Nassau Grouper Rules Put in Place by Cayman Islands
On Monday, August 15, 2016, the Cayman Islands government enacted a comprehensive set of regulations aimed at recovering Nassau Grouper, an endangered Caribbean reef fish. The new regulations are based on more than a decade of collaborative fisheries research carried out by the Grouper Moon Project.
The regulations represent the Caribbean’s most progressive set of management actions for Nassau Grouper, and include:
All take, possession, or sale of Nassau Grouper is prohibited from December through April, inclusive (during the spawning months for the species)
When take is permitted (May – November), only fish between 16″-24″ can be kept and no more than 5 Nassau Grouper per fishing vessel per day can be kept
Nassau Grouper may not be taken on spear gun
Reef Environmental Education Foundation (REEF) initiated the Grouper Moon Project in 2001 in collaboration with the Cayman Islands Department of Environment. Ongoing research and education programming is conducted in partnership with scientists from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and Oregon State University. The project is the Caribbean’s oldest continuous grouper spawning aggregation research program, and represents one of the most advanced, multi-faceted tropical fisheries research programs in the world.
Scientific products stemming from the Grouper Moon Project will continue to support healthy grouper fisheries in the Cayman Islands in the coming years, while maintaining the Cayman Islands’ global leadership in collaborative tropical fisheries research and management. The Grouper Moon Project is funded in part by the Lenfest Ocean Program and REEF donors. Peter Hillenbrand, Southern Cross Club, and Little Cayman Beach Resort/Reef Divers have provided significant field and logistics support for the research team. For more information, visit www.REEF.org/groupermoonproject.
IMAGES:
Spawning Nassau Grouper. Photo by Jim Hellemn.
An Aggregation of Nassau Grouper. Photo by Paul Humann.
Grouper Education Program Student. Photo by REEF.
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