I thought that at one time they were pretty up on fining boaters for running thru the sea grass beds and dredging scars. Sad to think that isn't the case
Not much, they watch the reefs a bit.........no anchoring etc.
Not a lot of enforcement really.
They have cut most state funding for enforcement, cut hours, and personnel. I cannot blame/fault the indviidual officers or DEP.
I did imply that above and that is not fair to them. Nice to think they do all this work by having these laws, but if no one pays for enforcement and people to do that job...............nothing can be done.
It's like having lots of laws, and no police. They are in a very tough spot.
I get asked maybe 1-2x a year about spear fishing, but never for anything else. I thank them, and off they go. It really is the "high seas" in many ways. I've seen guns pulled over fishing spots and diving spots. Add some booze.....then it gets worse. All you have to do is look and you can see the scars. Maybe there's less due to them being there.....but there's a lot of scars for it being
"illegal" and all. Reef damage is intense as well.
I yell at people doing this stuff. I get flipped the bird plenty, keep thinking about using the flare gun and landing a hot one in their boat. You can call complaints in. My concern is more the longer term damage and how much management usage we can do without harming it. Hurricanes and other natural things can tear up a seagrass bed or macro algae bethos, Mangroves etc. But these ecosystems reduce the damage on shore. This makes them worth a lot more in reduced insurance and nicer eco tourism location. Better fishing.
I'm not sure what to do about the poor manatee though. Hard to spot one while doing 30-40 knots and turn quick to avoid hitting them. Sonar can help spot stuff at lower speeds.
Tagged and beapers placed on them and yet another device for boating in Manatee water? Not sure this is the answer either. Closing some regions to boating is not going to go over too well.