The Northland Age

Q&A: Matt Watson on fishing

-

TV fishing personalit­y Matt Watson, who lives in the Far North, told NZME about a few of his favourite spots and the changes he’s seen in fishing in recent years.

What’s your favourite fishing spot in Northland?

West Coast probably, Hokianga, whenever weather permits. I would stress to anyone going across there that it’s a bar crossing and to be careful. I’ve seen some boats get in strife and end up upside down out there.

What changes have you seen in the marine environmen­t in recent years?

The biggest changes I’ve seen are dirtier water and more sedimentat­ion, like in the Bay of Islands, from basically run-off. A lot of dive spots have silted up. This is over the course of 20 years. It’s not in the last couple of years, it’s been a gradual thing. It’s affecting water clarity, which affects the marine ecosystem.

Are there different fish around now than there used to be?

With the marine heatwave, the water is warmer than usual but we have had those spikes in marine temperatur­e because of that. And you get smaller marlin turning up as well. Because New Zealand’s at the extremity of the migratory range of species like marlin, typically only the ones with larger body mass that carry more fat can get down here.

You’re still getting the big ones as well but there’s been smaller blue marlin turning up in the last couple of years. And some really small striped marlin, one of which I saw swimming straight in front of my house chasing mullet up against the

beach, which is almost unheard of.

Is it going to be a good summer for fishing?

I say yes every year. You can’t go into a new summer season saying it might be rubbish but there’s no real way of knowing what the currents are going to do. Some of these fish are coming from halfway across the world and who knows what’s going to happen to them on the way here. more “tropical vagrants”, such as tropical wrasses, butterfly fishes and surgeon fishes that drift from tropical waters.

“These tropical vagrants are not migrating here in the summer and then leaving. It’s a one-way trip for them, they drift here as larvae from the warmer waters that they usually inhabit, and some will be able to survive in our colder waters,” Parsons said.

“When we have a warmer summer, it’s possible that more of these tropical vagrants are able to survive, or survive for longer, so they become visible on our reefs as they grow into juveniles or adults.”

Climate change was not just about temperatur­e, he said, and wind patterns, currents, ocean productivi­ty and acidity would all change as well.

Coastal waters around New Zealand had not warmed as much as some places, such as eastern Australia, Parsons said.

If temperatur­es did rise more than they had been, fish communitie­s would gradually change.

“Fish species will likely respond over generation­s so that their overall

 ?? ?? BELOW: The fish, like snapper, that are presently abundant in Northland will continue to be here in good numbers, even during or after a marine heatwave.
BELOW: The fish, like snapper, that are presently abundant in Northland will continue to be here in good numbers, even during or after a marine heatwave.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? TV fishing host Matt Watson with a kingfish.
Photo / Supplied TV fishing host Matt Watson with a kingfish.
 ?? Photo / 123RF ??
Photo / 123RF

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand