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Half-eaten fish reeled in by Connecticut Fishermen Highlights Problem Fishermen are Facing Nationwide

Half-eaten fish reeled in by Connecticut Fishermen Highlights Problem Fishermen are Facing Nationwide

Anglers in Connecticut are reeling in what appears to be half-eaten fish, and it seems to be due to an ocean predator.

The Connecticut Fish and Wildlife put out a call for photos of half-eaten fish on Facebook on Tuesday, Aug. 15, and fishing pros and hobbyist shared images of their partial catches.

“Yesterday while reeling in this striped bass these anglers had an unexpected visitor who proceeded to chomp most of this Striped Bass in one bite,” the CFW wrote in its post. “We hear of this happening more and more over the past couple of years.”

Brown sharks, sandbar sharks and tiger sharks are the usual culprits, according to Berwick, who works at Real Cast Charters, a sport fishing charter company in Old Saybrook, Connecticut.

Berwick said the sharks seem to be active in the southern parts of the Long Island Sound, and on occasion, great white sharks have been seen in the area, too.

In the 12 years he’s been charter fishing, Berwick says clients have been reeling in half-eaten fish in the last three or so years.

“We deal with them on a daily basis now. It’s just kind of the way of the day,” Berwick said. ” The sharks are grabbing the back of fish, they’re chasing fish, they’re grabbing baits and it’s just been getting kind of out of control.”

Reeling in half-eaten fish has yielded mixed feelings from fishing charter clients, according to Berwick.

When clients get to see the sharks as they take bites, excitement is stirred from the close-up encounters, he explained.

But, at the same time, not being able to fulfill the dream of catching a fully intact once in a lifetime “trophy” is disappointing to some, especially when the uneaten fish remains show signs of being a large, according to Berwick.

Even for smaller fish, it’s not immediately clear if a shark bite could contaminate the meat, he added.

“I don’t know if it’s a bait thing or if it’s the temperature or whatever the case can be, but the sharks have just started to kind of move in from last year,” said Berwick.

Several other anglers replied to the CFW with photos of their half-eaten fish and shark sightings.

Elliot Thomas, of Kensington, Connecticut, said a shark in the Long Island Sound recently took a bite out of his hooked catch.

The incident happened on Wednesday, Aug. 2, in the East Lyme are of the sound. Thomas also managed to snap photos of the shark that bit his fish that evening.

Jake Roczniak, of East Haddam, Connecticut, was night fishing on the eastern side of the Long Island Sound in August 2022 when a shark took a chunk out of his striped bass.

“I was fighting with the bass and when it got near the side of the boat a shark bit my striper in half,” said Roczniak.

“I didn’t get a great look at the shark, but it was either a small white shark or a brown shark,” he continued. “Most likely a smaller white shark as I’ve seen them in the area before this happened days before and after.”

Roczniak said he’s noticed an increase of shark activity in the sound at the beginning of August each year.

Anglers from other states also responded to the CFW’s call for photos, including people who fish in the northeastern and southeastern coasts.

Brian Swiat, of Pine Bush, New York, had a large catch bit in half during a fishing trip in Rhode Island by a shark that “was going nuts next to the boat.”

“My fish was caught alive in Block Island, Rhode Island, and bitten right before landing into the boat,”. “Not sure what kind of shark, but it’s happening more and more frequently. Definitely makes us leery about putting our hands in the water anymore.”

Steve Schipman, of Pensacola, Florida, said he has had to deal with sharks stealing and taking bites out of hooked fish when he ventures into the Gulf Coast.

On more than one occasion, Schipman has had landed large Atlantic red snapper that have been half-eaten by the time he reels them in.

“Sharks have become a real problem here for recreational fishermen,” he said. “The limit on red snapper is two per person, per trip, and there are some days we can’t catch a limit because we lose 20 or more to sharks.”

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