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Archive for December 5th, 2008

FWC adjourns two-day meeting in Key West

Friday, December 5th, 2008

The agenda focused on boating issues, including proposed legislation on statutes related to vessels and vessel registration. Commissioners directed staff to proceed with proposing new regulations concerning anchoring, mooring and local governments’ jurisdiction for the Florida Legislature to consider. Also, Commissioners adopted new rules regarding boating restrictions in Martin and Okeechobee counties, based on a vessel traffic study and requests for revisions from stakeholders and governmental bodies.

Commissioners revoked a final order that permitted the City of Naples to post waterway markers in the Naples Bay area. The FWC granted the permit in March 2007, but an appeals court overturned the decision, requiring the Commission to execute a new final order denying it.

In addition, Commissioners heard staff reports on high water and wildlife issues in the Everglades and reviewed proposed rules to improve Florida’s quota hunt program for sportsmen who will use the state’s wildlife management area system during the 2009-10 hunting seasons. Commissioners directed staff to proceed with the new rules, which will come up for final approval at the February meeting in Destin.

In addition, Commissioners heard an update on a general management plan for the Big Cypress National Preserve Addition and a summary on the recent summit, “Florida’s Wildlife: On the front line of climate change.”

Also during Wednesday’s session, Commissioners voted to proceed with a land swap proposal by the Saddle Creek Corp., City of Lakeland and the state Board of Trustees concerning the FWC-managed Tenoroc Fish Management Area. The proposal involves swapping an FWC-managed 10-acre tract to go to Saddle Creek Corp. in exchange for 40 acres adjacent to state-owned land.

FWC Commissioners selected Rodney Barreto as chairman and Kathy Barco as vice chairman for 2009.

A final public vote on proposed rule amendments for gag and red grouper in Gulf of Mexico state waters was on Thursday’s agenda. Commissioners approved rules to reduce the recreational bag limit for Gulf gag grouper from five fish to two fish daily per person and prohibit the recreational harvest of Gulf gag grouper from Feb. 1 through March 31. This is consistent with gag grouper regulations in Gulf federal waters. The Commission also voted to increase the recreational bag limit for Gulf red grouper from one fish to two fish daily per person.

Other new rule amendments approved by the Commission include increasing the recreational minimum size limit for greater amberjack from 28 to 30 inches fork length and increasing the commercial and recreational minimum size limit for gray triggerfish from 12 to 14 inches fork length in Gulf state waters. These rules are consistent with current regulations in Gulf federal waters.

The new Gulf gag and red grouper, greater amberjack and gray triggerfish rules take effect on Jan. 1.

In other marine fisheries action, the Commission proposed a draft rule amendment that would make the recreational Gulf red snapper fishing season in state waters consistent with federal regulations. The proposed red snapper open season in Gulf state waters would be from June 1 through Sept. 30, if adopted by the Commission at their meeting in February.

Another draft rule amendment proposed by the FWC would end the moratorium on the reduction of lobster trap certificates and provide that the number of trap certificates be reduced by 10 percent to a purchaser only when they are sold or transferred to someone outside the immediate family of the certificate holder.

The Commission also proposed a series of draft rule amendments for the marine life (aquarium species) fishery. The proposed rules would add new fish and invertebrate species to marine life regulations, establish or change size and bag limits and gear specifications for several marine life species, and make other administrative and technical marine life rule changes.

In addition, the FWC proposed a draft rule that would establish six regional closed seasons around the state to the harvest of blue crabs with traps. These closures would extend for up to 10 days each to help identify and retrieve lost and abandoned blue crab traps from Florida waters.

Final public hearings on the proposed red snapper, lobster, marine life and blue crab rules will be held in February.

The full agenda is available online at www.MyFWC.com/commission/2008/Dec08/index.htm.

The next FWC meeting will be Feb. 4-5 in Destin.

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….

From Staff and Wire Reports

BassOnline.com

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Snakehead Predator may not cause trouble

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Studies show snakeheads do less harm than generally thought

Chronicle News Services

photo

Snakehead always worries fisheries managers.

“One of the finest fish I’ve had,” Arostegui, a retired physician, said.

Arostegui, who has caught and eaten seafood delicacies everywhere from Suriname to Thailand, had bagged this dinner the previous day in a narrow, muddy weed-lined canal that runs along a busy highway in North Lauderdale, Fla.

He served it to his family and three guests in his elegant dining room, along with white rice and salad. Everyone pronounced the entree delicious.

It was a 4½-pound snakehead — a slimy, ugly freshwater fish native to Asia that has been the scourge of fisheries managers from Florida to New York to Arkansas for the past eight years.

