NEWPORT
– Sport boat anglers may not retain cabezon after 11:59 p.m. Friday,
Sept. 22. Fishing for other bottomfish – such as most rockfish species,
lingcod and greenling – remains open.Cabezon harvest in Oregon has
been limited in recent years by the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission
because health of the stock is uncertain.
Landing data for the sport fishery indicates that anglers will meet
the ocean boat harvest cap of 15.8 metric tons for cabezon. Anglers also
reached the harvest cap in 2004 and 2005. This year, anglers were able
to fish for cabezon almost six weeks longer than last year.
Sport anglers may continue to harvest other legal groundfish species,
but may not retain cabezon in the saltwater boat sport fishery. Shore
anglers, including shore-based divers, may still keep cabezon.
“Cabezon have an excellent survival rate when released,” said Don
Bodenmiller, project leader for marine recreational groundfish fisheries
for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. “Unlike rockfish,
cabezon do not have air bladders and therefore do not suffer from
barotrauma—expansion or rupture of the air bladder when the fish are
brought up from deep waters—that can cause stress, injury, and sometimes
death in rockfish.”
“Many anglers are wondering about the status of the black rockfish
fishery, since that fishery also closed early in both 2004 and 2005,”
Bodenmiller said. “Current projections show the black rockfish catch to
be at or below projections. We are looking good for a full year of
fishing for black rockfish and lings.”
Eight species of groundfish caught by anglers in Oregon waters are
managed using harvest caps – four imposed by the federal government and
four state-imposed caps.