Texarkana Gazette

Texas aims to protect fish described as ugly, prehistori­c

- By Bill Hanna

FORT WORTH, Texas—They are probably one of the most unique creatures plying Texas waters.

Some have called them ugly and others have described them as prehistori­c.

Now, Texas Parks and Wildlife is proposing changes to protect overfishin­g of large, mature alligator gar as well as a nighttime bowfishing ban.

The proposed regulation changes include a 4-foot maximum length for fish on the Trinity River from south of the Interstate 30 bridge in Dallas all the way to the I-10 bridge in Chambers County east of Houston.

To fishing guide Marshall Bryant the rules are unfair. Bryant is originally from Aledo and takes customers all over Texas in the pursuit of alligator gar.

“They make no sense,” Bryant said. ‘We do have a sustainabl­e alligator gar population and a sustainabl­e amount of trophy alligator gar to harvest.”

Bryant has started a petition drive that he says has more than 6,000 signatures to oppose the rule changes.

In a press release, Craig Bonds, TPWD Inland Fisheries Director, said that the parks and wildlife commission “has communicat­ed to us that they would rather, out of an abundance of caution, act proactivel­y to further limit harvest of older, mature alligator gar while population­s are in relatively good shape.”

The rule changes will be considered at the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission’s March 20 meeting.

Texas Parks and Wildlife would also include a drawing, similar to one in Arkansas, for the chance to harvest one alligator gar over 48 inches in length per year from the Trinity River.

In a letter to the Fort Worth StarTelegr­am in June, Fort Worth attorney Ralph Duggins, chairman of the parks and wildlife commission, said alligator gar are worth protecting.

“Alligator gar have been in American river systems for millennia, and we are proud that the largest, and oldest, of these fish exist in river systems of Texas, like the Trinity,” Duggins said. “Over 10 years ago, the Texas Parks & Wildlife Commission implemente­d rule changes to try to reduce the harvest of these large fish, and we will continue to study whether or not additional restrictio­ns are appropriat­e to protect those fish.”

 ?? Scott Olson/Getty Images/TNS ?? ■ The carcass of a gar rests along the shore at the edge of a small pool of red sludge-like water at the base of the dam at O.C. Fisher Lake on July 25, 2011, in San Angelo, Texas.
Scott Olson/Getty Images/TNS ■ The carcass of a gar rests along the shore at the edge of a small pool of red sludge-like water at the base of the dam at O.C. Fisher Lake on July 25, 2011, in San Angelo, Texas.

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