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  Home : Features : Commercial and Recreational Fisheries : Commercial Fisheries

Commercial Fisheries – American Eel

Learn about commercial harvesting of the American eel.

All commercial eel fishers that harvest American eel Anguilla rostrata from the freshwaters of the state of Florida are required to have an American Eel Permit, as well as a commercial fishing license. Reporting of American eel harvest is a mandatory requirement of the permit. Please go to the Freshwater Fisheries Management, American Eel Web site: http://myfwc.com/fishing/permits/aeel.html to download a permit application form.

Please refer to Chapter 68A-23.015 of the Florida Administrative Code (http://fac.dos.state.fl.us) for regulatory information.

Yellow (juvenile) American eels commercially harvested from the St. Johns River

Eel life stages, in order:

Glass eels: transparent juvenile eels that migrate into brackish water from the ocean. In Florida waters, these eels are usually between 1.5- and 2.5-inches in length.

Elvers: glass eels become pigmented as they remain in brackish water or move into fresh waters. In Florida these eels, now known as elvers, are usually between 3-and 9-inches in length and are green-brown in color.

Yellow eels: as elvers grow larger, they transform into sexually immature adults known as yellow eels. They have a yellow-green to olive-brown color. It is at this life stage the eel is often captured in Florida’s commercial eel pot fishery.

Silver eels: sexually mature adult eels that are silver in color. They have a thicker skin, a fattened body, and enlarged eyes. These eels migrate out to sea in the fall to reproduce.

Do you want to know more about American eels?
Visit the Freshwater Commercial Fisheries section and the Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Freshwater Fisheries Management Web site at: http://myfwc.com/fishing/

Photo Credit: Kimberly Bonvechio, FWC/FWRI









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