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Recreational Hogfish Season Is Shut Down In The Atlantic

Hogfish are popular in the Florida Keys, where people like to catch them with spearguns and eat them.
Nicholas Lindell Reynolds
/
Wikimedia Commons
Hogfish are popular in the Florida Keys, where people like to catch them with spearguns and eat them.

Spearing hogfish is a popular pastime along South Florida's reef. So popular, in fact, that by April more than 220,000 pounds of hogfish had been caught along the Atlantic coast.

That's almost three times the limit for the entire year so when federal fisheries managers received the data, they moved to close the recreational harvest as of Monday (Aug. 24).

Hogfish are popular in the Florida Keys, where people like to catch them with spearguns and eat them.
Credit Nicholas Lindell Reynolds / Wikimedia Commons
/
Wikimedia Commons
Hogfish are popular in the Florida Keys, where people like to catch them with spearguns and eat them.

"We've had these annual catch limits in place for several years now and we've never closed the recreational sector for hogfish before," said Jack McGovern, a fisheries biologist with NOAA Fisheries. "It was a surprise."

The closure applies to the area managed by the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council, from North Carolina to Florida.

Most hogfish are caught using spearguns.The fish are reef fish, like snappers and groupers, and are popular for eating.

The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council will likely start looking at changing the rules for hogfish, including trip and size limits. For now, the recreational limit is five per person and the fish must be at least 12 inches long.

The recreational season in the Atlantic will re-open Jan. 1. It remains legal to catch hogfish in state waters, up to three miles out, and in Gulf waters.

Copyright 2020 WLRN 91.3 FM. To see more, visit WLRN 91.3 FM.

Nancy Klingener covers the Florida Keys for WLRN. Since moving to South Florida in 1989, she has worked for the Miami Herald, Solares Hill newspaper and the Monroe County Public Library.