The post drew a few comments, the
majority of which seemed to question whether any further management action was
needed, because from what the commenters saw, the bass stock appeared to be
healthy. One commenter wrote
“The past fall run has proved to me that the
fishery is strong and robust…Countless bass gorging on sand eels and
bunkers. Acres and acres of fish. Last year I did not land one school nor one
slot fish. Something is going right.”
Another wrote,
“I as many on LongIsland [sic] have
experienced a very strong fall run of striped bass…I am a true believer that
the slot law is working.”
A third noted that
“It was a terrific year for striped bass
fishing. Contrary to the last couple of years,
I was able to land more than my share of slot sized fish this year, with leads
me to believe that the limits that have been imposed have worked to help revive
the striped bass population,”
while a fourth simply said,
“Such a solid fall run…It was a great
fishing run with my family. What a great
season.”
The truth is that those
anglers are right: There was a great
fall run of striped bass off western Long Island this year. And the truth is that those anglers are wrong, when
they try to extrapolate from their very successful fall season off Long Island, to reach the conclusion that there were plenty of bass everywhere.
That’s just not the case. The
striped bass stock remains overfished, and is facing some serious
challenges.
It turned out that one of the anglers who commented on the post is a friend, who runs his boat out of Fire Island Inlet, New York, just as I do. He had a great fall season, and is having a hard time believing that the striped bass stock is not doing well.
In response to his comments, I referenced an
old fable that I had learned as a child, which spoke of six elderly blind
men who were extremely curious about elephants, but were never able to see one
because of their blindness.
According to the fable, the blind
men were eventually led to the palace of the Rajah, where they would be able to approach an elephant and, because they could not see the creature,
touch it to determine its nature. When
the opportunity finally arose,
“The first blind man reached out and touched
the side of the huge animal. ‘An
elephant is smooth and solid like a wall,’ he declared. ‘It must be very powerful.’
“The second blind man put his hand on the
elephant’s limber trunk. ‘An elephant is
like a giant snake,’ he announced.
“The third blind man felt the elephant’s
pointed tusk. ‘I was right,’ he
decided. ‘This creature is as sharp and
deadly as a spear.’
“The fourth blind man touched one of the
elephant’s four legs. ‘What we have
here,’ he said, ‘is an extremely large cow.’
“The fifth blind man felt the elephant’s
giant ear. ‘I believe an elephant is
like a huge fan or maybe a magic carpet that can fly over mountains and
treetops,’ he said.
“The sixth blind man gave a tug on the
elephant’s coarse tail. ‘Why, this is
nothing more than a piece of old rope.
Dangerous, indeed,’ he scoffed.”
Each of the blind men having
perceived one part of the elephant, and certain that their perception disclosed the
elephant’s true nature, they each began to argue about what an elephant was really
like, rejecting the views of the others.
Their argument grew quite clamorous, until finally,
“’Stop shouting!’ came a very angry voice.
“It was the Rajah, awakened from his nap
by the noisy argument.
“’How can each of you be so certain that
you are right?’ asked the ruler.
“The six blind men considered the
question. And then, knowing the Rajah to
be a very wise man, they decided to say nothing at all.
“’The elephant is a very large animal,’
said the Rajah kindly. ‘Each man touched
only one part. Perhaps if you put the
parts together, you will see the truth.
Now, let me finish my nap in peace.’”
That fable’s teachings are
applicable to many situations, including perceptions of the striped bass stock,
which is very large—even
overfished, its spawning stock biomass at the end of 2023 was estimated to be
86,536 metric tons, or slightly over 190 million pounds—and ranges from
North Carolina to Maine, with a handful of fish even straggling up into
Canadian waters.
So while fishermen off Long
Island undoubtedly experienced very good fishing this fall, their perceptions
were very limited in time and place. The
popular striped bass website Stripers Online hosts a series of chat boards,
including one dedicated to Connecticut anglers which features a thread titled “stripers
in CT this year….” which sees Connecticut anglers reporting their very different perceptions of
the fishery. The leadoff post reads,
“this was without question the worst
season I’ve ever had fishing for bass…talking to others seems to reinforce my
experience.”
