Panga longliners started about 1985 when 200 special permits were issued in Manzanillo for longlining shark. The by- catch of primarily sailfish and some dorado was over 95% of the total catch. At that time these pangas were landing between 150-200 tons of sailfish monthy into the Manzanillo markets. It was from these original 200 permits that the huge panga longline fleet of more than a thousand pangas rapidly developed. By the mid 1990’s sailfish and dorado were severally depleted in the Sea of Cortes and today they are almost gone.
Panga longliners caught around 1500 to 2000 kilos of dorado daily/panga in the mid to late 1980’s and could make over $500 usd per fishermen.
Long-Lining for the Fish of Gold
A story of two brothers from Guaymas in the mid 1990’s – written by Mike Brozda as told by Edgar Calderon.
It’s 3 AM on a muggy June morning in 1994 in the seaside city of Guaymas on the mainland side of the Sea of Cortes. In the pre-dawn darkness, teenage brothers Jose Luis and Edgar Ceseña Calderón are preparing their 26-foot-long panga for a marathon fishing session. Their target is one of the most beautiful, hardest-fighting, mouth-watering fish in the world. By any measure, Coryphaena hippurus are magnificent creatures. Found in tropical and subtropical waters around the world, the fish are known by several different names, which sometimes causes confusion. In the Hawaiian language, and on many menus, the fish are called mahi-mahi, meaning “very strong fish”.
In Mexico and many Spanish-speaking parts of the world, the fish are known as Dorado, meaning “golden,” which is my favorite name. Dorados have dazzling golden colors running the length of the body on both sides of their bodies, and, while they’re alive, bright blues and greens on the sides and back. With their long, slender bodies, Dorado are hard-fighting, flashy fish capable of incredible bursts of speed and have been clocked up to 92.6 km/hr. (57.5 miles per hour).
Everything aboard the Calderón brothers’ panga is arranged for maximum efficiency. Two-hundred-and-thirty kilograms (500 pounds) of shaved ice are packed into three different holds aboard the boat. Hundreds of barbed steel fishhooks dangle neatly from the gunwales, along with one-liter plastic milk jugs that will serve as floats to mark the hooks once they are in the water. Coiled on the foredeck is about 10 kilometers (6 miles) of pinky-finger-thick polypropylene line (linea madre) and on special racks hung over 2000 hooks lines and clips. The Calderón brothers are long-lining for dorado. During June, July and August, the blistering summer season when dorado are biting on the Sea of Cortez, the brothers will work nonstop for up to 22 hours per day. “It’s terrible work, and I hated it,” said Edgar Calderón. “Sometimes I wouldn’t see my family for days or weeks at a time.”
High Earnings Drive Illegal Fishing
Leaving from Guaymas, about 1:30 am, they first catch squid and then head for the Baja. It takes the brothers more than two hours of blasting through the chop to reach to their fishing grounds off Baja California’s San Marcos Island by 5:30 am. In a well-choreographed deadly ballet, they toss a plastic barrel with a flag, tied to one end of the linea madre and immediately begin feeding out the polypro line. Every 5 meters (16 feet) they clip a baited hook and a plastic float bottle onto a four-foot-long leader. Motoring slowly, it takes more than four hours to set the entire six miles of line and over 2000 baited hooks.
Now the hard, bloody work begins. Quickly returning to the plastic barrel, the brothers begin to pull in the polypro line. A sharp knife flashes as each fish is bled out and tossed into the hold. A layer of fish, a layer of ice. Repeat. Re-set the hook on the gunwale rack and bring in the float. As they die in the hold, the Dorados quickly lose their rainbow colors and the skin fades of a lifeless gray. By the brothers’ count, many hooks contain a Dorado; a few are empty. The rest of the catch is considered “worthless.” There are seabirds, sharks, rays, turtles, perhaps an occasional juvenile marlin or sailfish. By the time they return to Guaymas, unload and sell their catch it is usually after 11 pm.
When the Calderón brothers first began long-lining for dorado in 1994, late in the game as dorado were already declining, a good day’s catch could bring in as much as 2180 kilograms (4,800 pounds) of illegal fish.
In three days of successful dorado fishing, the Calderóns earned far more than the entire year’s salary of a Mexican laborer.
Edgar, now 42 and Jose Luis, 38, gave up long-lining 1996 when the dorado populations became so depleted that it was no longer profitable to fish. “During the height of the Guaymas-based fishery, the approximately 70 pangas in the Calderon brothers cooperativa were bringing more than 80 tons of Dorado per day to the beaches located near the Navy base in Guaymas,” McGettigan says. There were 10 times that many boats (700) working dorado just from the Kino to Guaymas area. “7 years of illegal fishing by over 1000 pangas had decimated the dorado fishery in the Sea of Cortez” and 20 years later dorado populations are still declining in the Sea of Cortez.
A must see video (in Spanish) that nails the Dorado problem. Done by Vince Radice:
July 22, 2015
The lucky winner is Gordon Harris! Scott Hanson donated his popular “Winter Song” sculpture to SeaWatch for our year-end raffle. This beautiful sculpture was raffled in January. We thank you for your support of the raffle and look forward to your support and the success of future raffles. Money raised helped SeaWatch fund the organizations vital to the recovery of the Sea of Cortez. Watch the video of Scott Hanson here...
Conservation Watch Magazine Is published by the Garden Club of America's conservation committee members. It's a quarterly online newsletter featuring conservation and environmental news. SeaWatch is proud of the campaign we originated and support Espiritu Santo es parte de ti (Espiritu Santo is part of you) and their feature article in this magazine. Read the article...
The Mobula Rays are a joy to watch as these expert acrobats jump, twirl and belly flop through the sea. The Sea of Cortez is the world's premium destination for viewing the largest schools in the world, sometimes exceeding 10,000 individuals. They are seasonal visitors and visit Baja in May-July and November - January. These rays are protected by Mexican Law Read More...
Abstain from eating all fish that protect the health of the reefs including parrotfish and surgeon fish
Be our "Eyes on the Water" take photos, record positions, and send reports to the authorities
Your donations contribute to the work of Espiritu Santo es parte de ti and the efforts of ROC