Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
George: YOY has no bearing on the overall population; it has never been, nor ever was used as such. It just tells everyone how many young fish hatched and survived until October, that's it. OK, so now with 7 failed spawns in a row, most of the fish in the current population are large ones. My data, along with everyone I hear from bears that out.I've been covering this fishery for 38 years. I lived through the collapse. I documented the recovery. And what I'm seeing on the water today simply doesn't match what the YOY data is telling us. When a 70-year-old index loses 45% of its predictive power and fails to explain 70-85% of what we're actually seeing, it's time to question whether we're managing the fishery based on science or nostalgia.
The abundance I'm witnessing suggests the striped bass population is in far better shape than a statistical model from the 1950s would have us believe. Maybe it's time fisheries management caught up with what's actually happening in the water. I can't speak for anything happening north or south of here, but fir New York anglers, this is a healthy exciting fishery.
I agree with you that we have a vibrant fishery. Fishing was incredible 2 falls ago. I don't trust Maryland .Let's put aside my doubts of the YOY reliability, let's assume it's correct. 2025 is the seventh year of below-average YOY scores a sign that recent spawns haven’t been strong. That sounds bad, and it’s not ideal, but it doesn’t mean the fishery is on the edge right now. Most scientists, including the ASMFC, say that YOY numbers mainly tell us how many young fish made it through their first season, not how many adult striped bass are actually out there on the coast.
Even with those weak spawns, there are still plenty of older, big fish in the system, thanks to some strong year classes from earlier in the 2010s and the fact that stripers can live 20 years or more. What’s keeping us going are these older fish, and it’s why anglers in places like New York are still seeing lots of action. But if the small fish don’t come back soon, the stock is going to get top-heavy, and that could mean trouble down the road.
The poor YOY is a warning, not proof that the whole population is collapsing. Slot limits and cuts are there to protect those big breeders and give the young ones time to rebound. In the meantime, what we see is a vibrant fishery.
That is exactly correct, so why do you harp on the predictability factor when it comes down to the YOY data? It's never been touted as a tool for short-term predictability, but trends in those data may be a signal of danger or success in the future. Let's face it, 7 stinkers in a row, is disconcerting to say the least.Let's put aside my doubts of the YOY reliability, let's assume it's correct. 2025 is the seventh year of below-average YOY scores a sign that recent spawns haven’t been strong. That sounds bad, and it’s not ideal, but it doesn’t mean the fishery is on the edge right now. Most scientists, including the ASMFC, say that YOY numbers mainly tell us how many young fish made it through their first season, not how many adult striped bass are actually out there on the coast.
Even with those weak spawns, there are still plenty of older, big fish in the system, thanks to some strong year classes from earlier in the 2010s and the fact that stripers can live 20 years or more. What’s keeping us going are these older fish, and it’s why anglers in places like New York are still seeing lots of action. But if the small fish don’t come back soon, the stock is going to get top-heavy, and that could mean trouble down the road.
The poor YOY is a warning, not proof that the whole population is collapsing. Slot limits and cuts are there to protect those big breeders and give the young ones time to rebound. In the meantime, what we see is a vibrant fishery.