in situations like the one affecting Bluefish, Belcher said.

Williams signed the administrative order Feb. 18 to close the Bluefish fishery for March and April. The administrative order is only valid for one year and must be re-issued annually if a closure is needed in future years. Belcher said she expects the two-month Bluefish closure to continue annually through 2023.

CRD fishery managers are also asking the ASMFC to classify Bluefish in Georgia as “de minimis,” which would declare that Georgia’s Bluefish harvest is insignificant in the overall management of the species. If granted “de minimis” status, Georgia may be exempt from future ASMFC Bluefish management directives.

Bluefish are a highly migratory species that occur from Maine to Florida. Population target levels are significantly below where fishery managers would like, and a fishery management plan has been in place since 1989.

The fast-growing fish live up to 12 years and can reach up to 31 pounds and 39 inches. The diet of Bluefish consists mainly of Menhaden and smaller fish such as Silversides. Large predators, including sharks and Swordfish prey on Bluefish.

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