Atlantic striped bass,
commonly called stripers, are among the most prominent and heavily targeted
recreational species in the United States, according to NOAA Fisheries.
The highly migratory fish can live for up to 30 years, grow up to 5 feet long, and weigh more than 75 pounds. They are caught from the Gulf of Maine to Albemarle Sound in North Carolina.
The highly migratory fish can live for up to 30 years, grow up to 5 feet long, and weigh more than 75 pounds. They are caught from the Gulf of Maine to Albemarle Sound in North Carolina.
In 2017, nearly 18
million angler fishing trips targeted or caught striped bass, representing 9
percent of such U.S. trips, according to NOAA
Fisheries. Striped bass harvest, by weight, was the largest of all
recreationally targeted species in the nation that year.
“Anglers place a relatively high value on catching trophy-sized stripers — fish that are about 34 inches or longer in total length,” said Andrew Carr-Harris, an economist at NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole, Mass., and co-author of a January study with colleague Scott Steinback. “But trophy-sized stripers are almost exclusively part of the female spawning stock, and if too many are removed from the fishery the stock has trouble rebuilding.”
High levels of removals
were found to have contributed to a steady decline in the numbers of female
spawners during the past decade. A mandated harvest reduction in 2015 from two
fish to one fish, 28 inches or longer, to achieve the desired mortality
rate did little to increase the female spawning stock. In 2017 the stock
was estimated at a roughly 25-year low.
Given heavy fishing
pressure on the species, fishery managers must make trade-offs between
achieving conservation objectives and satisfying angler demands when designing
policy, according to the study’s authors.
The researchers wanted
to better understand what policies might work to rebuild the fishery while
minimizing adverse impacts to anglers. Carr-Harris and Steinback evaluated the
immediate economic and biological impacts of different types of recreational striped
bass fishing policies.
The first step was
understanding the drivers of individual angler behavior. They used data from a
survey of 469 recreational anglers that fish in coastal waters from Maine to
Virginia. Those survey results were then integrated into a model.
The model simulated the aggregated effects of policy-induced changes in trip expectations on: angler welfare, the value that anglers obtain from striped bass fishing; participation; fishing mortality; and female spawning stock biomass, the combined weight of females that have reached sexual maturity and are capable of reproducing.
The model simulated the aggregated effects of policy-induced changes in trip expectations on: angler welfare, the value that anglers obtain from striped bass fishing; participation; fishing mortality; and female spawning stock biomass, the combined weight of females that have reached sexual maturity and are capable of reproducing.
This approach allowed
the researchers to examine the immediate economic and biological consequences
of full or partial harvest restrictions on trophy-sized striped bass. To date,
these restrictions haven’t been considered jointly in policymaking,
according to NOAA Fisheries.
“We found that there are
many economically efficient management policies available if the primary
objective is to control fishing mortality, but few policies if the primary
objective is to protect female spawning stock biomass,” Steinback said. “Of the
36 possible policies we evaluated, only one achieved the intended reduction in
fishing mortality while at the same time mitigating removals of the mature
females.”
That policy was
taking one fish per trip in the “harvest slot” of 28-36 inches.
Harvest-slot policies specify both a minimum and maximum size limit.
Carr-Harris and Steinback found that implementing that policy achieved a
significant reduction in both total and female spawning stock removals. These
changes were relative to the 2015 policy of allowing one fish, 28 inches or
longer per trip.
This policy produced only a slight reduction in angler welfare, due to the relatively low rate at which trophy striped bass larger than 36 inches are encountered. The researchers concluded that additional consideration for this or similar striped bass slot limits is warranted.
This policy produced only a slight reduction in angler welfare, due to the relatively low rate at which trophy striped bass larger than 36 inches are encountered. The researchers concluded that additional consideration for this or similar striped bass slot limits is warranted.
“Our findings provide
empirical evidence supporting the recent decision made by the Atlantic States
Marine Fisheries Commission to direct Atlantic coastal states to eliminate
minimum size restrictions for striped bass in 2020 and instead impose a slot
limit of 28 to 35 inches to reduce spawning stock mortality,” Carr-Harris said.
The commission has primary management
responsibility for the East Coast striped bass fishery.