Fishermen, by their nature, spend a lot of time on the
water. If they fish commercially, or run
a for-hire boat, they’re out just about every day that weather and business considerations
allow; if they fish recreationally, other factors, such as jobs, spare cash,
and family obligations enter the picture.
But whether recreational, commercial, or for-hire, fishermen put in enough
time to observe changes in environmental conditions, fish movements, and the
health of fish stocks.
Such observations are essential to a fisherman’s success, as they provide a matrix of information that reveals where fish will most likely be at a particular juncture of season, water temperature, wind, and tide. They also inform a fisherman’s views on the health of fish stocks and the value of particular management measures.
But in such cases, fishermen can easily be led
astray, in part because their observations are usually limited in space and
time, and also because of the very human tendency to succumb to confirmation bias, which leads people to remember and give
higher value to observations that support their existing beliefs and interests,
while discounting those that challenge such preexisting values.
Thus, we often hear for-hire captains in the northeastern striped bass fishery argue that bass are shifting their spawning grounds north, even though there are no scientific data to support such claims, rather than admit that years of extremely poor recruitment in the Chesapeake Bay is going to require managers to adopt more restrictive regulations.
Similarly, after a stock
assessment update found that the bluefish stock had become overfished, we
heard members
of the recreational fishing industry argue that the population hadn’t actually
declined, but merely moved offshore where managers can’t find them, based on a
handful of offshore encounters between bluefish and commercial and recreational
fishermen (the interesting thing about such comments, from my perspective,
is that I fish offshore throughout the summer, spending a substantial amount of
time chumming for sharks, and am now encountering far, far fewer bluefish in my
offshore chum slicks than I did in the 1980s and 1990s—even than I did in the
early 2000s—which would seem to contradict the claim that
the bluefish stock is healthy, but merely remaining in deeper waters). Once again, such comments were offered in the
hope of avoiding more restrictive regulations.
Right now, we’re seeing the same phenomenon play out in the
gag grouper fishery in the Gulf of Mexico.
Because the State of Florida has been doing quite a bit of research on
gag grouper, the current controversy surrounding that fishery illustrates why fishermen’s
objections to management measures can be based on misconceptions arising out of incomplete, and perhaps biased, understanding of the relevant
facts.
This year, the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council
agreed to open the recreational gag grouper season on September 1. However, that season is already over, as it was only
scheduled to run for two weeks, due to problems with the gag grouper stock.
The short season led to many unhappy anglers, with one reportedly saying,
“What a joke this has become,”
while another, probably unaware of the irony in his comment,
said,
“What an unfortunate situation we find ourselves in. Resources being governed on emotion, you
know, under the guise of poor science. It’s
a shame.”
A
writer for the Bradenton [FL] Herald wrote,
“After studies and quotas and all sorts of
angler/government/legal interaction, this is what we’ve been left with. A short two-week window in the middle of
hurricane season when the water is the warmest.
It is almost a slap in the face to anglers.”
Yet the same writer concedes,
“I will admit that gag grouper landings have been more sparse
in my recent fishing experiences than years past,”
and that
“Anglers pre-fishing [ahead of the season] have caught
legal-sized fish, but they haven’t been in extreme abundance,”
although he tries to explain away his own lower catches by saying,
“much of that is because I actively try to avoid them.”
Another angler quoted in the article complains about the
number of undersized fish, or fish caught out of season, which end up being
eaten by sharks or Goliath grouper sometime after being hooked and/or released.
But the one group of people that the writer does not quote
are the scientists who study gag grouper, the same group of folks who could
provide plenty of reason for the short recreational season. For, contrary to the claims of the angler who
said that gag grouper were “governed on emotion…under the guise of poor science,”
there are good reasons to engage in precautionary management.
Biologically,
gag grouper are what is known as a protogynous hermaphrodite; that is, a fish
that begins life as a female, but eventually transitions into a male. Biologists previously believed that the health
of the stock depended upon the number of breeding-aged females, and the last
stock assessment, which was reliant on female abundance, found the stock to be
neither overfished nor experiencing overfishing. However, commercial fishermen were having
trouble filling their quotas and, as the Bradenton Herald writer noted,
anglers weren’t finding overwhelming numbers of adult fish.
Concerned by such signs of declining abundance, Florida
scientists decided to take another, deeper look at the resource. It turned out that males matter more than
people once thought.
The most recent stock assessment found that males only make
up two to three percent of the overall gag population, as opposed to their historic
level of 17 percent. Such males spend
the entire year in deep water, typically at depths of more than 165 feet, on or
near the spawning grounds. Some, but not
all, of the spawning areas have been designated as marine protected areas in
order to help conserve the gag grouper stock.
In the paper reporting
their findings, the researchers
“propose[d] that shallow-water pre-spawning aggregations are
a key spatio-temporal bottleneck to gag productivity. They appear to be an important source of [female
to male] transitionals and are heavily fished, which may negatively impact male
recruitment to the spawning grounds.”
They also found that current regulations were not
sufficiently restrictive to rebuild the proportion of males in the spawning
stock to the historical 17 percent.
Thus, the anglers quoted in the Bradenton Herald article had
it all backwards. It was not the fishery
managers, but the anglers, who were basing their views on “on emotion…under the
guise of poor science.” They saw—and targeted—the
abundance of females, including fish in transition from female to male and, by
doing so, drove the level of males below the level needed to maintain a healthy
stock.
“the male population in the [Madison Swanson marine protected
area] may be aging with limited recent recruitment of younger males rather than
indicating a recovering stock, highlighting our need to better assess male
recruitment and the processes driving it.
The mating function (relationship between sex ratio and fertilization
success) plays an important role in the productivity of protogynous species…but
is poorly understood. Males displayed
low milt (sperm) reserves during the spawning season which is a pattern
associated with pair spawners. Because
gag are pair spawners and female gag are multiple batch spawners (meaning they
produce multiple batches of eggs throughout the spawning season), males would
have to spawn with multiple females per day, every day of the [approximately]
78-day spawning season. Although make
spawning frequencies are unknown, given the low milt reserve gag displayed this
seems unlikely to be accomplished.
“With the current low observed sex ratios being close to those
seen in the 1990s when gag were considered overfished and undergoing
overfishing, the above evidence suggests that male abundance is well below what
would be expected in a healthy stock.”
Anglers saw a lot of gag, and based on the apparent abundance, assumed that the stock
was healthy and the short season unnecessary, but they were completely
unaware of the skewed sex composition of the stock, and the implications of the
shortage of males on the stock’s long-term sustainability.
They didn’t realize that far from being “a slap in the face,”
the two-week season was really a helping hand, both to the gag grouper and to
those who plan to be fishing for them a few years from now.
The story of the gag grouper is just one more example of why
fishermen’s comments on the health of fish stocks need to be taken with a very large
grain of salt. While fishermen know what
they see—or at least think they see—when out on the water, they rarely have a
complete picture of all of the factors that bear on the status, and
long-term prospects, of a fish stock.
And, as is so true in many facets of life, it’s what one doesn't know that can often cause the most harm.
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