Florida SportsmanSUBSCRIBE NOWSUBSCRIBE NOW
Home Regions Sportfish Gear Boating How-To Forum FS Store SUBSCRIBE NOW
 
advertisement
 
 SEARCH 
 You are Here:  Home >> Conservation Front >> Home-Grown Reds?
 
ONLINE RESOURCES
 
RELATED FISHING
Shallow Water Angler
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication dedicated to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine. [+] See It
> In-Fisherman
> Florida Sportsman
> Fly Fisherman
> Game & Fish
> Walleye In-Sider
 
 
RELATED HUNTING
North American Whitetail
North American Whitetail
A magazine designed for the serious trophy-deer hunter. [+] See It
> Petersen's Hunting
> Petersen's Bowhunting
> Wildfowl
> Gun Dog
 
 
RELATED SHOOTING
Guns & Ammo
Guns & Ammo
The preeminent firearms magazine: Hunting, shooting, cowboy action, reviews, technical material and more. [+] See It
> Shooting Times
> RifleShooter
> Handguns
> Shotgun News
 
Home-Grown Reds?

We could raise hundreds of thousands of redfish in our coastal communities.

Then we'd release them locally to add to the redfish stocks, triggering a resurgence that would produce a permanent fishery beyond our current dreams.

They call it Redstart.

Some might call such an idea a pipe dream.

But Redstart is a pipe dream that quietly became reality a few weeks ago when volunteers and biologists released a large school of near-adult reds into a pond on Sanibel Island.


continue article
 
 

In just a year, the fish were raised in tanks on Sanibel from tiny fingerlings to 14- to 16-inchers.

Now the fish are alive and well in a pond owned by the Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Association, where their growth and health will be followed.

"This really shows what volunteers and staffers can accomplish and the program could work everywhere," said an enthusiastic Bob Wasno, Florida Sea Grant representative who helped spark the Redstart demonstration.

It's a fascinating prospect, a potential way to move Florida's slow-motion redfish hatchery program into a higher gear.

The fishing public for the most part loves hatcheries. When done correctly, they do wonders, without doubt. Hatchery fish can jump-start populations after traumatic events, bad year classes and overfishing, as well as provide much better angling. (The Texas redfish bag limit is three, largely because of that state's huge stockings of 30-plus million fish per year.

Not that stocking should ever substitute for habitat protection. Both habitat concerns and good management, including hatcheries, must have equal standing.

At this point, Florida is putting millions into a new freshwater hatchery and research facility west of Orlando. But on the saltwater side, it's putting up only nickels and dimes, even though millions in federal funds could be captured.

The state's Port Manatee coastal fish hatchery is, however, making a noble effort with limited resources, concentrating on "Project Tampa Bay," in which some 3.5 million reds, mostly small fingerlings, have been released since early 2000.

Some legal-size reds of hatchery origin already have been caught by Tampa Bay anglers. But next there will be long periods of evaluations and report writing. Unfortunately, there is little momentum among current officials for getting a Texas-style program really rolling. That's a shame.

All of which makes the community Redstart idea especially appealing. In short, fisheries supporters around the state could provide a huge force of volunteers and localized resources for growing out large numbers of reds after first getting the fingerlings from Port Manatee.

White seabass have been grown this way in California to compensate for gill net massacres that wiped out that fishery years ago. Florida has an opportunity to follow suit.

The possibilities are endless.

What's needed now is for Florida officials, angling clubs, the Coastal Conservation Association and marine-oriented interests to take the ball and run with it, for a Redstart touchdown.

 
 


 
 
OUR NETWORK: IMOUTDOORS WEBSITES
[Featured Title]
Shallow Water Angler Shallow Water Angler Magazine Online. Covering inshore saltwater fishing from
Texas to New England.

* Go to the Site
* Subscribe to the magazine

[Features From Shallow Water Angler]
>> Which Flat Trout?
>> Where The Reds Meet The Sand
>> Supersize That Soft Bait
*Subscribe to Shallow Water Angler
 
[All Titles]
  Bowhunter Bowhunter  
  DU Great Outdoors Festival Ducks Unlimited Great Outdoors Festival  
  Florida Sportsman Florida Sportsman  
  Fly Fisherman Fly Fisherman  
  Game and Fish Game and Fish  
  Guns and Ammo Guns and Ammo  
  Gun Dog Gun Dog  
  Handguns Handguns  
  In-Fisherman In-Fisherman  
  North American Whitetail North American Whitetail  
  Petersen's Bowhunting Petersen's Bowhunting  
  Petersen's Hunting Petersen's Hunting  
  Rifle Shooter Rifle Shooter  
  Shallow Water Angler Shallow Water Angler  
  Shooting Times Shooting Times  
  Shotgun News Shotgun News  
  Walleye In-Sider Walleye In-Sider  
  Wildfowl Wildfowl  
 >> PRIVACY POLICY >> CONTACT US>> ADVERTISE>> MEDIA KIT>> JOBS>> SUBSCRIBER SERVICES