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Summary

DOI: 10.1201/9781351242776

Description

In the late 1800s and early 1900s a fishery for Red Snapper developed rapidly in the Gulf of Mexico. Shortly thereafter, recreational fishing for Red Snapper became popular wherever access was afforded to offshore waters. These developments occurred decades prior to organized collection of fishing and landings records. However, due to increasing library digital archiving, previous information regarding historical fishing conditions, landings, and size composition was available from formerly difficult to obtain reports, interviews, and particularly newspaper articles. Thirty-two newspapers from the U.S. Gulf of Mexico region were searched providing landings from 3157 fishing trips (93% commercial, 7% recreational) from the years 1874 to 1986. These records document increasing landings of Red Snapper early in the fishery with peak landings-per-trip occurring from circa 1900 to 1915 for U.S. coastal trips and from circa 1910 to 1930 for trips to Campeche Bay, Mexico. By the late 1920s to early 1930s there was evidence of fishery-impacts with reduced catches, decreased average size of Red Snapper and a shift to lower-valued species. Between the mid-1930s to 1950s, the Red Snapper commercial fishery expanded to the outer continental shelf waters off Louisiana and Texas in the northern Gulf of Mexico reaching the areal extent of the present day fishery. After World War II, technologies and exploratory surveys enabled continuing areal expansion and resulted in a period of increased landings from U.S. waters; most notably from the western Gulf of Mexico with peak landings occurring in 1971. Landings decreased through the 1970s and 1980s and reports of fishery concerns and commercial-recreational conflicts followed leading to the implementation of the Gulf of Mexico Reef Fish Management Plan in 1984.

Document Information

Document Type
Book chapter

Document Format
Acrobat Portable Document Format

Controlled Theme Keywords

Lutjanus campechanus

Contact Information

No contact information is available for this record.

Please contact the owner organization (SEFSC) for inquiries on this record.

Item Identification

Title: Improving the Historical Baseline of the Gulf of Mexico Red Snapper Fishery
Status: Completed
Abstract:

In the late 1800s and early 1900s a fishery for Red Snapper developed rapidly in the Gulf of Mexico. Shortly thereafter, recreational fishing for Red Snapper became popular wherever access was afforded to offshore waters. These developments occurred decades prior to organized collection of fishing and landings records. However, due to increasing library digital archiving, previous information regarding historical fishing conditions, landings, and size composition was available from formerly difficult to obtain reports, interviews, and particularly newspaper articles. Thirty-two newspapers from the U.S. Gulf of Mexico region were searched providing landings from 3157 fishing trips (93% commercial, 7% recreational) from the years 1874 to 1986. These records document increasing landings of Red Snapper early in the fishery with peak landings-per-trip occurring from circa 1900 to 1915 for U.S. coastal trips and from circa 1910 to 1930 for trips to Campeche Bay, Mexico. By the late 1920s to early 1930s there was evidence of fishery-impacts with reduced catches, decreased average size of Red Snapper and a shift to lower-valued species. Between the mid-1930s to 1950s, the Red Snapper commercial fishery expanded to the outer continental shelf waters off Louisiana and Texas in the northern Gulf of Mexico reaching the areal extent of the present day fishery. After World War II, technologies and exploratory surveys enabled continuing areal expansion and resulted in a period of increased landings from U.S. waters; most notably from the western Gulf of Mexico with peak landings occurring in 1971. Landings decreased through the 1970s and 1980s and reports of fishery concerns and commercial-recreational conflicts followed leading to the implementation of the Gulf of Mexico Reef Fish Management Plan in 1984.

Other Citation Details:

Book Chapter in Book: Red Snapper Biology in a Changing World. CRC Press.

Eds: S. Szedlemeyer and S. Bortone

Szedlmayer, S.T., & Bortone, S.A. (2019). Red Snapper Biology in a Changing World (1st ed.). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351242776

eBook ISBN9781351242776

Supplemental Information:

The chapter provided for download is a preliminary pre-publication version by author Fitzhugh, Gary R before his retirement from NOAA

DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1201/9781351242776

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS)
Lutjanus campechanus View WoRMS Aphia Record
UNCONTROLLED
doi 10.1201/9781351242776
None Economic Data
None Fishery
None historical fishing vessel information
None History
None landings
None port
None Red Snapper
None sizes
None vessels

Temporal Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Temporal Data Resolution Keywords
Annual
UNCONTROLLED
None 1874-1986

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Location Keywords
OCEAN > ATLANTIC OCEAN > NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN > GULF OF MEXICO
UNCONTROLLED
None Campeche

Instrument Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None handline

Platform Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None commercial boat
None recreational boat

Document Information

Document Type: Book chapter
Format: Acrobat Portable Document Format
Status Code: Final

Support Roles

Co-Author

CC ID: 842011
Date Effective From: 2019
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Gardner, Chris L
Address: 3500 Delwood Beach Road
Panama City, FL 32408
Email Address: chris.gardner@noaa.gov
Phone: 850-234-6541 x 262
Fax: 850-235-3559

Co-Author

CC ID: 842016
Date Effective From: 2019
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Kline, Bill
Address: 3500 Delwood Beach Road
Panama City, FL 32408
Email Address: bill.kline@noaa.gov
Phone: 850-234-6541 x 229

Co-Author

CC ID: 842010
Date Effective From: 2019
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Porch, Clay
Address: 75 Virginia Beach Drive
Miami, FL 33149
USA
Email Address: clay.porch@noaa.gov
Phone: 305-361-4232
Fax: 305-361-4562
View Historical Support Roles

URLs

URL 1

CC ID: 1168971
URL: https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351242776
Name: Access to Book via its DOI
URL Type:
Online Resource
Description:

Szedlmayer, S.T., & Bortone, S.A. (2019). Red Snapper Biology in a Changing World (1st ed.). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351242776

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 56314
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:56314
Metadata Record Created By: Lee M Weinberger
Metadata Record Created: 2019-05-19 10:09+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: SysAdmin InPortAdmin
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2022-08-09 17:11+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2022-05-04
Owner Org: SEFSC
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2022-05-04
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2023-05-04