TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- After determining that two years of season extensions did not
significantly impact the bay scallop population, the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) decided June 28 to permanently
extend the recreational season by adding two weeks to the end.
The decision was made at the Commission meeting in Palm Beach
Gardens. Commissioners also directed staff to look into the possibility
of a future commercial harvest of bay scallops. The commercial harvest
of bay scallops has been closed in Florida state waters since 1994.
The recreational season, which starts July 1 and closed annually on
Sept. 11, will now end Sept. 25. The extension will help increase
business opportunities during a time of the year when other fisheries
are closed and tourism has decreased. Bay scallops are also known to be
larger at the end of the summer, which may be a draw for some
harvesters.
The Commission extended the season temporarily in 2010 and 2011 to
help alleviate economic hardships caused by the Deepwater Horizon oil
spill.
Bay scallops can be recreationally harvested in Gulf of Mexico state
waters (shore to nine nautical miles) from the Pasco-Hernando County
line to the west bank of the Mexico Beach Canal in Bay County.

The recreational bag limit is two gallons of whole bay
scallops or one pint of meat per person, per day, with a vessel limit
of 10 gallons of whole bay scallops or half a gallon of meat.
There is no commercial harvest for bay scallops in Florida state waters.
During the season, scallop harvesters can assist the FWC's scallop researchers by completing an online survey at http://svy.mk/bayscallops.
Harvesters can indicate where they harvest scallops, how many they
collect and how long it takes to harvest them. FWC staff and some
vendors in harvest areas will also distribute postage-paid survey cards
that collect similar data. Participants can email [email protected] to ask questions or send additional information.
Visit MyFWC.com/Fishing and click on “Saltwater,” “Recreational Regulations” and “Bay Scallops” to learn more.
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