Southern Charm
6240
105th Terrace North
Pinellas Park, FL 33782
Telephone:
727-546-7257
E-mail:
captchas@flfish.com
http://www.floridasaltwater.com
4/16/00
A Short
history of bait fish in the Tampa Bay area.
In 1970 the fishing in the eastern Gulf was fantastic. The mullet were prolific all over the Tampa Bay area. Kingfish were large and numerous in the spring and fall and there were so many grouper in shallow water that they were considered a nuisance fish during kingfish season. There were such large schools of Spanish sardines, scaled sardines, threadfin herring, and menhaden that it seemed you could seemingly walk on them from one side of Tampa Bay to the other. It was common to collect your bait for a day’s fishing by simply motoring outside Pass-a-Grille pass or John’s Pass and looking for either birds or a mud boil, throwing a cast net into the middle of them and going fishing, all within a few minutes. There was never any problem finding bait except during the coldest part of winter. We also, at that time, had the largest nesting population of brown pelicans in the entire country.
In 1970-1971 the state legislature passed a law
prohibiting purse seining in the State of Florida, except somehow Pinellas
County was excluded from the prohibition. Recreational fishermen of that time
pleaded with the legislature to close Pinellas as well. When Ralph Haben was
Speaker of the House he slipped a law in mandating that the purse seiners had
to stay 500 yards off the beach, but at the same time he saw to it that
Hillsborough and Manatee Counties were opened to the purse seiners as well.
The law remained this way for many years, until the
creation of the Marine Fisheries Commission. At that time recreational
fishermen began lobbying the MFC to push the purse seiners out of state waters
to bring our three Tampa Bay counties in line with the rest of the state.
Throughout the 1980’s many recreational fishermen noted the steadily declining
populations of all species of baitfish and some noticed the declining
population of brown pelicans. Finally after years of lobbying the MFC, a rule
was passed pushing the purse seines out three miles off the beach. This proved
to be too little and too late. The Audubon Society in late 1980 found that the
nesting population of brown pelicans in the Tampa Bay area had declined by over
70%. This can be directly linked to the collapse of the baitfish populations in
the Tampa Bay area.
Three purse seine boats based in Apollo Beach took
all the menhaden from Tampa Bay over a three or four year period prior to the
MFC’s regulation. They depleted the stocks of menhaden to the point that it was
unprofitable to remain in the area, so they moved on to other parts of the
country to work. This left only the few purse seine operators in Cortez to
continue the decimation of the other baitfish stocks. Spanish sardines were the
next to disappear, and they have yet to make a comeback. The seiners then moved
to scaled sardines and caught almost all of them. The only thing left to them was
threadfin herring and since both Spanish and scaled sardines are depleted, it
remains their primary target even though the price they are paid for threadfin
herring is very low.
The year 2000 spring fishing season has proved,
beyond a doubt, that the baitfish stocks in the Tampa Bay area, both inshore
and offshore, have truly collapsed. At the time of this writing, we should be
in the prime of the fishing season. There should be huge schools of threadfin
herring, scaled sardines and Spanish sardines all over the Tampa Bay area. Many
of the bait and tackle shops that sell live baits on the south end of the Bay
are saying that they have never seen it so bad, even during other drought
years. Offshore, those of us that have been fishing full time for the last
thirty years can attest that the bait stocks have simply collapsed. Charter
boat captains in other parts of the Gulf have told me that there are plenty of
bait fish both north of Clearwater and south of Manatee County. This can only
mean one thing. The herring and sardine stocks that we should have in this area
are gone. They will not have a chance to rebound until the purse seine industry
is dissolved; either with a buyout of the licenses and equipment or simply by
making it illegal to purse seine in state waters, as it is in the rest of
Florida.
It is time for the new Fish and Wildlife Commission
to help the Tampa Bay area and close our waters to this all-too-efficient
method of fishing just as the rest of the state is closed to it. Most of the
purse seining is done off south Pinellas County beaches and just outside the
mouth of the Bay. There is virtually no enforcement in this area to determine
if they are in fact three miles out. Many times purse seiners have been
witnessed making sets well inside the three-mile limit and the FMP has declined
to investigate. This, coupled with the fact that purse seiners and their
spotter aircraft are capable of wiping out our bait populations makes it
imperative that they be removed from state waters.
If the bait species are allowed to recover, we will
then see an increase in our game fish species, which directly benefits both
commercial and recreational fishermen and indirectly benefits the state with
the increased tax dollars brought in as recreational fishing effort increases
in this area.
An increase in the brown pelican nesting population
will not be far behind once the forage fish are allowed to increase in numbers
in the Tampa Bay area.
Capt. Charles Walker