Despite poisoning and draining ponds in northeastern states and making possession of the live exotics a criminal offense, snakehead populations are slowly spreading from water bodies, where it is believed they were deliberately released.

Paul Shafland, who heads the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s nonnative fish lab in Boca Raton, said the bullseye snakehead — the only one of 25 snakehead species detected in Florida — is found mostly in north Broward’s C-14 system.Shafland said. “If you catch them, eat them. Don’t release them.”

But so far, the pesky exotic hasn’t turned into the environmental disaster that some predicted.

Early results from the FWC’s most recent electrofishing study in the C-14 – (stunning fish with a mild electrical charge so they can be examined) — shows that although snakeheads are abundant, they are not destroying populations of largemouth and peacock bass — the two main gamefish species in South Florida lakes and canals.

Examining the stomach contents of 127 dead snakeheads, they found the remains of 13 of their own species plus one bluegill, 11 mosquitofish, seven warmouth, two peacock bass, several lizards, bufo toads, small turtles, a rat and a snake.

No remains of largemouth bass were found.

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….

From Staff and Wire Reports

BassOnline.com

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Palmetto Bay residents plead to stop receation fishing in Miami canals

Friday, December 5th, 2008

The debate over whether to set speed limits on Palmetto Bay canals continued.

Last month, Palmetto Bay officials listened to people who live on village canals complain about loud, speeding boaters. Set a speed limit on the waterways, they asked.

On Monday, council members heard from the other side — villagers who said they moved to Palmetto Bay to could enjoy the water. Their plea: Protect our lifestyle.

”We spend our weekends on the canal,” Rainer Schael said. “We fish, we ski, we play.”

The village is considering designating the canals as minimum-wake and slow-speed zones, requiring boaters and skiers to move slowly through the waterways. That is a change from the original proposal before the council in November, which would have set a more stringent no-wake zone requirement.

Canal users ignoring the rule could be cited — the waterways equivalent of a speeding ticket on the highway — by state, county or municipal officers, including the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, which has some jurisdiction over the canals.

The measure was proposed by former Vice Mayor Linda Robinson and state Rep. Julio Robaina, who said they were reacting to ”years” of complaints from residents.

But it could keep people from water skiing, jet skiing and otherwise enjoying the canals, some residents said at Monday’s council meeting.

”This ordinance is absolutely crazy,” said Ryan Swakon, who said he boats, kayaks and wake boards on the waterways and nearby lakes.

The large, cigarette and commercial fishing boats residents spoke about last month could not fit through the canals, he said.

His father, Ed Swakon — president of the Miami Marine Council, a group that works to preserve boater rights — said boaters from outside the village were to blame for speeding.

”The people who don’t understand [responsible boating] won’t obey your law anyway,” he said.

Still, speeding boats threaten other people on the canal, other villagers said.

”I have been run up into the bank more than once,” said Henry Clifford, a kayaker. “I don’t like the idea of having to listen constantly if there’s a boat coming around the corner to nail me.”

Elected officials largely stayed out of the debate, although Vice Mayor Brian Pariser said he was concerned about people disturbed by boat noise.

Council member Shelley Stanczyk, who lives on a canal, said the waterways were built to prevent flooding. Boat traffic, she said, has decreased recently. But, she added, “you can’t ignore the fact that they do speed.”

The village will hold a town hall-style meeting to discuss the issue at 6 p.m. Jan. 14 at the Deering Estate Visitor’s Center, 16701 SW 72nd Ave. It will then take up the measure for a third time, probably in February.

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….

From Staff and Wire Reports

BassOnline.com

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Florida Everglades and Lake Okeechobee – Back to Back…

Friday, December 5th, 2008
Bass Fishing in the Everglades in South Florida
Bass Fishing in the Everglades in South Florida

I had the opportunity to fish with two brothers Neal and Evan Capizzano, Evan lives in Port Chester, NY while his brother Neal lives in Stanford, CT.  Both brothers are repeat customers and a blast to be with. We fished to places during this trip, the Florida Everglades and Lake Okeechobee. I sure enjoyed fishing with guys that were so in to the sport, very serious about bass fishing. I thank that they could become good tournament anglers.

Bass fishing is such a unique sport with so many skills to product day in and day out!

Good fishing,

Capt Mark Shepard
marks@bassonline.com

If you are visiting South Florida for work or vacation and want to experience the best fishing that there is to offer then please give us a call. We can be reached @ (888) 629-BASS or by email.

BassOnline.com
888-629-BASS (2277)
www.hawghunter.net

www.bassauthority.com
www.flpeacockbass.com
www.basson-line.com
www.lakeokeechobeebassfishing.com

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