Florida Fish and Wildlife: Stone Crab Season Opens October 15 In State, Federal Waters

By  //  October 8, 2015

Florida Fish, Wildlife Commission News

ABOVE VIDEO: Recreational and commercial stone crab season runs from October 15th through May 15th each year in state and federal waters off the coast of Florida.

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA – Florida’s recreational and commercial stone crab claw harvest season opens Oct. 15 in state and federal waters.

To ensure this valuable resource is available for generations to come, take care when removing crab claws, and follow all protective management guidelines for stone crab harvest.

To be harvested, stone crab claws must be at least 2 and three-fourths inches in length when measured from the elbow to the tip of the lower immovable portion of the claw.

Claws may not be taken from egg-bearing stone crabs. Egg-bearing females are identifiable by the orange or brown egg mass, also known as a “sponge,” which is visible on the underside of the crab when it is picked up or turned over.

Recreational harvesters can use up to five stone crab traps per person. Stone crabs may not be harvested with any device that can puncture, crush or injure a crab’s body. Examples of devices that can cause this kind of damage include spears and hooks.

To be harvested, stone crab claws must be at least 2 and three-fourths inches in length when measured from the elbow to the tip of the lower immovable portion of the claw. (Image for SpaceCoastDaily.com)
To be harvested, stone crab claws must be at least 2 and three-fourths inches in length when measured from the elbow to the tip of the lower immovable portion of the claw. (Image for SpaceCoastDaily.com)

Recreational and commercial traps may be baited and placed in the water 10 days prior to the opening of the season but may not be pulled from the water for harvest purposes until Oct. 15. Traps that are not being fished should be removed from the water to avoid ghost fishing, a process in which marine species get caught in the trap for extended periods of time and are not harvested.

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Harvesters are encouraged to take only one claw, even if both claws are of legal size, so that the released crab will be better able to defend itself from predators. A crab that is returned to the water with one claw intact will be able to obtain more food in a shorter amount of time and therefore regrow its claw faster.

There is a recreational daily bag limit of 1 gallon of claws per person or 2 gallons per vessel, whichever is less.

The season will be open through May 15, 2016, closing May 16. Stone crab regulations are the same in state and federal waters.

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Florida’s recreational and commercial stone crab claw harvest season opens Oct. 15 in state and federal waters. (Image for SpaceCoastDaily.com)
Florida’s recreational and commercial stone crab claw harvest season opens Oct. 15 in state and federal waters. (Image for SpaceCoastDaily.com)