New York’s striped bass season opened yesterday.
From what I heard, a few fish were caught, and some of those
were of reasonable size, although anglers
who had been fishing for and releasing their bass prior to the season opener—which
is perfectly legal in New York’s marine waters—have been reporting less
than stellar action in most places.
It’s difficult to say what this season will bring although,
given the poor striped bass recruitment in recent years, it’s safe to say that,
overall, this year’s striped bass fishing won’t be as good as last year’s, but
will probably be better than anything that we’ll experience for the next decade
or more.
Still, there will probably be times and places that provide
some fast action, even when bass are generally scarce. We saw that sort of thing happen in
the depths of the last stock collapse during the early 1980s, when Block Island
and parts of Cape Cod provided extremely good fishing for very large striped
bass at a time when bass were somewhat scarcer than unicorns everywhere
else.
Right
now, Raritan Bay, which sits between New York and New Jersey, seems to be
particularly hot. In recent years,
Raritan Bay has often provided good early-season action. 2021
was an especially good year, that saw anglers catch, and mostly release, a
little over four million striped bass during March and April alone—49% of the
coastwide striped bass catch during that period--over the course of about one
million fishing trips,
although things have slowed down since then.
Last year, New Jersey anglers only caught about 733,000 bass—42% of the
coastwide total—during those two months, even though they took about 100,000 more
trips in March and April than they did in 2021, a catch total that was more in
line with historical norms.
Should the Raritan Bay fishery result in striped bass catch
levels seen in the early 2020s—almost certainly not the big spike of 2021, but at
least levels twice that of 2025—it is very possible that the Management
Board has underestimated the 2026 fishing mortality rate, and perhaps the
fishing mortality rate for 2027-2029 as well, and that striped bass rebuilding
will, as a result, fall short of the biomass target.
And that’s not a good thing when we already know that seven
years of very poor recruitment is going to lead to low striped bass
abundance in the 2030s.
Now, the big question is whether we will only have seven
years of poor recruitment before striped bass spawning success returns to
something close to the historical average, or whether low recruitment—and the
recruitment over the past seven years has been so poor, that it is well below
the level contemplated in the
management plan’s “low recruitment assumption—will continue into the
indefinite future. If
such “very low recruitment” scenario continues, the spawning stock biomass,
which has been increasing due to the growth of the fish already in the SSB,
will begin to decline in 2030 or 2031, with the depth of that decline
determined by how long the very low recruitment regime lasts.
For some years, we believed that the success of striped bass
spawns was solely dependent on just two factors—a cold, wet winter and a cool,
moist spring. Now, we know that things
aren’t quite that simple, but I still hear quite a few anglers say that, given
how cold last winter was—and it really wasn’t particularly cold,
if you compare it to
winters thirty or more years ago, when New York clammers regularly ventured out
on a frozen Great South Bay and cut holes in the sea ice to get at the clams—they
expect a very good bass spawn this year.
I truly hope that they’re right, but I expect that they’ll
be disappointed.
Even if we rely solely on the old cold, wet winter/cool, moist
spring formulation, once we get past the cold winter, there are reasons to be
concerned. Almost
all of Maryland is experiencing drought conditions, with the United States Drought
Monitor showing most of the state, including most of the state where the
spawning rivers are located, under “Moderate Drought” conditions, while the
lower half of the state’s western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, which includes
the important Patuxent and Potomac River spawning grounds, are experiencing “Severe
Drought.”
That’s hardly the sign of a cool, moist spring.
He lists five criteria—river flow rates, water temperature,
the timing of the spawn, the coincidence of the striped bass spawn with the peak
abundance of the zooplankton that the young bass feed on, and predation by the
blue catfish—as the factors impacting striped bass spawning success, with river
flows and water temperatures the “most critical” of the five.
His thoughts on 2026 spawning success aren’t particularly
encouraging.
With respect to water flows, he noted that flows in mid-March
were “close to the long-term median.”