I grew up in Greenwich,
Connecticut, and still go back to my old home waters to fish with a friend every year. One of my favorite times is late summer,
which typically sees a short but intense pencil popper bite occur right at
first light. But this year, that bite
didn’t happen, and it really wasn’t worth my time to drive up to Connecticut at
all. Thus, I wasn’t surprised to see
others who fish there make comments such as
“Same here. Bass fishing sucked for me this year,”
“I wish this were a fluke but the steady
deterioration is in its 5th yr at least. Each yr is a little worse,”
“It has been the worst year I’ve had in
several years…The fall was the Nail in the coffin for me with only one good
week in early October…Since then it has been skunk city with a few rats under
the birds here and there,”
and
“The locations that I would normally fish
this time of year that would be stacked up thick with schoolies are empty…It
has been going downhill for years and this year is worse.”
Clearly, those Connecticut anglers didn’t
touch the same part of the elephant as folks fishing off western Long Island,
even though the two areas are not all that far away from one another. Anglers fishing other areas of the coast also
have divergent perceptions of the health of the striped bass stock.
So how do we—all “blind men” in that we only see a piece of the overall whole—gain a full picture of the striped bass stock?
The answer, of course, is by using science
and analyzing data, to create a factually unbiased view of the entire striped bass population,
throughout its various peregrinations between nursery grounds and summering
areas, and between coastal rivers and the waters of the continental shelf.
Because of the wide array of data
included in a stock assessment, gathered over most of the striper coast, a benchmark
stock assessment or subsequent update necessarily provides a far more
comprehensive and far more accurate picture of the striped bass stock than do
the limited experiences of anglers fishing along a small section of coast.
To assess the future, as well as the current status, of the striped bass stock, biologists can rely on juvenile abundance indices, which provide an estimate of spawning success in the four most important spawning regions, the Maryland and Virginia sections of the Chesapeake Bay, the Delaware River, and the Hudson River.
The
Chesapeake Bay is, by far, the most important spawning area, providing about
eighty percent of the migratory striped bass found along the Atlantic Coast,
and Maryland
Is the most important portion of the Chesapeake Bay, producing about two-thirds
of the Bay’s juvenile bass
Thus, to learn that the
2024 Maryland striped bass juvenile abundance index revealed that the bass
experienced recruitment failure for the sixth consecutive year, and that the
Virginia index signaled the fourth straight year of recruitment failure was
particularly bad news. 2024 data is not
yet available for the Delaware and Hudson rivers, but the fact that the
New Jersey juvenile abundance index, marking the success of the Delaware River spawn,
was below the 25th percentile of the juvenile survey’s time series
in 2021 through 2023, and that the Hudson River index for 2023 was the worst
since 1985 provides reason to worry about the bass’ immediate future.
Contrary to some Long Island
anglers’ beliefs, the conclusions of the stock assessment and assessment
updates, combined with the recent juvenile abundance surveys, provide no
objective evidence that “the stock is strong and robust,” nor that “something
is going right.”
Good fishing that occurs
within a limited area, particularly good fishing for bass that fit within the
recreational slot limit, can give the impression that the stock is healthier
than it actually is. But a simple test
can reveal whether abundance is improving, or whether the health of the stock
is getting worse: calculating the number
of bass caught on an average trip. When
striped bass abundance is increasing coastwide, the average number of bass caught per
trip will increase; when abundance declines, the number of bass caught per trip
declines, too.
And over the past few years, the number of bass caught per trip has steadily headed in the wrong direction, with the rate of decline increasing in recent years. In 2019, the average trip taken in New England/mid-Atlantic region, primarily targeting striped bass, saw 1.960 bass caught. That number ticked up slightly, to 2.032 fish per trip, in 2020, then declined, at an ever-increasing rate, to 1.947 bass/trip in 2021, 1.814 bass/trip in 2022, and 1.611 bass/trip in 2023.
For the first eight months of 2024, the average number of bass caught per trip was just 1.059, although that figure might be deceiving, as it leaves out the last four months of the year, when bass fishermen are often very active. Still, it's not unreasonable to expect the 2024 average to fall below that of 2023.
A vast preponderance of the objective evidence indicates
that the coastwide health of the striped bass stock is not good, which again illustrates why relying on
personal experience to gauge stock status, instead of depending on objective
information, can easily lead someone astray.
I wish that wasn’t the case. I wish that the fishing we saw off Long
Island this fall accurately represented the health of the stock.
But when it comes to striped
bass, subjective impressions must yield to objective fact, and the fact is that
the immediate prospects of the striped bass stock are worrying.
Hopefully, when it meets on
December 16, the Management Board will have the courage, wisdom, and collective
will to put the stock back on the track to long-term health and sustainability.