
Cabo Blanco Marlin Study
It
was April 7th, 1952 when Texas oilman Alfred
Glassell, Jr. caught the first ever fish
weighing over 1000 pounds on rod-and-reel. The fish was a 1025
pound black marlin and the place was Cabo Blanco, Peru. The fact
that Cabo Blanco Fish Club co-founders Glassell
and Kip Farrington both wound up in the IGFA
hall of fame is a testament to the importance
of this catch and those that soon followed
off the northern coast of Peru. Over the
next 16 years Cabo Blanco produced 24 world
records and over 30 granders, including a
1560 pound black marlin, caught by Glassell,
which continues to reign as the largest bony
fish ever caught on rod-and-reel. Six other
Cabo Blanco world records remain unbroken,
including an all tackle bigeye tuna that
weighed 435 pounds and a roosterfish that
weighed 100 pounds (130 lb line class). When
the military took control of Peru in 1968
anglers stopped searching the blue waters
for big fish. Eventually the fish seemed
to disappear as well for reasons not entirely
understood. Certainly the intensive longline fishery had an effect, but changes in oceanic
conditions may have occurred as well.

Forty
years later, Cabo Blanco seems to be at long
last awakening. April 2008 marked the first
marlin tournament held off Cabo Blanco in
modern times, and yes, marlin were
found!
Just a handful of boats from Peru and Ecuador
each sighted 8-14 striped marlin per day,
but they failed to find black marlin. During
the course of the tournament TBF representatives
Ellen Peel and Russ Nelson had the opportunity
to meet three Peruvian captains from Cabo
Blanco’s heyday, now in their 80’s. When
questioned about black marlin these captains
said “Yes, they’re here”, but they indicated
they appear later in the year.
Virtually nothing
is known of marlin in the southeastern hemisphere
and the fact that the waters off Cabo Blanco
may be coming back to life presents a special
research opportunity. The Offield Center
for Billfish Studies has partnered with The
Billfish Foundation
and Peruvian fisheries scientists to explore
these historic waters in 2009 with the intent
to survey, capture and satellite tag marlin
off the northern coast of Peru. Paxson Offield,
fishing from his boat Kelsey Lee, hopes to
open the door to the many questions we have
about the relationship of marlin from these
waters to marlin found in other parts of
the Pacific. For example, do the black marlin
off Peru travel to Australia to spawn? Do
the striped marlin from Peru mix with those
off the Galapagos Islands? We hope to answer
these questions and more…stay tuned!
MarineCSI gratefully acknowledges the support of the Offield Family Foundation.