Learn more about the deep sea fishing in the Clearwater / St. Pete Beach, Florida area.
Fishing for Pelagic Fish
What are Pelagic Fish?
Pelagic fish get their name from the area that they inhabit called the pelagic zone. The pelagic zone is the largest habitat on earth with a volume of 330 million cubic miles. Different species of pelagic fish are found throughout this zone. Numbers and distributions vary regionally and vertically, depending on availability of light, nutrients, dissolved oxygen, temperature, salinity, and pressure.
In this part of Florida, it is a very far boat ride out to target the pelagic species of fish, so most anglers will not target sailfish, marlin, tuna, mahi mahi or wahoo in this area. For the ones that do, they may be running 70 to 100 miles out from shore. However, during the summer months, mahi mahi are known for coming in closer to shore, so it is possible to get into some mahi mahi without going as far out, but it’s still going to be a good distance out from shore.
Bottom Fishing
Reefs & Wrecks
There are so many offshore fishing charters out of this area and many of them will go offshore to fish the reefs and wrecks for a variety of fish such as snapper, grouper, king mackerel, Spanish mackerel, amberjack, cobia, sharks, hogfish, tripletail, jack crevalle, barracuda and more.
Artificial Reef Locations
Visit the reef locations on the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website.