HIBT Leader Board 2011
Fish SponsorDistance

"West Marie"

8

West Marine 2188 nm
7 Laguna Niguel Billfish Club #1&2 1752 nm
5 Kona Game Fishing Club - Taiyo 1053 nm
4 Louisiana Hot Sauce Club 1028 nm

"Merlin"

 10 

Patricia Steele and Sherry Vann 522 nm
2 Bay of Islands Swordfish Club #1&2, and Stephen Chow 515 nm
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2011 HIBT Updates

"West Marie" Wins the Race!

The third annual Hawaiian International Billfish Tournament Great Marlin Race was won by “West Marie,” a 170-pound Pacific blue marlin caught by angler Ed Abele and tagged by Captain Marlin Parker on board his boat the Marlin Magic II. The electronic tag, sponsored through a West Marine BlueFuture Conservation Grant, was deployed on August 8, 2011 off the Big Island’s Kona Coast. The tag released from the marlin after 121 days, approximately 2,188 nautical miles from the tagging location, in a region north of the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia. Remarkably, this marlin swam south across the equator in less than 4 months “I am amazed at how quickly blue marlin travel the surface waters connecting the two hemispheres,” said Stanford University professor of marine sciences Barbara Block,  “These are oceanic travelers who are using international waters, crossing many national boundaries quickly.”

2011 HIBT Great Marlin Race Results

This was one of two marlin tagged during the 2011 HIBT Great Marlin Race to travel to the Southern Hemisphere. Fish 7, a 330-lb. marlin tagged on behalf of Laguna Niguel Billfish Club on August 2, surfaced two days earlier after having traveled 1,752 miles from Kona – about 525 miles west-northwest of the winner, putting it in second place for the race.

Of the 10 tags deployed as part of this event, 6 surfaced along a broad swath of ocean southeast of the Hawaiian Islands. Marlin tagged during the 2009 GMR behaved similarly, with 3 of the 10 tags deployed  in that year ultimately showing up near the Marquesas. This is quite different, however, from the results in the 2010 Race – when all but one of the marlin traveled mostly east from Hawaii, and no tags reported from the Southern Hemisphere.

2009 and 2010 HIBT Great Marlin Race Results

“The variability in these tracks from year to year is as interesting as the similarities among them,” said Stanford University marine biologist and GMR co-founder Randy Kochevar, “It illustrates the importance of gathering data over several years to understand the broad migration patterns of these fish.”

 
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