Fishing Monthly Magazine | December 2021

Page 14

For the love of luderick NSW STH COAST

Steve Starling www.fishotopia.com

Luderick or blackfish are one of the most prolific species found in the estuaries and coastal seas of our South East: from

scientific circles as Girella triscupidata and belongs to a family of omnivorous inshore fishes that also includes the eastern and western black drummer, the blue drummer or bluefish and the zebra fish. All of these species inhabit rocky shorelines and inshore

Tasmania, and while they become increasingly rare west of Wilsons Promontory, the odd stray specimen can turn up around Melbourne at times, and possibly even as far as South Australian waters, although they’re certainly not predictable enough that far west to be

Starlo poses for a quick luderick ‘selfie’. At 46cm and 1.45kg, this is a very good blackfish by most standards, especially from the estuary. far north coast, especially during summer and early autumn when those waters are at their warmest. At the

estuaries or along ocean rock ledges, breakwalls and from bridges, wharves or jetties.

A catch of blackfish or luderick taken on ‘traditional’ gear consisting of a long, light rod, centrepin reel and a float used to suspend a bait of marine algae such as green weed or ‘sea cabbage’ on a small hook. Queensland to Tasmania. They’re readily available, fun to catch and good to eat, yet many anglers

coastal seas, but the luderick extends that range well up our estuaries, occasionally straying into water that’s

actively targeted. Over the last few decades, the distribution of luderick appears to have shifted somewhat, perhaps due to increasing water temperatures and changes in ocean currents. According to many observers, they are now nowhere near as abundant nor reliable in southern Queensland waters as they once were, and have even thinned out a tad along the NSW

Luderick have small mouths and comb-like teeth well suited to cropping weed growth. Each tooth has three peaks or points, explain the latter part of the fish’s name: tricuspidata. other end of their range, however, luderick are now turning up more frequently in Tasmania’s north east and east, with smaller numbers even being encountered around the Apple Isle’s north western corner.

If killed, bled and cleaned promptly, luderick are very tasty. They’re best filleted and skinned to reveal the firm, white flesh. overlook these barred battlers, or regard them as ‘by-catch’ when chasing other targets. The blackfish or luderick is known in

fresh enough to drink. G e o g r a p h i c a l l y, luderick extend from about Moreton Bay in southeastern Queensland to the north and east coasts of

Starlo with a better-than-average luderick. They’ve been recorded to weights in excess of 3kg, but are more common at a kilo and less. Luderick are handsome fish with reasonably variable colours, but they almost always display a series of dark, vertical bars.

Luderick are powerful opponents and put up a great fight on light gear. 14

DECEMBER 2021

and skin the catch. After that, the flesh can be cooked in all manner of ways, but in my book it’s hard to beat lightly crumbing and shallow frying blackfish pieces, then serving them with salad and chips. I recently made quite a detailed YouTube clip about targeting luderick on ‘traditional’ gear in the estuary and you’ll find it on my Starlo Gets Reel YouTube channel, or by scanning the QR code hereabouts. Luderick are an oftenoverlooked species that remains arguably as abundant in many areas today (even close to major population centres) as it was when white man first arrived on this continent… and there aren’t a lot of

Luderick have a diverse diet. They eat a heck of a lot of marine algae or weed, but also snack on all manner of smaller invertebrates such as worms, yabbies, shrimps, prawns and the like. For this reason, they’re occasionally caught as ‘by-catch’ on various baits and even lures and flies. However, the specialists who target them (especially in NSW) prefer to use floats to suspend weed baits rigged on small hooks and light leaders at various depths, either in the

‘Traditional’ blackfish gear consists of long, light rods (typically 3-4m in length) matched up to simple, direct drive centrepin reels, but you can certainly use spinning or threadline gear to catch them, too. Once hooked, luderick are strong fighters that give a very good account of themselves, especially on lighter gear. While some folks don’t rate them all that highly as a table fish, they’re actually quite tasty if handled correctly. Ideally, they should be killed and bled promptly after capture, then chilled. The best way to prepare them is to fillet

fish you can say that about! If you haven’t done so already, consider giving luderick a try, you just might get hooked! QR CODE

Scan this QR code to watch Starlo’s YouTube clip on catching luderick in the estuary.


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Articles inside

Boat test: Arvor 705 Sportsfish

9min
pages 126-132

Freshwater

9min
pages 122-123

Karratha

6min
page 121

Lancelin

5min
pages 118-119

Metro

4min
page 116

WESTERN AUSTRALIA Esperance

6min
page 113

Augusta

6min
page 112

WIRF

4min
page 110

Recfishwest

6min
page 111

Yarrawonga

5min
page 107

Wangaratta

5min
page 103

Shepparton

7min
page 105

Geelong

9min
pages 94-95

Port Phillip West

5min
pages 96-97

Phillip Island

6min
pages 92-93

Canberra

5min
pages 84-85

Albury/Wodonga

5min
page 83

Lithgow/Oberon

6min
page 81

Tathra

3min
page 79

Bermagui

4min
page 78

Illawarra

9min
page 76

Batemans Bay

7min
page 77

Central Coast

7min
page 75

Coffs Coast

5min
pages 70-71

Sydney North

3min
page 61

Sydney Rock

6min
page 60

How sustainable are whiting stocks?

7min
pages 56-57

NEW SOUTH WALES Pittwater

9min
pages 58-59

Hinchinbrook

3min
page 45

Flathead on soft plastics

10min
pages 54-55

Kayaking: Adventure search

10min
pages 52-53

Freshwater

14min
pages 50-51

Lucinda

5min
page 44

Townsville

5min
pages 40-43

Whitsundays

6min
pages 38-39

Mackay

7min
pages 34-37

Advantages of heavy leader

17min
pages 8-11

Brisbane

11min
pages 26-27

Northern Bay

5min
pages 28-29

Starlo’s back to basics

5min
pages 14-15

Sheik of the Creek

4min
page 25

Southern Bay

4min
pages 22-24

Squid: taking on the tigers

5min
pages 12-13

Noosa

5min
pages 30-31
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