skipperdude
Guru
I was talking to a fish biologist last night about the subject of what to do with a rock fish that you bring up from the deep.
The team had fished for 3 years in the same area in Port Gravina near Cordova Alaska
The rock fish are non palagic (meaning bottom dwelling species living on or near the ocean floor) Usually in rocky or bolder strewn areas. Long lived from 15 to 75 years to be full grown.
You know the ones that have the big protrusion from their mouth when they reach the surface.*
*That thing in there mouth in the stomach if you puncture that, it kills the fish.
The thing to do is to take a large lead head jig file the barb off and use the weight to drag the fish back down to the bottom. Just bounce it around a bit and the fish will get off.
After tagging the fish and releasing them in this manner *they were able to re-catch a number of the tagged fish and projected a survival rate of 85%.
100% of the ones that had there stomach punctured died.
Only *35% of those just released on the surface survived.
So the next time you catch a rock fish you don't have to feel bad about killing it.**It can be released alive.
SD
-- Edited by skipperdude on Thursday 17th of March 2011 12:54:26 PM
The team had fished for 3 years in the same area in Port Gravina near Cordova Alaska
The rock fish are non palagic (meaning bottom dwelling species living on or near the ocean floor) Usually in rocky or bolder strewn areas. Long lived from 15 to 75 years to be full grown.
You know the ones that have the big protrusion from their mouth when they reach the surface.*
*That thing in there mouth in the stomach if you puncture that, it kills the fish.
The thing to do is to take a large lead head jig file the barb off and use the weight to drag the fish back down to the bottom. Just bounce it around a bit and the fish will get off.
After tagging the fish and releasing them in this manner *they were able to re-catch a number of the tagged fish and projected a survival rate of 85%.
100% of the ones that had there stomach punctured died.
Only *35% of those just released on the surface survived.
So the next time you catch a rock fish you don't have to feel bad about killing it.**It can be released alive.
SD
-- Edited by skipperdude on Thursday 17th of March 2011 12:54:26 PM