South Carolina Launches First-Ever Southern Flounder Stocking to Boost Coastal Fisheries

March 13, 2026
South Carolina Launches First-Ever Southern Flounder Stocking to Boost Coastal Fisheries
  • An event on March 13 will bring together researchers, recreational anglers, and state leaders to celebrate the milestone.

  • The Southern Flounder Stock Enhancement Program, created in 2021 and funded partly by saltwater license fees, is part of a broader Marine Stock Enhancement Program that also includes other species.

  • For the 2024–2025 season, the program produced nearly 1 million larvae, 33,000 pre-metamorphosis juveniles, and 45,000 post-metamorphosis juveniles, with releases at multiple developmental stages.

  • The public release at Murrells Inlet Boat Launch is scheduled for 1 p.m. today.

  • This milestone marks the culmination of years of pioneering research that established the first southern flounder stock enhancement program along the Atlantic coast.

  • The overarching aim is to strengthen coastal fisheries and support the long-term sustainability of flounder in South Carolina waters.

  • South Carolina is releasing hatchery-raised southern flounder into state estuaries for the first time, starting with nearly 10,000 post-metamorphosis juveniles around an inch long released at Murrells Inlet Boat Launch today, as part of a broader annual program including larvae and juveniles.

  • Experts note that warming sea temperatures, not just overfishing, may be affecting southern flounder reproduction by altering sex determination during development, a factor considered in the species’ declines.

  • Regulatory changes over the years have shifted fishing rules to support maturation and spawning, increasing the minimum length from 15 to 16 inches and reducing daily bag limits.

  • The stocking effort will be evaluated over the next one to two years by tracking released fish with a genetic identification tool to measure contributions to the wild population.

Summary based on 2 sources


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