I'm waiting to hear someone is catching corvina. So far I've only heard of a few being caught. I do not care to catch sand bass around Rocky Pt. as they are too small for anything but bait, and I don't care to eat trigger fish. Corvina from shore and larger, good-eating fish from the reefs several miles out are what interests me.
So that leaves us to ponder what's going on and what could be expected for the future. Stuart and RB Moore gave the reefs a shot and came up empty. Is that because
A. The water is too warm right now, in which case
1. in November we will start to see the kind of activity we normally expect in October, or
2. this is just going to remain a bad fall fishing season because if they aren't around in October they aren't coming, and we can only wish for better luck next year.
B. Both the resident and migratory fish populations have been hammered by commercial fishing and other marine life harvests of various kinds and might not recover any time soon.
C. Improved fish populations in recent years pulled a lot sharks farther north, and they hung around until they ate themselves out of house and home, then left. (I doubt this happened, but thought I'd throw it out there.)
D. Something vital has been lost near the bottom of the food chain, causing game fish to either perish or move to greener pastures.
E. Some combination of the above.
F. The fish are there just as always but just not biting now, possibly because of warm water.
As for the corvina, could it be that not enough people have been fishing for them with the right tackle and instead are using the kinds of lures that are guaranteed to catch sand bass and small triggers, and that Norty and his friends (another thread) were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time?
I have no answers, only questions. But I do know that some fish species boom and bust in cycles fish biologists have been unable to explain. Crappie are said to be that way, which is why state fish and game depts. seldom bother to set limits on crappie. Sometimes you just never get to know why.