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  2. Florida fishing: Spring training means kingfish, bluefish ...

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    Florida fishing regulations and fishing season opening and closing dates: Snook: Harvest opens Feb. 1 along Florida's Atlantic Coast.Bag limit: 1 per angler per day. Size limit: No shorter than 28 ...

  3. Florida fishing: Dolphin, pompano, tripletail, snook all on ...

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    Florida fishing regulations and fishing season opening and closing dates: Great amberjack: Harvest closed April 1 to April 30. Harvest re-opens May 1. Lobster: Harvest closed March 31.Sport season ...

  4. Common snook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_snook

    Snook closed to harvest in Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic waters in January 2010 after a severe cold kill affected snook population number." [28] All snook were "catch-and-release only" in the Gulf of Mexico until August 31, 2013. At that time, the FWC could choose to open or close snook harvest for another season.

  5. Florida fishing: Snook harvest closed until September; Gag ...

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    Summer patterns mean snook are catch & release. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us

  6. Centropomus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centropomus

    The robalo or common snook (C. undecimalis) commonly has 11 to 13 non-rudimentary gill rakers and the Mexican snook (C. poeyi) is most often found to possess 15 to 18 non-rudimentary gill rakers. The Pacific robalo nato or white snook (C. viridis) is also a dead ringer for the common snook. The distinguishing feature is also the non-rudimentary ...

  7. Centropomus parallelus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centropomus_parallelus

    Centropomus parallelus is a species of fish in the family Centropomidae, the snooks and robalos. It is known by several common names, including fat snook, smallscale fat snook, little snook, and chucumite. [ 1][ 2] It is native to the western Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico, its distribution extending from southern Florida in the United ...

  8. Florida fishing: Pompano, jacks, ladyfish because wind and ...

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  9. Nile perch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nile_perch

    Nile perch can grow to 2 m (6 ft 7 in) and 200 kg (440 lb). [11] The introduction of this species to Lake Victoria is one of the most cited examples of the negative effects alien species can have on ecosystems. [12] The Nile perch was introduced to Lake Victoria in East Africa in the 1950s, [13] [14] and has since been fished commercially. In ...