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Thread: changes to spotted seatrout rules

  1. #1
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    Default changes to spotted seatrout rules



    (Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page.)
    For immediate release: Dec. 12, 2019
    Suggested Tweet: Spotted #seatrout rule changes approved by @MyFWC: FWC approves changes to spotted seatrout rules #Florida #Fishing #FWC2019
    FWC approves changes to spotted seatrout rules
    At its meeting in Panama City Beach, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) approved several rule changes for spotted seatrout. Spotted seatrout are one of Florida’s most popular inshore fisheries. Based on the results of a recent stock assessment and after hearing concerns from anglers, FWC worked with stakeholders to create a suite of regulatory changes that would benefit the spotted seatrout as well as continue to provide quality fishing opportunities.
    The following rules will go into effect Feb. 1, 2020:

    • Creating two new zones by splitting the Northwest spotted seatrout management zone into the: (See maps below.)
      • Western Panhandle (Escambia County through the portions of Gulf County west of longitude 85 degrees, 13.76 minutes but NOT including Indian Pass/Indian Lagoon).
      • Big Bend (remaining portion of Gulf County plus Indian Lagoon, and Franklin County through Fred Howard Park Causeway in Pinellas County).

    • Creating the renamed South Florida zone (Fred Howard Park Causeway in Pinellas County near the Pasco County line through Broward County) and Central East zone (Palm Beach through Volusia counties) by moving the boundary between the southern management zones. (See maps below.)
    • Reducing bag limits
      • Western Panhandle: five to three fish.
      • Big Bend: no change (remains five fish).
      • South Florida: four to three fish.
      • Central East: four to two fish.
      • Northeast: six to five fish.

    • Modifying the recreational slot size limit from 15-to-20 inches to 15-to-19 inches total length.
    • Allowing one seatrout over 19 inches per vessel (currently per harvester).
    • Prohibiting captain and crew from keeping a bag limit on a for-hire trip.
    • Re-establishing the February recreational closure in the Western Panhandle zone and the November-December recreational closure in the Central East zone.
    • Reducing the current daily commercial limits to 50 per harvester and 100 per vessel.
    • Removing an unnecessary commercial reporting form.

    Learn more about spotted seatrout by visiting MyFWC.com/Marine and clicking on “Recreational Regulations” and “Spotted Seatrout.”

    -30-
    Newly-approved spotted seatrout management zones, effective Feb. 1, 2020.

    New boundary between the Western Panhandle and Big Bend spotted seatrout management zones effective Feb. 1, 2020.



    another good day at the office !

  2. #2
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    One redfish ....two trout .... Great ! ! ! ! ! ! = That's why I don't fish salt anymore (plus fishing in a sewer) ......
    "Teach a man to fish = he can feed himself "
    "Teach the world to fish = you won't have any fish left to eat "
    Likes huntinslabs, specktacklure LIKED above post

  3. #3
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    They need to stop commercial take on all regulated gamefish in state waters. Making it to where it isn't even worth the trouble to fish central east zone.

    Sent from my SM-S727VL using Crappie.com Fishing mobile app

  4. #4
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    skeetbum is offline Crappie.com Legend - Moderator Jig Tying Forum * Crappie.com Supporter
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    SOOOO glad I bought a skinny water boat to NOT be able to keep any fish.
    Creativity is just intelligence fooling around
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  5. #5
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    1 upperslot red and 2 trout per person with the added bycatch species mixed in still makes a few good meals. Don't mind the reg changes except the commercial fishing aspect. Heck, once the flounder get past coast guard station to south and critter fleet marina to north they get hammered nightly by commercial giggers. They run under the disguise of netting mullet to net speckled trout, and decimate the mullet schools. The commercial guys need to be managed way more than a recreational fisherman.

    Sent from my SM-S727VL using Crappie.com Fishing mobile app

  6. #6
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    Saw this proposed months ago, many reasons the regulate, just not the recreational fishing...things that come to mind for regulation is: canal spraying=run off/NO sea grass, sewage releases, research that actually combats algae bloom, diverting water from natural flow St. Lucie/Caloosahatchee, ect...sad to think FWC believes more fish will fix any of the glaring issues that really need to be addressed...
    crappie down !
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  7. #7
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    We still can't keep redfish, trout, or snook because of the red tide closure. Think it runs until May or something.

    Haven't fished Tampa bay since.

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