Chesapeake Bay's Favorite Trophy Fish is Back in Season


PRINCE FREDERICK, Md. –– Call them rockfish, rock, stripers or striped bass, but Morone saxatilis is back to spawn in the Chesapeake Bay and area anglers will be out in force for the striped bass season that began Saturday, April 20.

During the trophy season that runs through May 15, anglers may catch one striped bass per day measuring over 28 inches in the mainstream Chesapeake Bay from Brewerton Channel to the Maryland/Virginia line and in Tangier and Pocomoke sounds. After May 15 the rockfish size and limit will change to 18 inches or above and anglers will be allowed to keep two rockfish.

The striped bass, named the official fish of the State of Maryland in 1965, gets its name from the seven or eight dark stripes that run from head to tail. The fish has an olive green back, fading to light silver on its sides, with a white underside. Known for its size and ability to put up a good fight, the striped bass is considered by many to be the premier sport fish on the bay.

While adult striped bass swim in the ocean, they lay their eggs in fresh water. Between April and June, they move up into tributaries of the Chesapeake Bay to spawn. The bay and its tributaries are the primary spawning area for up to 90 percent of Atlantic coast striped bass. The young striped bass spend three to five years in the bay before migrating out to the Atlantic, where they may live up to 30 years. The record for a striped bass caught on the Chesapeake Bay is 67 pounds, 8 ounces for a fish caught in 1995.

Calvert County is home to the bay’s largest charter boat fleet and anglers from across the East Coast and beyond visit the county to chase the big ones with help from the area’s knowledgeable boat captains. Sport fishing is an important industry in the county and it is serious business for people like Russ Mogel, who owns and operates the Mary Lou Too and is a member of the Chesapeake Beach Fishing Charters Association. For Mogel, the season is also about a passion for fishing and being on the water.

“This time of year, everybody has spring fever and people are ready to go fishing,” Mogel said. “We’re finally able to get back out there after the long winter. The warmer weather has a lot of us antsy and we’re ready to catch some fish.”

Source: Calvert Co. Government

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