Quote Originally Posted by albiealert View Post
This is all we need. I c&p this from the stripersforever website. Striped bass eating all the lobsters!!!!!



Stripers Forever

Connecticut - here is a matter of the greatest importance for the future of striped bass. Representative Richard Roy of Milford, CT has introduced

HB #5506 which would overturn CT’s long-standing game fish law and make it legal to commercially fish for striped bass in CT! This would certainly be a blow that striped bass don’t need, and it would make it much more difficult to finally achieve the coast-wide game fish status for striped bass that Stripers Forever is working towards with its Massachusetts game fish bill.



We understand this bill has been introduced largely to reduce the number of striped bass in CT waters so that they will not eat all the lobsters. According to a 1999 study by the Univ. of Conn. the lobster population crashed from record high numbers – that coincided with record numbers of striped bass – because the waters of the Sound became too warm.





We urge all SF members to do their utmost to defeat this bill. Send Representative Roy both an e-mail, a postal letter, and make a phone call to his office today. His name in paragraph one above is a link that will provide complete contact information. Let him know that you live in CT, that this bill will be very harmful to the sport that you love and to the recreational industry in CT that depends on good striped bass fishing. Tell him that you want him to withdraw this legislation today.






1. The striped bass are already under too much pressure. Fishing quality is already substantially worse than it was 5 or especially 10 years ago. This is reducing fishing participation and harming the guiding and tackle industry.

I agree with this, but it's tough to prove without hard numbers to back you up.







3. In 2003 CT had 473,000 marine anglers, 212,000 of whom primarily targeted striped bass. This legislation would be unfair to them since it would give a very few people a disproportionate share of a scarce public resource.

I wonder that the figures from 2008 are in terms of angler participation? I would estimate they're a lot higher than that.




This is definitely a misguided move IMO. Ther's no way the bass are eating all the lobsters. I wish I had more time to do research, but I think I read something that said the lobster fishery in long island sound started to decline around 10 years ago, and some said it was from a bacteria or organism. Something similar with clams, but I'm not sure, what I remember of that is fuzzy. I wonder if anyone has more details on that?