FWC acts to protect lemon sharks

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Walt Stearns

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Location
Palm Beach Florida
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I'm a Fish!
When we began this campaign several months we knew what had to be done and rallied a lot of people to the cause to get lemon sharks protected in Florida.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) made it official by ruling this Thursday February 18, 2010, to prohibit all recreational and commercial harvest of lemon sharks from Florida waters. The FWC took this action to protect lemon sharks, because they have a high potential to be overharvested.

Lemon sharks are often found near shore in shallow water, especially in Southeast Florida, where they aggregate in large numbers each year. This makes them easy to locate and raises the potential for large numbers of lemon sharks to be removed from the population with minimal effort by fishermen.

Lemon sharks also are susceptible to overharvest because of their life history characteristics. They are slow-growing, reaching sexual maturity at 12-15 years of age, and have a low reproductive potential, producing 6 to 18 pups per litter every second or third year. Juvenile lemon sharks experience a mortality of 40-60 percent.

Recently, some preliminary data from an ongoing tagging study found that at least 7.5 percent of tagged adult lemon sharks from a Southeast Florida aggregation succumbed to fishing mortality in one season. At that rate, the entire lemon shark aggregation could be harvested in a few years.

In addition, recent regulatory actions for other shark species might put more fishing pressure on lemon sharks in Florida waters, where 90 percent of known lemon shark aggregations occur. The harvest of lemon sharks will still be allowed in offshore federal waters adjacent to state waters.

Healthy lemon shark populations are especially important to Florida’s dive charter industry which provides ecotourism trips to see lemon shark aggregations in the winter months.

The FWC’s lemon shark rule takes effect on March 23. More information about recent shark-management actions FWC Saltwater Fishing Regulations - Sharks is available online at MyFWC.com/Rules, click on “Fishing – Saltwater.”
 

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Great news, indeed. It looks like the hard work that you, Bill, Cheryl, Doc Gruber, ....... etc. put in finally paid off.
 
So you can still land them in florida, you just need to catch them 3 miles out in federal water?
 
State and Federal shark fishing regulations require that:

All sharks “Harvest for commercial purposes” this pertains to the sale, barter, trade or exchange or with intent to sell, barter, trade or exchange have to be landed whole.

A commercial harvester (fisherman with a commercial license and federal permit for sharks) can transport their catch (provided it is during season) across state waters, and only sell to a holder of a valid federal Atlantic shark dealer permit pursuant to 50 C.F.R. § 635.4.im

As for lemon sharks they are hands off to both commercial and recreational fishermen in state waters which is 3 miles out on Florida’s Atlantic coast, and out to 9 miles on the Gulf Coast.

So if you are found in possession of lemon shark even at the dock, you will have a lot of explaining to do as this species is a large coastal dweller favoring the shallows between 3 and 130 feet, seldom venturing off shore in waters deeper than 200 feet.
 

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