January 5, 2026 — A recent Advocate/Times-Picayune article examined what Louisiana anglers caught in 2025 and what those numbers could suggest about the health of our most popular sport fish. It highlighted an important truth that every policymaker, fisherman, and coastal resident needs to recognize:
Louisiana’s fisheries challenges are real, complex, and cannot be reduced to simple narratives or blamed on convenient villains.
Speckled trout remain the most popular recreational catch in Louisiana. Red drum and white trout continue to define our coastal identity. At the same time, state biologists and anglers are watching long-term trends closely and evaluating how environmental conditions, fishing pressure, and policy changes are affecting populations.
Here is what the science and experts continue to point to:
- Louisiana’s ongoing coastal land loss crisis
- Loss of nursery habitat critical to juvenile fish survival
- Storms, freezes, and environmental variability
- Water quality conditions
- Declining angler participation, which affects funding and data reliability
- New management measures that require time and rigorous assessment to fully evaluate
Notably, the article did not identify the Gulf menhaden fishery as a driver of declines in speckled trout or red drum. If scientific evidence clearly linked menhaden harvest to those issues, Louisiana biologists, federal fisheries experts, and responsible journalists would say so. Instead, the discussion continues to focus where the strongest science points: habitat loss, environmental stress, and long-term ecological cycles.
