|
The
bait fishery for menhaden has historically accounted for only a
minute portion of the total landings of gulf menhaden. Through the
mid-1980s, the bait fishery for menhaden occurred almost exclusively
along the Florida Panhandle and in and around Tampa Bay. Louisiana
and Alabama began landing menhaden for bait in 1984. Louisiana's
landings for bait increased substantially through the mid to late
1980s. Neither Mississippi nor Texas has recorded commercial bait
production in recent years. Through the 1990s, two bait companies
in Morgan City and Cameron, Louisiana, were responsible for a majority
of the gulf menhaden landings for bait in the central northern Gulf.
The current menhaden bait fishery is primarily conducted along
the Florida Panhandle, Louisiana, and Alabama, although the gear
used in these areas is quite different. Historically in Florida,
menhaden were primarily caught using purse seines about 2,000 feet
in length fished from boats 35 to 65 feet long. Currently, there
are approximately ten purse-seine boats operating on the west coast
of Florida outside the three mile limit. The Florida net-ban
in July 1995, banned all gill/entangling nets and any nets greater
than 500 square feet from state waters. In response, a new
gear (tarp net) was authorized under an experimental permit for
three years. That permit was allowed to expire without renewal
and tarp nets are no longer allowed in Florida.
In
Louisiana, menhaden are caught for bait generally using the same
type gear, vessels, and methods as the reduction fishery. Although
some bait is sold fresh at dockside, most is frozen and trucked
throughout the Gulf region. There is little published information
about the markets for gulf menhaden bait. No doubt the majority
is used in the blue crab and crawfish fisheries. Smaller quantities
are used as chum or bait by sport fishermen. In the Gulf, menhaden are also caught
as bycatch with other gear (gill
nets and trawls).
Like Louisiana, purse-seine boats operate in a portion of Alabama�s
jurisdictional waters and the waters off Alabama, particularly in
waters off the western coastline. However, the number of boats
operating off Alabama has decreased in recent years when compared
to the late 1980s. Alabama�s gill net fishery contributes
a substantial amount towards the total yearly menhaden bait landings
averaging over 1.5 million pounds in recent years. Although
there is a lack of published data on the gulf menhaden bait fishery,
it is probable that the majority of Alabama�s menhaden are used
as bait for the blue crab fishery. Menhaden are also used
commercially by long-line and hook and line fishermen as bait and
chum for red snapper, grouper, and other reef fishes. In the
recreational fishery, menhaden are used for bait and chum by sport
fishermen and the charter boat industry.
|