Unfortunately, such near-normal flows didn’t continue. Instead,
“the worst case scenario has played out, with very little
precipitation and plummeting flow volumes in the tributaries. A quick glance at the USGS watershed dashboard
shows nearly every monitoring station in the upper bay drainage either maroon
or crimson (all below the 25th percentile). It’s a pretty grim picture…”
With regard to water temperature, he says,
“This year…too warm, too soon,”
although he notes that
“one positive that has me curious is the severe oscillations
in temperature that we often get (warming trend and then plunging temperatures
from a cold front). Have [sic]
been absent, and perhaps if we are lucky, very little mortality will occur from
thermal shock to larvae.”
Based on that hope, he scores this year’s water temperatures
a little higher than water flows, although still only rates it a 3 out of a
possible 10.
He also doesn’t hold out too much hope with respect to the
spawn’s timing, observing that peak spawning activity once occurred in May, and
that in the 1960s and 1970s, bass didn’t even show up on the spawning grounds
until mid-April, while a 1997 publication set the peak of the spawn in late
April and early May. Still, he while he
notes that bass are spawning much earlier today, he doesn’t insist that the
earlier spawn forecloses the possibility of a strong year class.
Instead, he suggests that the earlier spawn
“raises important questions on how a warming climate may be
influencing timing of the spawn and reproductive success for Striped Bass. Timing is different now than it was decades
ago, and the trend has been to an earlier peak of spawn. Does this mean strong year classes can still
be produced in these earlier windows? If
they can adapt to this earlier window, perhaps they call pull of a decent spawn
this year. If those conditions are
insurmountable, it may be a bust again.
And if we do get a successful spawn and production of larval fish, the
next question is even more vexing…Do they have food to eat to survive those
most critical days/weeks of life?..”
Which leads to the next question: Will the peak abundance of the zooplankton occur
at the same time that the bass need them in order to survive?
That’s a difficult question.
Research shows that cold,
wet winters tend to lead to larger, later zooplankton blooms, but a
recent paper also suggested that even when there is enough zooplankton
available, a shortened spawning season, caused by water temperatures that rise
too quickly to levels fatal to eggs and larvae, could still result in a poor
year class. Mr. Gary didn’t make any
firm prediction on how a possible zooplankton match/mismatch might impact the
2026 spawn, but rather chose
“to suggest that the [latter] paper provides evidence that
feeding MAY NOT be the sole or dominant driver, but also express concern that that
[sic] feeding is perceived as unimportant overall. There may still be a role mismatch plays in
poor recruitment years.”
Finally, there is the great unknown—the impact of blue
catfish predation. There is little hard
data to suggest what that impact might be, but in Mr. Gary’s words,
“I do not pretend to know what the possible impact could be,
but I believe it is not zero.”
So, in the end, what is his prediction for the 2026 spawn, remembering
that last year, he predicted a Maryland juvenile abundance index of 4.0, and
was just about dead on target?
“Is it possible we have dominant year class? Possibly, but not likely. More likely is an average to slightly above
average year class if the temperature profile that warmed quickly but without
severe oscillations that might favor reproductions. But my gut tells me conditions are conducive
for a weak year class, and possibly a dismal one.”
Given Mr. Gary’s long experience with Maryland striped bass,
and his rational analysis of the governing factors, I’m inclined to trust his
gut, and not get my hopes up.
Bass have already been seen chasing menhaden in Long Island’s
Great South Bay, so the best advice I can give at this point is to get out and
catch (and hopefully release) a few fish now, while the opportunity is still
there.
Next year, most of the 2018s will have grown out of the
slot, with little coming in to replace them.
At that point, the chances for catch-and-keep striped bass fishing will become
increasingly low. Decent
catch-and-release fishing for larger bass should go on for a few years after
that, but by the mid-2030s, both fishing and natural mortality will have reduced
the once-large 2011 and 2015 year classes to a handful of very large fish, with
the 2018s holding on for a very few years longer.
After that, the real drought will set in.
I hate to say it, but if you’ve just started bass fishing
over the past three or four years, get out now, fish as much as you can, and
try to enjoy it.
Because, for fishermen who never experienced the abundance
of years past, these are the good old days.