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The Billfish Foundation (TBF) has done a lot
to promote billfish conservation and has been instrumental in
shifting past catch-and-kill practises to Tag & Release in
most parts of the world. We fully support TBF and Tag & release
all billfish from our game boats, the only exceptions being a
fish that is clearly a National or World record.
TBF have noticed an increasing tendency nowadays
for some anglers to lift a billfish (particularly sailfish) out
of the water to photograph the angler with his catch.
If you choose to Tag & Release, there
are four very good reasons not to lift your billfish out of the
water:
1. To state the obvious - Fish can't breathe
out of the water and a billfish brought to the transom will almost
certainly be, at the very least, 'out of breath'. If you lift
the fish out of the water, you are starving the fish of oxygen
just when it needs it most. Imagine running up a flight of stairs
and then trying to hold your breath when you get to the top.
2. Fish have a protective coat of slime on
their bodies that helps them fight infection and parasites. In
hauling out a large fish and handling (even with gloves), you
will inevitably damage or remove some of this coating.
3. The billfish's skeleton is designed to
support the fish in water - not in air. If you haul a sailfish
over the transom and try to hold it up, you are probably causing
internal damage which may later kill the fish.
4. A thrashing billfish in the cockpit? Are
you nuts? It's just going to injure itself and maybe you too!
If the fish is so exhausted that it can't kick, lifting it out
of the water and starving it of oxygen is likely to be the last
straw.
We have, in the past removed a couple of sailfish
from the water for photographs. We don't do it any more. Nowadays,
we photograph all billfish in the water after the fish has been
tagged and the hook removed. Photos are a wonderful reminder
of past memories for our guests and even more so to see their
catch gently swimming behind the boat before release. We recommend
you consider following the advice of The Billfish Foundation
not to remove your catch from the water.
The whole point of Tag & Release is to
gather scientific information for future conservation purposes
and to release the fish unharmed. If you haul a billfish out
of the water, you are damaging and possibly killing the very
thing you are trying to conserve and protect.
Not much sense in that is there?
Adrian was born on the island of Cyprus and
graduated to his first rod & reel at the age of five. Having
fished around the world from the Arabian Gulf to the North sea
and English Channel, he finally settled for the tropical waters
of the South Pacific around the island of Kadavu, Fiji Islands.
Director of Matava Resort Gamefishing, he skippers 'Bite Me',
the resort's 31ft DeepVee Gamefishing vessel and thoroughly enjoys
exploring the light and heavy tackle fishing around the island
and Great Astrolabe Barrier Reef. An IGFA Certified Captain,
he advocates tag & release and is a keen supporter of the
IGFA and the Billfish Foundation.
Adrian Watt,
IGFA Captain
http://www.matava.com
http://www.gamefishingfiji.com
http://www.gamefishingfiji.blogspot.com/
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