GRAND BAHAMA ISLAND -- A little more than two years ago, University of
Miami bonefish researcher Mike Larkin escorted a small group of avid
anglers on a tagging expedition to the bone-studded flats of Grand
Bahama Island.
The goal was to learn how far bonefish range and
to see if there is any mixing of the stocks between Florida and the
more than 700 islands of the Bahamas.
In one week, the handful
of anglers caught, tagged and released 71 fish. All were hoping for
word that one of their fish had been recaptured.
They had to wait a long time -- until March of this year, when guide
Ishmael Makintosh reported catching a 21-inch, tagged bonefish near
Water Cay on the north side of Grand Bahama. It turned out the fish had
been caught June 23, 2007, in the same area by Islamorada angler Jim
Bokor and his brother, Art, when it was only 16 ½ inches long.
That fish is one of few recaptures of bones tagged in the Bahamas since the 1980s.
Other Grand Bahama guides, such as Phil Thomas, said they have caught a
handful of tagged fish recently, but let them go without following up.
Some bonefish researchers, such as Aaron Adams -- executive director
for the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust based in Key Largo -- hope to
change that. Adams and several colleagues met with Bahamian bonefish
guides last month in Nassau in a session organized by the island
nation's Ministry of Tourism.
``They were all very forward-thinking about preserving their fishery, which was nice to hear,'' Adams said.
Bonefish & Tarpon Trust (tarbone.org) last year launched a
large-scale project in the Bahamas, Caribbean, and Central America,
working with fisheries managers, guides, resorts, and anglers with the
goal of tagging as many as 2,000 bonefish over the next two years.
Adams said they need to tag at least that many because the average
return rate is low -- about 3 to 5 percent.
In South Florida and
the Keys, guides and anglers working with BTT and researchers from the
University of Miami Rosenstiel School have tagged more than 7,500
bonefish since 1998, with nearly 300 recaptures, according to Larkin.
From those tag returns, the scientists have learned that bonefish
travel extensively between Biscayne Bay and the lower Keys, and that at
least two bonefish tagged in South Florida traveled across the
predator-infested Straits of Florida to be caught again near Andros
Island in the Bahamas.
Far less is known about the species'
travel among the islands of the Bahamas and elsewhere, Adams said.
Hence the big push to get others concerned with the fishery involved.
``It's important to figure out movement patterns and home ranges so we
can put that into management,'' Adams said. ``If it turns out
[bonefish] move among the islands, then those guides would have to
cooperate in conservation.''
Learning more about bonefish
movements, life history and reproduction is vital, scientists said,
because the species helps drive a powerful economic engine wherever it
occurs. An annual bonefish census in South Florida, for example, shows
each fish is worth about $3,500 per year, or $75,000 over its lifetime.
Elsewhere, the species has a commensurate value, the scientists said.
BTT petitioned the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
recently to make bonefish a catch-and-release-only species. But some
FWC officials have interpreted the request to mean designating bonefish
a prohibited species, such as Goliath grouper. That would mean anglers
would not be allowed to bring a bonefish out of the water to photograph
it -- a notion that has some Keys guides and tournament organizers
upset.
BTT officials now have withdrawn their request and are
working with FWC on the wording of a possible rule change to protect
bonefish without making them off-limits. The issue is expected to be
discussed at the FWC's next meeting in December in Clewiston.